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Oct. 21, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
35:13
TOXIC WATER poisons prisoners in the Montana State Prison system
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All right, welcome to today's emergency interview here on Brighton.com.
I'm Mike Adams, and today we are joined by two special guests.
Uh first we have Amanda McKnight.
Uh she runs what's called uh 406 revolutionized group on Facebook, which investigates and exposes judicial corruption and prison uh prison corruption and also today prison toxicity.
There are prisons in America, and we're gonna talk about one in particular that is exposing its inmates to extremely hazardous toxic levels of heavy metals and other substances in in the water supply that's causing widespread sickness.
So we're talking about worse than third world conditions right here in the United States.
Our second guest is James White, and he joins us.
Of course, uh, he's a longtime patriot.
I've worked with him for many years.
He's also an investigator and an analyst.
And uh welcome both of you to the show today.
It's great to have you on.
Thanks, Mike.
I really appreciate it.
Thanks, Mike, for having us.
Great to have you both here.
So, okay, let's uh let me go to Amanda first and uh just give us a quick background of who you are.
This is the first time we've interviewed you, uh, who you are, what your focus on right here, and what we're gonna get into today.
All right.
Um, well, my name is Amanda McKnight, and I run for 06 Revolutionized on Facebook.
Um, this started as just a movement that I created um for my husband um in his case out of Sanders County, Montana, um, and the injustice that he experienced um during his case.
He he was sentenced to five years on his first time drug possession charge um to Montana State Prison.
And ever since then, um I've had the word out, you know, on the wire, and people have just been contacting me over and over for help, and you know, these things are happening to them and this and that, and I just started growing.
Um I have 600 over 600 members on my group page, and I just um hit a thousand yesterday on my Facebook page um of people that are you know interested in this and and want more help, and I've been given resources and you know, advice and helping people for the past few months here, and this is just growing um huge.
So we're gonna try and expose what's going on right now at the Montana State prison with the uh the contaminated water and the risks that these inmates are experiencing and and the staff also.
Okay, that's really important.
Thank you for that intro.
Now, are you just quickly, are you finding that there's corruption throughout the the court system as well as the prison system?
Do they work hand in hand to uh deprive people of uh due process?
I believe so.
I I think that's a true statement, Mike.
Um I'm finding in the district courts, you know, the the corruption there is just so extreme, and then they're being sent to this um department of corrections system, and they're not getting programming, they're not getting adequate medical care, they're not getting you know the proper hygiene and safe water, uh, all of it.
They're you know, it's it's a outrageous thing that they have going on here with these people that they're doing to these people.
Well, uh sadly this isn't the first we've heard of this, but we're gonna get into some details today, folks, that will blow your mind.
So uh keep listening.
Uh now uh Jim, uh for our audience, you know, you and I have known each other for many years.
We've worked on a number of of shows uh in the past.
Remember Health Revolt that we used to do.
Yeah, that was great.
Yeah.
We were like, I don't know, eight years ahead of the curve and all that stuff.
It was but uh give our audience a little intro of you and and how you got involved in this topic here.
Yeah, Mike, thanks.
Uh well, I do uh investigative reporting here in Northwest Montana, and uh for the last six years I've been really, really um deeply diving into the corruption here in local in Flathead County, and now we're finding out that there seems to be judges involved and you know attorneys, and uh now we just released uh I'm gonna be published an article tomorrow that we found the U.S. trustee was committing fraud, and we've got it like all the like I've got all the goods as usual.
And um, we're just that's what I do.
I just try to expose corruption and you know, try to people to take advantage of those that are you know, they can't really defend themselves.
I try to, you know, at least fill some of that gap.
I mean, I'm I'm a reporter.
I just try to get the word out and hopefully get people, you know, behind folks like uh like uh uh Amanda here.
But she contacted me.
I mean, we've been in contact about other things.
I saw that she had a revolution uh four or six revolutionized Facebook page.
I saw some of the stuff she was posting.
