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June 4, 2024 - Info Warrior - Jason Bermas
22:45
Will Trump Release The JFK 9/11 & Epstein Files?!? Plus The End Of InfoWars?
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Time Text
Would you declassify the 9-11 files?
Yeah.
Would you declassify JFK files?
Yeah.
I did a lot of it.
Would you declassify the Epstein files?
Yeah.
Yeah, I would.
Attorney General.
Well then, well then, well then.
So most of you may not get the reference that I'm starting with today, but yesterday I saw just a short clip of Donnie T from an alleged 90 minute interview on the morning show Fox and Friends.
And I thought it was extremely important.
Now, I didn't weigh in one way or the other.
I literally, and this, you know, hey guys, my audience, my Burmese Brigade out there, I just, I want to give you my intel on this one and how I feel about it.
It was well then, dot, dot, dot.
Now I thought the dot, dot, dots would allow most of the audience to know that I remain skeptical of what I posted via Donny T.
But boy, did I get the hate everywhere.
Probably one of my biggest posts, and I literally saw my analytics.
Guys, if you saw my analytics, they're such trash.
They make no sense.
Like, despite my audience growing, everything is down by hundreds of percents every single week and month on the free speech platform, okay?
So anyway, Donnie T gets asked, in succession, really quick, it's like a 13 second clip.
I honestly couldn't believe, first of all, the question was even asked, especially on Fox.
So, we'll start with the JFK documents.
Are we going to get those?
He says we're going to get them, and then he also reiterates, I already gave a lot of them up.
Then, out of nowhere, the 9-11 documents.
Oh, are we as a society now?
Accepting things like JFK and 9-11 and then Epstein are one in the same?
Well, let me say this.
Without blinking an eye, without blinking an eye, Donnie T says yes.
I'm like, whoa!
I really think people, we're going to get back to the significance of it.
Whether or not I think he's going to do it or has the ability to do it, whole nother scenario.
But I would be remiss if I did not point out in that same clip and now like if you're listening to this one because I'm going to be reposting this one for everybody.
Go back and look how I posted it.
Well then, that's all.
When he gets brought to Epstein, it's the one time that he hesitates a little bit.
He doesn't hesitate on JFK, he's got his backup answer.
I couldn't believe he didn't blink for 9-11.
Epstein, who he clearly not only had an association with, I'd like to remind the audience, That when Glaine Maxwell was on trial after she had been captured, okay, he wished her well.
And there were a bunch of very, very mentally ill, delusional people who believed in white hats and QAnon sense.
He's like, that's the godfather kiss that Donny T has given.
That's the godfather kiss.
He's letting him know.
He wishes her well, huh?
Huh?
No guys, no.
They rode on planes together.
They knew each other.
They were business associates.
There are even reports in the media that Trump met Melania basically on an audition for his third wife in a party of many, many models, perhaps 20 of them, in other words, dozens maybe, put on by Epstein himself.
I know that makes people uncomfortable.
That's real.
Okay?
That's real.
Like, I didn't make that up out of nowhere.
I don't know that it happened.
But it's openly in the mainstream media.
Okay, so let's get to the significance of 9-11, put everything I said to the side.
Of course, I don't know if he's going to do it, or if he's sincere, but the fact we are now at the point, everybody, look at me, That the ex-president of the United States, without blinking an eye, says he's going to declassify all the 9-11 documents in the same breath of what we know happened with JFK, just on a surface level, is incredible for the culture.
OK, that's all I'm saying.
And boy, you know, I'm a LARPer and I'm an InfoWars shill.
Alex Jones staged the whole almost takedown of InfoWars this weekend.
Not the case, not the case, not the case.
But you're going to find out about that.
We've actually got Harrison Smith at the end of the show.
And we are now joined by part of the InfoWars team, the tip of the spear, if you will.
He does mornings over there.
It is Harrison Smith.
And Harrison, I gotta tell you, even yesterday, I was getting DMs from people, some people I'd never even talked to, like we're talking right now, actually wanted to have a private conversation with me.
They wanted to know if this was for real.
Just so everybody knows, I have really no backdoor access to InfoWars.
When they give me the call to do the fourth hour, it is literally, hey Jason, can you do it?
I sure can.
Okay, see you then.
And it's that much.
You know, there's the occasional text maybe with Dew, or a DM with you, or maybe now Chase Geyser, but pretty low-level stuff.
Usually flat-earth stuff, you know, real fun stuff on the back end.
So, for those that don't know what's going on, let's give the quick synopsis.
