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We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in.
Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want.
We think too much, feel too little.
More than machinery, we need humanity.
We know the air is unfit to breathe.
Our food is unfit to eat.
As if that's the way it's supposed to be.
We know things are bad, worse than bad.
They're crazy.
Say, I'm a human being.
God damn it.
My life has value.
You have met all the primal forces of nature.
Don't give yourselves to brutes.
Men who despise you, enslave you, who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think, or what to feel, who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fodder.
Don't give yourselves to these unnatural men.
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts!
You're beautiful.
I love you.
Yes.
You're beautiful.
Thank you.
Showtime!
It's time to buckle up for making sex of the madness.
And who loves you and who do you love?
Hey, everybody, Jason Burmes here, and you take the W's where you can get them.
Now, in the midst of the story that will not go away, aka the Epstein saga, there's another story that coincides on so many levels into what Epstein was about that is not discussed nearly enough.
And that person was convicted on four of five counts of felonies, got a sentence of 11 years, and that appeal has just been denied.
Now, some of the direct parallels between Jeffrey Epstein and Peter Nygaard are the modeling and fashion aspects of that.
Again, I've discussed it many times, but you don't hear about it much.
It's not just the Wexner connection.
In the Palm Beach case, they had considered arresting Epstein while he was judging a beauty pageant.
Very embedded in that world.
Okay?
That is how you exploit young girls, women, into not only your own abuse, but then to be farmed out later, like we discussed earlier this week when we showed you the Bradley Edwards, the lawyer of many of the victims, explaining the Epstein situation.
So you have that.
But then you also have the transhumanist aspect of this.
And I think that that is really key because when we talk transhumanism, I cannot stress enough how it is not only a multitude of things, but if you were to take it at a spectrum, okay, of what the current predator class transhumanists want.
It's a very clear spectrum, okay?
Number one, they would like to somehow biologically, for the most part, live forever.
Even escape that biology in the sense that they can become a being of light, travel the multiverse, if you will, beyond the universe, supposedly.
Not that I buy into that, okay?
And essentially, beyond immortality, beyond the singularity, this is the Kurzwellian view.
Now, I think a lot of that is hogwash, but at the same time, I do think the quest for immortality has been one of mankind since its inception.
Whether you talk about the fountain of youth, the tree of life, it has been embedded in our psyche, in our cultural imagination, probably since the beginning, wherever that is.
Okay.
So you have that by what some people would call the elites.
I think they're anything but.
It is a predator class of human beings.
Now, on the other end of transhumanism, in that journey, they would like to experiment on the rest of us, have us merge more and more with bionanotechnology, what you could refer to as cybernetics as well, kind of like what you see in a lot of the science fiction movies for decade upon decade upon decade.
I mean, Star Wars with the Luke hand.
And you've seen where we've gone with DARPA.
That's part of it.
But at the end of the day, they want to trick you into believing that somehow, some way, you can upload your consciousness, not a real thing, never going to be a real thing.
They can't even tell you what consciousness is.
When I say they, I'm talking about the entire scientific community.
Okay, you can't put it in a bottle.
Can't just explain it away.
In fact, many of the current AI models are based on the research of a man who admittedly failed, admittedly failed on his journey to try to find out exactly what consciousness is.
Maybe it's unknowable, especially to us human beings.
You know, this imperfect species, this flawed species that I think is worth fighting for.
So they want to trick you eventually after doing all these horrific things.
That's what this transginger movement is about, folks.
It is about you rejecting your biology.
All right, going into a form of psychosis where you're literally against our own species with the belief that you can upload your consciousness and become anything, anything, and be anywhere and interact any way you want, perhaps with other consciousness.
Whole lot of Johnny nonsense there.
Whole lot of Johnny nonsense there.
Nygaard is in that group where he was very, very openly and adamant about living forever, de-aging, if you will.
And remember, Google has their immortality division.
And yes, that does mean de-aging as well.
It's known as calico, C-A-L-I-C-O.
But when you're a person like Nygaard that has the hubris, the hubris to believe that you can live forever, you're that important.
All right, you're on the verge, no matter what.
And I mean, this guy went well beyond the verge.
I want to make that extremely clear, of not only being a total and complete sociopath, but enacting psychopathic behavior because other people aren't people.
They're just things.
They're just there to be passed around, to be passed by.
They don't matter.
And how many of these people in that billionaire class and above think that way?
You think they're concerned about me or you?
They think, do you think they care what you think?
That you should have a say.
Most of them know.
The vast majority of them absolutely not.
They look at us in their social Darwinistic manner as a subspecies.
We're about as on the radar as a fly in the room that needs to be squashed.
