Michael Yon and Mike Adams warn of an engineered global famine and fuel collapse by late 2027, driven by elite sabotage of the Haber-Bosch process and maritime choke points like the Strait of Hormuz. They allege a deliberate depopulation strategy involving Zionist and Jesuit colonization in Thailand, Panama, and South America, while shifting resources to AI at humanity's expense. The discussion highlights vulnerable mega-cities versus resilient rural areas, predicts resource wars blocking Persian Gulf energy, and concludes that remaining populations will become disposable individuals controlled by chips as synthetic states enforce this multi-year war against humanity. [Automatically generated summary]
Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, WAV2VEC2_ASR_BASE_960H, sat-12l-sm, script v26.04.01, and large-v3-turbo
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Disposable Sheep and Serial Numbers00:15:16
They want to depopulate and control the remnant.
It's very clear.
They want a lot fewer people that they can control.
Basically, serial numbered people without real names, your name number, your number such and such, right?
And they want those people to be disposable, just completely disposable, like a sheep.
A sheep has a tag in its ear, a cow has a tag in its ear.
They want people just like that.
It's crystal clear.
They don't hide it.
They want you to have a chip.
All right.
Welcome, everyone.
We have Michael Jahn joining us today for an urgent interview.
I'm Mike Adams with brightvideos.com, and Michael joins us.
I think, Michael, are you in Japan right now?
I'm in Japan.
Misako and I were just down near Mount Fuji looking for a place to open Kinjiro House, which is a, which is, you know, I've talked about Kinjiro quite a few times, which is a, Kinjiro is a figure in Japan, very famous.
He was famous for helping people get through a famine in the 1800s.
And so we were down there by Mount Fuji looking at, You know, the food resilience in those areas, because clearly you've been talking about it, I don't know, a thousand times, two thousand, three thousand, you know, that we're going to almost certainly end up in huge famines.
And it's clearly coming.
It's just a matter of how it's going to look.
We don't know that, but we can clearly see that the asteroids are coming right at us.
In fact, this is what I wanted to talk with you about today.
And to our audience, you know, I want to give you credit, Michael, because I've been interviewing you for many years.
And during this time, you have spoken repeatedly about.
Not only the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, long before anybody knew what it was, it seems, but also about the engineered global famine.
And now we are seeing the actual engineered famine.
We're seeing the sabotage of the oil infrastructure globally.
We're seeing the shutting down of fertilizer production plants globally, the force majeure of natural gas, et cetera.
And as a result, it's on.
The famine is going to kick in from here forward.
So we're seeing a lot of people now suddenly recognizing what you And I, to some extent, have been talking about for years.
So, what are your thoughts on that?
Oh, you as well.
I think, how did we even first meet?
I think, you know, because I was talking about the Haber Bosch process and BASF and those sorts of things.
And I think it was numerous people saying, hey, this guy, Mike Adams, is talking about Haber Bosch process, you know.
And so, I mean, you were already talking about this.
So, we were on parallel tracks.
And then, you know, then we started combining information, which, Made it more robust because then you could fill in blanks for me and I could fill in some other blanks.
And then, you know, you know how it goes.
One plus one equals three, you know?
And so, you know, it's been that.
It's not just one plus one.
There's a lot of people out there that see this and they're filling in other blanks.
So it helps, as you know, you and me and us as a collective.
But how is this going?
I just got a message this morning.
Actually, one was from Brandon Weickart.
I think you know Brandon quite well.
Brandon, you know, he's talking about how the Russians are now starting to threaten to close.
Dana Strait.
Misako and I were just up at the Dana Strait a few months ago, warning about this because the Dana Strait is, again, that's one of those no-brainers.
If you're going to work to create global famine, you're going to close Hormuz, you're going to close the Bosphorus, you're going to close both of those Straits by Turkey, you're going to close Baba Mandeb, or maybe the Houthis will do it for you, Suez, Strait of Gibraltar, probably, which would be easy anyway, in Malacca for sure.
Also, for at least to control Panama, because you would, if you're trying to famine China, you would want to cut China off from Brazil, right?
And because they get a lot of food from Brazil, and it's not the only place, but you know, if you cut Malacca, cut quite a few of the other things, and cut and control Panama, which China wants to do, and the Zionists also want to control Panama, they're fighting over Argentina and Panama.
I think we're going to end up seeing a war between Argentina and Brazil at some point, which is related to the energy that's really thick down in Argentina and also the.
Food, which is really thick in Brazil.
And so, anyway, skipping past all this, it's clear that we're setting up to block Malacca.
Now, you've got the Chinese and the Singaporeans and the Thais all getting huddling together in the last week or so, big time on building that Craw Isthmus Canal, which you and I have talked about, I don't know, 20 times probably.
So, I mean, so the Craw Isthmus Canal is now fully on the front of the table for the Chinese and the Thais and the Singaporeans and some others.
And, but, you know, they're talking about not even starting until like 2030, which is way, I mean, this famine will be a blazing by then.
This is way, way behind the curve.
So that would be an ameliorate.
Others are the railway systems and pipelines that they've been building across Asia and other places.
But there are just no easy workarounds because there are just a few, let's say a couple handfuls.
It's not just like seven or eight, but there's other places that aren't normally called main choke points, like.
Mainly, when you talk about main choke points, you're talking about Panama, Suez, you know, Turkish Strait, let's say Bosphorus.
You're talking about Gibraltar, of course, Dana Strait, Malacca, Hormuz, Baba Mandab, you know, and around the tip of Africa and South America, right?
South America can be a workaround down there.
And so, but the, but closing, but there's others too, like Hamburg.
That's why Misaka and I were recently in Hamburg.
Hamburg is the biggest harbor in Germany and the third biggest in Europe.
But there's also Rotterdam.
And Antwerp.
Rotterdam's the biggest in Europe, and it's also at the mouth of the Rhine River, which is basically the Mississippi for Europe.
The Rhine River is huge.
That's where BASF is on the Rhine River.
You know, that's where, you know, you've talked about Haberbosch many times.
That's where they started production in 1914 for nitrogenous fertilizers.
And Antwerp is big.
The overall theme here that you and I talked about many times, our listeners are aware of it, that the world's 8 billion population.
Is only alive because of the Haber Bosch process, which is feeding at least four or five billion, but it's the routes and resources, as you say.
These routes enable this global shipping, which becomes an economic issue.
You have to be able to ship things economically to make food affordable so that people can survive and eat.
And if these routes start getting cut off, which is exactly what's happening, then the entire economic situation changes.
And Michael, the thing that strikes me in this is that I think until about two weeks ago, A lot of people assume that you and I were just being alarmist.
And now you have mainstream media.
You have Forbes and Bloomberg and everybody talking about the coming fuel and famine.
And, you know, we weren't making it up.
We were just ahead of the curve.
Yeah, that's the way it normally looks, right?
And every war that we've ever studied is about routes, resources, and ideology.
And keep in mind, ideology is about human resources.
The biggest resource out there is human resources.
And, you know, for Misako and I were talking just a couple of days ago while we were out on the highway and saying, you know, all this infrastructure that you see, whether it's the roads or the bridges or the Panama Canal or whatever, Suez, all of this physical infrastructure, which is considerable, would pale in comparison to the amount of effort that's been put into human infrastructure, human brainwashing, human influence, human.
I mean, this is unbelievable.
I mean, entire.
New languages are deployed in the service of these things, like modern Hebrew, you know what I mean, to replace Yiddish, those sorts of things.
