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unidentified
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The silent majority is no longer silent. | |
This is The War Room with Owen Schroyer. | ||
Please stand by for further details. | ||
We return you now to your regularly scheduled program. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, it is Thursday, March 21st, 2024. | ||
This is the InfoWars War Room brought to you by InfoWarsStore.com, your election headquarters right here. | ||
With 229 days to go until the 2024 presidential election. | ||
You know, I got a lot on my mind and a lot on my heart today. | ||
I will tell you. We'll put that on pause briefly. | ||
And let me just tell you what we have coming up today. | ||
But part of the reason why I have a lot on my mind and perhaps even my heart is that... | ||
In the second hour of today's transmission, we're going to be joined by my attorney, Norm Pattis. | ||
And it's kind of gotten to a point with this legal stuff. | ||
It really is such a heavy burden to bear. | ||
And really, I've been through the worst of it. | ||
And we've had to make a lot of decisions. | ||
And part of the problem is also because of all the things that InfoWars is going through legally, it doesn't make things easier on me either. | ||
And it's funny when I go through this, and I don't want to get ahead of myself, but it's just... | ||
It's incredible to think about what we have built here at InfoWars, what Alex has built here at InfoWars, the fact that some days he's even able to go on air dealing with this stuff. | ||
But... We do have a legal announcement and update coming at 4 o'clock, second hour today. | ||
You know, this audience has come through in so many ways for me | ||
that I can't even properly express my gratitude other than to just continue to come on here every day and | ||
Do the best job I possibly can so Legal update four o'clock. We're also gonna be joined by | ||
Bryson Gray in the third hour who has really a new milestone for him | ||
A new accomplishment for him and I was honored to be a part of this project that drops tonight | ||
So we're gonna be talking about that with Bryson Gray and he's always fun and informative and entertaining as well | ||
Now in the news a bunch of news a lot of video clips today a light news desk, but a bunch of video clips | ||
But what what is dominating right now is a new video Just surfaced as we go | ||
live I mean, we've seen some crazy videos from the southern border. | ||
We've seen some crazy videos when it comes to the caravans that are pouring up through the Darien Gap in Central America and everything. | ||
We've seen some wild stuff. I don't know how else you would explain this other than a large group of illegal immigrants storming the southern border, rioting in an attempt to get into this country. | ||
Now, this is extremely dangerous for multiple reasons. | ||
Yes, the aspect of illegal immigration and who's coming in, okay. | ||
But now you're dealing with a potentially violent situation. | ||
Where if this trend continues, this will be a small group compared to the next one. | ||
This is maybe 100, 200 people. | ||
Imagine 1,000. Imagine 10,000. | ||
Well, now you're in a really bad situation if you're Border Patrol. | ||
And what do you do? | ||
You can't even be on horseback to try to stop illegal immigrants from coming in. | ||
And the Democrats and the media go on TV saying, look, they're using whips. | ||
They're whipping people. | ||
It's like slavery all over again. | ||
My God, the images. | ||
And it's just horse reins. They're just on a horse with horse reins. | ||
And then they try to destroy the lives of the Border Patrol agents that are riding on horseback trying to do their job with the reins in their hands. | ||
And they say, look at these racist Border Patrol agents using whips! | ||
My God! And just the whole thing is a lie. | ||
And so now it's like, well, gee, I mean... | ||
The narrative has already been set. | ||
Border Patrol's bad if they try to do their job. | ||
If they're seen doing their job on camera, then the media and the Democrats are going to lie about them and try to destroy their lives. | ||
But what do you do... | ||
Again, this situation today is light compared to what we might have. | ||
What do you do if you have a situation that could be coming soon of a thousand or ten thousand illegal immigrants storming the southern border and rioting, and your border patrol facing that down, but you know if you try to do anything about it, you're gonna be the bad guy. | ||
unidentified
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There is a man who is whatever America needs him to be. | |
The hero we deserve. | ||
But the hero we need. | ||
Nothing less than a knight. | ||
Shining. They'll hunt him. | ||
They'll set the dogs on him. | ||
Because the truth is the greatest threat they face. | ||
It's the war room. | ||
with Owen Schreier. | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Thanks for watching and subscribe for more We've got some very interesting news developing today. | ||
Some very interesting news at the Capitol. | ||
Some very interesting news at the southern border. | ||
Some very interesting news geopolitically with what the U.S. military is currently setting up. | ||
And it's kind of being whispered, but people are starting to hear it, and it's starting to make its way around the grapevine. | ||
And really, it's just a lean-in towards conflict or war. | ||
Instead of trying to lean out, they are leaning in. | ||
And it's just not very bright. | ||
And then when you have an invasion at the southern border, it makes it even worse. | ||
So we got all that, but as I said... | ||
Now look, I strive to make this show... | ||
The best show possible so that when you spend your time with us here you don't feel it's wasted. | ||
But I did have a lot on my mind and my heart and it's amazing too when I come in here and the crew can tell and they really know how to cheer me up. | ||
Otherwise I probably would have been a lot more downtrodden before I came on air. | ||
So it just reminds me how much I love this crew and how much I love this audience. | ||
But Wang on my mind is what I'm dealing with legally right now. | ||
And really, you could say I've already been through the worst of it, obviously, going through the trial and the sentencing and the incarceration. | ||
My probation goes on, but okay, whatever. | ||
They live in my personal life. | ||
I, you know, subjected to annual and random drug testing and, you know, everything else. | ||
Whatever. It's a minor burden in the larger scheme of things. | ||
But I'm talking to my lawyer today, and he's coming on it too for an update. | ||
About where we stand when it comes to the Supreme Court case. | ||
And so we're beginning that process. | ||
It's a bit of a process. | ||
And obviously my attorney's been busy with some other stuff. | ||
Including fighting off the IRS that has been up my keister as well. | ||
And so I will tell you there's good news on that front. | ||
We'll give the update in the second hour. | ||
But I'm going through all of this. | ||
And then also... | ||
In the background, kind of lurking because it's all connected, is all the legal stuff and the court cases and everything that Infowars is going into. | ||
And it's amazing, as I'm dealing with this all morning, and then it's like 2 o'clock hits, and normally I'm doing like 4 or 5 hours of prep for the show just throughout the day leading into it. | ||
But today I'm on the phone with lawyers and IT people and stuff. | ||
And as 2 o'clock, I was like, whoa, man, I got to do a show. | ||
But your heart and your mind are in different places. | ||
And it really just hit me. | ||
You know, not many people have to deal with this. | ||
And, of course, one of the few that does is Alex Jones, perhaps more than anybody. | ||
And... Just being able to go on air and do a show when you're in this headspace is... | ||
It's already... You know, most people can't even comprehend doing a three-hour talk show. | ||
But with this stuff lurking in the background and the constant white noise of it, it makes it even harder. | ||
And I can understand why, very easily, why Alex, just any day, could just say, you know what, I'm just done. | ||
I can't do it anymore. And he hasn't. | ||
He's still showing up here every day. | ||
And I'm having these conversations with my lawyer, and it's like, well, I mean, yeah, this is what it's going to take to get it to the Supreme Court. | ||
And it's just more money, more time, more burden. | ||
And so I could easily just say, you know what? | ||
I don't want to deal with it anymore. | ||
I just want to get through my probation and just get this behind me. | ||
As if that's really what's going to go down. | ||
Because obviously we know that we'll never be able to put this corruption behind us. | ||
It's always going to be there. | ||
But it's not about me. | ||
My case has to go to the Supreme Court because it's a precedent-setting case. | ||
Just like my sentencing was precedent-setting and we warned That if they do this to me, they're going to come after other journalists. | ||
And now three other journalists have been charged. | ||
And many more will still be charged because they got away with it with Owen Troyer. | ||
And now they're also going after people for their speech. | ||
Like Isabella DeLuca. | ||
Because mine was the president's setting case. | ||
So we've got to take this to the Supreme Court. | ||
We've got to do it. And I'm going to get into the legal updates and everything else with... | ||
My attorney dealing with this at 4 o'clock or in about 50 minutes here on the Infowars War Room. | ||
But... As I just put that aside for now... | ||
I'm only even able to do this at all because of the support from this audience. | ||
And so I say again, I can't even properly express... | ||
How important this audience is to us here at InfoWars, to me personally. | ||
I cannot personally express my gratitude for this audience and everything you've done to support me personally, support InfoWars and keep us on the air. | ||
It cannot be properly expressed on this show. | ||
But just know from the bottom of my heart, it really means everything. | ||
And we're never going to give... | ||
We're never going to give in. | ||
We're never going to sell out. | ||
We know the role that we've accepted. | ||
And we accept it. | ||
And we wear our battle scars with pride and with honor. | ||
So I'm just glad to be in this with all of you and with the crew. | ||
And I gotta tell you, man, it'd be nice. | ||
It'd be nice. | ||
And, you know, we've had Steve Baker on the air and he's going through his legal stuff. | ||
It'd be nice though. I'm glad Steve Baker and the Blaze have not had to go through what we've had to go through here at Infowars. | ||
And I'm glad that the Blaze can afford to make sure that Steve Baker has all the legal help and funding that he needs. | ||
But we're not allowed to do that here. | ||
We're not allowed to do that here. | ||
We have to ask our audience for your support. | ||
And you've come through every time. | ||
And I cannot express my gratitude. | ||
Now that I've gotten that behind me, just consider that a depressurization, if you will. | ||
Now, let's get into this news. | ||
Over 100 migrants break through razor wire, knock down guards as they illegally cross El Paso border. | ||
Guys, let's just go ahead and show this video. | ||
This is just breaking as of about an hour ago. | ||
guys just give me clips six and five back to back here. | ||
So here you see them storming the border and now that was at a hardened wall. | ||
Now they find the fencing, and they're tearing it down. | ||
It's got to be probably at least 100 or 200 illegal immigrants storming the southern border. | ||
And, I mean, it's basically... | ||
If they were in a downtown area, this would be considered a riot, and then they storm through the border guard and get to the wall. | ||
This is truly wild stuff. | ||
Now, again, today it's a couple hundred, and as far as we can tell, nobody gets hurt. | ||
But what happens when it's a couple thousand? | ||
What happens when it's ten thousand? | ||
Let's not pretend like that's not a serious potential here. | ||
We know it is. | ||
We've seen videos of these massive caravans with tens of thousands of people coming in one group. | ||
Can you imagine if you had a thousand people bum-rushing the border like this? | ||
Ten thousand? We're talking about a potentially Dangerous and deadly situation. | ||
And what are you supposed to do if you're Border Patrol? | ||
You know, sometimes survival instincts kick in and outweigh every other thought process in your mind. | ||
What does a border patrol agent do in that moment where he sees hundreds or | ||
thousands pouring down upon him or her? | ||
And the Democrats and their allies in the media have already sent out the | ||
message that if you are seen on camera as a border patrol agent doing your job | ||
and stopping an illegal immigrant we're going to destroy you. | ||
We're going to put you everywhere and we're going to destroy you and call you a racist | ||
and a xenophobe and compare you to a torturous slave owner. | ||
This conduct should be immediately condemned by the White House. | ||
This conduct should be immediately condemned by the White House to send a strong message that you're not going to storm our border, you're not going to break through our barriers, and you're not going to put our law enforcement... | ||
Our border patrol in a potentially compromising situation where they might have to act with force. | ||
whether we want them to or not. | ||
Because at the end of the day, remove the uniform, remove the badge. | ||
What do you have? You have a human being that has a right to self-defense. | ||
And survival instincts. And when they see hundreds or soon to be thousands or even tens of thousands of hordes of illegal immigrants rioting and storming towards them, what are they supposed to do? | ||
What are they supposed to do? | ||
But see, there is no invasion. | ||
There are no illegal immigrants. | ||
There is no open border. | ||
Gavin Newsom yesterday just said it's down 90%. | ||
You couldn't have a more blatant lie. | ||
And the border is secure. | ||
So, don't believe your lying eyes. | ||
Don't believe the numbers. | ||
Don't believe the videos. | ||
Just believe the lying Democrats and their friends in the media. | ||
There is no border invasion. | ||
It does not exist. | ||
Barry Bonds never hit any home runs. | ||
He never hit a home run. | ||
Barry Bonds never hit a home run 450 feet into McCovey Cove. | ||
It did not happen. Mark McGuire did not hit a home run into the upper deck at Bush Stadium. | ||
You never saw that. | ||
It never happened. | ||
Okay? There is no border invasion. | ||
But you won't see the condemnation from the White House. | ||
You won't see the condemnation from Democrats in Congress. | ||
They will tell you it doesn't exist or they'll support it and say, well, these are just desperate people. | ||
Well, so when is it America's duty to take care of every desperate person on planet Earth? | ||
How many desperate people? | ||
How many hungry people? | ||
How many poor people? | ||
How many needy people are there on planet Earth? | ||
100 million? 200 million? | ||
500 million? A billion? Are we just supposed to take them all? | ||
Is that our duty? | ||
So the American people have to sacrifice and lose everything, and they have to starve, and they have to be poor, and they have to own nothing. | ||
But then we have to take care of starving hordes of illegal immigrant invaders that assault our border patrol and penetrate our border infrastructure. | ||
That's the policy of the Biden White House. | ||
That's the policy of the Democrat Party. | ||
As of, what, five years ago, I guess? | ||
Six years ago? Or maybe when Trump got into office? | ||
So, I guess eight years ago, that became the Biden policy? | ||
That became the border policy for the Democrats? | ||
When Trump decided he wanted to secure the border and ran on that? | ||
I mean, this is just stunning footage. | ||
unidentified
|
... | |
Hey, but walls don't work, guys. | ||
unidentified
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Walls don't work. | |
If it wasn't for that wall, it's likely that National Guardsmen gets trampled over by this horde of illegal immigrants. | ||
And that is a horde. | ||
Notice how they're all military-aged men, by the way? | ||
Every single one of them? | ||
Starting this riot? | ||
Assaulting law enforcement officers? | ||
Do you think they'll be treated like a January 6th defendant? | ||
