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It's time to get deep in the weeds with WQUD 1077.
We talk about a plethora of issues from NASA to AI to silver exploding and well beyond, as well as sonic weapons.
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I wouldn't be able to do it without you, but let's buckle up and get ready to make sense of the madness.
Deep in the weeds with Jason Burmese.
Holiday is affording.
We are the dollar 480 in the morning show.
And yes, it is that time of week where we go deep in the weeds with documentary filmmaker Jason Burmes.
Of course, he also has his own YouTube channel, Making Sense of the Madness.
Make sure you check that out.
All brought to you by River Cities Reader.
How's it going this morning, Jason?
It is going well.
How are you doing, my friend?
Pretty good, man.
Really glad it's Friday.
Excited about this weekend for football.
Big Bears fan.
So, you know, got that going on.
And my daughter's got a basketball tournament.
So we got some good stuff happening.
I'm just ready to get through the work week.
I hear that.
You know, I got volleyball this weekend, but still no UFC.
UFC returns next week on Paramount Plus, so no more pay-per-view.
Kind of stoked on that.
But actually, one of the local fighters here that's been headlining Caged Aggression is going to be on another venue this weekend via UFC Fight Pass, and I will be watching that.
Right on, yeah.
You're a big UFC guy.
Now, how long have you been doing the announcing and stuff for that?
Geez, since I moved here, I went to the very first, I literally moved here in, I believe it was October of 2020, and I went to the first Caged Aggression show that same month, maybe like a week or two later.
God bless Jeffrey Wilson, Pat Militich.
They introduced me to my now good friend, Justin, who hired me pretty much after and after party.
I just talked to everybody, and then like the couple days later, he's like, hey, do you want to try this out?
And I'm like, yes.
So the following March, I started, I guess, in 2021.
And I've been doing it ever since.
They throw cards just about every six months.
They just announced another one coming up in March.
And I believe it'll be on a Friday and Saturday night.
We do two night events, sometimes three.
And for the bang for your buck, you can't beat it.
Great local show.
And I know a former UFC fighter is going to be headlining this one for his retirement fight.
So people aren't going to want to miss it.
Right on.
Right on.
I don't, you know, I don't have a lot of background in UFC.
I mean, obviously I'm very aware of it and some of the key players, but not something I watch all the time.
I have to check it out.
Sounds like a good time, but you get busy, you know, making sense of the madness in the world, man.
I think you could do both.
Aaron, you need to make it out to one of these events this March.
I'm telling you right now, bring a couple buddies, maybe some family members, get a table.
You will not be upset.
You'll be very satisfied, I promise.
All right.
All right.
I might just take you up on that.
Venezuelan Soldiers Account00:13:59
I'd like to check it out.
Again, never been to one, so it'd be neat to see it live for sure.
Well, this week, well, another interesting one.
One thing I wanted to ask you about right out of the gate.
There's more coming out about the taking of Maduro.
And one of the vets, did you see the Venezuelan soldiers account of how they came in?
I actually was on One American News about that.
And first of all, when I did post that soldier's account last week, when it first started to make its rounds before it made it into mainstream media, I said, look, let's take this with a grain of salt.
We don't necessarily know that this is 100%, but I went through on that program on all the technology that he said was used.
And we have utilized that technology for decades.
Now, let me give you an example.
Probably the biggest thing that people were surprised about were the sonar weapons or the sound weapons that seemed to make everybody physically ill, people vomiting, people bleeding from different parts of their body, etc.
Those type of technologies have been deployed in the United States on a much smaller scale now for literal decades.
In fact, when I covered the G20 in Pittsburgh, they used the sonar weapons.
I've been hit with them.
It does not feel good.
And we're talking about what they've used on civilian populaces that were protesting world leaders and largely nonviolent.
Now, if you're going in for a full-scale attack, number one, what they show the public is always many, many years behind.
Normally, when these things are deployed, they're usually, quite frankly, on the back of tanks or Humvee-like vehicles.
They almost look like a smaller satellite array, and you can audibly hear them.
But the higher pitch that they get, it's almost like a dog whistle.
I would say it's that combined with being at a concert.
And, you know, when you're up front at one of those big shows and you can feel that bass bumping right away, only it's a very, very uncomfortable feeling on time.
It's going to make you flee and anybody in that general vicinity.
The account also discussed aerial drones.
Now, once again, and people are starting to become more and more aware of this, we've been utilizing these kind of smaller drones or swarm drones.
There's a program called Offset via DARPA for some time.
And number one, I don't think that these were like, when I say swarm drones, yes, there are ones that are literally the size of insects or birds that work in unison.
I mean, it's crazy, but at the same time, again, four years on display, you can type in, say, Burning Man and just type in drone display.
And I think a lot of people who haven't seen this would be surprised to see literally hundreds of drones working in unison to not only change the color, but the shape and form.
And, you know, they're making everything from faces to, you know, butterflies, et cetera, in the sky.
And again, that's the commercial use for it.