Entire languages like modern Mandarin, modern Hebrew.
I think the Mandarin that you speak is from Taiwan, right?
That's the old Mandarin, right?
But then the Chinese came out with modern Mandarin.
So this is part of the game.
Big strategic language weapons, as an example.
All right, Michael.
So Here's the thing.
A lot of Americans are only just now realizing a couple of things, one of which is that fuel storage is going to start running out in July in the United States.
It doesn't mean that, you know, it's going to be full Mad Max, but we won't have the buffer that we currently have.
And when fuel becomes scarce, then of course farming becomes difficult and transportation and all of that.
So, can you walk us through, Michael, some of what you see happening in the United States?
I'm talking about the wealthier Western countries, the US, Canada, Australia, UK, et cetera, for the second half of 2026.
What do you see happening?
Right.
It's the stuff you've talked about for years.
You know, the fuel energy prices, Chris Martinson talks about this all the time.
I think you just had Chris Martinson on, actually.
I know you did.
And so, Chris Martinson, by the way, we just had a cut in video.
It wasn't because we were cutting something out, it was because I had some problem with my microphone.
I mean, when the energy prices go up, all prices go up.
And we already know that many people in countries, even like Japan, which, you know, most people see Japan as being very wealthy, but it's a very wealthy country filled with people living on the edge, just like the United States.
It's just that the social cohesion and the, and the, uh, let's say that the Japanese aren't as, you know, call of the wild or planet of the apes when the lights go out, right?
But they're also living on the edge insofar as money goes, right?
They don't, they're not, this is not a, It's a rich country filled with people that are not rich, just like the United States.
And so, what will this do?
One of the things that leads to famines is when people, or let's say contributes to famines, is when people cannot afford food, they start stealing it.
And they'll start stealing it from the store.
They're hungry.
I mean, it's not because they're thieves, they're hungry.
They got children to feed, that sort of thing.
We all know that.
And they'll start stealing it from warehouses where they work or they just break in, trains and the whole works, right?
They start also stealing it directly from farmers.
So, the food stops growing because farmers go out, they got to make money too.
And so, people start, you know, it gets to be called the wild.
So, the famine often will grow, especially now there's different sorts of famines.
I've noticed in my years of study of famines, there's some that are like a light switch, like Mount Fuji is not far from me.
In 1707, Mount Fuji erupted, caused instant famine.
I call that a light switch famine.
Often, those are caused by like locusts or volcanoes or something.
And that's a quick famine.
Boom, turns on and it's gone, game on, right?
Then there's the slow ones like Weimar, Germany, or this.
It slowly fades in.
Those tend to be by far the worst.
The ones that sort of fade in, and you start to see people start to steal more.
There's a lot more adulterations that go into the food, like sawdust.
Every famine book that I've read always has sawdust in the bread, right?
There's always, you know, the bread being baked suddenly has sawdust in it.
This, things like that.
People start eating the grass roofs off of their buildings and that sort of thing.
So, you know, the bark off the tree, leather, people are always eating leather in famines and eating mud.
That's always happens as well.
So the, uh, And yeah, every famine book that I've read, which is be a couple dozen that I've actually read that are books, not just studies and that sort of thing, which would be a lot more.
But you'll always see that people go for tree bark, they go for leather, they go for anything made out of leather, horse saddles, the horse, of course, and just basically anything that walks, crawls, flies, or swims, and things that don't.
And your nose leads you to things, like women with pica that go for the.
I was down in Nicaragua, no, I was down in.
Some years ago, and the neighbors were from Nicaragua.
And one of the women, she had a baby, she said she sometimes wanted the dark mud and other times the orange mud, right?
I mean, your body knows what it needs and it goes for it.
And sometimes it goes for the neighbor.
Yeah, those are mineral deficiencies, especially during pregnancy, that drive people to eat mud or dirt.
It's interesting that that's been noted throughout history, even to this day.
But you mentioned also that people eat.
Thatched roofs.
I mean, I guess the material, you know, they'll eat almost any material that they can get their hands on, including cannibalism.
Now, do you, you know, how bad do you expect things to get in the United States?
I don't expect to see cannibalism, but I do expect to see a lot of food lines and a lot of people displaced out of their homes because they're spending much, a lot more of their income on food.
But what do you see?
Oh, I would totally expect to see.
Cannibalism in the United States.
Really?
But you know, yeah, on eating the thatched roofs, by the way, that's something I've seen.
It pops up everywhere.
Eating grass, of course, and thatched roofs.
And in fact, just the other day, I was looking for any old paintings or anything of people like eating a thatched roof.
And I found one from Old Russian Famine and I bought it actually.
It's only like 20 or 30 bucks.
It wasn't a painting, it's just an illustration.
But from anyway, but now I don't know if others have noticed this, but as someone who has tracked cannibals, I did this in India and Nepal and other places.
California, actually.
I'm more tuned into it, right?
And so, what I'm getting to is I don't know if others are noticing this, but there's a clear, more of a low rumble of stories and items that you see around for recent years about cannibalism, right?
Cannibal, you know, the cannibal cult, whatever it is, the rock band or whatever that crazy band is.
There's so many like that.
There's many just references to cannibalism.
That I was not used to seeing when I was growing up.
But now, having tracked the cannibals, it leaps off the page to me when I see it.
And it's clearly they're habituating people to it subtly.
Okay.
And nudging.
Right.
So, along with this, it looks like fuel rationing is going to be coming to even wealthy nations.
And with fuel rationing, of course, the only way for the government to enforce that is to have some kind of ID that tracks people's fuel consumption.
Cannibalism References in Music00:04:26
Where you're limited to how many gallons a week.
But that's what we saw in places like Venezuela for food, also.
So, you go in a grocery store, you scan your thumbprint, you're biometrically approved to purchase one chicken a week or something like that.
Do you see that coming also to North America?
Definitely.
I mean, I don't see the way things are barreling now, that's what they want.
And you can see how many fertilizer plants have burned down in the United States.
It's a lot.
Actually, Catherine Austin Fitz, didn't you have her on recently?
I don't know if you did or not.
This was a few months ago, but yeah.
A report came out in her Solari report recently that was mapping out a lot of these things that have been hit.
So, you know, she's, she's, and you obviously are tracking this and you have unbelievable tracking abilities.
I mean, mapping abilities with your AI and that sort of thing.
But as you can see, they've been setting the table for this famine for years now.
So it's taken a long time to set conditions for this.
And as you know, these people don't think in five year plans.
They have a five year plan for taking out the garbage.
These people think in terms of like 200 years or 300 years, right?
They really over the horizon planning.
So, I mean, they've been setting that, you know, Malthusian ideas have been in place a long time.
They've been growing.
They've been getting control of the food supply and getting control of everything that they can get control of.
But one of the things, there are many, many books about depopulation techniques.
I have many of them in our library right here.
It's taken years to collect them.
But this is an art and a science that most people aren't aware of.
It's not hidden, it's not like, you know, hidden away.
It's just that most people don't go to that section of the library.
Not that it's all.
In one section of a library, but it's there.
It's wide open.
You can look up, you know, the Bulgarians and the Turks and the Greeks swapping population.
There's a book on that from 1932, which I have here.
All kinds of things like this.
But what's amazing, I mean, what you just said is accurate, but in AI or in the corporate media or search engines, the idea of depopulation is still widely labeled a conspiracy theory as if it doesn't exist and it never existed and it certainly doesn't.