I could detect her passion with what she was doing, and um, you know, I reached out to her and we started communicating, and she told me her situation.
Then she called me, I think last Friday and said you won't believe what's going on at the prison with the with the water situation.
So I said, Well, maybe I'll do an emergency broadcast and that you know that Saturday morning next morning, which I did.
It's only about seven or eight minutes.
But that's kind of kicked things off, and then Amanda took the ball and just charged down the field, just knocking people out of the way uh in her in her wake, and she just dug into stuff and got into some really really deep dives on the water levels, or not sorry, the water levels, but the contaminants in the water, how long it's been going on.
Uh there appears to be some sort of cover-up going on.
Um there's a report of a lot of sicknesses, a lot of illnesses, and I think she'll report right now that they are sort of uh coughing up and blowing like red uh mucus out of their nose and out of their mouth because the pipes we believe have like the rust has just infiltrated the piping that they're drinking.
But uh let Amanda get into that.
So that's really my background, Mike.
I just want to try to expose corruption and you know, try to be a crime fighter without a cape.
Well, you most definitely are a crime fighter, and uh before we go back to Amanda, I just want to mention that uh Jim.
Uh if you're not familiar with the work of Mitch Vexler, uh you need to check him out.
Have have you heard any of his interviews?
No, I'll write his name down right now.
Mix Vecch Vexler.
Vexler, V E X L E R. He's exposing the total uh school board bond fraud and the ratings agency's fraud in Texas and across the country, and he's digging deep and he's finding um smoking guns everywhere.
He's about to blow up the whole bond fraud situation, which I know you've seen in Montana as well.
Yep.
Right.
So it's all connected.
All right.
Uh so thanks for the introduction, both of you.
Let's go back to you, Amanda.
Uh, thank you for taking the time today on this.
Let's get into the details of what you found in uh in this case, is it the Montana State Prison in Powell County or where where is this one?
Yeah, it's located in Deer Lodge, Montana, um, Powell County.
Okay, okay, great.
Um tell us what you're finding, because I know you've shared you shared uh some lab tests and violations reports with me.
I'm pretty horrified, but why don't you walk us through it?
Correct.
Um so I you know went down this rabbit hole after this whole water infrastructure um collapse, and I got into a um site where they have all their the reports posted on there, and I just found um contaminants and um Montana State prison being in violation of any retesting or notifying um residents that are on these wells.
Um I found E. coli, um, some chloroform bacteria, nitrates, fertilizer, sewage indicators, asbestos fibers, arsenic, lead, radiation, uranium, radium.
Um wow.
Yeah, just all these levels.
They're not they're not extreme levels, but I think they're they're testing these, they're getting these numbers off of a sealed system, not a system that's um compromised, you know, that's been fractured.
And you know, what are the levels now once this system has been compromised?
Um these these um levels were tested, I think, thinking that it was a sealed good working system.
So I know they have a dairy farm there, um a pasture, and there's a boot camp facility up above them that they don't know where that sewage drainage is running to, and it's running downhill towards the prison.
So they're thinking I think that it's picking up the contaminants from from that sewage and also the dairy farm there and putting it into the water system as well.
Okay, okay.
This is all, of course, extremely concerning.
Um these are not I mean, these are violations, right?
These are violations of state law as well.
What's come out?
Correct, correct, because you know, there's no safe amount of lead in water.
There's no safe amount of um asbestos in water.
Sorry.
It's just shocking that there's asbestos in in this water.
But I we're also looking, I mean, there's uh E. coli has been detected in the water.
Correct.
There's uh arsenic from corroding pipes, uh lead.
Which is at you know, again, it's a it's a small level, but it's it's not like the prisoners have any other choice of what water to drink.
See, that's the thing.
They can't go out and just buy bottled water all day.
Well, they can on commissary, they're um allotted eight bottles a week on their commissary.
Oh my gosh.
So that's it.
Like, didn't you say there was a lot of things?
Yeah, that's that's the extent.
Sorry to interrupt.