But the much smaller drone technology that's been utilized via Ukraine and Russia have been around with the ghosts and sidewinders for quite some time.
And again, that's what we're selling to other people and letting other people see.
So these drone strikes, they looked, you know, extremely deadly.
Then you have the account of just about 20 actual soldiers.
Now, from what we know, there's no U.S. casualties whatsoever.
Accounts vary from how many people died on the other side.
This soldier said hundreds died.
At the same time, I think official accounts don't exceed 100.
Again, I'm taking that with a grain of salt as well, especially yesterday, and I posted this on my ex, 32 of the Cuban bodyguards had their remains returned from the assault, and they're not in coffins.
They're in like little doll boxes each.
It's pretty wild, actually.
So you want it very bizarre.
Even when they have your human remains, unless everybody was cremated prior, which also seems a little bit bizarre, it doesn't make any sense unless these people were literally almost evaporated by whatever attack happened.
And again, details are kind of sketchy.
You know, Trump bragged in a press conference that he watched the entire thing and actually said, I don't know if the public's ever going to be able to see what I saw, but it was a sight to behold.
I'll just say this.
We've been able to do these type of operations again.
And I think we mentioned this last week for four plus decades.
And one of those reasons is that we have a multitude of weapons that are classified and are not only in this arena where we're literally physically disabling the opposition, but our surveillance technology, our automated technology like these drones, even the soldiers themselves, he described them as almost looking cybernetic and having some kind of exoskeleton on them.
Again, sounds like science fiction, sounds like something you played in Call of Duty because you did.
At the same time, the exoskeleton technology has not only, again, been around for about two decades, but now is being commercialized by other militaries such as France, which I actually demonstrated.
You've got soldiers that are using them to basically move inventory.
It's kind of the merging of man and machine, almost avatar-esque style.
You see those kind of things so that they can move large-scale materials that no human could ever lift up on their own.
China just ran their own military drills about six months ago where it's very visible that their soldiers are now wearing exoskeletons on the battlefield.
And this is something, again, that we've seen here and there from our own defense department, from DARPA, and with smaller scale ones, it would not surprise me that maybe an elite team is using something that may be lightweight and just give them the slightest advantage.
Remember, they didn't just go in there out of nowhere.
They also had the human intelligence on the ground.
They had already remade the entire bunker.
They had done the raid probably dozens of times before going in there.
And that's why this account rings probably pretty true to me.
But again, could be, you know, a lot of people go, they just want you to think that they have those weapons.
Well, again, when you look at especially those sound weapons, type in Serbia and sound weapons, there were just protests, once again, and you had people, again, the government didn't admit it, but people saying that they were hit with those sound weapons and they suffered similar cases of vomiting, of being incapacitated.
So they got extremely hit hard with those type of things.
So, people need to know that these technologies are not only out there, but they should be very, very wary that they're now being deployed without a problem.
Because if we in this country, again, become the problem, we could be subjected to these same weapons.
And people need to be, I think, paying more attention to a lot of this not only autonomous drone technology, but things like sound weapons, like actual laser weapons, like Starlink technology.
You know, Musk is out there touting Starlink, and he put out a tweet yesterday that everybody that buys Starlink is funding the next mission to Mars.
And I just, I'm like, no, they're not.
It was like, that's ridiculous.
Laser weapons.
I like that.
The sonar thing is crazy.
I know they had, I mean, the closest thing I've been to something like that back when I was like a late teenager, I went to a Pearl Jam concert at Soldier Field, worked my way up to the front, and was able to be in the front row for like seven songs before I was like, you know, crushed to death.
But between being crushed from behind and the sound in the front, I was pretty beat up.
I was like, I just chilled the rest of the concert, drank water, tried to get back to normal.
But it that took a lot out of me.
I can't imagine something that like makes you feel like you're going to explode from the inside and you're like bleeding out the nose.
That's a little spooky.
Hopefully Minneapolis is paying attention and they don't get themselves too far out there.
But Nikola Tesla had something with radio waves that could do a similar thing.
And I'm wondering if it's kind of the same thing because I know when he died, the U.S. government went in and took all his stuff.
Still waiting for him to bust out the Wi-Fi electricity that Tesla figured out.
But 100 years later, we're still waiting.
Well, I don't know that we're ever going to get something that benefits humanity to that extent.
Unfortunately, especially with the weapons potential of harnessing that energy, which, once again, if you look at the experimentation that we know about from places like Area 51, you know, I say over and over and over again, it's not aliens, folks.
You know, from the nuclear testing to the radiation testing to the propulsion testing to things like EMP technologies that they were testing in the atmosphere, again, to read these electromagnetic waves.
I know I mentioned that I had David Ike on here recently.
Yeah.
Yeah, the Lizard King himself.
Ike was really the first person to introduce to me the fundamental truth that there really are no solids in the world.
You know, we sit here and we talk about electromagnetics and we talk about frequencies.
But what we have to understand is on a micro level, the further you get down into seeing, even we are not solid.
We are constantly in motion.
