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July 22, 2025 - American Journal - Harrison Smith
02:37:14
The American Journal: Trump Says Obama Himself Manufactured Crime Of The Century Russia Hoax — Will Deep State Coup Plotters Be Brought To Justice? - FULL SHOW - 07/22/2025
Participants
Main voices
h
harrison smith
01:47:36
s
stewart rhodes
21:11
Appearances
a
alex jones
04:48
j
john brennan
01:08
l
liz allcock
01:42
m
marc istook
01:01
s
stephen miller
01:30
s
steve robinson
01:15
s
sue pascoe
02:47
Clips
a
andrew callaghan
00:13
h
hunter biden
00:16
t
tucker carlson
00:27
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Speaker Time Text
hunter biden
Hierarchy of that goes from Steve Mannon to Alex Jones.
And Alex Jones talks about the flat earth and he talks about the, I mean, whatever Alex Jones is talking about.
alex jones
I eat babies, I eat them every night, I eat them with barbecue sauce.
unidentified
And I flew to the moon last night with a witch, and I took DMT with Easter bunnies.
hunter biden
Sandy hook and things like that.
This in holy alliance has come together because of one, one really big reason.
unidentified
Music.
alex jones
Music.
unidentified
Bye.
Bye.
alex jones
you you Look, I know I'm smoking a cigarette here, but if Hunter Biden can smoke crack and be with underage girls and stuff in his laptop, it's okay.
I can smoke a cigarette.
I don't do this very often.
Kids don't try this at home.
So Andrew Callahan, who is a total fake, acts like this loving little cute liberal, but the guy's very duplicitous, has done all these hit pieces on me.
And so now he's dropped this interview with Hunter Biden.
So you talk about two piles of garbage trying to prop each other up.
This is a perfect example of it.
So I'm going to just play you a few of the excerpts for the Attack Me with Hunter Biden.
And, oh, Alex Jones believes in flat earth.
And Steve Bannon wants to live under tyranny.
And, oh, there was no election fraud in 2020.
This is just so pathetic.
And Callahan is propped up by HBO and the establishment, but he goes around acting like he's this nice little friendly guy.
In both the interviews, he uses excerpts of to act like I was being serious.
Those were admitted comedy pieces that he told me, I'm doing a comedy show and I want you to do a comedy piece with me.
And he did release those comedy pieces.
But here he is with me screwing around with him years ago, trying to then act like that's really who I am.
So again, this is total disingenuousness.
And then you've got Hunter Biden talking about how Steve Bannon and I do this for money.
I had the globalists try to buy me off and hire me for decades.
I don't get money from communist China and Russia and the Ukrainians and barisma like Hunter Biden.
I'm not giving 10% to the big guy.
I wasn't all part of the whole autopin system and posse that for the last four and a half years was running this country dictatorily.
No, it's Hunter Biden, the smartest guy Joe Biden knew.
So this is a gift from these people.
I mean, it's an absolute joke to have Hunter Biden up there who doesn't actually counter anything I actually say.
He just says this guy thinks the earth's flat.
And of course he brings up Sandy Hook, which they just attached me to for fundraising of the Democratic Party, raised hundreds of millions of dollars off my name.
So let's go ahead and start some of the excerpts from the interview, and I'll stop and start it at key points, but I basically already made my points.
I mean, these are just two people that are emblematic of the dinosaur media and the system.
And unlike the left, I have integrity.
I will criticize Trump when he's wrong.
Democratic Party, they'll never criticize themselves because they're a cult funded by the establishment.
They're the globalists.
They're the kleptocrats.
They're the problems here at this.
andrew callaghan
The conspiracy is that most mainstream conspiracy theories, flat earth, chemtrails, QAnon, all that stuff, is deliberate misinformation to convince dumb people that they're doing important research and keep them away from the truth.
alex jones
You want to see the CI director under Obama admitting geoengineering, weather control weapons, or the treaty for it?
We'll play a little bit of that.
john brennan
Another example is the array of technologies, often referred to collectively as geoengineering, that potentially could help reverse the warming effects of global climate change.
One that has gained my personal attention is stratospheric aerosol injection, or SAI, a method of seeding the stratosphere with particles that can help reflect the sun's heat in much the same way that volcanic eruptions do.
An SAI program could limit global temperature increases, reducing some risks associated with higher temperatures and providing the world economy additional time to transition from fossil fuels.
This process is also relatively inexpensive.
The National Research Council estimates that a fully deployed SAI program would cost about $10 billion yearly.
As promising as it may be, moving forward on SAI would also raise a number of challenges for our government and for the international community.
On the technical side, greenhouse gas emission reductions would still have to accompany SAI to address other climate change effects, such as ocean acidification, because SAI alone would not remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
alex jones
Feel it still.
unidentified
Hey!
It's Tuesday, July 22nd in the year of our Lord, 2025.
And you're listening to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith.
Watch it live right now at band.video.
I think it's time to blow this thing back.
Get everybody in the stuff together.
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam.
harrison smith
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
unidentified
Welcome to the American Journal.
harrison smith
I'm your host, Harrison Smith.
unidentified
Coming to you live this Tuesday morning from the Enfor's headquarters here in Austin, Texas.
harrison smith
We've got a lot of stuff to talk about today.
We're going to be joined in studio by Stuart Rhodes.
In the third hour, we're going to be talking about less about politics and more about the catastrophic flooding that took dozens of lives here in Texas and the recovery efforts and how you can help.
We have a lot of stories to get to, a lot of videos to get to as well.
So let's begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch.
unidentified
*Sounds of phone rings*
harrison smith
All right, here to close your daily dispatch.
For Tuesday, the 22nd of July, 2025, former Louisville police officer charged in Breonna Taylor raid, sentenced to 33 months in prison.
Former Kentucky police officer Brett Hankinson, who was convicted of a civil rights offense after shooting into an apartment where Breonna Taylor and her boyfriend were in March 2020, has been sentenced to 33 months in prison despite the shots not hitting or injuring anyone.
During a drug raid at Taylor's apartment, her boyfriend Kenneth Walker opened fire on the police, sparking the shootout.
Hankins shot into the apartment, but hit nobody and did not injure anybody.
Walker was found responsible for her death.
Hankison was charged by prosecutors in 2022 with endangering the lives of Taylor, Walker, and some of her neighbors.
According to Fox 7, the case went to mistrial when jurors could not reach a unanimous verdict in 2023.
But he was retried on the charges again in 2024 and was convicted of using excessive force.
Because how dare you fire back at somebody firing at you, right?
Just crazy, just absolutely crazy.
The DOJ said both counts in the state trial arose from the same nucleus of facts.
Believing the officers were under attack, Defendant Hankinson ran to the side of the apartment unit and fired blindly into Ms. Taylor's home.
The memorandum stated, again, none of these shots wounded anybody.
After a recent review of many 242 cases, counsel is unaware of any prosecution in which police officers have been charged with depriving the rights of another person under the Fourth Amendment or returning fire for returning fire and not injuring anybody.
So that doesn't make any sense, I have to say.
But it's not really supposed to.
He's not really being punished for misbehaving or hurting anybody.
It's not actually a crime that he's being punished for.
He's being punished as a sacrificial offering to the mobs of black people that are outside of the courtroom and threatening to riot, even though he got 33 months in prison.
That's not long enough for them because he is a symbol that they want to destroy.
And our system is eager to give them that satisfaction.
Again, just insane, vindictive psychopaths that like we genuinely can't keep having a country with.
So I don't know what we're going to do about that, but it's not sustainable in any way, shape, or form.
Again, just to imagine being the type of person that it's like, I get being sad that your family member died.
I personally would be mad at the person who started shooting the police officers because they're a drug dealer that they're involved in.
But he just got these people.
They're just drains.
They're just gigantic vacuums sucking out all of the energy and prosperity and potentiality that America has, just gigantic sinks, just weights dragging us to the bottom, providing nothing, contributing absolutely nothing to anybody, causing massive, unsustainable problems in every realm of our society.
And I just can't even imagine like having a friend or a family member that like shoots at police.
Some cop, you know, shoots back, doesn't hit anybody, doesn't injure anybody, but you still like want his head.
You want him dead.
You want him in jail for years.
He's in jail for nearly three years.
He's just been sentenced to, and they're not satisfied.
They're not even happy.
Man didn't even do anything.
He didn't do anything.
They tried to kill him.
He didn't do anything.
And now they want him in jail for 33 months because there's something just deeply evil about these people.
I don't know what it is.
I don't know why we have, why we like listen to them or have anything to do with them, honestly.
What type of person, what type of person shoots a police officers and then is mad when the police officers go to jail for three years for shooting back?
Like it's just, we just can't do this anymore.
We just can't do this anymore.
Those guys should not go to jail for a single day.
Anyway.
Anyway, we can return to that, but it just when you really think about like what this system does to people and who it does it to, it's just, it is just completely insane to imagine being a cop, being sent on a, being given a mission to go do something.
You get shot at.
You're putting your own life on the line to try to make the city safer.
And then the same system that you're serving throws you in a concrete box for three years for following their instructions and doing exactly what they say.
It's just.
And meanwhile, the drug-dealing retards who have never, who literally just live off government largesse, just spend all of their time protesting to let criminals out of prison.
It's just, God, we're just so freaking screwed.
Meanwhile, Pete Buttigej's Transportation Department paid $80 billion for DEI while delaying air traffic control upgrades, according to a report.
The Department of Transportation under Pete Buttigieg spent $80 billion on diversity, equity, and inclusion grants while the agency delayed the upgrades of air traffic control, according to a report from the New York Post.
Buttigig, who is also considered to be a contender for the 2028 presidential race, at one point told an industry executives that upgrades to air traffic control would allow more planes to fly.
So why would that be in his interest?
Sources told the outlet.
What?
At one point told an industry executive that upgrades to air traffic control would allow more planes to fly, quote, so why would that be in his interest, sources told the outlet.
I don't even understand what the hell they're saying.
Records reviewed by the outlet showed that Buddhajig was much more interested in handing out $80 billion in DEI grants over four years.
He was in the cabinet role.
He was definitely pushing an agenda.
One industry official told the outlet and added that Buddha Jeej had little to no interest in modernizing the air traffic control system.
The sources said that Buddhajig spent a great deal of his time blaming airlines for delays as well as vilifying the industry while leaving the old traffic control system that has not been upgraded since the Carter administration in place.
The reports stated, citing sources, again, folks, you have to understand.
You have to understand the way these people's minds work.
You have to understand how incompatible These people are with our society and with your mind and the way that you think about things.
I swear to God, if you're listening to my voice, it's like 99% chance you're the type of person that if you're put in a position of power, you would do everything in your ability to fulfill the obligations of that position.
Understand that that never even enters into the equation in these people's minds.
Pete Buttigige became Department of Transportation Secretary with one goal in mind, one goal alone, to use it to pad his resume so that he could become President of the United States.
It's what his entire, every one of his actions is predicated on.
Every one of his life decisions is towards that purpose.
I've been talking about this for a year.
I mean, everything, everything, everything, everything.
It's very obvious, you know, trail he's plotting where he's like, first, I'm going to run for president.
And even though he was doing better than anybody else in the field, he gave all of his support over to Biden as soon as he announced.
And we had it on the foot.
In fact, there was like a leaked call because I think Pete Puttig called the wrong number or something, but there's a recording of Pete Buttigieg going to Biden, like, yeah, I'm about to drop out and I was just, you know, wondering where I should send my support.
And so we could talk about that a little bit.
In other words, he never ran with the intention of winning the election.
He ran for the sole intention and purpose of getting enough support to use that, transmute his support into a position in the cabinet, use that position in the cabinet to stay in the public eye and build his resume so that in 2028 he could get elected.
I think he even adopted children when he adopted them, specifically so that they would be like four years old when he was running for president the next time.
The man is not a human being.
He's a slithering serpent.
He's a manifestation of the worst inclinations of the most die-hard bureaucrats in our government.
So when he gets in the position of Department of Transportation, his only thought is how do I weaponize this to my own advantage?
How do I use this position I'm in to get a bunch of money to funnel out to interest groups so that they'll support me when I run for president in four years?
How do I use my position granted to me in public trust to serve a specific purpose and, you know, better the safety and efficiency of our transportation systems?
How do I ignore all of that and instead just take as much as I can from it to help myself and the people like me?
I don't, it's like you got to be able to, you got to understand that these people, they, it's just, it never, it never even occurs to them that they shouldn't do this.
This is what they think the position is supposed to be.
Like this is how they're, this is what their mindset is.
And this is really at the core of all of it, at the core of, at the heart of like so many of the things that that our country is is failing in because of bad people like this.
Because of bad people like Pete Buttigieg, trying really hard not to use just a plethora of slurs against him.
But I'm trying.
I'm really trying.
I just, I just, you know, I just want people to understand, like, just how incompatible these people are with our system.
They don't care.
unidentified
They really, really don't care.
harrison smith
Okay.
Rex and I were talking yesterday about some of the like Chinese infrastructure, talking about maglev trains and stuff.
unidentified
80 billion dollars.
harrison smith
Do you have any idea what we can afford with 80 billion dollars?
What did we get for our 80 billion dollars?
Garbage pail libs, puppet Pete.
What did we get?
What did we get for our 80 billion dollars?
We got less safe air traffic controllers.
We got a bunch of handouts to a bunch of people not qualified to serve in the positions that they now have obtained.
steve robinson
I was going to say a butt plug and a travel voucher.
harrison smith
I don't know what the hell those two things have to do with each other.
Look, I just.
I hate these people.
I really do.
Well, we'll maybe get more, you know, back more into that later.
It's just, it would be better.
It would literally be better if Pete Budijige just burned $80 million, just put $80 million $1 bills in a pile the size of the Burj Khalifa and just lit it all on fire.
It would actually genuinely have been better for America if that was the case.
This is what I'm trying to emphasize.
This, the Joker scene from Batman is a better use of money than what Pete Buttigig did with the money.
This money isn't hurting anybody.
There's no way that a burned pack of $100 bills will cause a plane to fall out of the sky.
But what Pete Buttigig did with the money is the reason planes are falling out of the sky.
I just, it's like, this is what I don't, it's, it's, this isn't just a like, oh my gosh, he gave money away to people I don't like.
Like, people are dead because of this.
People died because of this.
I guarantee you, genuinely, I guarantee you, the DEI makes things less safe.
