Speaker | Time | Text |
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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. | ||
On January 10th of 1963, 45 current communist goals were submitted to the congressional | ||
record. | ||
Number 13 was, do away with loyalty oaths. | ||
Sixty years later, on the very same day, Biden, Obrador, and Trudeau met in Mexico City for the Declaration of North America, which states a plan to unify North America under the ideas of diversity, climate change, migration, health, and regional security. | ||
The beginnings of a North American Union, which is a step towards a one-world government. | ||
According to law, elected officials must swear an oath that they will support, defend, and bear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. | ||
And through the Freedom of Information Act, U.S. Attorney Todd Callender, along with his team at Project Proper Oath, found that not a single member of the existing Cabinet has a valid oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin has no oath of office and has also failed to register as a foreign agent, which is required due to serving on the boards and conducting international business with Raytheon, Nucor, and Tenet Healthcare. | ||
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra, responsible for declaring a national emergency during COVID, has no oath of office. | ||
Former Director of the Centers for Disease Control, Rochelle Walensky, had no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith, responsible for investigating the January 6th U.S. Capitol attack, has no oath of office. | ||
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Matthew Graves, Chief Prosecutor of Jan Sixers, has no oath of office. | ||
Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris, has no oath of office. | ||
Within 30 days of appointment to public office, all public officials are legally required to have a signed and notarized copy of their oath of office. | ||
And it appears as if no elected officials in the federal government have one. | ||
They are either non-existent, incomplete, or fraudulent. | ||
The fraudulent ones are missing signatures, are not notarized, and in most of them, the words, so help me God, are in all caps. | ||
In the U.S. Constitution, so help me God is not in all caps. | ||
And this matters, as many have been telling us for decades, including the great Jordan Maxwell. | ||
unidentified
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Today, the entire world of mankind operates under a world law Which is referred to as the Law of the High Seas or International Maritime Admiralty. | |
When you were born, you came out of your mother's water. | ||
Since you came out of your mother's water, you are a maritime product. | ||
This is why when you were born, the doc has to sign your birth certificate. | ||
It's a maritime admiralty manifest showing that your mother brought you into the world and you are going to make money. | ||
Anything! In this country, if it's a lawful, legal document of any kind, your name must be, according to maritime law, be in all capital letters. | ||
Why? Because you do not own your body. | ||
You do not own yourself. | ||
All capital letters name implies that you are a maritime admiralty product. | ||
You are Not a human. | ||
You're not a living entity. | ||
You're a product. You're a living entity person. | ||
The actual you is represented under law by upper and lower case name. | ||
So you are a corporation whether you know it or not. | ||
But you are merely a subsidiary of a larger corporation called United States. | ||
This is the way the law works. | ||
Reporting for Infowars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
All right, folks, share that link at band.video. | ||
Stay tuned. War Room begins on the other side. | ||
Big guests today. | ||
You're not going to want to miss this episode. | ||
unidentified
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Don't go anywhere. Harrison Smith presents War Room on Infowars. | |
Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to The War Room. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, sitting in today for Owen Schroer. | ||
We have a lot to cover, and we're going to have to get to most of the stories I want to cover in the first hour, as in the last two hours of the show. | ||
We will be joined by Redhead Libertarian and Revenge of the Cis in the next hour and Redhead Libertarian at the 5 o'clock hour. | ||
Very excited to talk to them about a variety of different topics going on in the world today. | ||
And boy, we have a lot to discuss. | ||
Let's just start down the stack, shall we, Rush Limbaugh style? | ||
Just see how far we can get through this stack before we welcome our guests and then continue to delve once they're with us. | ||
Our first stories have to do with health, various health crises in the world today. | ||
Cancer rates rising in young people due to accelerated aging, new study finds, quote, highly troubling. | ||
Slowing biological aging could be a new avenue of cancer prevention, says longevity expert. | ||
Accelerated aging, when somebody's biological age is greater than their chronological age, could increase the risk of cancer tumors. | ||
What? Are people getting old faster now? | ||
Is that a thing? | ||
Or is that nonsense? | ||
It sounds to me an awful lot like nonsense. | ||
I can't tell. | ||
I mean, what would you do if your doctor said this to you? | ||
They were like, well, we're concerned about some pretty, you know, dangerous health consequences you have. | ||
It appears as though your biological age and your chronological age are out of whack. | ||
You're going to need to get in a time machine for a little while to reverse this aging. | ||
Yeah, this doesn't make any sense. | ||
It's the vaccines, folks. | ||
It's probably the vaccines is what's causing the massive rise in cancer rates and turbo cancers and things unseen in the world before the invention of the mRNA cancer delivery device. | ||
But no, apparently it's because people are aging faster. | ||
Okay? The realization that cancer and now aging are becoming significant issues for younger demographics over the past decade was unexpected. | ||
How could you expect aging to be an issue for younger people? | ||
This is nonsense. Okay. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of reasons why cancer is increasing right now. | ||
It has to do with diet. It has to do with poisons and food and water. | ||
It has to do with the vaccine and the negative consequences, side effects of the mRNA experimental shot. | ||
I don't think it has to do with accelerated aging. | ||
I don't think that is a thing, actually. | ||
If you really want to know, I think if you look at pictures of young people from today and from 50 years ago, yeah, they look a lot younger nowadays. | ||
You can find pictures from like the 50s and 60s. | ||
Some 20-year-old dude, he's balding, he looks like Homer Simpson. | ||
It's like, your average 22-year-old, now your 22-year-old, your average 22-year-old looks 16. | ||
I just don't think this is true. | ||
I think this is a desperate distraction from what the reality is. | ||
A new study found that those with a higher biological age had a 42% increased risk of early onset lung cancer, were 22% more prone to early onset gastrointestinal cancer, and had 36% higher risk for early onset uterine cancer. | ||
So again, what they're trying to do is claim that this, I guess, correlation, which I still don't understand, but fine, is a causation when I think it's pretty obvious it's not. | ||
I mean, maybe what the reality is is that cancer happens when your body's immune system breaks down to some degree. | ||
And allows the cancerous cells to metastasize and grow at a rapid rate. | ||
And that overall, if your cell health is decreased, you're more likely to get cancer. | ||
Both of these would be symptoms of unhealthy lifestyles, not one thing causing the other. | ||
But that's just my layman interpretation. | ||
It just happens to be the right one. | ||
It just happens to be correct because this is obvious. | ||
And I'd love to know what my biological age is. | ||
You would think it's my age, but apparently not. | ||
Just because a person is 40-year-olds chronologically does not mean that they're 40 years old biochemically. | ||
Osborne, who's involved in the new research, told Fox News. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that's just not true. | ||
I mean, they're probably around 40, aren't they? | ||
I mean, if their chronological age, a.k.a. | ||
their age, is 40, their biological age, a.k.a. | ||
their age, is probably around 40. | ||
Is that a crazy thing to suggest? | ||
Any 40-year-olds out there with 80-year-old bodies? | ||
No? No? | ||
Okay. So there's actually a very small spectrum. | ||
Like a 40-year-old is really like a 42-year-old. | ||
So what you're saying is... People age differently. | ||
And you're blaming the sudden and drastic rise of cancer rates in young people on that. | ||
On that? Okay. | ||
Yeah, that's nonsense. | ||
They're desperately trying to come up with distractions from what is obviously the cause of massive increase in cancer, which is the poisons in the food and water, the fake diet that we subsist on, the Vaccines, as I mentioned before, just a variety of things that are controllable and the outcome of policy, not mysterious warping of time and space. | ||
This is sci-fi stuff. | ||
You know, people are figuring out what's healthy and what's not for them. | ||
For a long time, the only real sources that you had. | ||
I mean, unless you're doing meth. | ||
I guess if you're doing meth, you age faster. | ||
That's accurate. That is true. | ||
That's scientific. I trust that science. | ||
But obviously, along with political discussions being had online that were never had anywhere else, there's a lot of health issues. | ||
Information that you're getting on social media that was not available when the mainstream media controlled totally the conversation in America. | ||
