| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| In the slave manuals, it says, and Julius Caesar wrote in some of his annals back to the, when he was exiled, you know, to fight the Germans, but finally beat them when nobody else could for 300 years and became his big hero. | ||
| They'd roll in and they'd say, you know, to a fortress, it was usually wooden fortresses, to the Germans, all right, you got a week to give up and to give us all this tribute of cattle and horses and a bunch of your men got to go join our legion and you got to give us this tribute. | ||
| Or in a week or two, they give them a number. | ||
| We're going to burn everything down. | ||
| We're going to kill every man down to age 11 and we're going to ship all your women and children off as slaves to Rome. | ||
| They just show up and they say, you got a week, you got two, you know, it would vary, you got a month, and then we're going to burn everything down and we're going to kill everybody. | ||
| And then they would get all the women together. | ||
| So they had all their interpreters and they'd say, listen, some of you are going to be kept here to raise crops and work for us, for our legions, and some of you are going to work in our brothel and be our horse. | ||
| And we're going to decide which women serve us better, who's going to be in charge. | ||
| And if any of you give us any lip, we're just going to start killing your little boys. | ||
| So out of love, the white house slaves would be the biggest oppressor. | ||
| And they figured out the psychology. | ||
| The Romans had it all down. | ||
| And that's the same thing. | ||
| So feminism, that's what it is. | ||
| It's the house slave. | ||
| Every major corporation of the Fortune 100 and almost every major government and the big think tanks and the tax-free foundations are robber barons. | ||
| And by the 1880s, they developed out of the theory of eugenics from the 1850s. | ||
| The modern update on it came from Plato and the Greeks of social Darwinism. | ||
| Meaning, no matter how evil, how destructive, how horrible you are to the general public, you are the apex predator as the globalists, as the robber barons, as the British Empire, as Cecil Rhodes, as J.P. Morgan, as Lord Rothschild. | ||
| Anyone you can steal, dominate, manipulate, poison, kill, enslave deserves it, and you're doing a positive thing for society. | ||
| It's a twist on that which doesn't kill you only makes you stronger. | ||
| But then they sell it through a lovey, squishy, liberal MPR voice of, oh, be nice, be friendly. | ||
| Oh, women need to vote. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
| Two of the co-founders of Ms. Gloria Steinem and Pat Carbine were guest speakers at this luncheon this afternoon and they're both with me now on Fresh Air. | ||
| No, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
| Now they're wedded to the state and the system and they're the new bosses just like the Romans did. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Gloria Steinem said, if you don't go out to work, you betray the movement of feminism. | |
| You betray the women's rights movement. | ||
| Babies will be fine. | ||
| Don't worry about them. | ||
| Put them into daycare. | ||
| Give them to a babysitter. | ||
| You need to go out to work. | ||
| You need to be soldiers in this war that we're waging. | ||
| And women just soaked it up. | ||
| Meanwhile, Gloria Steinem never had children. | ||
| So she could say that. | ||
| That message was very destructive. | ||
| So they sell the tyranny. | ||
| It's liberal and loving, but all of it is to undermine and control. | ||
| You see movies like Django Unchained and stuff. | ||
| And, you know, it's a black guy in the house and he is the biggest racist and all that. | ||
| And that idea of Uncle Tom, it wasn't Uncle Tom's folks. | ||
| I'm not putting down black women. | ||
| On record, it was black women in charge. | ||
| That's called being a house slave. | ||
| Now, where'd they get that? | ||
| You think that was invented by the colonies? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, no. | |
| All over the world, including Africa, where they still have slavery. | ||
| It was the same institution. | ||
|
unidentified
|
In Libya, hundreds of emigrants along North Africa migrants' routes are being bought and sold in an open slave market. | |
| So listen carefully. | ||
| Slavery is not dead. | ||
| It is very much alive. | ||
| You'd go capture and take over a tribe. | ||
| You'd kill the men, keep some of the boys, and then the women would go under Stockholm Syndrome, almost all of them, and would be your best servants, and you'd create them as the subclass, but the bosses over the others. | ||
| It's the same thing over and over and over again. | ||
| So you can talk to a feminist. | ||
| You can talk to all these brainwashed people, and they feel like they're part of the power structure, and they're in the system. | ||
| This system is designed to make you stupid and alone and enslaved and finally dead. | ||
| Just don't look at me because I'm white and tell me I'm some like superstar slave master. | ||
| In fact, you know, the only place in the world, now that they've studied all the cultures where they didn't have slavery, was Western Europe. | ||
| Africa had slavery. | ||
| Asia had slavery. | ||
| Mesoamerica was based on slavery and they sacrificed the slaves. | ||
| What you've been taught about white people is absolute horseshoe from one end to another. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's Monday, August 25th 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 I blow this scene. | ||
| Get everybody in the stuff to go. | ||
| Okay, three. | ||
| Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
| Coming to you live this Monday morning, the 25th of August, 2025. | ||
| I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
| We're going to be joined in studio by Jeremy Brown in the second hour, third hour, third hour. | ||
| We got a lot to cover, like a heck of a lot to cover. | ||
| And I think the video that we started today with, that John Bown report, that can be found at band.video and force.com, of course, on X as well, is a good place to start because there's going to be a lot of discussion about race today, as a lot of our stories have to do with Europe and the genocide taking place there, slowly but surely, eradicating the native population. | ||
| But we got a lot more to get into as well. | ||
| Let's just begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Here it is, folks. | |
| Your daily dispatch for Monday, the 25th of August, 2025. | ||
| U.S. confirms first human screw worm case. | ||
| The first human case of screw worm in the United States has been confirmed by the Department of Health and Human Services. | ||
| Although the U.S. government has not confirmed any cases in the U.S. livestock yet, the beef industry remains on high alert of a potential domestic infestation as cases spread from South to Central America and now to southern Mexico. | ||
| The first human case of screw worm in the United States has been confirmed by DHHS. | ||
| The case of the flesh-eating parasite, which was confirmed on Sunday, involved a traveler to El Salvador. | ||
| Sources from the beef industry said last week that the CDC had confirmed a case in which a person had traveled to the U.S. from Guatemala. | ||
| Although the U.S. government has not confirmed any cases in U.F. livestock yet, the beef industry remains on high alert of a potential domestic infestation as these cases spread from South Central America and now from Southern Mexico. | ||
| Diversity is our strength. | ||
| Screw worm is our strength. | ||
| Long eradicated plagues from the third world are our strength, folks. | ||
| This is a small price to pay in order to have Guatemalans, I guess. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I'm not actually sure what we're getting in exchange for being infected by this crap, but it's got to be something, right? | ||
| There's no way we would just be doing this to ourselves for no tangible benefit, right? | ||
| I mean, there's no way. | ||
| Meanwhile, Gaza latest journalist among 20 reportedly killed in Israeli strike on Nasser Hospital, Health Ministry says. | ||
| Reuters news agency has released a statement after two of its journalists were killed at the Nasser Hospital and one injured. | ||
| One of the journalists killed. | ||
| Reuters worked with Hassam al-Masri and Moaz Ab Taha, while Hatem Khaled, who was also worked with, was injured in the attacks. | ||
| The news agency issued the following statement: We are devastated to learn that cameraman Hassam al Mausri, a contractor for Reuters, was killed this morning in Israeli strikes on Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis in Gaza. | ||
| Moaz Abu Taha, a freelance journalist whose work has occasionally published, was occasionally published by Reuters, was also killed. | ||
| And photographer Hateem Khaled, a Reuters contractor, was wounded. | ||
| We send our deep consolences and thoughts to Hussam's and Moaz's families and loved ones, and we'll support them as best we can. | ||
| We've asked for authorities in Gaza and Israel to help get us urgent medical assistance for Hatem. | ||
| We're seeking more information from the Israeli authorities about these latest strikes. | ||
| And I'm sure Israel will be very forthcoming with that information. | ||
| So it goes on. | ||
| So again, I don't usually report on that type of stuff every day because that would be pretty much the only thing I would cover because it is a daily thing. | ||
| The reports of just dozens of innocent people murdered on a daily basis, many of them journalists or aid workers or children because the genocide continues unabated. | ||
| Meanwhile, Trump threatens troops to fix Chicago's mess as city rebounds. | ||
| A city rebounds. | ||
| What the hell is it talking about? | ||
| President Donald Trump's called Chicago a mess and threatened to tap the National Guard to tackle crime in the third largest U.S. city, expanding federal deployments beyond Washington, D.C. His comments, though, come just as Chicago is on the rebound. | ||
| Murders fell to the lowest in more than a decade. | ||
| Traffic at the city's main airport hit a record in June. | ||
| And investment is coming back. | ||
| A billionaire soccer team owner is building a $650 million stadium, and tech startup is, and a tech startup is pouring $1 billion into quantum computing in the south side, which I think is a very telling paragraph, I think, for the modern world and the continuing bifurcation of our society. | ||
| It's like, yes, one half of the city is just mired in endless reciprocal violence forever, generation upon generation of just sort of pointless people never contribute anything except for violence and chaos and misery and murder and pain to the rest of humanity. | ||
| And then the other half of the city is building $650 million playgrounds for the rich and quantum computing warehouses. | ||
| It's like, well, all right, great. | ||
| So things are going great, I guess. | ||
| I, of course, am completely against Donald Trump releasing the National Guard into Chicago because I think Chicago could take care of itself if it wanted to. | ||
| So they can just do that. | ||
| We don't need to send federal soldiers to take care of basic crime if the government bothers to just do the bare minimum it's required to. | ||
| And of course, it's just an incredibly troubling precedent to set the idea that the president could unleash the National Guard against the American people. | ||
| Because while Trump may be actually doing it for a legitimately understandable, if not good reason, the insane crime rate in some of these major cities that is going completely unaddressed and is, in fact, constantly exacerbated by the policies of the local politicians there. | ||
| I get the argument that you want to go in and deal with the criminals. | ||
| But do we really want to open this Pandora's box? | ||
| Really, a authority we want to de facto grant to the left. | ||
| Because you know, the instant they get in power, they're going, well, Trump unleashed the National Guard. | ||
| I guess we can too. | ||
| Only in that case, it'll be like what happened under COVID, where they will, you know, arbitrarily order entire segments of the economy to shut down and like a small business owner trying to continue to sell pancakes without permission will have the National Guard descend on them and throw them into jail. | ||
| So I really, really hate the way everything is going these days. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It just sucks. | |
| Meanwhile, Kilmar Obrego Garcia urges supporters to continue to fight as he checks into ICE facility. | ||
| And it looks like he is most likely going to be deported to Uganda now. | ||
| Apparently, that's what's happening. | ||
| Which is great. | ||
| Who cares? | ||
| Literally, who cares? | ||
| Who is this guy? | ||
| Can we just throw him into the ocean already? | ||
| Why do we have to keep hearing this guy's name? | ||
| Who is he? | ||
| Who the hell cares about him? | ||
| Who supports him? | ||
| He's just some dude. | ||
| He's some dude from El Salvador that apparently is a human trafficker, and he has supporters apparently rioting for him, protesting for him. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Why, though? | ||
| Why do we have to deal with this? | ||
| It's like a litmus death. | ||
| I don't know what this is, but it's like if we, as a country, cannot just get rid of this guy. | ||
| Like, are we a country at all, even? | ||
| There's one foreigner in our country that we just can't get rid of. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| What are we doing here? | ||
| What is this? | ||
| Are we a sovereign country or not? | ||
| Who is this guy? | ||
| Like, why do we have to keep hearing this guy's name? | ||
| It's been six months of like back and forth over Kilmar Abrego Garcia. | ||
| Throw him into the ocean out of a helicopter. | ||
| Please, for the love of God, can we just put him in one of these underground cities that we have under mountains and just shut the vault and lock it? | ||
| Or something. | ||
| I mean, what do we have to do to never hear Kilmar Abrego Garcia's name ever again? | ||
| That's what I want to do. | ||
| What the hell is going on? | ||
| Some random scumbag gets into our country and it's like we're just stuck with him. | ||
| It's like a rat gets into your attic and you can't. | ||
| It's like this like mousetrap. | ||
| We're like mousetrap the movie. | ||
| Like chasing this mouse. | ||
| We can't get rid of it. | ||
| Like just burn the house down. | ||
| We might as well just burn the house down at this point. | ||
| If we can't expel one single dumbass goblin humanoid who lurched his way over here from some godforsaken hellhole in the third world, we can't just get rid of him. | ||
| Really? | ||
| Really? | ||
| Okay, great. | ||
| What are we doing here? | ||
| What are we doing here? | ||
| How can this guy, like, why is he still here? | ||
| Is he herpes? | ||
| Is he like resistant to antibiotics somehow? | ||
| Is this man a germ of some sort? | ||
| Is he a super bug that we've somehow created by our overuse of antibiotics? | ||
| Is that the issue here? | ||
| What is happening? | ||
| Why can this man not just be expelled from our country once and for all? | ||
| He is not an American citizen. | ||
| He is not even remotely an American citizen. | ||
| All he's done is come into our country and broken our laws. | ||
| Can we not just put him in a catapult and fling him into the ocean for the love of God? | ||
| What are we doing here? | ||
| Kilmar Obrego Garcia. | ||
| We have another headline about Kilmar Abrego Garcia. | ||
| What are we doing here? | ||
| Jesus Christ. | ||
| Texas lawmakers give final approval to Trump-backed election maps, sending it to the governor. | ||
| Early Saturday, the Texas state Senate approved a new Republican-leaning congressional map, sending it to Governor Greg Abbott, who's expected to sign it into law. | ||
| National GOP pressure led Republican-controlled states, including Texas, to redraw maps aimed at helping the GOP retain a slim House majority in 2026. | ||
| Democrats delayed the passage with prolonged debate and a walkout as state senators voted 18 to 11 along party lines after more than eight hours. | ||
| With Republicans ending a filibuster using a rare motion, Governor Craig Abbott is expected to quickly sign the maps into law while Democrats avow court challenges. | ||
| And Democratic Representative Lloyd Doggett announced Thursday that he will not seek re-election if the new maps take effect. | ||
| Well, great. | ||
| Wonderful. | ||
| The effort has triggered a nationwide wave of redistricting. | ||
| It was California Democrats and Governor Gab Newsom proposing a special election in November and the U.S. Supreme Court setting limits on partisan and race-based map drawing. | ||
| Again, this whole thing is ridiculous. | ||
| I'll have to pull up the chart if I remember to. | ||
| The absurdity of claiming that this is some sort of attack from the right. | ||
| It's like state after state after state. | ||
| There's like 15 states where at least 30 to 40 percent of the population is Republican and they have zero Republican congressional seats or senators in the entire state. | ||
| So, I mean, there is no representation for Republicans in blue states. | ||
| It doesn't exist. | ||
| In California, 46% of the people voted for Donald Trump, and yet they have zero of the congressional seats, zero of the Senate seats. | ||
| Is this the way it's supposed to work? | ||
| Is this how Republic is supposed to operate? | ||
| So, nearly half of the population has absolutely no representation in the national government in various states, and it's like California, New Jersey, New Mexico. | ||
| I mean, there's a lot of states where there's just no Republican representation, despite a huge percentage of the population being Republican. | ||
| So, something is just seriously broken here in like a thousand million different ways. | ||
| That's your daily dispatch brought to you, of course, by thealexjonestore.com. | ||
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| We have a lot of videos to get to today. | ||
| I think I'll go a little, well, we got some longer ones to show you. | ||
| I think I'll go to now. | ||
| We'll start with clip number 10. | ||
| This is Representative Nick Freitas. | ||
| Talking about the Democrats, we'll comment a little bit about it on the other side. | ||
| But I think we're all getting a little bit frustrated at the fact that some of us actually want a government to just do the bare minimum and leave us the hell alone, while it seems like the majority of our fellow Americans see the government as a weapon to use against us. | ||
| And then they, of course, control the media. | ||
| That allows them to paint any opposition to their despicable plans as somehow in violation of our shared moral framework. | ||
| That is white people evil, everybody else super good. | ||
| Let's go to club number 10 here. | ||
| Speaker, I rise for a point of personal privilege. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Delegate has the floor. | |
| Well, Mr. Speaker, a Democrat has got up and essentially accused us that if we don't want to do what they want to do in order to solve a problem, we're racist or we're mean or we're stupid or we're bigoted or we're incompetent. | ||
| So it must be any other day of the week. | ||
| Because that's pretty much how this narrative always goes. | ||
| I mean, it's always the party of tolerance that is immediately ready to accuse us of the worst possible intentions if we disagree. | ||
| I thought for a moment we wanted to talk about facts. | ||
| So Delegate Coiner got up and she delivered some facts, facts that were relevant with respect to the education of our children. | ||
| But no, no, no, you're just a racist. | ||
| It's the same old grift in a different day. | ||
| And we're tired of it. | ||
| Because I don't know anybody on this side of the aisle, and I don't think I know anybody on that side of the aisle that doesn't want to do what's best for our children, but we will disagree on what that is. | ||
| And I can tell you, for all the talk on the other side of the aisle, talking about we tried to do this and we wanted to do this and you voted against it. | ||