Didn't you say there was thallium in there also, Mike, in your analysis, and there was a uh thallium is used for certain things.
Is that correct?
Well, yeah, let me bring up the phallium report.
I want to make sure I'm I'm getting this correct.
Uh thallium is being monitored, and then it's it shows a violation of thallium, but it's it's not it's not telling me the actual concentration of thallium.
But it's there's a violation name reported on the Montana governor website, uh uh Montana.gov website, that there's a major violation found in routine monitoring of thallium.
And thallium is an element that's actually known to be used for mind control.
And I don't know if you knew that, Amanda, but yeah, that that does make sense.
Um, because that that whole valley there is, you know, prior mining um spots where they mined way back in the day.
And I think these chemicals run through that that ground just naturally from all the mining that was done there um years before.
Okay.
Wow.
Um I'm also seeing beryllium, antimony, nickel, uh both antimony and nickel are of course toxic heavy metals as well.
It's not just you know, leading cadmium and mercury and so on uh that qualify.
Um so the fact that these violations exist, but it's not being remediated.
What you know, what's going on, Amanda?
How how is it that a prison in Montana can continue to function like this and keep poisoning its inmates?
And they're aware of it, and they even report it publicly.
You know, Mike, that's what I'm trying to figure out here.
Um I'm trying to get answers on those re reports that I found, you know, the DPHS, the DEQ, EPA, they're all listed on there as you know, companies and um places that know that this is going on.
And you know, they've failed to alert people and failed to ask for retesting and you know, to for them to come in compliance with these with these testings.
So I'm not I'm not quite sure what's going on.
I'm I am no expert.
I have no idea about any of this.
I'm learning as I go, but what I'm seeing, um common sense tells me that this is um this is an emergency.
So who have you contacted about this in in the state government or the prison system?
So I have reached out to Senator Laura Smith, her office.
Um I'm still waiting to hear back.
I've um spoken out to different legislators.
I'm waiting for for someone to email me back.
Um I did get a call just this morning from Congressman Ryan Zinke's office um wanting to talk to me further.
They're gonna be calling me back today.
Um I've talked to the disability rights of Montana.
They're stepping in, they're trying to get the ACLU in there to release a statement.
Um I know the disability rights of Montana, they had their attorney go in there and speak to the inmates.
Um they weren't even gonna let him go into the medical unit where my husband's at.
They were just gonna bypass that, but there was another inmate out there in a walker, and the attorney, you know, stopped him, and he's like, Hey, you know, are you having a hard time using the porta potties and stuff?
Or you he's like, I'm not really, but there's another guy in here that is, he's like, I'll show you where he's at.
And so he got him access into the medical unit, whereas my husband is Rawl that you know, the men in wheelchairs and walkers and ones that have a little bit harder trouble getting around and and stuff.
So he was able to go in there.
Um, but he's be you know, the inmates are a little hesitant to speak out in fear of retaliation, and the warden was there overseeing the conversation.
So, you know, it's been difficult difficult for the inmates to get the word out their families have been contacting me on my Facebook page letting me know the conditions inside what's going on and you know what they're afraid of and they are some of them are experiencing retaliation already and uh some of them are just you know they're they're scared to death they don't want know what to do they're becoming sick um there's word that C diff has now popped up in there and inmates are are extremely ill yeah from exposure to all the feces and
sewage because you know these toilets they they overflowed and all the raw sewage came out into the bathrooms and the units and it was flooding in the kitchen of the low side kitchen where their food storage is so all their food was exposed to it.
They were still serving food I'm it's just it's it's unreal.
I mean it it sounds like a third world prison conditions really.
You nailed it yeah okay we have veterans in there we have um tribal members in there we have you know the correctional offers officers in there that are being exposed to all this people at visiting they've opened visiting at back up and letting families come I mean the children that go to visiting have drank this water have been exposed to this also.
Right okay wow Jim um I know it's amazing it's not just as it's it's also part of the problem in all of this is that there are many innocent people in these prisons.