And one of the biggest outcomes of this is people warning about realizing the danger and the unhealthiness of things like seed oils, like canola oil and others. | ||
Now for a long time, These industrial byproducts have been touted as a heart-healthy alternative to things like animal fats. | ||
This is nonsense. | ||
And it is kind of funny, isn't it, that in a lot of ways we have worse health outcomes now with all of our knowledge and the lack of bad habits compared to the olden days. | ||
But then you go back to like the 1950s where they were just drinking martinis at lunch and chain-smoking cigarettes 24 hours a day. | ||
And lower cancer rates back then. | ||
Isn't that weird? Isn't that strange? | ||
It's the plastics. | ||
It's the poisons. | ||
It's the pesticides and the GMOs. | ||
It's the hormone-altering material that pervades every aspect of our existence at this point. | ||
But don't worry. The industrial poison makers are fighting back against the truth. | ||
Canola and other seed oils are under attack, they say. | ||
We are seeing more misinformation about seed oils and that a lot of that is coming through social media, says Brittany Wood, director of Canola Utilization with the Canola Council of Canada, she said during a recent webinar. | ||
If you're on TikTok or Instagram, it's quite possible that you may have come across something that is negative or misleading, which is interesting. | ||
If it's negative, is it misleading? | ||
Or are these two different things? | ||
Is it possible to say something negative about seed oil that's not misleading, but actually true? | ||
And if that's the case, do you make a distinction between those things? | ||
Because what we're seeing here is the way that the political drive to create the idea, the concept, and then use policy to operate on the idea of Fake news, disinformation, misinformation is now being taken up by industries, corporations, industrial organizations in an effort to propagandize people. | ||
So if you criticize their products, they understand now. | ||
You can't just say, they're criticizing us and we don't like that. | ||
You have to claim it's mis- or disinformation. | ||
And that way, your lies are shrouded and shielded and disguised under a A facsimile or a facade of caring about the truth. | ||
So there's a couple interesting things about this. | ||
One, that they're fighting back against the fact that you can now tell the truth about food on social media. | ||
They want to shut that down. | ||
They don't want that to eat into their profits or stop people from consuming their poison. | ||
But also the way in which they... | ||
Use terms like mis and disinformation in, again, a completely dishonest and manipulative way in order to silence people who are talking negatively about their very dangerous products. | ||
They contend that seed oils are heavily processed, have been bleached and deodorized, and cause gut inflammation, among other criticisms. | ||
These things, this is the mis or disinformation that they're claiming to fight, you know, saying that they're heavily processed or that they've been bleached. | ||
I mean, this is horrifying. | ||
They're deodorized. This is the dis or misinformation they're trying to correct. | ||
I mean, if you go down four paragraphs, it does say that the words bleached and deodorized sound scary, but are common practices used to refine many vegetable oils. | ||
So it's not wrong. | ||
They are bleached. | ||
They are deodorized. | ||
They're just like, yeah, but we all do it. | ||
No, but everyone does it, though. | ||
So what are you complaining about? | ||
And this is the danger of these terms, misinformation, disinformation. | ||
Okay, but it's true. | ||
All right, but it is true. It's a valid and accurate criticism of your product, but now you're creating a censorship panel to silence people by calling it misinformation, despite the fact that you yourself admit that it is an accurate criticism of your product. | ||
Incredible, isn't it? Isn't that incredible? | ||
Lynn Weaver, market development manager for Saskatchewan Canola Development Commission, said seed oil bashing has been going on for five to seven years, but it seems to be fading of late. | ||
Well, let's not let that happen. | ||
Let's take that as a call to action. | ||
Let's warn everybody about the dangers of the disgusting product known as seed oils, canola oils. | ||
Yeah, let's double down on that. | ||
We can't be slowing that down. | ||
Quote, they're probably not getting as many questions from their clients about seed oils as they used to in the past. | ||
Wood is seeing more credible sources on social media, such as registered dietitians and other healthcare professionals, emphasizing the positive attributes of canola oil. | ||
Oh, interesting. So the people that went through the university system have been trained to support the bleached and deodorized and GMO massively altered seed oils. | ||
Incredible. Maybe there's some better words that need to be associated with it, she said. | ||
So Weaver, who's a registered dietitian, said the word bleached and deodorized sounds scary, but they're common practices used to refine mini-vegetable oils. | ||
And like automobile fuels, right? | ||
I mean, there's lots of things that are bleached and deodorized. | ||
Shut up. Stop complaining about it. | ||
Bleaching doesn't mean that we bleach canola. | ||
It just means we kind of purify it so that it has a paler color and increased stability. | ||
Yeah, we know. No, we get it. | ||
We understand. We don't like it. | ||
So what are you going to do about that? | ||
Or are you going to keep doing the thing that you were doing that nobody likes? | ||
Great. She says, from a nutritional point of view, it's an ideal oil. | ||
It's really superior. | ||
Yeah, I don't think so, actually. | ||
She shudders at the suggestion of anti-seed oil influencers that people should be instead consuming palm or coconut oil, saying they're very high in saturated fat. | ||
Saturated fat is another thing that is a lie. | ||
The dangers of it were massively overblown, inaccurately studied, and it's just complete misinformation. | ||
Basically, these people are still stuck on the food pyramid level of diet, where they think that you need to eat nothing but grains because the grain company happens to be the one who sponsored the study that came out with the food pyramid. | ||
The canola industry still felt it was necessary to form the Seed Oil Coalition in conjunction with corn and soybean commodity groups to share information and jointly fight what they deem a misinformation campaign. | ||
Now notice she says she shudders at the idea of consuming palm and coconut oil when most people I see say you should be eating olive oil instead. | ||
How's olive oil? Oh, significantly better in every possible regard. | ||
Doesn't have to be bleached or deodorized. | ||
Interesting. You didn't mention that one. | ||
Didn't mention that. A little bit of misinformation here coming from the misinformation experts. | ||
What else is new? The information in the programs we put out are backed by science and credible people, said Wood. | ||
Oh, okay. No, for sure. | ||
Yeah, definitely. Definitely. | ||
Look, We showed some videos here of what it takes to produce canola oil. | ||
It's disgusting, frankly. | ||
It's horrifying. It's disgusting. | ||
It's unnatural. It was created as an alternative when an alternative wasn't necessary. | ||
People used to use just fats. | ||
They used to use just oil from animals or olive oil. | ||
And that worked fine until they decided to... | ||
Come out with this, canola oil. | ||
I could go on about this. | ||
I guess I should bring on somebody like Raw Egg Nationalist or something to really break down canola oil or these other seed oils and just how bad they are. | ||
I don't need to tell you about soybeans or any of these things. | ||
They're bad for a variety of different reasons, and you can do your own research on that. | ||
But again, to me, the most interesting part about this is that you've got industries now picking up the mantle, Realizing how valuable this disinformation and misinformation claim is in order to silence their critics, when in reality the critics are correct about what they're saying. | ||
Here's another story, sort of similar, vain in my opinion. | ||
Lunchables found to contain relatively high lead levels. | ||
Lead. Lead in your Lunchables. | ||
The popular kid's snack Lunchables contained relatively high levels of lead and sodium, a consumer watchdog group says Tuesday. | ||
Why is there lead in the Lunchables? | ||
Why is there lead in the Lunchables? | ||
This is what I don't understand. | ||
You know, some things are bad, but they're at least reasonable. | ||
There's at least an explicable way how it got to this point. | ||
Pesticides would be one thing. It's bad that there are pesticides in our food. | ||
It's very bad, especially the level that we have. | ||
But at least you have a reason to spray the pesticides, right? | ||
At least you're sitting there going, okay, well, we've got this crop. | ||
It's going to be eaten by vermin. | ||
We've got to stop the vermin from eating our crops. | ||
We've got to spray pesticides, and we don't treat it well enough so you get some pesticides in your food. | ||
It's at least sort of a chain of events that makes sense. | ||
Where does lead come into the Lunchable production process? | ||
I want to know. I sincerely want to know. | ||
It's almost got to be some deliberate additive. | ||
I don't know how you get lead in your Lunchable without it being deliberately put in. | ||
How does that happen? How does it happen? | ||
We don't know. Consumer Reports, a consumer advocacy group, said it tested 12 store-bought versions of Lunchables, which are made by Kraft Heinz, along with similar lunch and snack kits, and found relatively high levels of lead and cadmium in the Lunchable kits. | ||