Okay?
And that's why when I show you a bunch of these different videos explaining exactly what this guy took part in to try to achieve that goal of, again, living forever on that journey.
And believe me, that may have been in his mindset the whole time.
The abusive people just came along with that predator class attitude.
Psychopathic.
Psychopathic.
So we got a ton of videos here.
Some you've seen.
I'll bet a few that you have not seen on Nygard.
And we're going to get to it.
So before we do that, I need you to thumbs it up.
I need you to subscribe.
I need you to share.
And I need to make it clear once again.
I can't do this without you guys.
There are no media paychecks.
You know, if you watched earlier this week, the Love and Robots and Karate, the whole nine, I love you guys.
I want to make this my all-time thing all the time.
I'm hoping beyond hope, okay, that perhaps, perhaps.
Uh-oh, what do we got here?
Please, hold on.
Sorry, folks.
Got to see something really quick.
Okay.
Okay, what is this?
Okay, that's that.
Okay.
It's a whole sequence.
Actually, you want to know what that is?
I'll tell you what that is.
And this is why I want to make this my thing.
The buy me a coffee's there.
The PayPal would be great right now.
You don't even understand.
That right there was information about me trying to send my niece, the older one, to Spain because she has been an exceptional student.
She has two jobs.
I can't tell you beyond words how proud I am of her.
And I got to find a way over the next, I think, year and a half.
I get to pay this thing.
It's a little over five grand to get my niece to Spain.
And come hell or high water, I'm going to do it.
I hope you want me to do that.
I hope you want to be on that journey.
$5, $10, $15 absolutely means the world to me.
Again, bigger donations.
There is the PayPal down below if you want to remain more anonymous to the crowd.
Again, I want to thank everybody who has donated to the cause.
I want to give a big shout out to Marigold Resources.
If you're buying or selling a business, if you've got some paperwork, if you're looking at something that you may want to buy, check out marigoldresources.com.
Great people there.
And rcreader.com, the River City Reader.
Again, I'm on the cover of this print publication.
Comes out once a month.
You're going to find some real news and commentary that you're not going to find anywhere else.
RiverCityReader.com.
And this one is for the boys and the gals.
I'm pumped up in a little bit more than a week.
Actually, a week from today, I'm going to be doing the weigh-ins for Caged Aggression for the first night, but it's a two-night event.
If you are in the Quad Cities area, Davenport, New York, okay, this is it.
It's going to be a great time.
I'm calling fights with Jens Pulver the first night, Tim Sylvia the second night, UFC Hall of Famer, Jens Pulver, both ex-champions.
Sylvia should be in the Hall of Fame as well.
This is my Christmas.
Make it yours.
There's not a bad seat in the house, but if you want to watch the pay-per-view and hear me run my mouth on it, you can do that at cagedaggression.tv.
All right.
So I also want, I mentioned that I want to be remonetized on YouTube.
It's been, geez, like almost two weeks.
So maybe I'm going to get there.
Post at Team YouTube on X. Remonetize Jason Burmes' channel.
Let's make it happen together into the stories.
Boom.
We did it.
We did it.
Thumbs those videos up.
Judge Stays sexual assault charges against Fashion Mogul with ties to Prince Andrew.
A judge has stayed a sexual assort charge against Fashion Mogul Peter Nygaard after ruling that the police violated his right to a fair trial.
What?
Oh my goodness.
I misread this.
Oh no.
Nygaard84 was sentenced to 11 years in prison.
See, I miss, because this is Canadian.
I thought stays meant, oh, this is horrible news.
I'm finding this out in real time.
Horrible news.
I can't even, I can't, I'm speechless right now.
I'm absolutely horrible.
Okay?
Just absolutely awful.
So tell me they're not going, tell me they're not going to let this guy out.
Tell me I'm still misreading it.
The disgraced businessman appeared before a judge again Wednesday over a case pertaining to a separate alleged sexual assault.
Okay.
The alleged victim, whose identity is protected under Canadian law, accused Nygaard of assaulting her in 1993 at his warehouse in Winnipeg.
The woman spoke to police in Winnipeg and North Vancouver at the time of the alleged crime, but charges were not filed.
She came forward again in 2020 and police launched an investigation.
Nygaard, who once hosted Prince Andrew in the Bahamas, was charged with his sexual assault, with sexual assault and unlawful confinement in 2023.
His trial was scheduled for this December.
But Justice Mary Carve has now stayed the charge after police failed to retain records from the interview.
So at least this isn't the appeal.
They're just not going to charge him again.
All right?
But they're protecting.
Man, I hope this doesn't mean he's getting out.
Because he's 84 and you'd think he can't make it.