Do you think the narrative for engaging in physical and violent contact against law enforcement by illegal immigrants, do you think that'll have the same narrative and the same rhetoric around people that just walk through the Capitol? | ||
There's ten, there's a thousand different ways this could be awful. | ||
This could be dangerous. | ||
This could be deadly. And we just sit here and watch it. | ||
Now remember yesterday, and I got more into it specifically with Carlos. | ||
We're going to drop the 30 Minutes interview with Anthony this Sunday and then with Carlos next Sunday. | ||
And so I really learned a lot from his whistleblower testimony and what he's seen behind the scenes. | ||
But it's amazing that this video comes out today. | ||
18-year-old illegal immigrant breaks down in tears, begs Border Patrol for help, wants to go home to mommy. | ||
Now, we briefly got into this yesterday on the air about how there are a lot of these children that are essentially slaves here. | ||
They can't escape. | ||
They're basically in an open-air prison now. | ||
Where the federal government says you can't leave, the cartels say you can't leave, and they're just forced to go wherever they're told to go with no options of actually going home. | ||
And so it looks like a moment, an example of this gets caught by News Nation, where an illegal immigrant is crying to Border Patrol saying, this 18-year-old saying, he wants to go home and clip for. | ||
unidentified
|
Cartel. | |
Hector tells a gut-wrenching story of getting abandoned by the group he was traveling with. | ||
He's clearly distraught. | ||
This whole situation is very odd. | ||
And I could even see being skeptical. | ||
But, again, we already know what goes on with the minors when they come in. | ||
They get used as a border passport. | ||
They get used as a border pass because of the policy. | ||
If you come in with a minor, you get a free pass. | ||
And then, essentially, they get abandoned inside of the country. | ||
They get left in the hands of escorts that have no background check. | ||
They get put in the hands of quote-unquote sponsors that have no background check and sometimes don't even show up or a different person will show up, will show a fake ID, and then the escorts have no choice but to drop them off anyway because that's the policy, and then they just disappear. | ||
And you have 85 million missing children on record. | ||
The number's probably closer to 200,000. | ||
And many of them just want to go home. | ||
But they're kept here against their will by the cartels and the Biden administration. | ||
And it's gut-wrenching, it's heartbreaking, and the story is much worse than that even. | ||
And when we drop this interview next Sunday, you'll see exactly what it is I'm talking about. | ||
Now, do you think it'll be the last time we see a group of illegal immigrant men, all military-aged, storming the border like that, breaking through law enforcement and border fencing? | ||
If this act is not seriously condemned... | ||
Tonight or tomorrow, if there is not serious repercussions for those individuals, if there's not serious reinforcement of these areas, then absolutely, 100%, this is going to happen again. | ||
Especially if you reach a situation where the cartels or these illegal immigrant pipeline runners are Believe that Donald Trump is going to get in office in 2024 and their illegal immigrant pipeline is going to be cut off or shut down. | ||
Well, then they're just going to put the pedals of the metal on this whole operation. | ||
And they already have been. | ||
And that's what's so crazy. | ||
Gavin Newsom saying 90% down, illegal immigration 90% down. | ||
It's up. I wouldn't say it's 90% up, but it's maybe 10% up. | ||
On a regular, annual, month-by-month basis, it gets about 10% higher each month. | ||
Every year under Joe Biden, there has been a record number of illegal immigrants entering the country. | ||
Every single year, we're on pace for a fourth straight year in 2024. | ||
unidentified
|
But Newsom just says, oh, illegal immigration is down. | |
And then he's got his own homeless problems, and we're going to cover that coming up too. | ||
This homeless situation, which is just, again, I mean, how you deal with it is, I don't know, have the debate. | ||
But imagine we spend hundreds of billions of dollars on illegal immigrants. | ||
Those are confirmed numbers. | ||
Hundreds of billions of dollars on illegal immigrants. | ||
Would you rather give $100 million to illegal immigrants to come here and get everything for free, or would you rather have that money towards American homeless and get them off the streets? | ||
I'd rather say none of it, but nonetheless, it just shows, well, we do spend it on the illegal immigrants, but then they claim to spend it on the homeless, but then what happens? | ||
Every time they spend more money on the homeless, the homeless situation actually gets worse. | ||
So Newsom wants to celebrate this bill, but Newsom has been promising about fixing the homeless for 20 years and has done, well, nothing except make it worse. | ||
So we're going to have that coming up next. | ||
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Why is it the more money we spend on the homeless, the more homeless there is? | ||
That's odd. Now, Newsom is celebrating this bill that passes, Proposition 1. | ||
He says, this is a huge victory for doing things radically different when it comes to tackling homelessness. | ||
Radically different. | ||
Radically different. | ||
You think there'll be any difference? | ||
That's funny. | ||
That's actually hilarious. | ||
unidentified
|
You think there'll be any difference? | |
Homelessness is probably the worst in California. | ||
Specifically, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland. | ||
You know, at least they've done a good job kind of maintaining San Diego, though, and keeping San Diego. | ||
Oh, wait, what's that? | ||
Wait, what's that? | ||
unidentified
|
Roll clip seven. San Diego has always been one of the most beautiful places in the world. | |
Very clean, very friendly, very safe. | ||
And now if you try to go to downtown San Diego, you have to walk through miles and miles of encampments that are worse than Bangladesh. | ||
Crash everywhere, people using drugs in the open air, people defecating and urinating on the street. | ||
You'd take your life in your hands if you had to walk a mile down in downtown San Diego. | ||
And we're having situations where people are being assaulted. | ||
There's all kinds of problems with that. | ||
There's no reason to live that way. | ||
This is a political ideology. | ||
This is a decision that homelessness should be acceptable. | ||
And frankly, California has passed laws that have made it almost impossible for cities to do any kind of enforcement. | ||
They've really basically said to the people throughout the country, come to California and be homeless. | ||
will give you lots of benefits, lots of money, and we won't bother you. | ||
You can do drugs on the street, you can steal up to $950 a day without being arrested, | ||
you can be violent without being arrested. | ||
California has become a much, much worse place. | ||
Now, what leads to homelessness? | ||
Obviously, you might say financial ruin, cultural ruin, drug abuse. | ||
There's all kinds of different things, but it starts with an environment Where somebody would rather live out on the streets or has no ability to not live out on the streets. | ||
And then the rest follows and you see the massive homelessness situation. | ||
Now, the surface level and probably the most obvious and accurate is financially. | ||
If these people could afford a house, they'd probably have one. | ||
If they could afford an apartment, they'd probably have one. | ||
They can't. So they live on the streets. | ||
They're homeless. There's obviously different situations and there's different causes, but it's mostly a financial thing. | ||
They don't have money, they don't have a job, whatever. | ||
Now, here's Jamal, holds a fire alarm and disrupts Congress but doesn't go to jail, Bowman. | ||
And I'm going to tie this all together. | ||
So the Democrats are always trying to attack this issue of people not having enough money. | ||
And they think... | ||
Somehow, bigger government or policy or giving you money is going to solve the problem. | ||
Of course, it doesn't. | ||
But here's what Jamal Fire Alarm Bowman says in front of the Capitol earlier today, clip 11. | ||
unidentified
|
It is plantation capitalism to have someone paying 40, 50, 60% of their salary towards rent. | |
That is plantation capitalism. | ||
Rent should be capped at 20% of someone's salary. | ||
That's where we need to take it. | ||
And as we rebuild our cities and as we rebuild our country to ensure that every single person has a home, we need to invest and pass the Green New Deal for public housing. | ||
That's right. Absolutely. It deals with the issue of unemployment and underemployment. | ||
It deals with the issue of the climate catastrophe that we are living in. | ||
Climate catastrophe. It's a beautiful day in DC. And it deals with the issue of lack of affordable housing. | ||
Looks like a perfect day in DC. As the senator said, win, win, win. | ||
Now, there is so much propaganda in that 60-second clip that I want to replay it and break it all down. | ||
But let's get back to the issue. | ||
And let's tie the two together. | ||
Why do we have homeless? Why is Jamal Bowman complaining about the price of rent? | ||
Well, that all stems from policy. | ||
And by the way, you know whose policy it stems from? | ||
Democrat policy. | ||
When you raise taxes and you raise costs, renters raise their rates. | ||
When you raise taxes and you raise costs, energy bills go up, food prices go up, grocery bills go up, cost of living goes up. | ||
So you have less money. | ||
So instead of attacking the policy that causes these problems, the Democrats look for new policy for solution when it's policy that is the problem. | ||
But let's talk about the homeless. | ||
Why do you see these homeless? | ||
You didn't see homeless like this in America in the 50s or 60s. | ||
And even before that. | ||
Why do you see it now? | ||
What's the difference? The difference is... | ||
American jobs, manufacturing, production have been shipped overseas. | ||
This is also because of bad policy. | ||
We raise corporate tax rates. | ||
People go over to China. | ||
We don't have policy that incentivizes companies to stay in America, produce in America, manufacture in America, build in America. | ||
We don't have policies that entice foreign companies to come to America. | ||
So all these jobs get shipped overseas. | ||
And they love to say, these are jobs Americans don't want. | ||
Bullcrap! Bullcrap Americans don't want these jobs. | ||
You used to be able to get a job at a shoe factory in a downtown, a metropolitan area in the United States of America, and you could make a living salary and have a family and own a home. | ||
Shoe factory, just one example. | ||
So no, this isn't something that just happens. | ||
This isn't just some magic thing that just happens. | ||
This is bad policy. | ||
And it's all Democrat policy. | ||
And so then they want more bad policy, which just makes the situation worse. | ||
And thus you see the situations that we now have dealing with homeless. | ||
Bad policy, shipping jobs overseas. | ||
Specifically in the inner cities. | ||
And then getting people hooked on the welfare state. | ||
But by the way, again, the Democrats, Gavin Newsom specifically, have been saying they're going to fix homelessness in California for 20 years. | ||
It's never gotten better. And I've gone long here, but really, this 60-second speech from Jamal Fire Alarm Bowman has so much propaganda in it, it really deserves a further breakdown. | ||
They call it the Green New Deal for Public Housing. | ||
Do you see what they do? They take their propaganda slogan, and then they just attach it to some other thing. | ||
Green New Deal for public housing. | ||
What? What does that even mean? | ||
But let's play his speech and just go through all the little bits and pieces of propaganda. | ||
I mean, it's just, Democrats are just, I mean, like, this guy is literally retarded. | ||
He has AOC sitting next to him shaking her head like, oh yeah, she's literally retarded. | ||
She doubles down on her RICO claims from yesterday. | ||
So play Jamal Bowman. | ||
unidentified
|
It is plantation capitalism to have someone paying 40, 50, 60% of their salary towards rent. | |
Plantation capitalism. | ||
Pause it. Plantation capitalism. | ||
So he evokes slavery. | ||
He evokes slavery because bad economic policy and energy policy Causes rents and the cost of living to go up. | ||
So he evokes slavery. | ||
Policy that he supports, by the way. | ||
unidentified
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Continue. Rent should be capped at 20% of someone's salary. | |
Pause it again. How do you even do that? | ||
I'd love to hear him conclude how you... | ||
How do you conclude rent is capped at 20% of somebody's salary? | ||
Well, whose salary? The garbage man's salary? | ||
The CEO's salary? The homeless guy's salary? | ||
Your salary? Does it just change depending on who it is and then the rent for the apartment changes? | ||
Oh yeah, that makes sense. Do you understand how moronic these people are? | ||
They're destroying our country. | ||
Alright. It's just, this is just so crazy. | ||
What do you think Jamal Bowman knows about BlackRock buying up all the single-family homes? | ||
A win for Texas. | ||
Texas pulls $8.5 billion from BlackRock in stunning blow to ESG movement. | ||
Texas will not stand idly by as our financial future is attacked by Wall Street, said State Board of Education Chairman Aaron Kinsey. | ||
Now, look, this is good policy, but even I am so reluctant for any type of government expansion or oversight of anything in the private market. | ||
But it's like, if you want to tackle these issues, if you want to go after why the cost of a single-family home is going up, yeah, you look at these massive investment groups that buy up all the houses because the average American can't afford it. | ||
Or look at the taxes. | ||
People pay on their property taxes. | ||
Get rid of property taxes. That'll introduce a whole new realm of homeowners. | ||
But no, Jamal Bowman wants bigger government to control things. | ||
And I mean, it's just laced with propaganda after ignorance after propaganda. | ||
And it's just stunning. You want to know why our country is destroyed? | ||
It's because absolute morons like Jamal Bowman and AOC are in charge. | ||
And they think if they just have catchy slogans and evoke some sort of a cultural scar or pain like slavery, that it'll work. | ||
So let's go back to this moron, Jamal Fire Alarm Bowman. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. And as we rebuild our cities and as we rebuild our country to ensure that every single person has a home, we need to invest and pass the Green New Deal for public housing. | |
Have you seen public housing? | ||
How long does public housing usually last? | ||
In downtown St. | ||
Louis, this is where I grew up, spent a lot of time, I remember three or four public housing projects. | ||
And when they go up, I mean, I'm sure it's not the nicest stuff, but they look nice. | ||
Nice area. Very livable. | ||
Within 5-10 years, it's a dump. | ||
And why do you think that is? | ||
Because it's public housing. Nobody owns anything, so they don't care if it gets destroyed. | ||
Nobody's there making sure it's protected. | ||
It's nobody's private property, personal property. | ||
It's all public housing, so it just gets completely destroyed. | ||
Nobody has any respect or care. | ||
So it doesn't work. It might be a temporary solution. | ||
Most public housing is boarded up within a decade or two. | ||
But see, this is Jamal Bowman who thinks that the government has unlimited money and power and can solve everything when the truth is most of our problems actually come from big government. | ||
unidentified
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Continue. Issue of unemployment and underemployment. | |
It deals with the issue of the climate catastrophe that we are living in, and it deals with the issue of lack of affordable housing in our country. | ||
As the senator said, win-win-win. | ||
So what is affordable housing? | ||
When the government has control over pricing? | ||
What is affordable housing? | ||
When you have an organic free market, affordable housing, it's like we've done this math before. | ||
Why are houses so expensive? | ||
Because the banks get involved, they raise interest rates, property taxes go up. | ||
And then you have all these centralized groups like BlackRock that can buy up as many houses as they want because they have the capital. | ||