Cadmium is a chemical element linked to negative effects on the kidney and skeletal and respiratory systems and is classified as a human carcinogen, according to the World Health Organization. | ||
There is not a safe level of lead for children, the CDC notes. | ||
The sodium levels in the kits ranged from... | ||
460 to 740 milligrams per serving, nearly a quarter to half of a child's daily recommended limit for sodium. | ||
All but one of the kits contained harmful phthalates, chemicals found in plastics that can be leaked to reproductive issues, diabetes, and some cancers. | ||
So a lot of things in the Lunchables. | ||
Again, I don't understand. | ||
I don't understand how we got to this point. | ||
Seems pretty simple to me. | ||
Lunchables in general. | ||
Crackers, meat, and cheese. | ||
Where does the cadmium come in? | ||
Where does the lead come in? | ||
Where does the plastic come in? | ||
When are these things added? | ||
Because I don't think they're coming from the cows. | ||
Maybe they are. | ||
We don't know. We just don't know. | ||
It's a mystery, I guess. | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
I would love to walk around the warehouses that produce these products. | ||
Just like, here's where we produce the The meat for the Lunchables. | ||
Here's where the cheese is cut by a big machine and dished out into servings. | ||
And here's where we add the lead pellets. | ||
And the cadmium. Here's where we spray it with cadmium powder. | ||
It's like, wait, but why? | ||
But why, though? | ||
Why is our food poison? | ||
Why is it all plastic? | ||
It's a very sincere question that I don't think we have an answer to yet. | ||
Why is it that every major food-producing corporation in this country... | ||
Seems hell-bent on adding poisons to their food. | ||
Does lead increase the shelf life of products? | ||
I don't know. Maybe by adding the phthalates, maybe the plastic is necessary for that extra crunch. | ||
What is it? Why? Why are these things in our food? | ||
I guess now we're going to have to write laws that say you can't have lead in your foods. | ||
I mean, I think there is some of that already. | ||
So why is there lead in the Lunchables? | ||
And then, of course, the Lunchables spokespeople are just like, they are a healthy option for kids. | ||
They're beautiful and lovely and healthy. | ||
Just, you know, a little bit of lead on top. | ||
Plus a little bit of lead for your daily value of lead. | ||
Your daily lead intake, 100% of your daily lead intake, can be met with one serving of Lunchables. | ||
Okay, so there you go. | ||
That's your health update. | ||
Canola Oil launching a misinformation censorship campaign to silence people talking about their disgusting product. | ||
Lunchables shown to contain lead and cadmium and plastics and all sorts of other stuff. | ||
It should be meat, cheese, crackers. | ||
You should have some wheat. | ||
You should have some dairy product because of the cheese. | ||
You should have some meat with various spices to keep it preserved. | ||
Where is the lead entering into the process? | ||
Where is the cadmium coming from? | ||
Where is it coming from? That's what I want to know. | ||
Is it even possible that this is happening by accident? | ||
Or are they deliberately poisoning us? | ||
Well, I think you know my answer. | ||
And of course, this is the problem. | ||
I mean, the real problem is that you've got like four companies that produce all the food in America. | ||
You've got like Tyson, and you've got Kraft, Kraft Heinz, right? | ||
And there's only a few, and they're all combining at a pretty rapid rate. | ||
And they all produce poison that's made out of plastic and growth hormones. | ||
Our food is disgusting just across the board and they're able to get away with it because they've monopolized the entire system. | ||
So there you go. | ||
That's how it works. | ||
And of course we give you not just the problems, but solutions as well. | ||
Make sure to be going to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
I don't know if we have any products that exactly will purge lead from your body, but | ||
I do know that if you're getting the good minerals into your system, there's no room | ||
for the bad ones. | ||
Make sure you're getting Survivor Shield X3 40% off, Bodies 40% off, Turbo Force Plus | ||
also 40% off, a ton of great products at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Because as we've been telling you for literally decades, the food is poison, the air is poison, | ||
the water is poison. | ||
You've got to protect yourself as we work to change this corrupt, disgusting system | ||
that seems incapable of just delivering normal products to Americans. | ||
Europe figured it out somehow. | ||
Europe doesn't have these problems. | ||
It has problems, but it doesn't have these problems. | ||
You aren't going to get lead in your kids' food in Europe. | ||
Somehow they get away with it in America. | ||
They probably shouldn't. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome back to the War Room. | ||
InfoWars.com. | ||
Share those links. It's the 10th of April. | ||
We're coming to you live from the Infowars headquarters here in Austin, Texas. | ||
We got some political news to get into today. | ||
Well, let's stick with health for a moment, at least. | ||
Well, health and the economy, these things are intertwined. | ||
PFA's U.S. limits forever chemicals in tap water for first time ever. | ||
PFAs are dubbed forever chemicals because they remain widespread in the environment due to lack of degradation. | ||
The U.S. has imposed the first nationwide limits on several harmful chemicals found in tap water across the country, which is what I like to call too little too late. | ||
If only you'd listen to Alex Jones 20 years ago. | ||
Oh, we wouldn't be in this problem. | ||
We wouldn't have this problem, would we? | ||
I mean, there's a reason that water filters were the first thing that Infowars started selling. | ||
Because since the beginning, there has been poison in your tap water. | ||
We might still sell the shirt. | ||
I have the shirt. There's poison in the tap water. | ||
We've known it the entire time. | ||
They called us crazy conspiracy theorists and mocked us about it. | ||
And now that they realize it's true, and now that the PFAs are literally everywhere and saturating every aspect of life on Earth, now they're going to pretend to do something about it. | ||
But it's pretty much too late. | ||
Pretty much too late. It's good to see. | ||
It's very nice to see that they are doing something to deal with this. | ||
It seems like they waited, called it crazy, until it was too much to stop. | ||
And now they're saying, we're going to stop it. | ||
EPA says between 6 to 10% of public drinking water systems in the U.S. may have harmful level of pollutants. | ||
Tell you what, folks. Play it safe. | ||
Get a water filter. Filter all of your water all the time. | ||
Even the stuff that you cook with. | ||
Even the stuff that you shower with. | ||
Get a shower filter. | ||
Because if not, you're breathing in and absorbing these poisons. | ||
So the bad news is that all of your food... | ||
Is just replete with poisons. | ||
Just filled to the brim with poisonous material of one sort or another. | ||
That's the bad news. The good news is you can't afford food anymore. | ||
So you don't have to worry about it. | ||
Wait a second. Hold on a second. | ||
That's not good news at all. | ||
But it's true. The typical American household would need to spend $445 more a month to purchase the same goods and services as a year ago. | ||
That's the headline from Unusual Whales, which is already staggering. | ||
Staggering. I mean, that's unbelievable. | ||
That's like minimum wage. | ||
That's like an entire month's worth of minimum wage. | ||
$450 a month just to buy what you purchased last year. | ||
An extra $450 a month. | ||
How happy would you be if you got a $450 a month raise? | ||
Well, the government has delivered us the opposite. | ||
You have had a pay cut of nearly $500 a month because of the inflation of Joe Biden. | ||
Which is just astonishing. | ||
The typical, and here's the craziest part. | ||
Here's the real kicker. | ||
It was higher last year, and it was higher the year before that, and it was higher the year before that. | ||
So this is just saying from last year, you're spending $450 more per month on the same products. | ||
If you buy the same products, you're spending $450 a month more. | ||
So unlike groceries and basic necessities. | ||
But that's on top of stories like this from 2022. | ||
Inflation now costing the average U.S. household an extra $296 each month. | ||
That was 2022. | ||
It went up even more in 2023, and now it's up even more in 2024. | ||
So, I mean, add these together, it's almost unimaginable. | ||
We're spending... Literally thousands of dollars a month more on basic necessities than we were when Joe Biden got into office. | ||
Just mind-blowing. | ||
Mind-blowing stuff. Inflation now costing the average American household an extra $296 each month. | ||
That was all the way back in March of 2022. | ||
Okay, so year on year, an extra 300 bucks. | ||
Add an extra $300 to $400 the next year, and an additional $450 this year. | ||
Absolutely massive. | ||
Now, back in 2022, they calculated this out in Bloomberg to say U.S. households face $5,200 inflation tax this year. | ||
In other words, $5,200 a year, $433 per month, is what American households are having to spend extra For the exact same consumption basket. | ||
Consuming exactly the same thing, and yet you're paying over $5,000 a year more. | ||
And that was back in 2022. | ||
So, that's increased twice over the last two years. | ||
But that was even a low estimate. | ||
There's something similar here. Americans need an extra $11,400 today just to afford the basics, Republican analysis finds. | ||
I believe this was 2023. | ||
It's a typical American household to spend an extra $11,434 annually just to maintain the same standards of living they enjoyed in January of 2021. | ||