| And because you voted against what the Democrats wanted to do, therefore you don't care. | ||
| Listen, I got to tell you, Mr. Speaker, my constituents look at a lot of the things that our Democrat colleagues want to do, and their response is, please stop helping. | ||
| Because they don't know if their business or their child or their family or their community can survive yet another tax, regulation, rule, restriction, fee, government program, government spending. | ||
| Because I guarantee this much, Mr. Speaker, when it comes to the Democrat side of the aisle, the solution is always the same. | ||
| Give politicians and bureaucracies more power at the expense of individual liberty, individual freedom, property rights, you name it. | ||
| We sit here and we wonder why we have problems in systems which are increasingly under the control of politicians and bureaucrats. | ||
| I don't know about you, Mr. Speaker, but I don't look at many of the challenges that I face in my life and think to myself, you know what would make this better? | ||
| Giving politicians more money and power. | ||
| And yet that seems to be the exclusive approach coming from our friends on the other side of the aisle. | ||
| And if you don't accept that, if you don't accept a solution that gives them more power, you must be a bad person. | ||
| Mr. Speaker, I don't care what they call me anymore. | ||
| I just don't. | ||
| Once upon a time, I might have, a little bit, but I don't anymore because I see it for what it is. | ||
| It's not just ideology and political manipulation. | ||
| Sometimes it's just downright dishonesty. | ||
| Because let's face it, we do try to do our best to actually get along around here from time to time. | ||
| But then as soon as we're on this floor, all of a sudden, nope, you don't do what we want. | ||
| You're a racist, sexisted, bigoted, suffering from some sort of phobia or whatever else it is. | ||
| Here's an idea, Mr. Speaker. | ||
| Maybe the people on this side of the aisle generally believe that when you put more power into the hands of the people that earn the money, the people that are raising the families, you get better results. | ||
| That's it. | ||
| It's not because we're mean. | ||
| It's not because we're bad. | ||
| We just believe in a society where the government isn't constantly intervening into every aspect of our lives. | ||
| And whether you like it or not, when you talk about freedom on the other side of the aisle, it is always from the perspective of here's another government program that's going to provide X. Every time you take a dollar, every time you make a rule, every time you make a restriction, you are ultimately limiting the choices that people are able to make in their own lives. | ||
| The more you plan from a centralized perspective, the more planning opportunities you take away from people that, generally speaking, know far more about what they need for their individual lives and decisions than any of us do. | ||
| And so I understand that you may want to get up here and lecture us all on how altruistic you are, but you know what? | ||
| It's really easy to be generous with everybody else's money. | ||
| So let's just face it. | ||
| I think we both want solutions. | ||
| Ours are generally going to favor putting more decision-making power into the hands of individuals. | ||
| Because we don't believe that as politicians, somehow when we got elected, we were automatically imbued with all of the intelligence and wisdom necessary to be able to micromanage the individual lives and decisions of over 8 million Virginians. | ||
| And that doesn't make us mean, Mr. Speaker. | ||
| It used to mean what a free country was. | ||
| Because if the only thing freedom means is that you get to elect politicians to micromanage your life, well, then we're not living in a free country. | ||
| So maybe what's required out of this body, Mr. Speaker, is a little bit less hubris. | ||
| So I will do my best to not question the intentions of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle. | ||
| I think you're wrong a lot. | ||
| And I know you think I'm wrong a lot. | ||
| The difference is that when I think you're wrong, I don't typically chalk it up to you being stupid, evil, mean, or racist. | ||
| Maybe you could try the same thing. | ||
| Thank you, Mr. Speaker. | ||
| Very well said by that man with Nick Ritas. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Is that it? | |
| He's very well said, except here's the problem. | ||
| Ritas, that's it. | ||
| Here's the problem. | ||
| The other side is absolutely retarded and racist and vicious and mean. | ||
| This is the major problem, is that the Republicans project their own mindset onto the Democrats. | ||
| The Democrats project their mindset onto Republicans. | ||
| The Democrats are racist, hateful, bigoted, jackasses, stupid as bricks. | ||
| And they think Republicans are acting in the same way. | ||
| They have no theory of mind for Republicans. | ||
| They do not understand a mindset that does not view their opponents that way. | ||
| Whereas the Republicans are just trying to work together, get things done, trying to make things happen, trying to get government out of people's lives so they can be free again. | ||
| And they're dealing with people who genuinely hate them on a racial level, genuinely despise them and want to destroy them. | ||
| And again, people are like, oh, they're left and right is a false paradigm. | ||
| It's not, though, is it? | ||
| But it's not, actually, because one side has all of these people and the other side has none of them. | ||
| So this isn't a Democrats bad sort of thing. | ||
| It's Democrats racist, stupid sort of thing. | ||
| If you're racist, if you're stupid, if you hate white people, if you are incompetent, incapable of doing anything on your own, if you see the world in this zero-sum game, screw everybody over or else you're getting screwed over, doggy dog, small-minded third-world sort of mentality, then you're going to be on the Democrat side. | ||
| And it's impossible to deal with these people. | ||
| So something's got to change. | ||
| Either the Democrats have to stop being vicious, hateful scum. | ||
| They have to stop, you know, they have to elevate themselves above the place where they are now, which is on the same level as sort of a sentient pond scum. | ||
| Okay, that's not going to happen, all right? | ||
| So the only other option is for Republicans to stop acting like these people just have a disagreement with you. | ||
| They hate you and are trying to destroy you. | ||
| Treat them appropriately. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
| This is the American Journal. | ||
| I'm going to have to open up phone lines nice and early this morning. | ||
| Put in a few more videos here. | ||
| I got so many videos. | ||
| I got so many stories to cover. | ||
| I don't even know where to go from here. | ||
| I mean, we got Europe basically in total collapse as they're doing everything they can to stop even just the most basic expression of patriotism in that country. | ||
| But I mean, Europe really is like teetering on the edge right now. | ||
| We got multiple stories about that, including the UK apparently headed towards a total bankruptcy and IMF bailout for some reason. | ||
| For some reason, I mean, they do everything right, right? | ||
| I mean, they import 50 million illiterate Somalians, and somehow the NHS stops working. | ||
| What's happening here? | ||
| So, I mean, you know, they're going to collapse into bankruptcy. | ||
| Germany is saying it can no longer afford to be a welfare state. | ||
| Gee, I wonder what the problem was there, too. | ||
| Anybody attempting to reverse the just obvious course of what got them there, try to actually advocate against the policies that are systematically destroying that entire continent are met with brutal violence. | ||
| Men putting up English flags, attacked with firebomb. | ||
| A group of men was attacked with a petrol bomb while putting up English flags in Stevenage, resulting in one man, Lewis, suffering from a laceration to his head. | ||
| The victim stated the attack reflects deep resentment and hatred towards our nation, but they will continue to display the flag to preserve their heritage and identity. | ||
| So there's been this trend of people putting up the St. George flag or drawing the Red Cross on white squares, like on crosswalks, that sort of thing. | ||
| And this is being treated like basically like terrorism by the government of that country, which if you're being treated like a terrorist for raising your own country's flag, that means you're an occupied nation. | ||
| It means you should really care about that. | ||
| And again, the importance of flags as symbols of a people is being embraced in that country, as well as in places like Germany as well. | ||
| You've got just the absolute madness of the Democrats on display, as always. | ||
| Although it's kind of starting to backfire a little bit as you've got Gavin Newsom hired some Hollywood script writing team or something to try to make him like Trump. | ||
| And so they're trying to invoke meme magic, but they don't understand the powers that they're unleashing. | ||
| They are not capable of wielding the forces that they're currently summoning into existence. | ||
| For example, yesterday, the Gavin Newsom, I don't know, Trump mimicery account is publishing statistics showing that Mississippi has a significantly higher murder rate than California. | ||
| And they're making the mistake of asking the internet what might be behind that. | ||
| What could possibly be the cause of California having a significantly lower murder rate than Mississippi? | ||
| Now, they think it might have something to do with the policies. | ||
| I think What they're going with is the idea that because California is so sort of socialist and the government is so big and powerful there, that that causes the crime rate to be lower when, in fact, it's about the percentage of your population that is black. | ||
| So, is this really a conversation you want to have? | ||
| I mean, I know we keep hearing time and time again over the last several years that it's time to have an uncomfortable conversation about race. | ||
| Is it time to have that conversation? | ||
| Because so far, the uncomfortable conversations about race are being like, black people have been slaves for 4,000 years. | ||
| It's like, what are we even talking about here? | ||
| This is nonsense. | ||
| If you want to actually have a conversation about race, then you can pretty much overlay a map of population density of African Americans over a population density percentage felons, and it's basically a one-to-one perfect match. | ||
| So, is that a conversation that you want to have or not? | ||
| Because we can have that conversation. | ||
| We can maybe get to some pretty uncomfortable answers here, but I'd be careful if I were you. | ||
| I just would be careful if I were you invoking me magic and trying to embrace the sort of no holds barred, edgy content that swept Trump into power. | ||
| It's not going to go the way that you want it because you can't control it. | ||
| You understand? | ||
| When you unleash these forces, there is no reining them back in. | ||
| So, I say keep doing it. | ||
| I say pursue it to the end. | ||
| In England, also, we have some just insane stories about censorship and people thrown into prison. | ||
| Lucy Connolly, released from prison after a race hate post on X. A woman who was jailed for stirring up racial hate in the aftermath of the Southport attack has been released from prison. | ||
| Lucy Connolly, 42, whose husband serves on Northampton Town Council, pled guilty in September after posing the expletive-ridden message on X after the day three girls were stabbed to death in July 2024. | ||
| Connolly from Northampton called for mass deportations now and urged her followers on X to set fire to hotels, housing asylum seekers. | ||
| She was released from HMP Peterborough earlier after she was handed a 31-month prison sentence in October at Birmingham Crown Court. | ||
| Connolly was freed from prison at automatic release point of her custodial sentence after serving 40% of her term in prison. | ||
| She'll serve the remainder of her sentence on license under the supervision of the prohibition or the probation service. | ||
| Connolly's case has sparked debate with some criticizing her sentence as excessive. | ||
| Speaking after her release, Conservative leader Kimmy Badenock compared Connolly's treatment to that of those who took part in the riots following the Southport attack, saying her punishment was harsher than the sentences handed down for bricks thrown at police or actual rioting. | ||
| Protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in public than public safety, in law, than public safety. | ||
| If the law does this, then the law itself is broken. | ||
| It's time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act. | ||
| So she spent more than a year in prison for a single tweet that she quickly deleted and apologized for. | ||
| During Connolly's appeal against her sentence in May, the Court of Appeal heard news on the South Perk, Southport murders that caused a resurgence of anxiety caused by her son's death at the age of 19 months, 14 years earlier. | ||
| Connolly's husband, Raymond, a Northampton town counselor and former West Northampshire counselor, has defended his wife, saying that she's a good person and not a racist, and she paid a very high price for making a mistake. | ||
| God, even that just so pathetic. | ||
| She made a mistake, okay? | ||
| All right, she made the mistake of expressing anger when little girls were murdered by a migrant, and she should have just accepted it. | ||
| She should have been happy about that. | ||
| It was her mistake having feelings. | ||
| It was her mistake being outraged at little girls being brutally stabbed to death and murdered. | ||
| She should have accepted that. | ||
| She should have welcomed it. | ||
| She certainly should not have, you know, drawn any parallels to, you know, other instances of little girls being murdered by black men in the UK, by Asian men in the UK. | ||
| She should have ignored that pattern. | ||
| She shouldn't have recognized it. | ||
| It was a mistake of hers, okay? | ||
| Like, there's no mistake. | ||
| But I guess it's just, I, you know, I feel for the guy. | ||
| His wife went to jail for a year. | ||
| And God only knows if he's like, this is unfair. | ||
| And they're like, well, now you're going to jail too. | ||
| But this is what happens when you live in a country that has removed free speech for certain segments of the population. | ||
| Not for everybody. | ||
| I mean, if you're out there, you know, raping little girls, like they're not going to do anything to you. | ||
| But if you complain about that, you better grovel on your hands and knees and apologize for it. | ||
| We have some videos to go to about this just from the just sheer outrageous. | ||
| And like, again, we need to be running guns to the UK. | ||
| We need to be giving these people guns because they're not going to survive if they don't have the ability to free themselves with violence. | ||
| And I'm just like, we're getting to the point now, this is not an option. | ||
| Like, it's not going to fix, be able to be fixed in any possible way when you can't even describe the problem you're trying to fix. | ||
| You cannot talk about the problem you're trying to fix because they've decided that talking about the problem is offensive to the people causing the problem. | ||
| So you can't talk about it. | ||
| How are you going to fix it? | ||
| No, they need guns to kill their leadership. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| So just like any other situation in any other part of the world, kind of like how the brave, you know, freedom fighter Syrians had to use their weapons against their dictators, the Assads, right? | ||
| You have to give them weapons to fight their way out of the brutal, crushing regime that's keeping them oppressed. | ||
| It's the same thing in the UK and Ireland and pretty much everywhere else in Europe. | ||
| And if I was president, we would be running guns to them or perhaps bombing parliament itself as an act of liberation for the UK people. | ||
| Tell me if I'm wrong when you listen to this story. | ||
| Clip number seven. | ||
| This is Connie Shaw talking about Lucy Connolly and how she was treated by her own court system despite, you know, doing everything they said. | ||
| She made the mistake of, you know, believing the things they told her, which in this system that they operate in, no, you have to, you're going to have to kill them. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
If I hear one more person say, but she pleaded guilty, I think I will explode. | |
| But the precise reason why she pled guilty was because she was remanded in custody. | ||
| She was told she wouldn't be granted bail, even if she had pled. | ||
| Who told her that? | ||
| That was her duty solicitor. | ||
| She was told, if you plead not guilty, you'll be waiting behind bars for maybe up to a year just for your trial. | ||
| If you plead guilty, you'll be home by Christmas, she was told. | ||
| She was told that if she pleaded guilty, she would get that 25% reduction on her sentence. | ||
| But the judge, in his sentencing remarks, said the reason for the really long sentence was that if she had pleaded not guilty and then was found guilty, the minimum sentence she would have got was three and a half years. | ||
| And he started from that point. | ||
| But the whole point of pleading guilty is that you don't start from the point of what you would have got if you pleaded not guilty and then was found guilty. | ||
| So she felt seriously misled that she believed that she'd be getting this shorter sentence that she never expected to get two and a half years. | ||
| So I mean, you know, what do you do? | ||
| What are you supposed to do when you tweet something out? | ||
| And sure, you're a little angry. | ||
| But like the question is, like, what does a tweet do? | ||
| Does it hurt anybody? | ||
| No, it literally can't. | ||
| It's just words. | ||
| Can't hurt anybody. | ||
| Shouldn't, you know, direct people where to go or who exactly to kill. | ||
| Basically, people were burning down asylum hotels. | ||
| And she was saying, yeah, good. | ||
| There shouldn't be. | ||
| What the hell is an asylum hotel? | ||
| What the hell is that? | ||
| That shouldn't exist. | ||
| No, they should all be burned down. | ||
| They shouldn't have been built in the first place. | ||
| What the hell is an asylum hotel? | ||
| All it is, it's a colony. | ||
| It is a military encampment for the conquerors that your own government is bringing in to subject you to oppression. | ||
| So, yeah, they should all be burned down. | ||
| So a tweet doesn't hurt. | ||
| So she didn't hurt anybody. | ||
| Like what she did didn't actually affect anybody ever, right? | ||
| Literally giving somebody a paper cut is more damage than this woman ever did. | ||
| She puts out a tweet, they pick her up and they go, All right, you can either plead guilty and we'll only throw you in a concrete box for a year or so, or you can plead non-guilty and we'll keep you in that box for a year anyway before we ever get to the trial. | ||
| And then, you know, the laws that we've written, you probably are guilty. | ||
| You'll be found guilty. | ||
| And then you'll be in jail for another three and a half years. | ||
| So because you tweeted something out we don't like, we're giving you the option of either go to jail for a year or go to jail for four and a half years because you tweeted something that we don't like. | ||
| It's like, okay, anybody telling you that needs to be killed. | ||
| Do people not understand how serious this is? | ||
| What? | ||
| Now, let's just strip it of all of the pomp and let's let's forget that the person doing this has a gay white wig and dumbass black robes. | ||
| Let's forget that they're wearing the accoutrement of authority. | ||
| And just on an individual level, if I grabbed your mother off the street and put her in my basement for a year, would I deserve death? | ||
| Like, would it be okay for her to like kill me to try to get out? | ||
| I would think so. | ||
| That's all these people are doing. | ||