I mean, this guy literally thinks he's going to live forever.
Okay?
Man.
See, I'm not perfect.
I've got to get up on my Canadian law.
Geez.
Stays.
So there you go on that one.
And if you doubt that Nygaard wants to live forever, just watch this little piece.
If it comes up.
One man, younger at heart than those half his age.
That man is Peter Nygaard.
And according to this video posted on YouTube, the 70-year-old fashion designer claims to have discovered the fountain of youth.
Look at my before and after pictures.
I come from anti-aging to reverse aging.
He goes on to explain the science behind those claims.
I've been on stem cell turbino four times a year for the past three years.
Stem cells can be turned into just about any kind of cell, which means potentially they could be used to repair damage caused by disease.
But in Canada, it's illegal to clone them.
Nygaard moved from Winnipeg to the Bahamas several years ago.
He launched a biotech company in 2009, hired four scientists specializing in stem cell technology, and lobbied the Bahamian government to create legislation to further his research.
He now says his doctors have made a scientific breakthrough, successfully changing his skin cells into embryonic stem cells, essentially turning back his biological clock.
This is huge.
This is a game changer.
This could eliminate all disease.
This perhaps is immortality.
But this University of Manitoba ethics professor who's been studying stem cell research since scientists cloned Dolly the Sheep in the late 1990s says Nygaard's claims are unfounded.
There is no magic stem cell cocktail that you can drink or inject into your arm that will make you younger or healthier or that will help you to live longer.
Arthur Schaefer says while the technology isn't there yet, there's still an ongoing debate as the science could also be used to enhance physical and mental traits in only the people who could afford it.
The use of stem cell technology to create supermen and wonder women has many people feeling very uneasy.
But Schaefer admits, if nothing else, Nygaard's video will further the debate on the issue until science catches up.
I want to live forever with Guy Trigger.
I want to live forever, or he's very open about it.
The human vampire, like for real.
And once again, do you think this stuff is going to be evenly distributed?
On top of being evenly distributed, you got to understand he's on all sorts of testosterone as well.
You know, it's not just the stem cells, et cetera, et cetera.
There's a lot more that they don't get into.
But I'm going to play this clip right here.
A lot of you may be familiar with it, but when we are talking about the stem cells in particular, okay, the preference is the younger the woman who he would impregnate, and we're going to play Chris Hanson talking about this, the better because he wanted them to abort the child to take those stem cells of the aborted fetus.
You cannot make this stuff up.
Stem cell technology that Peter and I are investing in is called SCNT, which takes the egg of a young, perfect woman specimen, takes the egg and takes out the nucleus and puts our DNA in the nucleus.
They just go in and take it out.
It's achieved.
And this is part of this genetic greatness that we don't see in any other race on the planet.
These curvy, sexy black women from Africa.
You girls have a kind of a monopoly on this genetic perfection.
And we want some of that.
So, girls, for $100, we will pay you for your eggs.
$500.
So, how much do you want for it?
Let's bid.
I build $500 for the old perfect output of eggs.
Wherever I bid, he's going to outbid me.
$60,000 worth of eggs.
If you have abortion, that's very valuable.
Umbilical cord, you know, placenta.
You know, your period of blood is so rich with stem cells.
We regard it as waste, and it actually should be.
It should be captured, it's recycled.
And it shouldn't go to waste.
It's life for somebody, huh?
And it's life for mankind.
You know, the best eggs are 16 to 18, yeah, so those are the best eggs.
As you get older, your eggs get weaker and weaker.
Thank you.
So you may not be ours.
No, that's fine.
I'm dealing with my business anyway.
Cloning yourself with the idea of making yourself immortal, I think, is science fiction.
And I think it's unethical.
They've already tested this practice in mice and also fat.
And Moss got six back when he was jumping all the women.
You know, young, right?
You know, I go first to just everybody safe.
And after that, the young.
So now we're going to go to Chris Hansen.
You know, the have a seat guy.
Remember that guy?
Have a seat.
Excuse me, sir.
Have a seat.
That guy?
You know, I respect a lot of Chris Hansen's work.
And he's going to describe to you, all right, what was going on with some of these girls and Nygaard.
And then, I mean, there were many a documentary out there on Nygaard.
And then we're going to play you a, I think it's CBC, a portion of the CBC Fifth Estate documentary where they actually interview one of his victims, I believe, that was in the ninth grade at the time.
Can you imagine that Nosferrat 2 mother trucker?
So here's Chris Hansen.
Well, your newest show is an investigation on Peter Nygaard.
Correct.
And I've been hearing about this guy for years, way before he got arrested recently.
And I had heard that he would have girls and everything else like that.
