| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Risky Dollars and Informative Crowds
00:05:01
|
|
| You're gonna love this. | |
| Welcome to Brighttown Bodcast News for Friday, January 23rd. | |
| Yeah, 2026. | |
| I'm Mike Adams. | |
| Thank you for joining me today. | |
| And let's just start out with this tweet that I sent out. | |
| And you will laugh at this because you will know exactly how I'm feeling when I crafted this. | |
| Because, you know, if you're listening to this podcast, you're among those who are extremely well prepared. | |
| But here's my tweet to everybody else. | |
| Not trying to make people feel stupid or anything, but if you are now suddenly buying emergency food for the storm and also suddenly buying silver because you heard it's going up, you are way, way, way behind the curve on important things. | |
| Work to up your knowledge game. | |
| Turn off Fox News and CNBC crap and start reading real independent media. | |
| Those of us who are leaders in the alt media space have been urging people for years to stack silver and store emergency food. | |
| Our people are always ahead of the curve. | |
| And as a result, they always make it through any crisis with their health and their wealth intact. | |
| Isn't that true? | |
| If you're listening to this, give yourself a, you know, a pat on the back. | |
| You're well prepared. | |
| You're doing awesome. | |
| You're not going to have your wealth wiped out by the crash of the dollar. | |
| You're not going to have an empty food pantry because of the storm. | |
| Everybody else is out scrambling. | |
| The food shelves are stripped bare in cities like Dallas, Fort Worth. | |
| It's crazy. | |
| It's like, did you people not hear about the storm? | |
| Do you not have any food? | |
| And then I said the best site to follow independent media is brightnews.ai, where we crawl 80 plus indie media websites and identify trends in real time. | |
| It also has an audio podcast that's recreated each hour. | |
| It's free and has zero ads. | |
| Stay informed and you'll stay ahead of the crowd easily. | |
| And you know, isn't it wild that right now, you know, the storm, very big storm for North America, the biggest in years, has been forming up for days, right? | |
| I first did a podcast about it two days ago and there were indications even before that. | |
| How can people not have food or water or flashlights or whatever? | |
| I don't understand living that way. | |
| Well, I don't know about you, but I don't wait for the last minute and get stuck in some kind of crowd, like a toilet paper stomping match, you know, at Costco. | |
| No, thank you. | |
| I'm going to be home already, warm and cozy and well-fed when the mob is looting the retail stores, right? | |
| And you too, you know, we are the kind of people who plan ahead, but we live in a society surrounded by people who don't. | |
| And think about what that means in terms of finance. | |
| See, most people, and you know this, just look around. | |
| Most people don't know what money is. | |
| They think dollars are money. | |
| No wonder they're going to lose everything. | |
| They don't even know what money is. | |
| And they don't know. | |
| They're afraid to buy gold and silver because that's risky. | |
| Wow. | |
| You know what's risky is holding dollars as the currency collapses. | |
| That's risky. | |
| And those people are going to lose everything. | |
| Meanwhile, those of you who bought silver over the last few years, as I repeatedly kept urging everybody to look at gold and silver, you're up now 500%. | |
| 500% because today silver just hit $99. | |
| That's right, $99. | |
| It's about to go to $100. | |
| It's funny, earlier this week, I was joking when I said, you know, silver could be $100 by Friday. | |
| Well, that's no longer a joke. | |
| It might be $100 by the time you hear this. | |
| It could be. | |
| Or maybe it wiggles around and drops to 95. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But gold is also at $4,960, which means gold's going to cross $5,000, probably pretty close to the same time that silver crosses $100. | |
| And when gold is $5,000 an ounce, and when silver is $100 an ounce, the dollar's in trouble. | |
|
Americans Struggle With Layoffs
00:15:18
|
|
| The dollar's in trouble. | |
| I mean, not only is the currency collapsing in real time, it's a dollar doom spiral, but also the establishment is admitting they can no longer control it. | |
| Yeah, they kept silver prices artificially suppressed by selling paper contracts through COMAX. | |
| And, you know, JPMorgan was fined, I think, billions of dollars for all kinds of illegal market manipulation. | |
| We all know that. | |
| But now they've lost control. | |
| Why? | |
| Well, because central bank demand and industrial demand is now so much stronger than what can be manipulated. | |
| So now reality is entering the picture and they can't fake the reality any longer. | |
| So let me tell you what I have coming up here today. | |
| I've got an interview with Tayana. | |
| She's a Canadian who's currently in Texas. | |
| And she's a fiery Canadian, too. | |
| That's because she's actually Serbian from birth. | |
| So she wasn't born into the libtardia of most of Canada. | |
| And she also, she grew up in Alberta, which explains a lot because the Albertans have the most sense of all the Canadians, at least in my experience. | |
| The Albertans, they know what's real. | |
| That's why they want to secede from Canada. | |
| I can't blame them. | |
| I would too. | |
| I call Alberta the Texas of Canada. | |
| Anyway, Tayana joined me in studio, and we had a really wide-ranging interview on just a variety of topics. | |
| It gets hilarious. | |
| Because at one point in the interview, I think she uses the word retarded, or maybe I use it first, and then we both realize that the word has been unleashed, and now we just go off. | |
| Like, this is retarded. | |
| Justin Trudeau is retarded. | |
| You know, Starmer, Kier Starmer from the UK, he's retarded. | |
| Carney, you know, we just, and we had a little bit of confusion about Ford from Canada. | |
| I think it's Rob Ford. | |
| And then, I don't know if he's the brother. | |
| He's got another brother. | |
| One of them did a bunch of cocaine. | |
| One of them was or is a politician. | |
| I don't even, I can't keep them straight. | |
| But there's a little bit of confusion about the Canadian Ford and which one was doing the most cocaine. | |
| Anyway, we'll have all that for you coming up today. | |
| I think you'll have a good laugh. | |
| It's perfect for Friday as we prepare for storm lockdowns. | |
| In addition to all that, I've got a video, kind of a sad video. | |
| Well, kind of an angry video. | |
| This is Donald Trump, President Trump, bragging about Operation Warp Speed as he speaks in front of the World Economic Forum. | |
| So let's listen to this. | |
| Here we go. | |
| And so it began. | |
| And we ended up with the COVID and the whole world suffered. | |
| We did a phenomenal job. | |
| I don't think we got the credit we deserve. | |
| We did something that Operation Warp Speed, which some people say was one of the greatest military feats ever. | |
| We did a great job. | |
| Use our military. | |
| A lot of people. | |
| All right. | |
| Did you hear that? | |
| Oh, my goodness. | |
| Trump says that it is one of the greatest military feats ever. | |
| Use the military. | |
| Yeah, to murder 1.5 million Americans. | |
| So, you know, it's astonishing that we all knew. | |
| I mean, we all knew in Trump's first term. | |
| Of course, this was towards the end of his first term. | |
| We knew that COVID was a bioweapon. | |
| It was being unleashed to destabilize our economy and also to achieve depopulation of the American people. | |
| Trump bragged about pushing it through the FDA with emergency use authorization to bypass clinical trials and use the military to distribute it. | |
| And then over subsequent years, we began to find out just how much it killed people. | |
| And the proof is irrefutable at this point. | |
| It has been for years. | |
| We know it's killed at least 1.5 million Americans. | |
| Trump, over the last several years, has not just doubled down or tripled down, but he has repeatedly bragged about this program. | |
| And he refuses to say it was a mistake. | |
| He refuses to apologize for it. | |
| And he thinks it's actually great, which tells you something, doesn't it? | |
| That if there's another staged pandemic or whatever, Trump is going to brag about using the military to do something else that could kill millions of Americans. | |
| Because he's, you know, he's doubling down on the fact that he already did that and he thought it was awesome. | |
| And man, is he taking a lot of heat for this online? | |
| Because we remember, you know, we're not idiots. | |
| We remember what happened during COVID, how many people died after taking the jabs, how many people were injured. | |
| Trump did that. | |
| I mean, he pushed for that. | |
| He was behind that. | |
| And then who's his best pal now? | |
| You know, Andrew Borla, Pfizer. | |
| He brings in Pfizer and Eli Lilly and all these people coming into the White House. | |
| Those are his best pals, the companies that made the jabs. | |
| So, you know, Trump has never said that that was a mistake. | |
| And you notice that Fauci has not been arrested. | |
| We are more than one year into the Trump administration. | |
| And nobody, nobody significant has been arrested. | |
| Not people named in the Epstein files, not Fauci, not the people who committed treason against Trump and America by rigging the 2020 election, by the way. | |
| Those people haven't been arrested. | |
| There have been no arrests. | |
| And Pam Bondi is, she's not the AG. | |
| She's not the attorney general. | |
| She's the staller general of the DOJ. | |
| Her job is to delay and stall, just like Jeff Sessions in Trump's first term. | |
| And Pam Bondi is doing a great job of delaying and stalling and distracting and waving around one day. | |
| Oh, there's millions of pages of blah, blah, blah, of Epstein files. | |
| And then after that, what Epstein files? | |
| It's all a Democrat hoax, or at least that's what Trump said. | |
| So if we take an honest look at the Trump administration one year later, I mean, what can you say? | |
| He's bragging about the bioweapons that killed 1.5 million Americans. | |
| The traitors and criminals in America have not been arrested. | |
| And Trump continues to buddy up to another war criminal, Netanyahu, who himself has killed potentially hundreds of thousands or his forces have in the Middle East. | |
| So Trump loves to keep the worst mass killers, the serial killers of history. | |
| Trump loves to keep them close because that's, I don't know, that resonates with him. | |
| Those are his values, is slaughtering Americans and pretending to be pro-America. | |
| But he's not. | |
| He's not pro-America. | |
| He's not even America first. | |
| He's Israel first. | |
| And he brags about how many Americans, well, I mean, he doesn't brag about how many he killed, but he brags about the greatest military feat ever, which did result in the mass slaughter of 1.5 million Americans. | |
| So these are disqualifying statements for the leader of our nation, frankly. | |
| And I just, I wonder where this is going, because I'm still glad the Democrats lost the election. | |
| Somehow they would have been worse. | |
| But I really expected more from Trump, and probably you did too. | |
| And we all want Trump to do what's right for America and the American people, and he's just not doing that. | |
| And we're getting lied to constantly about inflation, for example. | |
| Trump says there's no inflation. | |
| He says prices are going down. | |
| Is that what you see? | |
| Is that what you see? | |
| No. | |
| Trump says, you know, the U.S. is the strongest economy in the world. | |
| Are you kidding me? | |
| Trump just told all the leaders of Europe that the whole world can't survive without America. | |
| You know, we are the most important nation, he says, you know, American exceptionalism, because we buy all your stuff. | |
| We are the consumers, and thus we're the most important. | |
| And if you don't go along with me, I'm going to slap tariffs on you, make you pay, because our consumers want to buy your stuff. | |
| Well, America's actually in a very weak position because of its national debt and its ancient military technology and its collapsing culture and work ethic and its collapsing education system, universities that churn out woke idiots instead of capable engineers. | |
| America's in dire straits, actually. | |
| It's not the strongest country in the world. | |
| The world is aghast at Trump, and they're laughing at America. | |
| And China and Russia are just sitting back and just going, wow, while China in particular is building the best technology in the world, it's dwarfing America's tech and industrial output and power grid capabilities and so much more. | |
| China's dwarfing America. | |
| So Trump's living in a delusional fairy tale at this point. | |
| But he's trying to sell that fairy tale to the American people and to the world. | |
| And there's still a few people who are going along with it who are just, I don't know, sort of Trump cult of personality type of people, like he can do no wrong. | |
| But if there were another person doing the same things that Trump is doing, well, they wouldn't be on board. | |
| You know, if Barack Obama were doing some of these things, they'd be calling for him to be arrested, you know. | |
| But when Trump's doing it, you know, suddenly magically, it's okay. | |
| So that's not rational. | |
| You and I, we need to be honest about our leaders. | |
| We need to judge them through the same lens. | |
| We need to have a meritocracy in terms of the way that we look at what they're doing. | |
| Are they doing some things that are good? | |
| Yeah, Trump's doing some things that are good. | |
| Are they doing some things that are bad? | |
| Yes. | |
| Are they doing some things that are catastrophic? | |
| Yeah, probably. | |
| But look, the good news in all of this is you can make yourself immune to whatever Trump is pushing. | |
| And it's very simple. | |
| Number one, you don't take Trump's jabs and medicine. | |
| Don't do it. | |
| A lot of people who trusted Trump the first time around are already dead, you know, over a million. | |
| Secondly, don't use Trump's currency, which is the dollar, because Trump's going to exploit the dollar. | |
| You know, it's all a concentration of purchasing power in the hands of the federal government and the Federal Reserve because they print the currency. | |
| Everybody else is screwed. | |
| Trump will print trillions for his goals, you know, for his projects, for his Pentagon, for his war. | |
| But you will be screwed as your dollar collapses in value, which everybody is already seeing. | |
| And so the way to escape that, of course, is to have gold and silver. | |
| And they are doing their job right now. | |
| So I've got a special report here called Corporate Layoffs Balloon While the U.S. Economy Crumbles. | |
| Because that's exactly what's happening. | |
| The U.S. economy is crumbling in the real world, not in Trump's imaginary economy. | |
| I did a song about that called The Economy in Your Head. | |
| I should probably play that for you here today because we're back to that. | |
| But enjoy this special report. | |
| And maybe we'll play the song and then we'll continue on the other side. | |
| Here we go. | |
| Well, another wave of massive corporate layoffs has hit America. | |
| Amazon laying off more people. | |
| By some estimates, that could reach 30,000 people this year alone. | |
| We've got layoffs at either it was Ford or GM out of their EV division. | |
| I think it was 1,200 people because their EV concepts didn't work. | |
| Yeah, it's probably Ford. | |
| Their EVs suck. | |
| You've got corporate layoffs across fast food and retail. | |
| Many top names are just downsizing. | |
| So what's happening? | |
| Trump tells us this is the best economy ever. | |
| He tells us there's no inflation and that things are actually getting cheaper overall, which is just flatly not true, of course. | |
| Now, gas is cheap, and that's the one saving grace in all of this. | |
| Cheap. | |
| Now, gas is cheap. | |
| Fuel is cheap right now. | |
| And that's the one saving grace in all of this. | |
| But food isn't cheap. | |
| Insurance isn't cheap. | |
| Building a house isn't cheap, etc. | |
| Vehicles aren't cheap. | |
| So prices continue to rise while the dollar is collapsing in its purchasing power. | |
| This is also reflected in the fact that silver just broke, sorry, $96 an ounce, $96. | |
| And gold is over $4,900 per ounce as of the time I'm recording this. | |
| It could be $5,000 by the time you hear this. | |
| It could be $5,000. | |
| Silver could be $100. | |
| It could happen just like that. | |
| And it probably will within the next few days. | |
| We'll see. | |
| And that tells you something about the dollar collapsing and the economy imploding. | |
| People are losing their jobs. | |
| People are being hit by layoffs due to a number of things. | |
| Number one, plummeting discretionary income among the population, but also the tariffs. | |
| The tariffs are causing supply chain disruptions, product scarcity, and inflation. | |
| And there was a recent study that was touted. | |
| I don't know if I think, was it Bloomberg that ran this or the Wall Street Journal? | |
| I'd have to check. | |
| But a study found that 96% of the tariffs were ultimately paid by the American consumers, not by the exporters. | |
|
Debt Crisis Unraveling
00:15:26
|
|
| So when Trump and his people say that, oh, these tariffs, they don't raise taxes on the American people. | |
| They don't raise costs on the American people. | |
| That's nonsense. | |
| Of course they do. | |
| And then, you know, Trump will roll out a new rule. | |
| Well, we're going to drop tariffs on home furnishings to reduce the cost of home furnishings. | |
| Well, wait a second. | |
| You just said, you know, a week ago that tariffs don't increase costs. | |
| So obviously, if tariffs don't increase costs, then how can dropping tariffs reduce costs? | |
| You see, it doesn't work. | |