And then they can control the market and raise the price. | ||
So Jamal Bowman just comes in and says, well, we'll just, stuff can just be free. | ||
Well, that's not how the world works, Jamal. | ||
But I guess if you're Jamal Bowman and you can pull a fire alarm and get away with it, then maybe you do think that that's how the world works. | ||
Maybe if you're Jamal Bowman, that's how you think the world works. | ||
Alright. The Democrats are trying to seize Trump's assets. | ||
I thought this was a cool story from Eric Trump. | ||
Seven Springs, New York Estate. | ||
They're also trying to seize the Westchester Golf Course. | ||
The Democrats are just trying to steal everything from Trump. | ||
And they're trying to steal the Seven Springs, New York Estate from Trump. | ||
So here's a cool story about Eric Trump talking about it and how the Trumps were able to eventually purchase it | ||
unidentified
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This property was originally built in 1919 by Eugene Myers, obviously | |
Eugene Myers was on the board of the Federal Reserve. | ||
He owned the Washington Post. | ||
He was one of the wealthiest people in the world at the time. | ||
And really, he wanted to have the most opulent house in the world. | ||
That's really what he created here. | ||
How did your family end up with the property? | ||
What's the story? Well, the story was that after the Meyers had the family, they gave it to Yale University in trust. | ||
Yale University transferred it over to Rockefeller University, and we actually bought the property off of Rockefeller University. | ||
So, you know, one of the things my father's been amazing at is buying incredible houses, really, you know, one of a kind. | ||
Unparalleled. The level of wealth of those people who built those houses was second to none and they really fared no expense and he always went after those properties. | ||
They were always very lucky to him. | ||
They always attracted him as a builder. | ||
He was always mesmerized by them. | ||
How much time did you spend here growing up? | ||
We first bought the property in 96. | ||
I was about 12, 13 years old at the time and really my brother and I. You know, my father during the summers would always put us to work and we were literally riding mowers around. | ||
We were mowing all the fields, we were cutting down trees and it was probably the best experience of my life in that it was kind of the first lessons about development from my father. | ||
It really kind of taught me the building blocks of what we do every single day. | ||
what my job is today. | ||
How many rooms is this place? | ||
How many square feet? How many pools? | ||
Well, there's three pools. Great outdoor pool house. | ||
But there's 60 rooms in this house. | ||
There's 15 bedrooms. | ||
There's two servants' quarters, literally wings that go off the house that they originally built. | ||
You know, the library that we're in right now, as a guy who builds for a living, the casework, the trim, you know, the molding, the plaster molding, the ceilings, etc. | ||
I mean, just the level of finish. | ||
And I could walk around the house for, you know, days and just be enamored almost by the details. | ||
If you look at the indoor pool, there is no nicer marble job in the world. | ||
I mean, even the heating vents are recessed under three inches of marble with small little slits cut out of them to allow the heat through. | ||
Just a level of detail that you can never replicate again. | ||
Every room in this property, every room in this house is exceptional. | ||
He had an unlimited budget. | ||
There's probably no question that he exceeded it. | ||
You could never build a house like this today. | ||
But when you walk through and just the details you pick up, it's a very special place. | ||
Eric, tell us about these fabulous grounds. | ||
One of the things that makes this property so unique, really one of a kind, is 230 acres in Bedford, New York. | ||
There's no piece of land in Westchester, government or otherwise, that's even close to that size. | ||
I mean, we're one of the highest points in Westchester. | ||
We are the highest house in Westchester. | ||
That's Byram Lake. It's one of the major reservoirs that feed all of Westchester, but also feeds a lot of New York City. | ||
It's surrounded by 1,000 acres of wildlife preserve, so you're as excluded as you could possibly be. | ||
This isn't the only mansion on this 230 acres. | ||
Tell us what else is here. We're at the Myers residence right now, and then on the other side of the property is the H.J. Hines, the Hines Ketcha. | ||
Him and Myers, they were very good friends. | ||
They wanted to live right next to each other, so they built houses really at the same time. | ||
Two amazing entrepreneurs, two amazing families. | ||
That really changed in a big way the legacy of the United States, of corporate America. | ||
When the property was combined and ultimately given to Yale University, It was one property. | ||
It went over as one property. And you're building, right, on part of that 230, or is that outside of the 230? | ||
Well, a true Trump faction, we're always building. | ||
We're always renovating. And, you know, this house is something that's very special to us, so we put a lot of time and a lot of work into, you know, making it the best. | ||
It always was the best, and then we really put the Trump touch on it. | ||
And we have approvals to build 14 houses, whether we actually We'll see when and how and if we ultimately proceed with that plan. | ||
Would that mean an end, though, to your private 230-acre compound that you cherish since you were a little boy? | ||
It could, but who knows whether we'll do it and when we'll do it. | ||
It's nice to have the ability to do things, but this is a place that's really special to myself. | ||
It's really special to my brother, my father, really the whole family. | ||
This is really our compound. | ||
I've spent so much of my life here and I've spent so much time learning the art of the deal here on this property. | ||
It's a special place for me and one that I'll always remember and one that I'll always be very close to. | ||
♪♪♪ Watch the American Journal Weekday Mornings 8-11 Central at | ||
band.video Live from the Infowars.com studios, it's Alex Jones. | ||
The silent majority is no longer silent. | ||
This is The War Room with Owen Schroyer. | ||
Please stand by for further details. | ||
We return you now to your regularly scheduled program. | ||
Alright, the Democrats are at it again from dropping thousands of pages of trillions of dollars of omnibus bills in front of the Republicans to be signed today at 2.30 in the morning, mind you. From Jamal Fire Alarm Bowman thinking that the government is the solution to the problems when the government is the problem itself. | ||
And then they use their slogan, it's the Green New Deal, public housing, Black Lives Matter, LGBTQ pride. | ||
Like, that'll be their final conclusion of propaganda. | ||
Just shove it all into one thing, and you're like, wait, what are we talking about again? | ||
Well, they don't know. | ||
And when you ask them, they can't figure it out. | ||
So the Democrats send a high school student to be their expert witness to stop carbon emissions, and Senator Kennedy isn't buying it. | ||
What is carbon dioxide? | ||
unidentified
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I went to high school, but carbon dioxide is a gas. | |
Okay. I'm not a professional to talk about carbon dioxide so much. | ||
Well, you want us to abolish it, right? | ||
unidentified
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No. There's always going to be carbon dioxide. | |
Right. So what is it you want us to do? | ||
I... Let me back up, because I want to... | ||
This is a Democrat star witness, a high school graduate who's now a cross-country Olympian skier. | ||
unidentified
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I'm here as an expert cross-country skier who sees the changes in my winters and the landscape that I live in in Alaska. | |
He's been alive for about 20 years. | ||
What I see it as is, you know, it's a gas that exists in our atmosphere. | ||
Is it the major part of our atmosphere? | ||
unidentified
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It's a huge part of our atmosphere, yes. | |
It's actually a very small part of our atmosphere. | ||
unidentified
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Well, okay. But, yeah, I don't know. | |
What are you asking specifically? | ||
Well, you said we need to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. | ||
I'd like to know first if you know what it is. | ||
You want us to abolish fossil fuels? | ||
I never said that. You never have said that? | ||
No. Okay. What do you think we ought to do with fossil fuels? | ||
unidentified
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What will we do with fossil fuels? | |
Yeah. Should we make any changes? | ||
unidentified
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I would like to see a decrease in the use of fossil fuels. | |
I think there's a possibility to use more electric generation. | ||
Okay. Over what period of time? | ||
10 years, 50 years, 100 years? | ||
unidentified
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That's not... I would like to see it come as fast as possible while continuing... | |
How fast? Sorry? | ||
How fast? I don't have a good answer for that, no. | ||
Okay, you just think we ought to. | ||
How much will it cost for us to become carbon neutral in the United States by 2050? | ||
unidentified
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I'm not a professional on that. | |
I don't have an answer. You don't have any idea? | ||
No. You just think we ought to spend the money? | ||
unidentified
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I'm not an economist. | |
Yeah, but it's going to cost money. | ||
unidentified
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You realize that? Yeah, but we've also talked about the trade-off of what the cost of climate change as emergencies will cost in the future also. | |
Right. But it's going to cost... | ||
But that's an unknown....trillions of dollars to become carbon neutral by 20,050, right? | ||
unidentified
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I do not know. You don't know. | |
You just think we ought to do it. | ||
unidentified
|
I... I don't have a great answer for you, but I think... | |
If we spent those trillions of dollars and became carbon neutral by 2050 in the United States, which you advocate, how much will it reduce world temperatures? | ||
unidentified
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I don't have an answer for that. | |
You don't know? No. You think we ought to spend the money and then see what happens? | ||
unidentified
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I think, as an athlete, I think if we spend that money and invest in our future, hopefully those temperatures stop rising and maybe the snow at least stabilizes where it is for me. | |
But yeah, I don't think anyone knows for sure. | ||
I don't know anyway. Well, when my colleagues invite witnesses to come to us to tell us Advise us on passing legislation. | ||
Always check out the background of our witnesses. | ||
You know, maybe if this young gentleman had been skiing for 50,000 years and noticed a significant difference, then maybe we'd have something here. | ||
But isn't this just the case with every liberal leftist policy? | ||
They can't explain it. | ||
There's a bunch of I don't knows. | ||
And when they're actually pressed for answers, they don't have them. | ||
It's just magical unicorn land. | ||
unidentified
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We're winning. F*** you. | |
F*** you, New World Order. | ||
Bro, I don't think people really realize how pro-life we are. | ||
That's how you're going to start it. | ||
You're just going to come right out. | ||
Just full-on pro-life. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I'm a baby with every race. | |
The one... Oh, okay. | ||
You're going to go that toxic. The one thing that everybody loves to talk about the most. | ||
unidentified
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So, Harrison, I heard you used to work for the opposition, and you were Seth Meyers' right-hand man. | |
I mean, that was a long time ago. I'm not sure why you'd bring that up here. | ||
I feel like it's relevant. | ||
What about... I heard he used to work for the FBI as well. | ||
Is that what this is going to be like? | ||
I mean... Are you throwing these accusations? | ||
Did you guys know he was going to do this? | ||
unidentified
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Are they accusations? Yeah, they're accusations. | |
You're going to really ask me that? Yeah, did you see that? | ||
That's it. I'm out. I'm out. | ||
Seriously, dude. I'm out. Yeah, we're having this conversation. | ||
I know you told me you didn't want to have it. | ||
No, don't do it, dude. | ||
Dude, we have to get to the bottom of this. | ||
You didn't lie to me, bro. | ||
I didn't lie to you. You told me it wasn't going to come off. | ||
I know. We're recording. | ||
Let's do that. Wait, what did you say about vaccinated people? | ||
I just said that I can't be too comfortable because you guys are all unvaccinated and I'm just running a bunch of super spreaders. | ||
That's accusations, though. | ||
How do you know we're not vaccinated? | ||
Because it says InfoWars right there. | ||
That's scary. Oh, shit. | ||
They still don't understand that what we do here is real. | ||
And that's why the government says, oh, Owen Schroer isn't a journalist. | ||
He's a conspiracy theorist. | ||
Oh, I'm a conspiracy theorist, huh? | ||
I told you they would gag Donald Trump over a week ago. | ||
Here's the filing. You think this is a game? | ||
You think Owen Schroer's a conspiracy theorist? | ||
unidentified
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Sometimes there's a man. | |
A man who must stand for what's right. | ||
A man who must stand for the truth. | ||
That man is Owen Schroer. | ||
It's the InfoWars War Room. | ||
Here's your host, Owen Schroer. | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We have some legal updates for you. | ||
My attorney, Norm Pattis, is joining me now. | ||
And believe me, the headache that he has to go through for defending me is... | ||
It might be bigger than mine. | ||
It might be bigger than mine. | ||
But he's going to tell you... | ||
All about it. | ||
But before I bring Norm in, again, I want to reiterate that we are in some very uncharted waters here at Infowars as a company. | ||
We are in even uncharted waters, I think, individuals, citizens of this country, obviously myself as an example, dealing with our free speech under attack, dealing with political persecution and incarceration. | ||
Really, not too many people, if any, have gone through it like we have at Infowars. | ||
And because of all the different attacks that we're under, I have had to ask this audience for help many times over the years, and you've always come through. | ||
You've always come through. | ||
And quite frankly, it gets more difficult at each stage of this process. | ||
It gets more difficult, and yet... | ||
The audience has always come through. | ||
So I cannot express how grateful I am for that because when I go through this latest stage of my legal fight and I see what InfoWars and what Alex has had to go through, believe me folks, a lot of times it'd be easy to just lay down that sword and shield and just say, just can't do it anymore. | ||
Taking too many hacks, bleeding out, I'm tired, I'm done. | ||
But we never do. We never will because we realize it's much bigger than us. | ||
And so my case is bigger than me personally. | ||
At this stage in the game, quite frankly, it'd be a lot easier and less of a headache and a lot less expensive for me to just walk away. | ||
I'll finish my year of probation. | ||
No problem. Whatever. | ||
You know, all the different violations they have against me in the process. | ||
It's fine. I can deal with it for another year. | ||
It's a small headache to deal with in the larger scheme of things. | ||
But this isn't about me. This is about political persecution. | ||
This is about the attack on the First Amendment and the attack on free speech where future Americans, journalists, can be charged, sentenced, and incarcerated for their political speech. | ||
And so my attorney, Norm Pattis, joins me now. | ||
Norm, you've been with me through this entire, hard to believe now, five-year fight since 2019. | ||