Sure.
Right or or wrongfully prosecuted we saw that after J6 right people who were peacefully protesting without weapons or anything like that.
they were rounded up by the FBI and thrown, some of them thrown in isolation for, you know, a year or more.
I mean, it was really torture.
What are your thoughts on this from a liberty perspective here, Jim?
And these people are someone's uncle and someone's son and husband.
And, you know, it just, it was disheartening to me that they would, Mike, it seems like we've just lost our humanity.
I think that in some ways we've unfortunately lost our humanity.
I mean, these people sure are incarcerated, but once they serve their time and if they went through due process and the States, you know, got ahold of them and they get finished with their, their, you know, their sentence, then they're deserve the right to get back and adjust back into society, you know, not die in prison or get sick and have cancer.
So yeah, it's a really, really frustrating to me, Mike, you know, I've been railing against the, I've been railing against the court system and stuff for a long time.
So yeah, this is particularly difficult for me to see this go on when I know how corrupt the whole system is, as you do.
Well, well, right, exactly.
And we are not supposed to be, I mean, Americans, is supposed to have the moral high ground in the world this is what allows us to lecture other countries over things like let's say organ harvesting in China is to say well we we treat people humanely right that's the whole argument but yet it turns out we don't we treat them like dirt in the prison system.
Yeah, we're supposed to be leading by, you know, showing an example of how these places are supposed to be led and, you know, we're failing.
Yeah, absolutely.
But do you feel like when you work to talk to people in positions of influence about this, are they listening?
Are they hearing?
You know, I'd like to think so and hope so, but, you know, I haven't seen any action or any communication back.
I feel like I'm being ghosted.
So what is the hope of being able to, you know, work through this and resolve this?
Well, I've got a team of women that I've picked, handpicked to help me and we are, we're creating a, an army together.
We're getting all these files organized and we're getting letters that people can send out and we're contacting all these different groups of people that this can affect.
affect and is affecting you know inmates that are being transferred to Montana State prison out of Montana State prison because the prison just this last winter they um moved 600 inmates or I mean 300 inmates out of the Montana State prison to private profit prisons through core civics.
They transferred inmates to Arizona and Mississippi to help with the overcrowding at Montana State Prison.
And I mean, we're still overcrowded.
We're still, you know, a couple hundred people above above the limit right now.
And they don't know where to put these guys.
They don't know what to do with them.
I don't know what's going to happen.
I'm trying, I'm just trying to get eyes and ears on this situation as many as I can.
I'm looking for legal representation.
I mean, if Aaron Brokovich is available, I'll take her.
Yeah, no, no kidding.
Um I'm just wondering like how how can we raise awareness about this?
Uh I mean, we're doing this interview.
This is important, but you've got your Facebook group.
How how can we really underscore this and bring attention to it?
Because again, these violations are illegal.
Right.
So I'm trying to get, you know, any environmental groups involved.
I've been talking to other advocacy groups, grassroots movements, um, catalysts now, Montana, um, disability rights of Montana.
I'm hoping the ACLU is gonna step in.
I'm trying, I'm contacting law firms.
Um, I'm contacting multiple multiple multiple media outlets trying to get their attention.
I have spoken to a few already, um, but they're just hesitant to report on these issues.
I think I don't know if it's reliability or or it's because they're not getting the correct information from the Department of Corrections, you know, and they don't want to report on something that could potentially potentially be a lawsuit against them or you know, I'm not quite sure.
I'm all new to this.
I'm I'm self-taught and I'm learning as I go.
And Jim's been a great help.
I've been on Jim's platform a couple times, and you know, he's the one that's really helped me get the word out there also.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you, Jim.
You do such great work.
Um, in fact, Jim, I want to ask you this there was a uh a water pipe failure in this prison just recently.
Yeah, yeah, last Friday, or well, it's been a week from this, just past this this past Friday, correct?
And it it what did it flood the prison or what what happened?
Oh boy.