And something else that is ultra bizarre, again, that Ike introduced me to, that is now mainline science and can be proven and demonstrated is we don't actually touch anything.
Everything that we think that we're touching, there ends up being this small barrier between our moving particles and those moving particles, no matter how solid you may think they are.
And they're at the motion of certain frequencies.
So, you know, that invisible universe that we ponder about absolutely exists and has been scientifically tapped into.
And, you know, you talked about quote unquote laser weapons.
Can I use your air quote fingers when you're saying?
Yes.
Unfortunately, again, those laser weapons, you know, you know, I was having a discussion with one of my fraternity brothers.
It's a little older than me, alumni guy.
And we were kind of going back and forth, you know, nothing vicious, but about the situation with the United States military, Israel, Gaza.
And, you know, he was very much, and, you know, this is a Jewish guy and very, very pro-Israel.
that there's just no way that Israel has the types of technology the United States does, especially quote unquote, laser weapons.
And I, he said, you know, nuclear weapons, sure, even though they're not admitted to, you know, he went that far and I go, well, actually, and I just sent him a, again, mainstream link that Israel actually not only has laser weapons, but they openly are deploying them, these smaller laser weapons.
I think now six months to a year ago, you know, you can just type it in, Israel laser weapons, and they're there.
Our own Navy has done public demonstrations of similar types of weapons.
So, you know, even when we had that Iranian strike and that's becoming ever more relevant with the rhetoric coming out of the administration right now on those nuclear facilities, you know, the public version is that we had B-2 bombers and we're just never going to know who the pilots are.
I don't know if that's even real.
I suspect that we may have hit those targets literally with the type of space weapons that I've been discussing for many, many years that go beyond even, you know, Starlink, DARPA's Blackjack.
Starshield Satellite Network00:08:59
But the new, the new, have we discussed the new spy satellite network?
It's now been named.
There's now a website for it.
The Muskernuts helped put it together.
It is Starshield, something out of the Cobra Commander G.I. Joe series, folks.
So now the good people at the Defense Department in partnership with the Muskerdew himself, they are now protecting us with something known as Starshield.
So just type in Starshield satellite network and you won't get Cobra Commander screaming at the Joe's or Destro.
No, instead, you're going to get a very real network that we know very little about.
So that's the new thing, huh?
Interesting.
Starshield.
Yeah, it does sound very G.I. Joe-y.
My favorite was always like Snake Eyes and Storm Shadow.
I like those guys a lot.
I mean, I was a big, big G.I. Joe fan.
I like the sailor.
You know, the sailor guy was probably my favorite.
Shipwreck?
Shipwreck.
Yes.
Shipwreck was probably the one for me for sure.
He had the tattoo on the arm.
I remember that, the anchor tattoo.
That was good times.
Yeah, he had this really one weird episode where like, you know, he woke up and his whole life was different.
It was like a weird mind control episode.
There's some good G.I. Joe stuff out there that you revisit.
There's also, you can also type in the World Trade Center and G.I. Joe.
And there's a little video of basically the World Trade Center's being demolished.
And it's like the secret base for Cobra.
And they like fly out in jets.
So it's not hit with planes, but as it is being demolished, planes fly out of the World Trade Center.
Kind of a reverse deal there.
Interesting.
Yeah, you don't think about some of that stuff, but it it is very much you know, science fiction seems like it's becoming more and more real all the time.
By the way, we are deep in the weeds of Jason Mermus, brought you by River Cities Reader.
Yeah, I mean, maybe not like the Jetsons, but we're, it's, man, some of the stuff that was in cartoons and TV shows when we were kids is real now.
Very much so.
You know, I'm glad you brought up the Jetsons because I used to bring that up all the time, like 15, 16, 17 years ago when I was working at Infowars.
Because at the time, a lot of those technologies, really, the only technology that had not at least been demonstrated and put out on a commercial level and still hasn't is the flying car technology.
Right.
Other than that.
Did you see Florida?
Oh, I've said, listen, I've seen some of the flying car stuff that's been around now, and you can purchase this.
I'm talking about, you know, like not only the flying car stuff, I guess, but everybody's kind of like floating in their houses above the earth, which I think is also kind of weird.
But other than that, you know, I remember when Skype first hit it long before FaceTime.
And, you know, when you were sitting there as a kid and you were watching, you know, the wife or George communicating with, say, the doctor, right?
Like the telehealth thing would be there.
You were like, whoa, like, that's, wow, they're going to be able to do TV like that.
And sure enough, that technology is there.
I just talked about the telehealth technology.
Right now, they very much are trying to bring in like these commercialized humanoid-looking robots that would obviously be like Rosie.
Obviously, we've had smaller scale stuff like that, not quite on the Rosie level.
But unfortunately, I think that when you get to that level, maybe in the next five years of these humanoid-type robots, they're not going to sound like Rosie, right?
Like they're going to sound much more like a human being, unfortunately, and maybe even interact more than a human being.
But that's going to be for the very, very few.
