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March 30, 2026 - MyronGainesX
01:33:56
1st Month Of War Analysis On How We Got Here And What's Next? Feat. Ryad

Myron Gaines and Ryad analyze the Israel-Hamas war, attributing October 7th to opposition against the Abraham Accords, occupation resistance, and religious motives involving Al-Aqsa. Following Yahya Sinwar's death and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah's elimination via the "Pager Attack," Hayat Tahrir al-Sham seized Syria, allegedly with CIA support. The hosts predict a June 2025 "Operation Rising Lion" against Iran, where failed decapitation strikes triggered asymmetric retaliation closing the Strait of Hormuz, spiking oil prices above $100 and threatening US Gulf bases while Trump faces contradictory ceasefire claims amidst imminent ground invasion preparations. [Automatically generated summary]

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Time Text
Every Single Lie 00:02:46
Every single time, every single crime, every single lie, early lie.
Every single hour, every single day, every single night, early lie.
I know it's hard to believe it's the whole forest, not one tree.
And it's every branch and leaf, they're born to deceive.
But I'm telling you the truth: it's not just one or two, it's every single they all hate you.
And it really breaks my heart, but their lies are off the charts.
And they only bring a scar, you got a damn smile.
So if you want to be safe and don't want to get replaced, it's best to start being based, or you'll get erased.
Every single time, every single crime, every single lie, early life.
Every single hour, every single day, every single night, early life.
I know it's hard to accept that all the ones you've met lie with every single breath.
They want you dead.
But you must not be weak.
Just open your eyes and see.
They always exploit the me, see their vampire tea.
And this can make you cry to learn your life is full of lies.
And the face was a disguise.
You must hide.
So if you want to live and protect all of your kin, you have to grow thick skin, or we won't.
Every single time, every single crime, every single lie.
Early life.
Kiss The Wall 00:05:30
On Thursday, March 26th, co-host of the Fresh and Fit podcast, Myron Gaines, came to Ohio University as a speaker for Uncensored America, a nonprofit student organization that hosts events on college campuses promoting free speech.
The event titled Toxic Masculinity Tour, held on College Green, was hosted to increase political dialogue and create an environment for debating unpopular opinions.
When people are speaking on these topics in such a way that it's like a threat to people's like fundamental well-being, this guy's a misogynist, he's a Holocaust denier, he's a Nazi.
You can pull up the video of him doing the Heil Hitler salute.
But like this guy is way worse than you think he is.
And these ideologies topics in such a way that it's like a threat to people's like fundamental well-being.
This guy's a misogynist.
He's a Holocaust denier.
He's a Nazi.
You can pull up the video of him doing the Heil Hitler salute.
Pissed off the chills.
What am I going to do now?
I don't want to lose everything.
See, you can pull up the video of him doing the Heil Hitler salute.
But, like, this guy's way worse.
And these ideologies are not inherently biased.
And it really pissed off the Jews.
And I don't know what to do.
I have way too much to lose.
I didn't tell any lies.
But I need to apologize.
I know that the Jews can easily destroy my life.
Hey, little boy, I heard you calling.
No need to cry now.
You can stop falling.
I can help you make it all go away.
But you have to do exactly what I say.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you wanna keep it all.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you wanna be our song, kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you know what's good for you, kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
Never forget your ruled by Jews.
Oh, thank you so much for being forgiven.
I'm so happy about this choice I'm giving.
I was just being edgy, I didn't mean to offend.
I will get to Jerusalem and make it right on my end.
Good little boy, I knew you'd understand.
I'll have my contacts waiting for you in the promised land.
And when you get there, they won't be mean to you.
Just remind them that you're apologizing to the Jews.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall if you wanna keep it all.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall if you wanna be at all.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you know what's good for you.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
Yes If you wanna keep it all.
Kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you wanna be at all, go kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
If you know what's good for you.
Oh, kiss the wall, kiss the wall.
Get your
And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to the stream.
Welcome to the stream.
As you guys can tell, we pissed off some snowflakes.
So I know some of you guys are probably wondering, yo, Martin, where is the video?
So it's having some rendering problems because as you guys know, Sean exports it like in 4K.
Technical Upload Issues 00:02:49
So we're getting a handle of that first.
And we should be good.
So I'm just waiting on them.
Hopefully we'll get it out.
Okay, Sean, just messaged me.
Tomorrow at noon, guys.
Tomorrow at noon, it drops.
Tomorrow at noon.
Tomorrow at 12 o'clock.
I'm going to see if I get a link from them right now.
So I'll get that link for you guys.
Yeah, guys.
It was like, there were some exporting problems, I guess, when Sean was uploading it earlier today.
So I apologize for that, guys.
But it will be out tomorrow.
Don't worry.
It's coming.
It's coming a bit slower than expected.
We're supposed to get it out to you guys today, but I guess we had some technical issues with uploading it and shit like that.
So it is what it is.
Mayor Sell says, Sub Ninja, got to hit you with a question for the ladies.
I have two daughters, both red pill.
Thanks to you, and Demandisphere.
Fuck Louie, Thero.
When it comes to my daughter's dating, how do I properly vet men for them?
What sort of criteria should I use other than financial stability?
Good moral character, man.
Good moral character, right?
You know, are they guys that like you could count on in a pinch?
You know, are they responsible?
That's a big one.
So many guys are not responsible, chat.
Like, when I say responsible, I mean, as in, like, someone can like give a task to you and they get it done.
You know, we all know those types of people that like, if you say, hey, I need this done, or yo, could you help me with this or whatever?
They don't ask you how or whatever.
They just get it done.
You know, people are very that are very Responsible, they get their shit done.
They get their their they got their shit together.
Um, that's very, very important, man.
Competence is something that honestly is lacking in today's day and age.
Um, and so many people are lazy, too.
So, yeah, that's those are some definitely some important traits.
Uh, you're ruined for staying cool with Sneeko.
I don't like him, but I respect to keep it 100 with everyone.
Yeah, I mean, look, man, I don't know why you guys have such a grievance with him.
Um, you know, uh, contrary to popular belief, I get along with most people I meet.
Um, you know, like the only time I really have issues with people is like when they're legitimate pieces of shit like Anus, right?
Anus from Anus in reach.
Like, that type of guy, um, you know, snakey motherfucker.
Uh, people like him, I don't like, but other than that, dude, like, I get along with most people.
Um, hold on, let me see here.
Refresh this real quick, chat.
Um, but uh, let's see here.
Shout out to Asylum Clips.
Appreciate you very much, my friend.
Appreciate you very much.
Um, but yeah, chat, we are back.
So, don't worry.
That will be out tomorrow.
I'm going to see if I can get you guys a link.
Political Propaganda 00:03:20
Um, I'm messaging Sean right now.
Okay.
Also, guys, it is solid.
Smash that like button if you guys are in here watching on YouTube.
You guys know I hate this fucking awful platform, but I'm here for you, ninjas anyway.
Um, so today we got, um, let's see here.
We're gonna be talking about the war.
Okay, we are gonna be talking about the war before we get into that.
Uh, because it's been officially pretty much a month now at this point.
Uh, we've been involved in this conflict a lot longer than we wanted, okay?
A lot longer than we wanted.
Um, but let me see here if I can get.
Oh, I saw this.
I didn't get a chance to react to this yesterday.
Look at this shit, chat.
Look at this fucking shit right here, bro.
Oh, my God.
These OF girls literally do anything for money, bro.
Okay, thanks to Jack J with the five gifted.
Thanks so much.
DCLE, 11.
Thank you for the gifted.
Just Justin Pap, eight, thank you so much for the gifted.
Shout out to you guys.
So look at this, bro.
These girls literally do anything for money, bro.
pretty pathetic um i started tiktok like the spring semester of my senior year and i was like fuck i finally have to start applying for law school And then, like, you know, female privileged life is so easy for a woman.
Obviously, I lucked out.
I'm just kidding.
I lucked out.
And then, you know, TikTok was basically full-time for me.
And the guy was taking ads by the time I graduated college from like the Biden administration and Planned Parenthood and like dating apps and stuff.
So it was like fully financially, you know, sustainable.
So you were getting the Biden administration was buying ads from you?
Yeah, I was doing full-on political propaganda.
And they would just say, oh, really?
With like what kind of, like, Biden created 10 million jobs?
Yeah, yeah, honestly.
And the funny thing is they're like, do not disclose this as an ad because, you know, they're like, technically, it's not a product.
So you don't have to disclose it's an ad because I think they just wanted like some edgy girl of color to just tell people like when they nominated like Katanji Brown Jackson.
They're like, can you say like as a person of color, you know, that you feel reflected?
And it's like a white woman emailing this to me and she's like giving me this script.
And I'm like, no.
And she's like, please.
And I'm like, no, I'll say, I'll like talk about the news of it, but I'm not going to be like, I'm not going to have a white person tell me to be like, you know, this is how I feel as a person of color.
Like, it's just so, I think that black filthy slightly on like, you know, political propaganda.
So the Biden administration sees, oh, here's this young.
Yeah, I mean, they use like a conduit.
It's not like, you know what I mean?
It's not Biden, but it's like a third party.
You know what I mean?
Like a media company that's doing it on his behalf.
I'm not blaming him for this.
Yeah.
And the message is like, because you're.
And again, once again, proves like, yo, OF girls literally do anything for money, bro.
Like, they literally do anything for money.
And that's why I tell you guys, like, don't believe anything they say because a lot of them like sell this bullshit about, oh, I'm a virgin or they try to sell you purity when in reality they're not.