The Democrats are still holding a grudge against me from 2019. | ||
We've decided to take my case to the Supreme Court. | ||
Norm Pattis. Yeah, you know, Owen, it's hard to believe it has been five years. | ||
It was in March of 2019 that I got to meet all of you. | ||
And, you know, I didn't know a lot about Infowars beforehand. | ||
I've learned a bunch. I've stood by you all through any number of storms, and some of those storms have cost me tremendously. | ||
You know, as I sit here talking to you now, my law license is potentially under suspension as a result of decisions made in one of Alex's cases. | ||
We've taken an appeal to the Connecticut Appellate Court, and we're awaiting a ruling. | ||
I walk into the office every day not knowing whether I'm going to get a six-month vacation or not. | ||
So that's stressful. | ||
But what's more stressful to me, frankly, is what's going on in this country and what happened to you in your January 6th prosecution. | ||
You know, you appeared at the Stop the Steal rally in Washington, D.C. on January 26th, rather—on January 6th, 2021. | ||
And your purpose was to protest the electoral results. | ||
Your purpose was to put pressure on Congress to buy some more time to investigate. | ||
You were inspired, I believe, by no less a person than Donald Trump. | ||
Now, whether—who was then President of the United States—whether the election was stolen or not, you know, I'm not a student of that game. | ||
I personally don't think it was, but I do think there were legitimate reasons for people to raise concerns, given the effect of the pandemic and the way polling regulations were changed. | ||
One thing is certain, though, whether you were right or whether you were wrong, in my view, you have an absolute unfettered constitutional right to petition for redress of grievances, to peacefully assemble, and to speak your mind. | ||
It's not the government's role to determine what the truth is. | ||
It's the people's role to tell the government the truth they want the government to respond to. | ||
So on January 6th, you and others were gathered outside the ellipse as the president spoke. | ||
There was some confusion on the national mall. | ||
There was some confusion about what the president's intentions were, and a group of you headed down to the Capitol. | ||
While at the Capitol, you entered grounds, meaning you went onto the lawn and onto the steps of the Capitol building. | ||
In your case, in an effort to persuade the crowd to stand down, not to engage in violence, because violence is exactly what your critics would have wanted you to engage in so that you could be impugned. | ||
Your integrity attacked, your motives maligned, which is precisely what's happened in the four years since, or three and a half years since. | ||
You were identified on the steps and arrested and charged, in effect, with trespass, entering or remaining on Capitol grounds when you were not authorized to do so. | ||
Trespass is an offense that says a person goes into an area knowing they have no authority to do so. | ||
That's really all it was, a misdemeanor. | ||
You pled guilty to that. | ||
We raised various legal defenses, but as a pragmatic gesture, wanted to avoid the risk of trial and the risk of facing a D.C. jury and potentially going to jail. | ||
So we cut a deal with the government where you would get a sentence of up to, I believe, six months. | ||
It was our understanding that the government was not going to look for jail time. | ||
And the case would be over. | ||
You would have accepted responsibility, as lawyers like to say, and we'd move on. | ||
In the years since January 6, 2021, the Justice Department has politicized the event to such a degree that now they've demonized every participant and are threatening hundreds more arrests. | ||
Now, think about this, Alan. | ||
After the Civil War in the 19th century, when 600,000 Americans were killed, three years after the Civil War, almost all the rebels were repatriated. | ||
Three and a half years later, we're still prosecuting people for misdemeanors, with more prosecutions to come. | ||
The government has become, in a sense, afraid of the people, and is using these prosecutions, I think, to send the message to avoid dissent. | ||
In any case, you enter your plea. | ||
We go to sentencing. | ||
And before sentencing, something extraordinary occurred. | ||
The government used protected speech of yours, speech that under the Constitution, in my opinion, you have every right to utter. | ||
You know, 1776, death to traitors. | ||
You can express your opinions about public events, right, wrong, or otherwise, so long as you don't violate other laws. | ||
There's no such thing as a crime of misinformation or disinformation. | ||
Yet, in its sentencing memorandum, asking the judge to put you in jail, the government said you spread electoral misinformation or disinformation. | ||
The government said that you chanted as you went to the Capitol that day. | ||
The government said that thereafter, you continued to justify your conduct. | ||
My response to that was all, frankly, probably not what you'd want me to say on the air with a family-centered content. | ||
But it was B.S. And, you know, you have every right to say the things you said. | ||
And what you said sheds no light on an element of the offense. | ||
That is entering a property without permission to do so. | ||
And I draw that distinction because your case is distinct from the Proud Boys case. | ||
Some of your viewers may know that I represented Joe Biggs in the Proud Boys seditious conspiracy trial in Washington, a trial that went on for some five and a half months last year. | ||
In that case, the government used speech that was otherwise protected to shed light on the defendants, Mr. | ||
Biggs and others, state of mind and intention when they committed the acts that the government said constituted a crime. | ||
In that case, there was at least an argument for the relevancy of otherwise protected speech. | ||
And we persuaded the trial judge to give a limiting instruction to the jury to warn the jury that they could not use protected speech as proof of criminal intent unless it directly flowed into the conduct. | ||
I don't remember the exact words. | ||
In your case, there was none of that. | ||
So we asked the judge to disregard the government's use of protected speech and to sentence due to no incarceration. | ||
In its sentencing remarks, the government adopted some of the government's arguments, in two instances saying that it was relying on what the government had to say in imposing a sentence of 60 days to serve. | ||
And so what we think what happened in this case was shocking. | ||
We think what happened in this case was that the United States government chose to seek incarceration of you, sought to enhance a penalty because of words you spoke that you had every right to speak, and that this case sends a chilling message across the criminal justice community or to the criminal justice community. | ||
So we filed an appeal in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and the government moved to dismiss it. | ||
It moved to dismiss it because your plea agreement said you would not take an appeal if you were sentenced to six months or fewer. | ||
And you were. So on its face, that argument made sense. | ||
But when you look at the law, it makes no sense. | ||
Because you always have a right to appeal a substantively unreasonable sentence. | ||
And our claim was that using the First Amendment's protected speech as a sentencing enhancement factor was wrong. | ||
So wrong that it didn't matter what the plea cap was with regard to your plea agreement. | ||
The government moved to file the motion to dismiss. | ||
We went ahead and filed our complete brief right off the bat to make sure The D.C. Circuit knew what the stakes were. | ||
Months later, the D.C. Circuit granted the government's motion to dismiss, and so we will soon be filing in the United States Supreme Court a petition for certiorari. | ||
That is, Owen, we're taking your case to the highest court in the land, and we're saying to that court, do something. | ||
We've got a Justice Department that is quite literally out of control. | ||
We've got a Justice Department that believes it is justified in using protected speech to call for imprisonment. | ||
And unless something is done to limit this, God only knows where it's going to go. | ||
And I'm hopeful in your case because about a year ago, the Supreme Court decided a very significant case, the so-called counterman versus Colorado case involving true threats. | ||
And what it said is that one of the problems with criminalization of speech is its tendency to chill speech, its tendency to inhibit people, its tendency to frighten people and to keep them from speaking out. | ||
We think that under Colorado v. | ||
Counterman, or Counterman v. | ||
Colorado, I don't remember which way the names broke as I sit here right now. | ||
We think that the language in that case will invite the court to consider yours, and we will file your petition either late next week or early the following week. | ||
Well, that's a great breakdown, and I think that it's important to emphasize that the U.S. government is arguing that my speech, which not even speech from January 6th, folks, not even speech from the Capitol grounds. | ||
I mean, yeah, they said that I'm a criminal for chanting 1776 while I was at the Capitol, but they quoted speech from this show that Having nothing to do with January 6th before and after January 6th. | ||
Me attacking Joe Biden, me talking about election theft and other such things. | ||
And they used that as a reason to sentence me to prison. | ||
And the judge went along with it and agreed. | ||
And so we're sitting here saying what we will be saying to the Supreme Court is that protected speech cannot be used as an enhancement when it comes to sentencing. | ||
And if I'm saying this wrong, Norm, you can correct me. | ||
No, I think you're dead right. | ||
But I want to let the audience know this, too. | ||
Let me amplify something you're saying, Owen. | ||
If protected speech can be used to amplify a sentence or as an aggravated factor as a court considers sentencing, then you're one step closer to the line that says a person can be prosecuted for protected speech. | ||
And unless you think that I'm I'm suffering from some sort of paranoid delusion. | ||
You know, I remind you that just this week a case was argued in the Supreme Court involving the government's threats to internet providers, internet purveyors of information, to keep certain ideas off the air or they would suffer consequences of one form or another. | ||
You know, and some people have ridiculed that litigation. | ||
It's ridiculous saying that private entities aren't state actors, and therefore the First Amendment, which applies only to state actors, is the wrong tool here. | ||
But if our government is going to take the position that it possesses the truth, if our government is going to take the position that it possesses the truth and can compel others to speak only the truth, we've lost something fundamental in this country. | ||
And that is a step, in my opinion, toward totalitarianism. | ||
You know, ours is a government of limited powers, and it's met that way by design. | ||
You know, I'm teaching a class on common law right now, and I just had a chance to reread the Youngstown steel decision. | ||
This was a decision in 1952, I believe, or in the 1950s. | ||
Not a great teacher, as you can see. | ||
But it involves President Eisenhower's seizure of the steel mills in a strike during the Korean War. | ||
His justification was we needed to keep the mills open in support of our war effort. | ||
The question presented to the court was, did he have the authority to do that? | ||
Where does the authority to seize property come from? | ||
And the court held it does not inhere in the executive branch, and that President Eisenhower, notwithstanding his motives to prosecute the war, notwithstanding his interest in national security, notwithstanding his desire to take care that the laws of the United States be faithfully executed, He exceeded his authority. | ||
And the importance of that decision is as follows. | ||
Our government was not designed for the sake of efficiency. | ||
Our government was not designed to consolidate power in few hands. | ||
We defused power by means of the separation of powers doctrine and by way of the federalism doctrine so that too much power would not inhere in one set of hands. | ||
And why did we do that? | ||
We did that because there's a value in inefficiency. | ||
It makes room for liberty. | ||
And it makes room for freedom of individual people. | ||
And we have a high tolerance for inefficiency and mistakes in the United States. | ||
Now, in the Youngstown Steel decision, it's a sort of startling decision in some respects because, you know, the shutdown of the steel mills could have impeded the war effort. | ||
But the justices at that point said that the American way of life, the American way of life that was being fought for in the Korean War was imperiled by a president who seized too much power. | ||
Our view is the Justice Department, with respect to January 6th, is doing precisely that. | ||
Our view is that in your case, the effort to enhance or use as an aggravating factor prohibited speech placed the government in the position of licensing or saying what can and cannot be said and thought in the United States. | ||
And if there is a doctrine worth fighting for in a court of law, if there's a doctrine we're leading for on the streets, if there's a doctrine worth going to war for, as we did against Britain, you know, when we declared our independence, it is freedom of speech. | ||
So I could not I'd be happier that you've stuck with me all these years and you're giving me this opportunity to take this very, very important case to the United States Supreme Court. | ||
In my professional life, much so I get tired of it from time to time, I've gotten old practicing law. | ||
There is no place I would rather be in this fight, Owen, than standing right next to you. | ||
And I'd like to thank you and your viewers for making that possible. | ||
Well, and that's how I feel about it, too. | ||
I want to explain something to the audience here because when I was talking to Norm about this, and I want to be careful how I say this because people that want to catch us in slipping up or, you know, let's just say the enemies are watching all the time. | ||
Since 2019, When I was originally brought in, actually I was brought into the Sandy Hook cases, and then I was brought into court for disrupting the impeachment hearing. | ||
Then I was arrested again with a piece of tape over my mouth. | ||
Then we had to defend myself against the IRS. So we're talking about five different instances here where Norm has been my attorney. | ||
And through those years, this audience has come through in great ways. | ||
We've raised just north of $100,000 for my legal defense. | ||
And again, my gratitude cannot be expressed. | ||
Now, as of today, and again, I want to be careful how I talk about this. | ||
I've had to start a new legal fundraiser account. | ||
Because of some developments. And thank you, by the way. | ||
We really appreciate it. | ||
Electricity's expensive in New England. | ||
Well, and now, Norm, as you were... | ||
Folks, my attorney just has to go to court to defend himself just so he can defend me. | ||
I mean, that's how crazy this is now. | ||
My attorney has to defend himself just so he can defend me. | ||
That's how insane this is. | ||
But because of some other legal circumstances and some other things that are going on, I've now had to start a brand new fundraiser. | ||
So we have a new URL, a new Give, Send, Go. | ||
We've just launched it today. | ||
Send Owen to the Supreme Court. | ||
Owendefense.com. | ||
Owendefense.com. | ||
And all the details are on there. | ||
Send Owen to the Supreme Court. | ||
Now, again, when I'm talking to Norm about this, Norm is a lot more long in the tooth than I am. | ||
Yeah, you can say that again. | ||
And so, but he's like, look, Owen, here's the circumstances. | ||
Here's what I'm going through on the daily basis. | ||
Here's what this is going to look like going to the Supreme Court. | ||
It's the fourth quarter now. | ||
It's time for us to make the filings and make decisions. | ||
And then I had to do some other stuff in the background to see what we need to do for legal defense and funding. | ||
And we got it all done. | ||
OwenDefense.com. | ||
But again, it would be easier. | ||
And I'll let Norm speak for himself here because I agree. | ||
I echo the sentiments of Norm. | ||
I want to defend the First Amendment. | ||