Exists today.
And yet, when you talk to those who are pushing climate alarmism, many of them openly talk about the importance of depopulation.
And it goes back decades, even to Ehrlich with the population bomb book and President Richard Nixon.
And they were saying, you know, let's put chemicals in the water and the food for depopulation.
So this isn't new, is it?
No.
And even with Ehrlich with the population bomb, you know, You know, he went off to India.
That's the story they tell, and yada, yada.
I've been to India, and you go there, and you're like, Hey, there's a lot of people here.
You know, it's an extraordinary number of people.
And they say there's over a billion people, and I think I saw every one of them.
But, you know, even Ehrlich, some people say it was a groundbreaking or seminal book or that sort of thing.
But even that was just an evolutionary book.
There were many books before that.
Malthus, of course, which I have Ehrlich's book.
I have.
The Malthusian books, or I have them all here.
I have the originals, right?
And so it's been going on a long time.
Even he was just another guy that showed up playing rock and roll, which had already been developed, let's say.
You know what I mean?
Right.
And so, and keep in mind, there's multiple lines of weaponry that are going on in this war.
One of them is just intoxicants, which is a huge weapon system, right?
Intoxicants, music, music is absolutely massively part of this system, right?
Not just music, but sounds, actually.
And so, in every form of brainwashing, every art and artifice that you can imagine, which is a lot because you studied this for years, but just imagine it's all at the table all the time.
And so, in one sense, we sort of really do live in a large Truman show.
And some people can start to break their way out of it, and some people don't.
I was talking with somebody on the phone a couple of nights ago, and he's just totally not even.
Replacing Humans with Silicon Data00:03:49
Willing to approach the wall of the Truman Show.
He wants to stay right in the middle of the stage, so to speak, and just be, I'll just live in my Truman Show and be a nice boy, you know.
Wow.
Well, that's not going to serve that person very well, given what's coming.
And the one thing that we see in America right now is that there is a very strong financial and infrastructure preference for building data centers.
Seems like data centers have unlimited funding, unlimited support.
They're being granted access to all the water, all the farmland, all the power.
And yet, the supply of food and energy to humans is being cut off.
It's almost like there's a replacement plan to replace humans with AI or silicon data centers.
Do you see that too?
Yeah.
I mean, you talk about this all the time.
I think you talk about this like every 18 hours.
You know, I mean, you're always talking, and so you know this subject.
Better than I do.
You know, it's interesting.
I was talking with somebody that we both know about 24 hours ago, and maybe he'll watch this because he's a very serious guy.
He watches your show a lot.
But, you know, he's doing the Bitcoin or let's say crypto mining thing.
And, you know, he was telling me about how much investment that he put into it and that sort of thing.
And he hopes to break even soon.
And basically, I broached the topic of you're part of the data center infrastructure.
You know what I mean?
You're paying for the electricity.
You're not really mining crypto.
They're actually, you know, giving you some payout.
You're doing Part of the distributed network, and you're paying for the electricity at your home level, right?
You know how this goes, Michael, very well.
I mean, it's not like you're just mining crypto out there.
There's other things going on in your computer that you're paying for, and that you're doing the computation.
This stuff has been going on since, it must be at least the 80s, right?
Because I remember they were doing some idea, trying to get people with their home very slow computers, maybe the 80s or the 90s.
You know, to calculate some astronomical things because it's, you know, there's a lot of mathematics involved.
And, you know, if they distribute the calculations with little computers around the world and get everybody a little piece of the puzzle, they say, you know, they can get.
That was in the 90s.
And so, was that the 90s?
So now, if you can imagine how that may have been actually just sort of an experimental or an evolutionary stage for what we're at now, now you've got people mining for Bitcoin like crazy and paying the electric bill, you know.
And getting some little Bitcoin change.
Well, yeah, but the Bitcoin uses a tremendous amount of electricity.
I mean, it still does because it's a proof of work network.
And the difficulty of the work in the blockchain for Bitcoin is very high, very high now.
But it seems like the power is going to shift from crypto into AI and specifically building simulated worlds.
And within those worlds, then spawning artificial intelligence that these scientists hope they can bring back into this world.
You know, I mean, this is a weapons program.
I mean, clearly, it's designed to build a super intelligence that can dominate this world.
But in order to do that, they have to build these other worlds.
And so, in order to do that, I see Trump and others justifying taking away resources from humans, saying this is a military program, it's national security.
We have to give all the resources to the data centers.
Famine as a Weapons Program00:09:32
Humans, you know, be damned.
And that's what I see happening right now.
I think it's obvious.
I mean, like, they don't hide it.
This is not even conspiracy theory.
This is the stuff they say, right?
And they say and they write it and they're doing it, right?
And also, keep in mind every war we've ever heard of is routes, resources, and ideology.
And ideology is about human resources, right?
I mean, the Jesuits were going around the world for so long and not just them, but so many others.
And it's about human resources, right?
It's about getting people in your architecture, right?
And so this is just.
The way it goes.
And when they see these globalists, the subset of people that are very, you know, let's say, and they call us nationalists, nationalists versus globalists, they see us as like cattle, of course.
And they're really clear.
They don't hide it again, they're open about it.
And so when they've got too many cattle, they call some off, right?
And that's what they're doing.
They're calling the cattle right now.
They're just reducing the population because the population is, you know, useless eaters, as they say.
And they're in the way.
And again, this is an old game.
There's zero new about it.
It's been done more time.
I study this seven days a week and I have no idea how many times this has happened.
It's so much that just learning the names of all the places this happened would be like learning the English language.
You know what I mean?
It's a big task just to memorize the names.
It's going on all the time.
It's never ended.
It goes back to the edge of time and back to the edge of recorded history.
But never before in history, though, has the population been this large, which means that this effort will be a larger depopulation effort than anything in history.
Although there are many examples, like you said, like Ukraine, 1930s, the Holodomor, how many tens of millions of people were starved to death on purpose.
And there's history of China, history of Cambodia, et cetera.
But in this case, there's going to be a lot of social upheaval as people are.
Being slowly starved to death, isn't there?
I mean, what talk to us about the upheaval side of this?
What's going to happen to the civil stability of our world?
Right.
You know, during the 1840s, when the Irish famine really kicked off, there was actually a lot of famines around Europe in the 1840s.
That's why they call it the hungry 40s.
And, you know, in every case, you're going to get upheaval, right?
Often, it's the government, let's say in the different famine period with Mao.
I mean, he's using that to control the population.
He was killing off people he didn't want, right?
And Stalin has done the same thing.
And the British have done the same thing.
So there's nothing new about this.
It's very, you know, for them, it's like building a bridge or a canal.
I mean, every bridge and every canal is different.
But they also, if you know how to do it, you can go do your calculations and get the material and do it.
It might take 20 years to build a big canal, but you can do it, you know?
And that's what they're doing with the famine.
If you want to make a famine, you can do it.
If you want to put China in famine, And if they can't resist you enough, you can put China in famine.
You know, and for instance, by not just China, but Japan, where I'm at now, the United States, you can do it.
And, you know, many people in 2020, when I started saying United States can go into famine, you know, there was always the tisk, tisk, don't you understand?
United States is the biggest food producer in the world.
And I'm like, before I put my mouth to this microphone, trust me, I will have studied that in detail.
And I understand that the United States is a massive food exporter.
And trust me, it can be put into famine.
And Ukraine is a book.