They're huge 304s.
So what are we surprised?
Snow Day Wode.
Thank you for the five gifted.
Kula Latz says, this is my first time watching your stream.
What else do you normally cover?
I've seen a few clips about the war, but that's all I've seen on YouTube.
Middle East Perspective 00:16:08
Yeah, no worries, bro.
We cover everything here.
We cover red pill stuff, cover true crime, etc.
I might do an episode of Forensic Files with you guys actually on OSS.
I'm thinking about doing an episode on there.
We watch some forensic files as well.
Because if I watch on YouTube, I get hit with the copyright.
I already know.
D28, thank you for subscribing.
Mayor Sal is a homeowner, but relocated now renting.
Should I buy a townhouse or hold it as a future rental property when I get a bigger house?
I guess you can.
I mean, look, if the numbers work, just as long as the numbers work, guys.
Okay, any real estate deal works as long as the numbers work.
You're a dark-skinned woman.
You will be inspired by Kataji Brown Jackson and all the kids should support her.
Yeah, they're like basically as like another black person just say that you feel reflected by Katanji.
I'm like, no, I'll talk about like Katanji's background and her accomplishments, but like I never, you know what I mean?
Like I'll never, I'm not going to say like the corny stuff.
Even if it was a brown person emailing it to me, I'm like, no, that's not like how we feel.
So chat, what I'm going to do is I'm going to start preparing for you guys a full timeline.
Okay.
As you guys know, we got involved in this conflict and we officially attacked on February 28th.
But I'd be remiss to not educate you guys on anything, on everything that led up to that.
Okay.
Now, for all intents and purposes, this war has been in the making for roughly 40 years.
Okay.
However, however, for the purposes of today's discussion, I'm going to start at October 7th and just slowly work my way forward from October 7th, 2023, how that happened, why it happened, the events that transpired after October 7th, right?
And then we're going to go into how the war happened.
Okay.
Or, like, what's been going on over the past 72 hours?
Hold on one sec.
You guys said my brother's calling me?
Hold on, Chad.
We may approach some sort of peace deal.
Yo.
Yo, what's up, man?
Are you live right now, right?
I'm live.
Yep.
I went live on my end already.
I'm ready to rock and roll.
You are?
Okay.
Give me one sec.
Let me turn my camera on.
I didn't know that we were going to do it.
It's fine.
I don't mind.
So what I was going to do, bro, was I was going to go ahead and give them an entire because obviously we got one month that we're going to reflect on this conflict.
So let me turn my camera on.
So obviously me and you know what the hell is going on, but I do think it's important to educate them on how we even got here in the first place.
So give me one second.
Because I was going to start from October 7th and work our way backwards to how we got here.
October 7th and go forward.
Yeah, yeah, excuse me.
Work our way forward.
Exactly.
Precisely.
So let me this, but they don't know why we're involved in this bullshit.
So let me go ahead.
Go ahead.
You could introduce yourself to the people real quick while I set up my screen.
Go ahead.
Yeah, no, that's a good idea because we've reached a crossroads here.
But what's going on, everybody?
If you're not familiar with me, I'm Myron Junger Brother.
We've been doing this whole political commentating thing for about a month now.
It's been over a month, actually.
We started at the beginning of the Iran war, so perfect timing, but we've been covering developments and everything like that.
I usually go live with Myron.
If he's not around, I'm the substitute teacher.
I was actually subbing in a lot last week, so if you missed it, he will do that for you guys.
Like when I'm not live, like you guys notice, when I'm not live, my brother goes live and I send you guys all to him.
You know, we're basically the same person, honestly.
So yeah, yeah, pretty much.
So if Myron's ever not live, and that has been a little bit more frequent recently since he's been doing his college debates and whatever have you.
So jump on over to my YouTube channel.
It's Riyadh's report.
That's R-Y-A-D-S report.
Come subscribe.
I'm live two to three times a week, depending on how heavy the news is.
Still in the matrix and whatnot, so I can't go every day.
But me and my brother have been really consistent in this war coverage.
And not to be cocky or anything, but in regards to real-time developments, like micro developments, all the intricacies in between, we've been on top of it.
We've been the quickest to report the most accurate news.
And we've been making predictions and analyzations that have been coming true real time.
So I think we've been doing a really good job.
I don't mean to be cocky, but I've got to give ourselves credit because we've been stellar and excellent in our reporting as well as our commentary and our coverage.
And it's been fun.
It's been a good month.
Unfortunately, not the best circumstances to report on, but if you want an accurate reading of the news, multifaceted one where we give you kind of the Middle Eastern perspective, the Muslim perspective, the Western perspective, whatever have you, I think this is the most balanced place to get that in regards to all of these micro developments that are happening because these are things that not a lot of people get into the weeds of, but we jump right into it.
So jump, come on over, show some love.
Go ahead, go ahead.
Keep going.
No, no, no, that's it.
That's it.
Yeah, come on over, show some love.
If you're not, I'm sure a lot of people are familiar with me now because we've been running at it for a while, but I know there's always people jumping on who haven't been on in a while.
So, okay, so I'll just, what I'm going to start with here.
So, this is what I'm thinking, Riyadh.
I'll educate them on, obviously, how we got here from October 7th, right?
Work my way from October 7th, 2023, all the way to now.
And then we can go over the last 72 hours.
You saw the outline I gave you, right?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I went right into it.
I've been paying attention to the news very closely for the last perfect.
So you handle that part mostly.
Yeah, yeah, we'll get into all the developments there, but it's very important people to understand.
It's been going every which way, man.
Things have been getting complex, so we'll break it down.
But yeah, take it away in regards to October.
That's important because we've reached a crossroads.
I'll just say this.
No, go ahead.
We've kind of hit a crossroads.
I'm still setting up.
We're now, yeah, perfect.
We've hit a crossroads where now this war is about to enter its final stage or really graduate to the ultimate stage, which is boots on ground effectively.
Now, whether that's the IDF or, you know, U.S. Marines, which more obviously is probably going to be U.S. Marines because Benjamin Netanyahu has expressed the fact that the IDF may not be involved, at least that's what I'm seeing of conflicting reports.
But we've reached a crossroads now where this war is going to, in the next maybe two, three months, really enter the phase where we can see who's the winner.
And I say that because it's been asymmetric this entire time.
And honestly, I don't even know if asymmetric is the best word.
I said this the other day on stream.
It just seems like we're losing effectively.
I mean, we've really done nothing to staunch their military leadership as well as their capabilities.
They still seem to have people who can jump up in line, succeed, the people who are martyred, dealing a great deal of damage to these Gulf countries, to Saudi Arabia, and of course, primarily Israel being the main target.
The Houthis have mobilized.
They still got Hezbollah in southern Lebanon that they're fighting.
The IDF is stretched in according to commanders.
And so it really doesn't seem as if, though, the United States is winning the way we thought we would.
And that's because we thought this would be four days.
Now we're at a month.
So it's an important moment right here where we're going to segue into boots on ground.
But it's important that before we get into this part of the war, where this problem will probably be exacerbated, you guys understand how we got here.
And October 7th is probably the first final piece or the first piece in like the modern history timeline.
You can go all the way back to Ajax in 79, but for the sake of understanding and relevance, October 7th sets a very nice foundation to have a full understanding and elucidate a larger picture as to why we're even doing what we're doing.
So, like, go ahead.
Because a lot of people don't know this, man, and you repeat it all the time.
Yeah, I do.
People forget about it.
But it's a lot.
So, guys, the purpose of today's show, for all of you guys that tuned in, if you guys were wondering about, you know, Middle Eastern foreign policy, what's going on, how the hell we got here.
This is going to be probably one of the most informative shows me and my brother have ever done.
So, you know, grab some popcorn, get yourself a drink or whatever, and listen in because you guys are about to get educated on Middle Eastern foreign policy like you've never been before, you know, because I haven't seen anyone really go through this durley.
So the goal is I'm going to explain for you guys how we got here from October 7th as a starting point.
Obviously, this conflict has been going on way before October 7th.
We can go all the way back, really, if we wanted to like 2018 with the march where the Palestinians are marching on the fence.
They're doing these protests, and then the Israelis were shooting at them.
That's actually what got Yah Sin more interested in masterminding October 7th.
But for the purposes of today, I'm going to start October 7th and work our way.
But what I will do for you guys is I'm going to explain to you nice and thoroughly why they attacked on October 7th.
Okay.
And there's multiple different reasons.
A lot of it the mainstream media doesn't cover.
Before I get into that, I'm going to read chats one last time because it's going to be a while since I read them before this.
So let me go here.
Grammy substitute teachers, an understatement.
Nobody respects a sub.
Padawan says, guys, most of the country needs this message.
They don't understand what's about to happen.
One of my officers just got punched plucked for this conflict.
His toddler was just in office.
Pray comes back.
His son deserves better from America.
Yeah, I'm sorry to hear that, bro.
Out to Ashes, how do you feel about James Spitzenback who's running for Florida governor?
Definitely a better candidate than Byron.
My brother's on USS Ford and has been fighting fires for a week.
1,000 soldiers do not have beds from the fires and plumbing floods.
My neighbor's Army Reserves in his ordership on September.
Yeah, it's crazy.
God help us out.
Wow.
I was a homeowner, but relocating, now renting Shabbatanos and hold it as a future rental property.
Oh, no, we read that one before.
Do you have any other last-minute chats you want to read, Real, before I get into this?
Yeah, I got two.
Go ahead.
Mo Camera says, thoughts on Netanyahu admitting to funding Hamas.