The increase in air traffic accidents in the very recent past is not a coincidence in that it coincides perfectly with DEI drives in the air traffic industry.
Because it's like, my God.
My God, we give you $80 billion to improve air, you know, transportation.
You give it away to black women, to Muslim women, so they can feel good about themselves.
And planes are falling out of the sky.
unidentified
Pete Buttijudge puts the trans in transportation.
harrison smith
Yeah, there you go.
I think he should be charged.
I think he should be charged with murder or, you know, negligent incompetence, whatever the term is.
When you're put in charge of something, when you're put as the authority in charge of safety and you just give all the money away to your friends and everything becomes less safe, like you've committed fraud to the level that people are going to die or have died already as a consequence.
Right?
If I'm paying you to build a building and you're the chief safety officer of the construction building and you decide to spend $80 million on DEI programs instead of buying the material that will stand up and the building later collapses like that's on you.
That's your fault.
$80, $80 billion.
I'm sorry, I wanted to keep going, but now I'm stuck on this.
Now I have to actually even just try to comprehend this right now.
How much is an airport?
I'm going to ask Grock how much an airport costs.
I'm going to see how many airports we can afford with the money that Stinky Pete put in.
Small private airport, an airstrip could be as little as $100,000.
A regional airport costs $100 million to $1 billion.
My God, so much money.
$100 billion.
Medium-sized $1 to $5 billion.
Large and international mega hubs cost can escalate to $10 to $30 billion or more.
Beijing Daxing International Airport costs $17 billion.
Let's see what that looks like, shall we?
Can we, let's go ahead and just take a look at, maybe we can just go to YouTube and look up what this airport looks like.
I wonder what, because we could have afforded four of these, whatever these are, this Beijing Daxing International Airport.
There you go.
We could have afforded no less, actually more than, significantly more than four of these.
We could have had four of these built.
Oh, look at that.
unidentified
Hmm.
harrison smith
I wonder what cities could have used these in America.
Here you go.
Today's video.
We're at Daxing Airport, nicknamed the Starfish, one of the most expensive airports in the world.
Yeah, but this cost less than a fourth of what we spent on DEI.
So wasn't that worth it?
Oh, only 11.4 billion USDs.
That's even less.
So we could have gotten eight of these.
Sorry, we nearly could have gotten eight of these international airports.
Comparable to the state-of-the-art, incredible new Chinese airport that was built for just $11 billion.
We spent $80 billion.
Where are our airports?
Where are our new planes?
Where are our maglev trains?
Where are our architectural accomplishments?
Oh, they don't exist.
We gave them away to black people because they score poorly on the tests that they're supposed to do for air traffic controllers.
And now our planes are falling out of the sky.
I mean, do we really want this, though?
I mean, is that the type of America that we want to be?
We want to just have state-of-the-art, high-tech infrastructure everywhere?
I don't know.
The America of today, we don't want these incredible, you know, wonders of construction.
You know, we don't want that.
We want our old dilapidated infrastructure and we want it black people in charge.
Okay.
That's what we've chosen.
That's the course we've chosen to go down.
As long as our boardrooms look like brochures from stock photo catalogs, then we're happy.
We don't need this.
We don't need what.
I mean, what is this?
State-of-the-art, perfectly clean infrastructure.
Where's the vibrancy?
Where's the diversity?
Okay.
I mean, what, so our lives would be significantly improved in a thousand different ways if we spent our money on actually building things and creating great things?
No.
We don't want that.
We want everything to be crap, and we want lots of brown people everywhere.
alex jones
Ugh.
Ugh.
Thank you.
unidentified
you Thank you.
harrison smith
I mean, that's literally the choice that we made.
That, I guess, is the choice that we made.
unidentified
The browner, the better.
harrison smith
The browner, the better.
Yeah, I wouldn't say, I don't care.
I wouldn't care except that it's what it's the choice they make.
This is why they did it.
$80 billion.
We could have had roughly eight of these Pete Buttigieg flew almost 20 times on taxpayer-funded private jets.
Yeah, good for him.
I mean, he deserves it.
He can't be just sitting on domestic civilian flights because, you see, the work he's doing is so important.
I mean, what if a flight is delayed or something?
You know, that is very ironic.
So by being such a failure in the Department of Transportation, like flights are constantly being delayed or canceled or airplanes fixed with tape.
And he's like, so, you know, I can't have that happen to me.
I can't have that happen to me.
So I need a private jet at my beck and call so I can just hop on and board immediately without having to suffer through the problems that I myself cause as Department of Transportation Secretary.
That is pretty amazing.
But I mean, you know, he's, hey, he's got an important position in the federal government.
You know, he can't, the fate of America can't, you know, be at the whim of some civilian airline changing their flights.
I mean, what if there was some storm and flights were canceled and he can't get out?
I mean, who is going to give away $10 billion to racist organizations?
I mean, he's got to have the private jet.
Otherwise, he couldn't make those emergency trips away from East Palestine, Ohio, right?
I mean, he couldn't make those emergency trips to very quickly sign a check of other people's money to give away for his own political cachet.
I mean, if he wasn't on a private jet, who knows the delay that could be caused in handing out gigantic chunks of cash pair money to people who don't deserve it and haven't earned it.
So we'll move on on the other side, but I just...
How is he not just disappeared into obscurity because he's such an obvious gigantic failure?
unidentified
No.
harrison smith
No.
No pun intended.
We went a little off the rails there.
I guess you could say that Daily Dispatch crashed and burned as soon as we got to Pete Buttajige.
We'll keep going now.
We'll keep going now.
Even though I would like to know more about that.
Because I just don't even get how you can spend $80 billion and not have anything to show for it.
That is just...
Anyway, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
It's just your money.
It's just your blood, sweat, and tears being given away because certain classes of people can't score well on tests.
Oh, well, and just jam on the accelerator in our race to the bottom.
Meanwhile, Trump admin releases MLK files despite King family's objections.
Despite protests from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s families and civil rights group he once led, the Trump administration has made public the FBI surveillance, the records of FBI surveillance of the slain at civil rights icon.
The move pits President Trump's determination to release documents the government has kept secret for more than half a century against the family's lingering pain of how J. Edgar Hoover's FBI spied on King and tried to intimidate and humiliate him.
It comes amid growing calls for Trump to release the Epstein files after his administration concluded there was no evidence to suggest the great disgraced financier was murdered or kept a client list.
King's surviving daughter, Bernice King, referenced in a post to X late Monday of a photo with her father of her father with the comment, now do the Epstein files.
Tulsi Gabbard released over 230,000 pages of documents related to the 1968 assassination of MLK, the agency announced.
And of course, well, we can get into all this.
In January, Trump ordered the release of all these records.
The documents detail the FBI's investigation into MLK's assassination, including case leads, internal memos, tracking progress, and records about James Earl Ray's former cellmate, who claimed Ray spoke of a possible assassination plot.
The release also includes evidence from a Canadian police department and never-before-seen CIA records that outline overseas intelligence on the international hunt for Ray, the prime suspect in the assassination.
King's two surviving adult children, in a statement, said, those who engage with the release of these files do so with empathy, restraint, and respect for our family's continuing grief.
They had an advanced viewing of the documents, saying, quote, during our father's lifetime, he was relentlessly targeted by an invasive, predatory, and deeply disturbing disinformation and surveillance campaign orchestrated by J. Edgar Hoover through the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The Kings said, while we support transparency and historical accountability, we object any attacks on our father's legacy or attempts to weaponize it to spread falsehoods.
Yeah, the FBI was very hostile against him.
We can get more into that later and look at what some of the files reveal.
Meanwhile, U.S. Appeals Court allows Trump administration to remove deportation protections for Afghans and Cameroonians.
On July 21st, a federal judge lifted an order blocking the Trump administration from ending temporary protected SAS for around 14,600 Afghans and 7,900 Cameroonians in the U.S. The administration moved in April to terminate TPS, citing improved security and economic conditions in Afghanistan and Cameroon, despite arguments about ongoing threats and crises.
This ruling allows the administration to begin deportations after Monday night and suggests affected TPS holders may seek asylum or other legal protections amid ongoing legal challenges.
Yeah, okay.
Again, it's like it's funny how it's always a news story when the temporary protected status gets revoked as if it was never meant to be temporary, as if that was a lie the entire time.
It's just ridiculous.
I don't know again, why, why, why do we we're under no obligation It's like but Afghanistan is dangerous.
It's like so So, what?
There are lots of dangerous places.
We're under no obligation just because your homeland is a cesspit doesn't mean you get to live here.
Why is this considered a thing?
Improve your own lands.
Like, it would be different.
I was thinking about this.
I don't think I expressed it very well when I was talking about it a while ago because in Austin, there's a school that has a very nice public elementary school that has just been given over to the Afghans that they imported to that community.
So you've got American kids who grew up here, whose parents went to this elementary school.
Now they are being disadvantaged to the extent that the classes are being taught in Pashtun.
So the American kids are going to class, and the class is being taught in a language they don't understand.
Or at the very least, it's being, the whole class becomes English second language because there are so many Afghans in this one neighborhood in Austin that they have to treat all of the students as if they don't speak English.
So if you're a third grader, it's been speaking English your whole life, suddenly you have to go to class every day and relearn how to spell the word dog that you learned five years ago.
So you're not learning anything.
So instead, you're going to school and you're going to hate school.
It's not going to teach you anything.
You're not even able to like communicate, let alone maximize your potential of learning and knowledge and instruction because they imported a million Afghans for some reason and dropped them all in Austin.
And so now, and of course, all of the kids are Afghan.
All their parents came over here, don't have jobs.
So they all get jobs in the school because they don't have enough people who speak Pashtun to run the school.
So now all the people who we brought over got hired by the school.
So now it's the taxpayer dollars.
They go to fund their salaries so they can take over the school and teach their kids to learn while all of the kids whose parents are the ones who paid the tax money to pay for all of it have their education completely hampered and stalled out because they're being taught like they're in kindergarten, even though they're in third grade.
And here's the hilarious thing.
That's if you're in the regular classes.
If you want to do the advanced classes, guess what?
They're in Spanish.
No, I'm not kidding.
The advanced placement classes in this elementary school are dual language.
So they're teaching you in Spanish.
My wife was talking to some mothers that was there, and one of the, there's a kid there, probably second, third grade.
And they asked her, like, are you?
And she's like, yeah, I'm in the Spanish class.
And they're like, are you learning anything?
And she goes, well, I don't speak Spanish, so not really.
It's like, okay, so they're teaching science class in Spanish to a bunch of kids who don't speak Spanish.
So they aren't learning Spanish and they aren't learning science.
And that's if you're in the advanced placement class.
They only went in to get out of the class that's been taken over by Pashtun and is teaching kids to speak English even though they're in third grade.
And so it's just like, why would like nobody would do this to themselves.
This is being done to the Americans.
This is an attack on the Americans.
This is hijacking the American system and just giving it to other people who provide nothing, bring nothing, contribute nothing.
What I mean by that is that it would be different.
It'd be very different if there was some Afghan billionaire that was like, I want to contribute to the United States.
I'm going to pay millions of dollars to build our own school there in America.
And then Afghans are going to go there and they're going to have their own place where they can learn English as a second language and they can have Pashtun speakers.
But I'm funding it and I'm providing it.
And, you know, it'll help America because I'll be building things there and creating prosperity there.
At least there you'd have an argument for the ethnic displacement and, you know, demographic change that's going on because at least you're like benefiting from it and the people that are coming in are a positive contribution to your system.
Instead, they weaponize and hijack all of our systems, disadvantage the people that built it and paid for it and who it's for to give away to other people who contribute nothing and instead get jobs with the school provided by the government out of your taxpayer dollar.
It's just an endless drain on our resources.
It's hamstringing and kneecapping our children so that they can't achieve what they should be able to achieve because you're just, you're forcing them to go to school for babies.
You're forcing them to go to school with babies or school for babies.
They're not learning anything and they're just going to achieve nothing.
And it's just, you're just hamstringing and kneecapping all of the Americans that are actually paying for all of this.
Well, the people who've contributed nothing get every benefit we could possibly give them, every advantage they could possibly get.
And like whatever good for them, you know, they should go and try to improve themselves if they want to come to America and contribute.
God bless them, but they can't just come and just be parasites.
It would be very different if this was, you know, some big movement of wealthy people coming to this country to create, you know, to bring their wealth here and contribute to our society.
It's never that.
It's never that.
unidentified
Never that.
harrison smith
Not that there aren't Afghan billionaires.
Of course there are.
They're just not expected to do anything for their people or, you know, shoulder that burden.
That's all on us.
That's on us for some reason.
Some reason it's our responsibility that Cameroon can't get its act together.
unidentified
Cameroon can't get its act together.
harrison smith
Meanwhile, 15 dead, including four children, of malnutrition in Gaza over the past 24 hours, Hamas-run ministry says.
15 people, including four children, have died of hunger and malnutrition in Gaza in the last 24 hours, as reported by the Gaza Health Ministry.
The Gaza Health Ministry stated that 72 people were killed, 367, 76 injured when Israeli attacked during the same period.
Since the ceasefire ended on March 18th, at least 8,268 people have been reported killed in Gaza, with a total of 101 deaths from hunger and malnutrition since the war began.
So they're just starving people to death.
Wonder if they'll resort to cannibalism soon.
It's just, it's like when we talk about all this stuff and just the way that the American people are just screwed over and disadvantaged and hijacked and discriminated against constantly in every different way and how our money,
which is just, you know, a transmutation of energy, it's just our lifeblood, is stolen from us to pay for these programs.
It's just worth re-emphasizing that like the people doing this have no limit to their cruelty.
There's no point at which it'll be like, and now your debt to humanity is paid and we're going to stop disadvantaging you.
This is the end.
This is the end, okay?
This is the end result.
Like, we're still in the early stages.
Like, we still have wealth, we still have prosperity, we still have communities.
Slowly but surely, those are being winnowed away, chipped away at.
But eventually, when these people stay in charge, this is the point that it gets to.
And you can be in a desert surrounded by barbed wire, your children starving to death, and they'll still call you the bad guys.
I just I don't know I I just know, like, especially earlier on, you watch InfoWars, and like it can seem a little blackpilling.
And a lot of the, I think one of the main reasons people sort of like reject the InfoWars message is because it requires you to actually contend with the fact that this level of evil exists out there.
And people just don't want to.
They're just scared.