I want to defend free speech. | ||
I want to, in my view, quite frankly, save this country from authoritarian tyrants. | ||
But it'd be a lot easier for Norm to ride off into the sunset and just say, oh, and we've got through the worst of it. | ||
Let's just let this go. | ||
Complete your probation. You'll be fine. | ||
And I could do the same thing. | ||
But this isn't about Owen. | ||
This is truly a First Amendment case. | ||
This is truly a free speech case. | ||
This is truly a precedent-setting case. | ||
And unfortunately, Norm, and I'm going to... | ||
We aired some of these clips earlier this week. | ||
I'm going to air some more coming up. | ||
Just like we predicted outside the courtroom, just like I predicted on Tim Pool and other shows, immediately after they sentenced me, they sentenced three other journalists for journalistic activity on January 6th, immediately, and now they're going after other people for social media posts that they don't like. | ||
So unfortunately, the precedent was set with me to go after other Americans. | ||
We want to reverse that at the Supreme Court level. | ||
That's the goal. And, you know, as I say, we'll be filing, you know, I'm about halfway done with the petition, and I'm hoping to get it filed at the end of next week. | ||
I've got a trial starting the following week, so that'd be a good window. | ||
But we've got five or six weeks to get it in. | ||
And, you know, the goal is to get the Supreme Court to bite. | ||
The goal is, you know, a petition for certiorari is discretionary, meaning the court doesn't have to grant the writ. | ||
It can decline to hear the case. | ||
But we think, given the importance of the counterman decision, given some of the rulings in other J-6 cases, including the obstruction of official proceeding statute, we filed a successful statutory petition in that, although the argument was given to another lawyer. | ||
We think that given the court's sensitivity to what's going on in D.C. with respect to the First Amendment on January 6th, this is the right time for that brief. | ||
And so, folks, if you can help out, we'd appreciate it. | ||
Our firm has been devastated by the January 6th things. | ||
We signed on to the Joe Biggs trial. | ||
With the expectation that legal fees would be crowdsourced. | ||
And after five and a half months of trial, I don't think more money came in than was needed to cover my Airbnb. | ||
So we took an enormous hit there. | ||
And, you know, Owen, I'm grateful that you're asking your listeners for more money because, candidly, I'm not going to say I'm selling pencils on the corner, but I've got people to pay, bills to pay, and commitments to make. | ||
And your viewers help us to stay in this fight. | ||
So thank you very much, Owen, and thank you very much to your listeners. | ||
Well, and I know we've had discussions. | ||
We don't need to air all this stuff, but folks, I'm telling you, Let me just put it like this. | ||
As I said, my lawyer has to defend himself just to be my lawyer. | ||
He literally has to go to court just to maintain his legal license. | ||
That's the level of attacks that he's under. | ||
And you can only imagine some of the other stuff that's going on behind the scene. | ||
But again, you understand this. | ||
I understand this. This isn't about us, Norm. | ||
We're honored to take this case. | ||
We're moving forward for victory. | ||
And truly, this is going to be a precedent-setting case. | ||
I mean, imagine if the justice system thinks that they can start incarcerating people and sentencing people for speech, Norm. | ||
I mean, can you imagine how dangerous this is? | ||
I can, because we're on the cusp of it. | ||
It's beginning to happen now. | ||
There are serious discussions about creating federal regulations on information so that the feds can shut down disinformation. | ||
They don't like what you say. | ||
They hit the kill switch. | ||
First they kill the idea, then they kill the person who bears the idea. | ||
OwenDefense.com. | ||
OwenDefense.com. Ladies and gentlemen, you want me and Norm defending free speech at the Supreme Court? | ||
OwenDefense.com. | ||
That's what we're going to do. | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen, so you can imagine trying to bear down and stick your head into all this news when you're dealing with heavy legal stuff like that, but you want to be in the info war? | ||
It's a long way to the top if you want to rock and roll. | ||
So, my attorney departs from us now. | ||
You know, there was some other news I wanted to get into with him, but he had to bounce like... | ||
Again, though, but this is why it's so important here. | ||
This is why saving free speech in America is so important, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is from theglobalmail.com. | ||
This is a Canadian publication. | ||
Excessive free speech is a breeding ground for more Trumps. | ||
Excessive free speech is a breeding ground for more Trumps. | ||
In other words, if you have freedom of speech, you might get to choose who you elect. | ||
If you have freedom of speech, you might also have freedom of choice when it comes to an election. | ||
We can't have that. | ||
We can't have that. | ||
And this individual from Canada is celebrating the fact that a Supreme Court justice would question the First Amendment. | ||
And you know, it's amazing going through these things. | ||
And look, I've studied, truly, I've been a student, Of broadcast media from a very personal perspective, really since I was a child, actually. | ||
But I mean really studious in my 20s and now my 30s. | ||
So I've watched how certain people deal with things. | ||
I've watched how Alex Jones deals with some things. | ||
And I study that. | ||
And I weigh that. | ||
And I gotta make decisions. | ||
Like... Is it wise for me to go on air like I did... | ||
When were we covering the Katenji Brown-Jackson stuff, guys? | ||
Was it this week? Last week? | ||
Everything's just a blur nowadays. | ||
Is it wise for me to go on air and blast Katenji Brown-Jackson for two straight days when it's likely I'll be at the Supreme Court Arguing my free speech case facing Katenji Brown Jackson sometime this year. | ||
Is that wise for me to do that? | ||
Well, you could say Katenji Brown Jackson is a Supreme Court justice. | ||
She certainly understands her role. | ||
She's non-biased. | ||
She's not going to let your commentary affect her decision when it comes to this free speech case. | ||
Now, do you believe that? | ||
Do you think that's true? | ||
So is it wise for me? | ||
Is it wise for me? | ||
To attack the Supreme Court justice that might be hearing my case and it might sway her opinion, but she's supposed to be neutral. | ||
She swore an oath. Do you believe that? | ||
Do you think she believes that? | ||
D.C. U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves threatens to seek more prison time for January Sixers if Supreme Court reverses obstruction statute this summer. | ||
I told you Matthew Graves had nothing to do with any of this stuff. | ||
I told you guys to not worry about Matthew Graves. | ||
He has nothing to do with any of this political persecution. | ||
Nothing at all. | ||
Pressuring the Supreme Court, threatening more prison time for the opposition of the Democrat Party. | ||
Totally normal stuff. | ||
Totally normal stuff. | ||
You want to see something crazy? | ||
New York Attorney General moves to seize Trump's Westchester golf course. | ||
They're trying to steal everything Trump owns, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
So you'll see more headlines like this. | ||
They want to steal everything that he owns. | ||
What is this big case? | ||
Maybe Trump has $200 million to pay to that phony E. Jean Carroll who walks out of the courtroom smiling like the Cheshire cat and then brags how she's going to spend Trump's money. | ||
Maybe he has $200 million, but does he have $600 million to pay all these fines that they are forcing on him? | ||
And where does this derive from? | ||
Trump lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago. | ||
So he owes $500 million. | ||
Trump lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago. | ||
Or defrauded who? | ||
Nobody. He defrauded nobody. | ||
So even if he did lie, then the banks would have to sue, but the banks didn't. | ||
You had a corrupt Attorney General, Letitia James, who campaigned that she'll go after Trump politically if she gets elected. | ||
She gets elected. She goes after Trump politically. | ||
They find the right judge. | ||
Who goes along for the ride and then he commits fraud against Donald Trump and says Mar-a-Lago is worth $18 million. | ||
So that's Trump's supposed crime that's about to bring him to financial ruin if the Democrats have their way. | ||
He lied about Mar-a-Lago's value being $18 million. | ||
So listen to what they said on CNN. This is truly nuts. | ||
If you start to hear the Twilight Zone music behind you, that's just, it's on a constant loop now. | ||
So CNN is weighing this potential that Donald Trump might not be able to afford a $500 million bond. | ||
He might not have the liquid assets, and depending on how he's levered, who knows what he can liquidate in enough time to pay this bond. | ||
You know, tough stuff to liquidate all your assets like that. | ||
But there is one thing he might be able to unload quickly to pay this bond. | ||
unidentified
|
And what might that be, we ask CNN. You need at least 30 days to get any of these properties sold. | |
But the property that you alluded to, Mar-a-Lago, potentially, that could be something that could be sold quickly. | ||
I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions, and I think there could be a buyer for something like that. | ||
And that would be... | ||
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! | ||
Record scratch. Play that again? | ||
unidentified
|
Quickly, I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions, and I think there could be... | |
No, no, no. Wait, no, no, no, no. | ||
Stop it, stop it. I'm not hearing it, guys. | ||
From the top, please. I'm not... | ||
Something isn't... Hold on. | ||
I'm not hearing it. | ||
I'm not hearing it. Hold on. Can I get that again? | ||
unidentified
|
You need at least 30 days to get any of these properties sold. | |
But the property that you alluded to, Mar-a-Lago, potentially, that could be something that could be sold quickly. | ||
I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions, and I think there could be a bias for something like that. | ||
And that would be, literally, if you're talking about doing that between now and Monday, that's picking up the phone, calling someone, and then literally writing a check. | ||
Yeah, I mean, there could be plenty of international people who want to buy that property. | ||
For how much? And there's properties that are priced at $150 and $200 million that are nearby that. | ||
And Palm Beach is like the Nvidia of real estate. | ||
It's just shot up like a rocket. | ||
And people do want to live there. | ||
They've moved there. So I think that would be the best case scenario. | ||
As to property, if he's trying to sell quickly, I would encourage that. | ||
So, all right, now that's 240 million estimated. | ||
I mean, who knows? You know, he's a desperate seller. | ||
In this case, someone picks up the phone and makes that call this week. | ||
week. So I don't know what it would be. That's still past of what it would be. | ||
I'm just trying to figure out what it would be. Now imagine in that conversation. | ||
By the way, guys, we need to... | ||
We're going to do something special with that clip. | ||
I'll give the cues during the break. | ||
But imagine... | ||
You're CNN, Erin Burnett, out front with her legal guest. | ||
And you just did that whole segment talking about how Mar-a-Lago is actually probably worth at least $250 million. | ||
And ladies and gentlemen, it didn't even register in their head... | ||
That the entire reason he has this bond is because a judge said it was only worth $18 million. | ||
And it didn't even click. | ||
They didn't even realize it. They just had the whole conversation and they didn't even put two and two together. | ||
We're going to stick with this. | ||
We're not done with this. | ||
This is stunning stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
The answer to 1984 is 1776. | |
Info Wars has been banned, arrested, | ||
attacked and threatened because we are effective. | ||
you The Great Awakening is here. | ||
Go to band.video. | ||
Download the videos and share. | ||
Support the Information War at infowarstore.com. | ||
and never give up the fight. | ||
Fight. | ||
Alright, just a little late getting back to the desk here. | ||
I'm running around like a madman. | ||
Like a little tyrant here ordering the crew to do this. | ||
Because that clip is so rich. | ||
It's like richer than Donald Trump. | ||
I mean, that is just insane. | ||
It's just totally insane. | ||
But I can't tell, like, what is the craziest part about this? | ||
Is it that everybody knows that Mar-a-Lago is worth more than $18 million? | ||
Or is it that They can't even put two and two together that it's the judge that's committing fraud against Donald Trump. | ||
Where is the disconnect here? | ||
Where is the... I mean, seriously, what is this? | ||
How do you explain this? Let's roll this clip again. | ||
This is truly a modern marvel. | ||
This is... This 60-second CNN clip is truly the eighth wonder of the world. | ||
So everybody knows Mar-a-Lago is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and they're here talking about the Trump case trying to financially destroy him because somebody lied and said Mar-a-Lago is worth $18 million, and here they are trying to figure out how Trump can come up with $500 million, and they're saying he should sell Mar-a-Lago, which is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, but the only reason he owes half a billion dollars is because somebody lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And these two ladies on CNN, They can't... | ||
They don't even have the intellectual synapses, the brain synapses firing. | ||
They don't even have the connections. | ||
It's like... Seriously, it's like these are somehow two totally isolated things in their mind, and they can't even connect the two. | ||
It's like, oh yeah, Trump lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago, and so he has to pay $500 million. | ||
But he could get $500 million by selling Mar-a-Lago because it's actually worth that much. | ||
And they can't even connect the two. | ||
So we're actually going to do something special with this clip. | ||
But this is so rich. | ||
I'm just... It's incredible. | ||
I'm just truly in awe. | ||
This is a psychological, intellectual wander here. | ||
Truly, this needs to be studied. | ||
This truly needs to be studied. | ||
I really think there is something broke in their brains here. | ||
I don't know how else to explain this. | ||
Because they seem completely innocuous and innocent covering this. | ||
They really cannot connect the two things. | ||
They literally cannot connect the two things. | ||
They do not get it. | ||
unidentified
|
Play the clip. You need at least 30 days to get any of these properties sold. | |
But the property that you alluded to, Mar-a-Lago, potentially, that could be something that could be sold quickly. | ||
I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions. | ||
And I think there could be a buyer for something like that. | ||
And that would be, literally, if you're talking about doing that between now and Monday, that's picking up the phone, calling someone, and then literally writing a check. | ||
Yeah, I mean, there could be plenty of international people who want to buy that property. | ||
I mean, there's properties that are priced at $150 and $200 million that are nearby that. | ||
And Palm Beach is like the Nvidia of real estate. | ||
It's just shot up like a rocket. | ||
And people do want to live there. | ||
They've moved there. So I think that would be the best case scenario. | ||
As to property, if he's trying to sell quickly, I would encourage that. | ||
So, all right. Now, that's $240 million estimated. | ||
I mean, who knows? You know, he's a desperate seller. | ||
In this case, someone picks up the phone and makes that call this week. | ||
So I don't know what it'd be. That's still half of what it would be. | ||
Truly amazing stuff. | ||
And not either one of them can figure out that the judge is the one that lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago as they're talking about the fine Trump owes because he allegedly lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago saying it's worth hundreds of millions of dollars but then they admit it's worth hundreds of millions of dollars and that's how he can pay his fine about the judge that lied about the value of Mar-a-Lago. | ||