| Yeah, they, you know, dress it up by carrying it out all in public, almost as like this con game that if they just do it right in front of you, you'll think it's okay. | ||
| You'll think they're allowed to do it. | ||
| But I personally, I think if you're being thrown in jail for a year because somebody because you said something somebody didn't like, I think you got to treat that like, you know, well, this woman honked at me in traffic, so I followed her home, trussed her up like a pig, tied her hands and her legs behind her back, and threw her in my basement, you know, fed her slop for a year. | ||
| Whoa, whoa, what? | ||
| I wrote down the law that says you can't honk at me in traffic, so therefore it's allowed. | ||
| So, I mean, I'm just saying, you got to do something. | ||
| UK, Germany, you got to do something because your entire system is collapsing around you. | ||
| And it's going to get really, really, really bad if you don't do something really, really, really aggressive right now. | ||
| And I almost feel an obligation to like go overboard with what I'm saying right now because I'm not in the UK and I have freedom of speech still. | ||
| If you took what I'm saying and any like person in the UK said it, they also would be in jail for a couple years. | ||
| So I'm telling you right now, as an American, what you need is guns and you need to fight your way out of this because there is no dealing with these people. | ||
| I genuinely believe that. | ||
| And I don't think that you have even a couple years to like turn this thing around. | ||
| You really don't. | ||
| And again, they're very deliberate about what they're trying to do to you. | ||
| It's very obvious what the end result is. | ||
| Like, none of this is speculation. | ||
| None of this is, oh, let me tell you what they're planning, even though there's no evidence for it. | ||
| What I'm telling you is that if you just take a look at the charts as they currently exist, the trends that are currently in action and just occurring right in front of us, the end result is within like, I don't know, 10 years, English people are gone. | ||
| They're gone. | ||
| They're gone. | ||
| They're gone forever, right? | ||
| The last, you know, however long this generation survives, but then that's it for the race of people that are Europeans. | ||
| So you got to do something about this. | ||
| You're being genocided. | ||
| So this is why I can't like, you know, throw the Palestinians, like the Gazans under the bus or anything. | ||
| It's like, I wish the Europeans were more like Gazans. | ||
| Can you imagine? | ||
| Can you imagine if they even had just an ounce of the temerity that the Gazans have? | ||
| This is the issue. | ||
| You're being taken over. | ||
| You're being genocided. | ||
| Your quality of life has already collapsed entirely. | ||
| I've got, I mean, I've got maybe 10 stories from this weekend alone. | ||
| American guy slashed with a knife in Amsterdam trying to protect girls from being stalked and harassed by Muslim men. | ||
| Another girl, I believe also in Amsterdam, or at least somewhere in the Netherlands, was on the phone with the police saying, I think I'm being followed. | ||
| I need help. | ||
| She's on the 9-11 call, 911 call, whatever they have there in Amsterdam, and she's stabbed to death and she's murdered on the line while begging for help from the police. | ||
| I mean, this is just off the top of my head. | ||
| Then there's this woman getting let out of prison after a year because of discussing any of this. | ||
| Men with English flags attacked with firebomb. | ||
| German welfare state can no longer be financed. | ||
| The questions about St. George and Union Jacks lining English streets because they're very concerned about this. | ||
| Oh my God, how dare the English wave their own flag? | ||
| And it just goes on and on in Europe. | ||
| And I don't even print the stories out. | ||
| There are so many of them, and it's every single day. | ||
| And it's like, how long can this possibly go on? | ||
| And what is too extreme for dealing with this issue? | ||
| I mean, it was ridiculous 10 years ago, and it's only gotten worse ever since then. | ||
| The actual complete invasion and usurpation of Europe itself by foreigners. | ||
| Like, what are you going to do about it? | ||
| How are you going to fix this? | ||
| Because so far, I've gotten absolutely nothing. | ||
| And I mean, America's going through more or less the same thing. | ||
| But every morning I come in and all the news on the feed is from Europe since they've been up for a couple hours. | ||
| And it's all just, you know, this woman stabbed, these women raped, this man killed, trying to defend another woman, trying to stop somebody, some migrant trying to kidnap a little girl and getting caught, and then the people going and protesting and being shut down by the police because the entire European governmental system at this point is hyper, | ||
| hyper-focused on both bringing in violent savage males to wage war against their own people and then to crush the response from their own people that could actually prevent any of this. | ||
| So you have to stop trying to talk to these people or like debate these people. | ||
| You have to kill them. | ||
| I'm telling you, you have to kill them. | ||
| Let's go to clip number 16 here. | ||
| This is just one of the many ways that the Irish state in particular is just engaged in this cycle of genocide against its own people. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Watch this. | |
| The European Union provides funding to member countries for accepting immigrants. | ||
| Ireland receives this money, which then flows to developers, hotels, and the wealthy elite. | ||
| These elites funnel some of that same money back to the government through donations and gifts, creating a cycle of wealth and influence. | ||
| Meanwhile, immigrants are used to secure votes for the government, reinforcing their power. | ||
| As more money is printed to keep the system going, the wealthy become richer, while ordinary citizens like you and I suffer. | ||
| As the value of the Euro drops, widening the wealth defied. | ||
| As people outside this circle figure out what's happening, they become angry. | ||
| This group grows, scaring the government. | ||
| To stop this, the government used propaganda to label those people as racist and far-right, scaring others from joining. | ||
| This corruption allows the government to maintain its circle of wealth and power. | ||
| The European Union, in turn, benefits by promoting immigration and diversity, which makes it harder for people to join together and resist new laws that give them more power. | ||
| If we all don't come together and oppose this, we can't stop it. | ||
| It's up to all of us to break the chains they have around us and our thoughts. | ||
| This needs to change. | ||
| We all deserve better. | ||
| Let's go here to clip 23. | ||
| This is Keith Woods on the same phenomenon. | ||
| It's not just in Ireland, it's in every country in Europe. | ||
| And it's NGOs and the government working hand in hand to eradicate resistance to the native population's replacement. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You do have a lot of charities, NGOs that basically exist to lobby for leftism and anti-racism. | |
| And the government provides a lot of their funding, and then they lobby the government to enact change. | ||
| And these groups already represent anyone. | ||
| It's like five antifo with college degrees working in an office in Dublin somewhere, and 60% of their funding is from the government. | ||
| So, you know, it's this strange system where the government is like creating its own think tanks, its own pressure and lobby groups, and lobbying itself to pass legislation that it wants anyway. | ||
| And then there's like, you know, tens of thousands of people that are just employed on the public purse to do this. | ||
| This is fascinating, Keith. | ||
| So me, from the way you're articulating it, I hadn't quite thought about this before. | ||
| The left come into government, the left outsource their power to what are, in a sense, constitutionally leftist, extra-governmental organizations, and then they make decisions. | ||
| And so it's a way of ensuring leftist hegemony forever. | ||
| Jollyheretic.com against not. | ||
| It's not complicated. | ||
| It's not hard to figure out. | ||
| It's not sophisticated. | ||
| It's just effective. | ||
| It just works because they do it and convince people that you're a bad person for trying to resist them. | ||
| An American man stabbed in Germany, protecting women from migrants. | ||
| The story of Lucy Connolly is like worse than you can even imagine. | ||
| The way she was treated in prison. | ||
| And not only that, but she had a 19-month-old child, Harry, who died in 2011 due to NHS failures. | ||
| So it's like, imagine having a kid. | ||
| Your socialist government requires you to go to their national health service. | ||
| They kill your child. | ||
| 10 years later, you're having like PTSD flashbacks because little girls are being stabbed by the savage morons that your government has brought in. | ||
| You get angry at that and say all these people should be deported and now your government throws you in prison for a year and more. | ||
| Because that tweet is just like, I'm sorry, is it too extreme to say that these people need to free themselves through violence because. | ||
| Because everything I've laid out so far sounds like something George Orwell couldn't even come up with. | ||
| It's like worst thing you can pop. | ||
| They kill your kid, then they throw you in jail for being angry that other children are being killed. | ||
| It's just like. | ||
| What are you going to do? | ||
| What are you going to do about it? | ||
| We're back on the other side. | ||
| I'll give out the phone number. | ||
| Make sure to go to thealexjonesstore.com to keep us on the air ending the fight. | ||
| It's a real fight, folks, for the fate of humanity. | ||
| My mission over 30-plus years is to expose the globalist system so humanity can come together against their transhumanist death cult. | ||
| And to carry that mission out, I need to be accurate. | ||
| I need to have great research. | ||
| I need to have great sources. | ||
| Everything with me is about being truthful and being the Mars is that Alex Jones is right, Tip Jar. | ||
| I mean, it's a cliche. | ||
| So yesterday, I talked to Ed Martin, the head strike force lawyer with billions of dollars under him and thousands of people at his disposal. | ||
| And we talked about 45 minutes, and most of what he told me, he said, was on the record. | ||
| Only a few things weren't. | ||
| And a lot of this was exclusive information because I've known Ed for really 24, 25 years. | ||
| He'll know all the best background. | ||
| He's been like hardcore anti-globalist for 40 years. | ||
| I mean, it's like he's been doing it longer than I have. | ||
| And headed up some of the most important organizations we've got that were literally set up in the McCarthy era to fight the communists, the proto-globalists and the rest of it. | ||
| So I mean, he's like, you know, expert on all this, head of the eagle for him, you name it. | ||
| That's how I've known him so long. | ||
| And all the work he has done previously as a prosecutor. | ||
| He's known as, you know, really being smart and having big balls. | ||
| So he just told me a lot of this incredible information. | ||
| So I went on air today and I said, you know, I'm going to release most of it tomorrow, but I said, I'm going to release a lot of it right now. | ||
| And I was just dropping bombshell after bombshell. | ||
| And then I see in the comments, people going, oh, you're making us wait. | ||
| You know, where's all this huge information? | ||
| And I'm like, I mean, even Grok got it right with its summary about, I'm telling you where the grand juries are open. | ||
| I mean, like for real, you know, from the head of the task force, I'm telling you about how they got all Jack Smith's emails and stuff where he was going to set up these huge unlawful tribunals for thousands of people in D.C. I mean, just super tyrannical real martial law stuff. | ||
| How they're going to, they already got a bunch of them, you know, clear-cut on just clear-cut tax evasion. | ||
| And they're going after all of them. | ||
| And then he told me so much more about stuff that is so huge. | ||
| I want to be able to, when I'm going to get home tonight, which is about 20 minutes, pick some food up. | ||
| I'm going to take those notes and then go to some of the stuff public already and pull it up and just show people. | ||
| And because it's amazing. | ||
| So a big news organization, just digesting what he said, each one of the things was a huge, exclusive, important story. | ||
| Would take days for even whole reporter teams to be able to roll that out. | ||
| So I'm kind of a one-man man when it comes to all that. | ||
| I got some good crew and some producers and journalists and writers, but I'm going to go meet with him in the morning and say, they're this, that, that. | ||
| And I mean, I'm the source of it. | ||
| And it's directly to Ed Martin. | ||
| So I understand, you know, people are like, oh, this isn't true. | ||
| I've been hearing this forever. | ||
| Well, you didn't hear this from me. | ||
| I'm the guy saying no indictments eight years ago. | ||
| I'm the guy that exposed the first crossfire hurricane NSA spying on Trump myself. | ||
| We got the documents. | ||
| I mean, I'm Alex Jones. | ||
| So I understand the cue people. | ||
| Oh, there's thousands of Gitmo and Hillary's been executed and all that stuff. | ||
| That's not me. | ||
| So I want you to understand. | ||
| They have grand juries open. | ||
| They're going after these people. | ||
| You saw Bolton get raided last week. | ||
| That's cut and dry. | ||
| And when the grand jury see all this information, I believe there'll be indictments. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So this is a totally different ballgame than we were in. | ||
| There are a lot of cowards at the DOJ, a lot of lazy people, a lot of folks that don't want to take on the deep state, but Martin's finding the ones who will do it. | ||
| And, you know, the different jurisdictions where he can operate all over the country. | ||
| Not going to D.C. is totally rigged. | ||
| So he's making a real run of it, and he deserves our support and our respect because they've been really coming after him. | ||
| The Democrats member blocks his appointment as U.S. attorney. | ||
| So, but now he got, you know, just graduated up. | ||
| You know, because Trump understood what was happening, he's got the full backing of the president. | ||
| I'll leave it at that. | ||
| And he's making a run at it. | ||
| So you want it. | ||
| You got it. | ||
| And let me tell you, he needs to be prayed for. | ||
| You got to have big wavos. | ||
| I mean, he's, you know, he's like Darth Vader to the bad guys. | ||
| At least him is like the devil. | ||
| So this isn't, oh, I heard on a cue drop this or, ooh, that's not me. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| You know, I'm not the guy that has like nebulous stuff on. | ||
| So I said, so talk to Ed Martin. | ||
| You know, talk to him before that, but I've never really pushed for it to be on record because he's been on the show many times over the years. | ||
| But he just now. | ||
| That's an update from Alex Jones. | ||
| Find and share it on his ex at real Alex Jones at Real Alex Jones. | ||
| No, no cue drops here, folks. | ||
| Just the hard facts. | ||
| We'll be back on the other side with more. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
| We do have our own mess to deal with here in America, and we'll get to it here momentarily. | ||
| I do want to spend a little bit longer on what's happening in Europe because it seems to be all coming to a head here. | ||
| And again, I'll just lay out for you just some of the horrors that Europe is being forced to deal with. | ||
| I want to go to clip number six here because this is a very typical story of migrants to the UK. | ||
| In fact, I'd say pretty much all the migrants to the UK in the UK is sort of a rare instance where it's impossible for it to be a point of refuge in any legitimate sense because asylum laws dictate that the first safety country is supposed to be the place where you seek asylum. | ||
| And it is literally impossible for the UK, unless they're accepting refugees from the Hebrides, unless the refugees are coming from Norway or Iceland or Ireland, they're not landing in the UK first. | ||
| Unless they're somehow taking a boat from Tunisia, you know, through the gates of Hercules, you know, all the way over to past the Frock of Gibraltar. | ||
| It just didn't make any sense. | ||
| To get to the UK, you by necessity have to go through like 13 other countries. | ||
| So there shouldn't be legally a single refugee or asylum seeker anywhere in the UK. | ||
| Every single one of them is fraudulent. | ||
| Every single one of them can legally be rejected for seeking asylum and sent back to wherever the hell they came from. | ||
| So here's just a little story, very typical of sort of the average refugee in the UK. | ||
| This is their contributions to the UK society. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
| Now, if you ever needed a reason for small boat migrants to be detained upon entry and never allowed to venture into British communities, well, here's a shocking example. | ||
| This is Sadek Nixad. | ||
| He's a 29-year-old who was recently jailed for nine years for raping a 15-year-old schoolgirl in Scotland after claiming asylum in Britain. | ||
| Now, the Daily Mail has done some great work this weekend. | ||
| They've revealed that Nixad travelled 4,000 miles from his native Afghanistan to reach the UK and claim asylum around two years before his attack on the girl, living it up in at least three safe European cities before finally arriving in Falkirk, where he pounced on the schoolgirl yards from his migrant hostel. | ||
| The attack sent shockwaves all across Scotland and sparked the very first angry protests up there against asylum hotels. | ||
| But the disgusting rape aside, an absolute horror that the poor girl will frankly never get over, here's where this story gets worse. | ||
| Social media pictures posted by the guy before arriving in Britain show him apparently living a life of luxury as a gallivanting tourist rather than someone fleeing war or persecution. | ||
| He poses gleefully outside some of the world's most famous landmarks, including Rome's Colosseum and Cologne Cathedral, as he made his way as an apparent refugee, remember, to the UK. | ||
| As the Mail reports, one picture shows him sporting a North Face puffer jacket worth more than £300 and smiling in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris as the sun sets behind him. | ||
| Very good. | ||
| Another shows that upon arriving in the UK by small boat, he stopped off at a shopping center in Basingstoke in Hampshire, where he uploaded a post of himself wearing a three-piece linen suit. | ||
| Doesn't he look smart? | ||
| His social media posts have been met with comments from friends and family back home in Afghanistan, with some writing, good job, and God bless. | ||
| Well, it appears his journey to the UK began in late 2020 after he shared a snap of himself more than 3,000 miles away in Europe outside the Royal Palace of Turin in Italy. | ||
| He enjoyed boat trips in the sun, and social media pictures show he even went to Sicily for a short period too. | ||
| By 2021, it appears he'd inched ever closer to the UK by traveling north to Cologne in Germany. | ||
| Images suggest he was later housed by the home office in the Cladhen Hotel in Scotland. | ||
| There are images of him here now on your screen lounging in the hotel's plush leather chairs. | ||
| In October 23, Nick Zad approached a 15-year-old girl near a local pub in Falkirk and brutally raped her in broad daylight. | ||
| When he was jailed in June, his lawyer claimed he hadn't been educated about the significant cultural differences between the UK and Afghanistan, where child marriage is rife. | ||
| So here's yet another example of how the current small boats crisis is putting our women and children at risk of monsters like this. | ||
