All Episodes Plain Text
March 27, 2026 - Knowledge Fight
02:01:33
#1128: March 17-20, 2006

Dan Friesen and Jordan Holmes dissect a March 2006 episode where Alex Jones falsely claims President Bush signed a non-existent $2 billion bill, misinterpreting Medicare funding adjustments as stolen funds. They critique his fabrication regarding oil payments in Euros and his exploitation of Charlie Sheen's fame to promote unverified 9/11 conspiracy theories, specifically the out-of-context "pulling" of Building 7. The hosts debunk Jones' assertions about delayed official investigations into Pearl Harbor and JFK, arguing he manipulates timelines and linguistic nuances to manufacture doubt where none exists. Ultimately, the analysis exposes how Jones constructs narratives from technical glitches and misread data rather than factual reporting. [Automatically generated summary]

Participants
Main
a
alex jones
infowars 09:44
d
dan friesen
01:02:46
j
jordan holmes
25:52
Appearances
Clips
p
pastor james david manning
00:02
Callers
andy in kansas
callers 00:04
nehru in florida
callers 05:35
|

Speaker Time Text
The Road Trip Begins 00:03:21
unidentified
Hey, hello.
dan friesen
How's it going?
I'm Dan.
I'm sitting here.
jordan holmes
I'm Jordan.
I'm coming to your rescue.
I'm coming to your rescue right out the gate with that.
Hey, That's a rough start.
We're not great improvisers, I think, is the point of that opening.
This is thoroughly planned out, right, Dan?
dan friesen
The hey, hey, hey part of it was kind of like my brain missing a beat trying to figure out like, is this going to go before the theme song, or am I going to have to put the theme song in later?
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
And I decided in the moment that this is going to go in cold.
No theme song, just hey, hey, hey, hey.
jordan holmes
I mean, I'm going to be honest with you.
We've given criticisms about having production meetings in the past, and I think maybe we are hypocritical in that regard.
dan friesen
There is a happy medium that we should strike.
Yeah, we have failed it.
So, Jordan, I'm on the road.
You know what I'm saying?
unidentified
Yes, you are.
dan friesen
I am.
jordan holmes
You do not.
dan friesen
You can see, obviously, I'm in a hotel room somewhere, but you don't know.
You have no idea where I am.
jordan holmes
Well, I mean, just judging from the decor of your hotel room, I'd say, first off, America, and second, not the richest place in America.
dan friesen
You are right on both counts, and we will get to that in a moment.
So, what's going on here is that I am taking this road trip, and I'm also a lunatic.
And so, we had planned that we were going to continue working.
I was going to work from the road.
We'd established, you know, some ways to do that, getting some other equipment and all that shit.
But Alex has been out of studio still.
So, even though I'm on the road trying to live it up, go see America, I'm being annoyed that he's not showing up.
So, I figured, like, we're not going to do it, we're not going to do an episode about Stuart Rhodes hosting or anything like that.
We have episodes banked.
So, we have an old 2006 episode that we'll play after this little intro.
But, yeah, it looks bad over there.
And I can't say that it doesn't feel great to be having a fantastic time, personally, while Alex is conceivably having the worst time of his life.
jordan holmes
It is hard for me to conclude anything other than that he is on a bender right now.
Based upon all of our previous interactions with him up until the point when he has been gone, they have been dangerously alcohol-induced.
dan friesen
It's true, but I think the last time I saw him visually, he was in a room that was suspiciously sterile-looking.
And I was like, well, maybe that's rehab.
Maybe someone took him to a dryout center or something.
jordan holmes
Or he could be taking out his frustrations Dexter style.
You know, you never know.
Maybe he's out finally doing good for once and I guess murdering serial killers.
I don't remember that show.
dan friesen
He's taking out Carpe Dunkedum.
jordan holmes
Many, many have gone missing for their criticisms of InfoWars recently.
First Stop Kankakee 00:11:46
dan friesen
Leo Zagami dead.
jordan holmes
Now who's the Antichrist going to be?
unidentified
Yeah.
Yeah.
dan friesen
So I have much to report from the road, Jordan.
jordan holmes
Yes.
dan friesen
I think that I think you made the prediction that America and not very affluent America.
jordan holmes
Yes.
dan friesen
And I think you're right.
I am in Terre Haute, Indiana, right?
jordan holmes
Okay.
All right.
The highest earth.
Sure, that sounds right.
dan friesen
I think that's, yeah.
I know a little bit of French, and I think that checks out.
jordan holmes
That works for me.
dan friesen
So, yeah, I'm leg two of my journeys.
And so, to give everyone a little bit of a peek behind the curtain about the plan of this, I just sat on Google Maps and looked around for places that sounded funny.
And so, I ended up just scrolling around on the map, and I saw a town called Aroma Hills.
And it dawned on me that I had never smelled Aroma Hills.
And if you see the name, you can't, like, you can't have an ophactory memory of it just by looking at the word, but you feel like you should.
And so, I wanted to correct that, and I made that the first stop of my trip.
jordan holmes
Right.
I'm going to ask you a question real quick.
I'm going to get, I'm going to interrupt here for a second.
Do you think it is then necessarily an act of violence for them to name it Aromahill?
Like, without, I didn't do anything to deserve this longing to know what a smell of a hill is, and they've just named it such to give me that feeling?
That's bullshit.
dan friesen
I really think it's an unintended thing.
Like, I don't think it's an act of violence.
I think the effect may be violence, but there's no malice in it.
Like, naming it that is not like, it's not hurtful.
jordan holmes
Sure, I'm just saying people need to think ahead before they start naming things.
dan friesen
Right.
Someone weird like me might see the town name.
jordan holmes
Exactly.
And then here we are.
dan friesen
I think 99% of people who would see that town name would have no second thought.
But for me, it was just like, huh, I go smell that place.
jordan holmes
Right.
dan friesen
And so that was my plan.
That was my first stop.
And I came up with some other stops.
And as I was, as I think we mentioned this in the last episode, I spoke this into reality with my therapist and friends and then you.
And I told my therapist about my plan, just to make sure it didn't sound crazy.
And he thought it was a great idea.
And then the next morning, he sends me a text that there had been a tornado that had hit Aroma Hills.
So I tell you about this coincidence of like, I've never heard of fucking Aroma Hills.
I tell my therapist my plan is to start a road trip to that being the first stop.
Then there's, he sees a tornado has struck.
What is this?
Is this a sign of something?
And you managed to convince me a little bit that it is Gene Hackian.
jordan holmes
Yeah, you have to.
You must go visit after this whole situation.
It is something calling to you.
Go chase the tornado.
It is a metaphor.
It's like it's fucking Wizard of Ozzian.
It's not just Gene Hackmian.
dan friesen
Gene Hackmian.
jordan holmes
Hackmian?
Hackmanian?
dan friesen
Hackmian.
jordan holmes
I think I'm going to go with Hackmean.
dan friesen
I think they all were.
So I got there, and my plan initially was that there's a, I was going to stay in Kankakee, which is just outside Aroma Hills.
And there's an Aroma Hills forest preserve.
And I was going to wander around there.
I was also going to see, because this tornado had happened, I was going to see what was up.
Is there anything that needs assistance?
How are they recovering and everything?
jordan holmes
Any elderly celebrities that need help?
dan friesen
I didn't see any.
jordan holmes
Maybe next time.
dan friesen
It was surprising to me.
And granted, I didn't poke around and ask too many people, but it seemed like there was a phenomenal recovery effort underway.
Like, there was a lot of trees and branches and stuff, but they were all very organized.
Like, everything was, like, it really, I don't know.
You can see things are wrecked, and you could see definitely that there is destruction.
I don't want to, like, gloss over that and minimize it, but there was another end of it, too, that it really seemed like people were helping each other, and that was in progress.
And so there was something pretty uplifting about that.
Like, you're coming into this place and you're not just seeing, like, oh, horror.
Oh, it's all awful.
It was kind of, there's a tinge of optimism that came along with it.
jordan holmes
The destruction will come, but what is powerful about humanity is the rebuilding that comes after.
dan friesen
Yeah, yeah.
But so my biggest plan or point was that I was going to go to that forest preserve.
And so I'm heading over there.
I'm driving.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
The one thing that I ran into that was like actual pretty like damaged that wasn't fixed was that there was a downed power line over the entrance to the forest preserve.
It was just impassable and looked like it would probably die if you tried to drive over it.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
Whether or not you are following the precepts of some sort of god or anything, right now it feels more like a mischievous leprechaun kind of style thing going on here.
Like, follow me.
Ooh, not too close.
That's where I'm seeing this going.
dan friesen
How could it be that that place is the one place that's basically impassable that I saw in the town?
And it's the one place that I was set out to go.
jordan holmes
It's like a video game wall.
You're not supposed to be able to go there.
Perhaps it'll be unlocked when you level up on the way back.
dan friesen
It's gated content.
jordan holmes
Yep.
dan friesen
Yeah, that's a good way to think about it.
I don't have the upgrade.
I don't have my booster shoes.
jordan holmes
You gotta have the shoes to jump the power or rubber shoes to keep from getting electrocuted.
This all makes sense.
dan friesen
So I just decided, like, I'll just go somewhere else.
I went to the Kankakee River State Park and walked around there.
Lovely time.
Had a blast.
Saw some nature.
Stood over the river and contemplated river shit.
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
I found a sign that said that Sasquatch was around and then he wasn't.
jordan holmes
Nah.
Well, I'm fairly certain he's still Pacific Northwestern.
So if he's on a trip at the same time that you're on a trip, now that's a coincidence.
dan friesen
I don't think he would have had the time to set up that sign that says Bigfoot over there if he was just passing through.
Like if he's on a road trip.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
I mean, maybe he's some sort of Johnny Bigfoot seed where everywhere he goes, he puts one of those signs behind him so you know where he was along his journey.
dan friesen
Bigfoot was here.
unidentified
Yes.
dan friesen
Or is it geocacher?
jordan holmes
That's possible.
Yeah, you never know.
dan friesen
Little flash drives around.
jordan holmes
Maybe he's got a little Google camera and this is for street view.
dan friesen
So that Aroma Hills was the jump off or the end of leg one and jump off of leg two.
jordan holmes
What's your review of Aroma Hill?
dan friesen
You know what?
As a smell, nothing really notable.
jordan holmes
I feel like the correct answer was it stinks.
dan friesen
No, it was fine.
I think the town was really lovely, and I think that the there's something inspiring about people working together to build back from a natural disaster.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
But the Kankakee River was lovely.
And I found a beaver den.
I found a little hidden beaver den from poking around.
And I also was on one trail, and I had, this might be a segment for my trips, my road reports, which is thought that seems profound, but probably isn't.
jordan holmes
All right.
I suspect a jingle in our future for the segment.
dan friesen
I saw a guy coming out of the woods, right?
And I was not scared of him at all.
And I realized that I'm a very panicky, like scared person generally.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
But in the woods, in the middle of nowhere, if you see someone, they're not a threat to you.
If someone wants to hurt you, you're probably not going to see them.
So if you see somebody, they clearly don't mind you seeing them.
So don't be scared of them.
And while you're at it, if someone is going to hurt you, they probably are going to do it in a way that you're never going to see coming.
So don't worry about that either.
jordan holmes
Probably.
Sure.
I suppose maybe wear a paper plate on the back of your head with a set of eyes, just in case, right?
dan friesen
Can't hurt.
jordan holmes
Can't hurt.
dan friesen
You know, like as a sort of paranoid, jittery person, it was a nice little like, hey, whatever is going to attack you probably isn't, you're never going to see it.
And if you do see people, go ahead and be nice to them.
They're probably, they can't possibly want to hurt you.
jordan holmes
Can I pitch you on this?
dan friesen
Let me take that back.
Maybe this isn't universalizable.
jordan holmes
Let me just throw this out there for you.
And you can take it or leave it however that you desire.
But you are, and I think we both know this, a very hursuit man.
dan friesen
True.
jordan holmes
I believe that in a woodsy encounter, you perhaps feel more in your element.
If I was an observer walking in, I don't look like I'm supposed to be in the woods, but you've got some lumberjack vibes, do you?
dan friesen
Yeah, there's a privilege, certainly, to my being a thick man of hair.
A hairy thick man.
Certainly I'm not someone's first target.
Maybe people in the woods aren't safe.
Look, my point is I was trying to be reassuring.
It turns out this segment's a bust because the profound thing, I have totally backtracked on it immediately just by saying it.
jordan holmes
Well, I feel like this is a very, I only have to be faster than you kind of situation, right?
Like, if you're walking around in the woods, you only have to be less of a target than somebody who's very easily a target, you know?
dan friesen
So you should bring someone along.
A Bust on Tigers 00:12:41
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
dan friesen
A forest buddy who's like a dud.
jordan holmes
I would suggest a thin, unathletic person to keep with you.
dan friesen
All right.
All right.
So I took off from Aroma Hills, and I had a good time.
It was nice, and a lot of what I was looking for, no complaints.
But then I took off for my second destination, and I'm about to send you a picture, Jordan, that you can...
I'd like you to describe to the listeners here.
jordan holmes
I'll do my best.
Oh, man.
You know, I find it very interesting that we live in a time where you can text me something and I get it instantly.
