Cover-Up With Seymour Hersh In The Age Of Disclosure
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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 and 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.
You've got to 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.
Haha.
It is showtime.
It's time to buckle up for making sense of the madness.
And who loves you and who do you love?
Hey, everybody, Jason Burmes here.
And there are very few people within the mainstream investigative journalist world that I have any respect for, let alone an immense amount of respect for.
Now, you'll often hear me quoting people like Annie Jacobson.
A lot of what we do here is going over mainstream articles.
But when it comes to hard-hitting journalism, both independent and really in the belly of the beast of the mainstream, the New York Times in particular, for a long, long time, Seymour Hirsch is the man.
Now, does that mean I agree with everything that Seymour Hirsch says?
Absolutely not.
Does that mean that I think that all of his quote-unquote narratives are 100% correct?
Absolutely not.
But especially when it comes to, I would say, journalism that matters, that digs below the surface, that challenges the great narrative of the day, Seymour Hirsch is that guy.
Now, I think he's also extremely cautious.
I think there is a lot more that Seymour Hirsch knows about a multitude of very, very important subject matter, such as 9-11, that he has not shared publicly and is sitting on.
I think that's the nature of the beast with guys like Hirsch.
But yesterday, I came across a trailer for a new Netflix film called Cover-Up.
Now, normally I would play the whole trailer here.
We would watch it together.
I'm going to show you where you can find it.
I don't want a copyright.
There's almost zero chance that we play it here and we don't get a copyright strike.
What really Opened my eyes.
Like, I was like, ooh, this, this looks really good.
This doesn't look average at all.
Is two portions of the trailer.
One of which they are essentially confronting Hirsch with handwritten notes on people that are supposedly his sources or people that he has talked to in the past to garner this journalism.
And while he's doing that, the screen next to it is showing those documents.
So it seems like there's a camera somewhere over it.
We're seeing it on the screen next to it.
And Hirsch is freaking out a little bit.
And he's like, look, I can't say these names.
I'm not going to talk about these people.
What is this?
And then there is another point where they're talking to Hirsch towards the end of the trailer.
And Hirsch is like, you know what, let's just call it.
I'm not comfortable.
You guys know way too much about what I do.
This also shows the humanity of quote-unquote, maybe the best investigative journalist that's been around via the mainstream in my lifetime.
It shows that even he is hesitant.
And when you look at his eyes in this trailer, when that happens, you can see that he is being genuine.
So cover-up is something that I cannot wait to see.
Now, if you saw the title in the Age of Disclosure, it is a little bit of a pun, a little bit of a knock, if you will, on the UFO documentary that's getting all sorts of press.
I mean, how many of you guys out there have heard of the new Hirsch documentary?
On the other side, this Amazon Prime Age of Disclosure, you know, Alizondo Grush Stratton put-off piece, Marco Rubio.
I can't get away from it.
I'm seeing everybody talking about it like it's the best thing since breakfast.
We're going to do a full review of it.
I watched it.
Newsflash, no offense, in my eyes, it's hot garbage.
I mean, steaming hot garbage.
I watched Richard Dolan, who I do have some respect for.
I think Dolan comes at a lot of the UFO stuff from a genuine manner.
He gave it a much easier review.
The thing is that I have huge trust issues with a lot of the people that I just talked about.
And this documentary, as even Dolan acknowledges, shows no new information whatsoever and doesn't present physical evidence or government documents.
Instead, it's kind of like this clip show intertwined with interviews of people that we've now seen testify in front of Congress and the Senate, and it's alien, UAP, UAP, Johnny nonsense, everywhere.
Okay?
So for me, this Seymour Hirsch documentary is so much more important than the Age of Disclosure for a number of reasons.
And a lot of those reasons is that when we're talking about Hirsch documentary, we're talking about the geopolitical arena.
We're talking about the military-industrial complex.
We're talking about a group of people that do whatever they want and will take out whoever they feel they need to.
Literally in that trailer.