So this again was in 2022, right before inflation soared to 40-year highs, according to a recent analysis of government data. | ||
And the headline today is inflation down, inflation decreasing, which is what they mean is that inflation is still growing. | ||
The money is still inflating, like the prices are still inflating. | ||
They're just inflating at a lower rate than they were earlier, so they count that as a success. | ||
Just utter and complete madness. | ||
And it's completely by design. | ||
It's very simple, really. | ||
They want to get rid of the middle class. | ||
They want you to have no savings, definitely not be able to pass anything on, definitely not be able to save up money to make a big purchase. | ||
They want you renting everything that you own, so no down payment, no mortgage, no savings account, just living hand-to-mouth, check-to-check your entire life, the paradigm of the company store, and they want to diminish your savings that exist now. | ||
Because they're trying to destroy the middle class because the middle class, as they say in their own words, is the greatest barrier to the implementation of their so-called fourth industrial revolution. | ||
So this is by design, it's on purpose, and we're all feeling the effects of it. | ||
Inflation at the same point in presidency. | ||
Here's a little chart for you. | ||
Energy, 0% for Trump, 38% for Biden. | ||
Gasoline was at negative 2% under Trump at 47.8% for Biden. | ||
Electricity was at 3% for Trump at 30% for Biden. | ||
Natural gas at negative 1.9% for Trump and at positive 26.9% for Biden. | ||
I mean, these are catastrophic numbers. | ||
Eggs under Trump had gone down by nearly 4% in price. | ||
Under Biden, they have gone up by 50%. | ||
Bidenomics, folks. | ||
It's Bidenomics at work. | ||
Working exactly as we planned. | ||
Exactly as they planned. | ||
Exactly as it was supposed to happen. | ||
It's just happening. And in total... | ||
Exactly what you would expect when you know that the people who run our country are purposefully destroying it. | ||
This is what it would look like. | ||
Now perhaps that's why you haven't heard much about Bidenomics in the recent past. | ||
Here's Axios actually charting the number of times the Biden administration has said the word Bidenomics. | ||
And they were very proud of Bidenomics back in July of 2023 when they mentioned it 29 times. | ||
Since then, it's pretty steadily diminished to where at this point they don't really mention Bidenomics anymore. | ||
Yeah, best not to tie our name to this catastrophic and absolutely abusively horrible economic system we've created for everybody. | ||
So yeah, they're backing off of that claim. | ||
They're not mentioning that they're responsible for this too much anymore. | ||
But they are still. | ||
So, you know, I don't know what to say except grow your own food because otherwise you're going to go bankrupt. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The War Room. We will be joined by Revenge of the Cis, Royce, and Mersh in the next hour. | ||
And then we'll be joined by the redhead libertarian in the third hour. | ||
We still have a lot to cover here. | ||
I'm just trying to decide which stories I want to save for my guests and which ones I want to delve into here by myself. | ||
Let's stick with the economy for a second because there's a new sort of metric that you can use to determine economically where we're at at this point. | ||
And that is the Obvious and massive price changes that chain restaurants have undergone in the recent past. | ||
I think we all remember probably one of the most successful ad campaigns of all time, Subway sandwiches and the $5 footlong. | ||
You remember the $5 footlong? | ||
You could get a Black Forest ham, a BLT, spicy Italian, all of these, a footlong and $5. | ||
That was not so long ago. | ||
Nowadays, six inches, six bucks. | ||
Six inches, six bucks. | ||
So when you think of inflation, you might think of a $5 sandwich going to $6. | ||
But where we are now, a $5 sandwich is $6 and half as big. | ||
You're getting half as much for a dollar more. | ||
That's the real impact of inflation. | ||
That is the actual reality. | ||
Of the economic policies of Joe Biden and the Democrats. | ||
Instead of five dollars for a foot-long sandwich, you're getting half a foot for six bucks. | ||
Pretty crazy. Or you can look at Arby's, where you used to be able to get five sandwiches for five dollars. | ||
In 2014, a short ten years later, you can get four sandwiches for ten dollars. | ||
Again, if it used to be five for five and now it's four for five, well, that's a little bit of inflation. | ||
That's, I guess, to be expected. | ||
We used to be able to get five, now we can only get four. | ||
That's understandable. Now, you're getting less sandwiches for twice as much. | ||
So, very similar to Subway sandwiches, where, again, they both increase the price and increase. | ||
You know, cut down the food by half. | ||
In this case, they're cutting down the food by a little bit and doubling the price. | ||
So that's the actual effect of a tangible, noticeable effect of inflation, particularly when it comes to food, that the Biden administration has wrought on the country. | ||
And finally here from the economics pile. | ||
And this does relate. | ||
I know, it seems crazy when we on Infowar start rambling and suddenly we're jumping from Subway sandwiches to... | ||
Hey, what do Jared from Subway and Joe Biden have in common? | ||
No. No, I can't tell you the punchline to that. | ||
No, they both shower with kids. | ||
No, the punchline is they're both pedophiles. | ||
That's a joke I just made up. | ||
And by joke, I mean accurate reporting of the facts. | ||
Okay, sorry, I got distracted. | ||
I got distracted by the pedophile on screen. | ||
But all these things are intricately intertwined. | ||
I know, it sounds crazy. | ||
We're rambling about Subway sandwiches, and suddenly you're talking about Blackstone buying up houses. | ||
Yeah, it's all part of the same movement, the same program. | ||
It all pushes towards the same goal, as I was just talking about earlier. | ||
A world in which savings is impossible, in which nobody but the elite have any economic power whatsoever, and everybody else is living consistently off of debt that they accrue from the moment they're born, that's never paid off in full, that leaves them as a vassal, a vessel, Or rather a vassal, a indentured servant essentially to the banks who get to decide whether or not you deserve money. | ||
Blackstone making $10 billion multifamily purchase going on the real estate offensive. | ||
Acquisition of AIR Communities is Blackstone's largest transaction in the multifamily market. | ||
Blackstone, which... | ||
You know, Blackstone and Blackrock used to be the same thing. | ||
They split off into two companies, but they're the same thing essentially, and they're owned by the same people. | ||
So oftentimes you hear Blackrock's buying up homes. | ||
Well, Blackstone's buying up homes, but it might as well be the same. | ||
It might as well be the same. | ||
Blackstone has agreed to acquire an owner of upscale apartment buildings for about $10 billion, signaling that one of the world's largest real estate investors is ramping up investments again after a period of moving more cautiously. | ||
Blackstone is taking private apartment income REIT, known as Air Communities, which owns 76 rental housing communities that are primarily in coastal markets, including Miami, Los Angeles, Boston. | ||
The company confirmed Monday. | ||
Blackstone plans to invest another $400 million to improve these properties. | ||
So they are still very much on the march, on the hunt. | ||
They are still driving up house prices. | ||
They are still blocking individual first-home buyers from purchasing their dream home and being a part of the American dream. | ||
Instead, they'll rent it out for the same amount that people would be paying in mortgage, but they just won't own anything at the end of it. | ||
It'll just be impermanent and owned by somebody else. | ||
And whether it's psychologically, financially, or just literally, it's very different owning your home versus renting one. | ||
Extremely different. There are some positives and some negatives, but I think the positives massively outweigh the negatives because I actually believe in private property, ownership, savings, you know, the things that America was built on. | ||
These people don't, though. And they want you to be a slave class whose primary definition is its impermanence. | ||
Now I want to get to this story real quick. | ||
I don't know if we'll have time to get into all of it before welcoming Royce and Mersch, but the story's at Infowars.com. | ||
Tucker questions American loyalty, American Christian loyalty to Israel. | ||
Tucker Carlson talked with Christian Reverend Munther Isaac, who's living in Palestine, about the life of Christians in the area of Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank. | ||
And he made waves, and it was a huge... | ||
You know, argument discussion taking place on X today. | ||
And here's the clip. | ||
We'll go to the clip now. I may pull this out a little bit early just to give my two cents on this matter. | ||
Clip number 15, Tucker Carlson on Christians supporting Israel. | ||
Let's watch. If you wake up in the morning and decide that your Christian faith requires you to support a foreign government blowing up churches and killing Christians, I think you've lost the thread. | ||
Just to end on this, if you had a message for Christian leaders in the United States, whether in government or in churches or just citizens who care about the religion and their fellow Christians, what would it be? | ||
It would be to remind them that when the state of Israel was created, it was not created on an empty land. | ||
It was created on a land that had millions of indigenous Palestinians there, including Palestinian Christians. | ||