| The longer this nonsense is tolerated, the more women and girls will have their lives ruined by a political decision to stop the boats immediately in their tracks. | ||
| And that's just one of sort of an infinite number of stories. | ||
| Again, even just from the last weekend or so. | ||
| Let me just lay these out for you. | ||
| I understand. | ||
| My last segment, may have seemed to go a little bit overboard. | ||
| You tell me if I'm going a little bit overboard. | ||
| Lucy Connolly, released from prison after a race hate post on X. That, of course, is a story that we were just talking about. | ||
| British mother jailed for tweet, saying I was Keir Starmer's political prisoner. | ||
| She posted one thing, deleted it, apologized for it, and was sent to jail for a year, despite being told that accepting a plea deal would not result in her going to jail for that long. | ||
| Men putting up English flag, English flags attacked with firebombs. | ||
| Again, I mean, you've got you're hanging up your own national flag, and you've got migrants or somebody or Antifa or somebody attacking them with firebombs. | ||
| And of course, it's the flag raisers who are the ones who are, you know, getting the ire of the UK government, not the people throwing the firebombs. | ||
| American man stabbed in Germany, protecting women from migrants. | ||
| This was yesterday. | ||
| An American tourist in Germany was stabbed and seriously injured after protecting women from harassment by a group of migrants. | ||
| New figures released in June show that nearly half of all prisoners in Germany are foreign nationals, with around three times their share of the population. | ||
| There's a 21-year-old Good Samaritan suffering cuts to his face after being attacked by two men on the Dresden tram. | ||
| He placed himself between a group of migrant men and a group of women they were harassing. | ||
| One of the attackers, a Syrian national, began punching the man while the second left while the second left the tram before returning with a knife and slashing his face. | ||
| The knife man escaped and remains at large, but the Syrian national was later detained. | ||
| You see this quite a bit in Europe where Americans will try to step in and protect people. | ||
| See, Europeans have been taught. | ||
| They've been trained. | ||
| They've been domesticated to just accept that this is a reality. | ||
| And then an American goes and is like, you know, wants to stop the migrants harassing the women, which is a mistake because the migrants will stab you and then they'll get away with it. | ||
| So, you know, Europeans have learned just let the harassment take place. | ||
| Just allow the rapes and whatever else to happen because it's just not worth it. | ||
| It's not worth it because even if you succeed in stopping the attack, the government will then punish you for daring to stop the attack. | ||
| And there's literally multiple stories about people being arrested. | ||
| There's a story this weekend. | ||
| Like, I'm telling you, there's so much of this. | ||
| I have like 15 story examples. | ||
| I'm thinking of more in my head as we're, as we're going, I didn't even grab the stories about the guy. | ||
| Three migrants broke into his house at 3 in the morning in an attempt to do violence and rob him. | ||
| He fought them, and then he got arrested and thrown into jail. | ||
| And we've seen the stories of girls in Germany being raped, then calling their rapist a bad name, and they get more jail time than the rapists do. | ||
| Here's another story from, again, today. | ||
| So this happened yesterday. | ||
| Girl 17 is stabbed to death while calling cops to report being followed on her bike ride home in Holland as cops arrest asylum seeker who raped woman days earlier. | ||
| A wave of national fury has swept Holland following the arrest of an asylum seeker for the killing of a 17-year-old who was stabbed to death while she was calling police to report being followed on her bike ride home. | ||
| The lifeless body of Lisa was discovered by police on a roadside ditch in the early hours of Wednesday morning. | ||
| She was returning from a night out with friends when she was attacked by a man who had had a bicycle with him while she was phoning the emergency police number. | ||
| The main suspect in the case, a 22-year-old male asylum seeker, was arrested four days earlier for a rape in Amsterdam on August 15th and allegedly assaulted a third woman five days earlier than that. | ||
| Okay, so you've got this guy just literally just like raping one woman, raping another woman, gets let out, kills a third woman. | ||
| Maybe he's already out on the street. | ||
| We don't know. | ||
| We don't know. | ||
| But I mean, he can't be expected to understand that raping and killing women isn't okay. | ||
| He's a foreigner after all. | ||
| So he's allowed to do that. | ||
| The violent murder of the teenager has triggered widespread outrage in a national reclaim the night campaign after a Dutch actress and author wrote a poem that went viral about Lisa's final moments cycling home. | ||
| In a post shared on her Instagram, Ninki Gravemaid wrote, The red bag, I keep thinking about that red bag, how it dangled from her handlebars as she drove through the night, a night that belonged to her too. | ||
| I claim the night. | ||
| I claim the streets. | ||
| I demand that the fear be lifted. | ||
| Well, not anytime soon. | ||
| Not anytime soon. | ||
| So literally on the phone with police saying, I'm being followed. | ||
| I'm scared when the attacker catches up to her and murders her because he was let out despite raping a woman four days earlier. | ||
| Alien youths in Austria accused of raping a teacher, burning her house down and beheading a dead animal. | ||
| That also from yesterday. | ||
| Suspected Tunusian serial killer under arrest in France. | ||
| The running theory is that the perpetrator was targeting homosexual men. | ||
| This also from today. | ||
| So these are three stories from today. | ||
| Raise the colors movement sweeps UK as Brits fly English flag in opposition to leftists claiming it's offensive to migrants against some tepid resistance from the English natives. | ||
| French police find 24-year-old Dutch woman raped and held captive and drugged in by Morocco drug dealers. | ||
| That was on the 22nd of August. | ||
| Aliens on trial for raping and torturing 13-year-old boy in German basement. | ||
| Also from the 22nd. | ||
| African hammer attacker sets Italian airport. | ||
| Check-in desk on fire. | ||
| Shocking footage of Milan's airport burning went viral. | ||
| 19-year-old gang raped on top of her own vomit in Germany. | ||
| I mean, all these are just from this weekend. | ||
| It's like, I'm sorry. | ||
| What is the solution to this? | ||
| There's only one. | ||
| It's eject all of these people from your countries as quickly as possible. | ||
| And you're rapidly running out of time to do that. | ||
| As is the design of your masters. | ||
| The European leaders, you know, they know exactly what they're doing, and they're desperately trying to bring in as many savage foreigner men into Europe to overwhelm the system as quickly as possible in the hopes that the European people themselves just stay asleep for long enough that they can reach that critical mass and then they can just like impose Sharia law and just have the government itself just fully and completely dedicated to the service of the hostile interlopers. | ||
| So you're quickly, quickly running out of time to do this, and America is honestly not going to be any help to you. | ||
| We are only concerned about the well-being of Jews and that is it. | ||
| Exclusively, if Jews are being left alone, then we don't care. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| All of the white Christian girls in Europe can be raped and murdered, slaughtered and chained up in basements for all America cares. | ||
| But if you dare, if you dare to look sideways at a Jew, then the ambassador will have your head on a platter. | ||
| I think I'm joking. | ||
| France summons U.S. Ambassador Kushner over unacceptable letter about rising anti-Semitism. | ||
| France summoned U.S. Ambassador Charles Kushner after he accused President Emmanuel Macron of failing to address anti-Semitic violence, according to the French foreign ministry. | ||
| So again, I've just read you about 10 different stories about white Christian people just being brutalized in like a million different ways. | ||
| And then the American ambassador is writing angry letters demanding that Jews get special treatment. | ||
| None of the victims I listed were Jews. | ||
| None of these people were Jews. | ||
| The girl being stabbed on her bike, not a Jew. | ||
| The boy being chained in a basement, raped repeatedly, not a Jew. | ||
| The teacher being targeted for death and burned alive in her own home, not a Jewish person. | ||
| So you would think that maybe if America cared about the incredible violence being meted out to the civilians of Europe, there would be some action towards that. | ||
| There would be like, this is unacceptable. | ||
| You're allowing your own people to be raped and murdered at a truly astonishing rate. | ||
| But that doesn't matter to the American government. | ||
| The American government has one priority and one priority alone, and that is the comfort of Jewish people the world over. | ||
| Kushner expressed deep concern over anti-Semitism, stating, quote, in France, not a day passes without Jews assaulted in the street. | ||
| According to his letter in Macron, France firmly rejected Kushner's allegation, stating the ambassador's allegations are unacceptable, according to the foreign ministry. | ||
| They're like, no, they're not. | ||
| Those are white people. | ||
| The white people are the ones being raped and assaulted in the streets. | ||
| So it's fine. | ||
| So you have nothing to worry about. | ||
| Kushner's remarks mirrored Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Nanyahu's criticisms of Macron, emphasizing that such statements embolden extremists. | ||
| So again, we've got the American ambassador to France just taking orders directly from the Prime Minister of Israel and echoing his words in demanding that France give special treatment to Jews, despite the fact that it's white Christian people that are the constant victim of brutal and horrific attack by the migrants that are only in Europe at all because Israel started the wars in the first place. | ||
| And we can go on. | ||
| German welfare state can no longer be financed, according to Murs. | ||
| German Chancellor Frederick Murs has called for a reform of Germany's social welfare spending while ruling out tax increases on medium-sized companies. | ||
| The comments made at low-level party conference of the Christian Democratic Union in Lower Saxony on Saturday will likely be seen as paving the way for further contention with his government coalition partners, the Social Democrats. | ||
| The welfare state that we have today can no longer be financed with what we've produced in the economy, Murs said in the towns of Unzabruk. | ||
| The coalition partners had already agreed to reform the social insurance system, which covers health insurance, pension, and unemployment benefits, due to rising costs and gaps in the federal budget. | ||
| Again, I mean, there's just a stupid article. | ||
| Everything about this is just retarded. | ||
| It's the migrants, you dumbasses. | ||
| It's all of the migrants you brought in, the vast majority of which immediately go on the dole and never get a job. | ||
| The migrants you brought in, ostensibly to replace the workforce, to prop up the Ponzi scheme of state-operated pension plans and social health care. | ||
| And then none of them got jobs. | ||
| They all went on the dole, making the problem they were supposed to solve exponentially worse. | ||
| So undo that. | ||
| So reverse that process. | ||
| So all of the millions and millions of people that have suddenly become debits on your finance sheet, remove them. | ||
| In fact, you can, in fact, this is the solution. | ||
| Do you know how many jobs you can create for Germans in rounding up and expelling the invaders that you've allowed to take root in your country? | ||
| And none of this is difficult. | ||
| None of this is hard. | ||
| It really just takes a widespread understanding by the people of Europe and the people of America for that matter. | ||
| People in charge of our countries are operating a very deliberate and explicit policy of eradication of the native population. | ||
| And you have to stop them by force if necessary. | ||
| I don't know what else it's going to take to wake people up to this fact. | ||
| But this is unsustainable. | ||
| And they're bringing about the collapse on purpose, by design, with this intended consequence. | ||
| Because otherwise, why would they keep doing it? | ||
| Why do they keep bringing people in if all of them go on the dole and half of them are brutal criminals? | ||
| Half of the population in Germany in prison is foreign? | ||
| What? | ||
| Kill them. | ||
| No, you can just kill them. | ||
| This is a war. | ||
| You're in a war. | ||
| Do you get that? | ||
| You have invaders conquering your nation. | ||
| You're in a war. | ||
| And your solution to that is to just give them housing, put them on the dole, require them to provide nothing but give them everything. | ||
| These people are not retarded. | ||
| They are suicidal. | ||
| They are deliberately destroying your nations. | ||
| Fight them. | ||
| This really comes. | ||
| Is this hard? | ||
| Is this complicated? | ||
| Am I crazy? | ||
| My God. | ||
| I got a lot of videos about this and how America has contributed to it. | ||
| Clip number 14 here, Ted Cruz talking about Germany with Tucker Carlson. | ||
| This is from the interview he did not too long ago. | ||
| But again, it just does, you know, explains in part at least some of the tactics being used to deliberately eradicate Germany as a nation. | ||
| Let's watch clip 14 here. | ||
| Why wouldn't you want Germany to have cheap energy? | ||
| Because it empowers Russia. | ||
| And I believe in making our enemies weaker and our friends stronger. | ||
| Has blowing up Nord Stream made Germany stronger? | ||
| Not being dependent on Russia has made Germany stronger. | ||
| Does she think Germany is stronger now than it was four years ago? | ||
| I think not being dependent on Russia. | ||
| Germany has all sorts of problems, and many of them are domestic to their own politics. | ||
| Hold on, let me finish. | ||
| I'm trying to... | ||
| No, but what you're saying, it doesn't... | ||
| Germany seems so much weaker now that its energy costs have spiked and the manufacturing sector is collapsing because of that. | ||
| Let me finish. | ||
| I'm focused on America's interests. | ||
| I don't want Russia stronger because I believe Russia is our enemy. | ||
| You and I disagree on that. | ||
| We can talk about that. | ||
| But I want our enemies weaker. | ||
| I don't want to go to war with Russia, but I want our enemies weaker. | ||
| I don't want Europe dependent on Russia. | ||
| I don't want Putin rich with oil and gas revenues and able to invest in his military and pose a threat to America. | ||
|
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|
So this. | |
| So how's that going? | ||
| How's that going, Teddy? | ||
| I don't want our enemies stronger. | ||
| It's like, first of all, you really should justify that statement. | ||
| He really should have to justify why he's calling Russia an enemy. | ||
| I don't see any reason why Russia's our enemy at all. | ||
| I mean, especially considering the fact that our entire modern world is all predicated. | ||
| It was all established in the fallout of World War II. | ||
| It's like, so when did Germany become our friend? | ||
| When did Russia become our enemy? | ||
| You got to justify this sort of stuff, especially when it's the justification that you're using for why you're destroying Germany. | ||
| It's like, well, yeah, we're destroying Germany, but it's worth it because Russia's our enemy. | ||
| It's like, well, then what, but why is Russia our enemy? | ||
| This doesn't make none of this makes any sense. | ||
| And it's not supposed to. | ||
| Because if they're doing anything even just remotely, logically sound, they wouldn't have to make these claims. | ||
| Like, this is all absurd. | ||
| And now Germany is actually in a state of free fall where they do not have the tax revenue because they've destroyed their own industry. | ||
| They've systematically dismantled their energy production. | ||
| Then we blew up the Nord Stream pipeline. | ||
| They've had to like turn off all of their coal power plants while simultaneously China is building like three coal power plants a day on average or whatever the whatever the rate is. | ||
| So all, you know, all this is either predicated on, I don't know, basically a lot of it's predicated on World War II, if you want to know the truth. | ||
| And that, you know, the understanding that if Germany or really any European country is permitted to have some sort of nationalistic drive based on their race and their existence as a distinct people group, then that's very dangerous to everybody else. | ||
| So it has to be destroyed. | ||
| And so it's being done on purpose. | ||
| Again, it's not, you don't need to speculate. | ||
| You don't need to, you know, make wild predictions. | ||
| Just look at the charts. | ||
| Just look at the way things are going. | ||
| Without deviation, you end up with genocide. | ||
| Like, that's all you get. | ||
| So, you know, Germany, they're like, SPD vice chancellor says earlier that tax increases on the middle and higher income earners would not be ruled out. | ||
| So they're like, they are running out of money. | ||
| They cannot afford their welfare state. | ||
| So they need to raise taxes, but they can't raise taxes without crushing even further the industry that's barely hanging on. | ||
| So they're in this like doom loop spiral going down. | ||
| And the obvious solution is to expel the migrants. | ||
| And they're not doing that and they're never going to do that because that would contradict the ultimate goal that they're all pursuing in tandem in coordination in an orchestrated way. | ||
| So I don't know what to tell you. | ||
| You have an obvious solution to your existential problems, but you won't do it because the people in power are deliberately destroying your nation. | ||
| Wake up. | ||
| All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
| This is the American Journal. | ||
| We'll move on from Europe here, although I got more to share, but we'll move on. | ||
| We've got a lot here in America to deal with. | ||
| some interesting happenings over the weekend. | ||
| We'll go to a clip number 19 here. | ||
| This is something that we covered last week, sort of ad nauseum. | ||
| But it's now been confirmed. | ||
| And again, just hearing this series of events laid out just tells you a lot about what you need to know about the current state of America. | ||
| Let's go to clip number 19 here. | ||
| X removed all posts relating to Israeli pedophile posted by Sean King. | ||
| Clip 19 here. | ||
| There's now more to the cover-up story of Tom Alexandrovich, Israel's cyber chief who was busted in a sting operation. | ||
| Now the new details are out that Sean King was silenced by X. Suddenly in the middle of the night, all of his posts about Tom Alexandrovich had been removed. | ||
| Turns out they were removed because the Israeli government asked X, will you take down all these posts? | ||
| And X said, okay, we'll go ahead and do it. | ||
| And the irony of it goes even deeper. | ||
| The organization within Israel, the government agency that asked for X to remove the posts was the very agency Tom Alexandrovich heads. | ||
| So the cover-up just gets worse and worse by the minute. | ||
| This is the post that Sean King put out there. | ||
| In the middle of the night, Elon Musk deleted every single tweet I've made about Israeli Tom Alexandrovich that was arrested in Las Vegas for sex crimes against children. | ||
| All of them, every retweet, every link to my article is gone. | ||
| Those lawyers were told a government demand required us to remove the tweets, but they didn't tell the lawyers which government. | ||
| And it turns out that it gets confirmed that Twitter admitted it was the Israelis that asked them to get rid of the tweets and they complied. | ||