Um, yeah, so all the sewage backed up like in the inmate cell and raw sewage is coming out of the toilets in the inmates' cell, like like uh like Amanda was saying, and they didn't have any shower facilities, they didn't have any running water, they couldn't wash their hands.
They were even having to make it guys are so thirsty, Mike, they had to make an announcement.
And Manda, you can certainly verify this.
They had to make an announcement to have the guy stop drinking the water that they're using to wash their hands because there was chemicals in it.
These guys were so thirsty that they were actually drinking like the hand washing solution to be able to get some liquid in.
I mean, Amanda, am I uh am I am I portraying that accurately?
Yes, you are.
It's the hand washing stations, you know, that you see at fairs and carnivals.
You use the porta potty and you come out and there's little around you know, carousel there, but you step on it and it gives you some water, and the water has comes with chemical in it pre-ready.
So, you know, they're washing their hands with that.
But um, these guys were drinking it, and the sergeants had to announce over the speaker, the intercom, please stop drinking the hand washing station.
Water has chemicals in it.
Um they have advised there's there is water in my husband's unit for the showers.
So what they're doing now is um they're they're pumping the water.
I just read on the newest release this morning, they're pumping the water out of the other two wells on the property and putting it into the well number one.
So they're just taking the dirty water out of one and putting it into the to the well one and running it through those contaminated pipes into the prison again.
Wow.
And through the same contaminated pipes, and they're also um going and getting water from the city of Deer Lodge, which is a few miles away.
And I found reports on that.
That water's um the same, if not more contaminated with these same chemicals.
And they're they're advising the inmates to shower in it still, um, not to drink it, but they're required to shower in it.
They have shower tents set up out in in the yard that um inmates are able to use in other units, but my husband's unit, since it has shower water coming out of the shower heads, they're required to shower inside, and my husband's, you know, he's refusing to shower in there.
Um, Jim, what does this say to you about, you know, how When empires begin to collapse, infrastructure falls apart.
And you know, we've seen bridges and roads, you know, crumbling and in some cases collapsing.
Uh now this story about the Montana uh state prison.
And and this is not obviously isolated.
I've heard similar stories about the LA jail and you know other cities across America as well.
What what does this say to you, Jim about the crumbling state of infrastructure?
Well, you know, one of the things that frustrates me, Mike, is that I'm not really in for government handouts.
I'm I'm much more like on my broadcast, I try to tell people keep your eyes off Washington and all that clown show, focused on your you know, your local representatives, focus on your your economy commissioners, focus on your mayor, focus on your school board.
But that being said, if we're gonna give money away, if the United States government is gonna give money away and get billions and billions of dollars to various nations and a state within its own borders have the problems that it has with this prison system.
Mike, I don't even know what to say.
I mean, it it's it's almost cartoonish.
It really is.
It's almost like cartoonish that that we live in this time in in the world where we send billions of money or billions of dollars over to see dollars, uh, you know, digits, whatever you want to call it overseas, and we can't even take care of you know our own home, our own home continent without having chemicals, you know, into the jail systems.
I mean it's it really is like I said, Mike, I don't even I can't even put it into words.
Uh I'm just um I'm stunned.
Seems yeah, I'm stunned uh the at that that where we're at in this country, really.
I really am.
Yeah, well, it it seems like you know, often Trump is bragging about America being the greatest country in the world, or you know, uh announcing a trillion dollar investment deals into uh data infrastructure that will be used by big tech probably to surveil us.
Absolutely, you know.
But there's no money going into the core infrastructure that people depend on, which would include you know the water wells for for a state prison.
I mean clearly this is cruel and unusual punishment.
You know, the the this is a form of chemical torture, I I would say.
I don't know.
How would you just the title of the show that um Amanda came up with the title, the show we did on Saturday?
It was called Prisoners of Contamination.
And that's that's really what they are.
They're prisoners of contamination.
They they can't leave.
They're forced to live in, you know, and I don't know if it's probably a little bit better now.