So we're also going to just go over this little four-minute piece of Hirsch being interviewed in 2018, so pre-COVID 1984 nightmare.
Basically, just about midway through the first Trump administration.
And there's just a few things in this interview with Hirsch that I want to hit upon.
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Like I said, a lot of the indie media, what are they talking about?
They're talking about the age of disclosure, aliens.
How many people are talking about cover-up with Seymour Hirsch?
Okay, and I think that's what we need to be talking about.
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Here it is: Netflix cover-up.
We're not going to play it.
Like I said, but I want everybody to know there is a full page for this.
You know, I could hit the thing right now.
You're getting to see some of it right now.
And I am pumped.
Literally, extremely pumped for this documentary, just the way that it was presented.
I want to remind people that Hirsch is the one that gave us the quote-unquote Samson option.
He was the one that exposed Israel's nuclear arsenal in conjunction with American foreign policy and also exposed the fact that you had Glaine Maxwell's father, Robert Maxwell, acting as an Israeli spy.
Okay?
See right there?
See right there?
Robert Maxwell.
And you remember the Daily Mirror and Israeli intelligence.
How about that?
How about that?
So Hirsch has been ultra relevant for an extremely long time.
And I think, especially by this generation, coming like generation, what is it?
Z or Alf.
I don't even know anymore.
But I would even say the millennials, they've dropped the ball on Hirsch.
Most people don't even know who he is.
So without further ado, let's hear Hirsch talk about being a controversial figure.
And I want to break down a lot of what he says here: what I agree with and what I don't.
Your critics have often described you as paranoid.
And you've always been a big reader of fiction.
So it perhaps makes sense for us to start with a line of Thomas Pynchon, who wrote the following proverb for paranoids in Gravity's Rainbow.
He said, if they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers.
I read that book so many years ago.
20 years?
How old is that book, do you think?
When was that published?
20 years ago?
2030, something?
It was a real long time ago.
I don't remember that line, but the idea is not bad.
That's the whole purpose of sometimes.
Well, let's put it this way.
The most fallacious words I know are: we have high confidence.
So let's start here.
By the way, Hirsch is 88 now.
This is in 2018.
So this is about seven years ago.
So he's just on the other side of 80 in this.
And number one, you know, he chuckled when they were talking about paranoids.
All right.
And I don't like to talk about paranoia too much here.
It certainly exists.
But when we have been lied to so much about so many things, what is the real paranoia?
And on the tail end of that, in order to obfuscate the conversation and move it in the wrong direction, I think that, again, you do have this phenomenon where they do get you to ask the wrong questions.
And, you know, this is prior, for instance, to the, we have high confidence that the Hunter Biden laptop has all the hallmarks of Russian intelligence, all semantics.
And rightfully so, he goes, you know what?
That's when my ears perk up, and I don't necessarily believe what's coming out of the establishment's mouth.
When the American government says we have high confidence that, if you remember, they said it again and again for about 18 months, that Saddam Hussein, this is in 2000, before the invasion in 2003, we have high confidence he has weapons of mass destruction.
They also said, I have to tell you again and again, they say we have high confidence that the Russians were responsible for Hillary losing.
Now, I want to remind people that at this point, I don't know that that Hirsch audio, which we've played, which leaked with Ed Butowski and talking about quote unquote what happened to Seth Rich, et cetera, all that stuff is out there.
When he talks about Assange, he's telling you right here, he doesn't believe the Russia-Russia-Russia hoax story, just like he didn't believe the weapons of mass destruction story.
It's very important.
And when I hear that, I just think there's another story there.
And so it's, in a way, they're posing the wrong reality.
But his idea is right.
If they can get people, it's a good idea.
If the government can somehow deflect what could be some serious rational concern by making statements for which there's no basis, they win.
And they do it all the time.
All the time.
Again, to this day, and through this administration, they continue to go back to the Al-Qaeda well or the Osama bin Laden well.
And we're seeing it more and more and more.
Because it's very hard.