Yeah, no secret there.
I'm not surprised.
He's just been blatantly honest with everything lately with the whole boots on ground, Hamas annexing the West Bank, annexing Gaza.
He's just been saying it verbatim, not only on Hebrew media, but American media, which is kind of a new switch around.
And then Whale Ball25 says, how do you feel that it's likely you'll be drafted?
No, I don't think so.
I don't think we'll get to that point.
And we'll go over why.
But, hey, bro, they call me.
Anyways, go ahead.
TJ Pill and Sirock No Diddy.
Thank you guys so much for the gift of subs.
Okay, without further ado, let's get right into it.
Okay, so guys, so let me share my screen real quick for you guys.
Give me a sec.
So right here, we got a map of the Middle East.
Okay.
So as you guys can see, Israel is this tiny sliver of land right here.
Okay.
And Iran is over here.
These are the two countries that are in the main conflict here.
And obviously all the Gulf states are right here.
And this is going to come into play later on when I explain to you.
But for you guys to understand how the hell we got here, we need to go back to October 7th.
As you guys know, on October 7th, right, Hamas attacked the, hold on one sec.
Hamas attacked Israel, right?
Roughly 1,200 people were killed.
We know 400 of those people that were killed were IDF, right?
Which leaves us with roughly, assuming best case scenario, 800 civilians that were killed, right?
I won't sit here and litigate with you guys, you know, the Hanwell directive and all the other stuff, but understand that the Hanwell directive was activated on that day.
Yoav Galat admitted this, who was the defense minister at the time, our functional equivalent of Pete Hegseth.
And the Hanwell Directive is a controversial tactic where they kill their own people in the middle of conflicts like this to ensure that they don't have to deal with a hostage exchange like they did back in like, I think, 2011 or so at Ghale Shalit, where they had to transfer 1,000 Palestinian prisoners to get one IDF soldier back.
So, this is kind of why the Hanworld Directive has been put into play, but that's a whole other conversation.
But October 7th happened.
Now, you guys are probably wondering, well, who attacked on October 7th?
These guys right here, Hamas, okay?
Which is basically the Palestinian governing body in the Gaza Strip, which is right here.
Okay, this little strip of land right here.
It's run by Hamas.
They were put into power roughly 2006, 2007 via an election.
And they've been kind of running the Gaza Strip ever since.
This is different from the Palestinian Authority, which is up in the West Bank area.
So Hamas and PLO are two different things.
So Hamas attacked on October 7th.
Now, it's important to understand why they attacked.
Now, the spokesperson for Hamas was this guy, Abu Abeda.
If you guys remember, he was the one that would famously wear the red kefaya.
Here we go.
Here's a picture of him.
And he outlined in detail why they attacked.
And I noticed that Western media never really covered why they attacked, but there's three main reasons.
And Riad, if I missed anything, make sure to chime in.
Go ahead.
Number one was the Abraham Accords.
Some of you guys might be wondering, Myron, what the fuck is the Abraham Accords?
The Abraham Accords, guys, are these agreements right here.
Okay, they were basically normalization agreements that Donald Trump put into play where Muslim majority countries in the Middle East would recognize Israel, formally recognize Israel as a state.
Now, here's the thing.
For a very long time, the Muslim world rejected Israel's sovereignty and rejected Israel's existence because of what they were doing to the Palestinians.
And this used to be kind of a negotiating trip for the Muslim world.
Like, we are not going to recognize Israel until they either do a two-state solution, give the Palestinians a state, or they have a one-state solution and bring the Palestinians in and give them some type of citizenship.
Because what a lot of people don't understand is here in the Middle East, right?
And the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, right?
Palestinians have no rights, guys.
They can't vote.
They're not necessarily looked at as citizens.
They are confined to whether it be the West Bank or to the Gaza Strip.
It's very difficult for them to travel.
They're harassed at checkpoints, et cetera.
They're basically like legitimately second-class citizens.
Imports are limited.
It's an open-air prison.
It's guarded by a huge wall.
Border is severely protected.
They can't get the same access of resources that anybody else outside of that strip is able to access.
And so they've been kind of a penalized or oppressed group of people for several years, which is why you see that starvation for some sort of resistance that comes out of that strip as well as the West Bank.
Yeah.
And if you guys don't believe me, think about it.
After October 7th happened, the Israelis controlled all the food that came in.
Why do you think they starved?
Like the Israelis truly occupy them.
When you guys, when people talk about being occupied or an apartheid state, Israel is the definition of that.
Okay.
The international community, when they think of apartheid, when they think of occupation, when they think of no right to self-determination, all this other stuff, Israel is the state that always comes to mind.
It's worse than South Africa, apartheid South Africa, right?
And I think anyone that would admit at this point, even if you are a Zionist, that Israel is an, you know, it's an apartheid ethnic state.
There's two sets of laws for two different groups of people, and it's literally based on an ethnicity.
That's why they call themselves the Jewish state, quite literally, right?
They have to maintain the majority.
And even the Palestinians, and I'll say this before I carry on, even the Palestinians guys that live within Israel that have citizenship, they still don't get all the same accesses and rights that Jewish Israelis get.
Okay.
There's like something like 60 different laws that actually bar Palestinians from certain benefits that Jewish Israelis get.
So even for the Palestinians that live within their borders, that have an Israeli passport, they still don't even enjoy all the same benefits as a Jewish Israeli.
Okay.
But anyway, I digress.
So that is what that is who attacked.
It was Hamas.
Now, when Oba Abu Abeda explained why they attacked, there's a couple of reasons.
Number one was Abraham Accords, right?
The Abraham Accords, guys, like I said before, is it's an agreement that was pretty much middleman by the United States, where Muslim countries would recognize Israel's sovereignty as a state.
Now, the Muslim world in general has far has typically always rejected Israel because of what they're doing to their Muslim brothers in Palestine, right?
Now, the thing is, though, is that the United States basically made it where it's like, look, we'll give you foreign aid.
We'll give you military equipment.
We'll give you protection, blah, blah, blah.
And what ended up happening is multiple countries joined the Abraham Accords, right?
Sudan, Morocco, the UAE, Bahrain.
Okay.
They all went ahead and joined the Abraham Accords, and these countries all formally recognize Israel.
Now, there's a couple countries that still don't recognize Israel.
And for the purposes of this discussion, what you guys need to know is back in 2023, Saudi Arabia was flirting with the Biden administration with getting put into the Abraham Accords.
Now, why does this matter?
This matters because Saudi Arabia is probably one of them, if not one of, if not the most influential Muslim country because of, you know, Mecca, Medina, all the holy sites that are located there.
Definitely, definitely the most powerful and influential.
And if not the most economically stable, 100%.
Absolutely.
Temple Institute Secrets 00:07:38
So if Saudi Arabia recognized Israel, you could say goodbye to the Palestinian question.
Go ahead.
You're going to say something?
No, yeah, that's exactly what I was going to say.
They were trying to undermine that plan that was scheduled to happen just a little bit ahead of October 7th.
And so they knew that it was now or never.
And Hamas had been planning some sort of attack for a long time because of how calculated it was when they paraglided in and everything, Fortnite style.
And of course, there's a few elements as to Israeli intelligence having the go-ahead on this or the heads up.
But with the foregoing knowledge, they still allowed it to happen to give themselves an excuse to actually bar on the Gaza Strip and launch their 26-month bombing campaign.
But outside of that, that was one of the key reasons that Hamas had invaded.
And then the third one goes into the heifer.
So go ahead, take it away on that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, and then the other reason, right?
So, so number one was the Abraham Accords, right?
Number two was the, well, number one is occupation.
Let's start with the most severe grievance and then go on.
So the most severe grievance, guys, obviously is occupation.
In Gaza, it's an open-air prison.
They have no rights, no sovereignty, whatever.
They tried to resist peacefully back in 2018.
They got shot at by Israeli snipers, et cetera.
So they said, fuck this.
We're going to go ahead and attack these guys.
So that was number one, the occupation, both in the West Bank and also in Gaza.
Number two was the Abraham Accords.
They understood that there was a chance, a very high likelihood, that Saudi Arabia might join the Abraham Accords.
And if Saudi Arabia joined the Abraham Accords, the rest of the Muslim world would follow without answering the Palestine question.
And you guys got to understand that Benjamin Nyahu has done everything in his power to not answer the Palestine question, which is basically either a two-state solution or a one-state solution.
He tried to go around the Palestine question and get the United States to basically bribe all these Muslim countries.
We'll give you aid.
We'll give you support.
Just recognize us as a state without answering the Palestine question.
Go ahead.
And the last one's going to be the hefty.
Yes, and I'll let you do that.
But at some point or another, just an important intricacy to highlight between all of this, every single country bordering Israel or not around Israel around the world, just globally, had voiced the concern and the desire for some sort of two-state solution.
And so this was a popular idea, G7, EU.
Every single country has asked for Benjamin Netanyahu to facilitate or previous Israeli officials to facilitate some sort of two-state solution in order to bar peace across the entire land of Israel, whether it encompasses Gaza, the West Bank, other areas.
And that's something Israel has refused to do, which is why they fiercely occupy them.
They have military checkpoints everywhere.
They withhold the rights to visit their holy sites at any time that they desire, including right now during Holy Week.
It's Palm Sunday today, and Christians didn't have full access to practice their rituals today because of Israeli closures, things like that.
Of course, they run the law there in the West Bank and Jerusalem.
And so there always has been this desire globally for this two-state solution.
It's not an unpopular, like a Muslim only or a Muslim exclusionary idea.