And that state they supported, that state they celebrated as a fulfillment of prophecy and a sign of God's faith to the Jewish people for it to become a state. | ||
Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, including Palestinian Christians, were forced to leave and have never returned. | ||
Churches were closed. | ||
A friend of mine did a research and counted more than 30 churches that were closed when Israel was created because Palestinians were expelled from the land. | ||
Our numbers continue to be in decline. | ||
So we're pleading that Come and listen. | ||
Come and talk to us. | ||
And my message to Christian leaders right now is There is a very, very brutal war taking place in Gaza, a war that I've described using the word genocide, because it's a war that has used even starvation as a mean, and fellow Christians are suffering because of that war. | ||
It's time that Christian leaders recognize that wars is not the way, whether in Iraq, in Afghanistan, in Libya, I mean, when will we learn that war does not help? | ||
When will we take Jesus' words seriously about being... | ||
So people are very mad at Tucker Carlson for having this conversation. | ||
The main rebuttal to him is basically saying, well, but look at the other countries in the Middle East. | ||
They hate Christians. And if you're a Christian in these other countries, they'll kill you. | ||
The problem is history. | ||
The problem is that that's just not true. | ||
And history tells a very different story. | ||
I did a thread on this on X. I see a lot of people comparing Christians in Israel to Christians in places like Iraq. | ||
Like it wasn't the Israel orchestrated war on Iraq that decimated the Christian population in that country. | ||
And Iraq actually went from 20% of the population being Christian in 2002 to only 1% now. | ||
Practically a 99% drop in the number of Christians in Iraq from the beginning of the Iraq war until now. | ||
Iraq's Christians are close to extinction. | ||
That was an article in 2019. | ||
Since the US-led invasion toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003, he said, the Christian community has dwindled by 83% from around 1.5 million to under a quarter million. | ||
So that wasn't Iraq doing that. | ||
Under Iraq, in Iraq, there were plenty of Christians. | ||
It wasn't until America, at the behest of Israel, invaded Iraq that all the Christians were killed or driven out. | ||
Same thing happened in Syria, which has lost half of its Christian population since the start of the Western and Israeli attempt to overthrow Assad. | ||
How would it be if they'd been successful in usurping moderate Assad with religious extremists like ISIS? As the Christian population in Syria has significantly diminished, nearly half of the Christians in Syria have fled the country since 2011 and the start of the American and Israeli-backed uprisings there. | ||
It goes on. We'll rejoin on the other side. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. We'll be joined very shortly by Revenge of the Cis. | ||
I understand we're connecting with them now, and we'll join them just after this first short five-minute segment. | ||
But I do want to continue on this because I know a lot of our audience are what I guess you could term Christian Zionist. | ||
And a lot of it comes from the idea that Muslims hate Christians and that the enemy of my enemy is my friend or rather that, I don't know, Jews are less hateful to Christians so they're, you know, so we have to kill all the Muslims. | ||
I don't know. I don't really get it. | ||
But I sort of want to... | ||
Lay out the reality of the situation. | ||
In fact, I think this image sort of does more to explain the situation than any amount of words. | ||
It's the Church of St. | ||
Porphyrios under 1,000 years of Muslim rule. | ||
And it's looking fine compared to 75 years of Zionist rule. | ||
We go.cam guys. | ||
Church Saint Porphyrius under a thousand years of Muslim rule versus the same church under just 75 years of Zionist rule. | ||
So the idea that Christians were hunted down under Muslim regimes, how could that possibly be true? | ||
There were still sizable... | ||
Lebanon was majority... | ||
Well, I'll get to it. I'll get to it. | ||
But I think this image says a lot. | ||
Churches that stood for literally a thousand years... | ||
Have not made it 75 years through Zionist rule. | ||
And again, the accusation, or the response to a lot of the responses to Tucker's interview with that priest were basically saying, how dare you criticize Israel? | ||
Muslim countries hate Christians. | ||
But the reality is very different. | ||
20% of the population in Iraq was Christian until we invaded, where it dwindled 83%. | ||
The Christian population in Syria has significantly diminished due to the departure of many Christians from the country amidst the Syrian Civil War. | ||
In the first five years after the outbreak of Syrian Civil War in 2011, at least half of Syrian Christians have left the country. | ||
So that was a civil war that we started, that America and Israel funded the moderate rebels who were actually ISIS. ISIS has had a huge hand in destroying the Christian populations in the Middle East as well with CIA funding and instruction. | ||
So this is us. | ||
That was us. Half of Syria's Christians were doing fine under Bashar al-Assad, who is an Alawite, which is a more moderate sect of Islam. | ||
But the American and the Israeli governments tried desperately to oust him, to replace him with a Muslim extremist. | ||
And even in their failure, they have succeeded in driving the Christians out of that country. | ||
Now Lebanon, at the time that Israel was created, was actually majority Christian. | ||
Just think about that. Doesn't that seem so alien that there was a Christian country in the Middle East? | ||
Christian country. 60% of the Lebanese population was Christian. | ||
When Israel was founded. How did it go from majority Christian, a Christian country, what they called Beirut on the Mediterranean, or they called Beirut Paris on the Mediterranean? | ||
Well, how did Lebanon go from being mostly Christian in the early 20th century to predominantly Muslim in less than 100 years? | ||
Well, because of the Lebanese Civil War. | ||
What was the Lebanese Civil War about? | ||
Well, Israel was created and they drove all the Palestinians into Lebanon and destroyed it. | ||
Okay, so there you go. | ||
And of course, it goes without saying that Gaza used to have Christians, but Israel has more or less single-handedly destroyed the Christian population in Gaza. | ||
One of the oldest churches in the world reduced to rubble in Gaza, and now there's maybe a couple dozen Christians left. | ||
After 2,000 years, Christianity is disappearing from Gaza. | ||
And this goes as well for all of Palestine, which had a sizable Christian minority and even Christian majority areas until around 1950. | ||
So Israel founded 1948, and at the time, there was still at least 15% Christians. | ||
Now there's only 2% today. | ||
So it wasn't Muslims that destroyed Christianity in the Middle East. | ||
It was Israel. | ||
unidentified
|
Just the facts, folks. So what made you decide to start a podcast? | |
Obviously everybody and their mother has a podcast. | ||
Yours is genuinely special. | ||
What made you decide? You know what? I'm going to add my name to the hat of podcasting. | ||
Man, covering everything here every day, you get so tossed into the mix that when you get out, when you're on your way home, you just realize you have so much in you to say, so much in you to vent. | ||
And it was like that with the crew as well. | ||
So basically the idea started where I wanted to have the crew We're good to go. | ||
A different way to receive news sometimes. | ||
A different message. | ||
At the same time, I want to have fun. | ||
We have to be able to make fun of all these people who are trying to, you know, infringe on all of our rights. | ||
And it's so easy. Like, the comedic material is there. | ||
unidentified
|
It writes itself. You sit down in the classic Infowars podcast room that you retrofitted. | |
Exactly. You redid the whole thing. | ||
Yeah. And it's just nostalgic and new at the same time. | ||
It's awesome. Dude, and once you get into that, you feel the energy. | ||
You feel the nostalgia. | ||
You feel just so connected to everything there. | ||
I'm so glad that everybody who's come on so far has loved it. | ||
And everybody, you know, they can't wait for the episodes to drop. | ||
And I'm truly blessed to be able to be able to do this at all. | ||
And I wouldn't be able to do anything if it wasn't for you fans. | ||
Shop at Infowarsstore.com, get an X3 DNA Force. | ||
All the products that we sell... | ||
If it wasn't for you guys supporting us, none of this would happen. | ||
Chase wouldn't be sitting in this chair. | ||
I wouldn't be going on the battle tank with Owen or us being able to go to Stop the Steal. | ||
There's so many things, so many epic things that we've been able to do here at Infowars, and it's all thanks to you. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Harrison Smith here, sitting in for Owen Schroer on The War Room. | ||
Very happy to welcome my guests, known together as Revenge of the Cis. | ||
It's Royce and Mersch. | ||
You can find them at revengeofthecis.com, on X at ROTC Radio, and of course on Rumble, where they do their daily show, Revenge of the Cis. | ||
It's been too long, fellas. | ||
Welcome to The War Room. Thank you. | ||
Hola! How you been, bud? | ||
I've been pretty good. | ||
I know how y'all have been. | ||
Y'all have been hanging out at WrestleMania. | ||
I've been following it. We've been doing good. | ||
And, you know, they were mentioning it in our local chat, and they were saying, like, I think you probably are the guest we've had on the most. | ||
You're the most reoccurring guest on our show. | ||
Well, we've got to keep that trend going. | ||