But yeah, that Jetson technology, once again, so many of these things, especially in the stuff that gets, I get, I guess, put out there to the public, has been stuff, unfortunately, again, that our Defense Department has had for a very, very long time.
It just, either there's no market for it, there's no way to commercialize it, or the resources are extremely limited, or it has weapons potential.
I mean, you go all the way back.
First of all, I mean, the space program in general, you know, up until today, I don't know if you saw it, but again, NASA being extremely weird about this one.
And I don't know that a lot of people picked up on the story, but and again, the weird thing is there was this big hubbub about astronauts being stuck up at the ISS under the Biden administration.
Remember that?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And what people don't know is they're not saying who, but there's a four-person space crew.
Okay.
And that four-person space crew essentially, they all got sent back in rapid fashion.
They landed yesterday and they said it was a medical emergency.
And basically, they're not telling you which astronaut it was, but they all left.
This is the same week that they just announced that we're going back to the moon again.
Lots of announcements on this one.
We won't be landing on the moon, but instead, we're going to supposedly have a manned mission.
I'm holding my breath.
Obviously, don't think it's going to happen, but who knows what they're going to say is happening.
But on February 6th or that week.
So, that is now the plan that we're going back to the moon.
And it's just a little over 12 months away, everybody.
Again, we're not landing there, but we're sending human beings for the first time back on there on a NASA/slash SpaceX mission.
And I'm sure that Elon Musk is going to tell you that this is yet another step to us going to Mars.
But once again, I just find that really interesting that this happened.
I think a lot more is going on over at the ISS than people let on.
And just the quietness about it.
But again, people are so detached from the actual space program that it doesn't shock me, Aaron.
Right.
And well, I think it's funny, like, those people that were stuck up there for nine months are probably pissed.
Like, oh, you can bring these guys right back right away, but we have to sit up here for nine months.
Like, that seems kind of honky, you know, like wonky.
Like, what?
Like, I would be, I would not be happy.
Yeah.
And then, of course, the whole moon thing, you know, hopefully we can make it, you know, we have people can make it to the moon as fast as they did back in 68 and 72 hours or whatever it was, even though it's 250,000 miles away.
238,000 and change, maybe.
And again, we'll see because they're setting several dates in February of next year.
But I'm not exaggerating, Aaron, when I can tell you that back into the Bush administration, the second Bush administration, they were constantly setting dates back then.
That's pre-2008, everybody.
Okay, it's 2026.
For the last 20 plus years, they have continually set dates that men will go back to the moon, and it has continually not happened.
And again, I know that there is this cult of Musk, but Musk was also out there.
It seems he took the tweet down boasting about Grokpedia yesterday and telling people that immortality can be yours.
And basically, you just have to upload all your metadata and you're going to be part of Grokpedia, which, you know, again, is going to be like the ultimate, I guess, encyclopedia for planetary knowledge that's going to go into the stars and over to the moon and they'll be able to replicate you in some kind of virtual Johnny nonsense.
Silver Soars Past 9000:03:45
I mean, these people are shameless.
They are really preparing a generation to have zero privacy whatsoever and go beyond the track, trace, database, big brother society we already live in and literally get under our skin and into our biometric data, into our thoughts.
That's what they want.
And try to convince us that essentially we can be replicated by some kind of artificial intelligence.
And I don't know if you saw it, Aaron, but we had yet another big high for silver this week.
You see what it cracked?
In fact, let's look at it.
Oh, yeah, it went over 90.
You said it was going to take a couple months to get to 100.
I don't know if it's going to take that long.
Our producer, I'm worried if it goes up too much.
Joe Sephas is heavily invested into the silver, has been for a long time.
And I'm afraid he's going to retire if it goes too high.
And then we're in trouble.
Well, you better start worrying because I'm telling you right now, at the base it's on.
And I think it did drop quite a bit yesterday or the day before, then came back.
Let's see what silver spot price is right this week.
I got it at $89.13 right now.
$89.13.
All right.
It went up to 93.75.
Yes.
So it's constant, it's constantly breaking the barrier in rapid fashion and then going back down.
This is not a pump and dump people.
In fact, there are reports that China is actually paying over spot value for silver and mass.
I want people to really let that sink in.
Any dealer out there, like if you try to sell, yeah, you're not getting like if you go to a pawn shop, you're going to get a third of that.
The only way that you're actually going to get spot value is if you know the right people or you are selling them individually online or through something like Facebook Marketplace.
And hey, spot value might actually be great right now because I talked about it not only going over 100, but also probably into the 200 range.
So I think that would be crazy.
It's going to happen.
And I'm not one of those guys that's like, I'm not making any money.
I don't work with a silver company.
I've talked about precious metals, you know, probably the last almost 20 years, maybe more.
And obviously the crypto, since it came into the game all the way back in 2009 and 10 with the original Bitcoin, this is a real thing because this is a real resource.
And this is really in so many of our consumer electronics.
It is a necessity.
It is just like RAM going up.
It is just like gold going up.
And unfortunately, I think the next trend, and this is going to be a doozy for people, but we may not see this one in the next year or two, but fresh water also becoming a commodity that becomes much more expensive.