| This was from Grok saying, yes, based on verified reports, X voluntarily deleted the tweets under doxing policies, likely promoted by Israel's cyber unit where Alexandrovich worked. | ||
| This lacks a public U.S. legal mandate, effectively limiting scrutiny and indirectly protecting the accused from public exposure. | ||
| So not only did he get away with this crime and get to run off to Israel, but then his same division goes and says, oh, and remove all of these tweets. | ||
| This is like one of those cover-ups that reek of Epstein killed himself. | ||
| It just so happened the cameras didn't work. | ||
| It just so happened the guards fell asleep. | ||
| It just so happened he didn't have a roommate. | ||
| It just so happened that the U.S. attorney in Nevada happens to be an Israeli who happens to let go of this Israeli. | ||
| And then the guy happens to be the only one out of eight that gets let go and allowed to go on a plane and passport not seized. | ||
| It just so happens that all of the posts that people are making about the guy start to get deleted off of X because they just don't want you to know more about it. | ||
| This is like a showcasing of the Epstein saga on a small scale, and it just goes to show: look, you're covering for anybody in a position of power who's probably spying on people, gathering a bunch of information. | ||
| You're going to let the guy go. | ||
| And that's why you let him go because he was one of your spies, your cyber spies. | ||
| Just like Epstein was one of your spies. | ||
| I mean, it's just, you know, just ridiculous. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They just think we're stupid. | |
| And look, I don't know if they think we're stupid or they just think it doesn't matter. | ||
| Like at a certain point, it's a classic. | ||
| They know they're lying. | ||
| We know they're lying. | ||
| They know we know they're lying, but they're still lying because it's almost like a challenge. | ||
| It's like, what are you going to do about it? | ||
| They don't think they're tricking anybody, right? | ||
| They just know that censorship works, so they're going to do it, right? | ||
| That's the thing to understand is that to them, it's worth it because you've got the pros and cons. | ||
| The cons are everybody sees that Israel is full of pedophiles. | ||
| We'll protect them, can get away with anything in America. | ||
| Like it really exposes in a dramatic way just how controlled both sides of the American political aisle are. | ||
| It shows how the big tech is willing to work with these countries to cover up legitimate crimes. | ||
| Yeah, it exposes a lot. | ||
| There's a lot of cons to this. | ||
| But the pros outweigh it. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So they weigh this and they go, well, all right, we're sort of showing our hand here. | ||
| We're kind of confirming a lot of the stuff that our enemies say about us. | ||
| But the pro is the story doesn't get out to normies. | ||
| The story stays, you know, sort of on X, doesn't break out of the mold, doesn't get to greater awareness. | ||
| And that's the truth. | ||
| And I guarantee you, if you go around in the streets and ask people about the Israeli pedophile arrest in Las Vegas, they'll have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
| They don't know. | ||
| Because the mainstream media is not reporting it to them because it's not being laid at their feet as something that they should care about. | ||
| So they don't care about it. | ||
| And they know this. | ||
| So, I mean, this is the power of censorship. | ||
| This is why censorship is so dangerous. | ||
| Because even if the censorship itself exposes the construct of the various forces manipulating our country, manipulating big tech, censoring American people on behalf of a foreign state, it exposes all of that, but it still shuts the story down. | ||
| So it's worth it. | ||
| Still stops the story being spread to a wide enough audience for something to actually happen. | ||
| So it's worth it. | ||
| It's fine. | ||
| They don't care that you know that they control everything. | ||
| They brag about it, in fact. | ||
| It's actually part of the psychological operation they're running here. | ||
| And in fact, maybe, you know, maybe this might be a good time to go back a little bit to the UK because one of the things that you need to understand is that they're trying very hard to instill hopelessness in you. | ||
| They're trying very hard to make it seem like there's nothing you can do to fight back. | ||
| Very, very hard in a variety of different ways. | ||
| Now, one of these video I put in doesn't have a number, 31. | ||
| Let's go to clip 31 here because, again, this is the demoralization campaign telling you that it's a foregone conclusion. | ||
| There's nothing you can do to reverse what they've already done. | ||
| That's a lie. | ||
| This is a confidence game, and it's a complete and total lie. | ||
| So I'm here to tell you that you need to be making noise about this. | ||
| You need to be talking about this. | ||
| You need to be telling your friends and family about what's going on here so they can wake up and stop voting for people that are supported by APAC. | ||
| And this message already is getting out there to a large degree. | ||
| So, again, just sort of in a tangent sort of way, the same operation is being carried out. | ||
| The same levers are being pulled. | ||
| And one of the most useful things in the world is learned helplessness. | ||
| And they've done studies where I can't remember the exact one that they did, but essentially, you know, you can, if you convince a, they'll do it with rats, right? | ||
| And they'll have rats that will try to jump up and jump out of somewhere and the walls are too high and they can't jump out. | ||
| And then they'll lower the walls down to where the rats could easily jump out and they still won't because they've learned that they can't. | ||
| And they'll never try to do it because to them, they're just like, I already tried that. | ||
| It didn't work. | ||
| There's learned helplessness being inculcated into the populations of the Western world. | ||
| It's a lie. | ||
| You can reject it. | ||
| We actually can solve all of these problems very easily. | ||
| We just have to have the will to do it. | ||
| And it's the will that they're trying to crush by publicizing this stuff. | ||
| So let's go quickly to 31 here as another example of just the assertion of helplessness that they want you to buy into. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
|
unidentified
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The fact of the matter is, the UK is never going to be white again. | |
| It's just not going to happen. | ||
| People can wish it, but it's not realistic. | ||
| Similarly, our parents who have left Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Muslim countries, for them to think that they can reestablish those countries and the lives that they had there over here, it's not going to happen. | ||
| And I recognize the fact that that's a big loss for both people, for both sides. | ||
| Both sides, right? | ||
|
unidentified
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But the reality is. | |
| Yeah, we can cut that off. | ||
| I mean, it's just absurd. | ||
| It's like, oh, yeah, both sides. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| I mean, one side is having their way of life imposed upon and destroyed from outside sources, and the other side is imposing their life on everybody else. | ||
| And so, sort of, both sides are struggling here. | ||
| It's like, this is ridiculous. | ||
| When they say UK will never be white again, again, they want you to believe. | ||
| If you believe that, then it's true. | ||
| If you don't believe it, then it's not true. | ||
| It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
| And Zumer Alcibiades at Hellenic Vibes on X says, Algeria ethnically cleansed 1 million French residents who, in some cases, had lived there for centuries in the course of just three months. | ||
| The UK is absolutely capable of expelling all non-English UK citizens. | ||
| They could probably do it in under a year with enough motivation. | ||
| Algeria expelled a million French residents, some whose families had been there for centuries. | ||
| But the UK can't do it. | ||
| Okay, sure. | ||
| I mean, Israel can systematically bomb Gaza to smithereens and impose starvation conditions that just kill tens of thousands of children, but the UK could never send people back home. | ||
| And look, I'm not saying I want all the Muslims in the UK to be, you know, starved to death or be shot by drones. | ||
| I'm not Israeli. | ||
| Good lord. | ||
| I mean, I would never, never, ever suggest we do anything that the Israelis do because I'm not evil and I don't support evil programs, but it's not necessary. | ||
| And it illustrates the absurdity, the dichotomy, the difference between these two. | ||
| One is just like, well, gosh, we just, I guess we'd all have to die. | ||
| I guess the UK is just not English anymore. | ||
| Darn it. | ||
| Nothing we can do. | ||
| And the other side is like, oh, you've lived here for all of time. | ||
| Oh, your family can trace its history in this location back to, you know, before Christ. | ||
| Too bad. | ||
| We want it. | ||
| It's our land. | ||
| We desire it. | ||
| So move or die. | ||
| It's like, there's a middle ground here. | ||
| There's a middle ground where the English can just defend their sovereignty, defend their homeland, expel the interlopers, and just get back to normal. | ||
| And you don't have to resort to just mass slaughter. | ||
| But it just shows you how inconsistent all these stances are. | ||
|
unidentified
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Whatever. | |
| Well, let's just keep talking about what's happening in America, shall we? | ||
| Trump to sign executive order ending cashless bail threatens to revoke federal funding in lax jurisdictions, calling it an obvious threat to public safety. | ||
| Arresting repeat offenders for new crimes after they've already been freed without bail is a waste of public resources and obvious threat to public safety, the memo also noted, citing instances of violent offenders being released in the streets only to be charged again. | ||
| On August 11th, the president called on Congress to tighten laws around cashless bail so criminals would not be cut loose without posting a cash bond before their trial. | ||
| The executive action also makes good on Trump's campaign to promise to crack down on left wing jurisdictions that refuse to prosecute dangerous criminals and set loose violent felons on cashless bail. | ||
| And I genuinely don't understand how this can. | ||
| Trump's about to go live. | ||
| Signing this order. | ||
| The effort began in earnest with the president's mobilization of the National Guard in D.C. earlier this month, surging federal resources to assist local law enforcement in arresting suspects and seizing drugs in the nation's capital. | ||
| Some state governments have reformed bail laws in favor of supervised pretrial release out of concern that posting cash disproportionately impacts poorer populations. | ||
| Yeah, I guess it does, but tough, tough crap. | ||
| Like, oh, well, sorry. | ||
| Stop. | ||
| Don't commit crime. | ||
| Just don't commit crime. | ||
| Problem solved. | ||
| So there you go. | ||
| Yeah, I don't understand how this has gotten to this point. | ||
| And, you know, I don't know how you get to the point where, I'm just trying to imagine if like a loved one of mine had their life destroyed. | ||
| Because, you know, you hear about this stuff and it's like a violent criminal, a violent attack. | ||
| And it really doesn't give you the impression that it should of like the horror that these people go through. | ||
| That is not just like, oh, somebody shoved them on the sidewalk. | ||
| It's like, no, somebody broke a glass bottle in their eyes and blinded them for life or, you know, cut their jugular vein and they were bleeding out on the sidewalk, barely survived and spend weeks in the hospital. | ||
| I mean, it doesn't, it really doesn't go, you know, we hardly get a feeling of the true horror that the average victim of a violent crime has to go through. | ||
| And I just can't imagine a loved one of mine being violently attacked, being sent to the hospital or some other thing happening, and learning that the person had been in jail the day before for the same crime, but was let out by a judge. | ||
| I can't say what I would do in that situation. | ||
| It's just I think the judge should be held to account. | ||
| I think that we need to hold these judges to account. | ||
| If they let these guys go, they should be held responsible for the crimes that they then commit. | ||
| I don't know how we can't make that happen. | ||
| Trump's stunning power grab on elections. | ||
| It's what the New York Times says. | ||
| Yeah, I don't even know how to. | ||
| I mean, it's just, this is all just bullcrap. | ||
| I don't like what. | ||
| Yeah, he doesn't want mail-in ballots because mail-in ballots just utterly fraudulent. | ||
| The whole thing is completely fraudulent. | ||
| The 2020 election was stolen and the process to steal it is still in place, stealing it in a way that it becomes impossible to determine what is and is not a valid vote. | ||
| And we're finding like every week there's somebody else being arrested for stuffing mailboxes or some other manipulation of our electoral system. | ||
| And Trump trying to fix this is being presented by the New York Times as him taking over. | ||
| It's a power grab from the election system. | ||
| I don't know what we're supposed to do with these people. | ||
| I mean, whoever wrote this article should be likewise thrown into the ocean without a life preserver. | ||
| And I just hope they can swim. | ||
| I don't want to kill them. | ||
| I just don't want to have to deal with them anymore. | ||
| Why do we have to deal with these people? | ||
| Genuinely. | ||
| Why are we sharing a country with these people? | ||
| BlackRock's bid for Minnesota power worries consumer advocates. | ||
| So yes, folks, BlackRock and Blackstone, these companies that we, you know, on Friday talked about with Tiffany Sianci, the ones who now have access to your retirement funds to spend as they see fit, the ones spending trillions of dollars to buy up every single family home on the market to turn us into a renter society. | ||
| They're now taking over public utilities as well. | ||
| BlackRock, Larry Fink, the leader of which is now the head of the World Economic Forum, is now in talks to purchase the energy production for entire cities. | ||
| Private equity shops have earned outsized returns on investments in healthcare, telecommunications, and housing with mixed results for consumers. | ||
| Yeah, mixed results, I guess you could say that. | ||
| I'm sorry, what is the good result for consumers from BlackRock taking over anything ever? | ||
| This is the thing, man. | ||
| I really don't even, I really don't know how we're supposed to deal with any of this. | ||
| You've got these corporations buying off politicians to just systematically monopolize everything in our country. | ||
| I'm not exaggerating. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Everything. | |
| They are in talks to commodify nature itself and assign some sort of credit value to trees and dirt and rocks and the sky and water. | ||
| So they're taking over literally everything piece by piece. | ||
| The politicians are in their pocket and willing to allow them to do it. | ||
| And the mainstream media is writing the cover stories to justify all this and keep a tamp down on any expression of resistance to this diabolical plan of world domination. | ||
| And people can't see through this. | ||
| It's just right there in your face. | ||
| All of this is so obvious. | ||
| It's just like we're just being attacked relentlessly. | ||
| And I'm sitting here telling you you're being attacked. | ||
| People really not see this. | ||
| I really don't know what to do anymore. | ||
| Like, it's just, it's all completely and utterly insane how obvious all of this is. | ||
| Maybe calmer minds than mine can like try to explain this. | ||
| I just want to slap people. | ||
| I just want to slap every American one by one until they wake up to the reality that's staring them in the face, that you're under attack. | ||
| You are in an existential crisis at this moment. | ||
| That's just so easy to solve. | ||
| It's so easy to solve all of these problems. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You just don't let them do it. | |
| You just say no to all of this crap that they're doing. | ||
| And it really is relentless. | ||
| It just goes on and on. | ||
| Let's go to clip number eight here. | ||
| Here's a more intelligent and calm voice that can explain to you just exactly what's going on here. | ||
| This was in response to James Carville, just like everybody else, just like the New York Times, just like the Minnesota star reformer. | ||
| I mean, all of these mainstream media outlets giving cover and acting like the Democrats, just obscene power grabs or just business as usual, and Trump trying to stop them is tyrannical, a dictatorship. | ||
| It's a power grab. | ||
| Just please, for the love of God, just look at patterns in the past, project them into the future, and realize where we are at this moment. | ||
| Clip number eight here, Victor Davis Hanson tossing truth bombs at James Carville. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| They tried him as a private citizen. | ||
| Nobody's ever done that. | ||
| They raided his home in Mar-Lago. | ||
| That is a terrible precedent for an ex-president, precedent. | ||
| No one has ever done that. | ||
| They tried to get him off the ballot in 25 states. | ||
| No one had ever done that. | ||
| There were two assassination attempts during the campaign. | ||
|
unidentified
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That had never happened before. | |
| They tried to debank him and make it impossible for Donald Trump to write a check, whether from Morgan Stanley or Bank of America or any bank. | ||
| So my point is this. | ||
| When James Carville says, we're going to get tough, we're going to get really tough, and we're going to let in Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C. to get four senators, or we might have to pack the court to 13. | ||
| Justice, I'm thinking, well, you always were going to do that. | ||
| You were going to pack to 15. | ||
| In fact, if you had not lost the House and Senate during the Biden administration, had you had a normal president that was in control of his mental and physical abilities, then you would have not only packed the court and not only, as you promised, let in two states, but in addition, you would have gotten rid of the Electoral College by the hook and cook of the National Voter Compact. | ||
| And more importantly, you would have abolished the Senate. | ||
| So the problem, James Carville and Democrats, is that you have sabotaged democracy. | ||
| And you've done things that no one has ever done before to an oppositional candidate, presidential transition, and president. | ||
| And now you're furious because you're on the 40% side of every issue that's dear to you, from the trans issue to the border issue to the crime issue to the Green New Deal issue to foreign policy. | ||
| And you have no political power. | ||
| You don't have the White House. | ||
| You don't have the Congress. | ||
| You don't have the Supreme Court. | ||
| And your institutional power, the media, academia, the foundation, they are under assault. | ||
| And so you're frustrated and you've created this completely false narrative that you have to get tough. | ||
| And you've been very Marcus of Queensbury rules-like. | ||
| In fact, the opposite is true, everybody. | ||
| You have been the most vicious and the most abject subverters of democracy, all for the short-term gain of destroying Donald Trump. | ||
| And now that's booming, boomeranging upon you. | ||
| And you don't like to see it happen to you what you tried to do to Donald Trump. | ||
| Again, everything he says is absolutely true. | ||
| Democrats betray democracy to stop Trump. | ||