That's kind of fucking weird, right?
dan friesen
It's been like that for a while.
jordan holmes
I know.
unidentified
What is that?
jordan holmes
It is Dan giving a thumbs up to a, I mean, it looks like it's striped like a tiger, but it's got to be a mountain lion, right?
dan friesen
Oh, no.
jordan holmes
Who has a tiger?
Oh, this is an illegal tiger.
Are you hanging out with an illegal tiger?
Is that what's happening?
dan friesen
Well, we should take the illegal out of the explosion.
jordan holmes
That is a tiger.
All right.
There is a tiger in a cage.
I watched Tiger King, so I'm guessing that it's super illegal.
dan friesen
Well, actually, these people, it's an exotic cat rescue in outside Center Point, Indiana.
jordan holmes
Okay.
dan friesen
And I decided that was the second stop of my trip because I wanted to check it out.
I wanted to see.
I love, obviously, I love cats.
And I thought it would be really interesting to see these tigers.
And, oh, it was.
jordan holmes
Oh, man.
dan friesen
Oh, man.
unidentified
Nice.
dan friesen
They have a guided tour that they take you on of the facility because the facility itself is an active working rescue where they take in cats from people who try to illegally own them as pets.
I think they actually even did say that they had taken some from someone else.
jordan holmes
They had a couple tiger kings.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
jordan holmes
They had a couple tiger kings.
dan friesen
Also, animals who are used in movies and then don't have a home.
No one can take care of them.
So they have, I think he said something to the effect of like 200-something animals that are cared for on this refuge.
And man, what a fucking nuts thing.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
These cats are huge and you're right next to them.
Like I was feet away from tigers, lions.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Five minutes into being there, we're walking down a trail and these two lions start growling at each other.
And I can't tell you like how it felt in my chest.
Like you could feel the vibration of these.
jordan holmes
You felt the evolutionary history of 200,000 years of most of the time being terrified of giant cats.
alex jones
Yeah, yeah.
dan friesen
And I don't know if I'm proud that this is exactly my first thought, but my first thought was like, eh, he could eat me.
That's fine.
If this is what's going to kill me, that's fine.
I was at peace with the idea of...
Then I started to think about, like, what goes into a lion killing me, which would be, like, a lot of tearing.
unidentified
It would be a...
jordan holmes
It was a real bummer for a while.
dan friesen
Yeah, yeah.
That part I wasn't cool with.
jordan holmes
But just as a concept, a lion eating me, like, eh, I mean, I think, I think the, don't, don't we go into shock, you know, like we see the body doing all the screaming and all that stuff, but because of the way our brains work, they just shut off, so you'd probably just die without even knowing.
Well, I mean, after you die, you would have no idea that it really hurt.
dan friesen
I have no idea, and I think a lot of those, I always feel like those stories are just meant to reassure us.
You know, like the shit.
jordan holmes
We're just being reassured.
Oh, the lions won't eat you.
unidentified
Don't shit.
dan friesen
You won't feel it.
You'll be fine.
Anybody who could refute that is probably dead.
jordan holmes
It is a fairly easy to solve problem, isn't it?
dan friesen
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it was wonderful.
It was a really, really great time.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
They have foxes and skunks.
The skunks didn't come out of hiding, which is probably good because I could have freaked them out.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
But yeah, I can't.
You know, you see animals in the zoo and they're bummed out.
They seem incredibly miserable.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
And these animals, obviously, it would be better if they were in nature.
Maybe.
Although natural habitats are eroding and, you know, under attack.
So maybe it wouldn't.
But leaving that aside, a lot of them are raised in places that make them very difficult to reintegrate into the wild.
And to the extent that they can be, they seem pretty happy.
And like the tour guide, when he was walking around, he went up to the tiger cages and was petting them through the gate, like the fence.
And like they were rubbing up against the fence affectionately.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It just reminded me of Celine.
Like there were so many behaviors that were just like, okay, this is a 300-pound murder machine, but it also has the same tendencies as my tabby.
jordan holmes
Yeah, I mean, there's like, okay, there's no consciousness that says they know how large or small they are.
They're just cats.
You know?
Like, that's why Celine, if Celine was large, would just jump on you in the same way.
You would just be crushed.
dan friesen
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Yeah, they're all just cats in the same size, right?
They're in a different size.
dan friesen
And that's what the guy was saying, too.
It's like, they're really sweet, but it would probably kill you just by accident.
unidentified
Right.
jordan holmes
It would be playing with you.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It'd just break its toy.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And that kind of was a bummer.
jordan holmes
Well, you know, here's what I'm thinking, right?
It's a bummer that they're being mistreated right now.
But what's important is that some of them make it through because they'll have their time again.
Humans aren't going to be on top for the rest of time.
So you got to figure eventually there'll be something that messes us up and then the cats, boom, right back on top.
dan friesen
Hold on now.
I am not certain that we could ever say there was a time when cats were on top.
I guess the best, if I looked at the history, the best they've ever had was probably Egypt.
And humans were still on top there.
They just worshipped cats.
jordan holmes
Sure.
I mean, I don't know.
Maybe they're on top right now.
They seem to be doing pretty well for themselves.
The smaller ones, at least.
Yeah, absolutely.
They'll grow eventually.
dan friesen
Yeah, they've insinuated themselves into our lives to the point where we no longer think them a threat.
And that's a strategy.
unidentified
Yeah.
Sure.
jordan holmes
Maybe eventually they're like goldfish.
As we diminish, they will expand.
And then house cats will become house people.
We'll be small little people for their giant.
I don't know if I'm going to stick by that one.
I don't know if that one's going to work out.
dan friesen
I'm trying to carefully.
jordan holmes
I don't think I'm going to let...
I'll hang with that one.
dan friesen
So yeah, I think, you know, it's always really difficult to go to a place and know exactly, like, is this the coolest thing?
But I definitely got the sense that I was glad that they were doing the work that they're doing and taking care of those animals.
And like, it seemed, it seemed like a pretty positive thing all around.
And everyone was really nice.
And yeah, just a hoot.
Just a hoot.
jordan holmes
Just a hoot.
Well, that's fantastic.
dan friesen
No album.
jordan holmes
Hey, well, I mean, maybe there were at one point in time, but then, you know, I imagine large cats don't truck with that.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
And they can hang up in trees high enough to handle the business.
dan friesen
You know, we have propaganda films that tell us, like, Tigger can hang out with Owl.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
And that's not true.
jordan holmes
Well, I believe I watched I watched The Staircase, and I believe that there was an owl murder in that, or potentially.
dan friesen
But not with a cat.
That was just a human.
jordan holmes
That's true.
That's true.
Just a human.
dan friesen
So this guy who's given me the tour, I had a moment that fucking blew my mind.
So we're like three-quarters of the way through the tour or so.
And he was an awesome older dude, Jim Bakerian in some ways, physically, but not like as a character or a person.
But he's talking to me about telling me the stories of these cats.
And it's just a blast.
He's been in the cat game or taking care of cats since the 60s.
And we get to where our path is going one way.
And then the people feeding the cats are going the other way.
So we're going to intersect.
We happen to intersect just after they've fed a leopard, an old leopard.
And when I say old, I mean, it's still, it's like a big-ass leopard that looks scary as shit.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
One of the people who's in the feeding group is like, she needs to take her meds.
And so he, my tour guide, gets a chunk of meat that has the meds, goes in the cage, ends up trying to give the meat to the leopard who has retreated inside his little nook.
So now he's gone into the nook and is basically inside a clubhouse, a little tiny clubhouse with the leopard, giving it the meat with the medicine on it.
I think he knows what he's doing.
He's responsible.
He's not taking any real dangers.
I'm not worried.
Then his phone rings.
And I'm thinking, my heart would stop if I'm this guy, I'm in an enclosed space with a leopard and my phone rings.
He's totally chill about it.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Takes the call.
jordan holmes
No, I mean, you know, it's not like going to the gorilla cage in the zoo or anything like that.
He's just known this cat for probably its whole life.
This cat and him are probably buds.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And I get that the cat's old too.
So maybe that factors into it.
But like, it just is still, you have to be scared of the instincts that it might have.
I trusted that he knew what he was doing.
But at the same time, there was a split second of me thinking like, wrong day, wrong day for me to visit.
No, no, no, no.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
You know, I'll say this.
Anybody who's done something for 60 years, anytime I've interacted somebody with that amount of experience, I've seen them do things that I would describe as extremely dangerous with a lot of laissez-faire kind of vibes about them.
So, you know, he's been doing it for a long time.
If he were scared or if there was going to be a problem, he probably would already be dead by now, right?
dan friesen
Yeah, but that day has to come.
You know, like you say that, like, he would be dead already at some point that day happened.
You know, like, I agree with you almost 100% that like people who have been doing things for a long time, you see them do reckless shit and they get away with it.
But they also also, like, yeah, luck runs out.
I was so scared that I was there at the moment that luck ran out and a leopard was going to attack.
Part of Nature 00:02:38
dan friesen
And the fact that it didn't waste.
jordan holmes
Do you become a cat rescue shelter because you want to die sleeping in your bed?
No, my friend.
At the end of your days, you want to feed those cats with what's left of you.
He's lived a long life.
He's ready to make the future happen for the next generation of cats and cat people.
Beat me to the lions, he says, when he's 85.
dan friesen
Hey, you got to go.
jordan holmes
You're going to go sooner or later.
There's nothing you can do about that.
dan friesen
There's something kind of beautiful about it.
jordan holmes
Take me up and feed me to the cats.
dan friesen
He did finish the tour, so I left him quite alive still.
jordan holmes
Still alive?
That's good news.
That's good news.
dan friesen
Yeah, but just a great, it was a great, you know, I think that Aroma Hills obviously was blocked off that forest preserve, but the river was still great.
But as an idea of this being one of the stops, I'm so glad I went to that.
I'm so glad that's there.
jordan holmes
I take it you're enjoying this a great deal more than any sort of tourism kind of thing.
Like, you know, obviously my wife and I, we've gone to other countries and we've done like ziplining and shit like that, where there's a tour group, where there's lines of people.
I'm assuming that this is much more your style.
dan friesen
Yeah, definitely.
Like, I'm, I'm, uh, one of the things I'm finding I really enjoy is like driving on country roads.
Like, just that is because that shit is there all the time.
And we, it's just out of sight, out of mind.
But it's so calm and peaceful and like just, you know, we are a part of nature, right?
jordan holmes
All right.
Now, that is a profound thought that may be on further reflection.
dan friesen
Let's get the jingle.
No, but we're a part of nature, and a certain amount of agriculture is a product of our nature developing.
And so it still feels like part of it.
It's not as wild and untouched as the woods or whatever, but it still feels like outside of maybe like Big Agra or something.
Obviously, a giant factory farm or something isn't going to scratch the same little place.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
But, you know, some of these country roads, you see crops and stuff.
And it's very calming in a strange way.
Who Is at Fault 00:04:50
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
I can see that.
How do you feel about being gone?
You've been gone for a few days.
Are you thinking, ah, maybe I'm missing home or are you just ready to see the open road in front of you?
dan friesen
Well, it's a mixed bag a little bit.
I think I miss you.
I miss Celine.
We're coming up on.
Oh, wait, it's Wednesday today.
I'm going to miss movie time with Angela Lampsbury.
jordan holmes
That's true.
That's true.
dan friesen
And so people, I miss people some, and I count Celine as a person, strangely, but like, I don't, I don't miss Chicago at all.
jordan holmes
I believe you.
dan friesen
And don't get me wrong.
There's nothing wrong with the city.
I don't hate it or anything.
But I'm not eager to get back to a city environment.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
I don't know what that's going to manifest into, but yeah.
Just to fill in people who haven't, Jordan and I have talked about this privately, but my plan was there's three stops that I'm going to make and then re-evaluate along the way whether or not I was going to keep going and just keep exploring and see what I find.
And at this point, I do feel like I'm going to go further than three.
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
I think, yeah, I think I'm definitely I found a fourth stop that I think would be fun.
So there's at least that.
So we're recording in the morning on Wednesday, and I'm about to take off on leg three.
And I believe there will be a leg four at this point.
jordan holmes
Wow.
That's good to hear.
I'm excited by that.
There's, you know, there's always the concern that maybe one wants something in idea and then in practice, very much not the case, which can be disappointing.
unidentified
Sure.
jordan holmes
Or there can just be a little bit more fear than you were expecting and that can draw you back.
And that's disappointing.
But that you're ready to spread those wings and move on to another stop.
That's exciting.
dan friesen
It is.
It is.
And I'm.
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
I'm cognizant of the fact that I need to be aware that I have to get back.
So like, you know, as much as I'm like, hey, a fourth leg would be great.
I'm also like, well, okay, then that also means you're committing to it taking longer to get back.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
But that's okay.
I think that's okay.
My headspace is there for that.
And yeah, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I like that I'm not sure.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
I wonder if anyone ever would have swum across the channel if they had to swim to get back.
You know what I mean?
Like, if you got to do it once, that's an achievement.
But knowing you got to swim the whole thing on the way back, nah, that's too much.
dan friesen
Are you talking like at the beginning of the beach?
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
When Richard, Etienne, and Francoise have to swim to the beach?
jordan holmes
Yeah, exactly.