| But then again, Trump is not an economist. | |
| And Trump engages in what I call bluffoonery, which is this weird combination of bluffing everybody combined with technical buffoonery because Trump doesn't understand anything about economics, obviously. | |
| He wants negative interest rates, which is insane. | |
| You know, his whole premise has been, let's just crank up the debt and we'll profit from other people's money. | |
| We'll have more debt as a country or more debt for the hotel or more debt for the golf course. | |
| And we'll just borrow from banks and then we'll bluff our way to claiming we're the best and the biggest and everything. | |
| And that's his model. | |
| That's what he does. | |
| And that brand of self-promotion, it actually can work for a long period of time, but not when it comes down to the economic reality. | |
| And the economic reality is the dollar is collapsing. | |
| The world is moving away from the dollar. | |
| Everything that Trump has been doing recently with Venezuela or Greenland or sanctions or threatening Iran, what this is actually causing is the world to move away from the United States, to move away from the dollar, move away from trade reliance on the U.S. | |
| And what we're going to see probably soon is a massive global sell-off of U.S. debt. | |
| And we're going to see another wave of countries moving away from the dollar in terms of settlement. | |
| And so the U.S. economic situation is it's going to get worse. | |
| You know, there's a snowstorm coming right now, big ice storm. | |
| There's also an economic storm coming that's a much more devastating storm. | |
| And you see it. | |
| We all see it. | |
| We see what's happening. | |
| The economy is collapsing, or you could say eroding. | |
| It's not all at once, but it is accelerating in its contraction. | |
| And all that the government can do is give us a bunch of fake numbers to try to prop it up. | |
| Fake inflation numbers, fake unemployment numbers, you know, fake claims that the U.S. has the best military technology in the world, which it doesn't. | |
| It's not even close. | |
| It's all fakery, or again, what I call bluffoonery from Trump. | |
| He's the master of bluffoonery. | |
| And you're also seeing, and by the way, it's not just Trump. | |
| You're seeing how much of the entire system under Democrats and under Joe Biden was totally fake. | |
| You know, fake grants and all the money laundering through Minneapolis with the Somali community there, the fake leering centers, the fake child care, the fake transportation. | |
| But this thing, this is nationwide. | |
| You've got fake climate grants, fake, you know, EPA was spending $20 billion on grants that were all fake. | |
| USAID, all fake. | |
| Nothing was as it claimed to be. | |
| Oh, here's a, you know, $100 million to feed children during COVID. | |
| Yeah, how many children were fed? | |
| None. | |
| So where'd the money go? | |
| Yeah, well, you know, the pockets of the people running the scam. | |
| But that's the entire system, is my point. | |
| That's the entire system. | |
| Some people say, well, you know, financial fraud is like 30% of the federal budget. | |
| I think it's like 80% of the federal budget, actually. | |
| The more I think about it, I think it's 80% of the federal budget. | |
| Because how can we have $1.5 trillion funding the Pentagon now? | |
| Because, you know, Trump didn't keep his promise to cut military spending. | |
| He actually tripled down on it, technically. | |
| He promised half a trillion. | |
| It was going to cut it to half a trillion, but it's actually one and a half trillion. | |
| So Trump has, you know, he lied during the campaign promises and then he's made it triple what it was. | |
| But how is it that you can have $1.5 trillion in a Pentagon budget and you still can't build hypersonic missiles that work? | |
| How is that? | |
| Because the money's not going into RD or weapons. | |
| Really, the money is all laundered. | |
| It's going into people's pockets. | |
| Some of it's getting funneled back into campaign finance. | |
| Some of it donations. | |
| Some of it's getting squirreled away as people just buy gold, you know, gold bars. | |
| The smart people are doing that. | |
| The whole thing is a scam. | |
| I would say the vast majority of U.S. government spending is a scam. | |
| And the currency itself, of course, is a total fraud. | |
| And that's why the system is imploding. | |
| So my message for you today is this entire system is on the verge of collapse. | |
| And it's not all Trump's fault, just to be clear. | |
| You know, this has been going on since, frankly, Richard Nixon, 1971, took us off the gold standard. | |
| And ever since then, I mean, you could blame Carter, you could blame Reagan, you could blame Clinton, Bush, both Bush's, you know, they, I mean, they all deserve blame because they've all done the same thing. | |
| Print, print, print, spend, spend, spend, more debt. | |
| But nobody's done more of that than Trump. | |
| Do you realize that 25% of the national debt that exists today was created by Trump of all the debt of all time? | |
| A quarter of it came from Trump alone. | |
| One guy printing so much money and having so much debt that it's a quarter of all the debt. | |
| That's extraordinary. | |
| And it seems likely to me that Trump is going to be the last president of the United States of America, which is interesting because that's a prediction I made like eight years ago. | |
| Although I thought it would happen during Trump's first term. | |
| So it may still be happening, but in Trump's third term, technically, because he did win the 2020 election also, by the way. | |
| Nevertheless, Trump could be the last president because this system, I don't know how much longer it can hold together. | |
| Then again, Many of us who have thought the system would have collapsed before now, we've been wrong about the timing of that prediction. | |
| So maybe we're still wrong. | |
| Maybe somehow, you know, some kind of life support that can keep this thing going. | |
| But have you looked at the creation of the M2 money supply? | |
| Have you looked at the charts? | |
| You know, have you, things are different now. | |
| The M2 money supply is absolutely exploding. | |
| Money creation is off the charts. | |
| It's insane. | |
| You have fewer and fewer parties around the world who are willing to purchase U.S. debt in the form of treasuries. | |
| You got countries like Japan that are in their own crisis. | |
| They're going to keep selling off treasuries. | |
| China won't buy any new treasuries, period. | |
| All over the world, they're selling off treasuries. | |
| And so our own Fed has to print the money to buy the treasuries from ourselves. | |
| And the interest on the debt is going exponential to the point where it's absolutely unsustainable. | |
| The only way out of this is hyperinflation, massive currency printing. | |
| That's it. | |
| There's no other way out of this system. | |
| So that's what's coming. | |
| You can bank on it. | |
| I mean, that is 100% certainty. | |
| This system ends with hyperinflation and a collapse of the dollar currency. | |
| If you are primarily saving in dollars, you are going to be utterly wiped out. | |
| You will lose everything that's saved in dollars. | |
| It's just, it's a mathematical fact. | |
| And the current price of gold and silver demonstrate that. | |
| People who save in gold and silver are doing amazingly well. | |
| And so, by the way, for those of you who listened to me when I said two years ago, three years ago, five years ago, when I said buy silver and you bought it at $18 and now it's $96, you're welcome. | |
| You're welcome. | |
| And you were wise to pay attention to that and to invest in gold and silver at that time. | |
| Your money has now more than quintupled in terms of the dollar value anyway. | |
| More than quintupled. | |
| And remember what I said this entire time about gold and silver. | |
| I said, I don't need it to rise in value. | |
| I just need it to hold value. | |
| Well, it's done more than that, hasn't it? | |
| It's actually gone up, which means it's outperforming by far almost anything else, including, of course, Bitcoin and almost every stock that you could name. | |
| And of course, treasuries or bank CDs or other kind of nonsense. | |
| Gold and silver are outperforming everything. | |
| And I think they will continue to do so for years to come. | |
| So it's not too late to get into gold and silver. | |
| My advice is, and I'm not your financial advisor, so don't take it that way. | |
| You know, get your own professional advice, do your own research, etc. | |
| But I suggest you buy gold and silver every month, regardless of the price, dollar cost average into it over time. | |
| You take, I don't know, 10% of your income or whatever, 5%, whatever you can work with. | |
| But I would suggest at least 5%. | |
| And you just buy metals with that month after month, year after year. | |
| And if you do that, you are going to be so far ahead of the game, just like people are now who were buying metals a few years ago, like I was doing. | |
| And remember, one year ago, I very publicly said I bought silver at $30. | |
| And, you know, I vaulted that silver because I don't own any stocks whatsoever. | |
| So basically, I put a chunk of my retirement into vaulted silver. | |
| And yeah, what do you think happened to that silver? | |
| That more than tripled from just a year ago. | |
| And again, I think it's still going from here. | |
| You know, Gregory Manorino, he was on Liberty and Finance recently. | |
| I enjoy Gregory Mannarino. | |
| I'm going to invite him on my show. | |
| I like his courage. | |
| I like his heart. | |
| I like his compassion for humanity. | |
| He's a real person who really cares about humanity like I do. | |
| You know, we operate with ethics and morals. | |
| We want to help people. | |
| We're not here to exploit people or surveil them or control them or depopulate them. | |
| We're here to help people. | |
| Well, he said he thinks silver is going to be $250. | |
| I think he said by next year. | |
| And his target was something like, I think he said $600 silver. | |
| That might take a few years to get there, but can I see that happening? | |
| Yeah, that's possible. | |
| I'm not predicting that. | |
| It's too many variables right now, but could silver hit 600? | |
| Well, I mean, frankly, as the dollar collapses, it's mathematically inevitable. | |
| Silver is going to hit 1,000. | |
| You know, gold's going to hit 10,000 and then 50,000. | |
| You know, as the dollar collapses, it kind of loses meaning, you know? | |
| But people who are left holding dollars are going to be the ones in food lines. | |
| They're going to be the ones living in tents because they lose their house. | |
| I'm talking about middle-class families, people who used to work at Amazon or Ford or whatever. | |
| They're going to be living in tents with nothing to their name. | |
| Their retirement will be a total joke. | |
| Even if they ever get their social security checks one day, which is highly doubtful, it won't be worth anything. | |
| You don't want to be that person. | |
| You want to be the person that has metal. | |
| So you can keep your house and you can keep your automobile and you can keep your lifestyle. | |
| You can afford to buy food. | |
| Because, you know, food has not gone up priced in silver. | |
| Food has become more affordable priced in silver. | |
| Food is only going up price in dollars. | |
| What does that tell you? | |
| Hold silver, you're fine. | |
| Hold dollars, you're screwed. | |
| So, look, if you want to get gold and silver, the physical stuff, or have it vaulted, let me plug our sponsor, which is Battalion Metals, co-founded by Tucker Carlson and Chris Olson, who I've worked with for many, many years and I've interviewed many times. | |
| This is a high integrity gold and silver giant in North America. | |
| And you can reach them at metalswithmike.com. | |
| That's metalswithmike.com. | |
| Use discount code Ranger if you purchase physical metal and they'll waive the shipping insurance fee. | |
| And you could also check their prices, compare their prices. | |
| They also have inventory on a lot of things that are out of stock everywhere else because they are, you know, their sister company is one of the largest wholesalers of gold and silver in North America. | |
| It's not a small operation. | |
| They are actually a kind of a quiet giant in the metals industry. | |
| And reach out to them. | |
| Again, metalswithmike.com, you can either purchase online or you can schedule a conference with them and they will help you understand maybe the best strategy for you without any kind of bait and switch nonsense. | |
| I don't work with companies that run the gold retirement scams and sell you weird, oh, here's like, you know, three ounce coins that nobody wants and with crazy insane premiums of 200%. | |
|
Whitaker's Whistleblowing
00:00:48
|
|
| You know, no way, man. | |
| I don't mess with that. | |
| That's low integrity stuff. | |
| I had a guest on Dale, was it Whitaker, who was a whistleblower about all that? | |
| And he used to work at a company that did that and he blew the whistle. | |
| He's naming names of the companies that are scamming people. | |
| And it's bad. | |
| Situation's ugly. | |
|
The Economy in Your Head
00:06:09
|
|
| So avoid those scams. | |
| The trusted company is Battalion Metals. | |
| MetalsWithMike.com is how you get there. | |
| Anyway, do your own research. | |
| And by the way, use our engine, brightanswers.ai. | |
| You can do a ton of research about finance and money and how to reduce risk and understanding everything about, you know, the way what's happening with gold and silver and so much more. | |
| And I'm writing about economics. | |
| I'm publishing articles now very frequently at naturalnews.com. | |
| So you can go there and check out my articles every single day, naturalnews.com, as well as my videos on brighteon.com. | |
| So thank you for listening. | |
| Take care. | |
| The White House spins another tale tonight. | |
| Official numbers looking oh so bright. | |
| They say employment's climbing to the sky. | |
| While millions watch their jobs, say goodbye. | |
| Inflation's tame according to their charts. | |
| But grocery bills are breaking people's hearts. | |
| 42 million don't know how they'll eat. | |
| My golden age speeches sound so sweet. | |
| Scott Benson counts his treasury dreams. | |
| Donald Trump believes his own schemes. | |
| A gaslight in the nation coast to coast. | |
| Living in the fantasy they love the most. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Where the numbers aren't what the people said. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Where we're thriving while we're barely fed. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Real world's broken, but your stats aren't red. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| The economy in your head. | |
| The tariffs came and wrecked the supply lines. | |
| Destroying chains like falling dominoes in time. | |
| They print more dollars by the trillion load. | |
| While purchasing power hits an all-time low. | |
| The envy of the world is what they claim. | |
| But the world just sees a bully's game. | |
| They think the job reports are looking grand. | |
| While pink slips multiply across the land, prices climbing at the corner store. | |
| But they insist on less than before. | |
| And alternate universe inside their minds. | |
| While poverty increases in real time, Scott Benson counts his treasury dreams. | |
| Donald Trump believes his own schemes. | |
| They gaslight in the nation coast to coast. | |
| Living in the fantasy they love the most. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Where the numbers aren't what the people said. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Where we're thriving while we're barely fed. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| Real world's broken, but your stats aren't red. | |
| It's the economy in your head. | |
| The economy in your head. | |
| You can't trust government statistics anymore. | |
| Fabricated figures behind every door. | |
| Delusional fancy land they call home. | |
| While the rest of us are left alone, living in the dream world far away from the suffering we face today. | |
| The economy in your head. | |
| It's great in there, but we're filled with dread. | |
| The economy in your head. | |
| The real world's hungry, but your charts say fed. | |
| economy | |
| Just the economy in your hands. | |
| All right, there you go. | |
| That's my song from last year, The Economy in Your Head. | |
| If you want to hear all my music, it's free. | |
| It's at ametheos.com, A-M-E-T-H-I-O-S, Ametheos.com. | |
| My most recent song is called The Great Divergence. | |
| That's my first song in 2026. | |
| I've done songs like More Than Wires, Fear the Robot But Love the Phone, The Replacements, Living in the Dream World, Ignorance is Bliss, Running Out of Time, Animated Dust, Don't Believe Your Eyes, The Math Ain't Mathing. | |
| Yeah, a lot of good songs there. | |
| So check them all out, all free. | |
| I have a feeling that what we're seeing right now is just the beginning. | |
| I don't know who said this first. | |
| Maybe it was Rick Rule or someone. | |
| That if you're hoping for gold to go to 10,000 and you're hoping for silver to go to 200, be careful what you ask for because you may not want to live in the world where gold is 10,000. | |
| That's a valid point, right? | |
| Things go wrong horribly in the economy and in the world and in supply chains, stability, routes, and resources, as Michael Jan says. | |
| Things go horribly wrong and there's great uncertainty in the world. | |
| And because of that uncertainty, everybody who knows what's happening, i.e. central banks and the world's elite and wealthy people and just people like you and I who are extremely well informed, we all rush to gold and silver. | |
| So gold and silver skyrockets because of the uncertainty, because the world is breaking down. | |
| So, you know, be careful what you wish for, right? | |
| I would rather have functioning supply chains. | |
| I would rather have peace. | |
|
Is This Storm Geoengineered?