All at the behest of this new technological push, Aaron.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I've been saying, I told you last week for years, I've said I thought water would eclipse oil as the most essential resource by the middle of this century.
He Very Much Looks Like Barack Obama00:14:39
And, you know, maybe we get ahead of it.
Maybe that happens sooner.
Well, I mean, we need lots of silver, Jason Bermus, if we're going to go to Mars.
I mean, you know, the moon's 250,000 miles away.
We've allegedly been there, although we haven't gone back because I think it's too hard to fake.
And now, you know, I mean, Mars is 140 million miles away.
So pack a lunch, Elon Musk.
You know, I probably better just start watching The Simpsons again so I can find out what's going to happen in the future.
Or you can go to that great episode where, again, you know, our entire idea of space has been shaped by cartoons and media and Disney.
And yes, even The Simpsons, where Homer was lucky enough to go into space.
I forget was, I'm pretty sure it was Buzz Aldrin who he was in space with, but I may be wrong about that.
But they did get a real astronaut to do the voice at the time.
Hey, Simpsons has been a bellwether for popular culture for some time.
And I know people love the, they predicted this or that.
But once again, you know, you look at the people that are actually writing that show, and they're very much in that academia circles.
They kind of joke about it, but a lot of blue bloods, a lot of Harvard, a lot of Princeton, they like to crack jokes about the East Coast quite a bit.
And I think a lot of them are people that have been in those kind of families or societal arenas where people are in the Council on Foreign Relations or the Trilateral Commission or in the oil industry or invested in BlackRock.
I mean, you could name dozens of these institutions that go outside of even traditional government that have talked about a lot of the things that more and more people, I guess, fortunately are talking about today.
I don't know how much is getting done on the pushback, right?
When you have a president that just goes in with the technology that we talked about and all of a sudden gets nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize after the fact, which I think is kind of trash to begin with, you know, for anybody, you know, that even would think, hey, well, he's getting the peace prize or the peace prize is a good thing.
I want to remind everyone, they gave the Barack star Barack Obama, aka Barry Sotero.
And if you didn't know, that's his real name, just type in Barry Sotero.
You'll find a wonder world of who Barack really is.
But they gave him the Nobel Peace Prize basically for being elected.
I mean, as soon as he got in, they're like, let's give it to him.
And then he became the number one stunner with the drones, just like every other president that we've had.
More drone strikes, more global militarism.
And we got to find a way to break the cycle because I hate to tell everybody we're a year deep in this administration, and I'm just not seeing that cycle broken.
No, me neither.
I just typed in Barry Sotero.
So it's spelled S-O-E-T-O-R-O.
And I didn't realize the, I know people called him Barry, but I didn't realize that we had a whole name change thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Again, for those that don't understand political theater and how things actually work in the world, Barry Sotero, when you look at his actual background, you know, and you can sit there and you can go, well, he's an undercover Muslim or he's this or that.
The birth certificate.
Okay.
All right.
I understand where people get that.
How about you start with the fact that when you grow up with a name like Barry Sotero and everybody's calling you Barry, and then all of a sudden you change your name during college at these elite institutions and you're being backed by these high-level players.
And then you look at the mother and a lot of people probably don't know this, but be warned.
First of all, Barack's mother is as white as Snow White.
She is the whitest woman you've ever seen.
Yes.
And she also was an intelligence honeypot.
Again, coming from these circles.
So if you type in Barack Obama, mother nude, you'll notice that she did nude photography and you can find her topless, et cetera.
Now, one of the people, first of all, the guy they say Barack Obama's father is and where he gets the last name Obama, but obviously, if he was going by Barry Sotero, not the man who raised him, okay?
Not the man who was with the mother at the time.
But Sotero met her through other means.
Her and the father actually met through the Kissinger Institute.
Okay.
So the Kissinger Institute is essentially a public intelligence agency that works with think tanks and other intelligence agencies and is very much a part of that type of global agenda that I just discussed with the Trilateral Commission, the CFR, et cetera.
So those two, I mean, you look at Barack Obama's father, he looks nothing like Barack Obama.
However, and by the way, obviously Barry Sotero's or Sotero doesn't look like him because that's just a stepfather who raised him.
And I mean, Barack was playing basketball and everybody called him Barry.
You know, again, he's not this radical.
He doesn't even have that voice.
He was literally coached by an actor who has the same exact voice as him as he came up through Illinois and Chicago politics.
However, there's a guy out there.
His name is Frank Marshall Davis.
And in the book Dreams of My Father, which was penned by Barack Obama, this was kind of his coming out party as Barack.
He mentions Frank Marshall Davis as kind of this mentor that on the side raised him outside of his stepfather.
Anybody can go check out Frank Marshall Davis.
As much as Barack's supposed father doesn't look like Barack Obama, Frank Marshall Davis looks exactly like Barack Obama and sounds exactly like Barack Obama.
Yes.
He does.