It's just, it's terrifying to think that our country is run by people that are active participants in something like a campaign of starvation in which over 100 people have died from malnutrition, which is one of the most painful and agonizing deaths you can possibly imagine.
But like you, you got to understand.
You got to realize who these people are.
You have to realize that we're not being hyperbolic.
We're not being panicky.
We're not exaggerating when we say these people want you dead.
They want us dead.
And that they're just endlessly cruel.
Endlessly cruel.
And that there's nothing in them that's going to stop them.
There is no internal mechanism of limitation with these people.
And when they're in positions of power and they fail utterly to provide even semblance of positive effect to the people that they have been appointed by, like it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter.
To them or their constituents, it just doesn't matter.
Their goal is your destruction.
And so when they spend $80 billion on DEI and planes are falling out of the sky, they're not going to pay a price for that.
You would think, you know, in any normal situation, a failure of that magnitude, person in charge would be put to the side.
But like, you get to a point where you have to understand it's not an accident.
That 100 people starving to death, it's not because there's a lack of food.
I think when you understand that, it just...
alex jones
*thud*
harrison smith
I honestly just don't know.
I just don't know what to do about this anymore.
But it is genuinely endless.
At least 15 die of hunger.
As UN says, Gaza aid workers faint from starvation.
And this includes people like journalists.
The AFP organization in Germany is warning that their journalists in Gaza are also under threat of starvation.
AFP warns Gaza journalists face starvation amid ongoing Israeli siege.
23 die of malnutrition across Gaza in two days, say doctors.
Trump administration has announced the United States will leave UNESCO, accusing the UN cultural agency of opposing Israel and promoting what it calls a woke agenda.
According to the New York Post reported on Tuesday, the woke agenda of feeding starving children.
This move falls in 90-day White House review ordered earlier this year, focused on investigating the alleged anti-Israeli sentiment.
Officials reportedly criticized UNESCO's work on diversity, equity, and inclusion, as well as what they described as a bias in favor of Palestinians.
Oh, sure.
unidentified
you Thank you.
It's like, well, well, wait.
harrison smith
They have anti-Israeli sentiment.
You're telling me that the people whose careers and jobs have been dedicated to providing sustenance to poverty-stricken communities don't have fond feelings for the government that is deliberately starving 2 million people?
unidentified
What?
harrison smith
Oh my gosh.
I'm so shocked.
They don't love Israel?
How dare they not love Israel?
How dare the people with the on-the-ground up close and personal experience with Israel's just sickeningly evil actions, how dare they not kiss Israel's feet while Israel starves and bombs and shoots them?
What's wrong with them?
They're so anti-Semitic.
It's that ingrained, it's in their DNA.
And it's like no matter how many times we light their children on fire, they still hate us.
No matter how many times we offer them food only to shoot them in the head for trying to get it, they still don't like us.
And that's just so wrong.
And luckily for, you know, the poor innocent Israelis so subject to this senseless and pointless hatred, luckily the American government is here to make sure that their dislike of you won't go unpunished.
Okay?
So, hey, starving children is a small price to pay to remind people that you're not allowed to dislike Israel.
unidentified
Okay.
harrison smith
At least 43 Palestinians have been killed across Gaza since dawn, according to hospital sources, Al Jazeera Arabic reported.
Doctors say Israeli forces open fire in multiple areas of the strip, with 10 of the dead reportedly gunned down while waiting for food.
That was about an hour ago.
Famine death toll hits 80 101, including 80 children.
Say 80 children have starved to death with 15 deaths in just last 24 hours alone, including four children.
But again, I mean, they don't like Israel, so I think they should have to starve to death.
You know, if you don't love the people bombing you and who killed your whole family, you know, maybe you just need to be starved to death.
I think that's perfectly fair and reasonable, right?
Isn't it, though?
I'm just sick of all this anti-Semitism.
I'm sick of it.
What have the Jews ever done to anybody, ever?
Okay, not one.
You can't think of one thing the Jewish people have ever done to anybody.
I mean, sure, the starvation campaign.
Fine.
All right.
One thing.
The bombing campaign and the general genocide going on there.
Okay, so like two things.
One thing, really, if you think about it.
And like communism and the Middle East wars and the fiat reserve banking and obviously pornography and gay rights and the hijacking of the civil rights movement have left us in this meth, not to mention the fact that they brought the slaves over in the first place.
But like other than that, you know, what have they done to anybody?
Okay.
Leave them alone.
All right.
So they control our whole government with the sex blackmail rings with children.
So what?
So that's fine.
Okay.
That's not bad.
They've done nothing to anybody ever and you're not allowed to dislike them.
Okay.
And if that means you starve to death, yeah, maybe you should think twice next time.
All right?
Just sick of it.
Sick of all this anti-Semitism.
Israel seeks U.S. help on deals to move Palestinians out of Gaza.
Director of Israel's Mossad spy agency visited Washington this week, seeking U.S. help in convincing countries to take hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from Gaza to sources with knowledge of the issue tell Axios.
The spy chief David Barnia told White House envoy Steve Witkoff that Israel has been speaking in particular with Ethiopia, Indonesia, and Libya.
So, you know, good luck, Ethiopia, Libya, and Indonesia.
Israel's government goal of removing much of Gaza's population is hugely controversial.
I mean, I guess if the other option is Israel starves them to death, I guess that's the better option.
Just seems like we're dealing with a cabal of psychopaths here.
And probably the best thing to do for the sake of humanity is next time the Mossad chief visits America is we arrest him.
And I'll leave it at that.
unidentified
Thank you.
harrison smith
Anyway, we have videos to go to.
But I just, I'm just sort of sick of that.
I'm just sort of sick of all this, you know?
You know what I mean?
You know what I'm saying, though?
unidentified
Thank you.
harrison smith
It's like maybe the solution here.
What if we just acted like the Israelis?
It's like I'm kidding.
It's like I'm not even...
You know how evil they are?
Like, I don't even want to make a joke about, like...
But it's just crazy to imagine how responsible we all are for this.
And how our country is being destroyed.
In the support of the country that is starving.
just horrific.
unidentified
All right.
harrison smith
Welcome back, folks.
unidentified
Let's go to clip number four here.
harrison smith
This is Liz Alcock.
She's the head of the humanitarian protection at Medikulpaida.
She describes how desperate the situation has become in Gaza.
We're going to stick on this topic for a little bit.
Here is Liz Alcock describing what exactly it's like in the Jewish slave state.
Let's watch.
unidentified
Exactly.
liz allcock
People are exhausted.
Many people have had to evacuate 10, 11, 12 times.
And the impact for many now is that they won't move simply because they're exhausted.
They're very hungry.
There aren't the resources to be able to move.
And there is nowhere to go.
If they were able to move southwards, it's already oversaturated with people.
There are no humanitarian services that are able to be delivered at the moment in a lot of these areas.
So people are likely to stay put to shelter in place and to therefore be in the firing line, as we've seen with people being killed today, including our own security guard.
unidentified
Liz, the situation has been described as catastrophic for so many months now.
How would you describe it now and crucially, what do you think needs to be done?
What would you like to see done?
liz allcock
I am really lost for words at this point in time.
People ask me how to describe the situation and it's very hard to find the words that do justice to the gravity of the situation for people.
I've been in this response for about a year and a half and I've worked in many places around the world and I've never seen anything like this, given the fact that it could be turned around at any point if the borders were to open, if aid could come in and if there was an immediate and permanent ceasefire and a political solution to provide a sustainable outcome for everybody in the region.
So I know today that the government, foreign secretaries in a number of countries issued a strong statement of condemnation.
And while we welcome this, there have been statements for the last 21 months and nothing's changed.
In fact, things have only gotten worse.
And every time we think it can't get worse, it does.
harrison smith
Every time we think it can't get worse, it does.
That seems like the general sentiment for the last two years, almost at this point, that the retaliation against Gaza has taken place.
Israel, meanwhile, is currently detaining 350 Palestinian children and has detained over 13,000 since 2000, since the year 2000.
And 86% of those children have faced torture, beatings, or solitary confinement.
They're the good guys, right?
And if you don't like them, you have to starve to death.
And it would be one thing, again, if this was just Israel doing their thing and like whatever.
The problem is that they control our country to an extent that's kind of hard to even imagine.
This is from Ail Fimpler.
I'm not even sure how to.
Ail the Empler?
I don't know.
There is, in fact, something we might call Trump's law.
Any action done by Trump is done for the benefit of Israel in some way.
Thus, the attacks on South Africa back in May, which were ostensibly about the ANC's persecution of Afrikaners, were actually because South Africa was the nation that lodged the case for genocide against Israel, the ICJ.
Similarly, just this past week, Trump levied a 45% tariff on Brazil, ostensibly for its persecution of Yera Bolsonaro.
In actuality, it's because Lula accused Israel of premeditated genocide a month ago.
Once you spot this pattern, like understanding how a magic trick works, you will not be able to unspot it.
Trump's law is total.
That's from Academic Agent.
And it's pretty true.
It's pretty true, actually.
If you look at pretty much anything Trump has done, good and bad, it's all for Israel.
There's something I didn't point out with the South Africa thing because I'm just glad the genocide of white farmers in South Africa is getting attention.
But a lot of people were like, this is amazing.
Like, what the hell?
Trump has never stood up for white people.
Why is he doing it now?
Because it's about Israel.
Because it's about putting pressure on South Africa to protect Israel.
It's not about white people.
Welcome back, folks.
We've got a lot more to show you still in the show.
We talk a little bit about immigration and the real purpose behind it.
Hunter Biden also did a crazy interview.
We can go to some clips of that, but honestly, like, who cares what this dude has to say?
I guess we can go through just to sort of take his mindset as an example of what we're dealing with at the highest levels of our country.
But I want to talk about immigration first, I do.
And I think we'll start with a video from Tucker Carlson.
This is clip number eight.
It's just another example of yet another way that our system is operated entirely to the benefit of others to the exclusion of our benefit.
So here's Tucker Carlson talking about just one of 10 million programs explicitly designed to disadvantage the American people in favor of non-American people.
Let's watch.
tucker carlson
Why would we be helping foreign nationals buy in places where there's a housing crisis and the people who are born there can't find a house to live in?
steve robinson
That's only one aspect of how the United States taxpayer is subsidizing this, what's happening here.
About, I would say, a third of the properties in the state of Maine that would go on to become illegal Chinese marijuana grow houses were purchased using mortgages through a program called the Community Development Finance Institution.
It's a designation that you give to banks.
The entire purpose of the program is to help marginalized communities access financing.
The idea is that if you were an immigrant in the 1990s, you couldn't prove regular income.
You had irregular finances and trouble accessing a mortgage.
So they created this special program to take away some of the risk from the lender.
So there's one bank in New York, Quantic Bank, that has the CDFI designation.
and on their website, they advertise that they'll help non-citizens, foreign nationals buy property in the United States.
tucker carlson
This bank advertised on, Why would we be helping foreign nationals buy in places where there's a housing crisis and the people who are born there can't find a house to live in?
And what is going on?
steve robinson
And then why, under COVID, would we supercharge the program with an additional tranche of funding?
Why would we put that program on steroids?
I don't know.
I know, but I know that it was a lot of people.
tucker carlson
You can kill the people because you want to kill and replace the people who populate your country.
Replace them with other people.
Obviously.
alex jones
Yeah.
harrison smith
Yeah, no, there's literally no other reason.
No, there's literally no other reason.
And again, it's not even like you can quantify all of the various advantages that non-Americans accrue.
And again, we've talked about just the various I mean, you've got the TIN program, you've got the grants for non-Americans.
We've talked about the fact that if you're I mean think about this, if you're an Indian immigrant and you want to create a gas station, you're getting at least $200,000 in interest-free loans that Americans are not qualified for don't receive.
Yeah, that is a hell of a lot of money.
It's a hell of a lot of money, and it's just the seed funds for growth and prosperity infinitely.
But it doesn't stop there, right?
There's a number of different factors to this or angles to look at this in.
For one thing, not only are you advantaging non-Americans, thereby disadvantaging Americans, because now they have to compete.
It's a market and they get a $200,000 head start.
So you're disadvantaging Americans, making it harder for them to compete and to start their own business, just by nature of precluding them from advantages that are given to non-Americans.
But that's just one little minor disadvantage.
It's also the fact that that money being given to the non-American is American taxpayer dollars.
So it's also some portion of the money that's stolen from the hardworking, disadvantaged American is funneled to his competition, give him better chance.
The thing is, because every other ethnic group in America is allowed to, I don't even like using that word, but is allowed to have their own ethnic interests and political action committees and all that sort of stuff.
What you're doing is creating a money generating machine for their community so they can further advantage themselves in one way or another.
So you get somebody that comes here from another country.
They're basically given a gas station because that's essentially what it means, right?
Interest-free loans, just grants, gifts.
We've talked about the way that they will then, you know, apply for EBT cards.
And I mean, there have been like multiple scams exposed just in the last few days of Indian like networks that are just scamming the government programs for millions and millions and millions of dollars.
And so they come here, they get given, basically the government is just saying, hey, first year's on us.
First year's on us.
We are covering your overhead for a year.
It's going to cost you nothing.
For a year, you're just raking in pure profits because we're covering all the expenses.
And that, of course, gives them the seed money.
So they're then successful.
They can then have a thriving business.
They're taking in money.
That money's going to their community.
Some's being sent back to their homeland directly and just straight up sent out of the country.
And the rest of it can be contributed to Indian community projects in this country, part of which means you're contributing to politicians who will then go into office, not in order to serve the wider American public, but explicitly as a contingent of your community.
So then they get to go and argue for more immigrants and argue for more benefits and argue for more handouts and more interest-free loans.
And so you create this self-perpetuating system of expropriation and exploiting the American people.
And the question you have to ask is how does this benefit our country at all, even a little bit?
And of course it doesn't, which is why, as Tucker points out, the only reason that you would do this is because you hate the people that you're doing it to and you want them gone in the exact same way that we talked about with the Somalis in Minnesota or anywhere else in this country for that matter, where you've Got communities that are struggling, mostly because of the decisions of the people in Washington to outsource all of their jobs overseas.
So you've got these communities that were once upheld and made prosperous by a factory in their town or a mine or some other blue-collar operation.
Those go away.
The people are struggling.