00:04:34
|
|
| I'd rather have peace and silver still sitting at $18 than war and silver at $200, you know? | |
| But this is, we don't control. | |
| We don't control it all. | |
| So we have to deal with the hand we're given. | |
| Hey, let's go down the conspiracy rabbit hole for a second. | |
| How many of you think that this storm is geoengineering? | |
| Do you think that this thing has been created or steered or intensified? | |
| Because we know weather control obviously is very real. | |
| Geoengineering is real. | |
| We've interviewed Dane Wiggington multiple times. | |
| Increasingly, a lot of the weather events that we see, they don't look like natural weather. | |
| They look like weapons. | |
| Even like what we saw a little over a year ago, some of the storms that hit the, what was it, was it North Carolina that got hit super hard then? | |
| And then Florida got hit. | |
| You know, we've seen a lot of crazy things. | |
| This storm is Arctic cold weather plunging down from the north, plus a lot of precipitation that's going to cause ice, like an inch or more of ice to fall on trees and power lines. | |
| And that's going to cause power lines to fail and trees to snap and fall on the power lines. | |
| Going to cause roads to be icy, so transportation is basically impossible in those areas. | |
| And it's going to stay cold for days, so the ice is going to be very difficult to clear. | |
| I mean, this situation could last a long time, and the power grid outage could last a long time. | |
| And doesn't it make you wonder? | |
| You know, when the power grid is down, people can't know what's happening. | |
| At least the people affected by the power grid being down. | |
| Just wondering, do you think that this is there's an effort to have blackouts when Trump or the globalists or somebody wants to pull off something else that they don't want people talking about because maybe a third of the country's disrupted or something? | |
| I mean, I don't know. | |
| I'm just asking the question. | |
| I'm not saying that I necessarily believe that. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But I do know that Trump wants to bomb Iran and he's going to get a lot of flack for that. | |
| And probably from maybe from his PR point of view, the best time to bomb Iran is when there's a bunch of blackouts everywhere and people can't go online and complain about it. | |
| They don't even know about it until days later, maybe. | |
| That's one possibility. | |
| Or is there a financial reset that's going to happen? | |
| And maybe the banking cartel wants the American people to be as discombobulated as possible so they can't react and they can't protest. | |
| It's too cold. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Just wondering what you think. | |
| Are those or am I overthinking it? | |
| Is it just no, it's just cold weather. | |
| It's just snow and ice and cold weather. | |
| It's just normal. | |
| Okay, maybe so. | |
| Maybe that's true. | |
| Could be. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But you know, ICE also makes it impossible for first responders to reach people. | |
| Makes it extremely difficult for, I don't know, any kind of local government to do anything as well. | |
| So who knows? | |
| Or maybe is this a weapon against America by some other country? | |
| Some other country that's got like a, you know, atmospheric ionization technology bouncing off the atmosphere from China or something, right? | |
| I know this sounds like we're getting kind of far out there on this. | |
| And yeah, maybe we are. | |
| I'm just wondering. | |
| Do you think that this is, do you think this is natural? | |
| Or is it engineered? | |
| All right. | |
| Anyway, let's move on. | |
| I've got, I've got a, I've got a special report that, I don't know, you might not like it, but it's, see, all these years I've mocked electric vehicles because they always sucked, right? | |
|
Battery Breakthroughs Ahead
00:15:26
|
|
| I mean, they still do. | |
| And, you know, Ford with its F-150 lightning, it should be called like short circuit, I think, would be a better name. | |
| It was a total joke. | |
| And I think they shut down production of that and laid off thousands of people as they should because Ford sucks. | |
| But anyway, this is about to change. | |
| I've been tracking a lot of breakthroughs in battery technology. | |
| I've talked about it some these last few days. | |
| And it's clear to me that battery technology is about to take a leap forward. | |
| And no, I'm not believing the Donut company out of Estonia. | |
| I don't believe their claims, but I'm saying even aside from that, the battery improvement technology from Samsung and the things that Katyl and BYD are working on and other companies are really breakthroughs. | |
| And, you know, the sodium sulfur chemistry and so on. | |
| So, so I've got a special report for you here about how battery breakthroughs are finally going to make electric vehicles not suck. | |
| And I predict that before 2030, I will buy an electric vehicle myself. | |
| So I have a report on that. | |
| We're not there yet. | |
| It's still a couple years away, probably. | |
| But I'll run that report for you. | |
| You may find it informative because it's going to be more than vehicles. | |
| It's also going to be things like construction equipment eventually, excavators, things like that. | |
| Yeah, battery-powered excavators. | |
| That can happen. | |
| That will happen. | |
| Just a matter of time. | |
| So enjoy this report. | |
| And then following that, I'll have today's interview with Tayana. | |
| I think that's how she says it. | |
| Tayana, a Canadian, originally Serbian, but then Canadian, and then now working in Texas. | |
| And she's an online sensation, especially in Canada, because of just her brazen, uncensored speech. | |
| And I really encourage her to be incredibly uncensored because she's in my studio in Texas, and we're not subject to Canadian thought police. | |
| Thank goodness. | |
| So we really went for it. | |
| And I think you'll enjoy this interview. | |
| So special report here first and then the interview. | |
| Enjoy it. | |
| And I will bring you updates over the weekend, by the way, based on the storm situation. | |
| So check back if you have power. | |
| Check back tomorrow, Sunday. | |
| I'm going to do my best to keep you posted on what's happening and try to interpret the situation. | |
| So enjoy the rest of the show. | |
| So EVs have been in the past a horrible idea only because of battery technology. | |
| And of course, I've, you know, I've mocked EVs all these years. | |
| Oh, you're going to stand around for eight hours and recharge your car. | |
| That's insane. | |
| And the batteries don't cycle very many times, you know, for charge-discharge cycles. | |
| And when they catch on fire, you can't put out the fire. | |
| And EVs are heavy, thousands of pounds heavier than a normal car. | |
| A lot of issues. | |
| So they've been kind of a clown show of technology, but that's about to change. | |
| And I said before that I'm personally, I'm open to owning an EV if it uses sodium ion battery technology. | |
| And it turns out that this is the year of sodium ion battery production. | |
| Numerous companies that make EVs or that make batteries, such as both BYD and Katyl out of China, Are moving sodium ion batteries into production. | |
| It's a huge deal. | |
| And sodium ion batteries, by the way, they're not lighter than lithium. | |
| So we still have the problem of them being very heavy. | |
| They're also not as energy dense as lithium. | |
| However, they're cheap. | |
| They're cheap. | |
| They're reliable and they're safe. | |
| And that's going to be the first wave of what you see in terms of the new EVs is actually typically a hybrid of sodium ion chemistry with some lithium ion chemistry into the batteries, like a battery pack that's a hybrid that will be used in your vehicle as the next wave of EVs is produced. | |
| But to me, that's not enough. | |
| I need an EV that charges quickly. | |
| I need an EV that can cycle more than just a few thousand times on the battery. | |
| And so the new wave of battery technology is about to hit. | |
| Now, it's not going to happen overnight. | |
| It will still take a few years. | |
| But recently I did a podcast on sodium sulfur battery technology that uses a, I think it was a sulfur 4 plus redox chemistry to achieve the 3.7 volts necessary at the battery cell level, or maybe it was 3.6 volts. | |
| But that's sufficient voltage that's needed for electric vehicles at the battery cell level. | |
| And at least in the lab, the sodium sulfur batteries were achieving an energy density of an astonishing 2,000 watt hours per kilogram. | |
| Yeah, 2,000 watt hours per kilogram. | |
| Now, of course, we have these other battery companies like Donut out of Estonia that pretty much everybody is convinced that they are a hoax because of the claims that they've made with their batteries. | |
| For example, they say they're engineered for 100,000 cycles of charge discharge. | |
| Nobody believes that. | |
| So maybe that is a hoax. | |
| I don't know. | |
| We'll have to wait and see. | |
| But even if it is, there are other batteries coming online that are definitely not a hoax. | |
| And companies like Samsung that are working on their silver battery production. | |
| Remember, that's the silver carbon anode battery, which is a solid state battery that eliminates the liquid electrolyte. | |
| And it actually, I believe, it distributes the anode as thin film five micron thick silver, silver carbon, like thin film technology, making a solid state battery. | |
| This is really amazing, actually. | |
| That's extraordinary. | |
| And that was first demonstrated back in 2021, I believe, at a pilot project that Samsung ran to prove that they could do this. | |
| And for many years, they didn't really produce the batteries, but now they're about to. | |
| And they also need a lot of silver to do that, which is one reason why there's so much industrial demand for silver. | |
| But this kind of technology is coming online. | |
| And so I predict that I will purchase an EV before the year 2030. | |
| Of course, for me, it would have to be an EV truck or an EV SUV or some kind of larger electric vehicle. | |
| I don't like to drive little dinky vehicles around for lots of reasons. | |
| So I would only buy a big EV. | |
| But this breakthrough battery technology can make that happen. | |
| And I also predict that, let's say, 20 years down the road, there will be very few combustion engine vehicles actively running. | |
| They'll become museum pieces. | |
| The industry is going to shift. | |
| It's very clear. | |
| Everything's going to become an EV. | |
| That is everything on the road. | |
| You know, the semis, the trucks, the personal cars, everything. | |
| The taxis, the Ubers will all be EVs. | |
| And this is going to put a tremendous strain on the power grid, obviously. | |
| But that's the direction things are going. | |
| Now, here's the next interesting thing. | |
| If the battery technology becomes good enough, then you can start to make EV construction equipment. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, right now, it's not viable. | |
| The batteries just don't have the energy density. | |
| But with this breakthrough new battery technology, you could start to see things like electric skid steers or maybe electric compact track loaders or even electric excavators. | |
| I could see that happening. | |
| It's going to be a few years, but we will see that. | |
| And, you know, this equipment, it won't be used everywhere because by definition, a lot of construction sites have no electricity. | |
| Nothing's been built yet. | |
| You know, they're still clearing the ground or whatever they're doing, moving dirt, things like that. | |
| But on a lot of city projects, for example, road repair, especially a lot of these sort of left-wing climate cities, they may require by contract that some of the contractors use electric excavators or electric machines, or they don't get the contract for road repair or whatever else, you know, the job is. | |
| So I suspect you're going to see this kind of work its way into industry. | |
| And then power tools also will have a lot more battery life as this new battery technology comes online. | |
| And then robots. | |
| So a power source is one of the real limiting factors in robotics today. | |
| And also drones. | |
| That's why drones typically have a flight time of less than 30 minutes. | |
| You know, typically it's 20 to 25 minutes maybe. | |
| You don't get much more than that. | |
| That could easily double or triple over the next few years. | |
| Imagine a drone that can stay aloft for an hour. | |
| That won't be unusual in, I would say, 2028 or 2029. | |
| And then robots will become more widespread before the year 2030. | |
| Although it will take at least a decade for sort of a full-blown robot rollout. | |
| But the energy density of the new battery technology will make these robots much more functional. | |
| For example, they'd be able to work an eight-hour shift in a factory setting. | |
| And then beyond all this, if you start to extend drones, you're going to get into aviation, electric-powered aviation. | |
| So within the 2030s, you'll have personal aircraft that are all electric. | |
| Some of them might be air taxis, which are kind of like drones that carry people. | |
| Or some of them could be regular airplanes that just have an electric motor and some batteries on board. | |
| I don't know if you'll ever have an electric helicopter. | |
| That's a lot of power needed for stationary flight like that. | |
| You know, airplanes use a lot less power than helicopters, but it's possible. | |
| It's possible. | |
| Over time, I suppose you could have, well, you could have, you know, electric turbines or really, I mean, electric jet engines that require compression of air, basically, compression of air. | |
| But they would be very different from the current setup because you don't have explosive fuel to add to the compressed air, right? | |
| So I don't know what that would look like. | |
| It would be something totally different. | |
| You know, the thing about aviation fuel, kerosene, basically, is that it expands very nicely when you burn it as kind of like a fuel-air explosive, you know, which is what happens in a jet engine. | |
| Anyway, the electric engines will use some other principle, but that day is coming, although it's still a ways off, like more than a decade probably. | |
| Now, ultimately, and I predicted this long before Elon Musk predicted this, by the way, I predicted that the future currency would be kilowatt hours and that you would hold the kilowatt hours in your pocket on a device that maybe shows how many kilowatt hours it's got in it. | |
| And then to pay somebody, you know, at the grocery store, or if you're exchanging value with somebody face to face, perhaps you hold up your device and it touches their device and then you say how much you want to transfer. | |
| And then it will transfer like 10 kilowatt hours or whatever, or, you know, a megawatt hour. | |
| And that would be currency because I think that ultimately energy will be the currency. | |
| Why not? | |
| Why shouldn't it be? | |
| It's the ultimate value. | |
| Energy always has value. | |
| And in a society where electric motors are driving so many things from transportation and industry and aviation, etc., and robots, everybody needs electricity. | |
| You also need it for heating and cooling and running your refrigerator, etc., pumping water. | |
| So everybody needs electricity. | |
| It really is the universal currency, even more so than gold and silver. | |
| And the only reason why it hasn't been traded as a currency is because there has never been a way to hold it and trade it. | |
| You know, you can't hold kilowatt hours in your hand currently, but one day you'll be able to on a device, a very high-efficiency energy storage device. | |
| And there will be trade in energy in the same way that right now, let's say between nations, a nation might exchange, I don't know, soybeans for gold bars or something, you know. | |
| Or here, you ship us military weapons and we'll ship you gold. | |
| In the future, it could be, all right, we'll sell you oil and you pay us in, or we'll sell you rice or whatever, and you pay us in terawatt hours of stored energy in these energy bricks. | |
| You see what I mean? | |
| The technology will exist at some point. | |
| Energy bricks will be currency. | |
| And then after I made that prediction, Elon Musk made the same prediction. | |
|
Carry Around Portable Electricity
00:02:26
|
|
| Thought that was funny. | |
| And then a lot of people gave him heat for that. | |
| I don't know why. | |
| He's not wrong. | |
| It's actually, I think it's kind of a self-evident prediction. | |
| You know, I mean, of course, as soon as people can carry around portable electricity, it's the ultimate means of exchange. | |
| So that day is coming. | |
| And when that day comes, guess what? | |
| You're also going to need a lot of energy for your household AI engine. | |
| You're going to be running GPUs in your home to do all your artificial intelligence stuff. | |
| And those are going to need power. | |
| And so wealth is going to mean how much power you have. | |
| Like literally gigawatt hours or whatever you have. | |
| That's wealth. | |
| Or today, wealth might be gold and silver and land. | |
| In the future, wealth will be literal power. | |
| Kilowatt hours, gigawatt hours, terawatt hours, etc. | |
| And what does that tell you? | |
| Tells you that the sun has most of the wealth in the universe, by the way, because it's producing unlimited wealth with its built-in fusion generator. | |
| That's kind of awesome. | |
| And we will use solar energy to collect some of that and then store it in our new high-tech batteries. | |
| And then you'll carry around energy in your pocket. | |
| Are you happy to see me? | |
| Or is that a gigawatt hour in your pocket? | |
| Those days are coming. | |
| So I'll be covering this more and more. | |
| As you've noticed, I've, I don't know, I've become much more interested in the science of energy and battery chemistry, battery storage technology, off-grid living, robotics, and so on. | |
| And so I'm publishing all of this right now at naturalnews.com. | |
| I'm now publishing at least two articles a day, sometimes more. | |
| And I've also indexed over 340,000 science papers currently in our internal index, which is our curated data. | |
|
Young Scientist's Vision
00:09:24
|
|
| And those science papers help power our website services, our AI services that are free. | |
| Brightanswers.ai is one site where you can ask it questions and it'll do research for you. | |
| Or brightlearn.ai is our book generation website. | |
| And anytime you ask it to create a book, it also takes advantage of all those 340,000 science papers. | |
| And that number will grow to over 1 million over the next couple of months, by the way. | |
| I've already got over 10 million science papers that are cleaned up. | |