Obviously, there's been a bankruptcy after the Sandy Hook financial rulings that were to the tune of $1.5 billion, imagination land.
Unfortunately, people in the general public, people I know included, think Alex Jones is going to jail or that he's done something incredibly evil.
They have no idea the synopsis of this case, or that Jones actually did try to settle for about 50 million dollars, which I think is still an over-the-top settlement, but more in the realm if you were actually to go to trial And be convicted of defamation.
I still think probably ten times what anybody in his financial situation would be if it wasn't Alex Jones.
But, often they don't want to do it.
This weekend, it looked like they were going to lock the doors.
And you guys did a powerhouse weekend to broadcast.
All sorts of people tuning in.
Tell us what it's like on the ground right now over at InfoWars.
Uh, you know, it's definitely, you know, throughout all of this, it's been such a roller coaster.
It's almost, I don't want to call it a blessing in disguise, but it's like we've been through this so much that it's kind of like, personally, I'm not going to let myself feel like it's over until it's really over.
It's just like, oh, we're getting shut down?
All right.
As long as my key card still works, I'm not shut out yet.
But it feels different this time because the crew has taken all of our, like myself and the crew have taken all of our personal stuff away.
So, you know, our studio is covered in memorabilia and art and just all sorts of cool stuff.
And all of that is gone.
So it feels different now.
It feels like when you go into your house, when you're moving and everything's moved and you're like, oh, it's...
It's all coming down.
Everything feels a little bit more real when the personal stuff isn't around.
And, you know, I remember that vibe over there and it only expanded.
You know, I have the pleasure of knowing where you're located and, you know, basically how it looks like, you know, a brick office building from the outside.
Very unassuming.
And then you go into this place and it's literally something that's not only changed the world, but evolved to do so greatly.
Uh, and I can only imagine all the stuff that was there.
You're telling me the walls are bare.
Jones hit the airwaves today.
There was a court hearing.
I saw the mainstream media articles about the court hearing saying that basically the families want InfoWars dissolved.
Jones seems to be, after talking to the lawyers, thinking that there's going to be a positive and that InfoWars is actually going to go back into his hands within the next couple of weeks.
What can we expect in the next couple of weeks and when does that decision happen?
So that decision will happen on June 13th.
And it's funny, you talk about not having an inside track or a backdoor to InfoWars.
I work there every day, and I hardly know more than the public.
I mean, that's the thing.
I get the information directly from Alex, and he says the same stuff to me he says on air five minutes later.
So, you know, there's not even really... I mean, this is the thing about InfoWars is it's all just out in the open.
It's in your face.
He just talks about what's going on, and it's the same stuff he says to us behind the scenes.
So I wish I had a lot of inside information on that as well.
And I do get a little uncomfortable talking about just the plaintiffs and the lawsuit because it is still in action.
And so I want to make it clear, I'm just talking personally here and not as a representative or anything officially from InfoWars.
And that might sound ridiculous, but I'm just trying to be extra careful.
So as I understand it, June 13th is the decision where it will be decided whether or not to liquidate InfoWars, and if so, how that liquidation will come about.
But the idea behind the laws that are in place right now is that you've got people, you've got an injured party who are supposed to get paid, and that's supposed to be the purpose of all of these proceedings.
But it seems like some of the people involved, that's not their goal.
They're not trying to get money.
Let me stop for a second.
If you want to get paid, the business has to run.
Alright?
Now, especially when we're talking about a ludicrous 1.5 billion dollars.
Let's just stop for a second.
If you were talking about raw resources and equipment, aka gear, to get into the 1.5 billion range, first of all, I would have to buy probably three office buildings in a pretty nice area that were at least five stories high apiece.
Bare.
Okay?
We'd have to start there with real estate.
Then, you'd have to literally get top-of-the-line gear.
Like, everything that was released within the last year, we're talking $25,000 cameras.
You'd have to clear out the B&H Photo Warehouse.
You'd have to clear out the B&H photo warehouse.
I mean, completely.
Exactly.
And then maybe you could hit a fraction of that mark, all right?
The idea, listen, I can, and I know that you guys are pro, and I know that you guys run, you know, three separate shows every single day, Alex, yourself, and Owen, and I'm just gonna, I'm gonna ballpark it, folks, because I've been in this game and business for a very long time.
Even with servers, High ball.
I mean, this is a high ball.
With servers, a couple million dollars in equipment.
And that would be retail.