That kind of thing.
You're going to tire yourself out.
So you got to make sure that you plan for the appropriate travel time.
dan friesen
It's kind of appropriate because I'm on a travel thing here.
But I did read The Beach recently, and then I watched the movie the other night.
And I'm mad at the movie.
We don't have to get into it, but I'm mad at the movie.
jordan holmes
Just driving through the woods, angry at the beach.
dan friesen
Danny Boyle.
Is this your fault?
Whose fault is this?
jordan holmes
Whose fault is this?
dan friesen
I like his work.
I like 28 Days Later so much.
And that was him and Garland, and Garland wrote the beat.
unidentified
What the hell?
dan friesen
What happened?
jordan holmes
All right.
You've had two experiences now.
Without telling us what your next experience is planned to be.
How about tell me what your hope for the next experience is?
You've had the sniff of a post-tornado rebuilding project.
You've seen giant cats.
You've met people who care for them in the woods, just neglecting all forms of society to care for animals that cannot care for themselves.
All right, come on.
I'm exaggerating it.
This is a show, okay?
For God's sake.
Tell me.
So tell me what experience you want on the next leg.
dan friesen
Well, the next leg without giving away anything, because the element of surprise is important for you.
unidentified
Of course.
dan friesen
I think it's just stupid.
I'm looking, I'm looking.
jordan holmes
So you're headed to an Applebee's.
Applebee's Next Leg 00:08:53
unidentified
Uh.
dan friesen
I might as well.
unidentified
Honestly.
dan friesen
I mean, like, it's not that, but I think it'll be stupid.
And then that's what I'm looking forward to.
But also, actually, I had a third experience that we didn't get to.
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
I took that tour of the cat park in the early afternoon yesterday.
And then I had time, you know, that I could have done stuff.
I was thinking about going to another forest preserve or something.
But then I realized that I'm in Terre Haute, right?
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
You know what's in Terre Haute?
jordan holmes
Absolutely not.
dan friesen
There's a casino.
jordan holmes
Oh, okay.
All right.
You gambled.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
I decided that the way that I would put it is this trip is it's not all just like me trying to descend into like a primitive nature form of myself.
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
It's expressing and following things that I really like and have liked and things that like connect with my heart in some way.
And, you know, the woods is that.
Big ass cats is that.
Trying to smell a city is that because it's fucking dumb.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
And like poker is something that I fucking loved when I was younger.
jordan holmes
Great.
dan friesen
In college days, me and Nikki Gifts would go out to the bars.
They had bar poker during the poker boom.
And we would play like two, three nights a week sometimes.
We would be out at the bars.
We'd run into the same people who we had strong opinions of, even though they were strangers.
jordan holmes
So very important Chris Moneymaker was to the poker community in that time period.
dan friesen
This is a little after Moneymaker, but he kicked it off.
jordan holmes
He kicked it off.
Yep.
dan friesen
This is around the time of like the magician, Antonio Esfondiari and poker, Daniel Megranu.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
jordan holmes
Phil Helmuth, the bad boy of, I don't know what he does.
dan friesen
Him and Mike Mattasow would yell at each other all the time.
The bad boys.
jordan holmes
I would give anything to not remember these names.
There are so many important things that are gone inside my brain.
Yet somehow fucking Phil Helmuth lives up there.
dan friesen
Yeah, Jennifer Tilly would show up and play.
jordan holmes
Really great and the nice guy.
dan friesen
Huck Seed.
That was another guy.
Phil Ivey.
Man, I remember all of these fucking poker players.
jordan holmes
Yep.
I don't know why.
I don't know why.
There was a time.
dan friesen
So I went to the Terre Haute Casino and they have a poker room and just playing some poker.
And I didn't, I lost.
I didn't lose a lot.
I lost even half of the amount that I had set aside as like, this is the fun money for like a night at the casino.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
So I left.
I left before I had even lost the nut or whatever.
Because I just, I bought in for half of what I would accept losing and sat at the table.
And like, people were just really nice.
Like, some of them were friends and clearly had like a poker scene.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
They were very welcoming.
And it wasn't a like sharky kind of situation where people were trying to like gun for each other.
It felt like obviously you want to win pops and you want to win the money.
jordan holmes
That's poker.
dan friesen
Yeah, it also felt kind of like a house game.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Where people are, you do want to just see some cards sometimes.
unidentified
Sure.
jordan holmes
Sure, absolutely.
Let's play this bad hand just to see if the luck hits.
Why not?
unidentified
Yeah.
Yeah.
dan friesen
As much as like, you know, I don't know who any of these people are.
They're in a casino in Terre Haute, Indiana on a Tuesday night.
So who knows?
But it just seemed like they all were nice.
And that was nice.
I didn't sit down and be like, I fucking hate this guy.
There wasn't one person at the table who I'm like, God, I wish they weren't there.
It was just all pleasant, like, as a facsimile of a social thing.
Like, I know it's not real.
None of us will probably ever see each other again.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
Except them.
They will see each other.
jordan holmes
They'll be there on Tuesday for a long time to come.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
But for me, they welcomed me in graciously and we joked around.
And it was a lot of fun.
It was scratch and itch.
And I lost my last hand and I was totally fine with it and happy.
And, you know, hey, fun playing with you guys.
Thanks for letting me and took off.
And, you know, like, I just like it.
jordan holmes
You know, it points something out to me.
What I'm hearing, what I'm hearing from you is that based on this trip, it's something that we never remember.
It's something that we keep away from ourselves: it takes a lot of work to get people on reality TV who will behave like assholes.
It takes an algorithm.
It takes an entire corporation funneling assholes on social media to get those assholes there.
Most people, the massive majority of people, are one exactly like you, and you're really nice, so so are they.
dan friesen
And I think that the other thing, too, about that is that I think that every, not everybody, but most people want to have fun.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
We're all going to die.
Have fun.
dan friesen
And I think that a lot of people are not like they feel like it's not safe to have fun with other people and they keep a guard up.
And I think that that gets in the way of people being able to have fun.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
This is another profound thought that probably isn't profound, which will be the theme of this road trip.
jordan holmes
You know, if you read Eat, Pray, Love now, you're like, yeah, yeah, I got it.
Yeah, traveling.
It's fun.
dan friesen
It is, but it's not just the traveling of it.
But it is, it is something about it.
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
So, yeah, I took off and I, you know, went home.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
Went back to the back to the hotel.
Conked.
I don't think I've ever been to a casino and not drank or not stayed way too long.
And there was something very nice about being able to walk out at like 10:30 and be like, I had a very pleasant time.
I lost a little bit of money, but I had a very pleasant time with some strangers.
And I could be fine with that.
jordan holmes
I remember being young looking at older people doing stuff like that, thinking, ah, those idiots, they don't even know how to have fun anymore.
Now it is a delight.
It is the most fun thing in the world to be home safe without any kind of problems.
dan friesen
Yeah.
Or to just have, you know, you don't need an extreme experience.
Just have an experience.
jordan holmes
Have a pleasant time.
dan friesen
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So that's kind of, you know, looping back to your question, that's kind of what I'm hoping.
Whatever this third leg, I hope it's stupid, but I also, you know, I hope it's pleasant.
I hope it's.
jordan holmes
I think we're all wishing that it continues to be pleasant for you.
I think we're all excited that you are doing this.
I think this is kind of a big step for you.
And, you know, the future is uncertain.
So this could be something that helps propel you forward.
dan friesen
Sure.
And I wanted to address one thing.
I did see one comment that I thought was really a good point.
And that is, Dan chose the exact wrong time to do this with the, you know, like gas prices and stuff.
unidentified
Right.
Yeah.
dan friesen
And I would like to say correct.
However, part of my calculation was that there's such an uncertainty with the way the world looks right now that six months from now, I think I might not be able to do this, period.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
Whereas now it's a burden and it's more expensive than it would be like in normal times, but maybe I couldn't do this later.
And I would kick myself if I didn't when I had an opportunity, even if it's a pain.
jordan holmes
Now, that's something that actually is profound.
Nutella Ice Cream Cones 00:02:47
dan friesen
Thank you.
jordan holmes
Yes.
dan friesen
I have more deep thoughts that I will ruminate on my drive to destination three.
jordan holmes
Excellent.
dan friesen
But we will, yeah, we'll check in.
I'll send you some dumb pictures.
jordan holmes
Of course.
dan friesen
And yeah, I'll post those pictures with a tiger too, because people deserve to see that.
jordan holmes
Wonderful.
dan friesen
But Jordan, so lovely to see you.
jordan holmes
Always pleasant.
I've been missing you.
I'm glad to see you enjoying yourself.
Oh, come on.
You're traveling.
You're God.
Come on.
We do what we do.
dan friesen
Sure.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
Now people get to enjoy an episode of our show covering some time from 2006.
So enjoy that and we'll check back in with you from the road.
See if Alex is dead.
unidentified
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
alex jones
Dan and Jordan, I am sweating.
Knowledgeparty.com.
It's time to pray.
unidentified
I have great respect for knowledge fight.
alex jones
Knowledge fight.
I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys.
Shang, we are the bad guys.
Knowledge fight.
unidentified
Dan and Jordan.
nehru in florida
Knowledge fight.
alex jones
Rattler.
unidentified
I need, I need money.
Rattler.
Andy and Pansy.
Andy and Pandy.
Andy and Kansas.
Andy and Kansas.
Andy.
alex jones
It's time to pray.
unidentified
Andy in Kansas.
alex jones
You're on the airplane for all of us.
unidentified
Hello, Alex.
andy in kansas
I'm a fish pin calling my kids saying I love your room.
unidentified
Knowledge fight.
alex jones
Knowledgefight.com.
I love you.
dan friesen
Hey, everybody.
Welcome back to another Trade.
unidentified
I'm Dan.
jordan holmes
I'm Jordan.
dan friesen
We're a couple dudes who like to sit around, worship at the altar of Celine, and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
jordan holmes
Oh, indeed we are.
unidentified
Dan.
dan friesen
Jordan.
unidentified
Dan.
Jordan.
jordan holmes
Quick question for you.
What's your bright spot today, buddy?
dan friesen
My bright spot today is: you know what?
It's March, so I'm going for blah, blah, blah.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
Enough with a survivor, right?
I mean, like, we've talked about survivor too much.
jordan holmes
You've hit the beat a few times.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
We're like five or six more before Rake Effect kicks back in.
dan friesen
Yeah, I don't want to get there.
Maybe I'll bring it back up down the road, but I just don't have enough thoughts about it, honestly.
jordan holmes
Not a bad idea.
dan friesen
And I did have a bright spot that is worth sharing.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
And that is I got a pack of Nutella ice cream cones.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
You can get them at local grocers.
jordan holmes
Sure.
unidentified
I'm sure.
dan friesen
Various drugstores.
jordan holmes
Wherever groceries are sold.
dan friesen
I got them and I was very worried because I've seen Nutella used in other applications.
Venezuela Baseball Game 00:05:35
dan friesen
And sometimes it just doesn't work.
jordan holmes
Incorrectly.
dan friesen
This hit so hard.
unidentified
Nice.
dan friesen
It was really good.
The texture and the flavor of Nutella blended well with the vanilla ice cream.
Solid.
Solid eight and a half to nine out of ten.
jordan holmes
Damn.
dan friesen
It's very good.
jordan holmes
Dang.
dan friesen
And I want to go buy another box.
jordan holmes
Damn.
dan friesen
So good stuff.
jordan holmes
That is a bright spot.
dan friesen
8-2 when I opened the box because I was like, this right away.
Oh, it's another chom, chop, chomp.
jordan holmes
That's the stuff.
You know, it's good whenever you're like, well, I think I'm going to have to do that exactly now.
dan friesen
I shouldn't, but I must try another to make sure it's as good as I think it is.
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
dan friesen
And it stood up to scrutiny.
jordan holmes
It's like how Douglas Adams described drinking, you know, like you send the second one down to check and see how the first one's doing.
And before they get there, you got to send a third down to go after both of them.
dan friesen
I could have had a third one.
I probably stopped myself, but I could have.
Anyway, what's your bright spot?
jordan holmes
My bright spot is, well, I'll finish up with my World Baseball classic.
dan friesen
Crack of the back.
jordan holmes
The old Mighty Ducks won.
So Venezuela defeated the United States in the championship game.
dan friesen
Ironic.
jordan holmes
Fantastic.
It was a really great game.
It was great for baseball.
dan friesen
Did they free Maduro?
jordan holmes
That's what I'm saying.
The Mighty Ducks won.
Like, it doesn't get more Mighty Ducks than that.
Like, I'm not rooting for the U.S. over Venezuela.
I'm rooting for Venezuela.
Fucking, if you're rooting for Iceland in the Mighty Ducks 2, you're insane.
dan friesen
It is a very funny underdog kind of story, given the world.
jordan holmes
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It could only have been better if it was Iran.
Like, it would have been there.
unidentified
Wow.
jordan holmes
Like, if Iran wins the World Cup in Mexico, you know, as opposed to not being allowed to play because Trump threatened them.
dan friesen
Was it close?
jordan holmes
Oh, yeah, three to two.
Almost, Bryce Harper almost won it in the eighth, hit a two-run home run, two to one.
Then in the ninth, Venezuela pulled it off.
