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President Biden's Classified Documents Concern00:10:18
Hey everybody, Jason Burmes here and what you're about to watch is part of that second hour that we do over at redvoicemedia.com slash Jason or slash uncensored.
That really does help support the broadcast at only $10 a month.
Now remember you can listen live for free and every two weeks the whole hour is free over at redvoicemedia.com.
But for those that just want to, you know, hang back, I get it.
Look, I'm trying to put this information out for everybody and that's why we make it free.
So I hope that you enjoy this sample of the second hour.
And if you do, consider supporting the broadcast.
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I love you guys and enjoy.
All right.
So we are going and I want to play this clip here.
This is from that DVD.
And it's just kind of like, listen, I'm fascinated by this stuff because obviously on some level, it's pre-packaged and you can't believe it.
And I'll show you why in a minute.
But at the same time, the archive footage is totally fascinating.
And I think that it reveals more than some people really realize out there.
Aircraft to fly faster, farther, and at a lower operating cost.
This sleek black plane, the YF-12, capable of flying 2,000 miles per hour, made 25 test flights.
The joint NASA Air Force program is studying problems associated with propulsion, in-flight stopping and restarting of engines, heating, and structural dynamics.
The research is aimed at furthering the development and operations of future civil and military aircraft.
Eight times the M2 lifting body was carried aloft and dropped over the Dry Lake Desert in Central California.
Now take a look at that thing.
That little thing.
It looks like a boat in the sky.
So again, you got to realize a lot of the UFOs, a lot of the UFOs, if not all of the UFOs, are military aircraft and different types of propulsion systems.
They're not telling you about.
Different types of satellite systems, weapon systems, even holographic systems.
That's what you're watching.
You're not watching aliens.
The wingless M2 and other lifting body types are the research forerunners of craft like the proposed shuttle that could fly a space mission and then return through the Earth's atmosphere and land like an airplane.
Which, at least as far as we know, has never really come to fruition.
Okay?
There's never been like a shuttle lander from a rocket ever.
We're still in the capsule era.
A new flight program began at NASA's Ames Research Center with the X-14B vertical takeoff and landing plane.
See, check that out.
Equipped with an onboard digital computer, the X-14 serves as a flying flight simulator by duplicating in advance the piloting qualities of proposed new planes.
The Ames Center is also responsible for doing research on short takeoff and landing aircraft.
This is one of the planes used to test new concepts, the OV-10A Bronco.
The United States is very interested in developing a short takeoff and landing plane for use as an intercity transport in the nation's busy metropolitan air corridors.
Also, NeverQuit came into fruition.
Just want to put that out there.
Attacking the jet noise problem at its source, engineers at the Lewis Research Center in Cleveland are supervising tests of a quieter jet engine.
The goal is to develop an engine that will be 15 to 20 decibels quieter than present aircraft engines.
Now, this is Apollo 14.
And by the way, the Gemini program is in here.
Although the guy, that guy I showed you that's narrating it, he keeps calling it the Jiminy.
Jiminy.
Hey, it sounds like Jiminy cricket.
The reason I'm going to show you this section up until about five minutes is because we get into lunar rocks.
And I think that's something we should really talk about.
Lunar rocks.
The scene is Cape Canaveral, Friday, May 5th, 1961.
It was on this date that astronaut Alan B. Shepard became the first American to be rocketed into space.
Ten years later, January 31st, 1971, Alan B. Shepard made his second space flight, this time as commander of Apollo 14, the country's third moon landing.
With astronauts Mitchell and Rusa accompanying Shepard, Apollo 14 marked the beginning of large-scale use of the moon for science.
These are some of the 94 pounds of lunar rocks returned from the moon's ancient hills of Frau Mauro by Apollo 14.
94 pounds of lunar rocks, supposedly, we came back with.
They are beginning to tell scientists a story, a story three and one-half billion years old.
From them, we are learning about the early history of not only the moon, but other planets as well.
The Earth, Mars, even Venus and Mercury.
Now, my question is, and we won't get you into Apollo 15.
Again, I'm going to be watching like all eight hours of this because that's who I am.
Maybe we'll pull some other stuff out of it.
My question would be: okay, if this is a reality, and by the way, I never played that Biden clip.
We should play the Biden clip because it is important, because it shows you that the media might be gunning for these guys, you know, gunning to get rid of him.
Here it is right here.
Moon Rocket Museum is just petrified wood.