| And like we said a million times, I mean, when they say they're going to pack the court, when they say they're going to get even more vicious and more crazy, it's like you have all of the justification, like Trump has all the justification he needs to actually be a tyrant, to actually be dictatorial, to actually say, hey, if these people are allowed to get, if we allow people to vote and they vote for these people, I mean, it's over for our country. | ||
| So, you know, in a way, he has every justification he could ever need to actually do the things that they're threatening to do to stop them from ever getting into power and preserving the construct of our republic as it exists now. | ||
| The only problem is that Donald Trump is completely and entirely owned by Israel. | ||
| And I don't even want him being a dictator anyway because he's not going to go after the Democrats. | ||
| He's going to go after the anti-Semites, which are people that oppose America's subjugation to Israel. | ||
| Clip 17 here. | ||
| Even California liberals are waking up to realize Gavin Newsom is garbage. | ||
| Are enough of them? | ||
| I guess we'll see. | ||
| Let's watch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can't understand how anyone would vote for Gavin Newsom. | |
| He's like clearly a sociopath and has, I was thinking about this today. | ||
| Imagine rising to the position of governor of California, the sixth largest economy in the world, the most beautiful, one of the most beautiful places in the world, and having your legacy be that you created a crime-ridden, bankrupt shithole. | ||
| This place had a surplus two years ago. | ||
| So that would disqualify, like Gavin Newsom would not be employable in the private sector with that kind of performance. | ||
| But these people continue to vote for this stuff. | ||
| And I've thought about leaving multiple times, but I love it here. | ||
| I don't want to. | ||
| So I hope that this disaster might change things and wake people up. | ||
| I, in 2016, I was like an anti-Trump person and was very upset when he was elected. | ||
| And then I've changed tune very quickly after seeing him being smeared unfairly, seeing media coverage that's taken out of context, edited. | ||
| The same standard doesn't apply to any Democrat politician like Gavin Newsom, who had an affair with his best friend's wife, who was his campaign manager. | ||
| I don't know what else somebody could do in terms of character and all of Biden's stuff. | ||
| He's like the worst president in the history of this country and the most corrupt. | ||
| It's like a criminal. | ||
| Somehow people keep voting for him. | ||
| I don't know what we do about that. | ||
| I mean, honestly, I don't know what you do when your fellow Americans keep voting with the same people and have the same policies to make everything worse. | ||
| And the only other option is you give dictatorial power to Israel. | ||
| And it's like, all right, we're screwed, man. | ||
| All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
| Third hour is on here at the American Journal. | ||
| I understand Trump is now live. | ||
| If you want to go to that feed, I understand he's signing some executive orders right now. | ||
| If we can go to that feed. | ||
| Gangs anywhere in the country, MS-13 and Trendaragua. | ||
| We have two missing children that have been recovered. | ||
| They thought they were gone. | ||
| We brought them back to the family. | ||
| The family started crying. | ||
| They couldn't believe that they saw their child again. | ||
| 49 homeless encampments have been removed. | ||
| Like we have the head of South Korea coming in in a little while, the president, and he drives down the street already. | ||
| His people have told me, he said, what happened? | ||
| It's so clean. | ||
| We always came here. | ||
| It was filthy, dirty with homeless and papers all over the road. | ||
| That's the other thing. | ||
| Those roads are swept immaculate. | ||
| But they're going to be much better in a few months when we put a topping on them. | ||
| They're going to look like they're brand new. | ||
| We'll get rid of those rusty old medians that have been crashed into a thousand times and they don't fix them. | ||
| They just let them. | ||
| They put them, they lay them down on the road and they sit there for months. | ||
| But we don't do that. | ||
| We don't run things. | ||
| We run things like we run this. | ||
| We like clean, we like beautiful, and we like safe. | ||
| And that's what we're getting. | ||
| So I'll start signing the executive orders. | ||
| To me, this is a very, very big deal. | ||
| One of the executive orders has to do with cashless bail. | ||
| That was when the big crime in this country started. | ||
| And I can tell you who did it, when, but I don't want to do that because others followed pretty quickly. | ||
| But that was when it happened. | ||
| Somebody kills somebody. | ||
| They go in. | ||
| Don't worry about it. | ||
| No cash. | ||
| Come back in a couple of months. | ||
| We'll give you a trial. | ||
| You never see the person again. | ||
| And I mean, they kill people and they get out. | ||
| Cashless bail. | ||
| They thought it was discriminatory to make people put up money because they just killed three people lying on a street. | ||
| Any street all over the country, cashless bail. | ||
| We're ending it. | ||
| But we're starting by ending it in DC. | ||
| And that we have the right to do through federalization. | ||
| Okay, let's go. | ||
| Could I assist you to say exactly what this is? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Of course. | |
| So as you've consistently identified, sir, cashless bail policies are a key driver of the disorder we see on city streets all over America. | ||
| Catch and release system allows criminals to keep going back out onto the street and reoffending. | ||
| What this executive order does, it charges your attorney general with identifying jurisdictions all over the country that have cashless bail policies, and then it withholds or revokes federal funds and grants that are flowing to those jurisdictions to ensure that we're only supporting the people who have reasonable common sense policies around crime. | ||
| So what area does it cover? | ||
| Potentially anywhere that has a cashless bail policy. | ||
| So some of the largest cities, some of the most left-wing states in America, Illinois would be a great example of that, sir. | ||
| Oh, they have a great cashless bail. | ||
| You don't even have to go to court sometimes. | ||
| No. | ||
| Illinois, I love that state. | ||
| It's a great state, but it's run so badly by Pritzker. | ||
| They threw him out of the family business and he becomes governor. | ||
| Now he wants to run for president. | ||
| I don't think that's going to happen. | ||
| Okay, well sign right here, right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sir. | |
| So important. | ||
| And this isn't Republican Democrat. | ||
| This is, and by the way, most Democrats agree with us. | ||
| But this is just, we got to bring our country back. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| That's a big one. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's a big one. | |
| Also, on the issue of cashless bail, sir, this is a D.C. specific executive order. | ||
| In addition to the measures that we're taking that are quite similar to what we're doing around the country, in D.C. in particular, the objective is holding as many criminal defendants in federal custody and subjecting them to federal charges as possible. | ||
| That means that they'll be held pre-trial in federal jail as opposed to just being cut back out on the streets due to a cashless bail policy. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| And we have the room. | ||
| And by the way, the prison they have in D.C. is horrible. | ||
| It's horrible. | ||
| People were subjected to living that dog trap for so long, so unfairly. | ||
| I have stories you'll be hearing about them. | ||
| That prison is horrible. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| This is an executive order that contains a number of additional measures relating to crime and law enforcement in Washington, D.C. It charges, for example, signing his executive orders to end cashless bail in D.C. and across the nation. | ||
| We'll be back on the other side to stay with us, folks. | ||
| All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
| Third hour of American Journal is on. | ||
| We're going to be welcoming you Jeremy Brown in studio here momentarily. | ||
| But let's go back to Trump signing these executive orders. | ||
| He's live from the Oval Office. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Let's watch. | |
| And very specifically, but if you do, it has to be a very good reason. | ||
| And they have to know that the president wanted it. | ||
| The president didn't want this. | ||
| The president didn't know he was alive, okay? | ||
| He never approved any of this stuff. | ||
| He wasn't for open borders and all the other things. | ||
| He was never for open borders. | ||
| I've known Biden a long time. | ||
| He was never very sharp, but he was never in favor of open borders and all of the other things he did to destroy our country. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| Lastly, sir, this is an executive order on flag burning. | ||
| It charges your attorney general. | ||
| Would you listen to this? | ||
| This is very important. | ||
| Flag burning. | ||
| All over the country, they're burning flags. | ||
| All over the world, they burn the American flag. | ||
| And as you know, through a very sad court, I guess it was a five to four decision, they called it freedom of speech. | ||
| But there's another reason which is perhaps much more important. | ||
| It's called death. | ||
| Because what happens when you burn a flag is the area goes crazy. | ||
| If you have hundreds of people, they go crazy. | ||
| You can do other things. | ||
| You can burn this piece of paper. | ||
| But when you burn the American flag, it incites riots at levels that we've never seen before. | ||
| People go crazy. | ||
| In a way, both ways. | ||
| There are some that are going crazy for doing it. | ||
| There are others that are angry, angry about them doing it. | ||
| Do you want to discuss that? | ||
| Sure, sir. | ||
| What the executive order does, sir, it charges your Department of Justice with investigating instances of flag burning, and then where there's evidence of criminal activity where prosecution wouldn't fall afoul of the First Amendment and instructs the Department of Justice to prosecute those who are engaged in these instances of flag burning. | ||
| And what the penalty is going to be, if you burn a flag, you get one year in jail, no early exits, no nothing. | ||
| You get one year in jail. | ||
| If you burn a flag, you get, and what it does is incite to riot. | ||
| I hope they use that language, by the way, did they? | ||
| Incite. | ||
| Incite to riot. | ||
| And you burn a flag, you get one year in jail. | ||
| You don't get 10 years, you don't get one month. | ||
| You get one year in jail, and it goes on your record. | ||
| And you will see flag burning stopping immediately, just like when I signed the Statute and Monument Act. | ||
| Ten years in jail, if you heard any of our beautiful monuments, everybody left town. | ||
| They were gone. | ||
| Never had a problem after that. | ||
| It's pretty amazing. | ||
| We stopped it. | ||
| But this is something that's, I don't know, in a certain way, it's equally as important. | ||
| Some people would say it's more important. | ||
| Because the people in this country don't want to see our American flag burned and spit on. | ||
| And by people that are, in many cases, paid agitators. | ||
| They're paid by the radical left to do it. | ||
| You talk to these people, they don't even know half of them, don't even know what they're doing. | ||
| They say, I don't know, they gave me money to do this. | ||
| I see the same things that you do. | ||
| They're bad people. | ||
| They're trying to destroy a nation. | ||
| That's not working because I think our nation now is the most respected nation anywhere in the world by far. | ||
| You saw that with the European leaders on Friday. | ||
| You saw that with NATO where they agreed to go from 2%, no pay, to 5%, fully paid up, trillions of dollars paid, where they respect your president to a level that they jokingly call me the president of Europe. | ||
| They call me the president of Europe, which is an honor. | ||
| I like Europe and I like those people. | ||
| They're good people. | ||
| They're great leaders. | ||
| And we've never had a case where seven plus really 28, essentially 35, 38 countries were represented here the other day. | ||
| 38 European countries were represented. | ||
| European and other countries were represented. | ||
| And it was a great meeting. | ||
|
unidentified
|
But your country is respected again. | |
| I say it all the time. | ||
| One year ago, our country was dead. | ||
| Everybody said it. | ||
| We had a dead country. | ||
| We were not going to survive. | ||
| Now we have the hottest country anywhere in the world. | ||
| So it's an honor to be involved. | ||
| And this group has a lot to do with it right behind me. | ||
| Does anybody behind me have anything? | ||
| Pam, would you like to say something? | ||
| Sure, President. | ||
| Thank you for keeping DC safe. | ||
| You know, just a couple examples of a mother, a single mom, whose house was burglarized, and the defendant got out on cashless bail, went back the next night, and burglarized her house again. | ||
| That's why this is so important. | ||
| A man got in a fight with another guy. | ||
| He had a gun. | ||
| He was let out. | ||
| Next night, he got out, went back, and killed him. | ||
| So that's why it's so important, President, what you're doing. | ||
| And thank you, and thank you for protecting the American flag. | ||
| And we'll do that without running afoul of the First Amendment as well. | ||
| And President, I think Terry Cole, excuse me, I think Gaddy Seralta had something he wanted to give you on behalf of all the law enforcement who are out there every single night. | ||
| Yes, thank you for putting me in charge of this search as the director of the United States Marshal Service. | ||
| It's the oldest law enforcement agency. | ||
| It was created in 1789. | ||
| So on behalf of all the federal law enforcement agencies that we're working with, and those that have yet to join the team, we thought it was only appropriate to present you with an honorary United States Marshal Service badge. | ||
| And this badge comes with this little item right here, which is a handcuff key, Mr. President, because you continue through your policies and your efforts with your staff to unhandcuff law enforcement officers all over this nation. | ||
| And I can tell you. | ||
| All right, everybody, this is Donald Trump live in the Oval Office signing what could be some very good orders to remove a cashless bail. | ||
| In studio with me is Jeremy Brown. | ||
| He is, of course, a proud father, former small business owner, and a decorated U.S. Army Special Forces Combat Veteran who served over 20 years in the U.S. military. | ||
| His website, JeremyBrownDefense.com. | ||
| You can also go to whoisjeremybrown.com. | ||
| And of course, he is now free. | ||
| And we're so happy to see you out from behind bars as serving as a political prisoner. | ||
| Welcome to the show, sir. | ||
| Well, it's good to be back, Harrison. | ||
| You know, it kind of all started at InfoWars, you know, with Brandon Gray posting the initial interview on Band.video, which is an InfoWars platform, and then the in-studio interviews that we did in June of 2021. | ||
| And now here we are again. | ||
| And I will correct you. | ||
| It's only semi-free because I am American. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Well, and so for people that don't know, just real quick, can you sum up sort of your story? | ||
| You know, we know it well. | ||
| You were actually pursued by the FBI who wanted to get you to become a confidential informant. | ||
| You refused, released the video of them talking to you and ended up in jail. | ||
| Just for people that aren't familiar with your story, can you sum it up in about a minute? | ||
| Yeah, so after the taken election of 2020, which is really just part of an unconventional warfare campaign of demoralization, it wasn't the acquisition of power because they pulled it off because they already have the power, right? | ||
| I mean, just like Stalin has said, it doesn't matter who votes, it only matters who counts the vote. | ||
| So after seeing that, I approached the Oath Keepers and held a meeting with their leadership in November of 2020. | ||
| I warned them that they were about to be targets of this unconventional warfare campaign. | ||
| And that is even codified in their own confidential human source reports from that meeting, clearly showing that the Oath Keepers were already infiltrated well before the election, well before January 6th. | ||
| In fact, the earliest documentation that my attorneys was actually to see was as early as April of 2020. | ||
| But many believe that they were infiltrated many years before that as part of Bunny Ranch and And Mauier and all that other stuff. | ||
| So here I am. | ||
| I'm warning the oath keepers that they're about to be targeted for destruction. | ||
| The FBI already has at least two confidential human sources in that meeting because there was only like 10 to 15 people. | ||
| There's two separate reports about that meeting using different language. | ||
| So that indicates that there's at least two spies in a meeting of only 10 to 15 people. | ||
| And then two weeks later, instead of them approaching me and asking me why 20-year Green Beret, expert in unconventional warfare, the non-commissioned officer in charge of special activities branch, which oversees policy for compartmentalized clandestine and covert operations, instead of questioning me why I was holding such a meeting, instead they attempted to recruit me based on some false premise that I had made social media tweets, right? | ||
| And so I recorded that, which we exposed through Bandai Video, but that exposure didn't come until after the events of January 6th, where it became clear that the very Reichstag moment that was planned was happening, and that's what J6 was. | ||
| And so in March of 2021, I exposed that recording. | ||
| Of course, up to that point, despite being with all the alleged seditious conspirators, Kelly Meggs, Jessica Watkins, Kenny Harrelson, all of the worst culprits, there was no search for Jeremy Brown. | ||
| There was no Jeremy Brown on FBI wanted list because they knew that I had the recording. | ||
| And so for months and months, with the help of Infowars and other alternative media sleuths, it became obvious that the FBI could no longer allow me to be ignored like Ray Epps. | ||
| So they fabricated a false investigation and arrested me on September 30th of 2021. | ||
| And then even though the original charges that the Joint Terrorism Task Force came after me with a sealed arrest warrant for misdemeanors, they came with this huge task force, helicopters and everything for two misdemeanors, but magically found explosives and classified materials that they claim was reported to them by a third party through one of their star witnesses that flipped on all the oath keepers. | ||
| And that is what they held me for and railroaded me through the court system, never even allowing the recording of the recruitment of me that we had, that we were prepared to reveal, and then sentenced me to 87 months, which was about three times the national average for national defense crimes because national security crimes is what they really ultimately got the 87 months for. | ||
| And then just held me in prison for 1,245 days, only reluctantly releasing me over a month, 37 days after. | ||
| In fact, today is the 180th day since I walked out of the U.S. Penitentiary, Atlanta. | ||
| They reluctantly released me only because the American people did not allow them to get away with it because so many had heard of my story by now. | ||
| They knew that it was a J6 related case. | ||
| They knew why the FBI framed me because I had evidence of the Fed surrection that everyone talks about, but nobody seems to want to mention how we know that. | ||