This is something that the entire world has wanted because it's going to guarantee peace in that region.
But it's something that Israel has vehemently rejected because of the fact that they believe that the land belongs to them in its entirety.
Matter of fact, outside of the land belongs to them as well.
Go ahead.
Yeah, no, and not only that, they actually, the Oslo Accords was them like a good faith attempt to maybe even have that happen.
But after Yitzhak Rabin, the former prime minister of Israel signed this agreement with Yasser Arafat in 1993 in the White House, they killed the Yitzhak Rabin two years after this shot.
So, and the people that killed him were from Netanyahu's Likud party.
Okay, yeah, so like it's it's you know, they're done everything in his power to get around the Palestine question.
But so, yeah, so those are the main reasons.
And then the last reason why, why they attacked guys was for the red heifers.
Now, this has to do more with religion, but the long story short is there's a mosque, the third holiest site in the Islamic faith is called the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which is located in Jerusalem.
And this mosque sits on where they want to build the, hold on, it's located where they want to rebuild the third temple.
Okay.
And what they're planning to do is they want to destroy that temple and rebuild their temple, right?
The Jewish for the Jude, Jewish religion.
And basically, what ended up happening was they found five red cows in Texas, okay, the Temple Institute in Israel, that's also heavily run by Zionist Christians, evangelical Zionist Christians.
They found these cows, spent half a million dollars, and kind of covertly smuggled them over back, not smuggled them, but shipped them over back to Israel, right?
And obviously, Hamas and the Muslim world found out about this and they knew what they're trying to do, which is basically they're going to slaughter the cows, destroy the Ale Aqsa mosque, and rebuild the third temple, right, to bring about their Messiah.
And obviously, the Hamas and the Muslim world would have an uproar if they destroyed the Alexa Mosque because it's an extremely holy site.
So that is why, that is another reason why they attacked on October 7th.
As a matter of fact, if you look at the operation, right, the name of Hamas' operation was called Operation Alexa Flood.
It was for that reason, one of the main reasons.
So I don't know if you want to get more into the lore of the red heifer situation.
No, yeah, I mean, it's for the sake of going through everything in a timeline and chronological order.
I won't get too in the weeds.
I'll say this at the minimum.
So yeah, in Jewish theology, of course, there's this idea, and this is not conspiratorial whatsoever.
This is legitimate from the rabbis, their commentary, the Talmud, whatever have you.
Any sort of official Jewish scripture or Jewish body would admit that this is the case where they must sacrifice a certain amount of red heifers, perfect red heifers, can't be one gray hair, one defect, whatever have you, in order to bring about the temple or the entrance of the temple.
And so they burn these cows, they bring them to ashes, they purify said chosen person or rabbi with whatever ashes they have of these cows.
And then this is the anointed person who's responsible for invoking the ritual in the temple that is to bring their Messiah.
Okay, that's pretty much the kind of really, really generalized perspective of the Jewish theological view in regards to these heifers.
Now, the important thing is, obviously, from an eschatological perspective, this lines up with Islam.
This also lines up with Christianity, but primarily for the sake of this conversation, it's Islam.
And so that's also why there was a hunger or a motivation from Hamas or any sort of resistance group to interrupt this or get in between it, because this means that the Jewish people will bring about their Messiah, which from Islamic eschatology perspective is the Antichrist.
And this is one of the major signs of the end of times.
That's a very generalized way to put it.
There's a million intricacies in between, but for the sake of this chronological time plan, I will leave it there.
The Temple Institute has said that they have not sacrificed any heifers, although there's a lot of internal dispute or really controversy as to whether these heifers have been sacrificed.
The key point to take away here is it wouldn't be advantageous for the Temple Institute, which is the encompassing body that's responsible for reporting on these cows, to actually admit if they were to successfully have sacrificed one or two, because that would give not only Hamas, the PLO, Hezbollah, or any other Muslim resistance group in the world some sort of heads up to it, but it would also give the Western world a heads up that Israel is trying to invoke some sort of messianic figure that's to return, but that also necessitates the destruction of the third holiest site in Islam,
being the Al-Aqsa Mosque, because it's located where they want their third temple to be.
So you can see why Hamas and his other resistance group tried to interrupt such said ritual.
Go ahead.
Yeah, no, no.
Good.
I'm glad you mentioned that.
And also keep in mind, guys, like my brother said, they've been trying to keep this shit on the low.
They've been hollowing out underneath the mosque for a while, for years.
They've been doing that.
They've not renewed permits to rebuild the mosque or make repairs.
They can't get anything approved.
So the Israeli government has been purposely allowing the mosque to kind of disintegrate.
They're not letting it get repaired.
Ben Gavir has been starting issues while walking up to the Temple Mount when he's not supposed to, right, to try to antagonize a lot of fights and arguments and shit like that.
So they absolutely want to destroy the mosque to rebuild the temple.
Ground Assault Details 00:14:30
So now you guys understand.
So quick recap.
October 7th happens.
Why do they attack the Abraham McCords, Alex Hamas' destruction and the Red Cows, as well as the occupation?
Now you guys understand why October 7th happened, right?
And no one ever talks about that on Western media.
But those were the three main chief reasons why.
Now, let's go ahead and go into what happened after that.
So after Hamas attacked, right?
The Israelis began a relentless bombing campaign, okay?
And they basically started bombing the hell out of the Gaza Strip, and they began an on-ground assault, okay?
They bombed the hell out of it.
Then they started to work their way from northern Gaza all the way down towards Rafah.
Okay.
They did this for about a year.
So after they did this for about a year, they were able, or during this process, they were able to kill multiple leaders of Hamas.
One of them was this guy right here, Yahya Sinwar.
Okay, they killed him on October 16, 2024.
So roughly one year after the attacks, they found him in Rafah and they killed him.
Now, when they killed him, just so you know, guys, it wasn't targeted.
They actually killed him by accident because Yah Sinwar was actually fighting on the front lines.
Fucking nuts, by the way.
But he's actually fighting on the front lines with people.
This is the guy that, you know, famously threw the stick at a drone when he was injured and had a kefir on his face, right?
I don't know why the Israeli government put that out, by the way, that video.
That was very stupid.
They just immortalized the guy.
Yeah, they immortalized him by doing that.
But regardless, he was one of the planners of October 7th, and he was killed roughly one year later when they caught him in Rafah by mistake.
And Rafa was really the last frontier.
After they killed Yahya Sinwar, right, they began an assault into Lebanon.
Now, another important fact here is that you guys understand is that during this entire ground assault, they also assassinated another guy.
His name was Ishmael Hanea, this guy, okay?
They killed him in July of 2024.
Now, you're probably wondering, well, Martin, how did they get him?
This is the guy that they assassinated at Tehran.
Okay.
He was there for the presidential inauguration of Pazeshian, right?
Who is the current president of Iran?
This guy right here.
Masood Masud.
Yeah, Masoud Pazeshkin.
Because the president before him died in a suspicious helicopter crash, which that's a whole other conversation.
But Ishmael Hanea was at Tehran for this guy's presidential inauguration in the summer of 2024.
Okay.
And Ishmael Hanea, right, was the leader of the political wing of Hamas.
Okay.
So Hamas has two different sides.
They have the military wing, which Yahya Sinwar was the head of that.
And then they had the military wing as Yahya Sinwar.
He was on the ground fighting.
And then you've got Ishmaelea, who was the head of the political wing.
He was the guy that was the chief negotiator for the hostages that the Israeli government was dealing with.
So while Ishmael Hanea was in Iran, right, in Tehran, for Masood Pazeskian's inauguration, the Israelis killed him.
Okay.
And they cleverly were able to put a bomb in a room that he always stayed at every time he visits Tehran and killed him and his bodyguard, right?
The Mossad up to their fucking tricks as usual.
So, you know, this is why you got to give these guys credit.
So they killed Ishmael in July of 2024.
Then they killed Yahya Sinwar in October of 2024.
After they killed Yahya Sinwar in October of 24, they had pretty much completed their ground campaign in Gaza.
Okay?
Then this opened up the second part of the war, the invasion of Lebanon.
Okay?
Now, you guys are probably wondering, Myron, why did they invade Lebanon?
I'll tell you why.
During the entire campaign, after October 7th, Hezbollah, these guys right here, okay?
Hezbollah.
who are a part of the Axis of Resistance, who support Hamas, who work alongside the IRGC and the Axis of Resistance, who are funded by, they're basically funded by Iran, right?
They're the most capable ground fighting force by far against the Israelis, by the way.
They're a connected piece of the controlled and calculated network to resist Israel called the Axis of Resistance that's funded by Iran, just for context.
So it's Hezbollah, then it's Hamas that we were just talking about.
And then you've got the Houthis in Yemen that are probably going to mobilize any second now if they're responsible for the strike on Saturday or Friday.
They're in.
Yeah.
I was seeing reports.
I don't know.
It's official, yeah?
They're in.
Yeah.
Yesterday they're officially in as of yesterday.
Yeah.
And so just one thing as well, Abu Obaida, just in case you guys are confused, he's a spokesperson of Hamas as well.
So you've got Abu Obedah, you've got Hanaya, and then you've got Yahya Sinwar, the three guys that my brother had just mentioned, just so you can keep up.
Ismail Haniya, Yahya Sinwar.
No, I'm glad you clarified.
No, no, keep going.
I'm glad you clarified that because all these guys are figureheads for Hamas, which is very important.
Go ahead.
Yeah, they're all figureheads and they were all assassinated and they all play a key role, really Ismail, in potentially bringing about some sort of ceasefire, some sort of peace.