The Dutch National Museum, this is 2009, by the way, said Thursday that one of the prize, its prize possessions, a rock supposedly brought back from the moon by U.S. astronauts, is just a piece of petrified wood.
We should totally trust NASA.
They are totally and completely honest all the time.
All the time.
Just like CNN is honest all the time.
Because I've got a lineup of WEF NASA clips and NASA, you know, pushing it.
I've got this Bushnell long clip.
I've got Boston Dynamics, et cetera.
But let's cut back.
We're all over the place today.
Classified documents from Biden's time as VP discovered in private office.
And ask yourself, when has CNN gone after Joe Biden like this?
We have sound of current President Biden addressing the handling of classified documents and the care in which he believes they should be handled.
And we should listen to that.
I think we have this.
When you saw the photograph of the top secret documents laid out on the floor at Mar-a-Lago, what did you think to yourself looking at that image?
How that could possibly happen.
How anyone could be that irresponsible?
And I thought, what data was in there that may compromise sources and methods?
By that I mean names of people who helped or etc.
And it's just totally irresponsible.
Totally irresponsible.
And I just want to be precise.
That was released on CBS 60 Minutes on September 18th, 2022, about a month or so before, maybe two months before they found similar documents at the Biden private office.
Right, exactly.
The president, obviously, was not, according to the statement that we received from the White House, was not at that point aware of the discovery of these items.
But what it will call into question is, you know, just as the president made this mistake or someone made this mistake and transported these documents to the Penn Biden Center, just as easily someone could have done this in the case of former President Donald Trump.
And the question to the Justice Department is, you know, are you treating them differently?
Obviously, the Trump investigation whether or not these are from prior to him becoming president.
Because if it is prior to him becoming president, in other words, not the documents, but they were there, that's a problem.
That's a problem.
This screams a setup to me to take him out because of the way the media is covering it.
Maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe that's a long shot.
Maybe they want the poopy pants puppet in there for as long as they can ride it out.
I don't know.
Maybe they got upset that now there's talk that he's going to run again in 2024 and we're just too damn close to the election cycle, that they got to start tearing the guy down and using more leverage.
But he doesn't know where he is.
He thinks he's talking to the Secret Service or he's talking to the Salvation Army.
We know has taken a much different turn, right?
You have months and months between where the archives was asking for these documents to be returned.
We know that the former president basically thought that these documents belonged to him.
He considered them personal because he could declassify him just by thinking about it.
Right.
Well, he could.
He was the president of the United States.
He took them.
It was a ridiculous argument.
But again, we're in witch hunt territory.
If it wasn't a ridiculous argument, he had actually broken the law.
These people at the top are frothing at the mouth to arrest him and still have not.
And I give that credit to Trump.
Why Methanol From CO2?00:12:07
I give him at least that much.
And people can be in imagination land and act like that's not real.
It is real.
Again, look how they're covering this case with Biden.
It is important.
It's something that we need to pay attention to on the peripheral.
When is the FBI going to raid the White House?
Trump leads Republican rage as he demands action after 10 classified documents were found at Biden's think tank from his time as VP when he did not have power to declassify documents.
So again, that's the argument.
If in fact, you know, they were there prior to his presidency, it's a good way to get him out of there.
It's a good way to get him out of there and not have to bend the knee to the reality that this guy hasn't run anything, that he hasn't been mentally capable of running, again, a Wendy's, being a shift manager at a Wendy's, really being a counterperson at Wendy's.
He could maybe possibly make it as a Walmart greeter, but I would imagine he would be touching and sniffing too many women and children, quite frankly, to keep that position as well.
Like if you put him in a little blue sash and put him on the chair, I personally like the ones that aren't on the chair.
It shows you that they're making that extra effort.
And even though they're in their golden years, they're trying to stand up, get a little bit of exercise in there, right?
Prefer that.
But even if you stuck him on the chair, he'd be reaching for children constantly.
This is a guy that bikes into a fall, okay, bikes into a full-on fall.
First thing he does when he comes up, goes straight for the kid.
Goes straight for the child.
Why is that?
Why is it we're okay with that?
I can't answer that question.
All right.
So I've got some WEF clips here.
We're going to play several because they integrate with NASA in a big way.
And they integrate with the Build Back Better Plan and everything we've been talking about today.
And this one right here is the World Economic Forum telling us how great the pandemic was and how our lives have really changed for the better.
So what do you want to keep from the pandemic?
You understand?
We want you to keep stuff.
What are you going to keep from the pandemic?