It was awesome.
It was a great game.
dan friesen
You kind of get the feeling that they could have won if Shohei wasn't playing for Japan.
jordan holmes
Who?
Venezuela beat Japan.
dan friesen
No, if he was on Team America.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
dan friesen
Maybe they could have pulled off the Venezuela game.
jordan holmes
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, I mean, but what's great about it is that for baseball, baseball is a dumb game.
It doesn't make sense.
So it doesn't matter if you're the best team.
It's so fucking random that it has very little effect on what, you know, like the best team in this season of all the year, right, will probably win about 60 to 65% of their games.
That's not that much.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
Right?
dan friesen
Well, as Tori Hunter once said, it's a very hard game.
jordan holmes
It's a very hard game.
dan friesen
You got to hit the ball and then get it past like nine dudes.
jordan holmes
There's so many guys.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
It's a dumb game.
dan friesen
Yeah, but it is, but it is our dumb game.
unidentified
Right.
jordan holmes
And so what's great about it, right, is even though you have the four or five best hitters on the planet on one team, right?
Even the best hitters on the planet still only hit the ball about once every three times.
So statistically, it is just as likely for them to all go 0 for 3 as it is for them to go 2 for 3 or 3 for, you know what I'm saying?
dan friesen
It's one of the, like, it makes me the argument that you're making is it makes me feel like this is one of the only places where a series of games really makes sense.
jordan holmes
Absolutely necessary.
dan friesen
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Absolutely necessary.
dan friesen
Basketball and football, like football doesn't, they just have one game.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And that's, that feels right.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
Basketball probably doesn't need a series either.
jordan holmes
Probably not.
dan friesen
But yeah, the stats with baseball.
jordan holmes
You just have no idea who's going to win on any given day.
Like, and that's why the WBC is so great because everybody only gets one game.
It's almost completely random.
The last one in 2023, like the guy played again this year.
There's a guy who plays for the Czech team, right?
And he's like, I don't know, just a part-time guy.
Like, he's borderline a plumber, right?
He's an electrician.
I think that's his actual job.
dan friesen
But borders on a plumber.
jordan holmes
Borders on a plumber.
I was trying to remember.
dan friesen
He's so close to plumber.
jordan holmes
It's basically the same thing.
But yeah, he throws 80, and in 2023, he struck out Shohei.
unidentified
Wow.
Right?
jordan holmes
Like, he's going to take that with him for the rest of his life.
He struck out the best baseball player on the planet, right?
But that's also because baseball is so fucking random.
You might just strike out the best player on the planet on accident.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It's going to happen.
jordan holmes
It's so weird.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
That's great.
I'm glad he had a good time, and I'm glad the Cinderella story played out.
Good news, Venezuela.
jordan holmes
Maduro, you're coming.
You're coming home.
dan friesen
Come on.
Like, I want to live in a crazy world.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So, like, we're already mostly there.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Let's just let Trump say, all right, you won.
jordan holmes
You get him back.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
If we, we could definitely, like, people used to solve wars with the one-on-one.
We could just switch to baseball in a heartbeat.
dan friesen
I think that if Trump released Maduro because Venezuela beat us in the World Baseball Classic, it would fuck with the world's headspace in a way that would be more damaging than if he executed Maduro.
jordan holmes
I think you're right.
I think that would escalate the like anything is possible quotient to infinite.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
You just don't know what could happen.
Welcome New Wonks 00:02:11
dan friesen
It would be like my strategy that I came up with if I was a football coach to I would sometimes punt on second down.
jordan holmes
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
dan friesen
Just to confuse people.
jordan holmes
You'll never know.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
You'll never know.
dan friesen
You beat us at baseball.
Maybe I'll give you your dictator back.
jordan holmes
You might.
I might.
I might take the Cape Horn.
I might just take it.
Now I have it because you guys beat us at baseball.
I don't know why.
dan friesen
I might give you New England.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
I don't want it.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It's yours, Spanish.
jordan holmes
Boston people don't like me.
dan friesen
So, Jordan, today we have an episode to go over.
alex jones
All right.
dan friesen
We're going to be in the past.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
We're going to be talking about some of Alex's past doings.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
We're going to be talking about March 17th to 20th, 2006, Friday to Monday.
And before we get to that, let's take a little moment to say hello to some new wonks.
jordan holmes
Ooh, that's a great idea.
dan friesen
So first, Leah, Obie, Baby Quinn, and Dixie the Cat.
Thank you so much, Jerry Policy Walk.
alex jones
I'm a policy wonk.
jordan holmes
Thank you very much.
unidentified
Thank you.
dan friesen
Next, Daniel Agen is writing books about queers, potheads, villains, and a queer political and queer pothead villains.
Thank you so much, Jeron Howe Poliwonk.
alex jones
I'm a policy wonk.
unidentified
Thank you very much.
dan friesen
Thank you.
And to my angelic Chris, you are the best non-binary partner a lay blooming trans girl could ask for.
And I'm sorry I made you think we were heteronormative for the last 20 years.
Our time together has been the brightest spot anyone could ask for.
And I look forward to our evolving future together forever and ever.
And always your favorite Pokemon, Eevee.
Thank you so much, Jerry Policy Walk.
alex jones
I'm a policy wonk.
jordan holmes
Thank you very much.
dan friesen
Thank you.
And we get a technical credit in the mix, Jordan.
So thank you so much to my last name is Jones, and I tell people I'm related to Alex Jones.
Mark, you know it's true.
Thank you so much.
You're an Iowa technocrat.
alex jones
I'm a policy wonk.
unidentified
Four stars.
Go home to your mother.
pastor james david manning
Someone, sodomite, sent me a bucket of poop.
alex jones
Daddy Sharp.
Bomb, Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black accent.
He's a loser, little, little kitty baby.
I don't want to hate black people.
I renounce Jesus Christ.
dan friesen
Thank you so much.
jordan holmes
Yeah, thank you very much.
dan friesen
So on our last episode, we listened to 316, Stone Cold Austin Day in the Past.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
Stone Cold Steve Austin Day in the past.
unidentified
Wow.
dan friesen
Stone Cold Steve occupied Austin, Texas Day.
Fool's Gold Economy 00:08:38
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
Whatever.
Anyway, it was a lot of fun.
jordan holmes
Yes.
dan friesen
And so here we are on the 17th.
And Alex starts the show, and I'm like, you should quit.
alex jones
Welcome, my friends.
This is the 17th day of March 2006 on this live Friday edition.
And we're going to have open phones today.
Why open phones?
With a full three hours.
Any news issue, any item, any story.
Any solutions you wish to discuss?
Any questions?
Any comments you disagree with me?
Whatever.
dan friesen
Whatever.
This never seems angry.
jordan holmes
This is what?
Andy, this is Andy Daly show, isn't it?
Today we're going to be talking about going outside or not going outside.
Do you want to talk about going inside?
What do you want to talk about?
We're here to talk about it.
dan friesen
Yeah, but it's not as electric.
jordan holmes
No, no, no.
dan friesen
It doesn't feel as excited.
jordan holmes
No, it's reluctant.
dan friesen
Yeah, Andy's character is excited about whether or not you want to go inside or outside.
unidentified
Yes, he is.
dan friesen
Alex is like, take your calls, your solutions.
Whatever.
jordan holmes
I wish we had something else to do.
dan friesen
Yeah, it feels dead on Friday.
jordan holmes
Yep.
dan friesen
So he spent some of his time before getting to calls ranting about how the economy and the stock market and all that shit is fake.
Everything's fake.
jordan holmes
It's fake.
alex jones
The Chicago Mercantile is fake.
Much of the New York Stock Exchange is fake.
It's a joke.
Almost our entire world now is a hoax.
What we're told, what goes on, it's just most of it is a hoax.
And an example of this is Bush, we now learn a couple weeks ago, signed a spending bill that was hundreds of billions of dollars, and $2 billion of it that he wanted was not passed.
And so he just went and got an earlier version of the bill that never passed and signed that.
And we've now learned that he was told that, sir, you're signing a bill that wasn't passed.
Speaker of the House told him this in a letter.
They just signed it knowing we're so done they can take $2 billion right in front of everybody and she's like, well, $2 billion.
That's what they do.
So now the stealing, now the looting, now the craziness has gotten so wild that I can't even imagine what's going to be next.
dan friesen
This is a great illustration of why you can't really just rely on Alex for information.
He's not interested in actually conveying what's real.
He just builds up stories.
This is day two of him covering this story about Bush signing the Deficit Reconciliation Act of 2005.
And at the start of the show, he claimed that he looked into this and even called Congress for comment.
He's acting like he's done a lot of original reporting and legwork that's backing up this coverage, but he still has a very basic detail of the story wrong.
This isn't about Bush signing a bill that has $2 billion more in pork that he gets to steal.
It's about Bush signing a bill that has $2 billion less in Medicare funding than the version of the bill that Democratic Representative Henry Waxman believed they were passing.
At this point in 2006, there really isn't even a story.
It's just a letter that Waxman has written raising this complaint.
Engaging with this story within the bounds of reality would require Alex to argue that Medicare should get $2 billion more in funding, which he can't do.
Bush signing a bill that didn't pass Congress is too exciting a headline to ignore.
So in order to cover this, he has to create a fake version of the story to entertain the audience, which is what he's doing.
And it doesn't mean anything.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
I think it's nice to start everything with like, it's a hoax and then have a take.
Like, I feel like you can't do that.
If you start with three things are hoaxes, then either you have to go into why they're hoaxes or just be like, and so is everything else.
Who fucking cares?
dan friesen
Everything is a hoax except the $2 billion that Bush signed.
That's a hoax, too, right?
jordan holmes
No, no, no.
That's free from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
That's completely different.
That $2 billion, completely unrelated.
dan friesen
Hey, buddy, take a hit of this and let me blow your mind about how money's a hoax.
jordan holmes
It's a hoax.
unidentified
What?
jordan holmes
Fuck.
But it's tied to the gold standard, right?
dan friesen
Gold's a hoax.
jordan holmes
Oh, no.
Wait, is gold a hoax?
unidentified
No.
dan friesen
I don't know.
I'm going to go audit Fort Knox, though.
jordan holmes
I think that would be.
Is any gold even real anymore?
dan friesen
I don't know.
jordan holmes
Did they just vaporize all the gold secretly while we weren't paying attention?
unidentified
Okay.
jordan holmes
Don't answer that like that was a legitimate question.
Did they vaporize all the gold?
dan friesen
I wasn't going to answer your question directly, but I did get lost in thought thinking about how I don't think I've ever touched gold.
Like, I probably have at some point or whatever, but like I've never, I've never held a gold coin.
I've never really held a gold coin?
I don't think so.
jordan holmes
Really?
dan friesen
You have?
Rich?
jordan holmes
I mean, I think so.
I think I've, I think, here's what I think happened.
I think I felt.
No, I guess, I mean, it was like a $10 little gold bar, right?
But that's probably just like a little lead with gold wrapped around it, right?
dan friesen
Maybe.
jordan holmes
You know, so I didn't really touch a gold bar.
You know, it's like one of those little things.
dan friesen
I have experience with the chocolate coins.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
I have experience with fool's gold.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
I know that.
But yeah, I can't think of any time I've engaged.
Because, you know, I watch the traders.
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
I've never seen that.
No, I've never seen any borrowed.
jordan holmes
No, I've never seen anything.
It does make you question whether or not they're real.
dan friesen
I'm saying maybe they did vaporize it.
jordan holmes
No, I've never seen one in person.
dan friesen
Yep.
So money, a hoax, obviously.
But Alex deals with there's some calls and a topic comes up of countries wanting to pay for oil in different currencies than dollars.
unidentified
Yeah.
So at one point, I was looking to the power hour this morning and they were making mention that something about in order for countries to purchase oil in the Arab state, they have to pay 40% of it in the Euro.
Have you heard anything about that?
alex jones
Yes, they are moving to a Euro-controlled petro dollar, and a lot of other of the Arab countries are also dumping some of their cash reserves and moving part of their reserves into the Euro.
Iran is moving entirely into the European Union denomination.
unidentified
All right.
Thank you very much.
alex jones
Thank you.
I appreciate the call.
dan friesen
So it is true that some countries, like Iran and Russia, have requested the countries purchasing their oil pay for it in Euros.
This isn't really an attack on the dollar.
It's not some kind of threat to the status of the dollar as the currency that's tied to oil.
It's a reflection of the U.S. sanctions against these countries and their desire to get paid in an unsanctioned currency.
Alex is reporting the idea of Iran wanting to be paid in Euros as a piece of a conspiracy where the Euro is meant to replace the dollar.
But in reality, Iran would prefer to use dollars if we didn't have them under heavy sanctions.
The EU is more reliant on oil imports from Iran and Russia, so they can't afford to fully cut off and sanction those industries.
While U.S. banks have frozen accounts that would be involved in these companies taking payment and dollars and converting that to the local currency or investing it in other stuff that uses the dollar.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
dan friesen
It's a hassle with the U.S. sanctions.
jordan holmes
It costs money to launder money.
dan friesen
There is a threat to the U.S. dollar's status as the currency that most of the world's economies use for trade, but it's not oil-producing countries accepting payments in other currencies.