Of course, something that Israel would try to sabotage because they want to continue this war, which is why they allowed October 7th to happen, despite knowing it would happen so they can launch this onslaught and eventually annex Gaza or the West Bank.
This is their ultimate goal.
And just for totality, it's important to understand that as we're explaining this, because if you don't understand that as we're explaining this, then you think we're like being some apologetics for this.
And it's like, no, we're just giving you the entire perspective and what the goals of either opposing sides are or is.
Go ahead.
Yeah, no, no.
I'm glad you clarified that because it is important for people to understand the makeup because like people will say, who the fuck are these guys?
So October 7th, again, Hamas leads it, right?
The spokesperson explained why, right?
Abu Obeda, the guy with the red Kafih that was famously as always on all the Arab TVs, right?
The Red Cows, the occupation and the Abraham Accords and the expansion of the Abraham Accords and potentially bringing Saudi Arabia in.
Those were the three main reasons they attacked on October 7th and why they had to attack on October 7th before the Palestine question wouldn't be answered and Saudi Arabia normalized relations with Israel.
That would be a problem for them, right?
Then Ishma Hanea was killed later on in the summer of 2024 while in Tehran.
And then they killed Yahya Sinwar months later while they and the Gaza Strip in Rafah accidentally while they were doing their ground assault.
Now, after they basically finished or completed their ground assault and made it all the way to Rafah, right, Israel began the second part of the war, which is invading into southern Lebanon.
Now, you guys are probably wondering, Myron, why did they have to invade Lebanon?
The reason why they invaded Lebanon is because Hassan Nasrallah, who is a member of the Axis of Resistance, this guy right here, okay, vowed that they would bomb northern Israel until Palestine was free, basically.
And what they were doing from a military strategy standpoint was they were bombing northern Israel during the entire ground campaign by Israel.
So what ended up happening was the IDF had to split their manpower between Gaza as well as securing the northern border because they had to evacuate almost 60,000 people in this area because they were constantly getting hit with missile bombardment by rockets and missiles and everything else like that.
So what ended up happening was, and drones.
So after they completed their foot, their ground assault into Gaza, they started restructuring and they invaded southern Lebanon.
Now, originally, they claimed and boasted that they would try to make it all the way to Beirut.
They were not able to make it to Beirut.
They couldn't even make it to the fucking Latani River, to be honest with you guys, okay, which is this region right here.
And what ended up happening was they were having intense fighting on the ground for several weeks.
Um, for uh, towards the end of this was towards the end of uh 2024, right?
They killed the Ayasin war in October and they invaded, I think, Lebanon like in November of uh November of 2024.
And there was a tense fighting, but what changed the turn, what you know, changed the tables or what you know, kind of switched the tables around is the Israelis were able to cleverly conduct the famous Pedra attack, okay?
Um, and the Pedra attack, guys, okay, was when the Mossad cleverly put a bunch of explosives and radios, walkie-talkies, beepers, and other communication devices utilized by Hezbollah, right?
So, three things were going on, and this is very important.
This is how they were able to overwhelm uh Hezbollah in the war when they were fighting each other in September of uh, sorry, in uh November or so of 2024.
Number one, they did the Pedra attack, they exploded a bunch of pagers, right, um, and killed several people, right?
Uh, within within uh, Hezbollah, then the Hezbollah leaders, then they uh killed Hassan Asrallah via airstrikes, okay?
They killed him, uh, when was August September 27th.
No, yep, sorry, you were gonna say something?
No, no, no, I was gonna tell you the date, yes.
So, they then they killed Hassan Nasrallah by airstrikes in Beirut, right?
He was in an underground bunker, they killed him after they so they did the pager attack.
This obviously overwhelmed the structure of the command.
Hassan Nasrallah addressed the country after, and he was killed shortly thereafter.
Um, and this obviously made it very difficult because they had killed the leadership of Hezbollah, they killed him, they killed this guy too.
I mean, I might as well give him an honorable mention.
Uh, this guy right here, they killed a Fuad Shukar as well, okay, another high-ranking guy of Hezbollah.
So, they did the Pedra attack and they killed two of their top guys.
So, obviously, this overwhelmed them, they lost their command, their command structure, and they weren't able to effectively fight the fight.
However, the Israelis were taking a lot of casualties on the ground while fighting Hezbollah, right?
So, what ended up happening was they agreed to a ceasefire, okay?
Now, you have something you want to say before we go to the next part.
No, Hassan Asrallah was a big piece in weakening Hezbollah, though.
Uh, Hassan Asrallah was a big piece in weakening that faction in southern Lebanon, being Hezbollah.
Um, he was not only a very senior military commanding and officer, but he was really iconic in the Shia Muslim world.
So, when he was killed, not only was it decapitating to the function of the military and their command center, everything else in between, but symbolically, this was probably one of the more devastating strikes that we saw.
I would argue that this was a bigger deal or equal deal to the martyrdom of Yahya Sinwar.
This guy was huge, and when he was killed, that not only weakened the morale, but of course, the military leadership, and it had a huge effect, which played into what you just mentioned, which is which was the ceasefire.
Yep, yep, because once they, because the thing is, guys, when their walkie-talkies exploded, right, they couldn't communicate.
Well, if you're doing a ground assault and your leadership is gone and you can't communicate because you're too paranoid to use the pagers and walkie-talkies, basically, you have to concede.
So, what did they, what they did was, but the Israelis were getting their asses kicked too.
So, they ended up having a ceasefire, and um, Israeli troops withdrew from southern Lebanon, and um, and they had a ceasefire, right?
Even though Israel continued to bomb them after the fact, but that that's that's a whole other conversation.
So, after historically, Hezbollah has always whooped the IDF's ass, which is why they probably had that pager attack handy as well as that crater bomb strike that killed this guy.
They put a hole, they put a dent in the earth to get this guy and killed a lot of civilians in the way of doing so.
That's how important it was.
It's the only reason they even launched the ground assault because every time Israel goes into southern Lebanon, they always get their asses kicked on the ground.
So, they had to add in the pager attack as well as assassinating Hassan Asrallah so that they can so that they can overwhelm them.
And that led to the ceasefire, right?
So after this ceasefire happened, very important what happened because this started the domino effect, right?
You guys can see that we're starting to get into a one win here, one win here.
Now we're going to get into the third leg of the conflict.
After Hezbollah and Israel reached a ceasefire, this activated our guy, Ahmed Al-Shara, my brother's favorite guy, okay?
Aka Jalani.
Famous Jihadi, yeah.
I went into detail on him the other day.
Yeah.
So Ahmed al-Shara, right, and his rebel forces from HTS Ahad Tarir el-Sham, right?
Basically, after the Hezbollah was weakened, he was staged out of in the Idlib province, right?
This was kind of his stronghold right here in Syria.
And what he basically did was he went into Aleppo, took that over, okay?
And then after he took over Aleppo, he started working his way down to Hama, Homs, and then eventually to Damascus.
Now, at the time, it's very important for you guys to realize that the personnel was running the country was this guy right here, Bashar al-Assad, okay?
Bashar al-Assad was a member of the Axis Resistance, and his thing was he was critical in allowing weapons, personnel, resources to freely flow through Syria to Hezbollah.
Because if you guys look at this from a map perspective, right?
When Iran needs to transport weapons, munitions, you know, other types of resources, they got to move it through Iraq, into Syria, destined for Lebanon.
So Syria was a critical strategic location for the IRGC to arm their proxy, aka Hezbollah.
So once Ahmed al-Shara took over, he got Bashar al Assad out of there because Bashar al-Assad was allowing the IRGC to stage there to move weapons and resources into Lebanon for Hezbollah, who were actually fighting the Israelis on the ground.
So that's why when Hezbollah brokered that ceasefire and they were weakened, that's when Ahmed al-Sharra struck and he started to work his way to take over Syria.
Go ahead.
And some very interesting things, just a little treat in between for anybody who's not familiar.
So Ahmed al-Shara, he's formerly known as Muhammad Johnani.
This guy went through a huge rebranding in order to be an official leader of Syria and be accepted by the United States as well as any other Western countries because he was considered a terrorist.
There was over a million dollars on his head in regards to a bounty.
So the important thing, when he had a stronghold with his rebranded group, that used to be Al-Nusra, which was Al-Qaeda.
So obviously everybody knows Al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, all the lower there.
He was a part of that group and he managed the front in Syria.
That was called Al-Nusra.
After some time, he slowly rebranded to what is called Hayat Tahir Hashem.
That was the group that took over Syria in the matter of a week and then eventually conquered Damascus and where Bashar al-Assad was nowhere to be found.
Funny thing though, the United States was launching strikes on Syria and all these provinces in the northeast of Damascus to take out al-Qaeda, to take out ISIS, any remnants of the group that we once funded, by the way, and which Joe Kent just admitted a couple days ago.
And when we were bombing or carpet bombing this region, we strategically always avoided Hayat the Hadid Hashem and Ahmed al-Shara's group because we knew that this guy would be a back leader.
Why?
It's beneficial for the Israelis for him to be there because he excludes or he pushes away Iranian influence.
He's a Sunni fundamentalist.
So for him, his whole MO is Sedafiyah, is rigid Orthodox Islam.
He has nothing to do with the IRGC and their sworn enemies.
But for the United States, the benefit is he's not going to utilize the Soviet air power.
Planning The Twelve Day War 00:14:52
Bashar al-Assad allowed the Soviets to maintain some control of the assets in Syria, oil, whatever else have you, and they had an air presence there.