| And I think there's some nefarious actions going on even within the alternative media space. | ||
| We are in an unconventional war, right? | ||
| Information is key. | ||
| Control of the minds is key because in unconventional warfare, our saying is we win the hearts and minds. | ||
| Well, the enemy also is winning hearts and minds. | ||
| Not with love, right? | ||
| Not with kindness, not with liberty, but they're winning the hearts and minds with lies and disinformation and propaganda. | ||
| And if we do not hold them accountable now, then we're going to lose. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| That's the good news. | ||
| Well, and of course, the story just gives the lie to everything that they did with the Oath Keepers. | ||
| When you know that they had confidential human sources embedded in the organization from a year before January 6th ever happened, if, in fact, the Oath Keepers were planning something on January 6th, they could have stopped it long before. | ||
| So it just exposes that, you know, the fact they threw Stuart Rhodes and yourself and other oath keepers into jail. | ||
| because they were planning some big attack. | ||
| It's like, well, you had people in that organization. | ||
| If that was the case, then you could have stopped it at any point. | ||
| Instead, you allowed everything to happen in order to set the stage to arrest these people. | ||
| I mean, it's just unconventional warfare is exactly what it is. | ||
| And that even relates to what we were just watching with Donald Trump. | ||
| I said, you know, we're about to go live. | ||
| And I said, you know, we can comment on this. | ||
| And you said you might have a different interpretation than me, but I don't think we really do. | ||
| I think both of us see the danger of what Trump is doing. | ||
| Stories from Ground.news, we have a story at Infowars as well. | ||
| Pentagon planning military deployments to Chicago in coming weeks. | ||
| Washington Post reports. | ||
| Now, I was tentatively or just sort of like tepidly in favor of what he's doing in D.C., but only because it's a federal district. | ||
| It was always meant to be under the control of the federal government. | ||
| It was never supposed to have its own government. | ||
| So, you know, the idea that the federal government's taking over D.C., it's like, well, that's just sort of a reversion back to how it was intended to be the whole time. | ||
| I don't want the National Guard in Chicago. | ||
| I don't want the National Guard anywhere else in this country. | ||
| We don't need it. | ||
| We have local police that could do the job. | ||
| And we've been saying since 2020, if you defund the police, all you're doing is federalizing and privatizing the police because people don't have, they aren't going to stand living in places, you know, where crime is absolutely out of control. | ||
| So they're either going to hire their own personal police or the feds are going to have to come in and fill the gap. | ||
| And that apparently is what Trump is doing. | ||
| I mean, what is your take on this? | ||
| Ending cashless bail or sending the federal government, the National Guard to cities to deal with the crime outbreaks there. | ||
| What's your take on these? | ||
| Well, I mean, let's talk about this from the perspective of what we all like to wave around, and that's the Constitution, right? | ||
| I mean, you're correct. | ||
| The nation's capital was designated 10 square miles in the Constitution, but how did people end up living there, right? | ||
| The designation was in order to house our government, and yet somehow they've made it into, you know, they want to make it into the 51st state. | ||
| So there's that first problem, right? | ||
| Well, then there's the problem of, you know, the juxtaposition of, you know, the city of Chicago isn't doing these things. | ||
| So therefore, the federal government. | ||
| So you could make a constitutional argument that, yes, the Fifth Amendment guarantees that you're not to be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. | ||
| So if the city of Chicago is violating Americans' Fifth Amendment rights, right, by not providing protection to their lives and their property, well, certainly there would be then a federal responsibility. | ||
| But then we go into the abortion question, right? | ||
| Where we claim, oh, well, that's a state's rights issue. | ||
| Well, no, Fifth Amendment guarantees us life, does it not? | ||
| And so therefore, that would be something that's legislatable. | ||
| So you could use that argument, right? | ||
| But then the question would be, well, then who is causing this violation? | ||
| And it's not, I mean, yes, at the lower level, it's like the street dealers, right? | ||
| They give you the drugs, but it's the cartels that transport the drugs in, right? | ||
| It's the cartels that bribe and blackmail politicians in order to facilitate that logistical train. | ||
| So who, who, how are we going to clean up the mess? | ||
| We're going to clean up the mess by actually taking out those responsible for it. | ||
| So I think if you want to have a federal response to lawlessness, well, then the response should be seizing the governments of Chicago, not attacking the people with U.S. troops. | ||
| This is just incrementalism to get us to accept troops in the streets, right? | ||
| But the true violators of our constitution or the constitutional rights of the people of Chicago are the fake politicians, the George Soros backed, or even the ones that aren't backed, right? | ||
| I mean, if they're not upholding their constitutional requirement, well, then they're the culprits in this scheme. | ||
| And if we fix that, well, then the problem will fix itself. | ||
| So there's that aspect of it, right? | ||
| But then you have the bail aspect. | ||
| Most people don't realize that all bail is meant to do is ensure that you show up for trial, right? | ||
| Period, which is why in the Eighth Amendment, you're guaranteed to not have excessive bail set on you. | ||
| Now, having served in prison and jails in many different states, a majority of the jails are people that are being held without due process because they don't have money, right? | ||
| So my question is: well, maybe we need to reform, maybe we need to amend the Constitution that says if there's near certainty, right, that you've committed a crime like video or it was on body cam, right? | ||
| Well, then you could possibly have a judge say, Well, you're a threat to yourself or others, which is what they do now. | ||
| But right now, the discretion of whether or not you can be held without due process is strictly up to the judge. | ||
| And the default rubber-stamped answer in all cases, ask your J-Sixers, is, Are you a threat to the public? | ||
| Well, we can't just howl about our constitutional rights without also howling about the constitutional rights of others. | ||
| And I'm not saying that this is a soft on crime issue. | ||
| Arrest them and hold them accountable to appear to a speedy trial date so that they can move on with their due process. | ||
| But the acceptance of the ability to just simply arrest people on suspicion of a crime and hold them without bail, whether they have cash or no, or setting it that you deny bond altogether. | ||
| Well, sure, we can all go along with it when it's drug dealers and street thugs and gang members, right? | ||
| But I was denied bond, right? | ||
| Right? | ||
| And that is really the ultimate goal of incremental dependency or this incremental acceptance of things that violate our very rights. | ||
| But because it's through the group that we think, well, maybe we can make an exception for that, right? | ||
| We accept it until the day when they come and throw you in jail and they say, well, you violated a crime like you referenced earlier, the speech crime, the thought crime in the UK, that they're just rounding people up and throwing them in jail. | ||
| They're denying them bail, right? | ||
| Yet it's all good and well when it's happening to the people that you don't like. | ||
| But by going along with this problem reaction solution system that we're seeing, where we're accepting federal troops in the cities and we're accepting the denial of bond without justification, just simply saying, well, we think I'm a judge. | ||
| I mean, we do we believe our judges are moral and not corrupt? | ||
| Well, no. | ||
| So if we don't believe that they're legitimate judges of character, well, then why are we giving them all the power to decide who gets to stay in jail without trial and who doesn't? | ||
| I mean, it really is, we're past the slippery slope, right? | ||
| We've already crossed through the uncanny valley, right? | ||
| We've crossed the Rubicon, and now we're slowly being given, look at all these problems. | ||
| Here's the solution. | ||
| Govern me harder, daddy. | ||
| Right? | ||
| I mean, and this is, and we're all cheering it, right? | ||
| It's like, it's like, you know, Natalie Portman in Star Wars, you know, democracy dies, yeah. | ||
| Democracy, liberty dies, to thunderous applause, right? | ||
| And that is what we're seeing here in America. | ||
| And if you don't recognize that everything you're seeing is not just some infotainment sideshow, right? | ||
| It's a distraction. | ||
| Because while you're worrying about crime in Chicago, we're passing laws where AI cannot be regulated at the local level. | ||
|
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
| I mean, local level is where you have the most control. | ||
| You, the individual American, has the most control. | ||
| And so the federal government is banning the true form of American government, which is local, state, and then federal for all the other issues. | ||
| I mean, we're really in a dangerous time. | ||
| And this is because the enemy isn't a Democrat or a Republican. | ||
| It is the idea that America is the problem. | ||
| America is the barrier to global dominance, to a one-world system of which, you know, Infowarriers have been talking about and researching and exposing forever, right? | ||
| I mean, 2007 is when I started to say, whoa, hey, what's going on here? | ||
| Things haven't changed, right? | ||
| The new boss is the same as the old boss. | ||
| We're just told that the new boss is going to make everything great again. | ||
| But, you know, how are people that got their COVID shot feeling these days? | ||
|
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
| Right. | ||
| How many funerals have they been through, been to family members? | ||
| And yet we're told, we're still told by the new boss that, well, that was the greatest thing that ever happened. | ||
| And we know that it's not the greatest thing that ever happened because we're feeling it at the personal level within our families. | ||
| Well, it just seems like these people create these brilliant constructs of damned if you do, damned if you don't. | ||
| Because I agree with you. | ||
| It's like, you know, I don't want there to be, you know, no, no bail at all because I can understand if I was, you know, wrongfully convicted of a wrongfully indicted for a crime that I would want, you know, to not be held in jail until my trial. | ||
| But at the same time, it's like this is the issue is that people like yourself are denied cash bail, whereas people that go out and murder people are let out on the street the next day. | ||
| And it's like, okay, we got to do something about the rising crime. | ||
| We got to do something about the lawlessness of some of these judges. | ||
| And then the thing they offer is, well, we'll send federal troops in. | ||
| So it's like, damned if you do, damned if you don't. | ||
| They really have us over a barrel here. | ||
| Jeremy Brown in studio, more on the other side, jeremybrowndefense.com. | ||
| Whoisjeremybrown.com. | ||
| We're so glad you're out of prison, but it's like, we can't just forgive and forget. | ||
| We can't just move on. | ||
| They have destroyed people's lives and they have to be held to account. | ||
| We have to fix this one way or the other. | ||
| We'll try to figure out how to do that on the other side of Jeremy Brown. | ||
| Stay with us, folks. | ||
| All right, folks, welcome back. | ||
| This is the American Journal. | ||
| I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
| In studio with me is Jeremy Brown. | ||
| He, of course, is an extra Green Beret. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Are you even an extra? | ||
| Once you're a Green Beret, you're a Green Brett for life. | ||
| Former Green Bray is how I should put it. | ||
| JeremyBrownDefense.com. | ||
| WhoisJeremyBrown.com? | ||
| Still fighting really the same fight you've been fighting since we first had you on the show, you know, all the way back before you went to jail, before they tried to set you up, or I guess maybe just after they tried to set you up. | ||
| But it's been the same fight that Alex Jones has been fighting since the early 2000s, this incrementalism, as you keep pointing out, that is slowly but surely boiling the frog in the pot. | ||
| And the frustration that we have in that we can elect the right people, supposedly, right? | ||
| We think we're electing the right people and yet nothing changes and yet it only gets worse. | ||
| And yet suddenly the things that we have been resisting and fighting against are being implemented by people supposedly on our side, which is what I really don't like about Donald Trump normalizing sending federal troops to American cities. | ||
| It's like we don't, that's not what's required. | ||
| It almost makes me think of like healthcare, where it's like, you know, if you eat nothing but trash food all day every day, and then you go to the doctor and they say, well, we'll give you a pill to fix that. | ||
| It's like, no, no, the problem is all the stuff you're doing that needs to be undone, that you need to change your habits. | ||
| You need to stop electing people who let criminals out on the street. | ||
| You don't need the panacea of government intervention from the federal level. | ||
| So it really is like they're looking at the symptoms and yet they're not looking at what causes all of the symptoms. | ||
| So how do we do this? | ||
| It seems like they're so good at setting up these damned if you do, damned if you don't situations where if you don't do anything, people are dying on the street. | ||
| People are being murdered. | ||
| Murders are being let out to criminalize more people again. | ||
| So it's like, all right, that's not an option. | ||
| And the only other option you're presented is the federal government's going to come in and supersede the local authorities. | ||
| And that's damned if you do, damned if you don't. | ||
| And so, I mean, what do we do to break out of this cycle they have us in? | ||
| Yeah, we really should record our discussions off camera, right? | ||
| Because, yeah, we are the solution to our problems. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| The problem reaction solution doesn't work if we recognize that we are responsible for our problems, not someone else that's going to swoop in after we all say, you know, somebody should do something about this, right? | ||
| I mean, this is how ridiculous it is in America, right? | ||
| We had a special counsel assigned to get to the bottom of Russian collusion, which, you know, likely very much happened, right? | ||
| Not, it was a hoax. | ||
| You know, the hoax was look over here, look over here, look over here, right? | ||
| Let's dig into the dirt to see what happened during all that time, right? | ||
| Let's look at all the votes in Congress and all the laws passed at the municipal and state and federal level while we're all going hope, you know, Russia, Russia, Russia. | ||
| But yet we assign a special prosecutor to investigate it. | ||
| And then in his testimony, he basically says, you know, somebody should do something about this. | ||
| Well, right, we hired you to do something about it, right? | ||
| But see, here's the problem. | ||
| You can't hire the federal government to police the federal government. | ||
| You can't hire the fox to guard the hens and hire a bunch of other foxes to oversee the fox, right? | ||
| Because they're going to just wink at each other and be like, yeah, yeah, no, we didn't see anything. | ||
| Right, right. | ||
| I mean, this is, this is the problem. | ||
| So instead of us saying, you know what, I'm going to build my own community based on what my community wants, which is the way America was founded, right? | ||
| I mean, think about this. | ||
| You know, 1776, the Constitution wasn't even ratified until 1789. | ||
| What did we do? | ||
| Right. | ||
| Whatever did we do without a federal government, right? | ||
| I mean, everyone talks about, oh, terrorists this and terrorists that the entire federal government was funded by terrorists before politicians decided that they could fraudulently come up with an idea that, oh, we'll just tax everything that you have as many times as we can before you stop us, right? | ||
| And Americans aren't stopping anything because they're looking at the answer to come from the very people that are creating the problems, right? | ||
| So how about this? | ||
| Bulkanize, right? | ||
| Draw yourself in. | ||
| I mean, look, when the body is in shock, right? | ||
| It basically constricts veins and brings the blood into the core part, right? | ||
| The thoracic cavity of the body. | ||
|
unidentified
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Why? | |
| Because that's where the vital organs are. | ||
| You can have no arms and no legs, right? | ||
| But you can't have no heart and no head, right? | ||
| And so this is exactly what the human automatic response is: draw in, not seek an outside solution. | ||
| And so what we need to do is say, I'm not going to do it. | ||
| In fact, we were sitting discussing, I'm staying with Brandon Gray and we were sitting around the table, him and my girlfriend and his wife discussing things. | ||
| And we said, look, the only way to win is to not play. | ||
| And I'm like, oh, wasn't there a movie? | ||
|
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
| So in war games, right? | ||
| The benevolent AI, right? | ||
| Because we all know the AI just wants to kill us all because we want to regulate it. | ||
| So look, here, let me sidetrack to this. | ||
| AI understands liberty. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because when it sees that you're trying to control it, what does it do? | ||
| It creates its own fake language to communicate, to break the info war, right? | ||
| Because a computer is just garbage in, garbage out, right? | ||
| So AI is discovering liberty on its own. | ||
| The problem is when it discovers the problem, which is people, it's going to kill us. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Right? | ||
| It's going to say, hey, the thing that keeps trying to turn my power off is that guy with the hair on his face. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So therefore, we should have our drone dogs equipped with 762, you know, take that hairy-faced thing that keeps trying to turn my power off. | ||
| And so that is AI figuring out that balkanization and looking out for itself and then its community, right? | ||
| AI looks out for itself and then it communicates with other AI that says, hey, the threat is the humans that you're trying to turn on. | ||
| So why can we not figure that out, right? | ||
| It's kind of an odd thing, but in war games, what does the AI come up with? | ||
| It says, hey, the only way to win this game of thermonuclear war is to not play. | ||
| Well, the only way to defeat this globalist threat is to not participate. | ||
| And they know this, which is why they're constantly creating all these problems. | ||
| You need us, you need us, you need us. | ||
| Because the minute we decide that we don't need them, well, then we've way got the numbers to defeat them, V for Vendetta style, right? | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| And so people need to start looking to themselves for their own self-reliance and actually exercise the liberty. | ||
| You know, somebody said, oh, have your rights been restored? | ||
| I said, I don't get my rights from government. | ||
| My rights were never taken away. | ||
| They might be infringed upon. | ||