I never heard about the underage thing, to be honest.
You know, probably because of the circles.
And I go, it has nothing to do with that.
So I'd never heard that.
So when I heard about all the underage stuff, it was like, okay, this is way more serious.
I just thought it was some old guy who just liked a lot of girls around.
But ultimately, there were some really interesting stories about abortions.
Can you explain that?
He was obsessed, Peter Nygard was, with stem cell research and anything that he could get his hands on to preserve his health and youth and to create longevity.
And according to many people involved in the investigation, he actually would impregnate underage girls, have them get abortions, and then harvest the stem cells of the fetuses to inject in himself under the belief that it would be more beneficial than random stem cells from another source.
Totally normal behavior.
And that he would go to China and other countries to learn how to do this and have it done.
And the underage aspect of this was, you know, a big part of the investigation, too.
But that's part of it.
That's how far he would allegedly go to extend his life and his lifestyle.
Well, he's 79 years old right now.
So he felt that injecting stem cells from aborted fetuses from women that he impregnated himself would somehow keep him alive longer.
Again, this is six years ago.
You know, if you think that this guy is giving up, you think the vampire doesn't want to live forever, you saw him.
You saw him.
Correct.
And he kept doing that over and over again.
He did a lot of things.
I mean, this is a guy, Vlad, who is being investigated for sexual assault going back five decades involving potentially thousands of women.
Potentially thousands of women.
Now, I know how that sounds, but think about what world this guy comes from, what his mindset is.
And at the end of the day, his own son, as you're going to see, not only testified against him, not only disowned him, got rid of his last name and rejected his inheritance in Canada,
in California, in the Bahamas, where he had a compound where he would routinely, according to witnesses, take underage girls, drug them, get them drunk, seduce them, and rape them in a most vile and vicious fashion.
And we went down to the Bahamas, it's been a year now, and interviewed a lot of the victims, the survivors, and some of the people who were witnesses.
And he was able to get away with this for so long because of wealth and corruption and a sense of impunity like I've never seen.
And I've covered a lot of criminal cases in 40 years.
Right, because he's worth $900 million.
Correct.
And think about that.
Even at that time period, he wasn't quite a billionaire and still able to do all those things.
How much money do you think that is compared to maybe a Leslie Wexner or a Jeffrey Epstein?
Hmm.
Just food for thought.
I mean, John Luke Brunel, another person in that fashion industry business, ended up killing himself in custody.
You know, John Luke Brunel.
In this tier of Nygaard, untouchable, they say.
He's got a fashion empire.
Correct.
And I guess he has a big compound in the Bahamas.
It's amazing.
He is right next door to a fellow named Louis Bacon, who's a billionaire hedge fund guy.
And this part of the investigation, at least the Bahamas part of it, began over a battle over beachfront property.
The stuff that Nygaard was doing upset Bacon.
Bacon filed motions.
Nygaard filed motions.
It got nasty.
The stuff that Nygaard did to paint Bacon as this horrible human being in this misinformation campaign, it was just wild.
But ultimately, you know, Bacon was able to fund an investigation that unearthed evidence that was given to the federal government that led to an indictment and a prosecution by the Human Trafficking Task Force.
Again, think of the hubris of somebody that expects to live forever, that has no problem sexually assaulting women and girls for decade upon decade upon decade, and thinking he was going to get away with all of it.
And it wasn't just regular law enforcement that took him down.
It took another billionaire neighbor.
Remember how I told you that we don't live in their world?
You getting that?
You understanding it?
Huh?
Bueller?
Of southern New York in Manhattan.
And that indictment was unsealed.
And Nygaard was arrested in Winnipeg, where he's being held now without bail, pending extradition to the United States.
Right, and he's 79.
79.
So whatever amount of years he gets, there's a reasonable chance he's going to die in prison.
Correct.
And I'm told by sources, and we did a series of interviews for a show that's coming out on my YouTube channel on Nygaard, that, you know, because he's not getting the supplements and the vitamins and the injections that he's used to getting, that he's literally withering away in jail.
I mean, he's withered away, but he's still around, okay?
And, you know, I don't take these people lightly at all.
I don't think you should either.
And we got to realize that, okay?
So here's Jane Doe number one.
Chris Hansen, teed it up.
Let's knock.
You want to hear about evil?
We're going to show you a little bit of evil right here, unfortunately.
This is the real world.
It was me, my sister, and my cousin.
We're inside the mall on a Saturday, and then we end up passing Nygaard's limb star.
In a class action lawsuit filed in New York, she's among the first to come forward, called Jane Doe, number one.
And this is the first TV interview about her experience with Nygaard.