When am I on next? | ||
But seriously, it's been too long, guys. | ||
Whenever you want, you come on, man. | ||
You've been one of my favorite people to follow on Twitter, dude. | ||
You've been so on point. | ||
And you're an easy guest. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
You are an easy guest, too. | ||
Because, you know, you talk a lot, is what he's saying. | ||
Okay, great. Yeah, no, I also like guests that allow me to sit back and watch my own show. | ||
That's... Always fun. | ||
It's my favorite. So I got some stories for y'all. | ||
I got some stories I want to get y'all's input on. | ||
But what do y'all think? | ||
What's the big news story for today that y'all are focusing on? | ||
Cody finally finished his source. | ||
At WrestleMania. I don't know. We were at WrestleMania all weekend. | ||
That's all I know. Cody Rhodes. | ||
Honestly, the biggest one is probably that Tucker interview. | ||
That has been just ruffling so many feathers. | ||
There were people that were like, rah-rah, and Tucker should be VP, that are now like, can you believe how anti-Semitic he is? | ||
And he's like, he just... | ||
I watched that whole thing, by the way. | ||
He just interviewed a guy. He interviewed a guy, and the guy said, hey, this is what's happening. | ||
Everyone's like, can you believe this anti-Semitic filth? | ||
How dare he? | ||
How dare he question our greatest ally? | ||
But man, what do you think is behind this change? | ||
Because obviously, X looks entirely different this year than it did last year. | ||
Do you think that's just because Elon Musk isn't censoring as much? | ||
Is it just because of October 7th? | ||
Is it a combination of all of these things? | ||
Like what is behind the massive change in discourse, especially on X? | ||
I mean, Mersha and I were talking, it's so funny because Mersha and I were talking about | ||
it outside before our show today. | ||
And we were like, it's so funny seeing people that would kept their mouth shut and weren't | ||
saying. | ||
There was a few people saying this stuff years ago, but years ago, you would like us, you | ||
would put on the guest PLC watch list. | ||
and it was like, what's happening now is some people just started saying it, and everyone started going like, wait a second, they can't really do anything to us. | ||
Like, we can say whatever we want. | ||
And then, when you see, and I think Twitter did help that a lot. | ||
I think Yeah, the ratio-ing helps. | ||
It's fun to see now, like, you know, the ADL shuts off replies, you know what I mean? | ||
Like, all these groups now that are just like, yeah, we don't want to hear any replies because it's always just, we're not buying it, bros. | ||
Like, every kind of, like, warm, and it's not just the Israel stuff, it's the Ukraine stuff. | ||
Every kind of, like, money-grubbing, money-printing, warmongering, Luciferian crap. | ||
Everyone's now in the replies just being like, yeah, I'm not buying it, dude. | ||
I'm just not buying it. | ||
And it's good to see. | ||
Crenshaw got beat up today and he gets beat up every day. | ||
He gets battered on Twitter and it's the funniest thing ever. | ||
He can't get one word in without people just putting the boots to him. | ||
No, because these people, they're still trying to use the post-9-11 neocon talking points, and everyone's had it. | ||
Everyone's seen what happens with that, and what happened to that is a 20-year war that we lose. | ||
It used to be, what, you hate our troops? | ||
And now it's like, no, I'm tired of seeing them get their legs blown off. | ||
That's what I don't want. It's been 20 years, and I actually like the troops. | ||
I'd like them to maybe watch out for the southern border, maybe. | ||
They can hang out here, you know? | ||
It just seems better. Yeah, and obviously that's sort of the position that we've held here forever. | ||
And, you know, this seems like an opportunity. | ||
I keep asking this question because I haven't gotten in. | ||
How do we make hay while the sun shines? | ||
How do we use this to get some unity in this country? | ||
Because it seems like it's not a left or right thing. | ||
Everybody's sick of the wars. | ||
Everybody's sick of our money being sent overseas. | ||
Everybody's sick of it except for the few people at the very top who insist that it keep going. | ||
I mean, is this not an opportunity to make some major change with just popular will at this point? | ||
How do we do that? I mean, look... | ||
You mean vote our way out of it? | ||
Yeah, how do we vote our way out of this? | ||
I don't think we can't vote our way out of it. | ||
The problem is, it's a matter of these few... | ||
You're right, it's a couple people, but they control everything. | ||
They control the purse strings. | ||
They control the money. They control whether you're on these committees. | ||
They have all this power. | ||
It doesn't matter if... | ||
Look, and that's the problem. The Twitter, what it's done, and the Internet right now in general has shown people are sick of it. | ||
Like you said, the majority of people are like, I don't want to do this anymore. | ||
How do we stop this? And the only way I could... | ||
You have to keep pushing, right? | ||
You have to keep pushing back. You have to keep making fun of them. | ||
Call them out. Make them a joke. | ||
I mean, look at that. There's people now that we're seeing. | ||
Trump was a racist sort of like... | ||
I kind of miss my 401k. | ||
So I'll vote for him because we're not doing this anymore. | ||
Yeah. Oh, God. I'm going to get stuck voting for that guy, aren't I? Yeah, that's what happened. | ||
You have to. You have to. | ||
You really do. You have to. | ||
Because what's the other... | ||
Look, just for self-preservation at this point, people would never vote for him for self-preservation. | ||
Even stupid Michael Rappaport, who's stupid, is all like, oh, maybe Trump was so bad. | ||
Maybe I should have paid attention. | ||
It's like, you're an idiot. Okay? | ||
Shut up. You know what? | ||
Everyone's feeling the squeeze. | ||
Look, your other option is Joe Biden. | ||
And I got some videos here, you guys, of Joe Biden over the last few days. | ||
Let's go to clip number nine. | ||
I want to get y'all's response to this. | ||
It's him saying he started running to avoid the prospect of war in Vietnam. | ||
But that's not even the most shocking thing about this clip. | ||
Honestly, he just... | ||
Let's just watch and get your response. | ||
Clip number nine, guys. Joe Biden on why he's running for president. | ||
unidentified
|
Did you spend a lot of time thinking about what your legacy looked like? | |
Well, I hope the legacy is that I kept my word, that I said that the reason I was running was to help change the life of ordinary people and reduce the prospect of war. | ||
And because of Vietnam and And when I ran, I said that I was once asked, well, why wouldn't when I was one of 29 years old? | ||
I said, it must be a secret. And I said, yeah, the secret you got to ask yourself is, what are you willing to lose over? | ||
If you figure out what you're willing to lose over, you got an idea of what you should be doing. | ||
And so I hope my legacy is that I was honest, straightforward and did what I said. | ||
What's that, sir? First off, Fortunate Son should be playing behind him while he talks about Vietnam. | ||
Just what? What was he even trying to say? | ||
This is actually kind of scary. | ||
This is the president of the United States. | ||
What was he even saying? | ||
Sounds so sick and dying. | ||
If that was my grandfather, I would be like, this is probably grandpa's last Christmas. | ||
Really trying to make it nice for him, okay? | ||
That is bad. | ||
That's literally the leader of the free world. | ||
And that's Univision, right? | ||
So that was his appeal to Hispanic voters. | ||
That's what that was. That was that special where he walked him around and he goes, oh, you're not here to clean my office? | ||
And he was actually the guy interviewing him. | ||
So it was, I'm assuming, and honestly, you could laugh, but tell me that probably wouldn't have happened with him, knowing him. | ||
That man is the commander-in-chief of the United States of America. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, and hey, look, I know, I mean, maybe he's talking, like, maybe he thinks he was asking, why did you start running 50 years ago when Vietnam was going, why he would think that was the question. | ||
I mean, the whole thing is bonkers. | ||
But then there's this other clip, it's only five seconds, but clip number four here is Joe Biden yesterday. | ||
He might actually not know which century he's in. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch clip four. Elect me. | |
I'm in the 20th century, 21st century. | ||
Okay. Elect me, I'm in the 20th century. | ||
Great! We got a double face bomb going. | ||
I feel the need to emphasize again that this man is the commander of our armed forces. | ||
He can make a phone call and launch nuclear missiles. | ||
Yeah, he can. Luckily, there's not any major geopolitical conflict going on right now, so I guess we're fine. | ||
Especially not with a country that also has nukes. | ||
Right. It was bad. | ||
You know what it is? When was Bill Clinton in office? | ||
94, 96? | ||
It was around there, right? 92 through 2000, right? | ||
Yeah, through to that. So, 92. | ||
You look at Bill Clinton now, a president from the 90s, on stage next to Biden, and he looks so much younger. | ||
And, like, it's weird, right? | ||
Like, you're like, wait, this guy's the... | ||
You're a space alien, right? | ||
And you came to this planet and I showed you that picture. | ||
You wouldn't go, wait, that guy's the guy that's the leader? | ||
That guy? It's really, and I know it's because Bill Clinton probably got the adrenogram turned on again, but still, you know? | ||
Can we just get Terry Crews in the American flag pants? | ||
Oh yeah. Can we just get idiocracy, just President Camacho? | ||