Five ways the pandemic could change our lives forever.
Remember, reimagining offices.
Exactly what Andrew Capo Cuomo was talking about.
And we got the shields.
We got the masks forever, just like in the Immuniband, right?
There's Purel and QR codes everywhere.
Just awesome.
We can keep that.
And this idea of the 15-minute cities, the neoms of the world, the neighborhood hubs, your slavery.
Yeah, it's a 15-minute walk because we're not going to let you drive anymore.
And you're not going to be able to afford to live in the suburbs or have your own home.
You're going to be in a small apartment pod.
So love it.
We'll keep that too.
Oh, we're going to show you trees, cloud markets.
Ooh, ghost kitchens.
Restaurants that solely deliver takeaway meals.
Gross.
Gross.
They don't want human interaction.
When they do have human interaction of delivery people, wear your mask, wear your gloves, be a slave.
And by the way, NASA is going to allow us to identify you by your heartbeat when facial recognition fails because we've mashed you up.
We can double it down.
Thank you, NASA, for this invention that hones in on your heart, which is just as unique as your fingerprint.
Yay, NASA.
And again, digital technology is going to change the way your children learn.
It wasn't bad enough that we made them mask up.
We isolated them from other kids.
We want AI robots teaching them in a virtual classroom.
That's where it really goes.
Okay?
It's going to improve their digital schools.
Because when we're outside, everybody's got to be in a slave mask.
It's the World Economic Forum.
Okay?
And we're far from done.
See?
Permanent changes from the pandemic.
Just what Cuomo told you, permanent.
What would you like to make permanent?
Do you like being alone on a bike in gloves and a mask with a headset on?
Good, because we'll keep it.
Fantastic.
All right.
So here is some more NASA WEF propaganda.
Okay, because they're looking for volunteers here to practice living on Mars.
And that's one of the big sells, right?
It's a great cover for NASA.
It's a great cover for Elon Muskernuts.
We're going to Mars!
That's a...
It's a total front.
That's Hollyweird nonsense.
We're not going to Mars.
That doesn't mean that, again, some other type of propulsion system, maybe some black program out there.
Rockets ain't taking us to Mars.
Okay.
And Bushnell tells you humans will not be the ones on Mars first.
It will be nano-robots that surveil it and then bring back a virtual universe.
Now, let's say they just told us that nanobots were on Mars, surveyed everything, and we created the virtual universe.
Could we do that?
Well, I will argue that this clip tells you, of course, we could do that because we're going to build facilities that look and feel like Mars.
Who needs a virtual environment when you got people looking to volunteer to practice living there?
All right.
So, you know, four people who spend a year living in a 3D printed module that simulates the conditions of life on Mars.
So, total imagination.
And this just shows you like the Hollyweird, you know, it's smaller than a tennis court.
And the crew must face circumstances that could arise on Mars.
They're building a virtual NASA environment.
This is like a psychological experiment on these people.
They're going to perform simulated space walks and perform scientific research.
It will be a physically and mentally demanding mission.
And its application requirements are equally demanding.
It's 30 to 55 with a master's and a degree in STEM.
You must also have log two years of professional experience in your field.
Ooh.
Or at least a thousand hours as a jet pilot.
NASA says it will research, will help prepare humans for the mission of Mars that could launch sometime in the 2030s.
No way.
Uh-uh.
Not real.
The 2030s.
They might tell you that.
They might tell you that.
We got CGI like you wouldn't believe.
Everything you just saw there is preparing you for a false reality.
And again, World Economic Forum, NASA.
Who else out there is making the connection between the World Economic Forum and NASA other than me?
I mean, it's a real damn connection.
They're putting it out there all the time.
And you see these, you will own nothing and be happy.
You'll be part of the blockchain slavery system.
We'll play that one too.
Where, you know, they brag about how they're going to utilize this internet of things and bodies and blockchain to totally enslave you, blockchain people.
All right.
All that technology.
But they openly have these massive propaganda pieces strictly about NASA.
Here is yet another one where they brag about their basic partnership with this NASA agenda.
Three ways NASA technology is improving life back on Earth.
It's not a space agency.
Okay.
It's about what?
Psychological warfare.
It's about what?
It's about geoengineering.
It's about what?
Bioengineering.
It's about a real agenda that, in my opinion, is completely and totally anti-human.
It is a transhuman agenda.
Okay?
See, they're fighting air pollution.
Brings us right back to Ellen.
They're so concerned.
We're fighting air pollution.