| I'm just going through a classification effort right now to determine which ones I want to use. | |
| So yeah, it's going to be good. | |
| So follow my work at naturalnews.com. | |
| Use my AI tools at brightlearn.ai or we also have brightnews.ai and we're launching some other new stuff as well. | |
| And then you can follow my videos at brightion.com. | |
| So thank you for listening. | |
| Take care. | |
| When 2020 came, that's when the mask fell off in Canada. | |
| And that's where I couldn't even ignore it anymore. | |
| I've seen this before. | |
| I've seen this happen to Yugoslavia. | |
| And I'm seeing the exact same thing with Justin Trudeau. | |
| I'm seeing the propaganda go down the same road and then seeing Canadians comply. | |
| Welcome to today's interview here on Brighteon.com. | |
| I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon, a proud Texan. | |
| And today we're joined by sort of, well, a guest Texan from Canada. | |
| And it's Tayana. | |
| We're going to give out your social media information later. | |
| You're very popular online. | |
| You've made a lot of viral videos. | |
| I was watching many of them this morning. | |
| I love what you're saying, calling out the globalists and so on. | |
| So welcome to the show. | |
| It's great to have you here in studio. | |
| Thank you so much for having me. | |
| I really appreciate it. | |
| It's actually my pleasure. | |
| So I've been watching a lot of your videos and taking a lot of your health advice for a year now. | |
| Yeah, so definitely super excited to be here. | |
| Well, we're excited to have you here. | |
| And my dog is also excited to have you. | |
| It's funny. | |
| For the audience, like my dog immediately loved you. | |
| Oh, he just, in fact, he's laying down right behind you right now. | |
| He is, yeah. | |
| And I brought my two dogs. | |
| And honestly, not being rejected by a dog is pretty much my accomplishments in life. | |
| So I think my dog might go home with you if you wanted him to. | |
| He loves you that much. | |
| Oh, he's adorable, though. | |
| Well, hopefully he'll just chill there while we talk about what's happening in the world. | |
| So you're a Canadian. | |
| I am. | |
| You have a science background in what? | |
| Molecular biology, is that right? | |
| Molecular biology and biochemistry. | |
| So bachelor's in science. | |
| Wow. | |
| Okay. | |
| And you also have worked in the oil industry for many years, I understand. | |
| I have. | |
| Unfortunately, I've been quitting every single year, but it's been 17 years straight. | |
| So I think it's just my life now. | |
| So I'm just curious, then do you combine your science background with oil and energy or what is it that you do? | |
| No, I'm actually an MWD hand. | |
| So there's absolutely no chemistry or molecular biology involved. | |
| I think I tried to break through in the science world, but I realized that it was run by money and corruption. | |
| And so I did not want to be behind that because I thought science was about integrity. | |
| And so I learned pretty quick early on that science was not really science. | |
| It was basically paid for by somebody to get the results that they wanted. | |
| And it felt a lot nicer, morally speaking, to be working with my hands out in the field. | |
| It's dirty money, clean hands kind of saying, instead of the pharmaceutical world, which was what I was supposed to go into with that degree. | |
| And I lasted three months. | |
| And I realized that they were absolutely at all. | |
| Well, we have a science lab here. | |
| Would you like to see it after the interview? | |
| Absolutely. | |
| I would love that. | |
| I mean, I actually have a microscope that I can't find and telescopes and you name it, any part of science from astronomy to microbiology. | |
| I love it all and I'll collect anything. | |
| Oh, yeah, yeah, that's it. | |
| All right. | |
| Well, after the interview, I'll show you. | |
| We have a triple quad gas chromatography instrument and we just nailed down 10 parts per trillion dioxin quantitation at that very, very low. | |
| 10 parts per trillion. | |
| And I can probably show you some of the peaks. | |
| But anyway, that's an before everybody turns the channel, because we don't want to talk about geeky stuff. | |
| You are well known for your commentary about liberty and freedom. | |
| So tell us about yourself. | |
| So I came from former Yugoslavia. | |
| That's where I was born. | |
| What is today known as Bosnia, but I'm Serbian. | |
| So we went through the war. | |
| And then my parents really kind of taught me about communism, how communism affects different people and how it takes from those who have, gives it to those who have not, and pretty much how Yugoslavia started to fall apart after Tito's death and all of that stuff. | |
| Then we moved to Switzerland. | |
| Well, not moved, but we escaped because we were in a refugee camp for five years in Switzerland. | |
| And then Switzerland pretty much told us, hey, the war is over. | |
| You guys need to either, you know, stay legally or leave or find another country. | |
| And my parents applied to New Zealand, Australia, and Canada, and Canada accepted us. | |
| And I was nine and a half when we moved to Canada. | |
| Wow. | |
| And I'm 39 now. | |
| So I've been in Canada for almost 30 years, minus working down here for a year and a half and a year in Australia. | |
| Wow. | |
| So you've really seen a lot of the world. | |
| Yes, I've traveled. | |
| I've backpacked. | |
| I used to love traveling to remote places that didn't really have a lot of people just to see the world and see how different people are living. | |
| And that's kind of how I got into the whole survival and off-grid living as well. | |
| Or at least it piqued my interest when I was 19. | |
| I didn't really think I would be into it. | |
| And then as the years went on, I started to get more and more into it. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| Wow. | |
| And I guess you've also seen then how globalists create wars and pit people against each other, such as in the Bosnian War. | |
| Exactly. | |
| They would pit people against each other based on religion in that case. | |
| Oh, I'm so sorry. | |
| And they used to put different components in there, such as economic stress. | |
| That was one of the factors. | |
| Then you have three different religions, you know, living in one country, which is Bosnia. | |
| Then you've got the other two religions. | |
| You've got Orthodox Christians, Serbians, Catholics, Croatians. | |
| And then we had Bosnian Muslim population. | |
| And it was pretty much all three of them against each other. | |
| Then you learn about the corruption that the UN NATO have, you know, I guess, created in Bosnia during the war. | |
| And it's not necessarily the organization itself, but there are very bad actors that use the organization in order to get into places where women and children are. | |
| And so I've seen pretty much all of it from, you know, how you're treated in a refugee camp to seeing how other people treat Switzerland and refugee camps. | |
| So I can kind of understand why people don't really like illegals in their country. | |
| But at the same time, I know that there's good people, bad people everywhere in the sense of the way. | |
| And so I've kind of seen a lot of everything that has already kind of transpired, especially during 2020 and how things played out. | |
| And you got to really right up front look at all this at a very young age. | |
| Very young age. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So it woke me up at a very young age. | |
| Wow. | |
| Wasn't that the conflict where there was Milosevic? | |
| Yeah, there was Milosevic Tujman. | |
| I think he was the Croatian guy. | |
| And then I can't remember what the Muslim Bosnian guy, I think his name was. | |
| But they had three leaders that kind of showed up and they wanted separation. | |
| And so, of course, you get propaganda in there and then the TV. | |
| Through the instigation by the globalists. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And then you get people talking and they don't really read the news properly. | |
| So people translate things in a different way. | |
| And what kicked off the war was basically a propaganda piece that somebody shot at somebody else, you know, deep in the mountains and nobody knows what. | |
| And it just kicked off a full-scale war. | |
| They started to close the borders down. | |
| And there are certain memories I remember of us in the war and then getting out and like flashbacks, I guess, that I told my parents when I was, I think, 25. | |
| And they didn't realize that I could remember because I was only four, four years old. | |
| Wow. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| Was that also the conflict when the United States claimed it was an accident, but they bombed the Chinese embassy? | |
| No, I don't think so. | |
| That might have been the Serbia-NATO war. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| Okay. | |
| But I'm not sure. | |
|
Ottawa's Perspective on Canadian Authoritarianism
00:15:23
|
|
| I don't think I, I don't remember that. | |
| Yeah, I'm not, my memory's fuzzy on that too, but I remember at some point the U.S. dropped a bomb on the Chinese embassy and killed a lot of Chinese nationals and then said it was an accident. | |
| Oh. | |
| And of course, we know it's never an accident. | |
| I honestly have no idea. | |
| Yeah, I did not hear about that. | |
| Well, that's pretty wild. | |
| Anyway, so you lived many years in Alberta. | |
| Yes. | |
| And, you know, I've called Alberta sort of Canada's Texas. | |
| Yeah, we actually call it the Texas of the North. | |
| Oh, do you? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I wasn't even aware of that. | |
| Yeah, we call Alberta the Texas of the North. | |
| Anybody that hates Alberta and Canada, they're like, oh, they're like the Texans of Canada. | |
| Yeah, so that's what we get called. | |
| That's why I think the relationship between Alberta and Texas is just awesome. | |
| Yeah, I think so too. | |
| And I understand that Albertans, that's the correct term, right? | |
| Yeah, Albertans. | |
| Albertans, there's a referendum that's becoming more popular there to try to secede from Canada, correct? | |
| Yes, absolutely. | |
| So right now, what I'm seeing online and what I'm seeing people send me is there's lineups miles long, hours to sign the referendum. | |
| And so first they were told you need a certain amount of interest where people went online to sign something. | |
| And then now it has been elevated to actual signatures where people need two identifying verifications that they live in Alberta and that they want this. | |
| We have lawyers that are speaking with the U.S. administration as well on how we can do this. | |
| And by the looks of it, it has been a lot more popular than what the media wants us to know. | |
| And I think they're trying not to take it seriously. | |
| But the lineups are miles long, hours to sign them. | |
| Wow. | |
| People are driving three hours just to get to a nearest town that has the signature referendum on there. | |
| So do you know if Alberta were to secede from Canada, would it become its own republic? | |
| On paper, technically. | |
| But they would still be part of Canada. | |
| We'd still keep our Canadian passports, but they might have an ID just specific for Alberta. | |
| And so it would basically just take us away from Ottawa's control. | |
| It would be... | |
| Oh, so it's not a full secession. | |
| It's... | |
| It's not a full secession. | |
| So a lot of people had pushbacks because of the Canadian pension plan. | |
| And they're trying to say that we will have an Alberta pension plan as well. | |
| But our Canadian pension plan is pretty much World Economic Forums. | |
| You know, Christia Freeland took all of that and put it into the World Economic Forum, all of our pensions. | |
| So a lot of people have been mad about that. | |
| And so that was the main issue is people did not want to completely secede from Canada. | |
| And that's what would have held us back. | |
| But this way we can kind of navigate through also the Aborigine treaty lands. | |
| And it would basically just be on paper so that Ottawa cannot dictate to us what we can do with our oil and gas. | |
| But it seems like Ottawa absolutely needs total control over Alberta for energy. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And thus, won't there be a tremendous amount of effort to try to stop this referendum? | |
| Kind of like in the UK and Brexit a few years ago as well, right? | |
| Yes. | |
| And Ottawa is trying to stop Alberta, and that's why everybody's doing everything legally and it's taking as long as it has been. | |
| Quebec actually has more oil than Alberta and Saskatchewan and northern BC combined, except they're very green and they expand. | |
| They extract it. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So what is happening is we're the ones extracting it. | |
| We're the ones working for it. | |
| And then we send equalization payments to Quebec. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's crazy. | |
| And we don't get a penny of those. | |
| BC doesn't either. | |
| It's the have-not provinces that get it, that get our equalization payments from oil and gas. | |
| And then they try and stop us from drilling and exploring even further. | |
| So the woke Canadian territories are pillaging Alberta. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And that's the exact same communism that crashes pretty much everywhere. | |
| You take from the haves, you give it to the have-nots. | |
| The have-nots are never satisfied fully. | |
| And then the haves finally reach a breaking point where they no longer want to be part of that country. | |
| They no longer want to be exploited. | |
| And so now they're breaking up. | |
| And it's exactly what happened in Yugoslavia, except I don't think we did it the proper paperway. | |
| They just grabbed their weapons and started shooting at each other all sides. | |
| All right. | |
| And it seems to me like Carney was installed as a globalist to maintain control over this whole situation, keep Canadians in line and keep pushing globalist agendas that are anti-family. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Is that what would you add to that? | |
| So, we have been labeled anybody who's a traditional person who wants traditional values, who wants to a family, we've been labeled extremists in Canada. | |
| Of course. | |
| And we've been put on a list. | |
| And we are being told that we are basically a threat to Canada and the sustainability to Canada, even though all of us are employed, all of us are hard workers, most of us are blue-collar. | |
| You know, we pay our taxes, we don't break laws. | |
| We just want our traditional values to be left alone. | |
| But the woke side does not want to leave us alone. | |
| So they've been persistent with either policies, agendas, more propaganda. | |
| And it has been pretty much concentrated on Alberta for a lot of years, ever since Justin Trudeau came in. | |
| And we believe that Justin Trudeau was, well, Kearney was Justin Trudeau's handler, his handler, because everything that happened from 2020, even during the Trucker protest, was approved and signed off by Kearney before Justin Trudeau could do anything. | |
| Well, that's disturbing because it's also, it showed that Canada and also Australia and New Zealand were able to just leap very rapidly to full-blown authoritarianism with the trucker protest or with COVID, the lockdowns, the masks, and so on, or vaccine mandates. | |
| Yes. | |
| Canada, the Canadian government doesn't believe in any form of liberty, does it? | |
| It does not. | |
| It does not like individuality. | |
| It also punishes people who are very motivated either to be successful or to invent things. | |
| The Canadian government will make sure to pretty much put barriers in front of you at every step of the way. | |
| And they've done that even to Edison Motors. | |
| So we have something like Tesla, but it's Edison Motors, and those poor guys have just been bombarded by the government, even though the government is preaching these green initiatives. | |
| So here comes a company to invent something green. | |
| And the government's like, nope, that can't happen. | |
| Yeah, of course. | |
| Yeah, and I'm not seeing any amazing AI tech coming out of Canada or drones or robotics or anything. | |
| Yeah, we are stifled when it comes to any sort of innovation. | |
| I believe there was a guy in Saskatchewan, and this was a few years ago, where he learned how to recycle some form of, I believe it was like grain bins on farms to recycle them and make them into something else. | |
| And he was working and everything was flowing. | |
| There was a U.S. company that wanted to help him out. | |
| The government heard about it and he's been stuck in lawsuits for millions of dollars, even though he has not broken a single regulation or law. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, that sounds about right. | |
| It's on par with Canada. | |
| Right. | |
| So I'm just guessing it must be very, well, I'm wondering: has it been difficult for you to live in Canada? | |
| Because you're clearly an independent thinker. | |
| Yes. | |
| You have an international perspective. | |
| You live in other countries and probably speak multiple languages, I would imagine. | |
| But what Canada has become is this soma mass medicated NPC land of really sort of polite people who don't want to rock the boat on anything and aren't willing to stand up for their own future. | |
| Exactly. | |
| At least that's my perspective. | |
| Oh, you are 100% on point, like 100% on point with how Canadians are. | |
| And that was actually done on purpose, the propaganda, and to also be jealous of each other and to watch each other's almost every move. | |
| And then to be a good little citizen, Canadians will call the police on you for anything. | |
| Yeah, they will, won't they? | |
| Oh, they will. | |
| So you must have ruffled a few feathers along the way, I would imagine. | |
| Oh, I did. | |
| Like everything was fine because we moved out in the middle of nowhere. | |
| We were about eight hours north of Edmonton. | |
| So we were out in the middle of nowhere where the sun doesn't go down all summer and then doesn't come up in the winter. | |
| And we had our own little farm. | |
| You know, I figured society's a dumpster fire. | |
| I just don't want anything to do with them. | |
| On the farm, I get to create what I want. | |
| I get to build little things. | |
| But when 2020 came, that's when the mask fell off in Canada. | |
| And that's where I couldn't even ignore it anymore. | |
| And I decided, you know what? | |
| I've seen this before. | |
| I've seen this happen to Yugoslavia. | |
| And I'm seeing the exact same thing transpire over the last five years prior to 2020 with Justin Trudeau. | |
| I'm seeing the propaganda go down the same road. | |
| I'm seeing them take certain laws that state that the news media can't lie to you. | |