Instead of doing anything to help the people that are there, instead of doing anything at all to help the people who lost their jobs start small businesses or in some other way deal with the catastrophic effects of the policy decisions they had absolutely no authority over, instead, they bring in hundreds of thousands of Somalis and pay for them to build up their community.
They get all the grants.
They get all the money.
They get all the free stuff.
They get all the businesses created.
They get all the welfare.
They get all the hospitals built for them.
For them, not for the American people who are losing their houses, being foreclosed on because they just got laid off because their boss outsourced the factory to India in the first place.
It's not an accident.
None of this stuff is people trying their best to help America and just oopsie-daisy, everybody's dead.
Like, that's not how this works.
It's all on purpose.
It's all a giant scam screwing you over endlessly.
unidentified
Thank you.
harrison smith
It just goes on and on.
And this is one of those things, right?
Canada is dealing with a surge in thousands of cases of measles, far surpassing the U.S. raw numbers, despite having a much smaller population.
Canadian liberals have no RFK Jr. style figure to place all the blame on.
You can see the number of confirmed measle cases in Canada has skyrocketed to a really kind of unimaginable degree.
And Canada is blaming it on German Mennonites.
As Pagliotschi The Hated says, Canada is experiencing massive measles outbreaks and health authorities are blaming the country's tiny population of German Mennonites.
So they don't have to look at the millions of immigrants flooding in from India, which is a global measles hotspot.
Terminally retarded country.
How Canada became the center of a measles outbreak in North America?
And they point to Mennonites.
Mennonites are a Christian group with roots in the 16th century Germany and Holland who have since settled in other parts of the world, including Canada, Mexico, and the U.S. Some live modern lifestyles, while conservative groups live simpler lives, limiting the use of technology and relying on modern medicine only when necessary.
It must be their fault.
Meanwhile, Yemen, Pakistan, India, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan, these are the countries with the top 10 measles outbreaks, and they also happen to be Pakistan and India, the countries where Canada is receiving millions and millions of imports from.
Do I need to expand on this?
This is why it's this type of stuff that the fact that they would write this article and print this article is kind of evidence of how screwed we are.
That they would write, like, that they have this situation that they want us to think they take seriously, right?
A measles outbreak.
Oh my God, they're horrified at the measles outbreak.
And then they deliberately cover up the actual source of the measles outbreak because their interest, their mission here is not to actually stop the measles outbreak.
You see the measles outbreak and they think, ah, a chance to attack white Europeans.
Even though it's not the cause of the measles outbreak, they have to cover up the negative effects of their policies because they want the policies to continue because they have negative effects.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
The negative effects are the point.
If they wanted to stop the measles outbreak, why would they lie about it?
Why would they try to blame it on Mennonite Germans when they've brought in millions and millions of people from the countries that are measle hotspots?
Because if you knew that the measles outbreak was caused by mass migration, you might not want mass migration anymore.
To them, their superlative goal is to maximize migration.
Nothing else really matters.
The measles outbreak doesn't matter.
It's just a weapon that they need to use.
Or it's a potential vulnerability.
Where instead of actually trying to contend with the fact that this is a negative consequence of their program and trying to make the case like, yeah, look, measles outbreaks are coming back.
Look, we're reviving diseases that we'd ended in this country 100 years ago and they're coming back now because of our migration, but it's worth it because of all the benefits migrants give us.
They can't really make that argument.
They have to try to disguise what is really behind the measles outbreak and not just disguise it, but use it to attack their ethnic enemies.
unidentified
I don't, you know, I just...
harrison smith
It's like completely blackpilling to think that there are people that believe that.
That they're like, we'll read that article and there's like those damn Christian white people.
Now they're causing measle outbreaks.
What's next?
Like they just get it's Just, it's really crazy, man.
It really is crazy that it's, it's a, it's really a constant across everything.
Right?
I mean, this ties perfectly into what I was saying about Pete Buddhaji or whatever.
It's like genuinely shocking how little they actually care about anything at all.
They just don't.
It's just, I don't know, man.
I don't know.
I don't even know what to say anymore.
So Daily Romania on X posted a picture of this beautiful landscape in Romania and wrote, you know what this place needs?
100,000 Bangladeshis.
Romanian government.
Right.
Pointing out the absurdity of these really beautiful, gorgeous places that have thrived in Europe for centuries and the desire of the powers that be to turn them all into Indian slums.
Just as it just makes no sense on the face of it.
But then you get a response to this.
Again, what the post was saying was, in effect, hey, Romania doesn't need 100,000 Bangladeshis.
We're fine.
We're fine, actually.
Actually, we're doing okay.
We've got nice little villages hugged by soaring mountains.
We got people that love each other.
We don't need 100,000 Bangladeshis.
Again, it's just, there's a literal infinite supply of Indians.
Do we understand this?
That a million Indians could be dropped in every continent on earth and there would still be a billion Indians in India.
There's 1.4 billion Indians.
There's 400 million Indians over a billion.
So we don't want a billion Bangladeshis in Romania.
Why would we?
Why would we want Romania to look like this?
Is this a question I even need to ask?
Okay, so the sentiment is not exactly an offensive one.
Hey, our country is nice and has lots of beautiful nature, and we have no reason to bring in 100,000 Bangladeshis.
Okay, pretty normal sentiment, I think, to have as a European.
Now, in response to this, a Bangladeshi says, every time I see these racists cry, it fills my heart with joy.
The more they demean us, the better I feel when their women and children are raped by Packies and Bangladeshis.
Okay.
The more they demean us, the better I feel when their women and children are raped by Pachis and Bangladeshis.
The more they demean us, the better I feel when their children are raped by Pachis and the better I feel when their children are raped by Pachis and the better I feel when their The post wasn't even insulting.
The post isn't even demeaning.
The mere fact that you don't want your country overrun by Indians makes them say your child deserves to be raped by them.
Do you understand the type of people that we're dealing with?
Again, as a white person, maybe this is an aspect of my superiority.
Maybe this is the superiority of whiteness shining through that if some other country took a picture of their landscape and said, we don't need a thousand white people here, my response would not be, I want your wife and children raped by white people for daring to disrespect us by saying you don't want to be around us.
Like that mindset is so deeply evil and objectionable and just anathema.
I can't even wrap my mind around who these people are.
But like that's pretty much like the common sentiment.
Every time I see these racists cry, oh, the Romanians, you know, those white supremacist Romanians, right?
When you think about white supremacy, the Romanians are the one you think about, you know, standing astride the world, right?
Romania is like a dirt poor country.
It doesn't have a lot going for it, but it does have natural beauty.
And it does have, you know, European heritage.
But, you know, none of that actually matters.
They don't actually believe anything.
They just want you dead.
They just want you destroyed.
They just hate you for being who you are and being better than them.
Most of this is just pure like jealousy, envy.
I mean, it transmutes into hatred.
But there's no reason for the hatred, right?
If I just say, I don't want you around me, do I mean I hate you?
Am I insulting you?
I'm not saying I want you not to exist.
I'm not saying I'm going to go to your country and make it like mine.
Nothing offensive or aggressive or anything like that.
It's just, hey, Romania is nice.
We don't need 100,000 Bangladeshis.
And in response to that, it's, I want your child to be raped by a Bangladeshi.
Like, do you understand what I'm trying to say here?
They're like, this is just like, they just say this in public.
They think this makes them righteous and good.
To them, merely excluding them Is basically the equivalent of raping a child.
Like, that's in their mind, that's how they feel.
So, like, you don't, if you've ever needed a reason not to allow 100,000 Bangladeshis into your country, look at how they react when you tell them you don't want 100,000 Bangladeshis in your country.
alex jones
Like, what?
harrison smith
Why would you want them here?
unidentified
Why would you want them here?
harrison smith
Daily Romania responds, just posting this here so you understand what kind of people we will have to deal with in the future.
Quote, if you don't want me in your country, I will be happy when your children and women get raped.
Just posting this so you understand what kind of people we will have to deal with in the future when they're all living in your country.
alex jones
Thank you.
harrison smith
So, again, I don't want Bangladeshis or Pakistani people to have their children raped.
Apparently that's not a dignity they would share with me.
And so at that point, you kind of just have to understand you don't owe these people anything.
And you're really hurting yourself by giving them.
Anything ever for a second here?
Go to clip number six.
Again, especially in Europe, the people that have really paid the price for the migrant program are the white women, the European women who have been brutalized to a really insane degree.
And that is the point of this, right?
I mean, maybe I'm some sort of genius that I figured this out and nobody else could.
But what do you think happens when you bring in millions of military-aged men from Africa and the Middle East to Germany with no women?
No women.
Come along with them.
The dinghies that you see, there's never...
Like, you would think that every once in a while there'd be like a woman that just happened to come along.
But no, you see dinghies, hundreds, thousands of dinghies, these little inflatable boats crossing English Channel.
And there's never a woman on them.
So what do you think the purpose of that is?
What do you think is driving their motivation to leave their women behind and go to Europe?
Point being that the reason the migration crisis is happening is to target white women.
It is a biological attack against them.
And it's sort of a pincer attack in a way.
I don't know how to describe it, but they have actually indoctrinated the women of Europe into this idea that to be a good person, they have to welcome their victimizers.
In order to be on the right side politically, you have to actually be in favor of the importation of your rapist.
You've really done a number on these people.
Luckily, some have seen this and have the confidence and outspokenness to actually reference what we can all see with our own eyes.
Let's see.
Can we find a woman?
Can we find a single woman?
This is a video of several dinghies arriving in the UK.
I've not seen a single woman yet.
Any women on this trip?
Oh, wait.
Is that a woman there?
I see one.
Oh, two.
Three.
I see three women.
Okay, well, there's one.
No, I see one.
Two.
I saw two.
Okay, there's a crowd of about 500 people.
I saw two women.
Okay.
unidentified
Two women.
harrison smith
So.
Anyway, let's go to this clip now.
Clip number six, the threat of mass immigration towards women and girls is real.
It is, in fact, the entire point of the immigration program, try to breed Europeans out of existence.
No joke, no exaggeration.
That's literally what it is.
That is why you have instances where you have, even just the last week or so, there have been multiple instances of, you know, Afghan men raping a 15-year-old German girl and given no jail time and let out completely,
literally, absolutely scot-free because they said the fact that he's a migrant really made him stressed.
He didn't know that he's not supposed to rape people.
So sure, some little girl had to have her psychological security shattered and traumatized for life and violated in ways we can only imagine.
She'll probably never feel safer or be able to engage in intimacy, maybe ever again, but certainly for years as she deals with the trauma of this.
But you know what?
The guy was angry.
So, you know, too bad.
So too bad, girl.
Too bad, German girl.
You're just a sacrificial offering on the altar of multiculturalism.
And so the guy just gets let out.
Just, that's it.
Not even like, you know, sometimes they'll be like, well, they'll put him in jail for a year, just as sort of a symbolic thing.
But no, in this case, just let him out.
By the way, the same judge who let the guy out for raping the 15-year-old also threw a 97-year-old man in prison because he was a guard at a Nazi camp when he was 17 years old at the end of the war.
Okay, so this is the progressive liberal mindset.
And just understand, it has like they're operating in a moral framework, which is there.
There's no even trace or hint of things that you would typically associate with a moral framework.
Things like justice, things like fairness, things like consistency.
To me, these things are sort of incumbent.
They're necessary to have a moral framework.
You have to actually even just pay lip service to things like justice.
Like these, these higher concepts have to be here too.
They don't.
That never even enters into their mind.
never even enters into their mind.
They just, and look, whether like they even realize or not, there's like programmed Pavlovian almost to just like they just want to destroy white people.
And that's what all of their actions are predicated towards.
Because it doesn't make any sense.
Like, so she has sympathy for, this judge woman has sympathy for a migrant.
She so empathizes with him that she's like, man, if I was a migrant, I'd be so confused.
I'd be so scared of living in this white supremacist country that I would just rape a girl.
And, you know, how mean would it be to then punish that person for doing something he doesn't even understand?
They almost treat immigrants like babies, like maybe this is the motherly instinct being misaligned, or like dogs, like animals.
Where it's like you feel cruel punishing an animal when like they don't even know what they did was wrong, right?
So that's how they feel.
They feel like it's cruel to punish this poor, innocent person who didn't even know he was doing anything wrong.
That's how well they emphasize with some middle-aged Afghan raping a 15-year-old German girl.
Now, I have no sympathy for any migrant in Germany at all in any possible way.
And in a way, you could say that's because I respect them.
It's because I don't treat them like animals or babies.
They're adult human beings.
When they do something wrong, they should be treated like competent adult human beings because that's what they are.
I don't treat them like babies.
But I have absolutely no sympathy for them at all, even a little bit.
And frankly, I think if one Afghan rapes a German girl, all of the Afghans in Germany should be expelled.
Kind of medieval in that way.
But it only makes sense.
And it's the way other countries do things all the time.
It's the way we used to do things, but not really anymore.
So I have no sympathy for them.
But when it comes to a 17-year-old in 1945, I can only imagine being a 10-year-old in Weimar, Germany.
I can only imagine growing up in your formative years, being inducted into the Hitler youth, watching as your friends and family are sent off to the front line to die, watching your cities be firebombed and utterly destroyed and your entire communities turned into ash.
And to again grow up entirely, your entire conscious life, your education, your spirituality, all of it being dictated to you by a totalitarian government.
And at 17 years old, being forcibly conscripted into the armed forces, being forced to stand guard some Godforsaken death camp on some frontier somewhere,
only for 80 years later, some dumb bitch judge to throw you in jail because of what you did when you were 17, which was nothing, which was nothing, which was stand guard as a soldier because you had to, because they would kill you if you didn't.
See, she has no empathy for him.
Not even a modicum of sympathy for the 97-year-old man who has a child, was forced to be a soldier for the Nazis.
He gets the book thrown at him.
He gets sent to prison.
At 97 years old, he's sent to prison for years.
But the migrant who rapes a 15-year-old, well, he can't be held to account for that.
So I don't know.
Is there anybody listening to my voice that would look at those two decisions and go, yep, that's it.
Yeah, German court has convicted a 97-year-old ex-secretary at a Nazi camp.
There's a guy, too.
This is the story of the woman.
There was a guy they did too, too.
No, this is what they do.
They're going around Germany rounding up the 97-year-olds and throwing them in prison because they were guards at concentration camps 80 years ago against their will.
It's like there's no there's this is what I mean when I say like there's no like justice doesn't enter into this.
It's not even a remote consideration for these people.