NASA fights air pollution.
Okay.
What else are they about lunar dust?
It can damage astronauts' eyes and lungs as well as equipment.
Ooh, the lunar dust.
So they developed high-grade air sensors to monitor dust on space missions, which is so good.
It's now used on Earth.
Isn't that great?
The Canary S picks up pollutants and methane.
See, pollutants such as methane and carbon monoxide.
All right.
Okay.
You'll never have it pick up GMOs, you know, toxic poisons, methane and carbon monoxide.
And by the way, I report on this way back in 2009.
And let's see if we can bring it up.
But it was somebody who had figured out how to take carbon dioxide out of the water and make it into methanol, a form of energy.
Carbon dioxide out of water into methanol.
All right.
Here it is right here.
Making an energy.
Carbon dioxide to methanol process improved by Catalyst 2018.
Now, again, 2009 is when I first, you know, reported on it because if this was real, okay, this was real and carbon dioxide was the big, bad boogeyman that was going to really take us out.
Why wouldn't we do this?
Oh, because it would empower us.
I mean, look at this.
Methanol conversion.
It's mainline science.
When have you ever heard about this?
When have you ever heard about this?
But don't worry, the canary ass picks up pollutants such as methane and carbon monoxide.
See, they don't want you.
No, they want to put methane as a pollutant when you can make methanol.
And carbon dioxide as a pollutant when you can make methanol form energy.
Just, yeah, okay.
The U.S. uses it to moderate air quality in air schools and emissions from forest fires, giving farmers a bird's eye view.
For almost a decade, NASA has been building drones that will fly on Mars.
More Mars.
That research was crucial for creating higher altitude drones on Earth.
Of course.
We just showed you some of the propulsion systems from like the 60s and 70s.
And the drone-like maneuverability of planes and these other things that were being dropped from the sky.
All NASA tech and Air Force tech trickled down in the consumer realm.
It's exactly what it is.
I need to grow up.
It's like the real deal here.
Okay?
So again, oh, it's going to empower farmers.
Yeah, farmers like who?
Bill Gates?
We love him.
Oh, we're going to clean up the toxins in the earth.
NASA science developed a way to fight the world's most widespread human-made contaminant.
PCBs are now banned, but they still leach out to landfills, leach out of landfills and waterways.
Yes, the EchoSpears are going to help us.
Removes PCBs from the environment like a sponge.
What's your favorite technological innovation by NASA?
What do you love about NASA?
We all love NASA.
Ooh, NASA, just the best.
Pop Tech Innovations00:08:23
They really are.
They're number one, huh?
Can't get enough of that wonderful stuff from NASA.
You know, I wish I was joking.
I really do.
I just, it gets to a point where this stuff is like right in your face.
And people are like, Jason, you're going over the top.
NASA's a space agency, man.
We're going to the moon.
Artemis is going to the moon.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
What are you talking about?
And South Korea now getting into the moon mix, by the way.
What do you mean?
They're getting into the moon mix.
So, you know, this is how you know you've made it as a nation when you say that you've been to the moon.
And maybe, who knows?
Maybe they've been there.
South Korea's first ever lunar orbiter, Dan Uri, sends back stunning black and white photos of the moon's surface and Earth.
And here are those stunning photographs.
Here they are.
New Year's Eve.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
There we go.
There's some Earth shot.
There's some moon shot.
Yeah.
Go South Korea.
You know you're coming up when you're part of the space program.
You know, you know, you're about to be a main player when you're part of the space program.
Just want to throw that out there.
So I want to play this refugee and blockchain World Economic Forum piece because that seems to be what we're doing today: letting you know that this is all integrated.
And here it is.
I mean, this is blockchain slavery for people based on a system of not only a social credit score, but your biometric information as well.
It's that stepping stone from what we have in the Tractrace Database Society to the fourth industrial revolution.
And they're totally promoting it.
The refugee camp runs on the blockchain.
Yay!
Awesome.
They can shop at supermarkets without any physical money.
And to pay, they just look in the camera.
They just look in the camera.
All part of what?
The global food program, the IMF.
See, the IRIS scanner connects to that World Food Program account.
Okay, the blockchain could help refugees find work.
Yes, inside the slave camps.
And it stores your digital identity.
I love things that store my digital identity.
It's exactly what I'd like.
I mean, look at this handsome young gentleman here just giving up his digital identity.
Isn't that great?
Without the need for paperwork-like passports, exam certificates, and financial histories, and especially things like, you know, the Immunaband, your vaccine passport.