| As in 2019, they took that law away. | |
| And that's when my antenna started going up a little bit. | |
| And then seeing Canadians comply the way they did in 2020, that's where I just kind of lost it. | |
| And I went online. | |
| Well, I had many accounts during 2020, but they all got deleted. | |
| And I did. | |
| Yeah, of course. | |
| And then I gave up actually. | |
| And a month later, I did one rant video. | |
| And it was that rant video where I went from 80 followers, most of them bots, and like maybe 10 people that know me to like 10,000 overnight. | |
| And I didn't realize it was going viral. | |
| I was on the rig. | |
| I did all of my videos from my rig shack for the first two years. | |
| And it went viral. | |
| And my mom called and she's like, your face is all over the internet. | |
| What's happening? | |
| And I was like, I have no idea. | |
| I just woke up. | |
| So I went online and I was like, oopsie-daisy. | |
| But I figured, I'm like, hey, you know what? | |
| If I'm on a list, might as well go big or go home. | |
| And so I decided to put everything out there, everything that I knew from research vaccines to the FDA papers to the FDA European version of the papers to the Pfizer FDA application. | |
| And I mean, I had so many accounts taken down, but I just kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger. | |
| And now it's to this point where it is. | |
| And I have no idea how I got here. | |
| I just go online and yell at my phone in my truck. | |
| Well, it's because the truth is always popular. | |
| It is, yes. | |
| And I would imagine that many of the things that you said in those videos years ago have now been proven to be true. | |
| They have. | |
| And that's the weird part because I got so much hate those two years. | |
| But, you know, I figured I'm like, hey, I've worked in the oil field with a bunch of guys. | |
| They've literally, you know, roasted me for 13 years. | |
| So I've got thick skin. | |
| So the amount of threats that I did receive online were just, yeah, whatever. | |
| We'll just make another video. | |
| If you're going to come and find me, you've got to drive like another, you know, three hours this way into the woods. | |
| And I don't think any of those liberals would have done that. | |
| Yeah, liberals are big on the verbal threats. | |
| They are, yeah. | |
| They don't actually want to do the work to try to stalk you. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They're just about online. | |
| Most of them are just empty threats anyway. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| No, I haven't met any liberals that want to try to come here and dodge bullets and try to avoid getting their arms ripped off by my dog. | |
| Because I don't know, for whatever reason, they like their limbs attached. | |
| They do, yeah. | |
| And they also don't like putting effort in, but they're the loudest ones to complain and the first ones to complain and ask for handouts, which is the weird part. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So you said some things in some recent videos. | |
| I know because I was watching your videos this morning while I'm making my smoothie. | |
| Oh, no. | |
| That's called research. | |
| Because I'm going to interview you. | |
| So I love what you're saying about how you think this whole liberal world order is actually crumbling. | |
| And I'd like you to talk about that. | |
| Not just Trump's recent appearance at Davos and the things he said, but your overall big picture perspective. | |
| Because I agree with you. | |
| I think these old systems are crumbling because they can no longer bamboozle the world population like they used to be able to. | |
| But what's your take on this? | |
| I honestly think that they made a mistake with 2020. | |
| I think they wanted to speed something up. | |
| I think they've gotten very narcissistic. | |
| I've been studying kind of how the elites or the shadow government actually work and how slowly they do things, how you can't really tell what they're doing or which way they're going. | |
| And there usually are five points that they want to accomplish with one plan or maybe even more. | |
| But 2020 was when they really kind of exposed who they really are. | |
| And then it became a lot easier to show the research that we have researched, you know, that I have researched forever to my audience. | |
| And being like, see, when Justin Trudeau went, boop, no more money in your bank account. | |
| I'm like, that's what they're going to do with the digital IDs. | |
| This is what they will do. | |
| And so I've been kind of studying these, you know, shadow governments and why they do what they do and what their actual end goal is. | |
| And when I found the Agenda 2050, that's when I found their end goal. | |
| And that's where all the puzzle pieces started to be put together. | |
| And then I realized that it's like a tentacle. | |
| They have so many different avenues that they can do this plan. | |
| And they're kind of attacking us from almost every corner that there is from while also claiming that it's a conspiracy theory that they're doing this. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So it's gaslighting everybody. | |
| Like, oh no, it's a conspiracy theory. | |
| This would never happen. | |
| This would never happen. | |
| And then they do it. | |
| And then they do it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so when I realized that in 2050 that they actually wanted to enslave humanity and have a one world government, I realized that this entire, well, let's give the third world countries a chance. | |
| If we just topple the West a little bit, we can give the power to like the third world countries. | |
| And I'm like, no, you guys already ruined the third world countries for a reason because you can go in and ravage everything with absolutely no policies to follow or environmental regulations like you have to in the West. | |
| And so the higher the regulations became in the West, more of the industry started to leave. | |
| And they're not making other countries richer. | |
| They're actually polluting a lot more. | |
| And so I started to realize, I'm like, oh, this is the toppling of the Western world. | |
| And, you know, trying to pretty much take over because the third world countries are already taken over. | |
| Now you need to take over the West. | |
| That is the beacon of human rights. | |
| And Kearney is leading the way for destroying Western civilization. | |
|
Accelerated Depopulation Plan
00:00:52
|
|
| Oh, he is. | |
| He was implanted for sure because he worked for the Bank of England before he left England and he bankrolled them. | |
| So I'm pretty sure he's going to do the exact same to Canada. | |
| Now, you mentioned the 2050 plan. | |
| But I'm wondering how much of that has really accelerated now because of the depopulation agenda. | |
| See, I think they don't plan to even have a billion humans left by 2050. | |
| And that what we're seeing right now is just a run-up to a really accelerated depopulation schedule. | |
| I also think that they didn't realize that some of the AI and robotics advancements would happen this quickly. | |
|
Hunting Licenses and Gun Control
00:15:16
|
|
| And that's accelerating the schedule to eliminate and replace humans. | |
| I'm curious about your thoughts on that subject. | |
| That's exactly where my research took me. | |
| And that's what I think that 2020 was. | |
| And I believe that the vaccines are kind of a slow, I shouldn't say, it is a slow death of changing of DNA, depending on which, I guess, batch you got. | |
| Because they're pretty smart. | |
| They're not going to make every single batch exactly the same so that everybody has the exact same symptoms, yeah, death schedule. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So I think that they actually had saline ones. | |
| I think that they have ones that change DNA. | |
| I think they have ones that actually have metal in them. | |
| And I think that some have cancer-causing agents in them. | |
| Clearly. | |
| And so that way they can see the progression depending on the person or the group of people that got the vaccine. | |
| They could run like 50 experiments on humans. | |
| Exactly. | |
| With complete immunity. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Because, and if you have four different makes, like we had the Pfizer, the Moderna, and then the JNJ, and I think there was one more. | |
| I can't remember who they were. | |
| In Alberta, that was a biointech? | |
| I think so, yeah. | |
| And they were saying that it wasn't mRNA vaccine. | |
| So then I asked, I called that company with my phone while I was at work. | |
| And I was like, hey, so you guys are claiming your vaccine is an mRNA. | |
| But do you guys actually have the viral vector vaccine proof that you isolated this virus? | |
| Because I haven't found the isolation yet. | |
| So I don't know how you guys are making a viral vector vaccine without the vector part. | |
| And I just got hung up on. | |
| And then I got blocked. | |
| Yeah, how dare you ask an actual intelligent question. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But if I told you. | |
| Shut up. | |
| And that's what everybody said. | |
| And I would try and use logic. | |
| Like I was speaking with a nurse and I was like, so which one should I get? | |
| Should I get the third and the fourth because the first and the second didn't work? | |
| Or should I just go for the first and the second? | |
| And I confused her so much, she goes, just get all of them. | |
| I don't care. | |
| And I was like, whoa. | |
| And that's when I realized just how captured people were by the propaganda, the fear, and then the copious amounts of shaming for those who didn't want to get it. | |
| But I just, I'm oilfield. | |
| So when they called me a grandma killer, I just took it and I put it on a shirt and I put grandma killer. | |
| I was just like, whatever. | |
| I know I'm not killing grandma, but if that's what you're going to call me, I'll totally wing it, dude. | |
| So yeah, that's pretty much what I did in Northern Alberta. | |
| Well, yeah, I love how you respond to that. | |
| But you could probably get away with that because you're a woman. | |
| Like, you know, a guy wearing a shirt that says grandma killer wouldn't have the same reaction. | |
| He'd probably be arrested. | |
| That's true, too. | |
| Yep. | |
| Because like, well, in Canada, what's really weird, I've noticed that down here, the roles, gender roles, are still very traditional. | |
| And it's nice. | |
| In Canada, we don't have those. | |
| So I was yelled at by a full-grown, like six-foot-three dude in a store in my face for not wearing a mask. | |
| And I just started speaking German and then I would start speaking Serbian and I said I didn't understand. | |
| And then they'd be like, mask, mask. | |
| Like, and they're trying to tell me. | |
| I'm like, okay, right. | |
| And I would just walk away without my mask on. | |
| So yeah. | |
| But no, it's so much different from the United States to Canada. | |
| We have become so woke that I honestly didn't realize how integrated into the propaganda I was until I came down to the United States. | |
| Oh, that's interesting. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I'm the one that was like, hey, this is propaganda. | |
| This is this, this is that. | |
| But I didn't realize subconsciously how much it was actually affecting me until I came to the United States and started to talk to people who were genuine, didn't care about what they said. | |
| The government can't punish them. | |
| And so all of a sudden, now I'm having real human connections. | |
| They're not fake anymore. | |
| They're not like presentative or performative like they are in Canada because a lot of people are scared to say how they feel, even in the privacy of their own home. | |
| Yeah, I mean, from our point of view as Texans, I mean, you know, we love so many people from Canada and, you know, great creativity, inspiration, intelligence, and so on. | |
| But our perception is that the mainstream Canadians, not people like you, but the mainstream ones are woke-ass pussies, basically. | |
| You know, I mean, sorry, but they, and even the men get all like wimpified down. | |
| Like, what are your pronouns? | |
| You know, I mean, come on. | |
| This is Texas. | |
| First of all, half of everybody here is armed. | |
| You know, I mean, you go out in the grocery store, everybody's armed, which makes a very polite society, actually. | |
| It does. | |
| I have not seen a road rage incident like I have in Canada down here at all. | |
| I'll hear one little honk, you know, if somebody forgets to, you know, go on the red light. | |
| And then it's usually, I'm sorry. | |
| But yeah, the guns definitely. | |
| You don't honk. | |
| You don't rage honk at people in Texas. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I found that out when I was down here because I once sat at a red light behind somebody for the entire cycle. | |
| Cause I was like, I'm not going to honk because everyone's got a gun. | |
| So I'm like, we're just sitting here at the red light for another cycle and we're cool with that. | |
| So yeah. | |
| Right. | |
| Are you allowed to handle firearms in Texas based on your immigration status or whatever? | |
| We're allowed to go to like shooting ranges and rent them. | |
| If we do go hunting, we have to go with a hunting guide. | |
| Yeah, but we still need a license, like a hunting license. | |
| Oh, a hunting license. | |
| A hunting license, yeah. | |
| So if you just want to go shoot rifles, I don't. | |
| Could you do that? | |
| I don't know if we can. | |
| Because we went to a gun store and tried to buy a gun and they said, no, and we had an ATF guy call us. | |
| And then he's like, this must be a mistake because you guys are Canadian and you're not a threat to us. | |
| So we're like, I don't know what happened. | |
| And he's like, well, I'll fix it. | |
| And he fixed it on the computer. | |
| And then we just left it at that. | |
| We never went back again. | |
| So you didn't buy the gun? | |
| No, no, because he fixed it for us and everything. | |
| Like there was just, I guess, I don't know, admin issue. | |
| And just having an ATF agent actually call you, both my husband and I are on the phone. | |
| Like we're both sweating. | |
| I'm like apologizing profusely. | |
| And he's like, can you stop saying sorry? | |
| He's like, I will deport you if you say sorry one more time. | |
| So I was like, I apologize. | |
| He's like, hey, that's a loophole. | |
| And I was like, yep. | |
| Super great guy. | |
| And he told us everything of what we're allowed, what we're not allowed and stuff like that. | |
| Well, I was just curious because if I had known, I don't know if it's legal, but if I had known you were into firearms, I would have brought like my 50 cal Barrett. | |
| Oh, you know, like a semi-automatic, 50-cal. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| Because it's Texas. | |
| I know. | |
| So why not? | |
| I know. | |
| Why not? | |
| You guys also have like the helicopter pig hunts, which we want to do where you like shoot a big gun out of a helicopter at pigs. | |
| And I'm like, I love the United States. | |
| Like, honestly, God bless Texas. | |
| Well, see, that's funny. | |
| Now, we have a helicopter pad right out here, which is our parking lot. | |
| Oh, cool. | |
| And we had Gary Haven come and he flies his helicopter in to be on the show. | |
| No way. | |
| Yeah, he lands right where you park. | |
| That is so cool. | |
| See, no one in Canada can have a private helicopter. | |
| I've seen people that are like, oh, I have a tank, like a little mini one. | |
| And he's like, oh, if you want to go ride on my land, I'm like, you have a tank? | |
| And I'm like, this is why, you know, God bless America. | |
| Like, you can't do that anywhere else in the world. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Just to have a little tank or a helicopter and just go, you know, for a drive. | |
| Like, it's so cool. | |
| Well, high maintenance costs, though, I would imagine for helicopters. | |
| But by the way, I don't shoot animals. | |
| I'm not a hunter. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| That's against my moral code, actually. | |
| I only shoot steel targets at long range. | |
| I'm a long-range shooter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I only shoot steel targets or potentially like home invaders. | |
| Okay. | |
| You're not allowed to, I guess you can shoot animals, but not rapists and murderers. | |
| Yeah, apparently we can't do like shoot animals anymore either. | |
| They're trying to take away all of our guns. | |
| They started off with handguns. | |
| Then it went to certain scary rifles, which apparently included the Black Rifle Coffee Company because our RCMP, which is like your FBI main guy, thought that the Black Rifle Company was a gun and they banned it for like a month. | |
| They sell coffee. | |
| Yeah, and they sell coffee. | |
| So that had to be reversed. | |
| And now they're going after everything. | |
| And they're even thinking about banning like bow and arrow. | |
| Really? | |
| Yeah. | |
| In certain counties in Ontario. | |
| Well, because, you know, somebody could have a 30-round arrow quiver. | |
| Oh, I know. | |
| You never know. | |
| It would be dangerous. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But illegals are allowed to have illegal guns and rob you. | |
| And the cops said that we just have to give them our gun or our keys and let them and help them with the TV out the door, you know? | |
| So this is what's really interesting, then how does Canada think, or its leaders, how are they going to stop Trump's military invasion of Canada without having a Second Amendment up there? | |
| See, Trump can just walk in and take it. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Like he's going to do Greenland. | |
| And I keep laughing about that. | |
| I'm like, well, the European country leaders have proven they don't want their own countries. | |
| Exactly. | |
| They're not willing to protect their borders. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Why shouldn't Trump just take Trump land and rename it Greenland? | |
| Yep. | |
| I mean, Greenland and rename it Trump land. | |
| Sorry, just put a giant T on it. | |
| You know, just call it Trump land. | |
| That would be awesome. | |
| We'll take it all. | |
| We'll take it. | |
| Why not? | |
| I think that would be awesome. | |
| I'm being satirical, obviously, but Canada doesn't want to defend itself. | |
| No, we don't have anything. | |
| Like we've got Canada geese. | |
| That's our Air Force pretty much. | |
| And then I think there was a show on Canada and a bunch of, I think, curling seniors were saying that they would fight Trump. | |
| So you might have a geriatric military at the border waiting with canes and harsh words. | |
| I think the UK is recruiting seniors up to age 65 to fight Russia. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Okay, yeah. | |