Okay. Yeah. | ||
We're having fun. We're having fun. | ||
unidentified
|
Boy, oh boy. That is just... | |
That is a spectacle. That is truly a spectacle of the liberal mind. | ||
Um... Does this mean we can go squat at Mar-a-Lago or maybe I can go squat at Trump Tower? | ||
Are there any rich Democrats that have mansions in Martha's Vineyard that we can go squat at and steal their property because that's what their policies are doing now? | ||
This is wild stuff. Remember that story yesterday? | ||
We were talking about that woman with the squatter and she gets arrested. | ||
It's even crazier as more information and footage is being revealed here. | ||
Not only does she get arrested for trying to kick the squatter out of her house, it turns out the squatter is renting out her house, making thousands of dollars renting out a house that's not even his. | ||
This is crazy. Here's more footage from that incident. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not a squatter. | |
I don't even know what that word means. | ||
You know, I'm a Marine. | ||
I was in a Marine. Blah, blah, blah. | ||
This is not my style. | ||
I'm gonna call the real estate company and go meet with him right now. | ||
Matter of fact, as I get- What are you gonna tell them, the real estate company? | ||
How would you bring me into this? | ||
Hey, how's it going? I'm Kevin Sheehan from the New York Post. | ||
And we just wanted to know, what is at the heart of the dispute between you and the titled owner of this house? | ||
There seems to be some kind of irreconcilable difference of opinion of who owns the house. | ||
So I'm just wondering, what can you tell us about your side of the story? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, you know what? | ||
unidentified
|
We're just waiting on the lawyer. | |
What's wrong? | ||
That's the only thing I got. | ||
We're pretty much waiting on the lawyer. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So Jay, you said you were scammed into living there. | ||
That's what happened. Yeah, what happened? | ||
We haven't heard this before. So, this story just gets even weirder and weirder. | ||
Now, the bottom line doesn't change. | ||
You have these squatters' rights, which are basically just property theft rights. | ||
It shouldn't even exist. | ||
It's just insane. But I think that this story might go a little deeper now with this confusion. | ||
Now, we've had guests on Infowars who have talked about this. | ||
You may have heard even commercials that talk about title defense. | ||
So if you own your home, there's basically this new insurance that's a title defense is what they call it. | ||
Because scammers have found a way to forge documents and forge housing deeds, title deeds. | ||
And they can basically just recreate this stuff and then sell your house, claim they own your house, rent your house out, take out equity in your house. | ||
And so this has kind of been this kind of quiet but big issue that's been going on because not that many people have been affected by it. | ||
But I wonder if that is not the case here. | ||
Because this guy who's like squatter, I don't know what that is. | ||
I mean, he might have been fooled. | ||
But how do you have a situation? | ||
So you have somebody who probably is falsely owning the house, then falsely leasing the house to an individual, who's then renting out rooms to other people, and then the homeowner shows up and says, what the hell is going on here? | ||
And the homeowner gets arrested. | ||
It's truly wild stuff. | ||
But I think that... Based off of that phone call that you just heard with the New York Post reporter, whoever that supposed house owner of the house is, they seem like they... | ||
They seem like they're up to no good. | ||
And so there's the new headline. | ||
Suspected squatter in $1 million New York City home is subletting space and bizarre twist... | ||
Says he was conned. | ||
So it looks like that's what's going on here. | ||
It looks like you have a title deed fraud and then the people committing the title deed fraud are leasing the house out and then the person who's leasing it from them is renting out rooms and the homeowner has no idea any of this is going on. | ||
And So it might not be a squatter's rights issue. | ||
It could end up being a different issue. | ||
But that issue still stands. | ||
And by the way, we got some other news on that coming out of Seattle. | ||
We'll talk about that. The land of free stuff! | ||
Lollipops and liberals and unicorns and Democrats. | ||
Alright, this story here just keeps getting crazier and crazier. | ||
Here's a couple more breaking headlines here from today. | ||
Two squatters who took over New York City home of woman found beaten to death, stuffed in duffel bag, sought for murder, according to the cops. | ||
Okay. DA's office fails to get into $1 million New York City squatter home as another resident emerges and declares, I'm renting. | ||
So again, in that case, it looks like, I would say, a title deed fraud where somebody has forged a title document to the house and is then leasing it out illegally, fraudulently. | ||
And that's why the guy's like, hey, I got conned here. | ||
And then he's just subletting rooms. | ||
And in this case, with the people in a duffel bag, I mean, that sounds like gang activity. | ||
And we know there's a lot of that coming over the Biden open border. | ||
Folks, understand, there are... | ||
It's like, I can go on YouTube and search, like, you know, how to change my oil or how to clean out an air duct or something. | ||
You can go on these social media platforms, specifically TikTok, Probably YouTube now. | ||
In fact, guys, go ahead and plug it in on YouTube. | ||
You can go into these social media platforms. | ||
You can search, like, how to engage in title deed theft or how to gain squatters' rights and take somebody's house. | ||
Like, it's all over, and people are figuring it out, and they're taking advantage of this stuff. | ||
I mean, it's just total madness. | ||
It's just the total clown world. | ||
There's WikiHow, December 2nd, 2023. | ||
Yeah. I mean, but it's protected by law. | ||
A title deed fraud, that's a crime. | ||
These squatters' rights, there's laws that protect you. | ||
I mean, what are you going to have to do? | ||
You're going to have to find, there's going to be a, if this doesn't change, there's going to be a new business endeavor called like, House squat or something, and people just hire you to squat at the house so that you make sure nobody actually squats at the house. | ||
Or like, you'll have to pay somebody to be a quote-unquote squatter so that no squatters come and steal your house, but they work for you. | ||
Jeez. But one squatter in Seattle, and they're all Democrat-run areas, one squatter in Seattle is being publicly shamed by his community in clip nine. | ||
unidentified
|
Get out. It's my house. | |
Just pay the rent to the guy. | ||
I am going to. And I'm making, you know, he doesn't understand this, you know, system here in state. | ||
Get out, call men! | ||
Get out, call men! | ||
How is the Korean community interpreting what's happening here? | ||
They are not aware of this. | ||
They're usually a landlord or hardworking business people. | ||
They would never imagine A Korean descendant taking advantage of this poor, broken system like this and embarrassed not only his family, but the entire community. | ||
So I was chanting, if you're not gonna pay, you shouldn't stay there. | ||
And I also called them out as a con man. | ||
Sagi-kun. Sagi-kun means con man in Korean. | ||
What this is going to do is I'm going to provide a high resolution picture of them and ask | ||
all the Korean medias to post this on their newsletter and online website and actually | ||
have them get famous. | ||
Every restaurant he goes, every Korean restaurant he goes, every Korean market he goes, so everybody | ||
recognizes him. | ||
That way he's not only just embarrassed to move out of that place, but move out of the | ||
state once and for all. | ||
Wow, Asian culture for the win there. | ||
Shaming this guy publicly, saying he's an embarrassment to our community. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
You want to be a squatter? | ||
You want to be a thief? You want to be a lazy, good-for-nothing bum? | ||
You should be shamed. You know, we probably should bring public shaming back even. | ||
It's part of this political correctness cancer that's destroying us. | ||
Public shaming, a little public shaming can actually go a long way. | ||
Maybe it's time to bring back public shaming. | ||
I'll tell you what, one individual who's not afraid of public shaming is Bryson Gray. | ||
He is not. And he joins me next with a big announcement, a big milestone for him, and something I was proud to be asked to be involved in. | ||
Bryson Gray coming up next. | ||
unidentified
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Oh! Hey! | |
You've probably been wondering where I've been. | ||
Well, the better question is, why am I in this movie theater all by myself? | ||
Well, that's because this Thursday, I'm releasing a movie to go along with my album, Bryson the Demon Slayer. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh! Here's the movie trailer. | |
Rapper Bryson Gray. | ||
Rapper Bryson Gray. | ||
Bryson Gray is said to be leading a Christian vigilante group | ||
unidentified
|
In a war against Satan The | |
in My goodness, this is amazing. | ||
This is amazing. | ||
you you | ||
So there's the trailer, Bryson the Demon Slayer. | ||
The movie actually dropped earlier today. | ||
It's already gotten massive engagement on X. Bryson Gray joins me now. | ||
Well, Bryson, you've been coming on this show for, I guess, four or five years now. | ||
You've been making your own music, and now you're making your own cinematography. | ||
What does it feel like to reach this point? | ||
Totally independent from, I mean, basically recording out of your bedroom to now doing these extremely high quality productions. | ||
It's funny because one of my day one friends texted me earlier after he saw the movie. | ||
And he said it just made him proud because he remembered talking to me about movies that go along with albums and stuff on the phone like 10 years ago. | ||
And to see it actually happening is crazy. | ||
And the fact that guy put me in a position where I could do it independently, it's more crazy. | ||
I'm broke now, but you know, it was worth it. | ||
Well, you're not broke. | ||
You might not have a bunch of zeros in your bank account, but you're certainly rich when it comes to your spirit and your soul, and I know that makes you feel good. | ||
And part of the thing, I remember you put out a statement about this, how you didn't want to sacrifice anything when you made this movie to go along with your rap album, and so it cost you a lot more than you expected it to. | ||
Yeah. It cost a lot. | ||
It's not just money, it's time. | ||
I was spending 12 hours a day editing. | ||
You know, the cameras are cameras I own, the color, the coloring, the special effects, all the simple sounds you hear. | ||
It made me realize how many jobs are on a film project. | ||
You don't realize it until you do it. | ||
You're like, wait, I gotta pay for this and this? | ||
It's like the locations, the actors. | ||
But it was the most fun experience of my life. | ||
I feel like it came out beautiful. | ||
I'm mad that YouTube botched my release on YouTube, but it is fully on X right now. | ||
Wait, what do you mean? How did they botch it? | ||
So I guess somebody, there was like one of the beats that another artist used for some way and they, I don't know, it was muted. | ||
I had like almost 300 people waiting on the movie to release on YouTube and the whole thing was just muted. | ||
So I had it quickly deleted. | ||
And then I tried to go do a live stream with it. | ||
Still got like 260, 270 people in the live stream. | ||
And then it started glitching. | ||
But that was my fault. | ||
I just tried to make that happen. | ||
So the film is being uploaded to my left right now to YouTube. | ||
But on Twitter, it is out. | ||
Only on Twitter right now. | ||
It's amazing all the different obstacles you got to go through. | ||
But I'm sure that had nothing to do with your politics or the fact that you've worn a 10-ounce MAGA hat in the past. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
It sucks because you pitch so much hard work into something, and as soon as it's supposed to release, it jacks up. | ||
But I feel like it's all part of God's plan. | ||
I feel like God is going to bless it. | ||
It's on Twitter right now, and it'll be on YouTube, hopefully within the next two hours or so. | ||
Well, I do want to talk more about The film and the album, but I can't help but dig into this creative process. | ||
You know, I feel... It's so hard to find people... | ||
You know, this is why you see bands breaking up and stuff. | ||
To find people that have your same creative vision or can see and understand your vision that you can work with. | ||
The crew that we have here at Infowars is just... | ||
It's awesome. I mean, it's just such a great crew. | ||
And there's so many days where I can just basically sit here and do a bunch of things. | ||
And I don't have to worry about the creative stuff too much because I can put the trust in my crew because they get me. | ||
They know what looks good. | ||
And so for people to understand that part of the creation is so important. | ||
Especially when you want to do something that is really high quality because you really do have to micromanage. | ||
You really do have to pay attention to every little detail. | ||
And I'm really detail-oriented, too. | ||
Like I said, I'm so grateful that my crew, you know, they understand what I see and they see it, too. | ||
But for you to do that all on your own, I mean, again, you said 12 hours a day. | ||
I can't even imagine the length that you had to go through. | ||
Yeah, so, like I said, I purchased a camera, and my sister, my little sister, Gabrielle, she actually shot the film. | ||
She shoots all my music videos, too. | ||
And basically, I'm gonna tell you how our days went. | ||
We rented a location, you know, made sure we paid the actors, paid the makeup artists, all these people, they got to the location. | ||
We shot for six hours, eight hours, and then I'll go home and edit until about 4 or 5 a.m., Because I know editing is the hardest part, so I wanted to knock it out the way, and then I just kept repeating that process. | ||
And then you watch it a thousand times, and you see little things where you made mistakes, and you go back, re-edit, re-export. | ||
And if any editors are listening to me right now, y'all know that it's a crazy process. | ||
And yeah, it was really a two-man team, really, me and my sister. | ||
I wrote it. Care up with the concepts, care up with all the clothing. | ||
You know, it was a crazy process, but like I said, the most fun experience I've ever had. | ||
Well, the trailer is awesome. | ||
I haven't watched the film yet. | ||
And the great part about it is, I mean, it's free on X. You can go watch it for free on X right now. | ||
Yep. And you're in it. | ||
Thank you so much for being a part of it. | ||
Yeah, yeah. Am I going to get my IMDB credit for this one? | ||
I gotta put your name on there. | ||
You said the perfect line before I transitioned. | ||
You were the transition from your words to showing the devil. | ||
It was so perfect. Well, and, you know, it's great, too, because obviously you reached out to some other people in the media. | ||
I saw you had Allison Steinberg on there, Jack Posobiec, and I imagine the process was the same. | ||
You basically just kind of gave me a brief. | ||
You didn't even really give me too many details. | ||
You're just like, hey, just give me something like this and send it to me. | ||
And so, I mean, I understood where you were coming from. | ||
Like, yeah, he doesn't have time to micromanage me. | ||
I just got to give him something here. | ||
So I hope it was streamlined for everyone else. | ||
No, it was perfect because I wanted everybody to have their own thing to it, so I didn't want to say too much. | ||
I wanted everybody to have their own vile so I could switch it up and make it different. | ||
Like I said, it came out perfectly. | ||
I'm so proud of it. | ||
I hope everybody likes it, man. | ||
I hope everybody likes it. | ||
There's a lot of hard work with it. | ||
There's a lot of blood, a lot of sweat, a lot of tears. | ||
And first off, shout out to InfoWars. | ||