It's the possibility that enough powerful economies could get together and form a new currency system that sidesteps the dollar because the benefit of basing their economic transactions on the dollar is outweighed by the volatility and other downsides that we present.
The guy that Alex helped get elected in the present day is going far out of his way to make this more likely because even, you know, the BRICS countries and shit, They understand that world economies work easier if the dollar is a go-between for like taking one currency and converting it to the dollar and then converting to another one as opposed to going from A to C.
It's just easier.
jordan holmes
It just is.
Citizen Rule Calls 00:04:27
dan friesen
Based on how we have everything set up.
And they wouldn't upset that balance unless there was a reason to.
That middle point is going to fall apart.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
And if I'm the other countries, right, and I'm looking at the United States, I'm going, whoof, this is rough now.
And then I'm thinking, maybe they, maybe they put it back together.
Maybe they get their system back together.
They, they figure stuff out.
They got that.
But I still know that they got another Trump in them.
It's not like they got rid of all the Trumps.
There's another Trump somewhere.
And if I'm seeing that, I'm seeing that as a risk.
dan friesen
Yeah, every country has a Trump in them and a potential for that.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
It's just, we need reassurances and stability to make sure that Trump can't destroy that currency.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
I'm just saying I would prefer to, I would be like, hey, I'll work with these other people.
dan friesen
Yeah.
And that could be part of a new world order that Alex is interested in bringing in.
jordan holmes
A new world order?
dan friesen
The new new.
unidentified
Okay.
jordan holmes
But not the old new world order.
dan friesen
Not the old new.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
Or the old old.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
Or the new old.
jordan holmes
Wait, which one's the new old one?
That was the new one.
The new world order is now the new old.
Yes.
dan friesen
And also the old new.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
It's the new old and the old.
unidentified
Oh, man.
jordan holmes
Those adjectives.
dan friesen
Yuck.
So Alex takes calls, and he gets a call from a guy that he knows, like someone who calls in and bothers him a lot.
And they argue, and Alex gets mad at him and then hangs up on him.
Then Alex gets a call from somebody who reassures him and makes him feel better.
And Alex is like, hey, that guy who I don't like, you should call back in and argue with this nice caller.
So that plays out.
jordan holmes
I like that.
dan friesen
I don't have any clips of it because it's just fucking dumb and it goes way too fucking long.
jordan holmes
Of course it does.
dan friesen
But yeah, Alex is like, I've got backup now.
Call back in, I dare you.
jordan holmes
That's so funny.
dan friesen
And then the two callers yell at each other for a bit.
And then that ends.
And Alex is a bit depressed.
He just is in kind of a bummed out state for the rest of the show.
I think he blew it.
jordan holmes
Well, he's just doing a call-in show and then his call-in big fight happens.
So now he's in kind of a post-coitus call-in.
dan friesen
Yeah, I think the serotonin's gone.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And so we end up with a call like this.
nehru in florida
I got a question for you, though.
Is there any way I can get a signed picture of you that I can post on my wall?
alex jones
You know, we don't really have any of the classical glamour shots or publicity shots that most talk show hosts have.
There are a whole bunch of free photos of me all over the web.
So print out the one you like and hang it on the wall.
And if you want something signed from me, that's what I would really like.
Well, the problem is, you know, I sell my signature, and not because I even want the money.
It's just that if I offer three, I'm not trying to brag.
jordan holmes
I want the money.
alex jones
I'm not going to be signing thousands a week.
And it would really be impossible to get any work done.
It's already annoying.
And I like doing it, but I run out of time.
I got all this serious stuff to do.
I'm sitting there signing my book, Descent to Tyranny.
If you get a Descent to Tyranny, sir, I'll sign it for you.
And I'd like to tell you, if you mailed me a citizen rule book and asked me to sign it, I might do it.
But then I'm going to get a bunch of requests for people that order citizen rule books and I sign those.
And I just really, it's not a good, it's not the best way to spend my time.
dan friesen
Just send the guy an autograph.
He's on his deathbed.
Listen to this guy.
jordan holmes
It could not hurt you.
Just going into this whole spiel hurts you more than just being like, yeah, probably.
dan friesen
What is the precedent I set by sending you an autograph?
jordan holmes
Don't care.
Don't need one.
Next time, say no.
This time, say yes.
Move on with your life.
Just send him a signed picture.
dan friesen
A couple bucks, maybe.
I'll sign a dollar for you.
jordan holmes
If he wants to S-A-S-E it, you know what?
Get me an envelope.
Print out that picture.
I'll sign that picture and send it right back to you.
You do 99% of the work and I'll sign it.
You know?
dan friesen
Let's flip this, Alex.
I want to send you an autographed picture of me.
How much does that cost?
Yeah, so that was just kind of sad.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Anyway, this show, this is a disaster.
This episode, no good.
It's Friday.
He wants to go home.
He's taking calls.
Whatever.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
You know, gets the two callers to fight each other for fun.
It's kind of boring and a dud.
unidentified
Yeah.
Martin Sheen Autograph 00:15:40
dan friesen
And so we're done with Friday.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
We're taking a weekend.
jordan holmes
There's something, there's something quaint and beautiful about the radio show where the guy knows the callers because it's not big enough yet, but it is still pretty big, you know?
There's something beautiful about that.
dan friesen
Yeah, when he knows some of them and is annoyed by some of them.
jordan holmes
Right, that's great.
But the problem there is, if it were good radio, it would stay that way, but it doesn't.
dan friesen
Yeah, I think that, you know, what you're talking about is exactly right.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
Like that vibe and that energy of, hey, I know this guy.
I'm pissed off by him.
That's what I want to hear.
I want to.
I would OD on that if Alex was providing it.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
It's just in practice, whatever mood he's in and however it's struck on this episode is no good.
jordan holmes
It's just not the way it works.
dan friesen
But maybe another day.
Who knows?
So we come back from the weekend.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
You show up on Monday.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
And there's big news over at InfoWars.
alex jones
Now, after the break here in a minute or two, we're going to come back and talk to Charlie Sheen for the full hour, for the rest of the hour.
And he's been in over 65 major motion pictures, has a couple more coming out this year.
Of course, he's the star, the biggest star on one of CBS's hit shows, and that's two and a half men.
And Charlie and I have had a chance to talk some in the last week or so.
And he's just got a few issues, a few questions he wants to bring up concerning 9-11 and what's happening here in America.
So believe me, you're not going to want to miss the interview.
unidentified
Was this this episode?
dan friesen
No, we've talked about Charlie Sheen being on the show before.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
We talked about when he destroyed his career.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
That's not this one.
jordan holmes
That's not this one.
unidentified
No.
Oh, my God.
dan friesen
2011.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
This is in 2006.
jordan holmes
I was about to freak out.
I was like, holy shit.
dan friesen
No, this is when, this is just after Alex met Charlie.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
They talked on the phone before this, and that was, they'd never met before that.
unidentified
Wow.
dan friesen
It's very clear.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
They're just getting to know each other.
jordan holmes
Wild.
You know what's weird about that?
There's one coincidence about that, right?
On the way here, I was walking and I was like, I wonder if everybody's gotten over the Kanye and he's like, apologized for being bipolar yet.
Has he?
Has Kanye, or is he still committed?
dan friesen
I know that he did do some apologizing.
I don't know how much that I don't know how much people cared.
jordan holmes
Right.
dan friesen
I don't know if he's been welcome to hear about anybody's good graces or anything.
I know that he did definitely repeat that part of the cycle since the Hale Hitler season.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
jordan holmes
Yep.
Yeah, yeah, we've moved on from that part.
dan friesen
We're in the season of whoops.
jordan holmes
Well, the reason I thought it was because I'm like, oh, we're in post-Tiger Blood, right?
That's where we're at.
dan friesen
Oh, not in 2006.
jordan holmes
No, no, no, no, that's what I'm saying.
For Kanye now, we're in post-Tiger Blood.
dan friesen
Yeah, we're in the sort of reflective part after the manic outburst.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
The anti-Semitic manicure.
unidentified
Right.
jordan holmes
Right.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So Charlie Sheen in 2006 is just a celebrity.
jordan holmes
Top of the world.
dan friesen
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It's on two and a half men.
jordan holmes
Killing it, highest paid guy, right?
dan friesen
I think so.
This is only a couple of years into the show.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
So I bet he was.
I bet he had a great salary.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
But there was still more to come.
Five more years of this show.
Exactly.
alex jones
Mr. Sheen, of course, he comes from an activist family.
Martin Sheen.
who is the star of the West Wing and has been immortalized by some of the movie roles that he has played, like Apocalypse Now, has always really stood up first to corruption by the federal government, especially warmongering.
And his son is somewhat of an activist.
In fact, both of his sons are somewhat of activists in their own right, though not as well known for activism as their father.
Well, I think that in the future, you'll be seeing Charlie Sheen standing up more and more to the issues that he's concerned about.
And he'll be doing some of that coming up in the next segment and talk about his hit show, Two and a Half Men, which a lot of people I talked to here in the office before Mr. Sheen was going to come on really excited because they're big fans of that broadcast that airs every week on CBS.
So we're going to go to break.
We're going to come back.
We're going to talk to Mr. Sheen for the rest of the hour.
And then coming up in the second and third hour, I'll get into all the government-sponsored terror news, the Iraq news, the police state news here in America, what the secret police are up to, and a lot more.
dan friesen
So I get that Alex probably isn't getting paid to have Charlie Sheen on the show, but there's no way to describe this as anything other than part of a promotional campaign for his show.
Alex is clearly promoting Two and a Half Men and talking about how the staff are excited because they like the show.
That's fine if you're doing a morning radio show or just some frivolous drivetime kind of thing, but Alex shouldn't be promoting CBS.
He thinks that the media is controlled by the globalists, and Two and a Half Men is one of the most successful shows on TV.
From Alex's point of view, there really isn't any way to imagine that the show would be on if it weren't doing the bidding of the globalists.
This illustrates the difficult position Alex has placed him in for himself in terms of the media.
His ideology requires that he demonize everything and everyone involved in making the banal shows that pacify the masses, and that's easy when none of them want to talk to you.
This is an easy position to maintain when you're not really turning something down.
The publicity and validation that you get from associating with celebrities, that was never really an option.
So aggressively pretending you're turning it down is a great way to create an iconoclastic image.
The problem arises when some celebrities want to start hanging out, and all of a sudden the choice is real.
If you choose to keep your distance, then you're leaving money on the table, but at least you're not a conspiracy theorist shilling for primetime CBS sitcom.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
If you make the other decision and decide to associate with the celebrity, then you have to come up with an excuse for how the media is still bad and controlled by the globalists, but what you're doing is cool.
The correct choice if you want to do a serious show is to not interview Charlie Sheen.
There isn't some amazing insight he has into what happened on 9-11 because he's a famous actor.
The value that he brings to Alex is that he's a very famous actor who could be presented as co-signing everything Alex says.
The choice to interview him reveals that Alex is, in fact, interested in chasing celebrity, which isn't wrong in and of itself.
It's only wrong because of the way Alex presents himself and how he chooses to present this interview.
Alex and his employees are supposed to be the last humans who can see through the devil's evil plans, and they work around the clock to counter him.
But now we're hearing that a bunch of them love two and a half men, one of the most run-of-the-mill sitcoms on the air.
I'd understand if they watched two and a half men as part of their studying the globalists' message so they could find predictive programming buried in the easy jokes, but that's not what Alex is saying.
Alex has to glaze Sheen, CBS, and Two and a Half Men because he wants to have a friendly interview with Charlie, and it works out so well for him.
Alex is able to insinuate himself into Charlie's life to the point where Charlie has a meltdown on Alex's show five years later that gets him fired from two and a half men.
Charlie descends down a very dark point from there, but Alex is able to use his proximity to the story to go on the view, exploiting his connection with Sheen to boost his profile.
And it wouldn't have been possible without Alex promoting CBS back here in 2006.
And just to be clear, at this point, Sumner Redstone is the head of CBS, and he's a billionaire who donates to a ton of Democratic politicians, but supported Bush in the 2004 election.
He's everything Alex is supposed to be.
jordan holmes
I mean, it was wartime.
unidentified
All right.
jordan holmes
You have to support the wartime president.
dan friesen
And John Kerry.
But like, look, this is bullshit.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
You can't be like, oh, a lot of my staff loves this two and a half men coming up tonight on CBS.
Go check it out.
Like, this is, that's not you, man.
unidentified
All right.
jordan holmes
So here's the thing, right?
So the globalists, they're smart.
They're not these dumb globalists.
They're not going to make the number one watch show on television the globalist mouthpiece.
That would be too obvious.
They make every other show on television the globalist mouthpiece, but the number one show they leave completely alone.
dan friesen
Okay.
unidentified
See?
dan friesen
This seems arbitrary.
jordan holmes
It does feel that way, doesn't it?
Almost like somebody would just make it up on the spot.
dan friesen
Also, they seem to have an amazing ability to tell what is going to be the number one show.
jordan holmes
Yeah, it's pretty crazy, isn't it?
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
They're really good at it.
dan friesen
I don't think that anyone would have predicted like lost would be as big of a hit.
jordan holmes
No, but that's why it was globalist controlled because they knew it wasn't going to be as big of a hit.
dan friesen
I'm following you.
jordan holmes
I'm not.