| Maybe that's Germany, but. | |
| I'm not sure. | |
| I just, I know they're running out of people, so they're putting anybody in the front line. | |
| And that would kind of be the Canadian military. | |
| But if Trump came in through Alberta, 85% of Alberta would help him. | |
| Right. | |
| Yeah, I actually did that survey online. | |
| I was like, if Trump were to invade us, how many people would help? | |
| And 87% said they would help. | |
| The other ones said they would fight back. | |
| I think it was like 13% said they would fight back. | |
| And then like 2% or something said that they didn't care. | |
| Yeah, and I know that doesn't add up to 100, but it was around those numbers. | |
| Right. | |
| Well, but that brings up a really important question. | |
| And I don't want to get you into any more trouble than you're already in, but do you think that the government of Canada has aided the illegal immigrant invasion of the United States? | |
| Aided the illegal invasion of the United States? | |
| From the US. | |
| From our northern border. | |
| Oh, 100%. | |
| Like there's cameras. | |
| There are hunting cameras along the border with certain hunters, especially in the eastern corner, that have caught illegals coming in from Canada down to the United States. | |
| 100%. | |
| Canada does not look. | |
| Canada will only take you as a criminal or seriously if you have a Canadian passport and you're crossing the border back from the U.S. to Canada. | |
| They are the most ruthless guys ever. | |
| Like I don't, I've never had a criminal record, nothing. | |
| And I will get pulled over at least like, I don't know. | |
| If I'm flying, 100% of the time. | |
| If I'm driving, maybe 50-50. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Just going back to Canada. | |
| Yeah, going back to Canada. | |
| Coming into the United States, super easy. | |
| Everyone's so friendly. | |
| They just check you. | |
| They're like, oh, okay, you don't have criminal records. | |
| You have papers. | |
| Here you go. | |
| And they ask you and you tell them the truth. | |
| You tell the truth on the Canadian side. | |
| You're getting pulled over and searched. | |
| Wow, just like intimidation tactics? | |
| Yeah, intimidation tactics, trying to make you feel like a criminal in your own country. | |
| It's just insane how bad it's gotten. | |
| And it really took a turn in 2020. | |
| Like everybody had a very good mask on, very well, you know, acted out in public that, you know, that they didn't really care what you did with your life, that they valued freedoms. | |
| And, you know, but that mask really came off in 2020. | |
| And because so many people complied, now half of the government officials think that they can do whatever they want. | |
| Wow. | |
| Okay. | |
| Tell our audience how they can follow you on social. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| On my Facebook and Instagram, it's my full name, which is Tyana Tsekic, which is super weird to spell. | |
| And on X, it's TruthSeek01011. | |
| Or if anybody Googles TruthSeeker01011, you will find pages or haters on Google that will eventually lead you back to my pages. | |
| And my pages are all verified, but there are a lot of fake pages. | |
| Okay, so wait a minute. | |
| On X is TruthSeek 01011. | |
| Yes. | |
| So what we have up behind you is the wrong. | |
| Oh, so the name is TruthSeeker, but if you search it, it's TruthSeek. | |
| I ran out of space. | |
| And to be honest, I didn't, I had like five followers when I made that page. | |
| So I was like, meh, who cares? | |
| No one's going to look for me. | |
| So 01011, what does that indicate? | |
| Oh, it was a joke a long time ago on the internet. | |
| There was like talk of how to escape the Matrix. | |
| And because I used to go down those rabbit holes, I was like, has anyone found the exit for the Matrix? | |
| And someone's like, I don't know, but if you find the door, the code to the door is 01011. | |
| And so I remember that as a joke. | |
| If I ever find the door out of the matrix, that I will just put that code in and I'll be able to get out of the matrix. | |
| Well, okay, that's interesting. | |
| But, you know, in binary, that equals 11 also, which is 1-1. | |
| Yes. | |
| So your name just has a bunch of ones in it. | |
| That is true. | |
| Yes. | |
| Think about it. | |
| That is very true. | |
| A lot of people were like, what's the binary code? | |
| So I used to, I just told them that that was the code. | |
| It didn't really have anything to do with coding or computers, but it was just the door code that somebody said happened to be out of the Matrix. | |
| And that's what I've been trying to figure out is how to get out of the Matrix and the game just to see what the real truth is behind the, I guess, you know, the curtain. | |
| Okay, so I've got a couple more questions for you about Canada. | |
| Two questions. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| How much cocaine does Ford have? | |
| And then secondly, when is he going to threaten to cut off the power to the east coast of the United States again? | |
|
Zelensky's Money Laundering Allegations
00:03:17
|
|
| Oh, Rob Ford. | |
| Oh, that guy's, I call him flip-flop Ford. | |
| I know he's conservative, but he's a bloated bastard. | |
| I hate that guy so much. | |
| It was his brother that was the cokehead. | |
| Oh, that's right. | |
| Yeah, it was his brother that was a crackhead. | |
| He was actually really good. | |
| He was for the people, and he was openly a crackhead and said that he partied with drug dealers. | |
| Like he was actually, sadly, that was the best mirror we've ever originally. | |
| Yeah, that was the best premieres we've ever had. | |
| That was an upgrade for him. | |
| Yeah, literally was an upgrade. | |
| Well, Hunter Biden agrees with that. | |
| Okay, there we go. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But Rob Ford, yeah, he's just talk. | |
| He pretty much flip-flops every single day. | |
| Sometimes he's pro-Trump. | |
| Sometimes he's anti-Trump. | |
| He pretends to be a conservative when we all know he's in love with Christia Freeland. | |
| And he's right up Mark Carney's like anal cavity. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| Speaking of cocaine, Freeland, didn't she just join the Zelensky regime? | |
| Yeah, so she money laundered all of our money. | |
| What? | |
| Like, this is the craziest thing ever. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then she's like, hey, guys, I quit and now I'm going to be a finance minister or something with Zelensky. | |
| But she's actually originally from the Ukraine. | |
| They lied and said she was born in Alberta, Canada. | |
| Yeah. | |
| An hour north from where we were. | |
| And I started to investigate to see if anybody knew her, what school she went to, what high school, elementary. | |
| No one knew her. | |
| So she's essentially running the money laundering cover-up for Zelensky. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| And I think that she pretty much was set into Canada to take all of our tax money and money launder through the Ukraine. | |
| And now that she might be under investigation, which there never is any in Canada because no one holds anybody accountable, she pretty much just said, hey, thanks, Canada, for 10 years. | |
| And she moved to the Ukraine. | |
| Now she's working for Zelensky. | |
| She lives in Ukraine now. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yep. | |
| She left completely. | |
| She left Canada. | |
| And she's saying that she's working for the Ukraine for free. | |
| It's a voluntary position. | |
| Yeah, that's free cocaine, maybe. | |
| Exactly. | |
| But the other thing that's happened this year in the United States as well is the realization because of, well, you know, the exposing of, for example, of the Minneapolis Somali front fraud that maybe half of all government spending is nothing but money laundering and fraud. | |
| I honestly, in Canada, it's probably closer to 80%. | |
| You're probably right. | |
| Because our roads suck. | |
| Like, we have no plows. | |
| I have no idea where any of our tax money is going to. | |
| And we pretty much pay 50 to 55% of our tax, our wages to taxes. | |
| That's insane. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But this see, what I'm getting to is I think that we're looking at the fall of Western civilization. | |
| Like, not instantly, not tomorrow, but this is the crumbling of the last chapter of Western civilization, where it's the exposing of the fact that the whole thing has been a giant fraud front for generations. | |
| The currency won't be worth anything. | |
| All the politicians are fake drug addicts or transgenders or whatever. | |
|
Waking People Early
00:08:37
|
|
| What are your thoughts on that kind of comment and Western civilization in general? | |
| I'm seeing the change. | |
| I'm hoping that Western civilization doesn't fall, especially as a woman. | |
| Like, I've traveled the world. | |
| I've seen how... | |
| You want to live in an Arab country? | |
| Ah, no. | |
| No, I have not. | |
| I will absolutely not travel there as a woman. | |
| I've dealt with them, especially in the oil field, and it is not the same. | |
| So I can go work Norway. | |
| I can go work Australia. | |
| I can go work anywhere in the West, and I will be seen pretty much as a normal person going to work. | |
| But I've worked with engineers from those countries, and they do not like women. | |
| And they are open about them. | |
| And if they're not open about them, it just takes about a month for them to start the hatred to be seeped, either passively, aggressively, or just completely open. | |
| And I've worked with a couple of them in northern Alberta and at refineries. | |
| Okay, but back to Western civilization. | |
| And yeah, I don't want to see it all crumble either, but I think we've lost the original vision already. | |
| We have, you know, like here in America, we've lost the founding fathers' vision. | |
| This is not a constitutional republic any longer. | |
| But maybe we can recreate that. | |
| But the current system in place is going to fall first before there's even an opportunity to do that. | |
| Exactly. | |
| So I guess things need to fall. | |
| Things need to be demolished before they can be rebuilt. | |
| I'm just hoping that whoever rebuilds it won't be on the extremist side or the leftist woke side. | |
| But, you know, all the people that help take a civilization down, they've always been the first ones to, I guess, be gulagged or put in prisons. | |
| That's every single communist story. | |
| They use the left to destroy something, to bring in a Marxist system. | |
| And then they have to get rid of them because they know too much and they know that they've been had in that system. | |
| Because most leftists think that they're fighting for progressive values and open societies and this utopia. | |
| What they don't understand is that they're actually ushering in full communism and totalitarianism. | |
| But now with technology, that's a fiery road to go down. | |
| Yeah, see, you mentioned technology. | |
| I'm glad you brought that up because I think history changes here at this pivot point. | |
| I think communism is no longer, you know, communism, a means of controlling the masses, not just means of production, but the people. | |
| And then Marxism also keeping people in a state of constant fear and control. | |
| But that's the way things worked up until now because it was human cognition and human labor that was extracted by the people in power in order to amplify their own power. | |
| Whereas now we've hit this pivot point where human cognition is becoming obsolete because of machine cognition and human labor a few years from now, much of it can be replaced by automation labor. | |
| That is very true. | |
| So for the first time in history, they don't need communism. | |
| They need extermination. | |
| Exactly. | |
| But then there will also be the survivors that they will have to control because the survivors will see what happened. | |
| They will see the atrocities. | |
| So now they become a danger. | |
| So they will have to control them either through digital IDs or technology or modifying our behavior. | |
| And they can do that if it's on a point system and if our livelihoods depend on it. | |
| Right. | |
| CBDCs, of course. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And so I think that there's a two-part. | |
| One, depopulation, get rid of the useless eaters. | |
| And then the other one will be to control the survivors because they will realize what just happened and what's been happening. | |
| And then they're the dangerous ones because most of us who didn't get the vaccine and didn't fall for it are survivalists. | |
| You know, we're off-gridters. | |
| I say hard to kill. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And so that's kind of where they got stuck. | |
| And that's why they tried to push everybody so hard with the jobs. | |
| But that's also where they made a huge mistake. | |
| You mean by waking people up too early? | |
| Waking up people too early because people like patterns. | |
| If you're in a pattern, you're in a state of trance and you can kind of keep going that way, you know, not really cognizant of your surroundings in the way it is. | |
| But the minute you take that pattern and you break it and then you give them that much time to think, and, you know, a lot of people were on TikTok. | |
| They're not listening to the news because it was COVID, COVID, COVID. | |
| So they had to do it on social media as well. | |
| And a lot of people started to have time to think and they started to ask questions and things started to not make sense. | |
| And because they sped everything up to try and get the fear and the shame and all of this stuff into the public view, certain people went, wait a minute, this does not make sense. | |
| And certain people who even got the vaccine were like, wait a minute, this doesn't make sense, but I'll just go along with it because I don't want to lose my job or they're afraid or, you know, people have different, you know, reasons for doing what they have done. | |
| But it's when they push people with the jobs, that's when, and then Justin Trudeau locking bank accounts completely blew the lid through CBDCs. | |
| It really did. | |
| It was a horrible strategic mistake on his part. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And that's why I think the globalists were, they pee-pee-slapped him, especially the Xi Jinping, when they had a meeting, he actually laid into him and it was on camera and it went viral in Canada because we're like, yes, at least someone's yelling at him. | |
| Yeah, I think silently in their minds, all Canadians are yelling at Justin Trudeau, even to this day. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And just remembering his blackface photo, too. | |
| Yeah, those were precious. | |
| But then ultimately, as we've seen this pattern throughout history, and clearly you are a student of history as well, you've lived through a lot of it, but also you've studied it, that the most effective way to control the masses in times of sovereign desperation is to start a war. | |
| Exactly, yes. | |
| And we seem to be on the verge of so many conflicts. | |
| War with Russia, war with China, Trump's threatening to bomb Iran again. | |
| But also at some point, he's like, we're going to take Canada. | |
| We're going to take Greenland. | |
| What do you think are the most likely actual conflicts to ignite here? | |
| I'll be honest with you. | |
| I don't think there will be any conflicts. | |
| If there are, I think it will be small and it will probably be in the Middle East. | |
| I don't think there will be global conflicts because then you would need the people to rebuild. | |
| And unfortunately, they already depopulated half of them. | |
| So I think it's more of a silent Cold War with psyops or like psychological operations that we see pretty much everywhere. | |
| And then governments using distractions so that they can extract even more freedoms while we talk about something that won't happen because it is so in our faces and fearful. | |
| I think that's the likelihood of that. | |
| Yes. | |
| Because a lot of these liberals don't even want to go to work. | |
| I don't think they're going to go to war. | |
| So, and conservatives are like, we're not fighting for Canada. | |
| I mean, most of the patriots in Canada are like, I'm not fighting for this government. | |
| Same things happen among youth all across Western Europe. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Younger generation is like, we're not fighting for Germany. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then the ones that are pro-Germany are pretty much the left-leaning liberals. | |
| And you can't really get them to even decide what bathroom they're going to use, let alone go into combat with her feelings reports and stuff. | |
| They will fight over toilets, but not to protect their borders. | |
| Exactly, yeah. | |
| Because I think the loud, the loudness of war might not be proper for their safe spaces and their trigger points. | |
| Yeah, you know, the moment liberals stop using firearms is when they find out they go bang. | |
| Yeah, exactly. | |
| And the funniest part about Canadians wanting to fight is all of these Canadians want me to go to jail for words, but they think that they can actually fight in a real war because they've never been in war. | |
| They've seen it on TV. | |
| You know, I don't think they realize there's the chaos and everything that kind of happens during that time. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| That's what I love about Texas is because, well, and also rural areas in Canada, a lot of that in Alberta is because rural people like you have hands-on knowledge of how to do things. | |
|
Spraying Brake Fluid Inside Tires
00:03:09
|
|
| Exactly. | |
| They know how to do things. | |
| And here in Texas, we have so many veterans. | |
| We have so many retired law enforcement. | |
| We have first responders. | |
| We have paramedics. | |
| We have welders. | |
| We have, like the other day, I had a bad tire on one of my tractors. | |
| And so I called the team out to change a tire tractor. | |
| You know how hard that is to change one of those big ass giant tire tractors? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| It is a pain. | |
| That is not an easy job. | |
| Two big dudes, big, heavy dudes coming out with big tire bars. | |
| It's like, I can do a lot of things. | |
| That is not something that I've figured out how to change a big tractor tire. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We like to do a lot of redneck engineering and we just say none of it's safe. | |
| Sometimes you burn your eyebrows off and you go to work and you have no eyebrows and people are like, what did you do? | |
| And you're like, I tried this trick. | |
| I saw on YouTube. | |
| Didn't work by the way. | |
| So yeah, we kind of learned through trial and error. | |