It will help with the compliance that Albert Barela or Borla or whatever from Pfizer is talking about when you take your electronic pills.
It will help with all that.
Oh, they're often destroyed during conflict or seized by hostile governments.
Don't worry when that happens.
We've got your system right here.
We don't want bank transactions or anything like that because there's too many fees.
We want zeros and ones in a blockchain format to cut fees by 98% and have you love your new slavery right here.
Because that's a very happy refugee camp, obviously, with a bunch of people sleeping on the floor.
Just great.
Fantastic.
I mean, it's just and the World Food Program, it's global.
Okay.
Is blockchain the future for humanitarian aid?
Yay!
Because I want to be an older lady in a shawl.
All right.
That is totally, you know, beholden to a biometric slave system run by global governance that are pushing robots via pop culture.
So just like NASA and the moon and Mars and space travel has been promoted by entertainment, the same thing has been done with animatronics, robotics, and they've been used to normalize DARPA technology like this one that also is integrated, integrated into that business world, runs on what?
Google.
It runs on the Android operating system.
So that public-private partnership, Google already partnering with NASA in artificial intelligence and quantum computing.
Forget about all the other programs.
Forget about Calico, their immortality division, and so many others.
Forget about their partnerships with large media outlets to be the authoritative sources such as Vox.
Forget about the pre-bunking aspect of all this.
Let's just go with the psychological warfare via entertainment.
And I don't get K-pop.
I don't know.
Speaking of South Korea, maybe not my thing.
I've never been into boy bands in general or girl bands in general.
Even the spice girls craze a young Jason Burmes kind of missed out.
Didn't love it.
But now, obviously, you know, young Asian men that barely speak English and are pop stars, they're going to sell you on the robots and how great they are.
Very well shot.
Boston Dynamics, MIT, DARPA, Boston Dynamics, MIT, DARPA.
And now, Hyundai.
Oh.
Okay.
So, you know, it's a cute little robot.
It's on the move.
It's doing it right.
Oh, there's a little box, huh?
It's a cartoon.
Oh, it's a little car.
Fantastic.
Everybody loves little cars.
Okay, so we got the little car.
That's great.
Okay, let's take it.
Let's, you know, okay, we got the little car that can come in.
Kids Nexo.
Isn't that great?
How about you?
Spot, the DARPA dog.
You're like a little pet.
Let's humanize you a little more.
Yeah, you can come on in.
Come on.
Oh, hey, buddy.
Hey, buddy.
There you go.
You got your little neck bracelet on.
It's good.
You're supposed to be here.
Fantastic.
Oh, K-pop.
Yeah.
Asian boys dressed kind of like little girls.
Whoa!
Oh, you're happy.
Yeah.
I just, what the hell is the appeal of K-pop?
Whoa!
Yeah, we'll do push-ups with a robot.
The robot's not gonna outpush him.
I mean... What's going on?
Like, K-pop should alone let you know this whole thing's a science, right?
Like, they can make whatever they want popular and push it down your throat.
There's no way that organically, K-pop became popular in the United States and then pushing robot agendas.
Oh, yeah!
Oh, now there's the boss of Dynamics robot!
And I would imagine that that's actually CGI and not Atlas.
But who knows?
I can already do pretty incredible things.
Their spot has a little mount on the back with the screen.
And now he's got the dinosaur-like head.
Now we got a multitude of them with the dinosaur-like head attachments.
It's a new beginning for Hyundai.
Or they're going to automate you out with robots.
and K-pop I just Yeah.
2023 is going to be fun.
2022 was so great.
2022 just.
Fantastic.
Fan freaking tastic.
Michael Moore's Quote Battle00:08:53
All right, let's hit some other stories.
Okay.
And then we might possibly go to Dennis Bushnell over at Fire 2018, now five years old, talking about technological innovations.
I often play the 200,000 brain chip and human brain interface, muskernuts clip.
It's a two, or I'm sorry, it's a one-hour lecture.
So there's plenty of pure gold in there that I haven't covered or haven't cut out that maybe we can talk about in a live sort of watch-along.
Okay.
Diamond of Diamond and Silk dies at 51 at her home in North Carolina.
Trump leads tribute to one of the biggest cheerleaders saying, rest in peace, our magnificent diamond.
Of course, that was the sister team.
And this is sad to me.
You know, I certainly didn't agree with these women all the time.
Anytime you have somebody die suddenly, especially at that young age, no matter what the cause, you know, it's heartbreaking.