Has been a huge food exporter when it was put in famine.
Henan province in China, which is where some of the worst famines happen, was a breadbasket of China.
Just because Thailand, I've been warning about Thailand for years.
I flew in four or five years ago to meet with Abhisit.
I've mentioned this numerous times with you.
And I flew in from Europe and said that Mark, his nickname is Mark, I wrote the last two pages of his book, actually.
The Simple Truth is the name of the book.
And I flew in to warn him that Thailand could be put into famine, right?
Now, keep in mind, people that live in Thailand, they're like, That can never happen.
This is Thailand.
This is like the land of plenty.
I'm like, trust me, it can happen.
And here's the mechanisms by which it can happen, right?
And now it's happening by the mechanisms that I said, because I know what they're doing.
I'm not a genius.
I just study seven days a week like Rain Man.
That's it.
And after, you know, like the teachers would say in school, the best form of cheating is just to do your homework.
You know, if you do your homework, it's like you're going to feel like cheating because all these, this is such an easy test, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, exactly.
But I'd like to talk about the specific mechanisms.
Let me point out just to get us started that obviously the U.S. imports fertilizer.
And obviously there's no strategic reserve of fertilizer like there has been of petroleum.
So when the fertilizer is gone, it's just gone.
And it doesn't matter how much land you have, if you don't have the fertilizer, it's not going to produce at the level that creates that food abundance.
And they're doing so many things, so many attacks here and there.
Like, you know, World War II wasn't one on D-Day.
Right, or you know, Okinawa or anything, these are all battles, major battles, but in and of themselves, they were on the big picture, they didn't mean anything if you didn't have all the other battles, right?
So, we've got so many battles against our food supply, like choking down Hormuz, right?
Like blowing up energy pipelines and sources, you know, refineries and that sort of thing, replacing farmland with wind turbines, which is there's a lot of that going on, but all none of these, you know, replacing.
Food crops with ethanol production.
I think you've talked about that many times, right?
So instead of growing for food, you're growing for energy, right?
And another thing is like dope.
I mean, you have a lot of places, instead of growing okra, they're growing cannabis or they're growing opium in different countries.
Like when I was in Afghanistan, it was like Wizard of Oz.
There was so much opium, I couldn't believe it.
I wrote about this in 2006 and I was like, I can't believe there's so much opium here.
Not only that, it's right outside the bases.
So close to the bases, you could hit it with your left hand with a baseball.
You know, you could just like throw it and hit it.
It's that close to our perimeter, right?
I mean, if they were in a firefight, shell casings from the machine gun would be landing in the opium.
You know what I mean?
It's that close.
And it was so we were letting it grow.
And I wrote a series of dispatches called The Perfect Evil.
In any case, it wasn't food that was being grown.
And, you know, then they had food shortages.
I'm like, food shortages?
How can you have food shortages?
They're growing opium all over the place, you know, because, but keep in mind, when When Mao had the great famine that he made, China was still exporting food while people were starving to death.
Ireland was doing the same thing during the Irish famine, 1845 to the early 1850s.
People argue when it ended, but there was still food being exported, actually, because there were some of the counties in Ireland which were not even in famine on Ireland, right?
And then there was some famine, some counties.
I have a map of the counties that were not in famine at all, and some had some food issues, and others, I mean, they were down to cannibalism, right?
So, I mean, it was, you know, and even.
Even during that time, there were still people making vodka and that sort of thing out of the alcohol, or making alcohol.
They're saying not necessarily vodka, but they're making alcohol out of some of the food, the potatoes that they did have, that sort of thing.
Yeah, I mean, these sorts of things are, you'll find as these famines unfold, there'll be some people like Kenjiro here.
The reason he's so famous in Japan is because he saw famine coming.
Mike Adams, you are basically Kenjiro.
He saw famine coming.
And his statue is all over Japan.
His name is Kenjiro, right?
And he saw famine coming for various reasons.
This is the 1800s.
And he started warning people and he started telling them what to do, what to plant.
Don't plant the rice, plant the millet, all kinds of other things.
And the people that listened to him, none of them died.
But a lot of other people died.
So if you look up Kenjiro, Neinomiya Sontaku was his real name, but his nickname is Kenjiro.
His statue is all over Japan, right?
There's one in Los Angeles too.
I've gone over there and seen it near Japantown.
But, you know, not far from the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Memorial, for those who know what I'm talking about.
And so, but the.
No, I'll take that.
There are a lot of things that you can do.
He does have, there is a resemblance.
If there were a Japanese version of me, he would look like that.
That's you, man.
That's you.
Like walking around with a book.
Talking to grow food.
I know.
I call him my brother from a different mother.
Not only a different mother, but a different century.
And a different race.
I got his backpack exactly.
Burning the Future of Food00:05:56
All right.
That's cool.
I'll take that for sure.
Yeah.
And, you know, he's got sandals on and he's got a little backpack and everything.
I'll take that, especially with that very modern hairdo going.
He's rocking that hair right now.
Masako doesn't like this statue because he's all dressed off of flamboyantly.
She's like, Kenjiro never dressed like that.
I've got other statues where he's dressed, you know, more like a flamboyant.
Square and robes and stuff.
Yeah.
That's probably more accurate.
You know, Artist rendition here.
Yeah.
Well, I'm dressed like a farmer every day, literally every single day.
I'm just people like, don't you ever have clean pants?
No, I actually don't.
No.
Because pretty much there's going to be dirt or grain on them or something.
Okay.
So then it seems to me that you and I both know that the famine is going to get bad in 2027 for sure.
The longer the Strait of Hormuz stays closed and the more destruction there is of the infrastructure from fertilizer production to gas exports to pipelines getting bombed, refineries getting blown up or burned down, sabotage, whatever, then this starts to extend out three years, five years, even in some cases, 10 years.
What do you see as the longer term timeline of what we might be facing?
Oh, it'll be years because this is a.
Completely by design.
I think it'll be years.
Of course, we don't know until we get there, but the way it's shaping up, it looks like years because this is a slow famine.
The slow famines tend to come in slowly and then they'll build.
I think you're right on the timing.
It's funny because independently, you and I came to the same idea on the timing.
Like, probably late 2027 is when it'll be super obvious to everybody, you know, because it's still not obvious to a lot of people.
I think it's still not obvious to most people, actually.
But you can see, you know, basically it's like a hurricane that's way on the other side of the Atlantic right now.
It's obvious to the people with the satellite and, you know, hurricane chasers.
But I think it'll likely, keep in mind, as these slow famines progress, That second season often is far worse than the first.
So, in other words, if it really kicks off in late 2027 and it's really obvious, it'll probably be a lot worse in 2028, 2029, right?
Because in that first season, it starts, people start robbing the farmers, robbing the warehouses, robbing the trains, and everything breaks, really honestly breaks down internally, not just, you know, closing Hormuz, which I shouldn't use the word just, just closing the Strait of Hormuz as if that's a.
I mean, that's a major event, or Malacca, but it happens internally, is what I'm getting to at sort of an atomic level.
It happens locally when people steal everybody's avocados off their tree and that sort of thing.
And actually, sometimes, you know, people look at what's happened.
I just saw something in the news the other day where a bunch of fruit trees are being cut down in California.
Did you see that?
Yeah, that's because of the closing of that canned fruit company.
It's peaches, it's 400,000 peach trees, isn't it?
420,000, I think, is what they said.
That's right.
That's right.