It's just it's just sort of basic hatred, like just do what you can when you can to hurt your enemies.
And that's that.
alex jones
Thank you.
Thank you.
harrison smith
Did we even go to clip number six yet?
Let's go to it.
unidentified
Let's talk about how the far right weaponize women's sexual trauma is a way to push far-right white supremacists and racist views.
No, let's talk about people like you, self-declared feminists that choose to ignore and quite clearly mock the cries of a nation that is quite literally about to implode.
The bully tactic of calling us all racist, far-right, extremists simply bounces straight off us and only proves that you actively choose to twist and manipulate a movement that is based on the unity and strength of the British people despite what we have been subject to for the past however many decades.
But they don't talk about the real issues harming women.
They don't talk about the patriarchy and they don't talk about rape culture.
Well they don't talk about misogyny.
Instead they create this boogeyman of an immigrant man coming and raping everyone.
You claim that rape culture and the patriarchy simply are not spoken about.
Well how about acknowledge that those crossing the channels do come from real patriarchal cultures that dismiss women as lesser than and treat them as such.
You made the entire premise of your video about how immigrant men are demonised and wrongly targeted despite knowing what we all know about migrant hotels up and down the country and yet you want to lecture us on what misogyny is.
I'll tell you what misogyny is.
It's staring you straight in the face but you are too swept up in your grandstanding to even see this.
If you seriously think demanding the protections and safety for women and girls in the UK is pushing an agenda then you have got a lot to learn.
Real feminism rejects everything you say.
Real feminism stands up in the face of threat.
harrison smith
And look, I'm glad there are these European women standing up for this stuff now.
I think couching it in the language of the left is not necessarily productive.
It's not feminism that protects women.
No, feminism is led directly to all of like the concept of feminism is why we're in the position that we're in.
I don't know, this idea of like the real feminists are against migration.
It's like, nah, not really.
Not really.
Feminism is like a spiritual cancer that is destroying your countries and leads to things like mass migration since it's primarily women that are behind these movements.
And if women didn't have political agency, men would not let a million African men into their countries to rape their women.
For some reason, women allow that.
It's bizarre, but that's just how it is.
That's just the case.
So, I don't know, this idea of like the real feminists, it's like, no.
The real patriarchy protects their women.
You want patriarchy, actually.
Actually, if you're in patriarchy, you wouldn't be allowed to vote for your own destruction.
You'd be protected by the men.
So it's not real feminism to want to stop migration.
It's real nationalism.
Nationalism protects women.
Patriarchy protects women.
The family protects women.
The Western ideal protects women.
Christianity protects women.
Feminism destroys women.
It only destroys women.
It only leads to more policies that literally physically destroy women, as well as just the concept of womanhood.
Let's go to clip number five here, because it's not just Europe this is happening.
This is America as well.
And again, the purpose of a system is what it does.
If the people in power are bringing in a million foreigners to rape white women, then they're bringing in a million foreigners to rape white women.
It's not an accident.
alex jones
Okay?
harrison smith
Here's Stephen Miller.
stephen miller
Can you imagine getting a lecture on public safety from the party that has let child rapists and murderers into this country en masse?
Do you have any idea how many little girls have been maimed and raped and killed by the illegal aliens that they let into our country, that they gleefully allowed into our nation?
And they want to lecture us on public safety?
They have destroyed the lives of countless thousands of Americans.
And today, Democrats run sanctuary cities that protect and shield illegal aliens who have committed the most heinous crimes from deportation.
In every one of these cases, look at the case right here.
Right here.
This CPP officer, his assailant was arrested and released.
Arrested and released.
Arested and released because Democrat policies shield these monsters from deportation by purpose and by design.
Their policies are evil.
They are intentional.
They are malicious.
They hate this country and they want our people to suffer and they have turned migration into a weapon.
And when ICE and Border Patrol go out and conduct these raids, what do they find?
Trafficked and enslaved children.
They find offenders with rap sheets that go from here to the other side of the country.
State after state, a trail of blood and suffering.
And ICE and Border Patrol are getting these monsters out of our country, getting these predators out of our communities.
Under President Trump's leadership, murder rates are finally falling because these people are being sent home.
harrison smith
At least Stephen Miller seems to be taking the well-being of the American people seriously.
We've got some more breaking news here.
DOJ seeks Ghislaine Maxwell meeting.
A top Department of Justice official said Tuesday that he intends to meet soon with Ghislaine Maxwell, the British socialite serving a 20-year prison term for her role in Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking enterprise to ask her what do you know about other potential sex abusers?
The extraordinary announcement by Deputy Attorney John Todd Blanche comes after weeks of controversy and criticism of the Trump administration for recently reneging on promises to make public more details of investigative files about the late money manager Epstein and Maxwell.
And we have this.
House Oversight Committee subpoenas Ghislaine Maxwell for deposition.
The House Oversight Committee unanimously approved a subpoena for the convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell on a surprise move Tuesday morning.
The powerful committee subpoenaed the Jeffrey Epstein Associate for a deposition by voice vote after Republican Tennessee Representative Tim Burchett introduced a motion.
The move follows Attorney General Pam Bondi's announcement that she requested a meeting with Maxwell Tuesday to press her for additional information related to the deceased sex predator.
Okay.
What, guys, what do you think that she's going to say?
This is nonsense.
This is nonsense.
So they're withholding terabytes of data from Jeffrey Epstein.
CDs and DVDs and hard drives and computers and documents and folders and photographs, security camera footage, lists of associates, flight logs, visitor logs, communications, emails, telephone calls.
They're not releasing that.
They have all that information.
They know everybody that he was involved with.
They know everything that he did.
Jeffrey Epstein filmed it, and our government collected all of the data.
So why do we need to talk to Ghislaine Maxwell?
What exactly is the purpose of this?
This is a hoax.
You want to talk about the Jeffrey Epstein hoax?
It's this idea that we need to talk to anybody to learn the truth about it.
Just released the files.
Again, what is Glene Maxwell going to tell anybody about anything?
First of all, she's a massage operative.
She's a liar.
You shouldn't listen to her anyway.
She's only there to muddy the water.
But fine.
Fine.
They'll ask her questions they already know the answers to.
This is from Todd Blanche.
The Department of Justice does not shy away from uncomfortable truths, nor from the responsibility to pursue justice wherever the facts may lead.
The joint statement by the DOJ and FBI on July 6th remains as accurate today as it was when it was written, namely that in the recent thorough investigation or review of files maintained by the FBI in the Epstein case, no evidence was uncovered that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties.
President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence.
If Gill Lane Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against the victims, the FBI and DOJ will hear what she has to say.
Therefore, at the direction of Attorney General Pam Bondi, I have communicated with counsel for Ms. Maxwell to determine whether she would be willing to speak with prosecutors from the department.
I anticipate meeting with Ms. Maxwell in the coming days.
Until now, no administration on behalf of the department had inquired about her willingness to meet with the government.
That changes now.
Again, I mean, who cares?
Honestly, who cares?
They have all of the files.
They have all the documents.
They're not releasing them, but they're interviewing Ghislaine Maxwell.
alex jones
Yeah.
Thank you.
harrison smith
I don't know.
Am I wrong?
I mean, is anybody excited for this?
Oh my God, the sex trafficking lesbian pimp is going to talk.
Oh, my goodness.
Literally, who cares?
Honestly.
We got some more reports here, but it's all nonsense.
You know, maybe we need to go through all of Trump's accomplishments and see if we can't do.
You know, it's almost like the five degrees of Kevin Bacon or whatever, where it's like, is it true that we can just absolutely everything that Trump has done, we can relate to being for Israel?
So obviously we got the story about Trump pulling the U.S. out of UNESCO.
And they talk about DEI policies, pro-Palestinian, pro-China tilt.
Just like, well, it's for Israel.
It's because UNESCO is helping Palestinians who Israel is trying to starve to death.
So in order to allow the starvation to continue, Trump is pulling support from UNESCO.
South Africa thing is another one.
I mean, even stuff like putting real sugar in Coke is because the high fructose corn syrup isn't kosher.
Do y'all know that?
So even the good stuff that's like Trump got Coke to replace high fructose corn syrup with sugar.
It's like, wow, because he cares about our health.
It's like, wow, not really.
It's because it wasn't kosher before.
Now it's kosher.
Is there anything?
Is there anything he's done that isn't at the end of the day for the Jewish lobby?
And of course, the answer is no, because anything that he has done that's positive, not directly for them, is just to give him a disguise.
unidentified
That star-studded Concert that raised $100 million for wildfire victims.
But where did all that money go?
Investigative journalist Sue Pasco has been digging for answers, and what she's discovered might just surprise you.
And Sue Pasco, she joins me now live on set.
You are the editor of Circling the News.
We can clearly see that.
Thanks for the work that you're doing.
So this is personal and professional for you because you lost your home in the Palisades fire.
But that's not necessarily how this story landed in your lap.
How did this all come to be?
sue pascoe
A reader sent me a little note and said, I've never seen any fire aid money.
How do I apply for fire aid money?
And I thought, well, you know, I've never thought about that.
There's 12,000 people, basically, 12,000 homes gone.
Those people probably want to know where the money is.
This will be an easy task to find out.
So I contacted the Annenberg.
They never responded.
And the Annenberg Foundation, because they are overseeing the wildfire funds, yes.
So I emailed them several times.
They never responded.
I called them several times.
They never responded.
And finally, it was like almost two weeks later, a woman got back to me and she said, oh, I'm sorry for the delay.
The person you need to speak to is Chris Wallace.
He's a media spokesperson for wildfire funds.
So I contacted Chris and I said, you know, victims want to know when they can get their money.
Seems like a very simple question.
He said, basically, they don't.
All this money are going to nonprofits, and then nonprofits will take care of making sure the money's distributed.
So I looked at the, initially they gave $50 million to about 120 nonprofits.
And I looked at these nonprofits and one of them said, we help mobile home parks.
And there were two mobile home parks in the Palisades, all low income.
And so I contacted the people there.
They had never received any money.
They had never heard of that.
When you go through, I would urge everyone to just go to the nonprofits that are listed.
If you want a good laugh, I mean, one of the nonprofits cleans preschool bathrooms.
Well, after the fire, who knows?
Maybe there is a preschool bathroom that needs cleaning.
unidentified
Yeah.
In other words, a lot of these nonprofits are ancillary, if you will.
sue pascoe
That's a nice way of saying it.
unidentified
And you urge people, our viewers, they can go on the FireAid website.
And yes, in terms of if you're FireAid, you can say, we have listed all the nonprofits.
So they've given out $75 million so far.
And you can see for yourself each nonprofit that has received money.
The vetting process, though, that's an interesting angle to this story as well, because there's still another round of funding that will be given out.
If you're a nonprofit, you would just have to fill out a simple, very simple questionnaire.
sue pascoe
Six questions.
Six questions.
unidentified
So what do you make of the vetting process?
sue pascoe
I think they're not helping the victims at all.
Let's just say, and the other thing you should know, if you go on there, they don't say how much each individual nonprofit gets.
So there are two nonprofits that are for the homeless people in the Palisades, or not the Palisades, Los Angeles in general, that they're getting money from from LASA.
So why are these nonprofits also getting money from FireAid?
I don't know.
They're homeless nonprofits.
Of course, we're all homeless now.
unidentified
And to be clear, we have reached out to actually the Attorney General, Rob Bonta, to see if this is on his radar, because this is a whole lot of money, and you are well connected in your community, and you don't know anybody who has received fire money.
sue pascoe
That's correct.
unidentified
So what is your advice if you're a victim, and there are several who are probably watching tonight, who lost their home like yourself, where do you go from here?
sue pascoe
Hopefully with people like you who are bringing it to the attention of America, really, because we have all these people I know in the Midwest, where I'm from, who said, we want to give money, where do we give it?
How can we help the people?
This fiery money is not helping the people.
It's helping nonprofits, many of them who have executives that are getting a six-figure salary.
The money is not going to the victims that you wanted the money to go to.
unidentified
Yeah, you make a great point because a lot of people, this was an international story.
And a lot of people gave, people who really couldn't afford to give money, they had spent their $20 right.
Where's that money going?
sue pascoe
Right.
Exactly.
unidentified
All right.
Well, if you want to follow Sue's reporting, you can do so.
Again, this is at circlingthenews.com.
This is a production of the U.S. Department of State.
harrison smith
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.
This is the American Journal.
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined in studio today by Stuart Rhodes.
Stuart Rhodes is, of course, a former attorney and the founder of the original Oath Keepers organization.
He was persecuted by the Biden administration for his role in the January 6th protest.
His sentence, of course, was commuted by President Trump in July of 20 or January rather of 2025.
Now, usually, Stuart, when you're here, we're talking about politics.
We're either talking about your case or just what's happening in the wider political spectrum.
But today, you're here to talk about the flooding in Texas earlier this month on July 4th weekend.
The cleanup is still going on.
They're still finding dead bodies.
There's still a major relief mission going on.
Welcome to the show, sir, and tell us what's the latest with the Texas flood recovery mission.
stewart rhodes
Right after it happened, I was contacted by Doc Chambers, an organization, the Remnant Ministries, and they asked for my help bringing in volunteers because I've done like 14 hurricane relief missions with Oathkeepers and bringing in volunteers.
harrison smith
That's what you all did.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, I put a call to action out on Facebook, and we got a lot of folks coming in.
Search and rescue qualified medics and doctors and nurses and just the whole divers.
We got one Navy diver, recovery diver came in and did his work, and then dogs with dog handlers.
So we jumped right in, and we're doing search and rescue right after the event.
And hopefully, we had hoping to find live survivors, and sadly, we're not able to find any live survivors.
And it turned into recovery, you know, covering of the remains to bring the family some closure.
So we were there in the Creerville area up and down the Guadalupe River Valley, and now we're in Leander.
Because Leander got hit pretty Hard too.
A lot of people don't realize that, but Leander got pretty smoked.
harrison smith
Yeah, I was actually just reading an account from somebody in Leander whose parents passed away.
They were in an RV and got swept away.
And his account was about just the utter failure of the specifically the county government in actually deploying search and rescue.
And I mean, basically, the way he describes it is it was entirely the volunteers.
It was, you know, people showing up with their own heavy equipment to move stuff around.
And I mean, he was very, very disappointed with the reaction from the county, you know, talking about reporting that his parents were missing and they just, they never got on any list and nobody was ever looking for him.