| And then also being so isolated, you can't really call anybody. | |
| So you have to know how to change certain things like on your vehicle or in your house. | |
| Otherwise, you're not going to have anybody come out for about a couple of weeks. | |
| Yeah, true. | |
| Well, and actually, speaking of tractor tires, you know the trick that after you get the new tire on and then you need to seat the bead, you spray brake fluid all inside the tire and then you light that, like hopefully from a distance. | |
| And it's supposed to go and seat the tire. | |
| Yep. | |
| We've been there. | |
| Yeah, that's where the lost eyebrows came because I have to draw them on and I'm really bad at that. | |
| If anything goes wrong in that scenario, your face. | |
| Oh, you're gone. | |
| You're going to get like brake fluid fire in your face. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yeah, we've definitely been there. | |
| We've said that actually in our shop a few times. | |
| So that's why I'm like, I totally understand what you're talking about. | |
| But sometimes you're out there by yourself. | |
| You're like, how am I going to seat this tire? | |
| Yeah. | |
| What do I have that's basically explosive? | |
| Yep. | |
| Just some brake clean, you know? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Or like carburetor cleaning fluid or something. | |
| Something like an aerosolized fuel air explosive on the ranch. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Just have a bunch of different chemicals figure out what they do as you go. | |
| You know, sometimes you find out that like certain things don't mix and you're like, well, oops, we'll just hide that. | |
| Never use acetone for that purpose. | |
| It didn't go well. | |
| Okay. | |
| So you clearly like here in Texas, we love your attitude. | |
| Oh, thank you. | |
| You know, we love your take on things. | |
| And you would be very welcome in Texas, I think. | |
| Honestly, I felt so welcomed here. | |
| I have not had one bad experience. | |
| And I know there's bad people everywhere, but so far I've had not one bad experience in Texas. | |
|
Foreign Data Centers in Texas
00:15:45
|
|
| Everyone's been so friendly, so welcoming. | |
| And if I open up, they start opening up and they're like, yeah, we love it. | |
| And they kind of push me and motivate me more. | |
| Whereas in Canada, they're like, you probably shouldn't say that. | |
| The government's listening. | |
| You probably shouldn't say that either. | |
| And I'm like, I'm going to do it anyway now, even more. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| I'm like, if you tell me not to do it, I'll do it. | |
| So if you were offered like citizenship in Texas, would you move to Texas? | |
| Oh, that would be so cool. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because then we wouldn't have to renew our visas every two years. | |
| And then I'm like scared. | |
| I'm like, oh, if we don't renew, I'm like, I'm going to have to find a third country because I know I'm going to get arrested in Canada. | |
| I've yapped way too much. | |
| And so I'm like, Serbia is not big truck friendly. | |
| And you've seen like the size of my truck. | |
| So I'm like, I don't know where I would go. | |
| I'm like, maybe a little island somewhere. | |
| Not the Epstein Island, though. | |
| No, no, not one of those, but like, you know, somewhere where we would be able to go. | |
| But yeah, if Canada keeps going down this track, I honestly don't think I will be able to go back, even if I wanted to. | |
| That's a really important point there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Texas, just so you know, Texas has been great to me, even though, of course, I've said many controversial things and I've even criticized from time to time the Texas governor. | |
| But I've also said a lot of nice things. | |
| I'm no fan of Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. | |
| He's from Canada, I think. | |
| Is he? | |
| Yeah, I think he's from Calgary. | |
| That explains a lot. | |
| That explains a lot, right? | |
| Okay. | |
| Well, I don't like Ted Cruz. | |
| I think we need new senators that represent Texas instead of some foreign country. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| No, I totally agree. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, I want Texas first candidates here in Texas. | |
| Yes. | |
| And I want America first candidates for America. | |
| Is that a crazy thought? | |
| That is totally normal. | |
| I know a lot of people tell me in Canada to run for, you know, politics and go for premier or prime minister. | |
| And I'm like, I wasn't born in Canada. | |
| Like, I'm very pro-Canadian. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I know there's going to be a group out there that's like, oh, you're not really Canadian because you weren't born there kind of thing. | |
| But I completely 100% agree. | |
| If you are going to represent a people in either state or province, you should be for those people and not for a foreign power or a different country or anything in that sense of the way. | |
| So I totally agree with that. | |
| Representation. | |
| Exactly. | |
| That's supposed to mean representation. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Senator Cruz, you are our representative in the Senate. | |
| So why are you almost never concerned with Texas and you're always concerned about something happening in the Middle East? | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, come on. | |
| I completely agree. | |
| I think that there's a lot of people as well that go into politics because, I mean, I don't think you really need any sort of knowledge to go. | |
| I know in Canada, you just have to be over 18. | |
| I mean, Justin Trudeau was the prime minister. | |
| I mean, you can be a moron and like, you know, become the PM of Canada. | |
| So I think a lot of people get into politics because they can't get jobs anywhere else because they're not even employable at like, you know, McDonald's. | |
| And so then that kind of corruption and low IQ kind of take them in areas where they're really easily bought by foreign influence. | |
| Well, that actually explains every member of the United States Congress in Houston. | |
| I don't know who's in Houston. | |
| By the way. | |
| In Houston. | |
| And probably Minneapolis as well. | |
| Oh, Minneapolis for sure. | |
| Yeah, I can see that for sure. | |
| No, Houston is totally corrupt with low IQ. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| I totally, I. Like, they can't even read. | |
| Oh, oh, oh, so it is like Justin Trudeau. | |
| Yeah, right. | |
| Pretty much. | |
| It's a clown show. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Coming out of Houston. | |
| So, you know, anyway, what I was going to say, though, is that if the currency crumbles and there could be a rapid, dare I say, balkanization of the United States of America becoming no longer united, Texas would become its own republic once again, as it was before. | |
| And there's a very strong movement in Texas called Texit. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's kind of like what Alberta is. | |
| Okay. | |
| I totally did not. | |
| I've been so busy with what's happening in Canada. | |
| And then I know I'm a guest here, you know, like in Texas in general. | |
| And I just like love you guys. | |
| And I don't want to, you know, get into your politics because I'm on a visa. | |
| Sure. | |
| Like, I'll comment on certain things like Gavin New Scum, you know, being like Justin Trudeau 2.0 and like, you know, Tim Waltz being a retard and a transition. | |
| Oh, I swear those. | |
| Is that a transplant? | |
| How do they do that? | |
| I don't know. | |
| I think they probably like peepee touch on days off and like, you know, go to the same hairdresser. | |
| Gosh. | |
| But anyway, Texas could become its own nation. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| I mean, actually, I could see the future capital of sort of the rebuilt United States either being in Florida or Texas, but not Washington, D.C. | |
| Oh, interesting. | |
| Did you know Texas has its own financial hub now, like Wall Street of Texas? | |
| I did not know that, actually. | |
| Yeah, it's a trading ecosystem in Texas. | |
| Oh. | |
| Like a trading exchange. | |
| And Texas has a massive gold and silver bullion depository. | |
| Really? | |
| Yes. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| I had no idea. | |
| Like, I know everything about oil and gas when it comes to Texas and which like formation there is, but I have not looked into like the politics and the history. | |
| I know Texas is a republic. | |
| I know the Alamo. | |
| I sort of know a little bit here and there. | |
| But I try not and be a dick online just because, you know, I'm a guest. | |
| So who am I to say anything I can't vote? | |
| I'm just giving you some background. | |
| But that's really interesting. | |
| And Texas, when it joined the union, at least this is my understanding. | |
| I'm not a historian, but I think that Texas reserved the right to leave the union in the future if circumstances required it. | |
| Really? | |
| Like it was very specifically mentioned. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| And Texas was its own nation before. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So we could do it again if we had to. | |
| Honestly, I'll fight for you guys. | |
| Like, just point me whichever way. | |
| I'm like, I don't know what we're doing. | |
| I'm like, well, point me whichever way because I'm like, I love patriots and I'll stand for them. | |
| You would be offered like instant citizenship in the new Republic of Texas. | |
| Oh, that'd be so cool. | |
| And also work in the oil industry. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, I'd be a DEI hire in the military, but like, you know, I make my way there. | |
| I'm pretty like resourceful. | |
| Well, I just think that, and maybe you disagree with me on this, but I think that the current systems of Canada and the United States and many other countries, especially the UK, especially Western Europe, they are really crumbling. | |
| And out of that, there's going to be some chaos, but then some reformation of some new government structures and nation structures. | |
| And it may look very different from what we have right now. | |
| For example, the dollar is toast. | |
| Did you see gold and silver today? | |
| I did not check gold and silver today. | |
| Silver, when I checked it a few hours ago, was $96. | |
| And gold is almost $5,000. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| Okay. | |
| Yeah, what does that tell you? | |
| Do you think when those two go up? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's an indicator that other things might go down. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Interesting. | |
| And if, you know, if there's financial, if there are financial defaults across America or Canada, guess what two areas can lift themselves up out of their bootstraps? | |
| It's Alberta and Texas. | |
| Texas, exactly. | |
| Because we have the energy. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Energy is, I mean, commodities are the currency ultimately, or they can back a currency. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| No, I mean, oil and gas is almost in every part of our lives that I don't think people understand from building roads to building plastics to your clothing. | |
| To clothing. | |
| To the fibers. | |
| Exactly. | |
| To pretty much everything from cameras to, you know, pharmaceutical, like digital, you know, imaging in hospitals. | |
| So, I mean, you look at it, oil and gas is almost in every single part of our lives. | |
| And I don't think a lot of people understand that unless you work in oil and gas. | |
| And then you realize just how much of that energy barely goes into vehicles. | |
| It mostly goes into commodities and making commodities and running energy and so forth. | |
| And industry. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And like right now, we have all these data centers being constructed across America. | |
| That's going to be. | |
| But there's not enough power for many of them. | |
| Some of them need gigawatts of power. | |
| Yes. | |
| And the entire eastern grid of the United States is 20 years behind schedule compared to China. | |
| And they won't even allow data centers to connect to the grid because they're maxed out. | |
| And then, so the data center people are buying like gas turbines. | |
| I've seen that. | |
| To set, like, hey, I got a 300 megawatt gas turbine right there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's powering this aisle of the data center. | |
| Yeah, I've actually heard that in Midland, there's a new technology where data centers are being set up in fields where they have a specific gas that they can actually run certain generators on and power and make their ground right to, I don't know what, it's like this new technology. | |
| I didn't really look into it to power all of the data centers. | |
| That's so smart. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So it's really interesting to see like how we will actually sustain all of this, which is almost impossible if everything goes to digitalized unless they're planning on depopulating a huge portion of the population. | |
| Well, right. | |
| I mean, it's funny because they can financialize the economy and they can try to digitize the money. | |
| But at the end of the day, everything needs energy. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Everything. | |
| Transportation, heat, cooling, manufacturing, farming. | |
| What's going to run your tractor? | |
| Nobody's got a solar powered tractor. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And in Canada, they're trying to say that we should make tractors and combines electric. | |
| It's run for like two minutes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so I'm going to have to carry a generator, a diesel generator in the back of my truck to take it all the way out to the field. | |
| And then I'm going to lose time because if it rains or snows, now my crop is done. | |
| And I don't think a lot of people like understand that push this stuff just how time sensitive harvesting is, especially up north. | |
| I mean, you guys have three growing seasons. | |
| We only have one. | |
| And so in the fall, you pretty much work 24-7 just to get everything. | |
| And then you have to leave things to dry because if you put hay, you know, too tight, it starts to smoke and blow up. | |
| You need to bail it when it's ready to bail. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And you don't want to run the risk of rain making it wet and moldy. | |
| And then ruining the crop. | |
| And then our prices go up with flour and everything else. | |
| And then people are like, oh, well, why is this going up? | |
| It's like, well, you wanted electrical. | |
| It took 10 times longer. | |
| We lost half the crop. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And so now we don't have the supply versus the demand. | |
| And I think a lot of liberals don't understand how anything works. | |
| Like anything. | |
| To be honest. | |
| They don't understand how anything works. | |
| Nothing. | |
| And they just say dumb things. | |
| And the media knows this. | |
| The liberals know this. | |
| Like, you know, the globalists know this. | |
| And so they're like, oh, just give them one sentence and they'll just run with it. | |
| And they'll just repeat it over and over again without knowing any meaning how it works, how farming works, how basically nothing. | |
| I don't think they understand anything in this life except for screeching and yelling online and then pooling policies and pushing policies onto other people. | |
| That's what I love talking with you because you are very well informed. | |
| You're smart at a fundamental level, combined with all this experience you have. | |
| And I'm sure, like you share with me the frustration. | |
| I've seen journalists talking about why electric vehicles are good. | |
| And I'm not totally opposed to electric vehicles for just short commutes. | |
| But what I mean is there was someone asking her, she's like, oh, look, this, or no, this was a press conference for Ford or somebody talking about, hey, here's this new vehicle. | |
| And someone was asking her, well, where does the electricity come from for this? | |
| And she said, from the building, and then plugged into the building. | |
| It just comes from the building. | |
| Like, wait a second. | |
| It's just magic. | |
| Like, you work for a car company? | |
| You don't know where electricity comes from. | |
| And you're making EVs. | |
| Oh, it comes from the building. | |
| Where the bleep does the building get the electricity? | |
| Exactly. | |
| Oh, we haven't thought about that. | |
| You know? | |
| But there's some real retards in industry, you know? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And in journalism. | |
| Oh, oh, yeah. | |
| Oh, huge. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I think half of the journalists, especially in Canada that we have, I think they just get a script. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they can't even change some of the words. | |
| They're basically copying each other. | |
| It's like, you guys, come on, at least change a few of the words so it's not copywritten, you know? | |
| But they're like, ah, whatever. | |
| And we'll just put it out there. | |
| But half the people don't understand. | |
| Like electrical vehicles put out dust from the brakes in the batteries. | |
| Like there's the smart, I think it's not called smart dust, but it's a certain type of dust that comes from like the motor, electrical motor, and it's very fine. | |
| And it gives people allergies and asthma and it's cancer causing. | |
| So a lot of people don't understand that. | |
| And then also, what are we going to do with the batteries? | |
| They're not recyclable and they blow up a lot quicker. | |
| I mean, yeah, lithiums and they're harder to mine. | |
| And we're not going to have electric mining equipment because there's not enough outpower to actually power something to mine. | |
| You know, I mean, I just don't understand where or how they think because electric anything doesn't give the same output and power as diesel operated or gas operated or things like that. | |
| So I mean, yeah, just to get all of this equipment, road equipment, drilling, you know, put on electrical. | |
| I mean, it's insane. | |
| I mean, on my farm, like I have Skidsteer, I have an excavator, I've got trucks, and they're, of course, they're all diesel. | |
| Like my tractor, at the PTO, it's 110 horsepower, right? | |
| Yes. | |
| You're not going to get an electric tractor with 110 horsepower. | |
| No. | |
| PTO. | |
| It's not even possible. | |
| Exactly. | |
| If you had an electric skid steer, it would run for 60 seconds. | |
| You know, you lift one bucket of dirt. | |
| It's like, ah, battery's dead. | |