If you were liquidating it in an auction scenario, I don't know that you would get more than a few hundred thousand dollars for the equipment.
So they don't want to get paid because that's not a real thing.
Right.
No, exactly.
And I mean, when you really think, and it's funny because you just throw these numbers out there, and you know, 1.5 billion, wow, that's ridiculous.
But, I mean, hearing how you're breaking it down, literally, multiple office buildings in a downtown area.
I mean, that is, it is mind-blowing how much money, and that would only get you to like 400 million.
And I don't even know if the equipment that we have is worth... I mean, when you talk about a million dollars, that is so much money!
Let's put it into more perspective, okay?
Yeah.
According to the judge in the Trump case, an 18 million dollar Mar-a-Lago, all right?
You're talking about 85 Mar-a-Lagos is what he would have to have to liquidate to pay that money.
It's called Democrat Math.
We're doing a little Democrat Math here.
That's insane.
It's all so insane.
It's wild.
It is so, and look man, obviously I got a soft spot for InfoWars, not only for having to work there and being the first guy that Jones ever gave a show to and him producing films, but I have a soft spot for it because, you know, when I started waking up to 9-11 six months later, I remember what InfoWars.com looked like.
And it was like a glorified, maybe like a drudge report with some colors.
There's no even article pictures.
Really, for those that want some inside baseball, what really revamped the site visually was Paul Joseph Watson, who had put together in that time period something called Propagandamatrix.com.
And it was the look of Propagandamatrix That's right.
And, you know, the way that he was writing articles that kind of fused it, and the modern-day InfoWars began to be born.
But Alex has pioneered so many other things out there, and one of them would be Access TV.
You know, again, being kind of in the early days of InfoWars, you know, Jones might not have been really known on a national level at that point, but he had a fucking...
Fudgin'.
A fudgin' cult status in Austin the minute I walked there and a lot of that had to do with AXS TV and really the only other person that I can think of that made a career out of AXS TV successfully was Tom Green.
I mean, it's true.
I was a big Howard Stern fan way before I found Alex, and Stern would always make fun of people that were on AXS TV, and part of the gags were like, Jackie the Joke Man, and they'd call these shows, and they'd just prank And they play it.
Nobody ever is going to make it on AXS TV.
Alex Jones arguably has more political power and clout among common people than anybody else.
And guess what guys?
He started on AXS TV.
So, you're exactly right, and there's a couple aspects that are important to that.
First of all, you, yeah, I mean, InfoWars, you were, like, there on the ground floor, and you have so much to do with the legend of InfoWars, which, of course, is why it's important to fight for and to, you know, try to maintain.
Because Alex could have cut and run.
Whenever he wanted, right?
He could have said, oh, you want to sue me for all this money?
Well, here's InfoWars.
Good luck making that money.
Goodbye.
And he could go get a job somewhere else.
So he has gone through a lot of this to prevent their victory, to prevent them from mounting InfoWars as a trophy on their mantle.
And that's important, I think, because what it represents is the everyman, somebody who didn't have institutional power, somebody who didn't have to schmooze his way up, who wasn't anointed by the mainstream media, who did start on public access TV, and because what he was saying was true, and what he was saying was powerful, organically grew to be an unstoppable force in media.
And during the trials, I mean, The trials weren't fun, but there were certain parts where people were testifying, and it was like, people who were like, yes, I'm a researcher at this top-flight university, and I've spent years studying Alex Jones, and here's the data that shows that he alone had four times as much influence as the next highest influencer during the 2016 election.
I mean, they've done scientific studies on how powerful InfoWars is.
So...
It's that symbol that they want to destroy, and it's a symbol of the self-made man, the power of truth and nothing else, you know?
And it's been an amazing journey that he's been on, like a real American hero, man, like a legendary figure.
And yeah, you were there early on to see it grow.
I'll just say this, you know, obviously nobody's perfect, but he's also a college dropout just like me.
And it just spits in the face of this idea that, ooh, I went to Yale or Harvard or I'm from this bloodline and my parents drive this car.
So what, man?
I don't care.
You know, and that's one of the other things to this day I appreciate about Jones.
I've had a great steak with Jones.
I know he likes that sort of thing.
I know he likes to kick back a little liquor, but I really appreciate the fact that he has never been a guy to kiss Arnis to go to Mar-a-Lago.
I listened to that rant a week or two ago.
I don't care about that stuff.
I'm on the Reawaken America tour.
I make absolutely no money from it.
It costs me out of pocket to travel around the country, but I do it so I can go talk to other people about issues beyond left and right, transhumanism in general, and take on some of the norms.