He eventually found his parents' bodies himself.
Really, just so many tragic stories out of this.
What was your experience with the government response here?
stewart rhodes
Well, I mean, we were out on the ground and we would run in contact with search and rescue brought in from other areas, volunteer fire.
We were actually working under the banner of a local fire marshal and his guys.
And so they're good.
The first responders are good.
It's the bureaucracy above them that's usually the problem when it comes to fast relief.
And so on the ground, it does tend to be the local first responders get overwhelmed.
And that's why they have to have, like with Hurricane Harvey, Governor Abbott realized there just weren't enough first responders.
Even though they brought in search and rescue from all nearby states, still wasn't enough.
So he asked for, did a public appeal for Cajun Navy to come across with their boats.
And they showed up this time too.
And like you said, just other rank and file, just average Joe is showing up with their excavators and their skid steers and their bulldozers and pitching in and helping.
And same for search and rescue.
We worked with a great volunteer search and rescue team, Battle to Be, really, really squared away, really well-trained search and rescue.
They showed up.
There's a lot of small volunteer organizations like that that show up in the first week.
That's been the pattern across all the things I've ever seen in hurricane relief and the flood's no different.
So you wind up with average Joes helping in and then small groups that come in.
That's what they do.
They respond.
harrison smith
And of course, this is an ongoing mission.
This is not over by any means.
There are still missing people out there.
They're trying to find.
I think the official count is there are about three people that they know are still missing.
I know you've got to do it.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, absolutely.
Because all along the river valleys, and not just the Guadalupe, but all the tributaries, people are camped out in the summer.
And you get transients, you get homeless people down there.
There are folks down there that they don't check into a campsite.
They just pull up and pitch a tent.
harrison smith
Don't even necessarily have friends or family that know where they are.
So they could just be missing and nobody would even know.
stewart rhodes
They're still finding buried vehicles that have been buried in the mud.
So I think the death toll in the end would be much higher if they actually count them all.
So that's the problem.
harrison smith
They may not want to give us a real number.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, I'm suspicious of official numbers.
harrison smith
Yeah.
Well, but why is that?
Why are you suspicious of official numbers?
Have you heard?
stewart rhodes
CYA, bureaucrats don't want to admit that.
I mean, look, this was a catastrophic failure.
Like with the children camps, especially, I've got, you know, like we were taught in the Army, what's the effective range of an excuse?
Zero meters.
harrison smith
Right.
stewart rhodes
I don't want to hear any excuses about, well, this was, you know, an act of God and no one knew it would get that high.
They had a bad flood in 87.
They had one back in 1978, I believe.
And they had a really bad one in 1921.
So there's a pattern of flooding in the Guadalupe River Valley.
And it's just a reality of flash floods.
And so I don't think children should be sleeping in a camp site next to the river at all.
They can go down there to swim and stuff during the day, but at night, they should be sleeping up top.
harrison smith
And I was just telling you, it happened to me where one time, it may have been on the Guadalupe.
I was at a youth crew.
It was actually, it was, it was right near Kerrville.
And, you know, in the middle of the night, we woke up and our tents were floating.
I mean, there was like water under the tents.
And it can happen really fast.
And you don't, you know, luckily we were able to get out, but it could have been really bad.
And, you know, by the time, by the time the sun rose in the morning, I mean, our campsite was unrecognizable.
It was all underwater.
So, I mean, it can happen really fast.
And it's really not an out-of-the-ordinary thing.
I've been to Kerrville three times in my life, and twice it flooded when I was there in Kerrville.
So it's not an out-of-the-ordinary thing.
And the Camp Mystic in particular, where so many people, so many little girls passed away, they actually rezoned it.
I have the article here.
FEMA removed dozens of Camp Mystic buildings from 100-year flood map before expansion.
Camp Mystic in Kerr County lost at least 27 campers, counselors and owner Dick Eastland in historic floodwaters before dawn on July 4th, 2025.
The camp was located in a known flood-prone area called Flash Flood Alley and repeatedly sought and received FEMA map amendments removing dozens of buildings from the 100-year flood hazard zone since 2011.
So basically, it should have been no buildings there because it should have been a flood zone, but FEMA removed the flood designation, and so they were able to build there, and it eventually led to this tragedy.
stewart rhodes
That's the request of the camp owner.
harrison smith
Right.
So I think FEMA's got blood on their hands here, too.
stewart rhodes
Well, the state of Texas needs to take responsibility.
Whatever FEMA's doing is one thing, but Texas should do their own assessments on flood risk.
So like I said, I don't really care who wants to point fingers at who.
All I know is that those children were not protected and were not given the ability to self-rescue.
I really believe they shouldn't be sleeping down there at all.
They can go down during the day and recreate by the river and then at night sleep up top.
But if you're going to have camps down there, they need the ability to self-rescue.
And I've got pictures I gave you folks about, there's some local ranchers had steps going up to their home on the hill, and they've got concrete steps with steel guardrails, which is what you can walk up in the middle of a rainstorm.
You can still get traction on that and walk up.
That's what they need.
We found deer up in the trees like 25 feet up, dead deer.
So they weren't able to escape up the slippery river banks at times to escape the flood.
How is a child going to do that?
It's not going to happen.
And you can't just, you know, you can't have how many kids, 80 kids at a camp?
How are you going to get them out of there in vehicles in time?
You're not going to be able to get down there with buses and a caravan of vehicles.
They need the ability to self-rescue upsteps.
harrison smith
I think we have some of the pictures.
I don't know if we can show these.
Was there a video you want to show?
stewart rhodes
That's a Volkswagen bug.
That's right.
unidentified
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
Sandy Creek.
That's a big Sandy Creek.
That was a vehicle that got crushed and washed downstream.
unidentified
Wow.
harrison smith
And for our radio viewers, I mean, it's unrecognizable.
It just looks like a mangled mess of metal.
It just shows you the power that these storms can hold.
And obviously, well, for people who want to help, there's a Gibbson Go.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, so Buck Up Relief is the organization that's assisting Doc Chambers and all of us with, They just brought in two truckloads of supplies yesterday, and they're helping us out.
They got us radios.
They're really an awesome organization.
So if folks want to go to Buck Up Relief and donate, that'd be the best place they can send money that will actually be used for the right purpose.
I would not recommend giving money to the Red Cross, frankly.
harrison smith
Let's talk about that.
So buckupreliefmission.net, buckupreliefmission.net.
And there's a Gives and Go Buck Up Relief Mission that you can find there.
It is.
So Buck Up Relief Mission on GiveSyngo or Buckup Relief Mission.net is how you can get a lot of money.
stewart rhodes
I think they're GIFS and Go.
It's just gifts and go.com forward slash buck up.
harrison smith
Okay.
Forward slash buck up.
So if you want to help, there's still volunteers out there searching for people, finding bodies.
There was a body found yesterday.
Why do you tell people not to give to the Red Cross?
stewart rhodes
Well, I mean, the Red Cross has been bringing billions of dollars, and yet in all the work I've ever done, I've seen one Red Cross truck.
Now, I didn't go into Kerrville itself.
It's just a swarm of feds.
We just stayed out of there.
We went and worked all the outlying areas.
So there's probably a Red Cross truck there.
What I've heard from other first responders, when they call up Red Cross and ask, are you doing this?
The answer is no.
Are you doing that?
The answer is no.
So what are they actually doing?
And it turns out what they'll do is refer you to somebody else.
We call them to ask for what can you do?
They refer you to someone else.
So what I see from Red Cross is just a bureaucratic, top-heavy boondoggle, frankly.
It brings in millions.
It's like FEMA.
You get a lot of money being thrown around, but it never reaches the bottom.
harrison smith
Right.
And it doesn't actually help anybody that actually needs it.
And again, I mean, the stories out of this are just absolutely horrifying.
I've been in floods.
It's, you know, a certain point, I just, I try to imagine what it's like when you feel, you know, your house lift from its foundations and start to float.
It's like, you know, what do you do at that point?
Because the water is so insane.
You can't go in the water.
You can't stay in your house.
You're just screwed.
unidentified
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
That's why there needs to be alarms, but they also, like I said, if there's campsites, if you're going to run a campsite down next to the river, they need the capacity of self-rescue.
Otherwise, don't have it down there.
harrison smith
You probably need evacuation drills.
stewart rhodes
Sure.
Just like fire drills or just like school fire drills?
Absolutely.
The kids and the camp, the camp who run the camp should have drills that are taught, here's where the steps are.
They should be well lit at night, you know, with emergency lighting.
And they also have to have robust communication.
Every one of them should have a starlink or something that they can always make sure they have cell service.
harrison smith
Yeah, or at least Wilwalkie-Talkies to communicate with a central command somewhere or something, right?
stewart rhodes
Right, something.
And here's the other wrinkle is that on July 2nd, according to the Austin Firefighters Association, they're tearing their chief apart, saying that he did not respond when requested for mutual aid.
But the request for mutual aid, according to them, came in on July 2nd.
So on July 2nd, Texas notified all the area, apparently, notified all the area fire departments that, hey, we may need you for mutual aid.
Well, if they're doing that in preparation for a possible flood, why not contact the camps and say, if there's a possible flood coming, you need to make sure the kids are not sleeping down next to the river.
harrison smith
So they knew that there was a threat two days before.
stewart rhodes
Apparently.
That's what the Austin Fire Department men are saying.
The Fire Department, the Firefighters Association of Austin is saying that.
On July 2nd, word came from the state, be prepared for mutual aid.
And they're upset with their chief because their chief only assigned like three rescue swimmers to go down and help.
And they wanted to have more of a response.
But I'm wondering what was in that July 2nd move from the state.
harrison smith
And why there was no public announcement of any sort.
unidentified
Right.
stewart rhodes
So if you have a possible threat, this is a problem when you got businesses dependent on tourism and they don't want to rock the boat or scare away the clientele.
This is a potential problem.
harrison smith
Wow.
But I mean, that's like, I don't know.
It seems like criminal negligence.
I mean, you know a threat is coming, but you do nothing to warn the public.
stewart rhodes
You don't tell the public until the night of the alarms are going off like in the middle of the night, right?
harrison smith
Right.
stewart rhodes
Where there were alarms.
harrison smith
Oh, my God.
stewart rhodes
Right.
harrison smith
Yeah, it's just, it's just horrifying.
If the crew can print that story out for me, I would like to go over that because I really haven't talked much about these floods because I was out of town the week that they happened.
And so we haven't talked much about like the cloud seeding aspect of it either.
And I know that is a big topic of conversation because this is an instance where they admitted they were cloud seeding days before this happened.
stewart rhodes
Rainmaker, I think they said they were cloud seeding on either July 2nd or 3rd.
harrison smith
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
Right.
harrison smith
Which obviously, you know, cloud seeding is going to affect the entire climate for the duration.
unidentified
Right.
harrison smith
How could it not?
Right.
stewart rhodes
So they're called Rainmaker, and they're trying to bring more rain, but then when they get a catastrophic flood, well, our cloud seeding had nothing to do with that.
harrison smith
Yeah, how could it not?
I mean, it had to contribute to it.
Maybe it didn't cause it outright, but like...
Yeah.
I would think it would have to.
And it'd be one thing if he was saying, well, the month before we cloud seed, it's like, okay, fine.
Yeah, that probably didn't.
But two days before, yeah, that's going to have an effect.
stewart rhodes
So they have the CEO of Rainmaker on The War Room with Bannon on Glenn Beck's show.
She's running all over the place doing the circuit to say that, oh, we had nothing to do with it.
So I think that'll death protest too much.
harrison smith
Yeah, it's suspicious.
It's very suspicious.
And I mean, the storm as it existed was bizarre.
It was this, I think they were calling it like a land hurricane, but you basically just had this red spiral just spinning over this one area for hours and hours and hours.
It looked completely unnatural.
stewart rhodes
That's how one rancher described it.
We talked to a local rancher or landowner there.
We were going up and down the river on his property looking for bodies.
And he said that.
He's like, hey, it was like a land hurricane.
Like other storms that roll through.
This one just stayed and stayed and stayed and kept dumping water on them.
harrison smith
That's just wild.
stewart rhodes
He's never seen anything like that before.
So that's what's suspicious about it.
I mean, the reality is flash floods happen.
Like I grew up in Nevada and Arizona.
Flash floods happen.
People die all the time.
Even in Las Vegas, on the city streets, there's certain places you can't go when it's flooding and people just try to drive through there.
They don't realize how powerful that water is.
And they're drowned.
So it happens.
But when you have a land hurricane like that, right after they deceded, that should be investigated.
Because here's another issue.
A lot of the homeowners, their insurance companies, are telling them that, well, this is an act of God.
So we're not going to cover you.
Well, if it turns out to not have been an act of God, but instead of act of man, you know, Rainmaker, now those insurance companies would be on the hook.
So, of course, they don't want that to come out.
So, I'm just saying, people need to be aware that there is big money behind a possible cover-up and assisting Rainmaker in covering up because they also don't want to be on the hook.
harrison smith
Yeah, and I guess they would be.
I mean, do you think they're not the only ones doing this type of activity?
I wonder if they just it's like it's weird that they're public about it now.
Like, it's weird that we're looking at the contract out there everyone can look at.
stewart rhodes
They're contracted to do that here in Texas.
They can't hide it.
So now they got to get ahead of it.
They got to draw the sting by getting ahead of it, going out there and do some PR.
I just think it's suspicious.
I mean, I can't prove it, but hey, it should be investigated.
And those who can prove it should go and get to the bottom of it.
harrison smith
Absolutely.
AccuWeather estimates Texas floods will cost at least $18 billion Hill Country tragedy crank among the most expensive in recent state history.
And of course, there was a catastrophic flooding last year in North Carolina where the hurricane made it all the way up the coast and you had catastrophic floods then.
I mean, what do you think?
Do you think it's just because we're manipulating the weather too much and just aren't doing it in a responsible way?
Or is this just, or is it climate change, Stuart?
Do you think we need to stop eating meat or do you think we need to stop deliberately seeding the clouds?
Which do you think will have better effects?
unidentified
Oh, thank God.
harrison smith
Yeah, right.
stewart rhodes
Stop messing with the weather.
It's an ecosystem.
I mean, they should know that, right?
They're always yelling at us about the ecosystem.
harrison smith
You would think.
stewart rhodes
So when you start screwing with one part of the ecosystem, you're going to have unintended consequences or potentially intended consequences somewhere else.
harrison smith
And you're not actually creating the weather, right?