I am not there, but it was like you know, like living in squalor for a couple of days there with no showers, then they have six port-a potties for sixteen hundred people.
Um, you know, and that was running out, and they don't have any chemicals in it.
I mean, it was just it's it's like Mike, it just I just don't see how in a developed country like we are, and we're supposed to be the leader in things.
We don't have a provision like a plan in place if these things happen that we have like a plan to all the money we apparently have and we can print, we don't have a uh a plan in place to take care of these type of you know, these type of emergencies.
And again, it just speaks to the fact that you know the leaders what they've done is they've taken all this money and they've just laundered it.
And this doesn't go back to the folks.
It just goes to them after it's laundered, uh usually two or three times, usually through two or three different intermediaries, and it all comes back to them.
And there no Mike, I try to tell people, I think you would agree.
None of these people save a few.
There's a couple, maybe that are good.
These people are not in in uh in Congress for us.
They're in it for them.
Every single one of them, almost every one of them.
And you know, it's just I think people are fed up.
I think people are tired of the lies, they're tired of the gaslighting, they're tired of the mask, the shots, the promises.
People are just fed up.
I am.
I know that.
I know I am.
Uh sorry to tell everybody, but it's just gonna get way worse because we're not living under a system of freedom.
We're living under a system of enslavement.
But uh Amanda, are you in in your Facebook group?
What's it called again?
406 what?
Revolutionized.
Okay, 406 revolutionized 406 uh is the area.
Correct.
It's the only area code in Montana, believe it or not.
Montana for such a huge state has one area code, 406 for the whole state.
It's kind of odd.
Oh, okay.
All right.
That's that's good to know.
Um, are you hearing stories from other people about other prisons?
The other prisons In Montana.
Or even else elsewhere.
Um, yeah, I am actually.
So the Montana State Prison, the DOC, they um have a few other prisons.
Um, there's a prison in Shelby that in Shelby, Montana, that's also experiencing um uh sewage issues, water issues, um, a lot of corruption retaliation.
I know there's a lot of gangs in that prison, and uh, you know, it's it's way worse than Montana State Prison, as in you know, inmates and stuff like that, but I haven't even dug into the water stuff there.
People are begging me to, and the prisons where their um inmates have been transferred, like to Arizona.
Um, people are really concerned with the water down there because they said the water is highly contaminated and you know, these prisoners are getting sick down there, and just it's it's a mess.
Everything's failing.
Right.
Right.
Okay.
Um, how can people help you with this listeners who maybe they're in Montana or or not, but they still care about human rights?
Um how can they get involved and and tune into what you're talking about here?
So I'm sure a lot of people across the country have um someone or know someone, you know, that's incarcerated at Montana State Prison because they come from everywhere.
I've got people with loved ones from Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nevada, um, you name it all over the U.S. Just join my page, um, speak up, share any information that you know, tell your friends and family um we want to support these guys and you know, get them the you know, basic human necessities that they deserve, even if they're incarcerated.
We want to support them and show them that the world's listening and you know, a lot of them are losing hope, and there's a high suicide rate right now among the inmates and depression, PTSD, you know, they're all suffering.
There's guys in there that are you know not getting phone calls to their families, they're being deprived of water, they're only getting three bottles of water a day.
The guys that are in high security, you know, they're not able to go out and use the restroom.
They're being locked in their cells at night and having to hold, you know, restroom necessities all night long.
They're not the the guards are refusing to let them out.
Um the food is depleting, there's low shortage on milk and and necessities like that.
And the reports from the news is coming out that you know the inmates are given MREs and um sanitary wipes, but that's not that's not true.
I've talked to families from every unit.
Inmates have not received sanitary wipes, they have not received MREs, because you know, with MREs, you need to have water and then a heat source.
So inmates don't have, you know, sure.
They don't have access to this stuff.
So we just want to make sure that they're being taken care of, they're being fed, watered, you know, given mental health um opportunities to speak to mental health or their families, keep them in connection with everybody and keep the morale high, you know, keep them in good spirits and support them.