And I just want to put the condolences out there.
I know that they were social media powerhouses, and I saw them start up out of nowhere.
You know, so good for them.
It's tough to do that sort of thing.
We went over that one.
Let's see.
We were censored by the White House.
Tucker Carlson slams Biden administration after lawsuit reveals it pressured Facebook to censor him, talking about you know what, the hate and lie shots.
And I forget what the term is because I watched this piece last night, and it was some kind of reductionism, I think it is.
It's called reduction.
Let's see.
Can we, I guess we'll play it right there.
It was never really a secret that they were with the COVID shots.
And we knew this because the Biden administration's own VARES database indicated that from the beginning, a lot of people were being injured.
But the media suppressed that news.
We tried to point it out more than a year ago, not because we have a problem with vaccines or anti-vaxxers, but because if you're going to force people to take something, you probably ought to know what it is and what effects it might have.
That's the most basic right of all to know that what goes into your body, to know something about it.
But in trying to say that, we were censored, and now we know we were censored directly by the White House.
In April of 2021, the White House's director of digital strategy, a character called Rob Flaherty, sent this email to Facebook.
Quote, the top post on Facebook about vaccines today is Tucker Carlson saying they don't work, he complained.
He then pressured, the White House pressured Facebook to follow its policy of, quote, reduction, meaning censorship.
We're quoting, if reduction means pumping our most vaccine hesitant audience with Tucker Carlson saying it doesn't work, then I'm not sure it's reduction.
So again, their term reduction is to reduce vaccine hesitancy.
It doesn't matter what, if it's factual information.
It doesn't matter if you're pointing out that these aren't vaccines and what they are gene therapy and vector-based and they are run by the Defense Department.
And actually, they are what?
Bioweapons sent to hurt you.
To hurt you.
After a bioweapon was released purposely on the public, not leaked, not imagination land leaked in Wuhan, worked on throughout the world and seeded so their pre-positioned build-back better plan could go into high gear as they bragged about utilizing it to reimagine everything.
Couldn't pass the build-back better bill.
That's okay.
That's okay.
We'll call it the Inflation Reduction Act instead.
And we'll put the poopy pants zombie up there and a zombie administration, and we'll use reduction to control the narrative.
In other words, censor more.
The Facebook employee responded by promising that the company was, quote, running this down now.
We asked Rob Flaherty to join us tonight to explain, but of course, he's a coward and he won't.
So we only know this, by the way, because of a lawsuit from the Attorneys General of Louisiana and Missouri.
Jeff Landry is the AG in Louisiana, and we are honored to have him join us tonight.
Well, Sandra, thank you so much for coming on.
So you're the chief law enforcement officer of your state.
You're the attorney general.
This would be illegal, would it not be?
Well, it's certainly a violation of your First Amendment right.
And I wouldn't say that Facebook, I mean, that the White House pressured Facebook.
I would say that the White House demanded that they do something about the video that you had posted.
This suit is about whether or not the government has basically suppressed American speech as those Americans go about debating the very policies that the government has us under.
Right.
And if the White House did not like your position, or if your position did not agree with the great narrative, you were completely and totally censored.
Sometimes kicked off.
In cases of doctors that dared to actually treat their patients, some of them lost their medical licenses and faced criminal charges.
This was biological, psychological, physical warfare against the human species.
That's what it was.
Saying anything less isn't being intellectually honest.
Okay, I just want to put that out there.
It's not being intellectually honest.
All right, let's head down the line.
There's a couple more stories I did want to go over here.
Harvey Weinstein's LA sentencing is delayed as his lawyers seek new trial after he was found guilty of rape and sexual assault.
We covered that he was again found guilty in another trial separate from the one where he was sentenced to 20 plus years.
Okay, appealing some of those as well.
Some of those appeals are failing, and now he's trying to get a new appeal.
Here, Harvey not looking so great in the photographs, but you know, the days of the walker seem to be over.
Like, they had him on the walker before and all that other stuff.
No sympathy for Harvey Weinstein, who listen, whatever you think you know about that guy, whatever's in the public arena, I got to tell you the things that he's really done are probably some of the most morally repugnant, disturbing, and disgusting you could imagine.
And meanwhile, okay, I'm going to bring up this quote: Michael Moore, okay, let's do this.
Michael Moore, Weinstein, one of the better, nicer guys in Hollywood.
All right.
Oh, now there's a battle of it when he spoke out later.