You're just manipulating it.
So any water that falls because of the cloud seeding is water that would have fallen somewhere else, but instead falls there.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, they're focusing on this one area on purpose.
harrison smith
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
But then when the flood happens, well, that wasn't us.
harrison smith
Couldn't have been.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, it couldn't have been.
harrison smith
And it's just, I don't know, man.
It's just the amount of water that fell and seeing the videos we were just showing where, I mean, it genuinely looks like this hurricane just pops up in the middle of Texas and just sort of self-generates there for a while.
It seems impossible in just natural weather patterns that this would happen.
stewart rhodes
Right.
But even if, so, of course, what they'll say is this was a freak accident, 100-year flood, but there have been other floods in the past.
So I think the Texas officials need to take it seriously.
And they're talking about putting back in a warning system they used to have that they let atrophy.
They're talking about putting back in a warning system.
But in addition to warning systems, they need to have evacuation plans.
And like I said, there should be the ability to self-rescue.
In the middle of a rainstorm, when you got roads flooding out, to get buses in to pick the kids up and bring them back out, it takes too long.
They need to build a self-rescue.
So I hope, that's why I'm going to go down to the legislature and testify this next week.
And, you know, we'll see.
It's probably like butting my head against the wall.
But it can't just be sirens.
It can't just be, oh, it's time to evacuate in the middle of a flood.
And now you have no way to evacuate other than the roads.
That's a recipe for disaster.
So I think steps are the obvious answer.
But yet I've never seen anybody else propose that except for me.
harrison smith
Well, and I mean, it just shows you that just no one's coming to save you.
And it's sort of always the case, right?
We say the same thing with shootings and everything else.
It's like once the event happens and once all the damage is done, the government will show up and pat itself on the back for what a good job it did, but it's not going to prevent it and it's not going to actually be there to rescue you.
It just shows up to sort of clean up the mess at the end.
stewart rhodes
You have good fast water rescue guys that did come out and they did rescue people.
But what I'm saying is, is the mitigation and prevention side of it before the event, so like left the bang.
So you want to be prepared so that you have early warnings as early as possible.
You have evacuation notices go out.
Like those children camp in particular, what adults decide to do to risk themselves is up to them as adults.
But when you've got kids in a camp, parents are trusting that camp, keep their kids safe, and they're trusting the local officials to do the same.
And so they all need to coordinate so that when there's, like on July 2nd, apparently, according to the Firefighters of Austin, when an alert comes down from the state of a possible flooding next few days, the camp should evacuate at that point.
Should say, sorry, kids, we can't sleep down here.
We're going to move you up to the high school gym or whatever they want to do.
Figure out a protocol so that they're not down there at risk.
Because once the flooding starts, look what happened.
By the time they knew about it, it was too late.
Like you said, they're floating down the river.
harrison smith
Yeah.
No, it's just tragic.
No warning.
Texas County wouldn't spend $1 million on an alert system that would have saved these girls.
So and the way I know.
stewart rhodes
And then, hey, the state of Texas just spent $1.5 billion to bring in Hollywood to help Hollywood come in here and make movies, as though Hollywood can't afford to do that themselves.
harrison smith
Right.
stewart rhodes
We gave taxpayer money to Hollywood to make movies in the state.
harrison smith
$1.5 billion?
stewart rhodes
Yeah, $1.5 billion.
So the state of Texas can certainly find the funds to provide for earlier warning systems.
And they probably should also, I hate to say it, but they should also legislate evacuation protocols that if you get an alert, you will evacuate.
You don't have a choice.
You're going to run a camp, and this is a business you're making money off of.
You should have to comply with the evacuation protocols.
harrison smith
Yeah.
Well, because look at what happens when you don't.
I mean, if they're like, well, look, we don't want to scare away the tourists.
Well, I'll tell you, I'm probably not going to send my kid to camp anymore.
Not that I ever have, but, you know, or you don't want to spend a million dollars on the warning system.
So now you're spending $18 billion on fixing it up.
It's like, you got to spend the money now.
I like that left of bang.
The way I've been told it from when the FBI talks about terrorist attacks, it's like they don't want to constantly be guarding the goal line, right?
You don't want to constantly be in the red line trying to defend one yard from the end zone.
You want to stop it at the 50-yard line if you can.
Don't let it ever get to that point.
stewart rhodes
And the same for emerituses like this.
I mean, tornadoes hit so suddenly, but there are sirens for tornadoes, shelter.
You can shelter in place with a tornado.
You cannot shelter in place in a flood if you're down in a flood zone.
Your only option is escape.
You've got to get out.
You've got to get to high ground.
harrison smith
So the earlier the warning, the better.
stewart rhodes
The earlier the warning, the better.
And the more robust the protocols, the better.
harrison smith
Yeah.
And of course, you know, with hurricanes, typically you get a week of heads up because it's crossing the ocean.
You can watch it come in.
But with stuff like with these mysterious land hurricanes that have never existed ever before, you know, you don't get that warning.
It just happens all of a sudden.
I guess they did have the warning two days in advance.
But, you know, maybe that wasn't enough.
And of course, this ties into all of the other natural disasters that we've seen over the last few years, Lahaina burning and Palisades burning.
I wonder if they're going to come in and, well, you know, now that this place is flooded, I guess we're going to have to have low-income housing here.
And, you know, we'll make it a smart city.
We come in.
Do you know is there any plan to develop in that way?
stewart rhodes
I don't know yet.
I haven't been paying attention to any of that.
I'm just looking at the legislature, what they're proposing.
So far, all I've seen is sirens.
So I just hope it's more robust than that.
I really do.
harrison smith
Well, again, if people want to help, you go to buckupreliefmission.net or give single slash buckup, we think is the URL.
But the search, I was going to say the rescue is still ongoing, but it's been over two weeks at this point.
It's really just looking for bodies now, right?
But there are still people every day out there working with the cleanup and finding cleaning up.
stewart rhodes
But just the other day, an excavator was out there on a second bucket pull out of a pile.
A leg was sticking out of the bucket.
So they're still finding body parts, sadly.
But that's important as they do their recovery and help clean up, they have to be mindful and watching out for bodies.
harrison smith
Right.
stewart rhodes
Because otherwise people have a missing family member.
They have no idea what happened to them.
unidentified
Right.
harrison smith
And I'm going to read at least part of this account of this guy whose parents were lost because it's tragic, but it just goes to show you that when it comes down to it, when the emergency strikes, it's not the government that's going to give you relief.
It's going to be your friends and family volunteering their time and effort.
We'll be back with Stuart Rhodes on the other side.
And I'm going to show you some more videos about the flooding since I really haven't covered it much since I was out of town.
I got a lot of stuff I can show you on the other side of the state.
unidentified
We'll be right back.
harrison smith
All right, welcome back, folks.
Stuart Rhodes in Studio with me.
This is Harrison Smith.
You're watching the AmericanJournal Infowars.com band.video.
And we're talking about the Texas floods and the response to it and the ongoing search and rescue missions going on.
You can go to buckleupreliefmission.net, and there's a givesend go slash buckle up.
stewart rhodes
Buck up, I think.
harrison smith
Buck up.
I'm sorry, buck up, right.
Buckupreliefmission.net.
Buck up relief mission.
Thank you.
You can also support Stuart by going to his givesend go, givesendgo.com slash G-A-F-5B.
And that's the Stuart Rhodes Needs Help Facebook, or Give, Send, Go, rather, obviously to deal with not just the legal aspects of what Stuart's been going through and the persecution that he faced under Joe Biden, since been commuted by Trump, but still there's lingering things he has to deal with, but also, of course, volunteering and going in and helping out.
You're not getting paid for any of this, right?
stewart rhodes
No, it's out of my own pocket.
unidentified
Yeah.
harrison smith
So obviously this is what we rely on, volunteers going and helping people out.
And I want to play a video now just to emphasize the bizarre nature of this storm and the sort of unprecedented level of water that was poured on this very small area.
Again, pointing to, I would call it evidence of unnatural assistance on this storm.
Let's go now to this video comparing Niagara Falls to the Texas floods.
Sorry, we're having a little bit of technical difficulties here.
It'll pop up in just a second.
Let me know when you'll get it in.
with the ideas.
It says Niagara Falls versus Texas floods.
I just put it in.
Clip number 11.
We also have some videos that Stewart that we're going to pull in for Stewart too.
But essentially, long story short, billions and billions of gallons fell on this one tiny area.
Comparing it to Niagara Falls just actually gives you some sort of visualization of just how much water this was.
But again, I think this points to the fact that this wasn't natural.
Let's go to the video now.
marc istook
So this is just mind-blowing.
Right here, Niagara Falls, 757,000 gallons of water per second going over those falls.
That works out to about 45 million gallons a minute, 2.7 billion gallons an hour, or roughly 65 billion gallons of water a day going over the edge.
Now, that is an absolutely incredible amount of water, but it is only roughly half the amount of the 120 billion gallons of water that fell on Central Texas this past July 4th.
So they say about 12 inches of rain fell in those early morning hours, which led the rivers to do this to rise about 26 feet in a matter of 45 minutes.
That's less than an hour.
So when you see the absolute devastation and destruction and you try to wrap your head around just how much water this is, it is roughly two days worth of the water going over Niagara Falls, all falling on Texas in just a matter of hours.
unidentified
Yeah.
harrison smith
Just mind-blowing.
stewart rhodes
Right.
harrison smith
Mind-blowing amount of water drops, which again, it's like, how does that even happen naturally?
stewart rhodes
I mean, I think it's possible, but because they acknowledged they were doing cloud seeding just days before, that should be investigated.
It's like that can't just be a coincidence.
And he needs to be looked at and investigated for sure.
harrison smith
Are you going to talk about that when you go talk about to the legislature?
stewart rhodes
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Call them out.
They should be investigated.
And Attorney General Paxton should be on that right now.
Should be conducting an investigation.
harrison smith
And probably the people in the county who hired them should be investigated as well.
I mean, how do you say it just doesn't like how do you mess up that badly?
I mean, how do you cloud seed to a point?
stewart rhodes
Well, you play God, right?
When you play God like that.
harrison smith
You're just messing with forces you don't understand.
unidentified
Right.
stewart rhodes
It's just really strange that a lot of these people claim to be environmentalists and yet they're going to be monkeying with the weather like that.
unidentified
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
Yeah.
harrison smith
Because it's a closed system.
You can't just create rain and have it not affect other places.
It just seems so short-sighted.
stewart rhodes
Or you might make plenty of rain and more than you expect.
harrison smith
More than you could possibly need.
Here's the story that we were referencing earlier.
Austin Firefighters Association votes no confidence in File Chief and Fire Chief Joel Baker.
The Austin Firefighters Association announced on July 11th that it voted no confidence in Austin Fire Chief Joel Baker over concerns about his response to the floods in Kerrville.
According to the news report, news release of The association, 93% of the association voted no confidence in Baker after he refused to deploy Austin firefighters to Kerrville until very late in the event due to financial reasons.
It's absolutely outrageous that the Austin Fire Chief, Joel G. Baker, would not allow highly trained firefighters from Austin to respond to Kerrville.
The association wrote in an Instagram post: because of this egregious dereliction of duty, lives were very likely lost.
And they say this was a misguided attempt to save money.
They say, I say misguided because the fire department is fully reimbursed by the state to deploy.
Association President Bob Nix wrote in the post, I explained the reimbursement process to Chief Baker last week, and he failed to understand this very simple concept.
That's just crazy.
So Baker suspended emergency deployments in late May or early June to save money as the city of Boston faces a budget deficit.
Well, I mean, we got to build all those new bike lanes, I guess.
We got to spend a billion dollars funding Hollywood to make movies outside of Austin.
We don't have money to spend on things like flood.
I mean, at a certain point, this level of incompetence.
How is it everywhere?
stewart rhodes
Like, I feel like that's government for you.
That's bureaucracy.
harrison smith
I guess so.
stewart rhodes
They mentioned in there a July 2nd order that came down from the state, right?
harrison smith
I haven't seen that yet.
That might be from a different story.
This in particular is about this vote.
Let's see.
I don't know.
You can see if there's more.
There might be more to that story that we haven't printed out yet.
This is the other.
This is the latest from Axios.
Texas floods missing count falls to three, Kerr County officials say.
The number of people missing in Texas' catastrophic flooding has fallen to three from 160 in the immediate aftermath of the extreme weather event, the Kerr County officials said as the search enters a third week.
The July 4th flooding killed at least 135 people with 107 fatalities occurring in Kerr County, including the children at Camp Mystic, a children's summer camp for girls along the bank of the Guadalupe.
The last missing person count six days ago was 97.
You think that the actual number of missing people is probably significantly higher and they're just trying to cover their butts here.
stewart rhodes
Well, I think there's reality is they're not going to ever be able to identify all the people that were missing because they might have been transients and homeless people.
There were homeless camps along the river.
We do know that as a fact.
So what we're hearing is that those camps got washed away.
And so there's very likely to be other people out there that are still missing.
harrison smith
And, you know, just sort of expanding out, it just seems to me like there are so many things in America that are just basic things that are just sort of falling by the wayside.
And so it's almost like, well, you can't, well, I mean, you can point to certain things like the Palisades fire and you can go, okay, maybe this was a conspiracy.
Maybe this was them.
They wanted to clear out this land to revamp it into a smart city of some sort.
Like maybe there's a very deliberate, actual high-level conspiracy going on here.
Or maybe this is just the overall conspiracy that just is weakening us as a country, just makes us less capable of dealing with things.
We're putting incompetent people in charge of these very necessary systems.
So it's almost, it's like it's.
stewart rhodes
I like that chief in Austin.
When I saw him online, he's DEI obsessed.
unidentified
Right.
stewart rhodes
He's all about, we got to make sure that the fire department looks like the community.
So he's hiring based on skin color and demographics, not on capacity.
harrison smith
You're talking about life and death circumstances, and they're hiring off the banks.
Yeah.
So it's insane.
So, you know, it's like you see so many things.
You know, I went on a big rant about old sneaky Pete spending $80 billion on DEI programs and letting the air traffic control system just, you know, fall apart.
And it's like people are dying because of this.
And how do we reverse this process where just are these necessary systems that we have that we depend on that we just sort of assume exist, right?
It's just we, you know, America has been so successful in this.
You just assume that like when you call 911, they're going to dispatch an army to come help you.