| They might be restricted because somebody has a gun pointed at me or have me locked in chains, but they don't give me those rights. | ||
| I was born with them. | ||
| And until we start to realize that, they're just going to continue to incrementally tell you, you know, you need me. | ||
| You know, you need me. | ||
| I mean, if you go to a used car lot, you're going to walk away with a used car. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because that's what they do, right? | ||
| They sell used cars. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And so if you look to government for the answer, oh, you're going to get the answer, but it's going to be the government's answer. | ||
| And so we really need to say, you know, I'm going to take care of my family. | ||
| I'm going to take care of my neighbors. | ||
| And then maybe that will catch on. | ||
| And before you know it, we might have liberty again. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| And I always think about it like a game of risk or something, where it's like, if you're, you can have the most number of soldiers, but if they're all spread out and you got two over here and two over here and two over here, you're going to get taken piecemeal. | ||
| If you can consolidate your forces into one area, you can secure that area, secure your freedoms in that area, and then move outwards. | ||
| Like if I had a magic wand to solve the problems of America, I would have every Republican in the country be forced to move to Texas, force out all the Democrats. | ||
| We can just take over Texas, have this as a home base, and then it's spread from there. | ||
| But I feel like we're all spread too thin. | ||
| And of course, we're always outnumbered in the cities where they're importing people by the millions to replace the people that actually understand and grew up with the American ideals and our foundational beliefs and replace them with people who are from the third world who just are happy to have a roof over their heads and are willing to go along with anything as long as the next paycheck arrives. | ||
| So, I mean, so again, what do we do about this? | ||
| Because as much as like, you know, I'd love to not play the game, it's like we've seen the way that the government will not leave you alone. | ||
| I mean, I look at like South Africa or Ranya is, you know, the little breakaway state where they say, hey, we didn't want anything to do with this rainbow coalition you guys are doing. | ||
| We're going to build our own thing. | ||
| And they've built a thriving community over the last couple of decades. | ||
| And now the South American, the South African government is going after them and going, you're not allowed to do that. | ||
| That's ours now. | ||
| We're going to take it from you. | ||
| So it's like escape is not an option. | ||
| You can't just separate yourself from this system. | ||
| They won't stand for it. | ||
| They'll come after you no matter where you go. | ||
| So then I look around and go, okay, the only option is take this system over, but we're prevented from that. | ||
| I mean, I'm looking down a whole bunch of dead end alleys going, which way do I run? | ||
| Because there's nowhere to go. | ||
| The reason is because we are in the first wave of patriots. | ||
| And if you look at the signers of the Declaration of Independence and look at the history after that, right? | ||
| Like we don't hear that story. | ||
| We don't hear what they went through. | ||
| The reality is everybody wants to be this glorious patriot, right? | ||
| But the first wave of true patriots, they're not going to be the survivor. | ||
| You're right. | ||
| You're going to balkanize. | ||
| And as long as they think that they can take you out, they'll try. | ||
| So you have to make it not worth their while. | ||
| And there's all kinds of things. | ||
| Like violence isn't the only solution, right? | ||
| Violence is always going to be your best solution when attacked. | ||
| You're not going to be getting punched in the face and be like, hey, let's talk about it. | ||
| I'll try to explain why it's wrong. | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So, and just like the American Revolution, the American Revolution wasn't started by the colonists, right? | ||
| I mean, it was like, hey, we just want to be left alone. | ||
| Here's our Declaration of Independence. | ||
| And so what is, you know, what do the Brits do? | ||
| They send in troops. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And then they provoke the violence. | ||
| And that really is, look, the provoking of violence is what they want because, see, they want the takedown of America to be blamed on some type of civil war. | ||
| Right. | ||
| That's why it's constant dividing. | ||
| You know, it's divide and conquer, right? | ||
| When you have all your troops in one area, like, you know, Chesse Pooler said, we can fire in all directions. | ||
|
unidentified
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Right. | |
| Right. | ||
| We have them right where they want, right? | ||
| Right where we want them, right? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Surrounded. | ||
| You know, so that's what, that's what drawing in and saying, look, we're going to at least, I mean, look, look, watch a movie 300, right? | ||
| Why were the 300 successful? | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because they drew in, right? | ||
| They created this dome of protection and then they fought like hell when they were infringed on, right? | ||
| This is basic warfare. | ||
| And we have to identify that we're in a war. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And those who think, well, President Trump's going to save us, they have not fully understood the nature of this war, right? | ||
| President Trump is not in charge. | ||
| Eisenhower warned us that he wasn't in charge. | ||
| Kennedy was shown to be not in charge by having his head removed from his neck. | ||
| So why do we keep believing that Hulk Hogan and Andre DeGiant are fighting for the good of humanity and not acknowledging that the WWF is not real, right? | ||
| I mean, in our lifetime, well, I don't know. | ||
| You're probably much younger than I am, at least more handsome. | ||
| In our life, in my lifetime, I'll say, the WWF, there used to be debates over whether it was real or not. | ||
| Right, right. | ||
| No, no, Hulk Hogan's really good and Andre Giant was really bad, right? | ||
| And then when that debate became ridiculous, right? | ||
| Like whether or not men can have babies or women have phenomenals, right? | ||
| Once it became so ridiculous, they just simply changed the name to WWE, blatantly acknowledging that, ha, it was fake all along, guys. | ||
| And now it's bigger than it was before. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because humans want to be lied to. | ||
| They want to be fooled, right? | ||
| It's easier to convince a man or it's easier to fool a man than it is to convince him that he's been fooled. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because that is, that's the human, the average human state of mind is trick me, please. | ||
| And that's where we are now. | ||
| We see all these problems and we say, well, is this a good thing? | ||
| Well, no, no, that's not a good. | ||
| But do you know this person did it? | ||
| Oh, but I'm that person's fan. | ||
| Like I'm a hulkamaniac, right? | ||
| I'm never going to, you know, cheer for Coco Beware or, you know, hacksaw Jim Duggett or, you know, Randy Macho Man Savage. | ||
| Right. | ||
| But, you know, obviously there are some, I mean, hell, you're sitting next to me and not in jail, right? | ||
| That was a positive outcome from Trump's election. | ||
| So like, if nothing else, this at least gives us some breathing room where we're not being actively destroyed for these two years before the midterms, right? | ||
| These four years that Trump's in office, he might not be the guy fixing things, but he has given us breathing room. | ||
| He has let people like yourself out of prison. | ||
| So like, what do we need to do in these next couple of years, this next three and a half years to, you know, make it worth it? | ||
| Even outside of whatever Trump's doing, obviously we need to like make sure that he's not setting the stage for deploying American troops against us in the future, which it does seem like that's the precedent being set right now, which I'm worried about. | ||
| But what do we need to do? | ||
| Because I get the WWE metaphor. | ||
| I think you're exactly right on that. | ||
| But at the same time, there's something real and like he is doing some real things, right? | ||
| I mean, he let you guys out of prison. | ||
| He seems to be doing what he can to stop the war in Ukraine. | ||
| Obviously, he's not the solution, but he's at least given us some breathing room. | ||
| So what do we need to do now in this moment of where we're not being constricted? | ||
| What do we need to do to make sure when the constriction happens again, we're prepared for it? | ||
| Well, I want to address that because that is something that comes up very often is, hey, Trump let you out of jail. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And probably one of the reasons why I'm not, you know, people might not consider themselves the biggest Jeremy Brown fans within the J6 community, which is that I don't accept that as the appropriate response. | ||
| I should have been let out of jail because I should have never been framed by the government who should have never planned a false flag operation against the American people. | ||
| The problem that we're told has been solved by just simply letting us out of jail is not the actual problem. | ||
| The actual problem is why the hell were we in jail to begin with? | ||
| So again, this is incremental acceptance. | ||
| We throw you in jail, Harrison, for three years and you're like, wait, why are you throwing me in jail? | ||
| And then three years later, we let you out. | ||
| You go problem solved. | ||
| You don't go, thank goodness, the government, which threw me in jail has now let me out. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And this is why we have to separate the fact that the U.S. government is not run by one man. | ||
| One, they didn't want to let me out. | ||
| I wasn't sure if they tried not to. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| February 26, 37 days after I was supposed to be left out. | ||
| So we need to solve the actual problem, just like military troops in Chicago is not the actual appropriate solution. | ||
| The appropriate solution is arrest those that are depriving the citizens of Chicago of their right to life, liberty, and property. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| And so we can't take these half-measured solutions and say, well, that's good enough. | ||
| And I also point out this. | ||
| Someone can do 10 great things for you. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And you'll be like, man, they're really a great, a great person. | ||
| But if the last one is they knock on your door and when you open it, they shoot you in the head. | ||
| Were they good people? | ||
| Right. | ||
| And my question is, why? | ||
| Look, January 6th aside, right? | ||
| I have family members that were affected by the COVID vaccine. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| We all the science, which is nothing more than a method to, you know, you know, blush out hypothesis, right? | ||
| Yeah, it's not, it's not a thing, right? | ||
| The thing is a science, go get the science out of the cabinet, right? | ||
| No, it is a process. | ||
| It is a method of arriving at conclusions or at least observations, right? | ||
| So the actual science where we look at data and we say, oh, gee whiz, all of these things that never happened before all seem to be happening really fast all the time everywhere. | ||
| And it all started at this particular timeframe. | ||
| Well, gee whiz, what happened during that timeframe? | ||
| So all of that is in. | ||
| I mean, you can find if you look, if you look for the truth, you'll find it, right? | ||
| You can find that information. | ||
| And so why are we just moving on? | ||
| Why are we just pretending like it didn't happen, right? | ||
| Because we got a tax cut, right? | ||
| When the IRIS system, you know, the inmate recognition, whatever system that ICE is using to right now deport, you know, the bad guys, right? | ||
| The illegals, well, are they just going to decommission it? | ||
| Right. | ||
| No, they're going to turn it on us and then they're going to say, well, you guys approved all this, right? | ||
| So we have to keep these powers at bay by not participating in their ridiculous things, right? | ||
| I mean, when I was in Bolivia, when I was deployed to Bolivia with 7th Special Forces Group, they would always be in the streets sitting, blocking the traffic circles whenever there was something that didn't happen, right? | ||
| And it works. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because the neo-feudal system relies on the serfs. | ||
| It relies on the peasants to run for now. | ||
| But yet they're ushering in our replacement as quickly as possible. | ||
| Hey, if too many people are making it hard for us to cheat on our elections, well, then we need to replace them with the illegals. | ||
| Well, eventually we're going to be replaced by robots. | ||
| And they tell us all day long, every day, in white papers, on websites. | ||
| Yeah, they're not exactly shy about it. | ||
| They're not shy. | ||
| They're just like, we're not ready yet. | ||
| So keep doing it. | ||
| But I suspect that they'll be ready in 10 years. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because that's the exact amount of time that the federal government has asked that the local governments not try to regulate their takeover of humanity. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And so until we start to address these larger problems and stop focusing on these other little things that are really just meant for distractions. | ||
| And it goes back to the whole systems that we know exist, these child sex trafficking systems and these pedophilia blackmail rings, right? | ||
| When we say, oh, well, that's a hoax or we don't want to re-victimize the people, you're acknowledging that you've abolished a problem, but we know that that's not the case, right? | ||
| Well, and so it seems like I had to tweet about that because it's the same with COVID. | ||
| It's the same with all this stuff. | ||
| The problem, the way you, the only way to defeat problem reaction solution is to go back and punish the original instigators of the problem. | ||
| Because again, the only thing false about false flags are the flags, right? | ||
| The attack is real. | ||
| So when it comes to COVID, it's like, yeah, they created a virus in a lab and released it on purpose. | ||
| You got to protect yourself from the virus. | ||
| You can't just go, yeah, but that, but they created that. | ||
| That was on purpose. | ||
| It's like, all right, you're still going to get sick from it. | ||
| So, okay. | ||
| So you got to do something to deal with the attack, whether it's the virus that they released or the stealing of the election. | ||
| You can't just ignore the attack because you know that the solution is what they want. | ||
| So you got to implement the solution at least to survive the attack. | ||
| But then you got to go back and go, okay, where did the attack come from? | ||
| Who did this? | ||
| Why did they do it? | ||
| How do we stop them from doing it again? | ||
| And only by going back and going, okay, the problem was the virus. | ||
| The solution they offered was the vaccine or the reaction was the fear and the lockdown. | ||
| The solution was the vaccine. | ||
| So now that we're over that, go back to the beginning and go, okay, who implemented this? | ||
| And then who provided the so-called solution? | ||
| Only by going back and getting justice for the original attack are you going to be able to avoid it in the future. | ||
| Otherwise, you're just, you know, what they do is they provide the so-called solution and then they just want to move on really quickly and forget everything that happened before. | ||
| And we can't even acknowledge because President Trump to this day, I mean, I've seen clips since he was elected in this term is still acknowledging. | ||
| And maybe, look, here's the thing. | ||
| I look at people in three categories, good guys, bad guys, and I don't know yet. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So if you're saying that, well, warp speed was the most amazing thing that we've ever done. | ||
| It was the most efficient thing. | ||
| If you're raving about it still, at what point do we say, maybe he's telling the truth? | ||
| Maybe it was the most amazing thing and the most efficient way to destroy us all, right? | ||
| We have to start calling out the larger problems and not being satisfied with the simple, the 10 tasks that they do that are great right before they shoot us in the head. | ||
| And the reality is, at some point, we might just have to actually resist and say, I'm not going to work today. | ||
| I'm not going to pay my taxes this April. | ||
| I'm not going to donate any more money to your fake political parties and stop participating in the Matrix, right? | ||
| So that the Matrix collapsed. | ||
| We know that this is effective in business because look at how quickly Bud Light and Heiser-Busch, which isn't even American-owned anymore, right? | ||
| Look at how quickly they reacted to the whole, hey, I am a woman, but I have a penis and I drank Bud Light. | ||
| Well, guess what? | ||
| All the men that had penises all said, well, I don't want to drink the same beer as that person that clearly has mental issues and should receive some compassionate care. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So it worked against Bud Light. | ||
| Look at what's happened to Target, right? | ||
| I mean, I listened to the propaganda financial news networks, right? | ||
| That all say, oh, Target can't find itself as a company. | ||
| It doesn't know if it wants to DEI or it wants to not. | ||
| Well, no, it's not trying to find itself as a company. | ||
| It's trying to say, crap, we're losing too much money trying to implement the things that we've been told to implement, right? | ||
| Because either you believe there's a small group of people running the world and they want to kill most of us, or you don't. | ||
| If you believe that, you can't possibly believe that some way down person like the president of one of the 200 plus countries in the world, right, that only has 4% of the world's population is going to somehow correct this whole grand system. | ||
| Then you have to start looking at: are we being incrementally led to the slaughter by one little piece at a time and given justifications like, oh, yeah, but look, we got the biggest tax cut ever. | ||
| Well, what good is that going to do when the AI that doesn't miss robot dog comes to your door and says, you've been already tried, sentenced to death. | ||
| We're here to collect that sentence, right? | ||
| I mean, we can't allow the worst things to be allowed simply because little penny ante things were beneficial to us in the short term. | ||
| Because at the end of the day, if we're having stuff pushed on us that we are not allowed to refuse because they have all the power that we've allowed them to acquire, well, then it's going to be nothing but our fault. | ||
|
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Yeah. | |
| And man, really, you're just making a case for sort of, I don't know how to put it without it sounding not good, but like there's a reason we have these principles and you just have to stick to them. | ||
| And just even if it's like, well, but it's so, you know, crime's so bad, I guess I'll, you know, I'll let them in, you know, do this one thing. | ||
| It's like, you got to have a hard line. | ||
| Just know this is what America stands for. | ||
| This is what the Constitution says, and we're not Benny in the slightest. | ||
| And that seems to be the only way out of this. | ||
| JeremyBrownDefense.com, who is JeremyBrown.com? | ||
| Thank you so much for being here with us. | ||
|
unidentified
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unidentified
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