So it wasn't favorable for the United States to have Bashar al-Assad there because of the Soviets.
And for Israel, the benefit was getting him out so the IRGC or Iran can't move weapons across into Lebanon, which this guy would happily oblige because not only does he serve the interests of both of these countries indirectly, but he also serves his personal interests.
He hates the Iranians.
He doesn't need anything from the Russians and the Americans want him there.
So it all fit like a glove perfectly for him to take power.
And when he was running through Syria to eventually take control of Damascus, he was funded, I'm sure, by the CIA, but primarily by Turkey.
At least that's what was front-facing on the media.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
So, and the other thing, too, also that's important to note, guys.
When he took over Syria, it only took him about two to three weeks.
He was able to take Syria in less than a month.
A couple of weeks.
Fast, which was crazy.
And a big reason why, you guys are probably wondering, well, how did he take Syria over so quickly?
Well, a couple of reasons.
Number one, Hezbollah was weakened, so they couldn't support him.
Number two, the Russians had their hands preoccupied with Ukraine, so they could have sent in air power.
For a very long time, Bashar al Assad was a huge ally of Putin because the Russians have a base here at Tortus, which is very important for them from a strategic standpoint and a naval base here, a military base here.
So for years, because Syria, guys, was literally fractured by sectarian violence because there's so many different groups that live here, right?
You got the Alawites, the, you know, the Adaise, you have the Bedouins, you have the Adawiz, the Shia, obviously.
And then you have the Bashar al-Assad pan-nationalists.
I forget what you call them.
Baathists.
There's a lot of different groups there.
The Baathists, I guess, and then there's one more, the Druze.
Yeah, Druze are there too.
Yep.
So this Syria was extremely fragmented, guys.
So since, you know, Putin wasn't around to assist him with air power, this allowed Ahmed al-Shara and his guys to take over the country within a couple of weeks.
And what ended up happening was as they were working their way down to Damascus, Bashar al-Assad fled to Russia.
He's now there probably in exile slash asylum.
And Ahmed Al-Shara is now the new president of somewhere.
Yeah, he's playing video games at a penthouse in Russia.
And the thing about this guy, he was sitting ducks.
He was never attacked by U.S. strikes, even though they knew exactly where he was.
The CIA had his coordinates.
They could have taken him out at any time as well as the Mossad.
They strategically and methodically left him alive because they assumed that he would eventually be the leader.
And he jumped on the gun.
And the reason why it was so easy for him just to put it all together, the moment Hezbollah weakened, that was his go moment.
That was his green light because now he doesn't have to worry about Shia influence or Iranian proxy influence and funded Iranian paramilitary groups in the region that would pose a threat for him or be in the way for him to eventually conquer all of Syria and be the leader of Damascus and Syria.
It was within days, Chad.
He jumped within days right away.
Right when Hassan was killed and Hezbollah had the ceasefire and they were weakened significantly, that was his moment and he seized it like no other and he took control of the country in a matter of like really a week.
They knew that he was going to take Damascus by the second week, the beginning of the second week.
And here's the other reason, too.
You guys are probably wondering, well, how did they take it over so quickly?
Well, as you guys know, Syria has a lot of sectarian violence and they're a very poor country, sanctioned to hell, right?
So Bashar al Assad, for a very long time, wasn't able to pay soldiers.
So a lot of these guys were like, you know what, dude?
I don't even care.
Like, here, take it.
I'm not going to die for this.
I'm not getting paid.
So he was able to quickly take over the country, get Bashar al Assad out of there.
And also important for you guys to know, because a lot of people don't talk about this.
As Bashal Assad was fleeing and Ahmed Al-Shah was taken over and all this instability was going on in Syria, the Israelis were bombing Syria's military infrastructure.
So as Al-Mu al-Ashar was moving towards Damascus to take over, the Israelis were destroying all Syria's military infrastructure.
So even if Ahmed al-Shara came in, right, he would never be able to pose a real threat against the Israelis.
So that's something else that the Israelis were doing as well.
So obviously this was all coordinated.
Trump himself even admitted that he put Ahmed al-Shara in.
Netanyahu took credit after the Hezbollah ceasefire to say, oh, yeah, you know, Syria is going to be free now, blah, blah, blah.
So, and then, and then Ahmed al-Shara, a few months after this, came to the United States, went to the White House, met Trump, and actually was able to get sanctions lifted from Syria.
So it's crazy.
I mean, you know what I'm saying?
Like, this was a guy that was a member of Al-Qaeda.
They're pressing him on the Air Force one.
All of these journalists are like, yo, why did you just let this former jihadi terrorist take control of Syria?
That's a vital piece of geostrategic land.
Why would you let this guy in?
He's a strong guy.
He's at a rough pass.
He's handsome.
He's young.
He's good.
So I let him in.
But he admitted to his own fault that he kind of planted this guy.
But they were having some problems just a few months back, really around July or August, if my memory serves me correctly, where they were fighting with the Druze in the South.
The Druze is like a sect group in the South.
And the main government, HTS, as well as some Bedouin groups and some rogue groups that are branched off, were fighting with that sect in the South.
And Israel had bombed Damascus back in August or July to send a message like, hey, look, we'll let you be in power, but you better not pull off this whole like extreme, sweet old, you know, setup Orthodox thing.
Like, you got to loosen up.
And just recently, they tried to ban alcohol in the Muslim majority areas outside of Damascus, and they pulled it back because of an outcry from the people.
So you can see they're like trying to impose this kind of like strict Sharia adherence of law, but they're very careful if there's disruption or civil unrest in regards to it because they're just like one step away or a pin drop away from Israel or the United States taking them out of power too.
So this guy has to tread very lightly.
And he's been doing that.
He's been opening up his airspace for Israeli missiles, U.S. missiles.
He can't say shit.
He's got no power.
They destroyed all the military infrastructure before he could even sit in his chair of leadership.
So they made sure, hey, you can take control of the country.
We'll lift sanctions.
We'll give you some oil deals with Qatar and all that, but you're not going to have any military capability.
And that's what they effectively did to him.
Yep.
They chopped his balls off for all intents and purposes.
Yep.
He came into power with like no, no military, no nothing, because they know that this guy is dangerous.
So they basically, yeah.
And also the other thing that Ahmed Al-Shar did was he kicked the IRGC out.
These guys right here, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who basically, you know, are a wing of the military for Iran, he kicked them out of Syria immediately, right?
So, and as you guys know, the IRGC literally is like the sphere, you know, the tip of the sphere when it comes to the acts of resistance.
So, so, okay, so, so, we covered multiple things now.
So, quick little recap: we covered what happened with October 7th.
Then, we covered Hamas, why they did it, et cetera.
Then, that led us into the second part of the conflict, which is them invading southern Lebanon.
Then, we went into how that ceasefire led to the downfall of Bashar Assad in Syria and then putting Ahmed Al-Shar into power.
Then, right, now we're in the final leg, right?
Because Ahmed Al-Shar took over in December of 2024.
So, a lot of things happened in 2024, guys.
We're talking about Hamas falling, Hezbollah falling, and then Bashar al Assad falling in late 2024.
By 2025, now the Israelis are mobilizing to attack Iran.
Now, why?
I'll tell you why.
Because at this point, the acts of resistance has been significantly weakened.
So, Hezbollah's kind of cooked.
The Hamas is weakened.
The only people that were really still mounting a fight at this point were the Houthis.
And keep in mind, also, guys, in early January of 2025, right, this is how the whole signal gate thing happened.
The United States was relentlessly bombing Yemen, okay?
And this is how Pete Hex has got in trouble with the signal conversation.
If you guys remember him, JD Vance, Trump, et cetera, were talking about all the ways and strategies that they were bombing the Houthis.
Now, they obviously were not able to fully stop them from boarding ships, but they ended up being a ceasefire between the United States and the Houthis, where the Houthis would stop boarding U.S. ships, right, for a period of time.
But they weren't able to actually kill these guys because the way the Houthis move is, they're not just a paramilitary organization, they're also pirates, okay?
So, what they do a lot of the times is they control this waterway here, okay?
And they essentially board ships that are friendly to Israel and to the United States.
I mean, these guys bankrupted one of the Israeli ports.
I don't know if you remember the name of it, Riyadh.
What's the name of the port that they're doing?
I can't remember, but I remember what you were referring to.
Yeah, they've really got a lot of the export during that passageway in the midst of the war with Hezbollah primarily.
That's when they really stepped in and mobilized.
And another thing, too, why it's so, and I'll remember where we are, but just to refer to what you were mentioning.
Prior to Houthis, another reason why Israel and the United States chose this time to strike Iran rather than others.
I mean, you can argue Trump's a cuck, whatever have you.
But remember, Syria was also a big part because they posed a huge threat in the north because of all the fractured Shia groups that the former leader, Bashad al-Assad, allowed to run wild.
And so could you imagine if Syria or sorry, Israel started a war with Iran while all of these groups are still alive and running in the north being Syria?
Well, then they'd have to fight like a nine-front war.
So they got rid of the Syria issue.
And the only thing that really stood, like you said, was the Houthis.
Mohammed bin Salman, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, since 2018 has been desperately trying to get them out.
He's gone as far as to even carpet bomb the region to no avail, killed tons of civilians.
And he was the largest purchaser of U.S. weapons back in 2018, if my memory serves me correctly, all to destroy the Houthis, in which he has not been able to effectively do.
They still exist and they still have a lot of military capability.
Yeah.
And they just entered the war literally today, and we're going to talk more about them.