I literally am not following me anymore.
dan friesen
Okay.
jordan holmes
I lost where I was.
dan friesen
Yeah, I think Alex has too.
jordan holmes
Yep.
dan friesen
I think this is embarrassing.
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
Our staff loves the show.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
Tune in.
jordan holmes
Yeah, this is very Jimmy Fallon.
You can be Jimmy Fallon if you're Jimmy Fallon.
You can't be Jimmy Fallon if you're Alex Jones.
dan friesen
No.
jordan holmes
That's not how it works.
dan friesen
No, and you can't just decide that because someone is willing to talk to you and be friendly with you that they're one of the good celebrities.
That makes the definition of who's good and bad way too obvious and arbitrary.
jordan holmes
Who likes me versus who doesn't like me?
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Oh, well.
So Alex introduces Charlie by talking about Martin Sheen.
And he referenced Martin Sheen in that last clip.
But he talks more about his activism.
alex jones
And when I got a chance to talk to Charlie Sheen, I was just amazed because I've talked to a lot of other big Hollywood people.
We've got a few of them on this show.
And they call me up sometimes, say, hey, you're doing a great job.
Or I'm buying 50 copies of your video.
And I'm like, no, here, just take it.
But they're not as informed, I have to be honest, as Charlie Sheen.
I mean, I talked to this guy like an hour and a half yesterday, and he just really knows what's going on on the planet today.
But that shouldn't surprise me.
His father, Martin Sheen, has been on the front lines.
As Mark Twain said in the beginning, a patriot is a scarce man, hated and feared and scorned.
But in time, when his cause succeeds, the Tim had joined him because then it cost nothing to be a patriot.
And of course, it's been proven right time and time again.
It was his father in the days leading up to the war that was the most vocal spokesman in America against this disastrous conflict.
Everything he said has now come true.
And of course, Charlie Sheen and his brother are also activists in their own right.
And we are just incredibly honored to have Charlie Sheen on with us for the balance of this hour.
Mr. Sheen, good to have you with us.
nehru in florida
Nice to be here, Alex.
How are you?
alex jones
I'm great.
Before we get into the really serious stuff, tell me a little bit about Two and a Half Man.
nehru in florida
Oh, gosh, we're thrilled.
We are at the end of our third season.
We have three more shows to shoot.
Most sitcoms will shoot 22 episodes, but because the network always wants more product, we do 24.
So our season will continue when all the other shows have shut down.
But it's going good.
It's going really good.
We've found ourselves sort of in or around the top 10 for most of this year.
And we found out we got picked up for next season, which is fabulous.
And what's happening is they're using our show to launch new shows, which is the sign of great confidence and trust in us sort of being the anchor of that Monday night lineup, you know?
So with that, I should probably throw out a shameless plug on tonight's show, if that's all right.
alex jones
Oh, sure.
Tell us about tonight's show.
nehru in florida
Tonight's show is your title.
It's entitled The Spit-Covered Cobbler.
And it's funny because we'll always relate to a line of dialogue.
And so it's about my brother Alan, played by John Cryer.
And he's dating a girl who has no money.
And so he doesn't have any money himself.
I sort of support him on the show because I took him in when he went to a divorce with his kid, played by Angus Jones, right?
And so he's dealing with a woman, April Bowlby, who plays Candy on the show.
dan friesen
So 9-11, right?
alex jones
Wow.
dan friesen
It definitely feels like Alex wants to talk about some stuff that at least looks like it's important for the Infowar, but Charlie wants to promote the show.
They appear to be on different pages, and it's a bit uncomfortable to hear Alex fake laugh as Charlie tells him the plot of tonight's episode in a bit more detail than we need.
Maybe trim it up.
Also, Alex should hate Martin Sheen.
He's a guy who's participated at civil disobedience throughout his life and has been a lifelong Democrat.
He's had stances that Alex could agree with, like the fact that he's been publicly quite anti-abortion, but Martin Sheen always did campaign work and promotion for anti-abortion Democrat candidates.
His opposition to abortion didn't trick him into thinking that he had some common cause with the GOP and was part of a larger belief he had in life, like anti-war kinds of like thing that it all blended together, and that's where it came from, as opposed to some religious zealot conviction that Alex has.
jordan holmes
Right, right, right, right.
dan friesen
Alex absolutely does hate Martin Sheen and everything that he stands for, but he also knows that his brand in 2006 relies on his ability to not look like a white identity lunatic to the folks on the left who are really mad about the Iraq war.
Sheen is a big anti-war activist, so Alex needs to pretend to respect him for show.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
So the audience thinks, oh, he's on our side.
jordan holmes
Yep.
Yeah.
And anytime you get any questions or any feelings, just be like, oh, remember in Apocalypse Now, tell me about Dennis Hopper.
That's all you got to do.
You just move back to Apocalypse Now and you're good.
dan friesen
You can.
jordan holmes
Yeah, right?
dan friesen
Yeah, I think that if Alex had a real accounting of what he believes and his positions, he should be like, hey, your dad sucks.
jordan holmes
Yeah, he really should.
He would also say he was pretty great in hot shots, part due.
unidentified
Part du.
Yeah.
Yep.
dan friesen
That's fair.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
So Alex has had enough of hearing about the plot of this episode of Two and a Half Man.
jordan holmes
Haven't we all?
dan friesen
Yes.
So he wants to bring up 9-11.
And Charlie's like, you know what, dude?
I'm a fan of your work.
I like you.
jordan holmes
I like 9-11.
alex jones
You have some questions about the official 9-11 story, and we got hooked up because we both mutually have been looking into that.
And I want to just, I guess, start by what happened on 9-11, what your instincts told you, and really just go from there.
nehru in florida
Well, it was interesting.
And let me just preface that by saying that I've been a fan of yours for a long time, and I've been following you, and I've seen all of your documentaries, and your research is tireless.
Urban Warfare Training 00:15:09
nehru in florida
And it's interesting because a lot of these guys, you sort of look behind the notes and you start to discover inconsistencies in a lot of the claims that they're making, which pretty much torpedoes the credibility of most of their substance.
But with you, that's not the case.
dan friesen
So one thing that's interesting is that Charlie says he's been following Alex for years and watched his documentaries, but he doesn't say that he listens to the show.
If he did, I think that the point he's making about Alex's claims being super consistent would be hard to defend.
At this point, Alex hasn't made Endgame or the Obama deception.
So the only documentaries he made are the police state ones, the Bohemian Grove one, and America Destroyed by Design.
These are all bullshit, but I can understand how Charlie could watch them and feel like they weren't like other conspiracy theorist trash, where you look under the hood and it all just falls apart.
And the reason for this is that Alex's documentaries are mostly self-referential, which is a big part of why it's always been hard for me to find a way to cover them on our show.
Most of it is just about creating a feeling and then telling you where that feeling should be directed, but there's no truth or falsity to any of it.
For example, in one of them, Alex shows a bunch of B-roll footage that he shot at an urban warfare training exercise.
In it, you can see people dressed in military-style outfits storming what appear to be suburban American homes.
The people running this exercise would tell you that the troops are fighting in urban areas overseas, and doing these exercises in approximations of the area they're going to be in is important for training.
Meanwhile, Alex shows the footage and claims that their troops training specifically to later raid suburban American homes.
That's what the footage looks like.
So obviously, the people who would say that it's training for operations in other countries like Iraq must be lying.
In service of making his point, Alex can flash up and reference unrelated and out-of-context documents, some of them fake.
He can play out-of-context clips of people saying things that reinforce his point, like the clip we discussed a while back of a person in one of these training exercises improvising a line about being an American, and all of it is meant to build up and reinforce the feeling that Alex is selling.
But there's nowhere to really go with fact-checking.
Charlie can't research any of this any further because Alex is selling a feeling and reporting on people's intentions.
He's telling you that the military is running these urban warfare exercises because they intend to use these tactics against the U.S., but you could never confirm this.
If you reached out to them, they'd give you the answer about overseas urban conflict situations, and you'd be back where you started.
And the reality is that Charlie didn't and doesn't fact-check any of these things that Alex says on these tapes.
But what he's telling Alex is more that he enjoys the feelings those tapes give him.
The feelings are consistent through Alex's films, which feels like the same thing as Alex having all of his facts in order, and you checked his notes, and it's all good.
The feeling is good.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So Charlie's kind of dumb.
jordan holmes
You know, I'm thinking about this, right?
And I'm thinking, if his angle, if he had his, if his angle was this, right?
I don't want them training in these situations, not because I don't want them to have success in Iraq or because I think they're not going to use it in Iraq.
I don't want them to train because I want operational advantage should they ever be sent to us.
I'm training in suburban warfare to make sure that when they come here, I'll have the advantage, right?
I can't let them train in suburban warfare, too.
dan friesen
That's coherent.
jordan holmes
That is, well, at least.
I mean, it's somewhat coherent.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
But yeah.
dan friesen
I could see that being like an That's not what Alex is saying, but it is it would it would be like, all right, we must study what they do in urban warfare in order to be prepared militarily for that.
unidentified
Yeah.
Right.
jordan holmes
So then the angle there would be like, I kind of want them to lose in foreign wars.
dan friesen
I guess so.
jordan holmes
I guess that's kind of the point.
dan friesen
That would preclude them from doing that.
jordan holmes
It would make it very difficult, yeah.
dan friesen
That's also not Alex's point.
jordan holmes
No, I hope they lose.
It's probably not going to be a good point in 2006, especially.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
His point is mostly selling those DVDs with sensationalized and out-of-context shit.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So Charlie, he's been doing his own research.
jordan holmes
Ooh, that's always a good sign.
Yeah, it is, especially if you're charged.
nehru in florida
This is tough for me because for the longest time, I've been doing my own independent research.
And, you know, I don't claim to be an expert in any of these fields, but just as a concerned, upstanding, tax-paying American citizen, there's just questions I have that I wish somebody could explain away for me.
There's things that one will view and then look at the Keene Commission's official report.
And it just, as I heard somebody once say, might have been you, there's holes in the story you could fly a Boeing jet through.
alex jones
Oh, there certainly is.
In fact, we were talking yesterday, and you said over the phone that the biggest conspiracy theory is the official story.
I mean, at every point, it's a fabrication.
It's a lie.
Would you elaborate on that?
nehru in florida
Well, yeah, it's like they want to just pigeonhole all of us into this group of conspiracy nutbags when we're not really debating things that are related to UFOs bringing down the towers or Building 7 or the Pentagon, right?
And so it just, you know, it just feels like, you know, there's things in there that we're not the conspiracy theorists on this particular issue, you know?
dan friesen
I will accept Charlie's point that he doesn't like the idea of everyone who doesn't believe the official story of 9-11 being painted as the same kind of conspiracy theorist.
At this point in American history, after 9-11 and in the Iraq war, the media really didn't have to take the various different versions of weirdos out there all that seriously because social media hadn't become ubiquitous and the iPhone wasn't even released.
There's a lot of nuance and difference between people who thought that the story of 9-11 didn't add up and people who thought the UFOs took down the towers were an entirely different crew.
jordan holmes
They were.
They were separate back then.
dan friesen
But the media really couldn't treat them as all that different.
They could get away with treating them all as in the same basket back then.
It's worth noting that the people who thought UFOs took the towers down didn't really exist.
There might have been a few of them on message boards somewhere, but in terms of conspiracy theorists, there really were just the same two sides there always is.
The side that thinks things don't add up and are seeking explanations for it, and the side that wants to blame their scapegoat group for everything, who are just going to distort all information they find to serve that goal.
I'm interested in Charlie's seeming inability to articulate anything that resembles a question that he can't get an answer to.
He wants answers to these questions, and throughout that whole clip, he didn't say anything specific.
unidentified
No.
dan friesen
He just said platitudes and like, why won't anyone answer my questions, man?
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And it seems like he's about to, on multiple occasions, say something specific.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And then he stops.
jordan holmes
Then he pulls back.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
I don't know why exactly, but that was a strong feeling that I got from him.
jordan holmes
I feel, here's what I'm, here's what I'm getting.
Right.
I am imagining a version of It's a Wonderful Life with Alex.
And then if you like, just really go back through and see the way that he's touched people and like, oh man, if you weren't there, I bet things would have been so much better.
I bet things would have been so much better.
He's got the worst It's a Wonderful Life ever.
At the end of it, he's like, that makes me want to jump.
And they're like, yeah, that's why we did it.
That's what we're here for.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
You got to go, dude.
dan friesen
It's so weird to look at this with the knowledge that he essentially is complicit in ruining Charlie's life.
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
It's so wild.
It's so wild.
dan friesen
Charlie Gene's a big boy.
He can make his own decisions.
Obviously, Alex isn't responsible for any of that.
Man, he played a particular role in a way that he should have known better.
jordan holmes
As a bipolar type one person, right?
In these situations, I'm not always in control.
And I definitely hope I'm not meeting somebody at the time who's going to point me the way Alex does.
You know, like when you're manic, you're like an arrow going whatever direction as fast as possible.
And if you let that guy point you, you're fucked.
dan friesen
Yeah, because he wants to profit off whatever direction you're going in.
jordan holmes
Yep.
dan friesen
So I got this strong feeling that Charlie was like about to bring up specifics of the questions that he has, but kept pulling back.