You know I'm no fan of the muskernuts, right?
I want to dig in there.
And Jones has never been that aggrandizing individual that just wants to get up there and sign autographs, etc., or be a part of the club.
I don't want to put on the suit, dude.
I don't want to do the monkey dance.
I don't want to have to play team baseball.
And I think people feel that because, listen, Jones will turn on you in a second.
You know, forget Sneaky Snake Joe Rogan.
And I'm glad that they hashed it out.
But at the same time, like when I got there, that was kind of one of the other behind the scenes things.
Jones wasn't in love with some of the things that was going on on Fear Factor.
Uh, human degradation and torture.
Uh, didn't love some of the other people that he was hanging out with, but I was like, hey man, you know, Joe's going to be huge.
Like the UFC is huge.
And like, you, you need to start, you know, make amends bro.
Because another thing I remember all of you want to talk about all the way back in the day, Joe's certainly a pioneer of podcasting, but it was those two people together in the belly of the beast, rocking George Bush Jr.
and senior masks.
In cloaks in the middle of Austin, Texas, when ain't nobody know about the Bohemian Grove then.
And that's just part of that history that a lot of people don't know and don't understand.
And I don't want to see that history come to an end.
I want to see, you know, first of all, I want to see us get our constitutional republic back.
But I want InfoWars to be the example For real, true, independent media.
Imperfect, sure, but so much better than the mainstream has been able to do all these decades.
Yeah, and of course that's the great irony and tragedy of it all is that while we are going down because of, in my opinion, you know, malfeasance and misapplication of law and abuse through the legal system in a variety of different ways, At the same time that that's happening, we're actually growing.
We've actually never stopped growing, even through all of the lawsuits and decisions and everything.
We haven't fired a bunch of people.
We haven't had mass layoffs.
Meanwhile, every leftist outlet is going down in flames.
Media Matters is firing 15% of their staff.
Jezebel shut down.
Vice Media shut down.
Unless they get some huge cash injection from BlackRock, all these places are going down.
So they have nothing but institutional support.
And they fail.
We have nothing but institutional ire and hatred and attacks, and yet we thrive.
Again, it's a symbol.
It's a symbol of how you beat these people, how you can defeat them, how they're not popular, how they don't get anything right.
I mean, they cannot have Alice Jones out there, especially for the predicting stuff or for getting things right years in advance.
I mean, look at what...
It's happening with Fauci right now and the COVID stuff.
They're admitting all of these things, but they're saying, you know, but at the time we thought this was the right thing to do.
At the time we all understood that this is right.
Well, you can go back to that time and you can see me on InfoWars saying exactly the opposite of what the experts are saying.
It sort of blows their whole, you know, argument that, well, everybody thought this at the time.
Well, not if you've got a guy in Austin, Texas shouting the truth at the top of his lungs.
Sort of blows up your whole, this is what everybody thinks, narrative.
So there's lots of reasons to to get him off.
And one other thing I want to say about, you know, public access and, you know, him starting from the ground up is that's another extremely tragic aspect of all of this is I remember as late as 2015 probably.
The Infowars magazine would be, they'd go and put them in coffee shops around Austin and they'd be gone the next day.
Because even as late as 2014-2015, Alex Jones was like a hometown hero.
Everybody loved Alex Jones.
He was like the champion of the libertarians and the weirdos and the fed guys and the legalize it people.
You know, I mean, And now you go around Austin and he's a fascist, he's a bigot, he's all these things.
And so that again has been sort of a tragedy where it's like, man, here's this homegrown hometown hero who, because the media started telling lies about him in 2016 because he was politically effective, now all of his fellow Austin citizens, his hometown people, turn on him like that.
It is tragic, man.
Honestly, it's very upsetting that people couldn't just Have their homeboys back through all of this.
Well, I'll just say this, man.
The truth is the truth, no matter how uncomfortable.
And Alex Jones taught me a lot of that truth.
And I got into this whole thing after watching Road to Tyranny and saying, I'm going to prove that redneck wrong.
And look, unfortunately, it was way worse and maybe articulated in a way I wasn't used to and an accent I didn't like.
But the bottom line is, Alex Jones was right, everybody.
You can check out Harrison Smith weekdays in the AM over at InfoWars.com.
Always a pleasure, brother.
We'll catch up soon.
Folks, thank you so much for joining me right here on TNT Radio, where the truth lives.
It's not about left or right.
It's always about right and wrong.
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