But yeah, this is also a member of the Axis Resistance right here, Ansaraike, the Houthis.
So that's what ended up happening.
So all of the proxies of the Axis Resistance guys were weakened.
So the Israelis put an enormous amount of pressure on Trump to attack.
And that's what Netanyahu and Trump were planning all of 2025.
If you guys remember famously, Netanyahu came to the United States in March to talk about tariffs, right?
And the Gaza peace plan.
What they were really doing was planning the 12-day war.
Okay.
So at the time, Trump was negotiating with Iran for trying to create some type of nuclear deal, right?
And Qatar.
And Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were going to Qatar and having talks with the Iranians.
So June came in, and that's when the 12-day war happened.
And what happened during the 12-day war, right, was basically the Israelis did a sneak attack, which they called Operation Rising Lion, where they had a bunch of Mossad operatives that were embedded in the country, and they had those Mossad operatives destroy Iran's air defenses.
They built drones within country and shot them at military generals of the IRGC as well as nuclear scientists.
They killed several of them while destroying Iran's air defenses.
So this opened up the gate so that the Israeli fighter jets, F-35s, and obviously their entire air force was able to come in and just bomb the hell out of Iran.
And they thought they were going to get the Supreme Leader, but they weren't able to get him, right?
And after this war happened, after the Israelis did this, the Iranians finally responded with some actual real force and bombed the fuck out of Israel back.
Okay.
This led to True Promise 4, if I'm not mistaken, right?
Because the Israelis had been bombing them for a very long time, guys, and they hadn't really responded.
Iran was always being criticized for being a paper tiger.
But when the Israelis attacked them this time in June of 2025, that's when the people went to the streets and said, you better go fucking attack them back.
They actually protested, saying that the Supreme Leader needs to retaliate.
And that's when they retaliated and they started showing some of their real ballistic missile capabilities.
And they were hurting Israel a lot, guys.
It's so bad that the Israelis put a law into place where recording or showing damage was illegal.
You go to jail for that shit.
They implemented that during the 12-day war.
And then obviously now they put the same exact censorship law into play.
That's why we've seen even less footage from this.
As of recently, stuff has been coming out, but at the beginning of this war, around late February, early March, we weren't seeing Tel Aviv get hit so hard, but now we are.
So that's what led to the current conflict we're in, because they had that war, 12-day war ended.
Israel was getting pummeled.
They begged for the ceasefire, got the ceasefire.
Then we attacked them again in February, which leads us to where we are now.
So give me ones in the chat if that all makes sense for you guys.
We had to explain all the lore for you guys, right, from October 7th onwards.
Give me ones that that all make sense.
Now you guys know how the fuck we got here.
And the reason why the Israelis were so desperate to have this war is because they looked at it like the Iranians are weak now.
We weaken all the proxies.
We destabilize here.
We destabilize Hezbollah.
Hamas is gone.
We must attack now.
That is why they attacked in June.
They failed with their decapitation strikes.
And they said, okay, we need to try again.
And that's what led to all the conflict, the fake uprisings, the lies about 40,000 people being killed.
Blah, blah, blah.
Right?
And that's how we found ourselves in this war now.
And then we can go now.
We can fast forward to the actual conflict.
Okay.
Now you guys know the lore of how we got here.
So February 28th, what happens?
We bomb alongside the Israelis, the Supreme Leader at his location, kill him in the top 50 guys.
Now, the important thing you guys need to know is that the Iranians learned a lot from the 12-day war.
Okay.
And one of the things they had to beef up was their air defense, as well as creating a military response that is not contingent upon higher levels of leadership being alive.
So in other words, if you decapitate the regime at the top, they created what's called a mosaic defense.
And a mosaic defense chat is the ability to wage a war against your enemies with second straight, with devastating second strike capability with your leadership being gone.
And that is what Ali Khameni perfected before he was killed.
That is why after the Americans and the Israelis attacked and killed the Supreme Leader, within one fucking hour, rockets were going towards every military base in the region, U.S. military base, as well as Tel Aviv.
Go ahead, Red.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, the Mosaic defense, as well as the fact that Iranian officials and some media reports that Iran has a very intricate and layered system of leadership.
And so it's either that the military operates autonomously underground or whatever have you, or that they have a second string, third string, fourth string, fifth string, sixth string that runs endlessly.
And so if one guy is killed and which they expect and they kind of want because they idolize this martyrdom culture, then the next guy just steps up and it's no hesitation to it.
And obviously we saw that in the first week with the missile onslaught on the entire region, which Trump did not expect, by the way.
But as well as the fact that they've been doing it every single time a leader has been killed, it doesn't seem to be slowing them down.
So very well put.
But yeah, that's like their military is built to withstand that because that's what Israel has done to the entire region.
So obviously, if Iran had half a brain, they would build a leadership that, or they would build a military that doesn't depend upon the very thing that Israel is going to target in the first few days of any sort of conflict that is guaranteed to come.
Diplomatic Nightmares 00:11:10
So they've kind of set their government to operate without that.
And it's evident, you know, they've been making or covering a lot of ground in this conflict currently.
But go ahead.
And then what I'll do quickly is I'm going to recap the past month of the war.
And then I want you to go ahead and go over the last seven, two hours.
Yeah, go for it.
So, okay.
So we've covered the lore, how we got here.
Now let's go ahead and talk about what's transpired since.
So the Iranians, knowing that they can't necessarily fight the United States head-to-head militarily, what they've done is what they've been conducting is something called asymmetric warfare chat.
And what asymmetric warfare basically means, guys, is you're going to hit your enemy in pressure points that will make them lose the conflict in other ways.
Okay.
So they've been doing this in multiple ways.
Number one, they closed the trade in Hamus.
This creates an economic and energy nightmare for the rest of the world when 20% of the world's oil goes through this strait.
Also, they were able to effectively shut down Qatar's LNG.
This creates about 20% of the world's natural gas.
Okay.
What is a Brent?
What are we sitting at for a barrel of oil right now at this point?
It's probably fucking sitting at like 100, 110 plus.
115.
Okay, really?
Okay, let's see here.
115.
Shout out to the ssreport.com.
Okay, so right now, 108 is what it's sitting at.
And then U.S. is sitting at 102, which is fucking horrible, by the way, chat.
Really?
I'm sitting one.
You're looking at Brent?
Okay.
It's meaningful.
I mean, it's fluctuating.
It's still going up and down and stuff, but this is still horrible.
Like anything over $100 is fucking catastrophic.
Anything over 80 is like already an issue.
We've been sitting comfortably over 110 for the last two weeks.
Yeah.
So, um, so anyway, um, what was I going to say about this?
Uh, oh, so, so, okay, so they're waging, you know, this asymmetric warfare.
So, obviously, they're creating quite a bit of pain economically with closing down to Straighter Hamus and energy prices skyrocketing all across the world.
They've created a diplomatic fucking nightmare for us because they have been bombing all the Gulf states.
Now, for those of you that are wondering, Martin, why?
Because a lot of people ask me this question.
So, let me answer this as well.
Myron, why are the Iranians bombing their Muslim brothers in the Gulf?
Well, I'll explain why.
All of these countries, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the UAE, Oman.
Now, these are wealthy Gulf states, right?
And Saudi Arabia, of course.
These are wealthy Gulf states that, you know, make quite a bit of money, very safe, very clean countries, that rely quite a bit on tourism as well as their energy, right, for their economic prosperity that they've been enjoying.
So, the Iranians, like I said before, know that they can't attack the United States directly or hurt the United States directly.
But what they can do is create an enormous amount of pressure on their allies and destroy their bases in the region.
I think something like 13 bases in this area have been completely destroyed by the Iranians.
Okay, so they destroyed the military bases.
They destroyed the radars that were responsible for notifying them when rockets and drones are coming in in this region.
And they also have been bombing and attacking other locations within these Gulf countries.
And the reason why is because if you put enough pressure on these Gulf states, who are all close allies of the United States, it undermines Trump's diplomacy.
Guys, don't forget that last year, Trump's first official visit, he visited the Gulf to secure trillions of dollars in investment from the Gulf, from these rich Gulf monarchies.
So for him to be able to, you know, so for the Iranians to bomb them, right, completely undermines his diplomacy.
And now keep in mind, the only reason these Gulf states allow the United States to even exist and have bases in these regions is for protection.
Well, if we're not doing our job and protecting them, then what use do they have us for there?
If anything, we are a huge liability and why they're being attacked.
So imagine you're a Gulf monarch, right?
Imagine you can't get your energy out of the Strait of Hormuz.
You're losing money on that end.
Tourism is plummeting.
Your real estate prices are plummeting.
Your fucking hotels and other locations are being attacked.
The military bases that are supposed to be there to protect you for the United States have all been disrupted and dismantled.
You're running out of interceptor missiles.
And then on top of that, the U.S., whose job is supposed to fucking protect you, they're not doing their job.
So this completely makes us look horrible from an international perspective.
So again, economically, they're hurting us with the Strait of Hamus.
Diplomatically, they're causing a nightmare where we might not be able to maintain power projection in the Gulf anymore.
And then number three, politically, this is horrible for Trump because he ran on no new wars.
And he thought this was going to be a quick Venezuela in and out.
And now it's turning into a protracted long-term war, which is exactly what he campaigned against.
And they plan to hold on to this conflict until the midterms.
And unfortunately, the United States does not have escalation dominance because the Iranians are the ones that are going to dictate when this war ends now at this point.
So we've basically walked into a fucking trap.
But anyway, I'll turn it to my brother.
That's the overall gist of what's been going on, guys, over the past month.