And when you hear him talk, just the voice alone, obviously the cadence is different when I talk about him being coached, but that is extremely similar.
And it just so happens that Frank Marshall Davis was one of those people that was taking nude pictures of Barack's mother.
So you guys do the math.
Okay.
This guy, and you look at him prior to Trump, he was literally the most unqualified person to become the president of the United States.
And I say that only because a lot of people think that he had this large-scale career because they promoted him so wildly.
No, he, first of all, in 2008, he had still not won a large-scale election.
In other words, he wins in 2008 as a senator.
Before that, he's a state senator.
And people talked about him as like, you know, a city planner, et cetera.
He was very much that.
But again, with people like Rahm Emmanuel behind them, Rahm Emmanuel, extremely relevant in even today's politics, pushing him, they had him speaking as the keynote in 2008 before he won at the DNC.
So he is the keynote speaker even before he wins in the Senate.
Senate term, six years.
It takes him less than three to announce that he's going to be running for the presidency of the United States.
Think about that.
He didn't even serve half a term in the Senate, let alone a full term in the Senate.
And he got pushed through.
So that's the reality of the situation.
I know why I went off on a jag there, but.
No, you're good.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
We are deep in the weeds of Jason Burmese.
We're going off on jags left and right here.
Brought to you by River Cities Reader.
So I just typed in Frank Marshall Davis.
He very much looks like Barack Obama.
He's also listed as a communist.
A super communist.
But again, when you look at what was being done at that time period, right?
I think people get lost when they hear communism or Marxism.
At the end of the day, you're talking about globalism and disruption.
Don't get me wrong, a lot of these people do believe in those ideologies.
But what really alarmed me when they just put Mamdani in and he had his opening speech down in New York City was one line where I literally screamed out loud.
I couldn't believe he said it.
He said that we were going to move away from the frigidity of rugged individualism, okay, which I'm a big proponent of.
I mean, it's if you are freedom-based, truly, and you're pro-accountability, it is the only thing that really matters.
But he said from that to the warm embrace of collectivism.
And I just, whoa, and that's what it really is all about.
You know, they surrounded the Barack star with people like this.
Bill Ayers, Zbigniew Brzezinski was in that world.
Rahm Emmanuel, I just discussed, you know, he was big time in the Barack Obama presidential administration, but his brother is Ari Emmanuel, the guy who is behind TKO and the UFC and the merger with the WWE and the Hollywood agent that they based the Jeremy Piven character on via Entourage.
You know, those guys are huge players.
You know, we often, and I guess rightfully so, but we end up focusing a little too much on the quote-unquote leadership, right?
Like the Clintons or Barack Obama or Donald Trump, et cetera.
They become the story.
But there are often these characters that are in the threads throughout administrations that we don't hear about as much.
And I just named some of those names.
You do hear a little bit more about Kissinger and Rockefeller.
I'd say this generation is now hearing a little bit more about Peter Thiel, etc.
But in large part, the public is just completely and totally ignorant of these people.
And they're the ones that are really running the show.
And they're able to hide behind, you know, people like Bill and Hillary Clinton.
You know, I don't know if you saw the news getting into Epstein.
Oh, yeah, I was just going to bring that up.
You mentioned the Clintons.
They refuse to Google it.
They're not going in for their hearing with the House Oversight Committee or something like that.
Yeah.
Well.
And related to Epstein.
Yeah.
I mean, they think they're above the law because in large part they are.
If you look at the Global Clinton initiative, how they were able to move literally tens of, if not hundreds of millions of dollars directly to their daughter.
And when I say their daughter, again, that's Hillary Clinton's daughter.
It is simply not Bill Clinton's biological daughter.
So I mean, come assuming.
What's the guy's name that's Chelsea's dad?
Anybody can do this at home if they want a nice little surprise on their phone.
They type in a man named Webb Hubble and Chelsea Clinton.
And it is very apparent that Webb Hubble is her biological father.
And Webb Hubble and Hillary Clinton worked in the same law firm together with Vince Foster.
And Webb Hubble was actually very much on the public stage during the Whitewater scandal that kind of just went away and nobody talks about via history.
But once again, you have another one of these weird political scandals that nobody seems to talk about where that's not Bill Clinton's daughter.
So again, they've gotten away with just massive lies for their entire political career.
So they don't think that they have to come into the House Oversight Committee.
Thank God for people like Thomas Massey that keep pushing forward that are being attacked even by our president.
And I don't know if you caught it, but Donnie T was out on tour over in Pennsylvania with some blue-collar workers.
And I know like, you know, the MAGA people and the right-wingers tried to spin it and say this guy yelled at him and called him a pedophile.
That's not what happened.
He yelled at him and called him a pedophile protector due to the Epstein files.
And Trump flipped him off and said F you to him twice.
Yeah, I saw it.
I saw it.
Hey, at the same time, and this is a fun one for me.
I got some text messages as it happened.
Bill Clinton is going around and he is stealing my tagline for the last, I don't know, two decades that I've been using.
It's not about right or left, it's about right and wrong.