At least it would be more amusing. | ||
Yeah, let's just embrace it. | ||
By just unloading a weapon in the air? | ||
Like, that would be way better than whatever we're getting now. | ||
Like, this dystopia that we're getting is so boring compared to, like, the Mike Judge version. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, because, of course, the media can't point it out. | ||
Like, you know, they have to go with Biden. | ||
So, you know, we're not going to see this parodied on us. | ||
No, we're not even getting the good comedy that we could be getting out of it if we were, you know, allowed to laugh at this sort of thing. | ||
Instead, they have to completely ignore it. | ||
But, like, it's legitimately concerning that the man can ramble for 30 seconds and you're like... | ||
What was he even trying to say? | ||
It was a very simple question. | ||
What do you want your legacy to be? | ||
If he'd just been like, I left America stronger than when I found it. | ||
It's a one sentence answer. | ||
Instead he rambles for four minutes and you're just like, what was that about Vietnam, sir? | ||
What are we doing here again? | ||
What? And you know what's the scariest part, man? | ||
The scariest part is the person waiting behind him is worse than him. | ||
Like, Kamala is objectively worse. | ||
Like, you know how bad you have to be? | ||
Like, Kamala is objectively worse. | ||
Do you think he's going to be the nominee? | ||
Like, do you think you'll get there? Like Merce said, it doesn't look like he has that much time. | ||
I don't know if he's going to make it. | ||
Well, what do you think the other option is? | ||
Do you think they have a dark horse waiting in the, no pun intended, you think they have a dark horse waiting in the wings? | ||
Newsom. I mean, it has to be. | ||
He's the heir apparent. He's the one that's being groomed. | ||
He's white Obama. | ||
Like, yeah, he's the guy that, you know, of course he's saying all the right things. | ||
Don't be like, no, it's Biden's thing. | ||
I'm not going to run. But if they call him in, they're going to call him in. | ||
And the biggest problem they're going to have is they are going to have to try to explain to Kamala Harris why she's not going to be the one running. | ||
And it's gonna be rough. | ||
So here's my prediction. | ||
There's going to be some sort of scandal. | ||
If this happens, there'll be some scandal with Kamala where she's not gonna be able to run because we don't wanna make the woke people getting rid of an African-American Indian woman from running. | ||
The African-American, folks! | ||
Like that. Sorry, my throat's a little scratchy today. | ||
I can't do a good Trump today. | ||
If the crew could bring up that graphic again, was that from Indiocracy or is that like a meme somebody made? | ||
Terry Crews came back and did a whole thing where he actually dressed up like Camacho and said he was running. | ||
I like Terry Crews. I think he's a funny guy. | ||
And he's one of the few brave guys that first came out against the producers that tried to grab his junk. | ||
But it's true, dude. | ||
And here's the thing. Here's why Terry Crews is better than Biden. | ||
I'll explain. It might have been a world of idiots, but at least he was trying to fix it. | ||
He was trying to do something. | ||
It might not have been the smartest stuff, but at least he was putting forth an option because you knew people were mad at him. | ||
The administration with Ratchety Ann going up there and telling you stuff like, no. | ||
People are starving. No, they're not. | ||
They have food. They're just stupid. | ||
And you're like, what? Remember when inflation went up and they're like, guys, hot dogs are down. | ||
So, I mean, let's not, you know, let's try to look at the silver linings here. | ||
You're like, great, I'll just live on hot dogs forever. | ||
You know, that's what I covered in the first hour was just the economics. | ||
And, I mean, year over year, it's like in 2022, they're saying it costs you $300 a month more for basic necessities. | ||
Then it's the same in 2023. | ||
And then this year, the calculation is $445 a month. | ||
I mean, this is crazy. | ||
This is costing the average American family tens of thousands of dollars a year just to get the same stuff they got last year, just basic necessities. | ||
I mean, how does anybody vote for this to continue? | ||
I honestly don't think anybody voted for this in the first place. | ||
That was that. | ||
Those pizza boxes on the windows. | ||
Oh, what was that about? That's a normal thing. | ||
I'm sure there's 87,000 new IRS agents are voting for him. | ||
Oh, yeah, absolutely. But that, I mean, how do people vote for him? | ||
I think people will. | ||
I think, obviously, you're typical out-of-touch Upper West Side, you know, elite people are going to vote for him, and the LA people are going to vote for him. | ||
But I think now, at this point, I'm honestly at this point thinking that if Biden were to win, nobody's going to believe it. | ||
We're at that point when nobody, with a rational brain, because you talk to people on the streets, you talk to people that voted for Biden, you talk to people over Democrat their entire life that are telling you, this is not sustainable. | ||
We cannot keep living like this, because they're telling you everybody has a job, but what they don't tell you is the job is at an Amazon warehouse, we have to pee in a Gatorade bottle. | ||
There's not good jobs anymore. | ||
They destroyed all those. So it's like, sure. | ||
Yeah, I mean, people are getting a paycheck, I guess. | ||
But what kind of life is that? | ||
No, it's it's I can't think I mean, I can't imagine people like not everybody is noticing this. | ||
Everybody has to be noticing this at this point. | ||
And I've seen I know it's sort of a constant refrain from the conservatives where they're like, we're going to get the black vote this year. | ||
And it's just like, good luck with that, fellas. | ||
And it just it never happens. | ||
It never comes to fruition. | ||
But it feels a little different this time, does it? | ||
Have y'all noticed that? I've been noticing there's a very different shift in the racial voting patterns. | ||
I don't know because the vote hasn't happened yet, but just the videos I'm seeing seem to point in that direction more so than I've ever seen before. | ||
Y'all think there's any legitimacy to that? | ||
Black guys, maybe, are coming around. | ||
I don't see black women coming around. | ||
They love their little special interests. | ||
That's the thing, the special interests of the problem. | ||
I think a lot of people will vote. | ||
I do think that there was a big upturn in Hispanics voting for Trump. | ||
I know that. That is actually something that you could actually see. | ||
But I think that... | ||
The mugshot helped them. | ||
Oh, the mugshot helps. | ||
Of course. People that are joking, why would it help them? | ||
Because it looks cool. Shut up. | ||
It looks cool. It looks cool. | ||
It looks cool. Objectively, whether you like the guy or not, you're the thug now. | ||
And honestly, what they don't tell you is, you know who also were thugs? | ||
The founding fathers. We're all criminals. | ||
So when they try to tell you, like, oh, can you believe dignity? | ||
Yo, we had pot growers and bootleggers with guns they found this country that told the government, get out of here now. | ||
We're going to do whatever we want. So, no, criminals... | ||
Criminals basically started this country. | ||
To pretend it's not cool is a losing battle. | ||
And the Democrats, that's what's happening. | ||
That's where the shift is going. | ||
They're not cool anymore. | ||
They used to be cool in this, but now, since everything is woke and LGBTQ and all that stuff, everyone's like, no, this is... | ||
We said, Mersh, and I said this years ago, trying to have the LGBTQ and then the black communities pretend like they're together is not smart, because if you've ever been in a locker room, that's not real life. | ||
That's a good picture. But I think Georgia vastly underestimated how many of us in America have a mugshot and hate the government. | ||
And I think that they really just were like, oh man, we overshot it with that mugshot. | ||
Because a lot of people went, damn, that's relatable, dude. | ||
I had a DUI 10 years ago. | ||
I feel you, dog. They were arresting people with masks. | ||
So a lot of people have mug shots for dumb stuff now. | ||
They're arresting people for masks. | ||
Remember that dude that got two years in jail for throwing a house party during COVID? They pretend- Well, they told him not to. | ||
And he should have complied. | ||
unidentified
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All you have to do is- Maybe just follow the law, dude. | |
Yeah. That'd be a great sort of counter-propaganda. | ||
Just follow the rules. | ||
Vote Democrat. Do as you're told. | ||
Vote Democrat. I think that's what people are sick of. | ||
It is. Look, I do believe that every human being in their heart has anti-authoritarian in them. | ||
I think it's different levels. | ||
But at the most part, people reach a point where you can tell them what to do until you're not going to tell them what to do anymore. | ||
And I think COVID exposed... | ||
A lot of what they were doing and then getting caught lying and then, you know, hiding all the people that have vax injuries and stuff like that. | ||
I think that there's a lot more people. | ||
I do not think that there's going to be a huge increase with the black vote with Trump. | ||
I don't think that's realistic. But I do believe, I do believe that if Trump doesn't win, this whole thing is is rigged and we got to start over because I don't know what you do at that point. | ||
At that point, it's irreparably broken. | ||
I think you're right. I think this might literally be our last chance to vote our way out of it, even just to get a respite, even just to prove that the system isn't Utterly broken, Trump has to win. | ||