Okay, that sounds really important, but I gotta ask you as you're investigating this issue, has it led you to the uh extreme importance of judicial reform and prison reform?
Because this whole system, and Jim, I'd love your comments as well.
This whole system of just locking people up, it does not work for society.
I mean, there may be a very tiny percentage of totally violent psychopaths who need to be completely isolated, but that's not mostly who's locked up.
So have you uh you know, how much have you delved into this issue?
So um in Montana State Prison, and I'm sure most prisons, there's a there's a high level of um sex offenders that are take up the population.
So, you know, there's there's a lot of people that deserve to be in there, but there's also a lot of people in there, like my husband that's in there for a simple first-time drug possession.
He got five years, he's been you know, denied parole, he's been denied medical parole, he suffers from congestive heart failure, he has an aortic graft placement in his heart um from an accident that he was in.
He's got resistant hypertension, he's got PTSD, depression.
You know, there's there's a lot going on with him, and this whole you know, situation has made him more vulnerable to infections and stuff that's gonna be happening, you know, coming out in the prison, like the C. diff and any of these bacterias that are now starting to pop up and it's it's crazy.
Well, but to the bigger question of prison reform, Jim, do you want to do you want to take that?
Like I've got you know, you're talking about judicial reform and prison reform.
Uh yeah.
On if if the viewers would want to go to credit union crimes.com.
I've got stories on there all the way from the Supreme Court being corrupt in Montana to the Montana Federal District Court.
Judges, we just caught him lying twice on a document that he filed.
And we've even got the district court judges here in Flathead County.
We've got the goods on them as well.
All of these, the judicial system, Mike, at every level is corrupt.
And at every level, these people are up.
They're political animals.
They they they base their decisions on politics.
It just needs to be completely redone.
The whole entire quote unquote justice system needs to be reformed to where you know people, not everybody needs to be incarcerated behind bars.
And I have a feeling that whatever you've uncovered in Montana, it's 10 times worse in California.
Oh, I'm sure.
Okay.
All right.
Um, so give let's wrap this up.
Give us your final thoughts.
Uh uh, Amanda, if you're back, give us your final thoughts on what people should take away from this.
Um what they should take away is, you know, help these people.
Let's let's get some eyes on this.
You know, these people don't deserve this.
I'm fighting around the clock.
Um, there's a whole group of us, my whole page, all my followers, they're all involved, and they just want they just want help and justice.
You know, this this comes from it starts in these small towns, I believe, the corruption, and it just trickles, it keeps going upward.
And once you get in the system, it's it's so hard to get out of.
People are suffering, and we just want we just want the public to know because you know, not many people know the things that are going on, and I've just tried to shine a light on everything for everyone, and you know, I'm here to help.
Well, you're doing a great job, and we appreciate your time today to share this with us.
Keep digging.
And of course, we will be happy to cover this editorially.
So as you find things, documents and so on, uh, or decisions that are made, send them my way.
That's great.
Thank you both for your time today.
Yeah, thank you, Mike, so much.
You're very welcome.
You know, we want we want uh I mean, we support human rights and human dignity.
Um, of course, uh we also believe in incarcerating you know violent criminals or or sex offenders, etc., who who are uh who've done great damage to society.
Yes, we we agree with that point.
I'm not saying let all the prisoners go, but when they're there, we we can't be torturing them and poisoning them with a water supply.
That's insane.
So, you know, fundamental human rights really do matter.
Otherwise, how can we how can we lecture the rest of the world on human rights when we are running third world prisons right here in the United States?
So thank all of you for listening.
I'm Mike Adams of Brighton.com.
Share this interview on other platforms, and uh be sure to use our AI engine if you want research about prison reform.
Just go to Brighton.ai and you can ask it there.
It's been trained on hundreds of millions of documents that are truth-telling documents with censored information.
So that's some of the best research you'll find through our free AI engine.
Thank you for listening today, and take care, everybody.
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