Number 420.
But why would they do that?
They would do that again to cut.
Otherwise, they would just, knowing that famine's coming, you would never cut those down.
But if you want to control the food supply, you don't care about the people, you just want control.
You're going to cut them down.
You're not going to let them just go on their own.
Well, and also look at what the IDF has done to the Palestinians in Gaza.
One of the first things they do is they burn the olive orchards.
And olive oil is one of the foods that the U.S. imports, like 99% of the olive oil, mostly from Italy and Spain, et cetera.
But the fact that, you know, there's a force that's burning the future of food, just like we mentioned with the peach trees in America.
Why would you cut down 420,000 peach trees knowing that famine is coming?
It just has to be deliberate.
Right.
And, you know, it's funny, I was talking with an Iranian lady a few days ago, Massako and I were.
And she's in communication with her mother in Iran.
But she said that her grandmother, I asked her, what are the health tips that your grandmother, an Iranian lady in Iran, she's passed away now, but what were her health tips?
And she said, good oil, good salt, and good water.
Good oil, good salt, and good water.
Yeah.
And those are like the basics good water, good salt, and anyway, good oil.
Hmm.
Yeah, it makes sense.
Well, like not the crap that we eat in America, all the cottonseed, soy, corn, oils, you know, these cheap oils that we eat, which are, you know, making America diseased, right?
And not able to even function as a society with high health care costs, et cetera.
But isn't that part of this also?
The economic incentives for governments that are broke, like the United States, to kill off the people who have high health care costs, Social Security benefits, Medicare.
Disability from the federal government, even veterans benefits, etc.
You know, there's a financial incentive for a government to make people die as soon as possible if those people are receiving any kind of federal benefit.
I mean, that's obvious.
Right.
Financial Incentives to Make People Die00:15:37
Yeah.
I mean, because they're looking at people as human resources.
I mean, literally, that's what it's called.
And when did the name human resources actually start to be used in the corporate world?
I don't know, actually.
I don't know.
Etymologically, I need to look that out.
I've got a whole section.
I've got a bunch of old books on etymology.
I'm going to look at it as soon as we hang out.
But human resources, again, the whole ideology thing is about human resources.
But again, they look at us as human resources.
They look at us more as meat bots, as sheep, you know?
And so as soon as we're reached our expiration date, they want us out of the way.
It's that simple.
Look at Canada is doing a MADE program now.
They're killing massive numbers of Canadians, just putting them to death.
You can go, there's probably somebody right now.
In Canada, going to the doctor who will be put to death today, who is perfectly healthy.
Literally walk in, don't expect to be put to death, make some complaint about your knee.
The next thing you know, you're in the little pod and you're gone, you know, watching some whale movie.
You know, and that's it.
Yeah.
Well, and it seems like, I mean, they're starting to roll out the Hanta virus narrative already, which seems like COVID 2.0, while they ignored the actual real threat of the parasites like the screwworms that you warned about for so long.
They largely ignored that, but then they're pushing this Hanta virus, which seems entirely contrived.
And maybe they're going to use that in the same way they use COVID.
What do you think?
Oh, yeah.
It's just the number of brain cycles I put into Trump statements or Hanta virus would be, I don't know, half a brain cycle.
You know, it's like that alleged assassination attempt, you know, in the press thing recently.
I put literally probably one minute into that, you know, and that seemed like a wasted minute I can't retrieve.
You know, it's just like it gets to the point where you're like, okay, that's trash.
Next, you know, we got to focus on the, on the, with Hantavirus, of course, they'll use it.
They'll, you know, I'm on a private chat today.
They were talking about how the British parachuted in some troops to help somebody with some patient somewhere and did a, I don't know, 10,000 kilometer flight or something, parachuted people out the back of an airplane.
Just totally kooky type stuff, you know?
Right.
But, you know, making the big show of it.
And it seems like they can push not just the masks again.
Which never worked, but also then the lockdowns.
So they could have another reason for lockdowns, which combined with the fuel shortages and then the coming food rationing, this could be way worse than COVID.
This could force people to die in their own homes all across first world countries because they'd be threatened with arrest if they come out of their own homes.
Actually, you know, a pattern in famines is you'll often start in the beginning, you'll start to see a lot more people on the streets.
I see this recurring in all the famines I've studied.
There'll be a lot more people on the streets for a while.
They're looking for food.
And often people are carrying spoons, actually, which was interesting because when I was in the Army, all the SF guys, all the Green Braves that I knew, we always carried a spoon in our pocket.
It was pretty odd.
But because you didn't want to be without your spoon, we were often quite hungry and training and whatnot.
But what I'm getting to is in famines, you'll often see there's actually a famous photo of a Dutch boy holding a spoon.
But often when people finally die, they're actually in their beds.
They're actually back at home.
People often will die during famines back at home.
Others will have gone off to a different country and that sort of thing.
And like the Irish down in Argentina or Chile or America, that sort of thing.
So that human osmotic pressure gets to be.
That's why I spend so much time in the Darien Gap.
And I said this over and over I think there's going to be famines.
And I think places like the Darien Gap and corridors through places like Bahamas or just coming up Camp of the Saints style up the Mississippi River by ships, I think it's going to become intense.
I think they intentionally have created the infrastructure and the human infrastructure as well for helping.
Hundreds of millions of people migrate during famine.
And I think that's coming.
And I've said this many, many times, including with you, that I think the Darien Gap, I think, is far from over.
Right now is just a trickle, but it's far from over.
So I'm really glad you brought that up because I wanted to ask you about this.
It seems to me, and I lived in South America for a couple of years.
I think of Central and South America as.
Places of food abundance where there's a lot more local knowledge of how to grow food.
You know, gardening is still more common there.
And I think of North America as being a lot more barren in terms of if there's a collapse, fewer people know how to grow food in North America compared to Central and South America.
So why would starving people in South America head to North America?
Is it just a perception?
Oh, well, first of all, you can bring people in from Africa and other places in Asia into South America.
Which has been most of the people that came through the Darien Gap were not actually from South America.
A lot were from Colombia and Venezuela, and that's a huge amount came from Venezuela.
But a lot of people that came through the Darien Gap were from Cuba.
They were from Haiti.
They were from Africa.
They were from Ghana.
They were from Bangladesh, right?
So you just get them to South America.
But keep in mind, I think you're going to see Brazil get destabilized.
I think that there's part of the Zionist infrastructure that wants to.
They want to destabilize.
I think, I think we're going to see a war between Argentina and Brazil at some point.
But in the, in the interim, I think, this is my guess, Argentina is going to go for Malvinas, which is Falklands, right?
I think when we were, when Misako and I were down in Buenos Aires, I don't know, a year and a half ago now, you can see that there's signs all over the place about, you know, Malvinas is Argentina and, you know, Falklands.
And right now they're British, of course.
But I, but I think that they'll take those.
There's a lot of energy in Argentina.
There's a lot of food.
Uh, there's lithium.
There's, there's, there's that.
Well, I mean, Argentina, the whole name is Arge Silver.
It's named after silver.
The country's named after silver, right?
Yeah, good point.
But it's very close to Uruguay and Brazil, and Brazil's got a lot of food and a lot of other stuff, right?
And that bioceanic corridor that goes from Brazil through Paraguay through Argentina and Chile, China's been working on that.
Massacre and I got on a train, a little tiny train that the Chinese built up.
Northern Argentina, when we went, actually, very interesting.
And, but they've been working on that quarter.