InfoWars was one of the first people to ever give me a platform. | ||
And now they're one of the only people giving me a platform to help me promote the movie. | ||
InfoWars and OAN. Well, hey, you know, real recognize real, as they say. | ||
And you've been the real deal Holyfield since day one. | ||
And I think, too... | ||
What I always appreciated about you, and you kind of brought it up earlier, you're not... | ||
I mean, everybody deserves to make a living. | ||
You deserve to make a living, have a car you know is going to start that you like, and a house over your head, and you need a nice recording studio for your work. | ||
But as you said, you put everything into this, and you've put it out for free on the internet. | ||
It's more important. It's like what we do at InfoWars. | ||
We don't charge anybody for our stuff. | ||
All of our content is free. People can re-stream it, re-air it, re-bug it, twist it, everything. | ||
And we let that happen, because the message is the most important thing to us. | ||
Yeah, like I told people, not only is this like a triple-layered meaning movie, not only is it an album to go with it, but it's also a Bible study. | ||
And I tried to hit up a few other people to, like, premiere for me. | ||
It didn't work out. So I said, well, whatever. | ||
I have my own platforms. | ||
And, you know, and I said, I'll just post it on the platforms that I have. | ||
Even though YouTube jacked me up a little bit, it'll still be on my YouTube, like I said, probably in a couple hours. | ||
It's on X for free right now. | ||
And, yeah, I just let God handle the rest. | ||
There it is. That's right. | ||
Guys, pull up his X account. | ||
I want to get some details here, the exact time it was uploaded. | ||
I want to see how many views it's had. | ||
I've imagined it's done pretty well. | ||
You do pretty well on your social medias. | ||
Your albums have reached the top of the charts multiple times. | ||
How much of this project is music-oriented or audio-oriented versus the visual and the cinematography of it? | ||
It's equal. See, a lot of times when artists do visual albums, they put more focus on the music aspect of it. | ||
But when you watch it, you're going to be like, wow, because I feel like this is one of the first visual albums that's just as much of a movie, if not more of a movie than it is an album. | ||
The album has just helped It's just helping to tell the story that I'm trying to portray to people. | ||
When you watch it, you'll see. | ||
When you watch it, you'll be like, okay, he really did a lot of work into this. | ||
Yes, it's a real film. | ||
It has a real cinematic feel. | ||
The color grade is cinematic, but it is a visual album. | ||
Yeah, when I watch the preview or some of the stuff they're just putting there on the screen, it really does look more like a movie, like I'm watching a movie, more so than something that might be musically inclined or a music video or something like that. | ||
So, you know, in a way, in a way, you might say you're a bit of a groundbreaker here. | ||
I hope so, man. | ||
Because a lot of us, we focus on, especially as independent artists, you have to focus more on social media content. | ||
And a lot of people sort of give up creativity and quality and just try to put out stuff as fast as possible. | ||
And I wanted to do something different. | ||
I don't think I've ever seen a Christian rapper put out a I've never seen an independent artist do that pretty much ever. | ||
I wanted to give somebody something creative. | ||
We can still be creative. | ||
Everything doesn't have to be fast-paced and everybody has short attention spans. | ||
I like cinematography and I like movies, so I was going to make one, period. | ||
Well, and, you know, speaking of Christian rappers, one who tried to pose as one, Kanye West, you've been talking a little bit about Kanye lately. | ||
It's kind of odd. | ||
You know, it's hard for me to make sense of Kanye. | ||
I mean, if you even can. | ||
I mean, maybe even trying to make sense of Kanye is the struggle here. | ||
But... What do you make of it when Kanye puts, or Ye, I guess, he got mad at me for deadnaming him when he was here. | ||
What do you make of Ye trying to establish himself as a Christian-rooted artist, but then some of the behavior we see him engage in makes you skeptical? | ||
I think something may be wrong with him. | ||
And the reason I say that is because I was with him in Tokyo. | ||
Working on the first version of Vultures. | ||
And every song was Christian. | ||
All the lyrics were Christian. | ||
We were talking about the Bible, repentance. | ||
You know what I'm saying? He was like, everything I do is for God. | ||
And Shane Cashman, if you know who that is, me and him was bonding over this the other day because we both had personal experiences with Ye. | ||
And it's more weird for me because five months later, he released something for Vultures and it didn't sound like anything that I worked on. | ||
It sounded degenerate. | ||
And then he started posting his wife naked. | ||
It was weird because he told me personally he didn't like his wife dressing like that. | ||
That's what he said about Kim Kardashian. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, he was mad at Kim Kardashian for dressing like that. | ||
He told me personally, he was like, I don't like when my wife dressed like that, but I feel like my first marriage is ruined because of that, so, you know, I don't know. | ||
And he was like venting me about that. | ||
So to see him go from that to just a flat-out demon, In five, six months? | ||
And then to hear him on an interview say the reason he did it is because he prayed for Jesus and Jesus didn't show up? | ||
What do you mean? You got persecuted, but you had enough money to handle the persecution. | ||
Now you're doing stuff independently and you decided to take the blessings and give it to Satan. | ||
I have zero respect from Kanye and I purposely sabotaged My relationship with him was I don't want anything I worked on, any creativity I put into anything to be involved with him. | ||
So, yeah, I was willing to burn that bridge. | ||
I got fussed out by a few people around him, but I don't even care. | ||
Matter of fact, one of his engineers engineered the first song on my album. | ||
You will hear it in the film, but I'm pretty sure he doesn't like me anymore either. | ||
Well, and, you know, everything is on God's timing. | ||
And for Kanye to not understand that or Yeh not to understand that seems a little off, you know, to be acting like you can be impatient with God. | ||
Well, yeah. God's not on your watch. | ||
You know, what I try to understand about EA, and there's no doubt it's, for whatever reason, it's a human interest story, it's probably because his music was very popular, specifically for our generation growing up, it was very popular, and he was groundbreaking in a lot of ways, but... | ||
I can't decide. I go back and forth into trying to figure out, is everything that Ye is doing, is there a purpose behind it? | ||
Like, what is the purpose behind him parading his wife around basically naked or, you know, in a way, I mean, everybody talks about, you know, bipolar, bipolar this, bipolar that. | ||
I mean, I'm not just using that as a word, but is it like some level of a bipolar thing that he's dealing with? | ||
Was there never any sense to any of it? | ||
It's very strange. But when you talk about the Vultures album though, this is curious. | ||
I haven't heard this before. So you were there working on his new album and you thought it was one thing and then when it got released it was something entirely different? | ||
Bro, the song Problematic that is on the Vultures album, I have him mumbling on that song. | ||
I have the reference track of it. | ||
And he had another writer work on it, but it was kind of worldly. | ||
He literally, they sat me down and said, rewrite everything, keep as much as possible, but anything that sounds worldly, replace it. | ||
Keep the same flow, but rewrite the words, make it godly. | ||
I spent an hour and a half in Tokyo working on that one song. | ||
The song Beg Forgiveness. | ||
On Vultures. That song, me and two other artists wrote it in one of my main jobs to make sure it wasn't worldly. | ||
And then you hear it right now, and that album was one of the most Disgusting things I've ever heard in my life. | ||
And I think he's trying to lash out because he thinks he can be impatient with God. | ||
Like, you said yourself, you gave all these years to the devil. | ||
You gave 20 years to the devil, but you couldn't wait a couple months for Jesus. | ||
It didn't act like Jesus is the problem. | ||
And so, yeah, I have literally zero respect for Kanye. | ||
And I'm going to purposely call him Kanye. | ||
Yeah, you're going to sabotage the relationship further, I suppose. | ||
Well, and you know, what I always found odd, and this is just from somebody that just consumes music. | ||
I like listening to music. To me, Kanye West hasn't put out a good album in like 20 years. | ||
I mean, maybe like 808s and Heartbreak or something. | ||
I mean, maybe that's my opinion. | ||
Some might disagree. Every other album he started coming, it just sounded like trash. | ||
Like it just sounded bad. | ||
I'm not gonna lie. I like Jesus is King. | ||
And it wasn't because it was religious. | ||
Now that's his gospel album, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was the gospel album I thought was good. | ||
But Vultures, like I said, I tried to listen to like three songs on Vultures. | ||
Of course I listened to the ones to make sure my lyrics wasn't on it. | ||
But I tried to listen to like three songs and it was just like degenerate trash. | ||
Like I don't even like, it was, the production was good, but like lyrically it was like third grade level lyrics. | ||
Like he's trying to be a modern Mumbo rapper. | ||
I don't know what his... | ||
I don't know. It wasn't this when I was there. | ||
And I was there in July of last year, so it's not like I was there years ago. | ||
It was like July of last year. | ||
I don't know what the world he... | ||
I don't know. I can't explain it. | ||
It's freaky. Is anybody making good rap or hip-hop besides yourself? | ||
I mean, I'm serious. | ||
Like, people want to say... I hear all the time, oh, rock is dead, rock... | ||
Actually, rock is not dead at all. | ||
Rock is actually alive and well right now. | ||
Just nobody really plays it. | ||
I used to listen to rap and hip-hop in high school. | ||
I mean, Kanye was a great artist. | ||
I mean, T.I. These guys put out solid albums. | ||
Does anybody do that anymore? | ||
Or maybe I'm just not even trying to find it. | ||
It's hard to find people because a lot of people don't focus on the art. | ||
A lot of people go into the studio and say, I'm trying to make a TikTok song. | ||
You know what I'm saying? A lot of people don't go into the studio and try to make a good album. | ||
I'm sure there's popular rappers that actually take their craft seriously. | ||
I know people like myself, Tyson James, Isaiah Robbins, Marcus Rodgers, Kieran The Light, I know a few people that really take the craft seriously. | ||
I've been in the studio with them. | ||
I'm literally in Tyson James' studio right now. | ||
I'm like, I'm at his crib. | ||
But nowadays, people don't take the craft seriously, man. | ||
They're just trying to make a hit. | ||
If you go in the studio trying to make a hit, you're gonna sacrifice quality. | ||
Well, and two, I feel like the path is wide open for you or others because this is the same reason why Kanye West made the song Jesus Walks because he said, everybody wants me to rap about Satan. | ||
Why can't I rap about Jesus? | ||
And it was like, I'm going to go the opposite direction. | ||
And that's what it feels like it's become. | ||
The only people that seem to be creating or focusing on the art are the Satanists, like Lil Nas X, where it's like every video has some weird Satanist genre to it. | ||
And I feel like if you wanted to go opposite of that, it's like the perfect time. | ||
And I feel like even Ye kind of saw that for a second. | ||
Yeah, he did. And that's why I released a film. | ||
You have to do something where you show people that, wow, you really put time into your art. | ||
And sometimes you can't just do that with music. | ||
But I feel like when people see the film, see everything I did to tell the story of the album, I feel like it can compete with anything these record labels can put out, even as far as visuals. | ||
So I do feel like more people need to focus on the art because the lane is wide open. | ||
People are tired of these demonic rappers, and we just have to make sure we're putting out quality stuff that people can actually enjoy. | ||
So I hope the movie does that. | ||
Have you ever had that moment where maybe you're just Out at dinner or you're walking around outside somewhere or maybe you're at the gym and all of a sudden you hear your own music? | ||
Oh, I've heard it outside and people are pumping my music and I'm like, yo, what is going on? | ||
Or people have noticed me in Chick-fil-A. I still get shocked anytime people notice me. | ||
My wife be like, I don't know why you're shocked, but I'll be in Chick-fil-A and somebody will be like, oh my goodness, Bryson Gray. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'll be like, yo, what? Chick-fil-A? Why is it Chick-fil-A? What is going on? | |
I remember it happening. | ||
I mean, it just happened a few days ago at the movie theater when I was shooting the intro to the movie trailer. | ||
The dude was like, yo, like, what's your name again? | ||
I said Bryson Grade. He came back into the theater and showed me his playlist. | ||
He had, like, three of my songs on there. | ||
It was hilarious. All right, we're about to finish this segment. | ||
You know, I realize we probably haven't had your dad on in a while. | ||
We used to have some fun with your dad on this show. | ||
Is he going to vote Trump in 2024? | ||
He's going to vote Trump, isn't he? | ||
Y'all should bring him on to ask him. | ||
That's a conversation for him to, uh... | ||
We might have to do that. Before the election, we may have to do this. | ||
Let's do it. I don't think my dad might... | ||
I don't even know if I'm voting for a president in 2024. | ||
I'm doing red almost down the ballot in Tennessee because we have actual Christians on the ballot. | ||
My dad, I don't think he's voting Democrat, though. | ||
I know my dad ain't voting on Joe Biden. | ||
Boy, oh boy. Times have changed. | ||
But not Bryson Gray. He's remained the same. | ||
I promise you that. At Real Bryson Gray. | ||
The movie out now, Bryson Gray, The Demon Slayer. | ||
Bryson, congratulations, man. | ||
Really, I know this was a lot for you, and so congratulations. | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Thank you for having me on. All right, ladies and gentlemen, more news on the other side of this break. | ||
All right, the hilarious new politically correct term for homeless has just dropped. | ||
I'm sorry, it's just so ridiculous. | ||
unidentified
|
And when the crew brought me the story, I was like, oh, this means this, right? | |
And they're like, no, no, no, no, no. It means something else entirely. | ||
You can't make this stuff up. | ||
You really can't. You know, I was going to tell you all about DNA Force Plus. | ||
At InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
But you know what? The elite flagship product, DNA Force Plus of InfoWarsStore.com, 40% off. | ||
Actually, I'm going to call an audible here because I got to tell you about Turbo Force Plus and Brain Force Plus. | ||
I didn't get much sleep last night. | ||
Again, just talking with my lawyer yesterday and today, it's just something that weighs heavily on my heart. | ||
Just this legal fight that we have ahead and just everything that comes along with it. | ||
And it just weighs on you and then it becomes this issue that you have to talk about it on the show. | ||
But I know a lot of people, they tune in for news. | ||
They don't want to hear me talk about it. So I didn't get much sleep last night. | ||
I was kind of tired dealing with this all morning. | ||
So I might look a little tired today, but I probably don't sound it. | ||
Thanks to TurboForcePlus at InfoWordStore.com. | ||
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I don't have to wait too long. | ||
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And it's your support there that keeps us on the air. | ||
And we're still here, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We are still here. | ||
Okay, so I'm laughing about this as the crew brings me this story. | ||