The United States attacks them.
They attack the Gulf and they attack Israel and create pain via asymmetric warfare.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I've been saying the last few streams, I streamed a couple of times by myself last week, and I was saying, is it even asymmetric anymore or are we just losing?
Which one is it?
So, but in regards to what's been happening recently, I guess I'll go back to like two weeks.
Do you need to say that anymore or you want me to take this shit down?
Do you need to?
No, no, you can.
You can split screen it.
You can split screen it.
There's nothing I'll really share.
I'll just explain this in maybe like five, 10 minutes.
But really, where we are right now has kind of resulted in a lot of troubles or worries from the world because of the fact that a ground invasion seems imminent.
If you've read the news or you've not been under a rock recently, it's kind of obvious that the Pentagon, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, all these mainstream media news articles have been reporting the fact that a ground invasion is imminent.
There's apparently 50,000 troops in the region, some mobilized from Japan, others that were on their way from the coast of San Diego, USS Tripoli, and other marine assets, about 50,000 total.
But from what we've launched, about 10 to 20,000 just from the United States alone.
That's per the Pentagon's reporting, although they tried to deny that.
And so how did we get here?
So firstly, two weeks ago, you've got, or really in the beginning, the Trump administration had said this would be maybe four to six days, whatever have you.
And now we're a month in.
Now, obviously, Donald Trump is having a hard time keeping his image clean or looking like he actually knows what he's doing because of the fact that he miscalculated how long this war would take.
That's the first issue.
Secondly, when we got into this war or when Donald Trump started this war, obviously Iran, like my brother had just mentioned, had hit several Gulf countries in the region, all of which are key partners of ours.
Trump did not expect this.
And so in bombing these Gulf countries, it put the United States in a very difficult position because now we're just not fighting a war for the behalf of Israel or for ourselves, which is a lie anyways.
It's really just for Israel in its entirety.
But now we've also got to fight this war to keep the Gulf countries safe, something that was never binding upon us in the beginning and something that somehow the Pentagon did not see coming.
Although the Pentagon did give a heads up that this would eventually translate into boots on ground, which we're seeing is imminent any moment now.
Maybe while we're doing the stream, it may start.
So Trump says a few weeks ago, his first crazy truth social frenzy, he's been going on these truth social rants.
He says, well, we're going to give him 48 hours.
And he threatens that in two days, if Iran doesn't come to the table with some sort of stipulation or agreement or whatever it is, that we're going to bomb Iran's power plants.
Of course, that's responsible for the electrical grid, for their oil refinement, everything like that.
If you hit a power plant, the electric goes out.
People in the ICU and local hospitals will have to be transported.
They could die during this time.
Catastrophic things, no water supply, everything else that electricity and oil and energy relies on.
Really, the civilian population will feel it more than the government because the government probably has backup reserves.
They run on generators, whatever have you.
And so this causes some sort of outcry, this rage, and everybody is terrified.
Then Trump walks back just about two days later.
And by the way, the previous truth social post had said that we're, you know, reaching some sort of peace negotiation and that we're making headway.
And then he says that.
So he's going back and forth on truth social, contradicting himself.
Now, this is for a reason.
Obviously, one can make the discernment that Trump is just losing his mind because he's an older man.
And that I'd give some credibility to or some weight to.
Certainly there's some truth there.
But I think the real goal of these conflicting truth social posts is to keep the oil price in the stock markets in an area where the United States can somewhat feasibly deal with it.
If you don't know, a lot of oil experts have come out recently and people who study energy globally and have said that this is actually a lot worse than it may seem front-facingly.
And that's because of the fact that Trump has repaired it or bandaged this leak in a boat that's inevitably going to explode again with releasing a record amount of oil reserves, as well as the fact that he lifted sanctions on Russia and Iran to kind of ease the pressure, which, by the way, are our adversaries.
So this war has kind of worked against us in some case in regards to diplomacy or, you know, our issues with those countries and influence.
But then Trump also takes a truth social and he goes in this frenzy and he says that, you know, we're going to have five days where we don't strike Iran.
And then he moves the five days to 10 days and he said that we're gaining weight and or we're gaining and covering ground in these peace negotiations.
All while at the same time, simultaneously, we're reading reports in Axios and other verified official reports that the IRGC has come out.
By the way, from Fox News, the IRGC has come out and said, we are not talking to Trump.
We've spoken to nobody in the last two weeks.
And Trump himself is also saying there's no military leadership to even speak to.
He said that two days before his truth social post where he said we're having negotiations.
So everybody's like, what the hell is going on?
I'll elucidate the larger picture as to why all these contradictory narratives have been floating around.
This is all for a ground invasion.
And I'll tell you why.
Donald Trump says just about a week ago that we're going to have, or a few days ago, rather, that we're going to have a 10-day ceasefire period.
No one's going to, we're not going to put the Marines in there.
We're going to halt our power plant strike.
That's what he's referring to in this 10-day stipulation.
Okay, at the same time, Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF comes out just two days later in several reports from Hebrew media saying in the next 48 hours, we're going to attack every critical piece of infrastructure or military asset that belongs to Iran.
Their arms facilities, their nuclear facilities, their oil refineries, which have been riddled in the news lately.
So they've been carrying out that promise.
Why?
There's two reasons or really two discernments I can take from this.
One being that maybe Israel is panicking, that Trump may reach a point of diplomacy, but that doesn't make sense because we have so many Marines mobilized in the region.
I think that Israel is setting it up for these ground forces to have an easier time in their potential invasion.
That's why they're hitting all of these key plants.
Trump and Israel, I think, are working in tandem.
Maybe Israel is weakening the infrastructure, but Trump can play face to the American media to keep the stock prices and the oil prices stable.
So Trump is saying, don't worry, no war, but he's telling Bibi, keep up the onslaught, keep up the strikes, keep up what you're doing, and we're going to have a ground invasion to put the cherry on top and finish this once and for all.
The United States just can't have any front-facing activity in terms of the offensive because if we do, it makes our oil prices and our stock prices so volatile, which makes me look bad and already hurts my shit record approval rating, which is the lowest it's ever been, as well as the fact that I may lose in midterms.
So Trump is doing this kind of like front-facing, I have to make sure I'm looking like I'm winning thing.
And then Netanyahu is actually doing it nitty-gritty and setting it up for an easy ground invasion with our supposed 50,000 troops that are now mobilized or present in the region per Wall Street Journal.
Leaving YouTube For Kick 00:02:50
So that's kind of where we are.
Iran, in response to this, which by the way, they see this coming.
They're not idiots.
They've seen everything coming, which is why they've been a step ahead of us, bombing the Gulf countries, the protests with Mike Pompeo, the CIA assets being killed immediately.
Iran's been a step ahead.
And so what are they doing in response to this?
Well, they're going to start hitting key infrastructure in the Gulf.
The Gulf countries, in the realization that the IRGC is blocking the Strait of Hormuz, has now vowed to join the war because they realize, wow, the IRGC has the ability to completely stop our economic gain by blocking this 20-mile passageway, that being the Strait of Hormuz, which is responsible for 80% of Gulf oil export.
So the Gulf countries have joined this war.
So Iran kind of sees everything coming.
It's like the writing is on the wall.
Israel has ramped up its response.
Trump is, for some reason, saying nothing is going on and we're going to have this sort of peace deal in the next five to 10 days.
And then at the same time, the Gulf countries are saying we're going to join the war.
So Iran obviously knows this is all to set up some U.S. play for ground invasion.
What are they doing?
They're hitting key infrastructure in the Gulf.
Just reported recently, they may have potentially hit a desalination plant, which is responsible for taking ocean water.
Real quick.
Okay, that's important.
That's really great.
Escalation that we're going to talk about this.
Guys, I'm going to get off YouTube right now.
Come on over to Kik because this is where we're going to get into some important stuff with the desalination plans because this is a very important topic that we need to cover.
Because some news broke recently when it comes to these desalination plants, and we got to talk about this in more detail.
But I'm going to get off YouTube.
I've been on way on it for way too long anyway.
Been on here for an hour and a half.
Come on over, watch my channel on the kick, kick.com slash Myra Ganzax, or go to my brother's channel, my Riad report, whatever you guys want.
But I am going to get off YouTube.
If you really want to help us out, open up a tab on both.
That helps quite a bit.
As you guys know, Kick is my mainstreaming platform.
So I am getting off of YouTube, guys.
I'm dropping a link for you guys on here.
Come on over to my kick, guys.
There's no ads.
You don't have to worry about ads or any of that bullshit as well.
So come on over, ninjas.
Come on over.
We are going to do a quick switch here.
Like I said before, it helps a lot when you guys come on over.
Fuck YouTube.
Been on here for too long for free.
Gave you guys all this sauce.
So now me and my brother are going to get into the real breakdown here.
So come on over, guys.
I'm ending the YouTube stream now.
I'm spamming the link mod.
Spam the link.
Can either go to kick or go to my brother's channel, Riaz Report, or the best thing to do is open up both tabs.
Okay, so let's go ahead, guys.
Come on over.
I'm ending my YouTube stream here.
Come on over to kickkick.com slash MyerGainsX.
That is my main shit now.
Okay, guys, I'm ending the YouTube stream here.
We're going to talk about the desalination plants, escalations.
We're going to react to some Max Afterburner and other idiots, see what they got to say.
And we're going to go into what this escalation ladder looks like because now we're getting into very dangerous territory.
We desalination plants, which are now starting to finally get hit.
So big deal, guys.
Come on over.
Ending it now.
YouTube stream going down now.
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