I mean, I guess he sued Weinstein over the Fahrenheit profits.
Let's see if we can find it.
Because they did settle on that.
Let's go here.
Let's search the same thing in DuckDuckGo.
Because that'll be interesting if they're protecting Michael Moore in that narrative as well.
Let's see.
I believe I saw it on a video.
Him actually saying it.
Weinstein scandal, Weinstein allegation.
Man, maybe I have to look before 2011.
Because, again, I don't think I'm imagining it.
See the videos here.
Endorses Bernie Sanders.
Gutfeld.
Doesn't look like we're going to find it today.
Sometimes we fail when we do it live, unfortunately, folks.
It makes me upset.
I hate to fail.
I usually love to find, you know, what I'm looking for.
Let's see.
Michael Moore.
Renew Knight for Surprise Trump.
What is this?
What is this?
Oh, for $11.9.
Oh, okay.
So they actually got to better.
So maybe it is after that.
We're going to find that quote.
Don't worry.
We'll find that for you, Michael.
All right.
We got a little bit left in the show.
Let's do it.
Let's go to, didn't mean to do that.
I just minimize that out of nowhere.
Let's go to this Dennis Bushnell clip, HourPlus, Fire 2018, right here.
Let's the cat out of the bag and quite a few things.
Let's Let the Cat Out00:09:08
We'll start it with his introduction from the professor that basically led this.
And I would say these are academics and insiders that he's talking to.
So as you already know, he is chief scientist at NASA, Langley.
As chief scientist, Dennis is responsible for technical oversight and advanced program formulation with an emphasis on atmospheric sciences and structures, materials, acoustics, flight electronics, control software, instruments, aerodynamics, aero thermodynamics, hypersonic air breathing propulsion, computational sciences, and systems optimization for aeronautics, spacecraft, exploration, and space access.
That's the first paragraph.
Dennis is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a fellow of ASME, AIAA, and the Royal Aeronautical Society, and a member of the TechCast panel, a group of international experts engaged in technology forecasting.
He has served as reviewer and editor for 40 journals and organizations and has made seminal contributions in the area of biofuels, biomass as petroleum replacements sourced from wastelands and saline, wastewater via halophytes and algae.
He's a bio thing.
Dennis developed the riblet approach to turbulent drag reduction, high-speed quiet tunnels for flight apical boundary layer transition research, advanced computational approaches for laminar flow control, regenerative aero braking for Martian entry, electron beam freeform fabrication, and advanced hypervelocity air breathing and aeronautical concepts with revolutionary performance potential.
So, you know, I wanted to give you an idea that this guy has been around.
He's the real deal.
He's a real scientist.
So he knows when he's spitting Johnny nonsense and talking points and he's selling you something.
And he knows when the science is real.
He also has access to all sorts, all sorts of classified technologies and programs and has for decades.
This guy is the dude.
That's what I said to Dennis just now.
He has contributed to national programs including Sprint, HSCT, SST, Fast Ship, Gemini, Apollo, Ram, Viking X-15, F-18EF, Patent Holder for the Fix to the Wingdrop Problem, Shuttle, NASP, Submarine, Torpedo Technology, America's Cup Racers, Navy Railgun Maglev Trains, and Planetary Exploration.
Maglev trains and railguns.
Okay, and we talked about Gemini, which is, you know, pre-Apollo, all those other space programs.
This guy, he's been in it.
He's been, and why do we keep going to Bushnell?
Why do we keep going to NASA?
He's been in it.
Dennis originated and organizes a yearly workshop for the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command trade off on future technology warfare, out of which has grown the Army Red franchise, the preferred national security future operating environment utilized by the U.S. Army, Navy, and Joint Forces Command.
Future Warfare.
This guy's a warfare guy.
Obviously a slacker.
Dennis, please come up.
And here he is, Dennis Bushnell.
You and I just couldn't wait.
Dennis has access, as I mentioned in the agenda, to an incredible array of opportunities and technologies from the bottom of the ocean throughout outer space.
And by the way, NASA does a lot of oceanic research.
In fact, they train at underground facilities.
I remember they had one astronaut, again, on Rogan, and I think he was talking about one of his most frightening incidents of all time.
And basically, they keep you in these underwater facilities, isolation purposes, waitlist purposes, and you'd have to exit in this suit, in this airlock, to go use the bathroom.
And he said he had like giant anglerfish almost ate him.
Like the ocean is scary.
And it is.
You talk about, like, we haven't even seen close to all the species that are on this planet, period.