| Now I have to get a diesel generator with diesel in it and then plug it in and wait hours. | |
| Isn't this interesting, though, because Trump has declared critical minerals like silver, but industrial minerals, because China has this dominance in rare earths. | |
| But all mining runs on diesel. | |
| Yes, 100%. | |
| All of it. | |
| All of it. | |
| You don't do mining without big-ass diesel engines. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And everything is diesel. | |
| It's easier. | |
| It's also easier on gas or not gas, but easier on the mileage on diesel. | |
| It also doesn't freeze in the winter. | |
| It's safer to store. | |
| Pardon? | |
| It's safer to store. | |
| And it is safer to store, definitely, because you can put diesel stabilizer in your trucks or anything, and it will actually stabilize for quite a while. | |
| And they run longer as well, way longer than gas cars. | |
| And it's easier to produce. | |
| So I don't understand why we went from diesel because it burns cleaner to even gas. | |
| And then now we're going electric. | |
|
Europe's Energy Crisis
00:13:24
|
|
| It's just, because I'm pretty sure in the 80s, all of European cars were, I think, diesel. | |
| Yeah, they mostly. | |
| And speaking of the Europeans, so the Europeans over the last 20 years, they shut down their own domestic energy infrastructure. | |
| They have, yes. | |
| And then they can't figure out why their industries are laying off millions of workers, why they can't make cars and chemicals and glass anymore in Germany and France and Poland and the UK. | |
| I don't want to get myself in even more trouble because we have a lot of listeners in Europe and they're the bright ones. | |
| But seriously, are they retarded? | |
| Like the leadership, are they just retarded? | |
| They don't know where energy comes from. | |
| I honestly think the ones that were put in place are actually retarded. | |
| And then the ones kind of pulling the strings in the back know that. | |
| Is that because of the inbreeding? | |
| I think so. | |
| There's a lot of inbreeding in the shadow government, like the royal clowns. | |
| Like the families and everything. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like I think there's a lot of inbreeding and trauma. | |
| And then I think that they pick people like Justin Trudeau, a wannabe, you know, who will kind of listen to whatever because he just wants to fit in. | |
| And so they choose these people like here, you know. | |
| I mean, he looks like a wanker, right? | |
| I mean, you've got like the German, you know, people going after someone because they call the politician fat. | |
| And so I think they honestly knew that this would happen. | |
| They're like, oh, we need to green, green, green. | |
| Like, let's shut this down. | |
| But people didn't understand that you need that energy in order to produce cheaper things. | |
| And then if you can't and it starts getting too expensive, now industry starts shutting down going to China or India. | |
| And now you're making them rich, but not really rich because they're exploiting their workers because they don't have policies or human rights. | |
| So now you have slave labor that is happening in India and like China in certain areas because they don't have those rights. | |
| And now we're getting everything for cheaper, but we're also making billionaires and millionaires in India, you know, being able to up their countries up, but we're also kind of killing our industry at home. | |
| And a lot of these people don't care because they honestly think the world is ending because of climate change or global warming. | |
| Well, it's true. | |
| They do think that. | |
| And that's the sad part, especially if you tell them. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| It is an intricate cycle that they have created. | |
| And then anything that you try and say against it, people are like, oh, you want to kill the planet? | |
| It's like, okay, Greta Thunberg, UFAS goblin, like calm down, okay? | |
| Like no one is going, no one's going anywhere. | |
| I'm pretty sure that asteroid is going to take us out before global warming, you know? | |
| I call her little Miss Thunderpants. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I call her Goblin Retard. | |
| That looks like she's got fetal alcohol syndrome. | |
| I hate that. | |
| Oh, ever since she's like, I'm going to take big trucks. | |
| I'm like, you over my dead body, dude. | |
| You're not taking my truck. | |
| It's really extraordinary. | |
| I mean, ultimately, and I know we're coming up on time here, and I'm thankful that you're spending this time with me, but it's hard not to describe a lot of these Western countries as suicidal. | |
| Oh, absolutely. | |
| 100% they are. | |
| They're destroying the very pillars of civilization. | |
| They are. | |
| Yep. | |
| And you think about, for example, the war with Russia. | |
| The West pushed all these economic sanctions against Russia and tried to deprive Russia of everything. | |
| Fast forward five years, however long it's been, four years, Russia's got more steel, more industry, more weapons, stronger currency, more domestic supply chains working. | |
| While Europe, Western Europe is collapsing. | |
| It all backfired. | |
| Huge, huge. | |
| I mean, Russia is stronger. | |
| China is stronger. | |
| China's industry, China's technology dwarfs every Western country. | |
| Every. | |
| The automation is there's no competition. | |
| Even Iran now has advanced long-range ballistic missiles, probably thanks to Russia. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And a little China in there. | |
| Look, some cargo planes unloading. | |
| But the West is just stagnating and run by retards. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I think that was done on purpose just to fail everything. | |
| And I think that they over, or I should say underestimated Russia and China. | |
| I think the one mistake that the West made is when you come from nothing and when you come from communism, you learn how to make do. | |
| So there is nothing that you can take, like the government can take away from me. | |
| Like I'm not afraid. | |
| A lot of Canadians were like, oh, what if they take away my house? | |
| Well, I'm like, I'll burn it before the banks can get it. | |
| Like we're both going down now. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Like you're not going to have a house. | |
| I'm not going to have a house. | |
| And so I think a lot of people don't understand that with Russians and Chinese, like they're from communists. | |
| So like it is, they've seen hardships. | |
| And so once you've seen that hardship, there is nothing that can scare you because they can take it all away from you again. | |
| And you know exactly what to do and how to do it. | |
| And I think that's what happened is Russia just went, oh, you guys don't want us to participate. | |
| Well, there's all of these other countries. | |
| Let's try and make ties. | |
| And I think that's where they went really wrong. | |
| And they were so pompous about it, especially Western Europe. | |
| You know, they're very pompous about it. | |
| And now they're saying that they're going to, you know, steal more money from Russia. | |
| But it's like, no, I think they're actually stealing it because they're running out of money. | |
| Do you know that all the money that the EU is trying to steal from Russia, Russia's already gained that back just with the increase in the price of gold? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So Russia is untouchable. | |
| It's like they don't want to be in this drama, you know? | |
| And it seems like Western Europe is the only one playing the drama. | |
| Russia's just like, okay, well, just leave us alone. | |
| You know, either participate with us like adults or just leave us alone. | |
| Because it's really weird. | |
| Like I hear all this bad stuff about Russia, but then, you know, you hear President Putin, he actually sounds like a reasonable human being. | |
| Like, you know, when he talks, like, he could be a tyrant in Russia. | |
| I've never been to Russia and he could be like really bad for the Russian people. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But every time I see it. | |
| But he's not stupid. | |
| Exactly. | |
| He's not stupid. | |
| He's very well educated. | |
| He knows how the system works. | |
| He's very calm. | |
| You know, he presents himself as somebody who knows what they're doing. | |
| Right. | |
| And then he gave Tucker Carlson a thousand-year lesson of Russian history. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it was very like, you know, the way he presented it was very like simple and methodical and all of that stuff. | |
| And you can tell that he brought paperwork and, you know, he presented everything. | |
| And so, I mean, and then you look at leaders in the West, like Justin Trudeau is a clown, you know, macaroni in France. | |
| They're his wife, sister, husband, whatever beats him. | |
| Now he has to wear aviators at the World Economic Forum to hide the shiners. | |
| You know, you've got Kirst Starmer whose eyes are way too far ahead and he just says whatever. | |
| Like I don't think he even knows what he's saying. | |
| And it's just this entire clown show in the West of wokeism and stupidity. | |
| And, you know, whereas Russia's like, no, men are men. | |
| Women are women. | |
| We're just going to keep it how it works. | |
| And so I feel like Russia and China now are at the peak of where the West was at its used to be, yeah. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah, that's true. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, the skill set of Western leaders is focused on things like being like pedophiles, vampires, and child traffickers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas the skill set of China and Russia is engineering and industry and building and creating things. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And they push that even on their social media. | |
| When you see their social media, like if you use VPN and you go to like Russia's, like, you know, what they get shown or what China gets shown, they get shown much different. | |
| There's no stupid TikTok dances. | |
| There's no nudity. | |
| I mean, there is nudity, of course, but not to the vast amount as it is in the West. | |
| And so they promote more, you know, playing a piano when you're younger, math, this, skill sets that, you know, of course, there's a couple of stupid videos in there of people doing silly things because it's the internet. | |
| And sometimes we just want to, you know, log off and just look at cats playing with like things. | |
| But it's so much different. | |
| And I think that has created a lot of what they have created in Russia, which is to want to be better, to want to like innovate, to want to learn more things. | |
| Whereas in the West, we're being stifled with what bathroom do we use? | |
| What is a woman? | |
| You know, and it's like, why are we even talking about this? | |
| Like, yeah. | |
| That's why I can't help but sound sometimes I sound condescending to people, but it's just because I'm pointing out the obvious. | |
| And if that sounds condescending, then that's a culture problem. | |
| Exactly. | |
| You know, to say that men and women are different, that shouldn't be a debate. | |
| It shouldn't. | |
| I work with all guys. | |
| I'm not as strong as them. | |
| I'm not as fast as them. | |
| And we all know that. | |
| Like, that's not a secret. | |
| Like, they can, even a guy my size can lift more than I can. | |
| And I don't, it's just different muscle tones, different bone structure, different everything. | |
| And so to say that a man and a woman are the exact same, like go in a fighting, like get in a boxing ring and see how it goes. | |
| That's what I say about it. | |
| Tell a guy to try to make a baby. | |
| Or that, yeah, exactly. | |
| Good luck. | |
| It's going to hurt. | |
| And it will also fail. | |
| You know, but okay. | |
| Well, anyway, look, I want to be respectful of your time. | |
| You spent a lot of time with us here. | |
| So I want to give you the floor. | |
| We've covered a lot of really interesting stuff. | |
| We have, yeah. | |
| We pissed off a few people. | |
| You're probably going to get arrested next time you come back to Canada. | |
| I'll get some hate mail, whatever. | |
| It is what it is. | |
| It's another day. | |
| But what would you like to wrap this up with? | |
| Oh, I guess I always say this. | |
| I know it seems like we have absolutely no control over what's going on. | |
| But if we start taking control over our own lives, our own thoughts first, then our own families and our own inner circles, and then we start getting involved in community and really get involved with politics. | |
| You can see how that outward change starts to push to a global change. | |
| And so I always tell people, I know it seems hopeless. | |
| Sometimes I lose hope too. | |
| And then I go online and I blah, blah, blah, and I swear at everybody, but it gets frustrating. | |
| But at the end of the day, if we can control ourselves, control our thoughts and our emotions, get our houses in order, our own backyards, and then start with a community of people, we can actually grow outwards because they have taken control from the up down and we need to take the control back from the down-up. | |
| So that's kind of a little word that word, I guess, that I leave everybody with. | |
| I love that. | |
| And I think along with that goes, you know, be competent. | |
| Yes. | |
| Gain skills. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| Know how to do things. | |
| Yes. | |
| Because that will serve you very well in whatever happens. | |
| Exactly. | |
| I mean, the world is run by incompetent morong pedophile clowns. | |
| Yep. | |
| And they suck at anything. | |
| But, you know, eventually that system is going to crumble and break. | |
| And out of that, we're going to have to have capable people that know how to do things. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And who are not afraid to use energy. | |
| Exactly. | |
| That's true. | |
| I don't know about you, but I don't want to go back to horse and buggy shovels for everything. | |
| Like, I like how the Amish live. | |
| I envy them. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| Minus the horse and buggy and like the dresses. | |
| Those seem really itchy and uncomfortable. | |
| Like, yeah, I like sweatpants. | |
| So like if the Amish could only add cars and sweatpants, I'd be totally cool. | |
| No, I honor the Amish and the Mennonites and that choice that they've made, right? | |
| But in where I live, if I need to dig a ditch, I'm going to use a machine. | |
| Yes. | |
| Like I'm not doing it by hand. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah, I would say the same. | |
| I get 100x productivity with a diesel engine. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| No. | |
| Everything you just said is completely correct. | |
| And even if you are competent in doing it and never need to use that skill, it's better to have it than not have it in a time of need. | |
| Right. | |
| Or since living in Texas, I've learned how to build goat fences, right? | |
| Oh, nice. | |
| Or how to be a long-range firearms marksman. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Or and how to break down and repair and clean firearms and whatever. | |
| Or, you know, how to swap a starter on an excavator motor. | |
| Oh, nice. | |
| I actually had to swap a starter on my truck. | |
| Did you? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, like, I know how to fix my truck completely, except for certain things, like tires, you know, ball joints, upper ball joints, A arms. | |
| I've done starters. | |
| I've done a bunch of things. | |
| And it's, you know, either from my husband or YouTube or a couple of the dudes on site where I'm like, hey, something just didn't start. | |
| I need help. | |
| And all of us will get our wrenches together. | |
| And so you learn by watching, by putting your hands in there or buying a project car and just, you know, screwing around with it just to see what you can kind of figure out with things. | |
| And I think that a lot of people, if they just used less doom scrolling and a lot more, you know, hobbies just to learn. | |
| Yeah, have hobbies in the real world. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, exactly. | |
| Because that's what civilization is built on: people doing things in the real world. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Yes. | |
| Trying things out. | |
| Even if you fail, who cares? | |
| Just keep going. | |
| Like failure doesn't mean failure completely. | |
| It just means it didn't work that time. | |
| Maybe you try something else another time. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Exactly. | |
| Well, Tayana, it's been a pleasure to speak with you. | |
| And I just want to thank you for taking your time here. | |
| You want to give out your social account or accounts, plural? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| One more time. | |
|
Thank You, Excited Lab Tour
00:01:34
|
|
| Absolutely. | |
| If you guys Google TruthSeeker01011, it will take you to almost all of my Facebook pages, which is Tyana Tekich. | |
| It is verified. | |
| Same with Instagram. | |
| And on X, it's TruthSeek01011 because I didn't have the space. | |
| But I wanted to thank you for having me on today. | |
| It was such a pleasure and amazing time talking to you. | |
| So thank you. | |
| Oh, you're very welcome. | |
| And I'm going to show you our lab. | |
| Oh, I'm actually super excited for that. | |
| That's going to be fun. | |
| So we'll do that next. | |
| Awesome. | |
| Thank you. | |
| All right. | |
| So for those of you watching, I hope you enjoyed this conversation. | |
| And I hope you were triggered a little bit. | |
| Please report us to the RCMP. | |
| Is that what it's called? | |
| Oh, yeah, the RCMP. | |
| Yeah. | |
| RCMP. | |
| Yeah, those are cops, but yeah, I don't. | |
| Are they called Mounties? | |
| Yeah, they're like the Royal Canadian Mountain Police. | |
| Yeah, we're really scared of them. | |
| Oh, I know. | |
| They're super scary. | |
| The Mounties. | |
| Report us to the Mounties, please, because we need more comedy on this show. | |
| But thank you for watching, and you can share this video anywhere. | |
| Please do so. | |
| I'm Mike Adams of Brighteon.com, a proud Texan, proud American, and defender of the First Amendment, the Second Amendment. | |
| The third is important, but the fourth and fifth are even more important. | |
| Anyway, you get the idea. | |
| We love you. | |
| Thank you for watching today. | |
| Take care, everybody. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Savor-rich, cheesy goodness made with clean, organic ingredients. | |
| Our mac and cheese combines quinoa elbows and a flavorful mix of organic dairy and spices for a delicious, ready-to-cook meal. | |
| Stock up today at healthrangerstore.com. | |