And let's see what your interpretation is off the bat here. | ||
From the San Francisco Chronicle. | ||
An unhoused sex offender who antagonized San Francisco's inner Richmond for months with signs advertising free fentanyl is back in the neighborhood raising fresh concerns about his presence in a local playground. | ||
And I'm saying unhoused. | ||
And I'm thinking this is meaning he's out of prison. | ||
He's been released from prison unhoused. | ||
No! This is the new euphemism for homeless. | ||
This is the new politically correct phrase for homeless, unhoused. | ||
Unhoused and unhinged selling fentanyl at the local playground. | ||
That is just nuts. | ||
Now, if he was out at the local playground trying to sell, like, raw milk or something, he'd be shut down and arrested. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
Wait, wait, wait. What, what, what? | ||
From July 2023, you can't say homeless, you can't say houseless, you must say unhoused. | ||
So this has been the euphemism for months. | ||
I missed out. I'm late to the party here. | ||
Wow. I'm so sorry. | ||
I've been saying homeless on this show a lot, and I am politically incorrect for that. | ||
My goodness. My goodness. | ||
I should probably just blame it on Donald Trump. | ||
That's what I'd do if I was a Democrat like Mayor Brandon Johnson in Chicago. | ||
I just, you know, everything's Trump's fault. | ||
Everything's Trump's fault. Here's Mayor Brandon Johnson blaming Trump for his failed bill. | ||
Also now lost on me, I think there were 38,000 Republicans that showed up and voted for Donald Trump or something like that in Chicago. | ||
If we're trying to draw some conclusions and you all want some other analytics you might want to discover, that might be something to look into because there's I'll just say there's a good chance that that played a part in this referendum. | ||
So the same people who want to see Donald Trump become mayor, to become, not sorry, mayor, become president. | ||
Sometimes I do feel like he wants my job, but he wants to be president again. | ||
Those are the same voters who voted for him and the same voters where you look at where they were more knows, they were concentrated there. | ||
Oh no, scorning the voters because you didn't get your way. | ||
And blaming it on Donald Trump, what are you going to do? | ||
Send the Attorney General after Trump Tower Chicago next? | ||
But what is he really communicating here? | ||
People in Chicago don't like Democrat policies, and they're voting against these far-left radical bills. | ||
And so he just says, well, these dirty Trump voters, they're doing this to you. | ||
It's like, well, doing what to us? | ||
We are the voters. We voted against it. | ||
We don't want it. You're the one bringing in the homeless invasion. | ||
You're the one bringing in the illegal immigrant invasion. | ||
Not Donald Trump. | ||
He'll blame Donald Trump. They always do. | ||
They always do. | ||
Alright, let's look at some activities from Congress. | ||
Here's Jim Jordan asking the right questions in clip 17. | ||
Who planted the pipe bombs on January 6th? | ||
Nobody seems to know. | ||
Who leaked the Dobbs draft opinion? | ||
You know, the leak that led to an assassination attempt on Justice Kavanaugh. | ||
How about this one? Who left cocaine at the White House? | ||
The Biden administration doesn't seem to have time to answer these questions. | ||
They're too busy investigating parents at school board meetings, labeling Catholics extremists, retaliating against whistleblowers. | ||
They're too busy putting together a sweetheart deal for Hunter Biden, a deal that got laughed out of court. | ||
And oh, the guy who put together the deal that got laughed out of court, that's the guy they name special counsel. | ||
You know what Democrats do have time for? | ||
Going after President Trump. | ||
They've been doing it for eight years. | ||
They spied on his campaign. | ||
Then it was the Mueller investigation, 19 lawyers, 40 agents, $30 million, and found nothing. | ||
Then it was impeachment. Then it was raid his home. | ||
Then it was a special counsel. | ||
Then it was the 14th Amendment. | ||
The Party of Democracy said, we're going to keep the guy off the ballot who's leading in every single poll. | ||
The ranking member said that President Trump should be disqualified from even running for office. | ||
Thank goodness we have a Supreme Court who disagreed with the ranking member and the Democrats. | ||
9-0. | ||
Not 5-4, not 6-3, not 7-2, not 8-1. | ||
9-0. They disagreed. | ||
Now Democrats say, how dare Republicans investigate Joe Biden? | ||
How dare they look into the money, the business, and the brand? | ||
Millions of dollars, as the chairman said, millions of dollars from foreign entities run through 20 different companies for what? | ||
Wasn't, I mean, 20 different companies for what? | ||
Devin Archer told us what it was for. | ||
Access to the brand. | ||
And the brand was Joe Biden. | ||
The brand that played rounds of golf, took calls and meetings, attended lunches and dinners with Hunter Biden and his business partners. | ||
The brand that said... | ||
Alright, I want to pull out early and quickly go to Mike Lee here, talking about the thousand pages of a spending bill the Democrats dropped on his desk at 2.30 in the morning. | ||
My friend and colleague from the state of Washington in objecting to this measure, a measure that would have allowed all members adequate time to review the bill and to vet it with constituents and debate it, discuss it, and amend it on the floor. | ||
She said that we have to get a move on. | ||
The government's been on autopilot, meaning under a continuing resolution, for too long. | ||
True. Absolutely true. | ||
But I find it stunning the suggestion that she's saying it's now that time is of the essence. | ||
Now, we didn't have the bill yesterday or the day before or the day before or the day before that, when we were promised the bill. | ||
We didn't have it. | ||
We have it now. So she's identified the precise moment in history, the precise moment in 2024, when we can no longer move forward for another day. | ||
We've got to get a move on right, right now. | ||
They're the only ones who know this. | ||
She also says that it's bipartisan, that it's bicameral, that it is a carefully negotiated agreement. | ||
Well, that's great. The small handful of people who actually saw this bill and were involved in its final formulation... | ||
I'm sure we'll find that very comforting. | ||
But for the rest of us who didn't see it until 2.30am this morning, and for the 330 million Americans out there who will have to pay for this stuff, that's not adequate notice. | ||
That's not a carefully negotiated agreement. | ||
That is collusion among the few, affecting the many adversely. | ||
And I find this very, very disturbing that we couldn't give the American people and their elected representatives a few more days so that they can understand what's in there. | ||
Begs the question, what are they hiding? | ||
Yeah, they don't want you to see it. | ||
unidentified
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You need at least 30 days to get any of these properties sold. | |
But the property that you alluded to, Mar-a-Lago, potentially, that could be something that could be sold quickly. | ||
I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions. | ||
I think the valuation is something in the hundreds of millions, and I think there could be a buyer for something like that. | ||
And that would be, literally, if you're talking about doing that between now and Monday, that's picking up the phone, calling someone, and then literally writing a check. | ||
Yeah, I mean, there could be plenty of international people who want to buy that property. | ||
I mean, there's properties that are priced at $150 and $200 million that are nearby that. | ||
I mean, there's properties that are priced at $150 million and $200 million that are nearby that. | ||
And Palm Beach is like the Nvidia of real estate. | ||
It's just shot up like a rocket. | ||
And people do want to live there. | ||
They've moved there. So I think that would be the best case scenario as to property if he's trying to sell quickly. | ||
I would encourage that. | ||
So, all right. Now, that's $240 million estimated. | ||
I mean, who knows? You know, he's a desperate seller. | ||
In this case, someone picks up the phone and makes that call this week. | ||
So I don't know what it would be. That's still passed. | ||
of what it would be. | ||
Wow. And they even published that on Bloomberg with the valuation 240 million. | ||
My guess is it's probably that's like low market value. | ||
And they don't even see the irony. | ||
Donald Trump would have to sell his Mar-a-Lago estate for a quarter billion dollars because a judge said it's only | ||
worth 18 million dollars. | ||
We've witnessed a lot of ludicrous things, haven't we? | ||
you This is up there. | ||
This is truly up there. | ||
By the way, if you like that clip, we're going to take that little edit there. | ||
The great crew here did that. | ||
We're going to take that little edit. | ||
I'm going to post it on Owen Schroyer 1776. | ||
And feel free to spread that far and wide. | ||
Feel free to spread that far and wide. | ||
In fact, let's go ahead and... | ||
I mean, we can go ahead and just upload that. | ||
We can go ahead and get that process started. | ||
In fact, that headline that I already gave you... | ||
For the other one that I said, we can just use that headline for that clip, and we can upload that immediately, guys. | ||
So just doing a little traffic control here on the air. | ||
All right, a couple other things to cover. AOC embarrasses herself regularly. | ||
You know, you got to admit, though, she's got the assets in the frame of a lingerie mannequin and the brains to match. | ||
Hat tip Andrew Wilkow for that one. | ||
But boy, doesn't she. | ||
And she showed it yet again yesterday with her moronic diatribe aimed at Tony Bobulinski. | ||
And then she doubled down today saying on her Twitter account, no, Rico is not a crime. | ||
It doesn't exist. That's not how this works. | ||
Blah, blah, blah. And she's responding to Ted Cruz, who is a lawyer. | ||
And then there were hundreds of other lawyers that weighed in, and they literally cite the law. | ||
And they say, here is RICO. That's a racketeering, influenced, and corrupt organizations act. | ||
18 U.S.C. subsection, 1961 through 1968, is most assuredly a crime. | ||
That's just one response from a lawyer, Ted Cruz. | ||
She had hundreds of lawyers saying, even leftist lawyers saying, hey, wait a second, RICO is a crime. | ||
You got this one wrong. But she doubled down because she is the equivalent of a Victoria's Secret mannequin. | ||
The whole picture, brains included. | ||
Now, how did she get into office? | ||
And we've heard about this before. | ||
I'd never seen this breakdown. | ||
How did AOC get into office? | ||
One actress talks about it in clip 12. | ||
unidentified
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is not really the congresswoman of New York's 14th congressional district. | |
She is essentially an actress. | ||
She's merely playing the part of a New York congresswoman. | ||
I know this sounds crazy, but bear with me. | ||
In 2017, a group called the Justice Democrats held auditions for potential congressional candidates that they would run on their platform for various congressional seats throughout the country. | ||
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's brother Gabriel submitted her for the role. | ||
Now, I've auditioned for many acting roles in my day. | ||
I've also cast many of my own projects. | ||
I know how this works. | ||
If you find somebody with star power, even if they don't 100% fit the part, you go with it. | ||
Obviously, AOC has star power. | ||
Just look at her. She's a superstar, the most famous person in Congress, maybe ever. | ||
Their casting was perfect. | ||
Now, I didn't have to go digging for evidence for this because they freely admit it. | ||
They brag about it. | ||
Back in 2016, we put out a call for nominations. | ||
We got over 10,000 nominations. | ||
Out of those 10,000 nominations, we found Alexandria. | ||
My brother told me that he had sent my nomination in the summer, but I was like literally working out of a restaurant. | ||
I was like, there's no way. | ||
A casting call. They had a casting call. | ||
They cast Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the role of Congresswoman. | ||
So I believe that gentleman's name is Mr. | ||
Reagan on X. And, again, I'd seen the narratives before. | ||
I'd read the stories. I never heard it directly from the Justice Democrats and AOC herself until I saw that clip. | ||
That is incredible. Now, I think, you know, full spectrum here. | ||
Yeah, she definitely got cast and selected. | ||
That's how she went from kind of unwitting bartender to a political hype woman. | ||
But I would say, maybe to her credit or not, depending on how you want to... | ||
Gauge it. That she's gone a little bit rogue. | ||
I mean, she definitely likes to kind of do and say her own thing at times. | ||
But when it's, you know, when it's time for her to do the bidding, she's right there. | ||
She does exactly what she's told to do. | ||
That's why she was so animately defending the Biden crime family yesterday. | ||
So she might go rogue on a couple of far-left issues here or there, but she's really just an asset to the Democrat Party and an actress. | ||
An actress. A prop. | ||
Should Republicans do the same thing? | ||
Just a question. Should Republicans do the same thing? | ||
Maybe the Republican Party should cast Isabella DeLuca for a seat in Congress. | ||
unidentified
|
Just throwing out ideas. | |
That's all. That's all. | ||
All right. Check this out. | ||
Joe Biden at a campaign event at a Mexican restaurant awkwardly wanders off the podium. | ||
I can't even believe. | ||
Here we go, folks. | ||
Joe Biden awkwardly walks off the podium. | ||
To approach a baby, I kid you not, he's on the podium, supposed to be campaigning at a campaign event, and awkwardly in the middle of speaking, he goes and, well, sees a child he wants to sniff. | ||
unidentified
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...much progress together, but we know that there is still work to be done, which is why we are going to organize like never before and make sure we are turning out the vote. | |
And we know that, you know, there's so much at stake and that Donald Trump continues to pose a threat in so many ways. | ||
He continues to view racist rhetoric and to devalue our community. | ||
But we know that the president's vision values his commitment to faith, family, and hard work. | ||
Joe Biden certainly thinks so. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, there he goes. He's going in for the kiss. | |
Oh, she's not ready, Joe. | ||
unidentified
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Well, folks, I have to tell you straight up, I like you all, but I couldn't resist that little baby. | |
Well, first of all, I want to thank you. | ||
You know, it might be innocent enough, but Joe Biden has a history here. | ||
you It's not so innocent. Sniffing babies, groping babies, grabbing babies, motorboating their neck fat. | ||
I'm not even kidding. This is what Joe Biden does. | ||
But for him to walk off the podium in the middle of a speech, he just wanders off, and then to try to kiss the baby. | ||
It's just unbelievable. | ||
And then we can compare and contrast here as we go out in clip 14. | ||
The Biden motorcade in Arizona. | ||
Which basically warrants zero attention. | ||
Nobody shows up to these Biden events. | ||
He gets like 100 people max or like 20 people in a Mexican restaurant in Arizona. | ||
Literally nobody shows up for the Biden motorcade. | ||
Now granted... The Biden White House keeps these events as secret as possible because they know nobody would show up and they know the only people that would show up if they announced it would be Trump supporters or Biden protesters. | ||
So that's why they keep all these things hush-hush and ultimately he gets the low turnout anyway. | ||
It's by design. But then you see Trump, Trump's motorcade and Trump rallies on the right side. | ||
Both of these shots are from Arizona with both the candidates campaigning in Arizona. | ||
Trump has tens of thousands of people in the streets waving flags and everything else. | ||
But if you dare suggest or believe that Joe Biden did not defeat Donald Trump in 2020 legitimately, then you're a racist, you're a bigot, you're a criminal, you're an insurrectionist, and you need to go to prison. | ||
unidentified
|
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