And I think that Alex got the same sense.
nehru in florida
It seems to me, like, you know, 19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four commercial airliners and hitting 75% of their targets, that feels like a conspiracy theory.
alex jones
Well, I tell you, back in 2001, everybody admits that cell phones didn't work over 3,000 feet.
How are they working at 33,000, 32,000 feet?
How did Al-Qaeda make NORAD stand down?
Did Al-Qaeda call Mayor Willie Brown of San Francisco as the Chronicle reported and say don't fly to New York?
No, the White House did.
Did Al-Qaeda call Salmon Rushi and say, don't fly to New York on September 11th?
No, the Times of London reported that the White House did.
Did Al-Qaeda run drills, CIA, and Pentagon drills on the morning of 9-11 of hijacked jets hitting those exact same targets at those exact same times and then drills the day before and drills two weeks before?
nehru in florida
Yeah, the answer to that would be probably not.
dan friesen
I think that Alex could sense the same ambivalence that I felt in that last clip.
And Sheen wasn't coming up with any specific talking points.
He was saying that he had questions, but wasn't being specific about anything.
And I suspect that's why Alex launched into that barrage of talking points.
These are supposed to be the anomalies that represent the questions that they just can't get answers to.
This is really how Alex's rhetoric works.
If you're in a conversation with someone and they hit you with that, there is no way to respond.
He's referenced like 10 different things, some of which you probably don't know anything about.
And the aggressive tone that he's taking is meant to make it clear that he's ready to defend any of these things if you push back on them.
But they're all pretty hollow.
And I don't count any of that as Charlie having questions about those things.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
He's having them projected onto him, but he didn't bring these up.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
We've talked about pretty much all those points in the past, and the only thing that Charlie seems to be bringing to the table himself is that he thinks that 19 amateurs would have more trouble taking over planes and that they hit too many of their targets.
That's a fine concern to have, but I don't know how anyone is supposed to argue that with him.
He thinks that taking over a plane is too hard for them to have pulled off, but he's not going to accept anyone who takes the position that apparently taking over a plane was easier than we wanted to believe in 2001.
He thinks they should have hit less than 75% of their targets, but what would Charlie need to hear to decide that it's possible for hijackers to have this level of accuracy?
How are these things possible to argue?
Are these actually questions that Charlie has that no one can answer for him?
Or are they feelings that he has that no one's been able to help reassure him about?
I kind of think it's the latter, and that Alex knows that he can easily hijack feelings and make them seem like questions.
And that one of the best ways to do that is this flood of supposed anomalies that gets you off your back foot and makes you like, well, I can't, I don't have answers for any of those things.
And they just reinforce the same feeling.
jordan holmes
Yeah, because if your questions are, if your questions literally are like, I don't think they could hijack planes and I don't think they should hit that many targets, then what if the answers are just like, yeah, it was too easy to hijack planes and anybody who hijacks shit is going to hit somewhere between 25 and 75% of their targets.
They got lucky and hit the high end.
Or they could have just tripped and fallen and not hijacked any plane.
It's just random.
Life is chaos.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Maybe it's not entirely random in the rolling the dice sense of it, but like, yeah, they hit 25 to 75 percent of their targets.
We got unlucky that we live in a reality where they were at their highest point.
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
dan friesen
And like, yeah, it should be harder to take over a plane.
unidentified
It should be.
dan friesen
That's one of the lessons 9-11 certainly taught people.
jordan holmes
I agree.
dan friesen
That changes are made.
Is it satisfying enough to say there were a lot of naiveties that we operated with at early September 2001?
That's not satisfying.
That's not going to.
jordan holmes
No, it is like the world didn't operate that we thought it did, the way we thought it did, in a more unsafe way than we thought it was, right?
But Alex's point is, well, then what we're going to do is make it seem like the world is the least safe place in the world.
dan friesen
No, no.
The world is entirely safe, except for all of these things that the evil people are doing.
Right.
9-11 only happened because these evil people fucking did it, not because, well, it's something that can happen in the chaos and randomness of the world.
The world is fucking so safe.
If it weren't for these fucking globalists.
jordan holmes
If it weren't for these fucking globalists.
dan friesen
Yeah.
Silly.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Anyway, I think Charlie, for the most part, doesn't want to talk in specifics.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
I think that's all that Alex is doing in this interview.
nehru in florida
No, it's just the more you look at stuff, especially specific incidents, specific events around the Fateful Day, it just raises a lot of questions.
There's a lot of questions, and I know that a couple of years ago, it was severely unpopular to discuss any of this.
But it sort of feels like, just in my research and in the people that I talk to and in and around my circles, it seems like the worm is turning.
Because you start talking about this, even with conservative Republicans, and they can't really debate away some of the most obvious facts.
dan friesen
What are the obvious facts?
jordan holmes
What are the obvious facts?
dan friesen
Worm is turned.
You start talking about this stuff.
The fateful day.
Controlled Demolitions 00:04:52
dan friesen
Like, he feels to me like somebody who doesn't really have anything, but is cool.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And the only thing you're getting out of this interview is networking.
Like, he's just networking with Charlie.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Charlie doesn't have like some great truth to give him about 9-11.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
There's nothing that he's uncovered in his research that makes him a valuable source.
The only thing is feeling associated.
Alex is associated with this really, really famous rich guy.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
And the audience by proxy can feel associated too.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
That's what this interview achieves.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
And Alex is trying to make it more.
He's trying to give him the smorgasbord.
unidentified
Yes.
jordan holmes
You pick one.
I'll take any of these.
You don't trust this?
Let's talk about that.
And because Charlie's not really taking the bait, which is interesting, again, in the context of how we know Charlie's career goes, you know, like this is when he's like, I'm not going to take the bait.
dan friesen
But I think he's taking the bait and being like, I'm comfortable with the fact that this is a baited hook.
jordan holmes
He's dipping his toes in the water.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're right.
You're right.
He won't let him.
dan friesen
He's using one of the buffet options that Alex is setting out in front of it, but it's not because he's against eating.
jordan holmes
Sure.
dan friesen
It's, I think, probably because he's like, I don't know.
I don't know.
jordan holmes
I don't know enough of what he says.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
jordan holmes
I don't feel like I want to put myself out on the limb for this.
dan friesen
He doesn't realize that Alex is not going to be like, what you don't know about NORAD?
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
dan friesen
He could just, Alex will yes and whatever he chooses.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
That's just Alex wanting to be like, get more involved, get more associated in this.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
And so finally, they do kind of get to something they can sink teeth into.
unidentified
Okay.
dan friesen
And that is Building 7.
jordan holmes
All right.
dan friesen
Building 7 got pulled, my man.
unidentified
Sure.
nehru in florida
Yeah, and then you've got Silverstein, the leaseholder, the owner of 7, as well as the rest of the complex, right?
On tape on the record, saying, We've had such a terrible loss of life that day, and I made the decision that they should go ahead and pull it.
alex jones
And we gave the order and watched the building come down.
unidentified
Yeah.
nehru in florida
Well, pull is the, I mean, that's his coming to the demo world as action and cut, the movie world.
alex jones
In fact, in the same PBS documentary narrated by Kevin Spacey, or not Kevin Spacey, the other guy, he comes right out and says they cut to one of the other engineers demoing a building, and he says we're getting ready to pull it.
dan friesen
This is the kind of evidence that Alex provides.
And it's not really evidence, but it looks enough like it that it can trick people in documentaries pretty easily.
Larry Silverstein said that they decided to, quote, pull it in an interview about 9-11.
And Alex is presenting this as proof that he gave the order to carry out the controlled demolition.
unidentified
Sure.
dan friesen
The problem is that on its own, this isn't proof of anything.
In context, it's pretty clear that Silverstein was talking about the decision to pull the firefighters from the building because he's describing a conversation that he had with the fire department commander.
That guy had told Silverstein that they weren't confident they could control the fire in Building 7.
So when they said pull it, they were talking about getting the firefighters out and letting the fire burn out on its own.
unidentified
Right, right.
jordan holmes
We're trying to save people's lives instead of letting them die in part of a fire that they can't even fight.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
In order to prop up his own interpretation of what Silverstein said, Alex has some video of demolition people saying pull it before they take down a building.
It's a different building and it has nothing to do with 9-11, but they use the same words.
So this must mean something.
Whenever someone uses the words pull it, they must be talking about controlled demolitions.
We have a remarkable language where the same words can be used in many different situations.
Lighted up could be used by someone turning on a lighting rig or by someone who has a joint in their hand or by someone telling a group of soldiers to open fire.
If you had a video of a lighting person saying that they decided to light it up, and then you played a video of a soldier saying light it up before shooting into a building, you could create the image that the lighting person was giving a kill order, but it wouldn't mean anything.
unidentified
No.
dan friesen
And this is the same kind of game that they're playing.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
And I don't, I don't, it's sad.
It's just, come on, guys.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
I mean, it really does point out the failings of language whenever you contextually it requires so fucking much.
You know, like we're playing from behind the gun.
There's no way to contextually defeat somebody who can just remove it at will.
Like, that was how great it was before we had recorded stuff.
You didn't know if somebody said that.
You couldn't trust anybody.
Now it's on recording.
Can't trust it.
dan friesen
But now, yeah, you have a recording and like that could mean a hundred different fucking things.
unidentified
Yep.
jordan holmes
It's all insane.
dan friesen
Yeah, now we have fake recordings and deep fakes.
jordan holmes
Terrible.
There's no.
You know what?
Pearl Harbor Investigation 00:15:03
jordan holmes
Dan?
It's a hoax.
It's all a hoax.
dan friesen
This is what I was trying to get.
jordan holmes
This is a hoax.
unidentified
The mercantile.
jordan holmes
The whole thing is a hoax.
The Chicago of the MET.
dan friesen
But that was the reason that I kept that clip in and decided to discuss it was that it was something that Charlie brought up.
That was a specific that Charlie brought up.
So when he has these questions that can't be answered, this seems to be an example of one of those things.
And I'm trying to illustrate the shallowness of these questions that aren't really questions.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And so we have another one here from the Sheen Man.
nehru in florida
Let me ask you, though, how long did it take to start an investigation after, I don't know, Pearl Harbor?
alex jones
About a day.
unidentified
Okay.
nehru in florida
The Titanic.
alex jones
It started that day.
nehru in florida
JFK.
alex jones
Started that day.
unidentified
Yeah.
nehru in florida
9-11?
alex jones
Started about a year later.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
The investigation of all of these things started immediately in a nonspecific sense that folks were asking questions about them and the government was trying to figure out how to respond.
In order to actually look at Charlie's question, we have to just deal with the official investigation, which for 9-11 was the 9-11 Commission, which they said took too long to start.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
That commission was established on November 27th, 2002, which may feel like a long time after the actual event.
However, let's look at some of the other examples that Charlie brings up.
He asks Alex about Pearl Harbor, and Alex says that investigation began the day later.
As we know from the famous quote, Pearl Harbor, that attack happened on December 7th, 1941, a day that will live in infamy.
In Congress, the Joint Committee on the Investigation of the Pearl Harbor attack was not established until September 6th, 1945.
jordan holmes
What?
dan friesen
Four years later.
jordan holmes
It's almost like they had other things on their mind immediately.
dan friesen
Sure.
jordan holmes
Should cut, bip.
dan friesen
But in fairness, in December 1941, President FDR did create a panel to investigate the attack headed by Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts, which became the Roberts Commission.
They directed blame at a few U.S. Navy men who were derelict in their duty and raised concerns about Japanese spies, which became part of the rationale for the internment of Japanese Americans.
jordan holmes
Good stuff.
dan friesen
So from that information, it looks like maybe Pearl Harbor was investigated much more quickly, but that's to pretend that the 9-11 Commission was the first investigation into 9-11.
The joint inquiry into intelligence community activities began in February 2002.
The point is, as it relates to 9-11, as is the case for all of these tragedies, there were investigations that were launched quickly.
And then as more information was gathered, a full official investigation could be carried out.
Usually, the preliminary ones, like the February 2002 investigation with 9-11 and the Roberts commission with Pearl Harbor, were focused on the question: how did this happen?
Looking at intelligence or leadership failures that could have been responsible.
This happens because, in theory, we should know everything we need to know to carry out that investigation.
It has to do with us, our troops, our readiness.
Those kinds of things are easier to immediately assess, like, where are the holes here?
And that's what you see in these tragedies, the immediate investigations.
Yeah, you can't do a 9-11 commission investigation until there is a little bit of distance.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And that's the same for every one of these examples that he lists.
jordan holmes
I mean, all of the examples that he lists, too, the main investigations were not like, like, how would I put it?
They were commissioned on the sense of like, hey, let's fucking do it.
You know, they're not commissioned on like, oh, why hasn't anybody done this before?
They're like, we've got all of this shit.
We've got all this evidence all over the place.
These people have their ideas.
These people have their ideas.
These people, all this stuff is over there.
So here's what we're going to do.
We're going to get you guys and you fucking do the whole thing.
Right?
That takes so much time just to get started because you don't even know how much evidence you have.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Right?
You don't know who you need to collect from.
dan friesen
It's true.
jordan holmes
And you definitely don't know how you're going to discover who got here from what place if you're just starting a war.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And like, let's even look at his list.