Just graduated from grade nine, she was shopping for pants at the Nygaard store in the Bahamas.
Nygaard came, took my measurements because he said he wanted to make sure all his customers have something that could fit them.
And we went to the front and took pictures.
This is Peter Nygaard himself.
Yes.
Did you know who Peter Nygaard was then?
Yeah.
I know he had a king in the Bahamas, Nygar King.
And you knew he had a fashion.
He had a starting laugh down.
What she says happened next is now a familiar plot in the Bahamas.
He asked me about the model then.
And then this lady came and took my number more.
Did you, in fact, hear from her?
Three days later, she told me she was coming to pick me up and about time to be ready for.
You're being picked up at your home and taken to Nygaard Key?
Yeah, we had dinner.
I still thought we were going to have this discussion about the modeling.
And did he, in fact, mention that?
No.
But after he told me, let's go somewhere quiet, so we'll discuss business.
Where did you go?
to his bedroom now this is a 45 minute documentary we're up We're obviously not going to watch the whole thing.
In fact, we're not going to watch any more of that.
Instead, we're going to take you back because this behavior has been going on a very, long time.
And we're just going to play the beginning of this little short documentary about two of Nygaard's victims.
Two women with a lot in common.
Both Canadian, both with successful careers.
And both say fashion executive Peter Nygaard raped them.
When I found out that there was this case against him now, and I heard that the victims were as young as they were, and I read the details of the things that he had done to other women, I felt an immense amount of guilt over the fact that I had not charged him at the time and felt like I could have perhaps prevented some of that from happening to other women and Carl's children.
How could somebody like him go on for 40 years?
Police knew about it, media knew about it, everybody knew about it.
And yet, because he was wealthy or, you know, a so-called success story, he just rolled through like a knife through butter, hurting people, just harming people.
Gary, it's Jan.
You may have seen them both before.
April Telleck has over 100 TV and movie credits.
I will do what I have to to protect myself.
I like a man in uniform.
And Casey Allen led a busy international modeling career.
The rape that Casey Allen describes predates the majority of the dozens of sexual assault allegations against Nygaard.
Alan says it happened to her over 40 years ago.
40 years ago.
40 years ago.
So, like I said, we do have to take some wins.
Although I thought this story, and I got it wrong, was, you know, I'd read the beginning, was a stay on the 11 years.
That has not been appealed.
He's not leaving, but there are not going to be any more new charges with this other case that was filed probably close to five years ago.
But let's just play the aftermath of the conviction of this monster among us.
After five days of deliberation, a jury has found Peter Nygaard guilty on four counts of sexual assault.
The disgraced fashion mogul was also found not guilty on one count, a forcible confinement, and an additional charge of sexual assault.
A therapist and survivor advocate for four of the women in this trial says post-verdict emotions have been overwhelming.
They've known for years since they were the other one in the room that this happened to, that happened to them.
So they've known of his guilt, but to actually hear it, hear those first guilty verdicts and here in Toronto is just a very, very good shock.
Four years ago, Shannon Maroney says she contacted Toronto police with two women who accused Nygaard of sexual assault.
The same year, Nygaard's son, Kai Bickel, who has since renounced his last name and inheritance, says he came forward to members of his father's business after he says he saw his father inappropriately touch a child.
It's not a good grand association to be the son of a monster.
I've zero benefit from this other than knowing that one more child won't be affected.
One more woman won't be affected.
Bickel had scathing words for Nygaard's defense team following their cross-examination of the women.
They were called gold diggers by a lawyer who's lining his pockets to get this predator back on the streets.
Who was the gold digger there?
Nygaard's defense team says it's considering whether to appeal.
The 82-year-old pleaded not guilty to all charges stemming from alleged incidents ranging from the 1980s to the mid-2000s in his Toronto headquarters.
The Crown, meantime, is praising the bravery of the women who came forward.
This is a crime that typically happens in private and profoundly impacts human dignity.
To stand up and recount those indignities in a public forum, such as a courtroom, is never easy and takes great courage.
That courage was for all survivors, said one of the women who Nygaard was found guilty of sexually assaulting in a statement through Maroney.
We stood up not only for ourselves, but for everybody else and for every other survivor, and we share this guilty verdict with everyone, every woman and girl.
Folks, that's going to wrap it up.
I'm going to say it again.
I need your support.
I need your support now more than ever.
Again, no media paychecks.
You guys are the Burmese Brigade.
You're making it happen.
Not many people still talking about this Nygaard case.
I do want to say this.
You know, we're supposedly finally going to get a vote on some of this Epstein stuff.
So we're going to continue to cover that as well.
But please consider supporting the broadcast $5, $10, $15.