But now we're in this position like in Austin where if you call 911, you might get put on hold.
You might, you know, or they're not even going to come if it's not an imminent threat and they'll come later and, you know, fill out a form or whatever.
But it's like all of these systems are just collapsing in incompetence and failure or grift and DEI.
And so it's just emblematic of all of these issues that we're having and that we're only going to increasingly have as we continue to seemingly like sacrifice our country on the altar of DEI and whatever else.
stewart rhodes
Yeah, it's not only DEI, but it's also grift.
harrison smith
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
You know, you've got whether it's FEMA and the contracts they give out or it's the state of Texas and the contracts they give out.
A lot of times they'll give out contracts to their buddies to come in afterwards and clean up and do renovation.
And they get paid, you know, like $400 an hour to go out there and do menial tasks.
So they're being paid really high prices for something that all the volunteers are doing for free.
So that's the other part of it is the grift continues.
And further you get away from the actual event, first week or so, it's almost all local first responders and other guys coming in from other first responder networks.
And then you got all your volunteers and they're all busting their butts to get everything done.
First week is almost always just really, really good to go people.
But then you get the bureaucrats coming in later on and then their buddies, the contractors who have these big, big, expensive contracts, and they want to push out all the volunteers, make room for themselves to make money.
That's what you wind up seeing.
I've heard that from a lot of first responders that two or three weeks in, they get pushed out because the officials don't want them there.
They want their buddies to come in and do the cleanup and get the contract money.
harrison smith
And we've seen, Lahaina was a place where the cleanup crews were charging like a million dollars a lot just to haul away trash.
And it's like, you could rebuild a house there for a million dollars, but they're just removing the trash, something that I'm sure people would volunteer to do for free if you wanted them to.
But instead, they're literally paying out billions of dollars to these contractors.
stewart rhodes
Just taxpayer money.
It's like the USAID thing, right?
harrison smith
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
You get favored status and you've got connections.
You get in there and you get the money.
alex jones
Yeah.
harrison smith
And that's sort of the thing that, you know, pointing to the Pete Buttigieg or the, you know, the California disaster and the Palisades and just no water in the reservoirs.
And It's this sort of ubiquitous mindset of just like get what you can while you can.
And if you're put in a position, it doesn't matter if you fulfill the obligations of that position.
You just use that position to, you know, benefit your particular ethnic group or your particular ideology or your particular sexual, you know, orientation.
And so the actual necessary obligations of these positions go completely unfulfilled and people literally die as a consequence.
And it's like, what is it going to take for the American people to decide, you know what?
Actually, we need competence first and foremost.
We need people who are actually going to do the job right in those positions, not the Pete Buttigigas out there that are just going to, you know, write $80 billion checks for their friends in their Democrat coalition because he thinks it'll increase his likelihood of getting support when he runs for president later.
So it's just like, it's just in a word like selfishness, right?
It's just this pervasive selfishness of all these people who they get put in a position of power and all they see is money signs.
And all they see is, oh, now I get the checkbook and I get to write checks to my friends.
Like, how do, how do we deal with this when it's so pervasive?
And it seems like it's every position in every local, national, international government.
It's this dog eat dog, get what I can for me.
And who cares what the consequences are mindset?
Like, how do we even deal with this?
stewart rhodes
Well, I think it's just human nature.
I mean, the corruption that I've seen in Texas, aside from disaster relief, but just the corruption across the state.
I've been doing a speaking tour for True Texas Project all over Texas.
And I just hear about local corruption down to the town level, where if you're running against the local good-o-boy network, you get pulled over and harassed by the police.
You get pulled over and given a ticket by the local sheriff.
harrison smith
God, it's so infuriating because it's just these little fiefdoms.
Yeah, these little fiefdoms are these little chips.
It should all just chip away at the ability of our country to function.
And eventually, it's just the foundation is completely shattered and we just can't do anything.
stewart rhodes
Well, that's why it comes back to us as volunteers.
I think the American people need to make sure that their own community is strong.
They need to have robust neighborhood watches, and that should include disaster relief.
That's why the CERT program was created by FEMA, right?
The community emergency response teams, or citizens' emergency response teams, train citizens.
So I think counties should do it themselves.
I wouldn't rely on FEMA, but I think the county should do that.
They should train the people in self-rescue and how to rescue somebody else without becoming a casual yourself.
You know, if you're talking about flooding, it's the reality of flooding.
You got to escape.
What's the best time to do that?
As soon as you hear about possible flooding, it's when you escape.
It's going to be raining.
It could be dry where you're at, not raining, but upriver in the tributary, it could be raining and dumping water, and here comes a flood.
harrison smith
And that's what we've got some of the videos from that folder I put in.
I mean, some of the flash flooding video that came out of this, it makes you appreciate the power that this water has.
And I mean, I've seen things, we cross a low water crossing and like, if there's water over the water crossing, I will not cross it because I've seen videos of cars getting swept away in like three inches of water.
Like it's crazy how powerful water is.
And you got to give it the respect that's due.
And in the video that we just showed, that flash flooding, it's not raining.
It's not raining when the flood happens, right?
Look, it's not raining right here, but here comes the flood, right?
So it doesn't have to be raining by you for you to be swept up in this flood.
And you can just see the absolutely unimaginable rise as it happens.
stewart rhodes
That's the reality of dry climates where the ground is hard and packed and stony.
There's nothing there to hold the water back.
And so when it comes in quick, it comes in fast.
harrison smith
And what you were just saying is something that you've been saying the entire time that I've been interviewing you for InfoWars.
Have a community, know your neighbors, be prepared.
And it's not even necessarily like you want to have a militia to go out and fight people.
No, it might be a disaster.
You should have that too, exactly.
But that's not the only reason it's a good idea.
You got to have community connections so you can help each other out or know who might need help.
You know, if you're living in this flood-prone area and you know that there's an elderly lady down your street that needs help, you can go and rescue her.
But if you haven't done the work beforehand, it's too late by that point.
So maybe talk a little bit more about how people can sort of organize.
And if people see what's going on and go, gee, maybe my neighborhood should have a neighborhood watch of some sort.
What advice would you give to people watching for how they can sort of be prepared and get started making these community groups?
stewart rhodes
Yeah, Ground Zero would be a neighborhood watch, but make it more than just about crime prevention.
Make it about disaster preparedness.
And hey, go take a CERT class.
Why not?
So go get certified under FEMA, even though I think FEMA is a joke, but why not get that?
Because it'll help you in dealing with local first responders.
And I still encourage people, as I've always said, you should go join your local voluntary fire department.
I served on one for one year in Montana.
I was just a beginner, but at least got exposure to that system.
But I think anywhere you can, if I move into a small town here in Texas, I'll go join a voluntary fire department.
We should all do that.
Become a volunteer EMS, you know, EMT or paramedic.
Just become part of the first responder community and make it stronger.
Half the fire departments in the country are volunteer.
unidentified
Right.
stewart rhodes
So go join and make it stronger.
Go learn search and rescue.
Join a volunteer search and rescue team and get the training.
That'd be useful too.
So if you're fit enough to do that, go do it.
Everybody else, make sure you've got radios, make sure you've got some way to communicate.
Make sure you've got a plan for your family to escape.
If you live in a flood area, just be, you know, have yourself set up on some kind of radar system you're watching.
Anytime there's a warning coming through, that's when you have to do watches.
Like one person stays up and watches the weather and watches the radar.
You don't just all go to sleep.
Trust that the government's going to do it because they're probably not going to.
We've seen too many failures of official alert systems in this country.
harrison smith
That's awesome.
During the break, we were talking and I was sort of criticizing the response and you wanted to emphasize it's not the guys on the ground that we have a problem with.
It's not the first responders.
They're awesome.
stewart rhodes
Local volunteer fire and paid fire and search and rescue.
They're all great people.
I have no issues with any of them.
It's the bureaucrats above them that come in and they want a CYA.
Their biggest concern is PR, is their public relations and how they look to the public.
So they'll tend to take credit for something other people have done, and then they also tend to cover up what they did.
Like if July 2nd, the state of Texas put out a warning to the Hill Country first responder community.
How come that wasn't also given to the camps?
harrison smith
Yeah, that really is.
stewart rhodes
That needs to be looked into.
harrison smith
That's a major oversight if that's the case.
And the problem is by covering their butts, we don't learn the lessons that we should learn so it doesn't happen again, right?
If they come out and go, hey, look, here's the mistakes we made.
Here's next time, here's what we should do instead, then we can actually have a positive outcome, not a positive.
stewart rhodes
And I've heard people say, well, now's not the time to finger point.
We just need to focus on helping people in need.
I understand that.
But when you've got politicians who are already spinning the narrative and they're waiting for the crisis to pass, then I want to know what are they going to do to make sure it doesn't happen again.
But you can't let them off the hook.
That's why it's good that they're having a special session.
Of course, they packed it with all kinds of other nonsense.
But it's at least a start, but they should be held to account.
There should be hard questions.
They're going to have a town hall meeting in Kerrville for one of these legislative sessions.
We're going to do it in Kerrville to get the feedback from the local community.
So I hope the local community really holds their feet to the fire about what are you going to do so this doesn't happen again.
That's what we want to know.
harrison smith
Absolutely.
And of course, again, if you want to contribute to the Buck Up Relief Mission, buckupreliefmission.net, buck up relief mission on Gibson Go.
And of course, Stuart Rhodes also is doing this all on, you know, his volunteer time.
And you can contribute to his Gibbs and Go by going to givesingo.com slash GAF5B.
And again, you know, it's just relentless.
It's like from the Palisades fire to the Lahina fire to the flooding in North Carolina to the flooding in Texas.
It's like we, I get that there are some things that you just got to deal with.
Like there's going to be flooding.
There's going to be fires.
They get out of here.
It happens.
But you can prepare.
You can be prepared for this.
You can at least mitigate the consequences.
The individuals themselves can be better prepared to deal with it.
But the government especially can just not mess things up.
And it's just, it's just continuous.
It's just how can they not do this stuff right?
I know, but it's like, how can you not just have like the waters filled?
And if it's your responsibility to make sure there's water to fight fire and the water's not there.
Yeah, in Palestinians, like you got to be held to account.
You got to be, I don't know, charged with that fire chief ever fired?
I don't think so.
They're not in jail, which they probably should be.
stewart rhodes
She was a, I think she was a black lesbian, right?
harrison smith
She was a diversity hire of one sort or another.
unidentified
Yeah.
stewart rhodes
She could be an awesome chief and be a black lesbian, but that can't be the priority.
harrison smith
Exactly.
stewart rhodes
Demographics and checking boxes.
harrison smith
Exactly.
And it's like, okay, I can at least understand, like, if you want to do DEI at subway sandwiches, whatever, you know, who cares?
Get the people a job.
But like, you're talking about life and death.
You're talking about whether planes land or crash.
You're talking about whether fires are fought or just burn your entire landscape to the ground.
You cannot be doing DEI when it comes to these life and death systems.
stewart rhodes
Like with the Austin Fire Department, you've got a DEI-obsessed chief who apparently was beam counting and put that priority above life-saving.
harrison smith
It's just insane.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass says it's not a problem at all that city continues fire season without a permanent fire chief.
Well, I mean, I guess.
What's she going to do?
Mess it up?
What are they going to do?
Not be there for the people?
It can't get any worse.
Exactly.
It's just insane.
And again, you read some of the accounts.
This one guy, Brent Thomas11, I'm trying to get him on the show, but we're having trouble getting in contact with him.
But he put forward a comment from this guy, Wesley Daly.
And it's too long for me to read right now, but you can go and I'll retweet it and you can look it up.
I did retweet it, actually, and you can go find it on my account at Harrison H. Smith.
And it's the helplessness and the loneliness of the average American out there who his parents go missing in this flood.
He can't get the county to help him.
He can't get the firefighters to help him.
He's just out there on his own.
And luckily, there's other volunteers that come together.
And it just reminds you of how little you can rely on this government and how you've got to be prepared.
And it's too late to be prepared once the disaster happens.
You've got to be prepared beforehand.
stewart rhodes
That goes back to starting Hurricane Harvey.
That was our first hurricane relief mission that we did with Oath Keepers.
And that's the lesson from there is that they brought in first responders from all the neighboring states, search and rescue teams, Swiftwater Rescue, you know, great guys, but there's just not enough of them.
That's why they had to ask for Cajun Navy to come in and all the other volunteers.
We were there too.
So tons of volunteer groups came together, a lot of them veteran-run, a lot of veterans, and pitched in and got it done because there's just not enough manpower.
And that's the wisdom of the founders.
We told us that a militia is necessary for the security of a free state.
And that security also includes being able to respond to natural disasters.
harrison smith
Sure.
stewart rhodes
It should be the people themselves organized as their local militia that take care of fire, search and rescue, you know, all the things that we do after a disaster, looking for people, wellness checks, all that stuff.
That's what we've been doing is wellness checks.
We went around in the community in Lander and we asked the locals, you know, who are people that are in their homes that are elderly and they're just kind of stuck there and aren't coming out.
One guy had diabetes and multiple heart attacks.
We went and saw him and our nurse checked him out and made sure he's okay.
So you can do that.
Your community should be able to do that themselves and we shouldn't have to rely on it as much outside help.
If we were better organized in each county and across the country, we'd be able to help ourselves at self-rescue.
harrison smith
Yeah.
And if anything, the government can be there as a coordinator and help to sort of, you know, you really don't want government as a coordinator.
Well, but you don't want them in charge of everything.
stewart rhodes
But they can bring in assets.
harrison smith
But they can bring in assets or they could at least, you know, be there to help to, you know, coordinate or organize or, you know, the best thing to do is bring in like more outside search and rescue teams.
stewart rhodes
Cadaver dogs were huge.
Cadaver dogs can differentiate between dead animals and dead humans.
We can't.
unidentified
Right.
stewart rhodes
So not as well.
So we were winding up, you know, looking through brush piles and come to find out it's either a pile of rotting fish or a dead deer or something.
unidentified
Right.
harrison smith
And the cadaver dogs can help you avoid wasting that energy.
Right.
Well, the search continues.
Buckle uprelief mission.net.
I'm sorry, buckupreliefmission.net.
Buck upreliefie mission on Gibson Go.
GibsonGo.com slash G-A-F-5B to contribute to Stewart.
And God bless the people affected by this absolute tragedy.
unidentified
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