You know, we even have a case where we have a president that's a born-again liar right now, right?
He lies about everything.
It's more than lying.
I mean, it's a pathology because he'll, in the middle of a 20-minute sentence, he'll say something, and then later he said, I didn't say it, which is the kind of lie he makes.
It's like a three-year-old sort of, I don't know, maybe I'm being cruel to three-year-olds.
But anyway.
And look, you might disagree with that about Trump, but let me just put a couple like overt lies in front of everybody.
You know, the idea that there wasn't some kind of relationship with Stormy Daniels, the idea that he didn't know much about the Assange situation after talking about loving the WikiLeaks, the idea that the Epstein case is a hoax and it needed to be closed.
I mean, there's plenty of them.
Hirsch is not necessarily wrong.
And when Trump does lie in that manner, he does so with a confidence that has been rarely seen in, I would say all of geopolitics because of his fervent base that thinks that he's the best thing since breakfast and the second coming of Jesus Christmas.
He does.
And so he lives in a world that doesn't exist on some things.
And so, how do you parse all that?
How do you?
See, and I think that is the conundrum because a lot of people want you to play team baseball.
So I'll sit here just like he did, and I'll say that Russia Gate is a hoax.
All right.
And clearly, they tried to take Trump out, and they did all sorts of illegal things to do so.
But that doesn't mean that Trump is 100% honest on things.
And he's about to give a couple examples of that via this Syria situation.
And he also goes back to the Bush administration at some points.
Well, when do you think that one thing then is when the president says, I saw pictures of starving children or children that were murdered by the evil Saddam Hussein, or in this case, as this president does, we had that with Bush and creating a universe that didn't live up to a point.
We have this president.
The press doesn't believe anything he says except when he says things like, Bashar Assad murdered 800,000 people, 3 million people with nerve gas yesterday.
And that's taken at face value.
When Haley says we saw pictures of dead people, and so there's a funny dichotomy.
And by the way, when you looked at the incident in Douma via Syria, the Trump administration, when they were confronted by the OPCW evidence that said that the chemical attack did not happen, they had no evidence of it, they clamored to Russian propaganda.
So they use the canard.
You see how this is troubling?
They'll use the same tools.
So how do you manage information in a world, unfortunately, of universal deceit, a post-truth world?
Some things we don't believe a thing he says about, but sometimes when he says something about either people we don't like or people that are unpopular, Saddam Hussein is a hated man in America right now.
We always have to have people we hate.
It started with, you know, of course, Hitler, obviously, and Mao and Joan Lai.
And then you go through the list.
There's been, you know, scares of Gaddafi for a time, the mullahs in Iran.
We've always had fine people.
Saddam Hussein.
We've always had people we had to hate.
So I don't understand why somebody whose mere conversation has come replete with what the Washington Post gives what they call Pinocchios, when four is a big deal, replete with misstatements and misfacts.
Why on some things, foreign policy or something, he's taken literally.
And so I don't.
That doesn't mean he's wrong.
I just don't.
I just say I don't.
Same thing.
You know, I'm not saying the guy's wrong, but I just don't take him verbatim.
And if I do agree with him, we'll talk about that too.
I am looking forward to cover up.
Again, if anybody wants to go check it out, you just type in cover up and see more Hirsch.
And it's pretty much, you can find it on YouTube or on X, or like I said, there's a page.
I don't think it comes out till December.
This one is high, high on my list.
So I hope people check that out.
I hope people consider supporting the broadcast.
These are one of those short videos, guys.
Again, we're doing more and more videos during the day on these subjects.
If you don't know who Cy Hirsch is, Seymour Hirsch, go watch that trailer.
Go do a little bit of research into the guy.
And I think that you're going to be pleasantly surprised when you tug on the strings of history, if you will.
$5, $10, $15, it means the world to me.
I need you guys now more than ever.
It is that holiday season.
And again, we are trying desperately, desperately to keep this truly independent media operation going with no paychecks other than the fact that you guys appreciate the show.