One of them was the Titanic.
Like 9-11 or Pearl Harbor, those are attacks.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Pearl Harbor, sorry, the Titanic sunk.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
Like that, obviously there needs to be an investigation of that, but it's not like it was sunk by a belligerent country.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
It's sunk by a belligerent drunk and an iceberg.
And those fucking time travelers that didn't save the ship.
jordan holmes
They were supposed to save the ship.
dan friesen
Fucking ton of assholes.
jordan holmes
They saved us from the meteor, but they can't save us from it.
It doesn't make sense.
dan friesen
But like comparing those two or having this list is, it reveals a little bit of the.
I don't think your point is serious.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
This is a meme conspiracy.
This is like a post that you'd see that's supposed to blow people's minds, but there isn't the depth to it.
jordan holmes
There is no situation where that like that is just a structure that you cannot trust inherently.
Like, when did this start?
The next day.
I don't believe you.
I already don't believe you.
unidentified
Right.
jordan holmes
You answered too quick.
The next day isn't possible.
Who the fuck who got to work?
When did they show up?
unidentified
9 a.m.?
dan friesen
The exchange between them isn't meant to reflect reality and when investigations started.
It's a call and response church kind of feeling.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
Between the two of them.
It's affirmation of faith.
jordan holmes
We're just going to believe this.
I don't need any more information.
dan friesen
Yep.
So what they do want, not more information.
unidentified
Nope.
dan friesen
But an independent investigation.
jordan holmes
Oh, everybody loves a good investigation.
dan friesen
We got to get to the bottom of it.
jordan holmes
Independently.
alex jones
More than half of Americans in major polls want some type of real investigation.
What would you like to see?
nehru in florida
I would like to see the same thing.
I think it's got to be headed by, if this is possible, some neutral investigative committee.
I don't know exactly how to establish that.
Well, the problem is, you know, you would know more about that than I would.
alex jones
Well, the problem is they tried to, again, appoint Henry Kissinger and they called him independent.
It was like appointing one of Janet Reno's deputies to investigate Waco and calling it independent.
What would be independent?
Maybe just randomly pick 20 engineers or something and then draft them for a committee and then make sure no one tried to intimidate the witnesses.
I mean, maybe just a jury of the peers.
nehru in florida
What if we use like retired political foreign nationals?
What if we use experts that don't have any ties whatsoever to this administration?
alex jones
Well, Michael Meetscher, a number three in the Blair government, says that he believes the government may be behind it.
And then we have a couple of former German defense minister saying the same thing.
And a bunch of other Russian and other foreign leaders are saying the same thing.
Over 80% of the French public and major polls say our government did it.
So, boy, we got foreigners to do it.
I think they come to the same conclusion we have.
unidentified
Foreigners.
nehru in florida
But I'm just saying, as far as people that don't have a stake or don't have an interest or don't aren't controlled.
alex jones
Oh, I agree with you.
I agree with you.
I'm just saying that they would come to the same conclusion.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
That's stupid.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
But it's amazing how Alex's mind works.
They're talking about how they could put together a neutral, unbiased committee to investigate 9-11.
And all of the people Alex can come up with to include are people who agree with his conclusion already.
The most biased people doesn't want an unbiased committee.
He wants a committee that's pre-biased towards his conclusion.
And that's actually really key to understanding him.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
And actually, unbiased neutral jury might not always convict Alex, but they would never be persuaded by the arguments he'd be able to make in a formal setting.
And actually, unbiased neutral committee wouldn't reach the conclusion that, hey, maybe loose change figured 9-11 out.
unidentified
Nailed it.
dan friesen
That conclusion is only coming from a rigged, highly biased committee, which is what Alex actually wants.
He just insists on calling it unbiased because it sounds better, and he's an idiot.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
God, I couldn't get this image out of my head whenever he was like, oh, we should get a bunch of foreign nationals to do it who have no.
I had this like it's like an Oceans movie.
I had this moment where Osama bin Laden turns around and like removes his mustache and you're like, ah, it was him.
And he's leading the commission.
God, that'd be great.
Yeah, I mean, it wouldn't be great to have Osama leading the investigation.
No, but it would be a very funny image.
dan friesen
And don't get me wrong, I don't think Kissinger's great either.
jordan holmes
No, I agree.
dan friesen
I think these are both bad options.
bad dudes but i i love the idea that alex the fucking americana guy is like let's get uh yeah you know what charlie sheen actor You have made a wonderful point about foreign nationals deciding what happened with our government.
jordan holmes
I don't think you can sincerely want foreign nationals to do an investigation if you also call them foreigners in the same sentence.
dan friesen
And so Charlie's idea is retired, like public servants of foreign countries.
jordan holmes
People who are just servants of all.
dan friesen
And Alex is, he's like, okay, I know a few of them.
And then he remembers a trivia piece that 80% of the French believe that 9-11 was an inside job.
So what?
Now we just want a jury of the French?
jordan holmes
Yeah, let's just let the French.
They gave us the Statue of Liberty, and now they're going to free us from 9-11 conspiracies.
Thank you, the French.
dan friesen
The fun thing is just like thoughts like that reveal how non-sequitur his thinking is.
You don't want the fucking French?
jordan holmes
I don't even know how you could get to a point where you're like, hey, 80% of the French think it's an inside job as support for anything.
dan friesen
Yeah.
unidentified
Anything.
dan friesen
Except for cheese.
jordan holmes
Wow.
dan friesen
You don't like cheese, though.
jordan holmes
I'm not a cheese guy.
I tried cheese in Paris.
dan friesen
Yeah, let's not get into it.
So Alex, the first hour is interviewing Charlie Sheen.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And it's basically, as I've described, you know, he's ambivalent to take responsibility for saying too much stuff, but also he's on board.
He likes Alex.
He is into these conspiracy leanings in a way that is so sadly unaware of how much of a consequence this will have.
jordan holmes
I know.
dan friesen
But yeah, you shouldn't do this in the first hour.
jordan holmes
It is so strange.
It's like, right, you're seeing somebody on that street over there, right?
And you just know because five years later they get hit by a bus.
You know that you can see a five-year-from-now bus coming.
And you're like, you just got to move out of the way, man.
But there's nothing you can do.
dan friesen
Much like the people from the time tunnel on the Titanic.
You can do nothing.
jordan holmes
You can't do anything to change the past.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Unless you were already supposed to have done that.
dan friesen
That sucks.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Anyway, you shouldn't do this in the first hour because what do you do for the rest of the show?
jordan holmes
Three hours of calling.
dan friesen
Whatever.
jordan holmes
Whatever.
dan friesen
So at the second hour, Alex is, I mean, he's riding high on the fact that he interviewed Charlie Sheen, but also like, everything feels down.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
But it turns out some of their stations didn't air all of them.
alex jones
Well, you know what happened?
Our AM and FM conspiracy that listened off of the satellites were able to hear the whole Charlie Sheen interview.
But 15 minutes towards the end of the interview, about 45 after last hour, all of the streams, and I mean, there are a bunch of streams.
I've got servers, the network has servers.
It just maxed out and crashed.
So what I'm going to do is, that interview is so important as more and more prominent people go public.
I'm just going to air that interview again next hour.
We're getting a lot of requests, and phones are ringing off the hook of the network.
dan friesen
Yeah, they're just going to air it again in the third hour.
jordan holmes
Amazing.
God, that's the type of shit that only being your own boss is only available to you.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
You know?
dan friesen
And it also is like a reflection of we had a famous guy on.
Like, I don't think it's a terrible interview, but it's also not an interview that illuminates anything.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
It doesn't bring to light any new information.
It is just like, we got fucking Charlie Sheen on the show.
And that's why it's re-aired.
That's why people are drawn to it and why Alex wants to make the most of it.
Not because we're actually breaking through anything.
jordan holmes
It is, it is, I mean, ironically, it's like if the doors open with Break On Through and then did Break on Through as an encore, you know, it's like, you know, why.
You know why.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
So he plays it in the third hour, and the second hour is kind of like waiting for that to happen.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
But Alex does say something that got me excited.
alex jones
I snuck out last night after work and saw V for Vendetta.
My wife here's like, oh my God.
I'm going to be caught in my own mouth.
I snuck off and watched it last night, and it was good.
People said it was Illuminati, and I'd read some of the different synopses that were out there about it.
And I've said those were dishonest.
I mean, I have questions about the Matrix.
I have questions about some of the Illuminati things that are in it.
unidentified
Okay.
alex jones
Especially in the third one.
jordan holmes
Okay.
alex jones
What is it?
Matrix Revolutions or Revelations?
jordan holmes
I forget.
alex jones
But the Wachowski brothers with V for Vendetta, I know why the media is attacking it.
I mean, it shows the government carrying out terror attacks with a bird flu type weapon to get martial law to go after their political enemies and to sell the pharmaceutical that is the cure for it.
Which is what's happening in our real world.
dan friesen
So I got excited because it's like, okay, another fucking shot at a movie review.
jordan holmes
Let's do it.
dan friesen
We're going to fucking get V for he just saw V for Vendetta last night.
That's like that's earthquake levels of his career.
jordan holmes
That is what we are here for.
dan friesen
He might as well have a tattoo of a guy Fox Max.
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
dan friesen
That movie is important.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
He does not really talk much more about it.
jordan holmes
God damn it.
dan friesen
I'm hoping that maybe it's coming.
Maybe the V for Vendetta review is coming outside of this little bit of stray.
Hey, it's got good messages in the prologue to how the movie sets up the world that it exists in.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
I was really kind of hoping because I don't really remember.
V for Vendetta Review 00:02:57
jordan holmes
Like, I was trying to remember what exactly happens, and now I don't have the full thing.
You know, I've got the vibe of V for Vendetta.
dan friesen
Natalie Portman.
jordan holmes
I've got Hugo weeping, shaving her head.
And Stephen Fry is a show host who's gay.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
And he has a bolt of courage at the end, and then they just murder him.
unidentified
Yep.
dan friesen
And then, yeah, Natalie Portman becomes Guy Fox's acolyte.
unidentified
Right.
dan friesen
And they blow up the powder plot.
Remember the investigator.
I should rewatch it.
And I would have if Alex reviewed it.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So I make this promise to you.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
To the American people.
If he reviews it, I will re-watch it.
unidentified
All right.
dan friesen
I'll probably re-watch it anyway.
jordan holmes
Yeah, probably.
dan friesen
Alex reviewing it will trigger a rewatch.
unidentified
Okay.
jordan holmes
All right.
For sure.
unidentified
Yeah.
God.
dan friesen
Anyway, he just replays the show.
jordan holmes
We've had so many, so many problems with him just following through on a movie review.
dan friesen
Well, two in the last two 2006 episodes.
jordan holmes
Right.
That's brutal.
dan friesen
Scanner Darkley and V for Vendetta.
jordan holmes
We're owed to two that are important.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
High up on the list.
dan friesen
And I think have a large potential for him to misread in interesting ways.
jordan holmes
Right.
I know more about Oblivion from him.
dan friesen
Yes.
jordan holmes
But Oblivion doesn't mean shit.
dan friesen
No.
jordan holmes
But Scanner Darkly and V for Vendetta, huge on the list.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
Oblivion and Elysium.
unidentified
Yeah.
Like.
jordan holmes
It doesn't mean shit.
dan friesen
Not really.
So I will pray that we get this V for Vendetta review.
jordan holmes
Absolutely.
dan friesen
But I can't promise anything.
I am but a man.
jordan holmes
You can't promise it.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
No, you can't.
dan friesen
I wish I had a V for Vendetta quote that I could twist into being about whether or not you get the review that you want.
jordan holmes
Yeah.
dan friesen
I was waiting for you, Mr. Review.
jordan holmes
Oh, God.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
I would bet.
Okay.
Here's what I bet.
I bet you could find out what episode he does a review of V for Vendetta on somewhere.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
But I don't know which one it will be, which year it is.
I don't know, but it could be at any time.
dan friesen
Yeah, but that's cheating.
I don't want to.
jordan holmes
No, I know.
dan friesen
I don't want to cheapen this.
unidentified
That's what I'm saying.
dan friesen
I don't want to find it accidentally, much like we did with this Charlie Sheen interview.
jordan holmes
But that's what I'm saying about this review, right?
Is that it could really come like two years from now.
unidentified
Yeah.
jordan holmes
We don't know.
dan friesen
Yeah.
jordan holmes
It's a thief in the night when those movie reviews finally come.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
And none of us are supposed to know.
unidentified
No.
jordan holmes
We see through it.
unidentified
Yeah.
dan friesen
So we'll be back, hopefully, with movie time.
But until then, we have a website.
unidentified
Indeed, we do.
jordan holmes
It's knowledgefight.com.
dan friesen
Yep, we'll be back.
But until then, I'm Neo and Leo Mdz Clark.
I am the mysterious professor.
unidentified
Yeah, woo, yeah, woo.
jordan holmes
And now here comes the sex robots.
alex jones
Andy in Kansas, you're on the air.
Thanks for holding.
unidentified
Hello, Alex.
andy in kansas
I'm a fish Tim Color.
I'm a huge fan.
jordan holmes
I love your work.
alex jones
I love you.
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