Now, keep in mind, Chile and Brazil, which is on the bookends there, you know, Chile's on the Pacific side, Brazil's on the Atlantic side, those are closer to China.
They're not buddies with Israel at all.
Paraguay's very close with Israel.
They don't like China at all.
They still recognize Taiwan.
Argentina is that's a.
Argentina is sort of like Panama.
You got China and the Zionists are fighting over Argentina, just like they're fighting over Panama.
And they're fighting over Thailand.
A lot of people don't see this.
And a lot of Thais are finally waking up to it that a lot of the Zionists are actually colonizing Kotao, Copanyan, and Kosumui.
I've spent more than three months on those islands.
I'm very familiar with them.
Those are strategically placed islands.
And a lot of the Zionists also are colonizing up in Pai, Thailand.
That's where the Japanese were.
A lot of the Japanese were in Pai in World War II because it's a strategic place.
And a lot are going to the Philippines, and of course, Greece and other places that are strategic.
They're not going off to hide away somewhere.
They're going to colonize strategic places, right?
It's not running away.
I mean, some of the colonies, some of the people are just running away off to, I don't know, Miami or something, but others are going to strategic places like Panama.
Wow.
Wow.
And that's because Israel itself is so threatened by the current war.
Its ports aren't usable.
Its economy is collapsing.
Its people are.
Are having to flee because of the conflict or what?
Right.
And keep in mind, men, there's many, many groups.
I don't even know the numbers.
It's so many again that are transnational.
They are like the Zionists are transnational and Jews as well are transnational.
Catholics are transnational.
Jesuits, you know, all this is transnational, right?
Mennonites, Amish, like Mennonites.
We went to see Mennonites in Belize.
Mennonites are opening a camp now in Suriname.
We went down to Belize.
Misako and I had to talk with Mennonites because we wanted to talk with Mennonites.
And Vandersteel came down there as well.
We all went down there and we, and Taylor Kramer, we all went down there and we were talking with Mennonites.
And they speak Old German.
Luckily, I speak German as well.
They can understand my Hochdeutsch, but their Naderdeutsch was, I only got maybe 30 or 40% of what they were saying.
They speak Old German.
And anyway, but speaking with them, a lot of the Mennonites are leaving Brazil.
And I wanted to talk with Mennonites because they know how to do stuff.
You know what I mean?
Like Old.
Old people stuck, like you know, they know how to fix something with a piece of leather and a knife, you know.
And so, they uh, um, they uh, when the Belize government tried to force them to take the jab, they're like, nope, Mennonites, not gonna do it.
And they stuck together and they grow a lot of the food in Belize.
So, the Mennonites sent off feelers down to, for instance, in Suriname, that's one of the places, and now they're building a camp there.
And so, you can see in the news where there's an information war, I haven't looked lately, but that information war to try to stop the Mennonites.
From building a new camp out in Suriname.
They're saying they're destroying the jungle or whatever.
But once the Belize government tried to force the Mennonites to take the jab, which they didn't take, the Mennonites are like, we're out of here.
And now the Belizean government's like, uh oh, our farmers are going to punch out to Suriname or whatever.
But keep in mind, if you're going to think in terms of resilience, I'm thinking in terms of the neighbors I want are Mennonites.
They're Amish.
You know what I mean?
That's why Misako and I were just out checking different parts of Japan.
Where the people, there are parts of Japan where the people are far more resilient than others, just like in America.
There's parts of America where the people know how to go get a bear.
You know what I mean?
And there's people in Japan that know how to go get a bear.
This place is filled with bears, man.
Japan is unbelievably filled with bears.
Yeah, you've spoken about that quite a bit before.
I remember your story of the bear that got into the hotel and the bear hunter.
That was, and remember I said that's called Airbnb or Bear Bnb?
Bear Bnb.
Yeah, Airbnb.
But in the US, let's go back to the US.
What states or cities are going to be the most vulnerable then between now and 2030 as things happen?
Like, for example, we already know that California has to import all its diesel fuel and gasoline.
California doesn't have functioning refineries, or not that I'm aware of.
Maybe they have one.
But also, they don't have nuclear power plants, except maybe one small one.
They don't, you know, California has shut down their energy like Western Europe.
And as a result, clearly that's vulnerable.
But what's your overall assessment of where is it?
Where are people vulnerable in America?
Oh, all these big mega cities like Los Angeles, Los Angeles, that whole thing.
I spent a couple of years in California, so I'm pretty familiar with it.
I mean, all those mega cities, New York or whatever, or Florida.
I love Florida.
I grew up in Florida, but I'm also looking at this through a war lens.
Florida is not that resilient because there's too many people.
If there weren't that many people, you could do fine.
But keep in mind, Florida was one of the last places that was truly settled in the United States, believe it or not.
You might think, you know, Florida, that would be easy, but I assure you, You know, Josh, because of the swampland.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Josh Phillip, he works, you know, at Epoch Times.
Josh and I, we've been all over the place together.
But at one point, Josh said he went to live for a year out in the boonies, you know, to sort of meditate and get to know himself when he was younger.
And I said, Where did you do it?
And he said, He went to Florida.
I said, Florida?
Are you crazy?
You'd have been better off in Alaska than Florida.
And he's like, Oh, man, it was tough.
It was really tough.
And I said, I'm sure you learned a lot about yourself living off grid in Florida for a year.
He's going to watch your dad all right.
Yeah, no kidding.
But so, but why would.
See, I believe this is clearly an anti human agenda being carried out by globalist forces.
But it seems to me they're going to be killing off the people who support globalism, which is the city people.
You know, the people who support climate change are city people.
The people who support gun control are city people, or abortion tend to be city people.
The people they're not going to be killing off is all the country people all over the world.
Isn't that true?
Right.
Well, I mean, they're going to go for it and they can do it with, you know, with aerosol sprays or so many other mechanisms.
There's so many mechanisms where to start.
And they're going to go for it because the country people are on the country that they want.
Right.
So they're going to go for it.
But at the end of the day, these globalists are going to fight each other as well.
And because that's just their nature, they are.
Evil per se.
They are intrinsically evil and they don't trust each other.
They're going to fight each other.
But right now, they're all busy getting what they can get because right now, as they kill people off, they're getting their property.
A lot of people say, Why would they kill off all the people?
They're killing off their markets.
They're like, They don't want you.
They don't want your money.
They're going to take your property.
And if you're like a billionaire and you're not in the club, and by the way, if somebody tried to push the jab on you, And you're a billionaire.
Well, you ain't in the club.
You know, a billionaire is not big money for these people, right?
If you're a king or a queen royalty somewhere and you took the jab, you're not in the club.
They're coming for your kingdom, right?
They're coming for everything.
You got to keep in mind, these are the sorts of people that make countries.
All the countries on the Arabian Peninsula, for instance, the ones I call the 1922 synthetic countries like Bahrain and Kuwait and UAE and Oman and Emirates, Qatar.
I mean, those countries, or if you get into the peninsula, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, you know, Yemen, these countries, Saudi Arabia, these countries were made synthetically to get control of routes and resources, just like the countries in South America as well.
Higher Level War Against Humanity00:07:23
The United States were made that way.
The United States was built on basically a company town sort of methodology.
A huge amount of the United States was built on, I mean, just a bunch of company towns hobbled together and became a giant corporation.
As you know, the United States is actually a corporation.
And so the, and, you know, in many, you know, the city, the town you live in is probably incorporated, right?