God bless you, Bill.
You just keep it up, Slick Willie.
So I want to let's take this one step further before we move on.
I looked up Webb Hubble again.
Well, then I also found a link of Chelsea Clinton and Rebecca Hubble.
They look like they could almost be twins.
Rebecca Hubble being Webb Hubble's other daughter.
I mean, they are wow.
Just wow.
It's not a dispute, man.
Like, again, like.
It's really not.
I mean, once again, people have to have common sense, right?
Well, and I know a lot of people don't like common sense or situational awareness.
Police Force Misconduct00:08:50
You know, before I move too far away, you know, I got into it with some people in my audience.
I knew I was going to do it because of the way that I had worded the title.
But it's something we didn't discuss on the show, and I waited to discuss it.
Is this ICE shooting, okay, with this Renee Good woman?
And I said in the title, like it or not, Renee Goode was a crazy person.
Now, right out of the gates, I know there's going to be some people that are like, and there's going to be people cheering me on, and et cetera.
Before anybody has anything to say about it, it's not because of her political beliefs.
It's not because she was wearing shirts that said protect trans kids, et cetera.
It is that in that situation, okay, she had no awareness of what was really going on.
And that cost her her life.
And to me, that is crazy.
And what do I mean by that?
If you don't understand what you're getting into, okay, earlier today, I talked about covering the G20 and being on the ground with riot police and sound weapons.
I know what I'm getting into.
I literally am watching people put helmets on.
I've seen the less lethal stuff deployed, the pepper balls, the beanbag stuff, the gas.
I know what I'm getting into.
Long ago, Aaron, I made the decision that I would never go into an actual live battlefield, but I would always cover protests.
But anytime I thought my life was in danger or whatever, I would get out of there.
Same thing with the situation of awareness for myself covering January 6th.
I was at the Capitol.
I covered a lot of it.
I smelled the gas.
I watched people get hit.
I watched people get batoned, taped it.
I was right up in that passageway in the middle on the second floor where a lot of the violence was going on.
I watched the sledgehammer get passed up.
You know, again, I knew the situation I was in.
I was constantly aware of it.
When you watch that woman's body camp, now, I'm going to say this: I don't think she was trying to kill anybody.
I again just think that she had no so delusional, so crazy.
She didn't realize she was with armed officers in a vehicle, which is now a lethal weapon always.
Like if you're stopped at a drunk driving checkpoint and you are now in a lethal vehicle, okay, that is the situation you are in.
And you are up against people that are trained to use their weapons.
We're not talking about less lethal in this situation and have in the past.
I mean, she never once, I mean, look the look at her face.
She never once feared for anything.
And that is not how you deal with that situation.
I've dealt with a lot of police in a lot of different situations that even go outside of the protest arena, probably not in the best way in the past.
But you look back on that and you say, wow, you know, something bad could have happened.
And unfortunately, something bad did happen.
So I would just advise, I'm not against protesting.
You could have your own opinion on what ICE should or shouldn't be doing.
Personally, I don't even think they should exist because the Department of Homeland Security shouldn't exist.
At the same time, I think we need illegal immigrants to be taken out.
We had that in this country before ICE even existed, and we never had protests like this.
I think a lot of this has been set up to divide in the culture war.
But I would just advise people, no matter what you are doing anywhere in life, to have that situational awareness.
So, something crazy, so you don't end up as the next big GoFundMe.
And here's the thing on that.
I don't know if you've seen it.
Both the police officer who did the shooting and the widow of the woman are now millionaires just from GoFundMes alone.
Wow, that's crazy.
Did you watch the video of her honking and blowing the whistle?
Or, like, that someone shot from their house on their street while the ICE was walking through ICES, and they were just ignoring her.
But she's sitting at the end and they paying over to her and her Honda pilot and just going crazy, you know, honking, blowing the whistle, and they're just walking through the street.
I don't know, going to a couple of different houses or something.
But there's already like vehicles double parked in this small residential area.
And let me say this, Aaron, you know, because I've had a lot of pushbacks from people.
I'm not, I'm not even going to go into that route.
I understand how she was acting, and I've been at protests, a lot of them, right?
And I've covered it from all sorts of angles.
And there's some behavior that I think is ridiculous.
I've obviously seen people goad police officers.
If you're not a physical threat, you're allowed to do that.
That's your First Amendment.
I've also seen police officers act in manners that I think is atrocious for the slightest things.
I've had many a riot cop start pulling out the twisties, the twist ties on me.
And I'll try to keep my distance.
In fact, you could watch In Invisible Empire, that G20, we have a special on that.
And a couple of my buddies at the time did get detained.
They actually won lawsuits.
Rob Dew, who's still an InfoWars producer to this day, won a lawsuit.
And so did Luke Radowski of We Are Change, both detained separately.
Almost missed our flight because of that the next morning.
A whole other story.
But I was, again, I was nimble.
I was able to get out of the enclosures of all these people.
I watched.
I wasn't even the back of the crowd.
I mean, you could watch me at one point.