And we're talking, we're going to Mars.
And this evening he's going to share with us ideas of some of the largest problems that we face and some of the solutions we might find there.
Thank you.
Okay, boss.
Good evening.
Among other activities for NASA, the national security apparatus writ large, and the academies, my work, where is it all going?
The national security apparatus at large.
Major techs issues and opportunities.
So we're going to start off with a cook's tour of some techs, then briefly the societal issues.
And then I'm going to describe four greater than a trillion dollar year new business opportunities going forward to address the major societal issues and then some.
So let's do text first.
The poster child coming out of the IT BioNano Quantum Energetics Tech Revolution is, of course, AI, robotics, and autonomy.
The computers got big enough around 12, enough data so that we could do neural nets seriously.
And increasing number of niche areas, as you all know, many at our better than human.
So in 2012, now over a decade ago, some of these neural nets exceeded humans.
Okay?
Talking about automation and robotics right out of the gates.
Then there's, because of the success of the IBM Blue Brain Project, which some of you may remember, there's now human brain projects here in Europe, China, at billions plus dollars a year to nanosection a neocortex and replicate it in silicon for human-level brain replicants in about five to ten years, people are now projecting.
So again, if you believe that, we're five to ten years after this talk.
Have they replicated the human brain in silicon?
Who knows what's going on behind the scenes?
And Ray Kurzweil projected all that around 2000.
Another reason we talk about Ray Kurzweil all the time.
Why we played the Ramona clip yesterday.
Then there's emergence.
Turns out if you make something complex enough, it wakes up.
The humans evolved over the past couple of million years as superb hunter-killer-gatherer groups.
And in that context, we would have a problem.
We would evolve a piece of our brain, have another problem, another piece.
Eventually, we evolved enough pieces so that we woke up.
And people think the web is starting to wake up.
Again, whether that's true or not, you decide.
What you may not know is that a friend of mine, Steve Thaler, about 20 years ago, determined that he could make the machines create and invent an imagineer.
And he created the imagination engine, which has produced better toothpaste for Palmawa, better words for the Air Force, far more ideas than cities full of people on milliwatts, 24-7, 365.
So he talked about that in 2011, seven years prior to this speech.
And instead of cities full of people, it was buildings full of people.
So that expansion is pretty evident.
And the approach was to create quasi-random combinatorials and then use the superb speed and memory of the machine to evaluate all these combinatorials.
So it's something like cats walking on the computer, okay?
And you just evaluate from a systems point of view very, very rapidly what all that looks like and what's the best.
And it's just superb.
Okay, then we go down to renewable energy.
The usual and the unusual.
The usual are PV, wind, geothermal, biomass, and hydro, all of which are now at or below cost parity with fossil carbon.
Therefore, the nukes, although they're not fossil carbon, they're also too expensive.
And so we had 108 nukes.
We're down to 98 nukes and dropping.
The coal plants are closing.
PV is selling in the major markets now for 1.77 cents a kilowatt hour.
So I just want to point this out.
This is that marketing aspect.
This is that environmental aspect, shutting down the coal plants.
Talking about this again in 2018.
Obviously, a bigger agenda.
Renewable Revolution00:01:50
Wind is now selling for 2 cents a kilowatt hour.
The renewable costs are still dropping much.
They've been dropping very much over the last 10 years.
Their efficiencies are increasing.
65% of all new generation worldwide is renewables.
They generate the renewables today, 25% of all electricity worldwide.
And some are starting to discuss what I haven't heard since the 50s, which is, and this was in the 50s in connection with nukes, energy too cheap to meter, which never happened.
Just like we didn't have 30-hour work weeks, Dennis, okay, and month-long vacations and able to support us.
So they sell you on all the great things this technology could provide, and then they flip it on its head, and they utilize it to enslave humanity.
All right, folks.
I think that that is about going to wrap it up.
I want to remind everybody that I am a documentary filmmaker and that all of my films are free of charge, loose change, final cut, fabled enemies, invisible empire, a new world order to find, and shade the motion picture.
I hope that you are sharing the links to the show, that you're checking it out, that you're letting your friends know about the information, and more importantly, that you are getting involved because these aren't right or left issues that I'm talking about.
They are right and wrong issues.
They are issues that we must confront if we ever want to have a semblance of a free humanity or a constitutional republic again.
And I can't do it on my own.
So please, if you can out there, come on in.
Let's all become the great resistance to this great narrative, great reset agenda, and fight the new world order.