I mean, this is old stuff.
And now you've got these big corporations, which are transnational, right?
They don't have countries.
Like BlackRock doesn't have a country.
It might have a headquarters somewhere, but that doesn't matter.
We can shut that down and open, they can distribute it, right?
These are not, they have bases in Atlanta or something, but that's not them.
There's so many transnational, Architectures, whether it's religious or whether it's various companies or cults or whatever you want to call them, you know, there's many, many, many.
And like, for instance, Mennonites, again, they're transnational.
There's many, many people like this.
Yeah.
Well, exactly.
So it seems to me like this is going to be a drawn out, multi year process.
And importantly, that this war with Iran, and we know Trump just had to.
Fabricate excuses to launch the war.
But the war with Iran has nothing to do with Iran's so called nuclear weapons.
This seems to me like this is a much higher level war against humanity and an excuse to block the flows of gas and oil and helium and sulfuric acid out of the Persian Gulf, which means it's going to last a long time.
Oh, right.
I mean, on this, I know Hormuz is very important.
I've been talking about it for years and saying that I thought this would come.
In fact, you did.
Yes.
Yeah, in fact, I published.
Somebody just asked me this morning.
He said that some of his friends don't believe that I said last year, or I said it more than before last year in writing, that I thought the United States slash Israel would probably close the Strait of Hormuz and blame her.
You did say that.
So I sent him a link.
I'm like, you know, somebody found me the link, you know, a couple weeks ago.
And I mean, I'm sure there's, I've said it many, many times.
It was obvious, right?
It was obvious.
Now, keeping that in mind, Hormuz, whereas it's, It looks like it's strategic and it is on one level.
But when you're talking grand strategy, like really big strategy, Hormuz is almost a tactical battle.
You know, it's, I mean, even Malacca is basically as big as it is, as massive as it is, right?
It is absolutely vital.
But on the grand scale, on grand strategy, on multi century strategy, that's a tactical battle, actually.
It's super strategic on the level that most people analyze things.
And most people, actually, even the military, the generals and the admirals and the many analysts out there, they generally stop at strategy and think and represent that like that's the highest level.
But there's another level, which is much, much higher, which is grand strategic level.
And those are the people that think in terms of centuries, right?
Those are the people that built so many of these countries I'm looking at in Africa, right?
Those countries didn't exist 150 years ago, all these African countries, none of them.
Right.
And none of the ones in the sub Saharan for sure.
And so they built these countries, but they can then tear them apart.
The reason that these countries were all stood up and now have a sense of nationalism is because of the information war to make nationalistic.
These are all synthetic countries and they were all built for purpose.
Their borders are all for some specific purpose, right?
They're there for, you know, this place has got oil.
This place has got, you know, this river we need to, whatever.
You know, Panama Canal, we built Panama on November 3rd, 1903, Republic of Panama was born.
We sponsored a rebellion from Colombia, which itself was a synthetic country and remained so.
And the United States is as well.
But we took, on November 3rd, 1903, we made Panama so we could make the Panama Canal.
It's that simple.
If Panama was somewhere else, we wouldn't have put so much effort into it.
It was all about location, location, location.
Likewise with Thailand, the United States put huge effort into stabilizing Thailand over the years.
Now it's clear.
Israel, 1948, was created for this purpose to eventually control the Suez and control the Middle East.
Control the oil and control.
This language was created.
This language was created to do that.
Modern Hebrew, and they knocked the Yiddish out, right?
And that sort of thing.
They literally created that language to create Israel, right?
I mean, that's how deep this stuff goes.
The Schofield Bible, Michael, is so comprehensive.
And modern Mandarin, China was created.
The China we know now is like the Chinese Soviet Union, right?
It's like the United States, the United States, right?
That was created over time and hobbled together.
I know Americans don't, I'm deeply American, but I'm also, the more that I study, just imagine me as a doctor who studies anatomy all the time, right?
At some point, I'm like, well, we're built like the other people, right?
The United States is built like the Soviet Union was built, was built in similar ways that China was built, and how they're trying to hobble together the EU.
Which kind of eventually will split up.
But now they're trying to split all these things apart, like Thailand.
Thailand was a bunch of different places.
They hobbled it together, so many countries, right?
And then did these huge information campaigns, often revolving around language, like making modern Mandarin or modern Hebrew or the Thaiification program in Thailand or getting all the people in Panama to speak Spanish instead of Imberah and Kuna and Nobe Bugle and all those other languages down there.
So, I mean, this is very comprehensive.
And it's very cookie cutter.
I mean, every cookie's different, but when you know how to do it, you're like, okay, here we come with the language program.
Do we want which languages do we want to mitigate, get rid of that language?
You know, we'll call it Hebrew, but it'll be a different actually Hebrew, and we'll call it Mandarin, but it'll be a different Mandarin.
And that cuts people off from their history.
It cuts people off.
And then you write a new history in that new language.
So all the books, you know, like for instance, in Israel, they frown deeply upon Yiddish, right?
The Yiddish doesn't get, I can understand a lot of Yiddish when I'm reading it actually, because I speak German and a lot of A lot of Yiddish is based on German, right?
But they've worked very hard to get rid of it.
This is comprehensive.
It's not just physical, it's the space between our ears that the human infrastructure and the routes, the human resources of ideology is that's the main, like when you're building human resources, one of the main shovels is going to be ideology.
The Man Behind the Curtain00:02:59
Right, right.
Okay.
So we're almost up on time here, Michael, but last question for you then.
What is, you think, the vision of what these global elite want the world to look like after they manage to kill off anywhere from two to seven billion people?
What is it that they're, how do they want the world to look and work at that point?
Is it like robots everywhere, AI?
What is it?
Same thing you talk about all the time.
I mean, you talk about this all the time.
So this is nothing new to your.
It's funny how we parallel, though, came to these same ideas.
They want to depopulate and control the remnant.
It's very clear.
And a lot of this will be done by me.
Keep in mind, there'll be a lot fewer people.
And the people that they do have, if they succeed, it's not set in stone that they're going to succeed, right?
They may utterly fail.
They may be destroyed, actually, right?
Because they're not invincible.
There is nobody that, there ain't a horse that can't be rode or a cowboy that can't be thrown, right?
And they're not invincible.
In fact, they're a little wacky, to put it mildly.
They don't trust each other.
But what do they want?
They want a lot fewer people that they can control.
Basically, serial numbered people without real names, your name number, such and such, right?
And they want those people to be disposable, just completely disposable, like a sheep.
A sheep has a tag in its ear, a cow has a tag in its ear.
They want people just like that.
It's crystal clear.
They don't hide it.
They want you to have a chip instead of a tag on your ear, like a sheep or a cow.
You know, a cow, they want you to have a chip in your hand.
But why do they want humans at all?
What do they still need from some remnant?
Well, they still want to live.
They still want, you know, one thing, one piece of evidence that they're not the super ultras that they make out to be, they're aging at the same pace as everybody else.
Like, you know, the second tier would be the Bill Gates class.
You know, they're incredibly wealthy, but they're obviously not the first tier.
Those, all these people are aging at the same rate that.
Other people age, you know, like Soros, all these guys, the Clintons, all these people.
You know, if they were super ultras and they had total control over, you know, they had these magical powers that they pretend to have, why would they be aging?
Sometimes they seem to age a lot faster than other people, right?
You know what I'm saying?
They're not the super ultras that they make out to be.