I'm going through this just a ray of police officers.
And one of the cops goes for his twist ties.
And he goes to grab me.
I scream like a girl and I evade him and I get away.
I know that if I'm evading on foot and it's clear that I am unarmed, the chances of lethal force against me are almost zero.
But once again, let's go back to that situational awareness.
I also know that if I am in a vehicle and officers are in my window, okay, automatically the game has changed.
And that just did not register with this woman.
And I'm just telling everybody out there, no matter what you're protesting for and why, be aware of your conduct and the situation you're in.
And by the way, with a lot of these officers, I'm not here to be their enemy.
I want them on my side.
And even if they disagree with me and they're forced to do their job, I don't want them to hurt anybody, not just myself, but anybody else out there.
And I've been, again, at enough of these protests where you also have the agent provocateurs, and anybody can type this in as well into some of these major protesters where they will utilize somebody within their own unit, dressed in plain clothes, to start disrupting, to start trying to get other protesters to actually be disruptive, to use force so that they can step in and then arrest everybody.
And one of the keynotes of this is the way they've been caught in the past because they're not the brightest.
The arresting officers are wearing the same exact boots as the protesters that come in and start causing the violence and have their faces covered.
It's happened several times.
Again, they're just in their gear.
They're not thinking.
They're just black boots.
But then when you actually see them walking, they all have the same markings on the bottom because, you know, they're law enforcement issued.
Yeah.
Wow.
I didn't think about that.
Yeah, I don't know.
It's that whole situation is like a too bad thing.
I said earlier this week when all this went down, and just understand kind of what you're saying, understand if you put yourself in that situation, the percentage chance of something bad happening to you goes up dramatically.
Just always also know when you are considered armed and dangerous, you know, when they can use lethal force against you.
And by the way, when I say less lethal force, check out that kid that just lost his eye.
That's not the first time I've seen that happen.
You know, my man, I mentioned Luke, but Luke, to his credit, he hasn't done so, you know, recently, but he has been one of the most on-the-ground guys.
He used to go to those French yellow vest protests.
And not only was he at the French Yellow Vest protests where I watched people get hit with the pepper balls and get injured, et cetera, but he happened to be in France on this street where an explosion happened.
Rural Insights Matter00:03:58
At the time, they weren't sure whether it was terrorism or whatever.
But it ended up being just a gas line explosion.
So he's in a foreign country while there's massive protests going on, the yellow vest protests.
And I mean, he was in tears, man.
He was maybe like he was on the block.
He literally witnessed the whole thing.
He went live with this huge fireball going on and everything.
It was the wildest thing ever.
So even be I just want people to know, even being prepared in those situations.
I mean, Lou could have the helmet, the goggles, all that.
There's wild cards out there, baby.
So yes, know what you're getting into.
Yeah, I know.
I'm just going to stay home, you know, watch on TV and yeah, talk about it and stuff.
That's probably more my game.
And I was never, even as a younger man, rowdy in that way of like, hey, let's go protest.
I don't know.
And maybe that's because I'm rural, like a rural person.
So, and I feel like it's more.
Well, I just had a great chat with Salvador Greevy yesterday.
We were talking about one of the stories in this month's issue with the River Cities Reader.
It's about basically the urbanization of our population and how people in cities look at things differently than people who don't live in big cities.
And it's a great read.
I don't know if you've had a chance to get to it yet, Borgon, but it's interesting.
And so now I'm starting to think of like, well, do I think that way because I'm rural?
Like, is it so I'm just more apt to think of it in a different manner?
And I don't know.
It's I love the River Cities Reader just because it makes me think like that.
Well, I'm a big nature versus nurture guy.
I think there's a place for quote-unquote nature.
But I had this conversation with another buddy of mine.
It's actually a mutual friend of Todd's.
Just talking about some of my comedian buddies that are from the East Coast, like Sam Tripoli is from Cortland, which is about 90 minutes from me.
Kurt Metzger, also from that area.
And there's a certain demeanor.
So I don't think he's very far off, especially someone like myself that's kind of grown up with my foot in a lot of those worlds, right?
You know, even though I didn't live in New York City, I was constantly going in and out of New York City up until the time I was 12.
Then we moved to upstate New York where Amish people were having a picnic on my lawn and I ended up graduating with 54 kids.
They still had illegal three-wheelers on a lot of these properties.
Exactly.
You know, I was introduced to a lot that I was not introduced to otherwise.
And then kind of just traveling the country throughout this from my mid-20s on, right?
I've been all over and I can tell you right now, there is something to be said about the type of environment you live in, urban, suburban, citywide.
You know, I think that, you know, New York City culture is like unlike anything else I've seen anywhere else in the country.
But at the same time, so is LA and Hollyweird culture as well.
I think even Florida, even though it's kind of diverse, also has its own kind of thing going.
And I'm just very happy to be here out with the Midwest Manners, my friend.
Yes, sir.
Yes, we are.
And we have been deep in the weeds with Jason Burmese brought to you by River Cities Reader.
And that is going to do it.
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