They're just the man behind the curtain and they're not invincible.
They, and the main thing is, don't help them along, right?
Don't help.
You know, all is not lost by far.
There's no way that all is lost.
It's just that this is another challenging time we're going through.
Right.
Okay.
Well said.
Not Invincible Super Ultras00:04:57
Tell people how they can follow you on X and your Substack as well, I think.
Yeah.
I'm on Substack.
My name is Michael Yon.
You can find me on X, Big Honey on X, or just Michael Yon Substack on Substack.
Yeah, absolutely.
Also, I want to mention you've done a number of really great interviews with Michael Ferris, Coffee and a Mike.
And I really enjoy those.
And Michael's invited me on to join him pretty soon, I think this next week.
Oh, he's always talking about you.
You need to go on a show.
And I'm glad that would be great.
I do.
I've been on a show.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I thought you had been on it, right?
Because I was like, no, I love it when you're on a show because it's a long format, you know, really in depth conversations.
And what other shows are you on that you want me to mention here?
I was just on with Catherine Austin Fitz the other day.
And, uh, It's great.
Oh, good Lord.
I do quite a lot.
I was just on with Catherine, and I'm sorry, I've got an immediate brain block here.
But it's been quite a lot, though.
I mean, you know, unfortunately, I'm in Japan, and so I'm doing it often at two in the morning.
Oh, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Sorry to keep you up like that, but I.
Oh, no, the sun is up here now.
Okay.
And you, being an old army guy, you can catch an hour of sleep here or there.
I mean, I don't mean an old guy, I mean a veteran of the army.
You sleep whenever you can.
Like you're used to that.
I get good sleep, man, for whatever reason, despite knowing what's going on.
You know, yesterday, Masaka and I, we went to the park and we were, for a couple of hours, I was reading Pinocchio to her because we, this is an old copy of it.
And because we study together, we study together a lot.
And we're going through Pinocchio now because there's a lot of deep lessons in there.
It may seem like it's off on a tangent, but it's actually not when you see so many things.
And so we'll study together and then we'll go off on tangents.
And anyway, by the end of the day, you know, whether we're out, Recently, looking for Kanjiro House near Mount Fuji.
By the end of the day, man, we're ready to crash.
So we crash hard.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I tell you what, look, people really appreciate you and your analysis, and I do as well.
And you've been ahead of the curve.
Again, you called it about the Strait of Hormuz over and over again and the Strait of Malacca.
You've really seen a lot of this coming.
So I just want to give you credit for that.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Actually, again, like my old teachers used to say, when you do your homework, it feels like cheating.
Or, I mean, the best cheating is to do your homework.
But when you do so much homework, it actually feels like cheating to predict, like, the Danish Strait may be blocked and, you know, or that Malacca may be blocked.
And it sounds so crazy at the time to say Nord Stream or Groningen, but it wasn't crazy at all.
Just like the things that you're saying, it's not crazy.
Actually, it's kind of a no brainer because we know how to crocodile hunts.
You know, it's like it's obvious.
I gave a speech at a conference in 2019.
That talked about how Earth is being prepared for a post human future.
And in 2019, that sounded completely radical.
You know, today, and that was not so much.
It's true.
Yeah.
Yeah.
2019, that would be radical.
Wait, that's not on the edge.
That's like over the horizon, over the edge.
But it's crystal clear.
But, you know, but again, a lot of these, oh man, I took them into the other room, but I just had these.
Old books came in, children's books, and they're talking about, you know, weather machines and heat rays from the airplane and shooting a heat ray out this window of an airplane, causing fires and stuff.
These are old, old books.
One of them was Homework Machine, Danny Doyle books, I think.
Yeah, it's just amazing.
These are old books, Automatic House, long before any of this stuff was done.
Wow.
And now there is a homework machine.
It's called ChatGPT.
Yep.
Yeah, it's wild.
Okay.
Well, thank you so much, Michael.
It's always a pleasure to speak with you, and we appreciate your analysis and your time.
Enjoy the rest of your day there in Japan.
Thank you, Michael.
All right.
Bye.
Stay connected.
For everybody watching, this is Mike Adams here with brightvideos.com.
And you can also check out naturalnews.com for editorial coverage of this interview, plus infographics and so much more.
So, thank you all for watching today, and be sure to check out Michael Jan's Substack.
As well as his Twitter handle, Michael underscore Jan.
Thanks for watching.
Take care.
Physical Gold and Silver Safety00:04:01
Right now, more than ever, it's critical to eliminate counterparty risk.
That's my belief.
And don't take this as financial advice because I'm not your financial advisor.
But when you want physical gold and silver in your hands or vaulted, professionally vaulted, insured, high security vault, et cetera, that eliminates that counterparty risk, which I think is an extreme risk right now.
I think banks are going to fail and we're going to have bank bail ins.
The currency is failing every day, kind of little by little, because of all the money printing and the valuation erosion that's accelerating.
Also, because of what's happening in the Middle East, more and more countries are.
Agreeing to sell oil in currencies other than the dollar.
And the only way that treasury yields are kept low is by the Fed printing money and buying our own debt because there aren't enough international buyers to buy our debt anymore.
So our country is like a snake eating its own tail financially.
It's buying its own debt and this is going to end badly.
And when it does, in my opinion, those who hold dollars, even in bank accounts or in the stock market or whatever, they're going to be devastated by the losses.
Gold and silver are the best way.
In my opinion, to preserve your assets and make it through the coming storm.
And the best place to get gold and silver is a company I've been working with, the original founders of the group, for six or seven years now.
Today it's called Battalion Medals, and you can reach them at medalswithmike.com.
And the reason it's called Battalion Medals now is because they did a joint venture with Tucker Carlson.
So Tucker Carlson is the co founder of Battalion Medals.
It's the same group I've worked with for years.
And let me tell you about these people.
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They respect your privacy.
They understand the importance of your security, your privacy, and the importance of giving you gold and silver at the best possible competitive prices.
So there's no bait and switch.
There's no, you know, rigging.
There's no weird coins like here, have this one and a half ounce thing that nobody knows what it is.
They don't play games.
Otherwise, I wouldn't promote them.
This is the same company, medalswithmike.com.
Battalion medals.
This is the same group that I recommend to my family, to my friends, and that I use myself.
And I stack gold and silver every month, just a certain amount every month, and I have it vaulted with their vaults because I know I can trust them because they're professionals.
They're high integrity people, they're not fly by night.
They are the kind of people that you can trust.
Again, otherwise, I wouldn't even be associated with them.
So when you want to get gold and silver in your hands and eliminate that counterparty risk, this is the way to do it.
Just go to medalswithmike.com.
You can see the prices right there online in real time at battalion medals, or you can schedule a call with them.
Just use this button right here schedule a call.
And they are trustworthy, high integrity, knowledgeable people who can help you devise a strategy that's suitable for you.
Just remember I'm not your financial advisor.
I can't give you an investment strategy personalized for you.
You need to do that yourself with your own advisors.
You can talk with battalion medals, and they can.
Help give you a lot of information and some planning as well.
But make the best decision for you.
And you're going to make it through this.
You'll make it through the storm, even as other people lose the value of their dollars or their other investments.
Gold and silver will make it through.
And right now, in my opinion, gold and silver are still at an incredible buying opportunity in terms of price compared to where they're going to be represented in dollars in the near future.
That's my opinion.
Do your own research, do what's best for you, and check it all out at medalswithmike.com.