And if not, it really is over for us. | ||
But speaking of the black community in America, I don't know if you've seen this, but Representative Jasmine Crockett, Democrat of Texas, has a very brilliant idea. | ||
I don't know if you all are familiar with this yet. | ||
It's clip number 11. Let's hear this idea and then get Revenge of the Cis' take on it on the other side. | ||
Representative Jasmine Crockett, let's listen. | ||
unidentified
|
Just this past week, I saw, I don't remember which celebrity, but it was actually a celebrity. | |
And I was like, I don't know that that's not necessarily a bad idea. | ||
But I'd have to think through it a lot. | ||
One of the things that they propose is black folk not have to pay taxes for a certain amount of time because then again, that puts money back in your pocket. | ||
But at the same time, it may not be as objectionable to some people about actually giving out dollars. | ||
But obviously then you start dealing with the different tax brackets and things like | ||
that. | ||
And that's one of the reasons that, you know, we argue the reparations make sense because | ||
so many black folk, not only do you owe for the labor that was stolen and killed and all | ||
the other things, right? | ||
But the fact is, like, we end up being so far behind, right? | ||
And so it's like, how do you bring forth people? | ||
Exactly. And so it's like, if you do the no tax thing, for people that are already, say, struggling and aren't really paying taxes in the first place... | ||
It doesn't really, exactly. | ||
They may want those checks. | ||
Some interesting details there. | ||
What do you think? Should black people pay taxes, guys? | ||
unidentified
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I don't think anyone should pay taxes. | |
No, no, no, because this is one of these things where this same thing with this, because I know this is just bait. | ||
It's just social media bait to get people like, oh, how dare you? | ||
You've got to pay taxes. | ||
It's a way to get us to argue for, no, you need to pay your fair share. | ||
It's like when people say tax the churches, and I'm like, you need to be making arguments for why you shouldn't be paying taxes, not for why other people should be paying more taxes. | ||
So I'm on our side. I just don't think it's a black or white thing. | ||
I think nobody should pay taxes. | ||
Yeah, and you know, it's... | ||
Can we stop saying folks? | ||
I feel like we say folks too much now, and it's like lost the meaning of it. | ||
Every time I hear that, I go, oh, something stupid is coming afterwards. | ||
But it's... | ||
Look, this whole reparations thing, as we all know, is stupid. | ||
It's never going to happen. Even Newsom, who championed it at the end, when they go, well, you owe people this much money. | ||
He was like... Nah, I'm not gonna do that, though. | ||
I'm not actually gonna give you money. | ||
That was a whole thing. It's like, and the not paying taxes thing is stupid anyway. | ||
She even gave away the game at the end and go, well, you know, a lot of black people don't pay taxes. | ||
It's like, well, you're saying it now. | ||
Like, if I said that, you would call me a racist. | ||
But you're not allowed to say that. | ||
Even with direct money payments, this reparation stuff is just another thing to have people fight over why the government shouldn't get any more money. | ||
They shouldn't have hired 87,000 new IRS agents. | ||
They should have fired all of them and just leave me alone. | ||
And I think that's... | ||
That's where we are. You know in two years they're rolling in that after $600 you have to report a thing. | ||
People got mad so they slowly rolled it. | ||
Next year it's $5k. Then they're going to drop it every year by $1,000 until you have to give them money. | ||
And by the way, as we've learned anything from the federal government, Money never solves this problem. | ||
You could keep renting it if you want. | ||
And sadly, the only real way out of it, and it's going to hurt, would be to inflate your way out of it. | ||
You have to do it. But the longer we wait, it's Mad Max stuff now. | ||
Oh, my idea was way different. | ||
Involved a rider truck. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
unidentified
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We're not doing that. Anyway, hey, I'm just spitballing. | |
There's no gold in there anyway. | ||
Come on, man. Wake up. We're just throwing ideas out. | ||
We don't have to do my idea, but I want to at least be heard. | ||
Be brainstorming. Nothing wrong with a little bit of brainstorming. | ||
I wish I shared your optimism on reparations never happening. | ||
I think they're gonna happen in the next five years. | ||
I think it's coming. And I think it's gonna be, ironically, the states that never had slaves in the first place are gonna start taxing their white populace and just funneling the money straight to the non-white populace. | ||
I think that's definitely in the cards, and I think it's gonna happen. | ||
I mean, they're already paying off school loans for everybody. | ||
You know, if they can pay people, if they can bribe people to vote for them, they're going to bribe people to vote for them. | ||
More with Revenge of the Cis on the other side at ROTC Radio, their website, revengeofthecis.com. | ||
They stream every day on Rumble. | ||
I guess we're simulcasting right now because your show's usually on right now. | ||
We'll be right back on the other side with more from Royce and Mersch. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I'm joined by Revenge of the Sis, Royce and Mursh. | ||
You can follow them on X at ROTC Radio. | ||
Their website, revengeofthesis.com. | ||
And, of course, they stream every day on Rumble. | ||
Very entertaining show. | ||
I guess y'all have been off for a while but are coming back. | ||
Are we live streaming right now? | ||
unidentified
|
Are we simulcasting? We are on our local show. | |
This is our paywall show. | ||
We're keeping you behind our exclusive velvet rope. | ||
Yeah, we're doing our paywall show as a simulcast when they can just watch you for free. | ||
Which honestly is not a great business model. | ||
We're not good at this. But we're not good at what we do here. | ||
We just make jokes. We're not good at it. | ||
But they are calling in our chat master of the blade, Harrison Smith. | ||
You're darn tootin' I am. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. That was an applet I got from appearing on y'all's show. | ||
But your audience is very hungry for memes. | ||
They want something to latch onto like that. | ||
So you show them you have swords and suddenly that's your identity for the rest of time. | ||
And I'm fine with it. | ||
I like it. I love it. | ||
I just don't like that they think it's only samurai swords when I am clearly a fan of the blades from all cultures and don't want to be boxed in like that. | ||
He's a big broadsword guy. | ||
He likes those too. Okay, you're making it worse. | ||
Now you're just an all-around sword nerd. | ||
You're not just a samurai. Dude, do you own a bastard sword? | ||
I do, yeah. | ||
I actually do. Do you have daggers? | ||
unidentified
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Do I have what? Daggers? | |
Oh my god, yes. I got daggers, I got rapiers, I got sabers, I got Chinese longswords. | ||
I mean, look. You got the ones that, what did Raphael used to have? | ||
Oh, the size. Size. You have those? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't have those, but I know what I'm getting you for your birthday this year. | |
My birthday's in December. I want to have all the Ninja Turtle weapons. | ||
I must have the complete set. | ||
Ninja Turtle weapons sucked, except Leonardo, right? | ||
Like, Leonardo had a literal sword, and then, like, Donatello's like, I got a stick, so I'm just as useful. | ||
Well, he did machines. | ||
Donatello does machines, you understand. | ||
He does machines, yeah, but I have a feeling Donatello would've been pro-vax, and I don't like that. | ||
He was too pro-science. | ||
You know, I feel like Ralph would have taken it and they would have kicked him out of the Ninja Turtles and replaced him with a girl turtle. | ||
You know, did y'all see the newest Ninja Turtles? | ||
I was watching it on a plane because it was free and my son is obsessed with Ninja Turtles because I show him the one from the 80s. | ||
So I will not show him anything that I didn't watch growing up because I know I turned out okay. | ||
So if I watch it, he's allowed to watch it. | ||
But I thought I'd give the new one a try. | ||
Have y'all seen it? There's this moment where one of the turtles is struck dumb by the beauty of a woman. | ||
And she is a dumpy-looking, weird-looking woman. | ||
And it reminds me of the Romeo and Juliet catastrophe that's happening right now. | ||
What is it about putting weird-looking people and then having the actors act like they are drop-dead gorgeous and that they can't keep their jaw off the floor? | ||
Why do they keep casting these roles so wrong? | ||
I think it's a psyop. I think it's a psyop to tell you, no, no, this is what's beautiful now. | ||
You're going to love it. Honestly, I don't think so. | ||
I think it's just genuine marketing. | ||
I think, like, look at pictures from the 1960s of what just people on a city bus looked like. | ||
We're all wearing suits. | ||
They were all thin. They all looked great. | ||
It's just reflective of the, yeah. | ||
We're just a nation of fat ugly retards now and they're like well we need the character needs to be relatable so spider-man's got to be a fat ugly retard like we got to make Wolverine a fat ugly retard otherwise they're not gonna see themselves through the lens of the character. | ||
That's why Juliet needs a mustache now because Everyone, you know, everyone's a trans woman now. | ||
So honestly, you know what? | ||
We're wrong here. It's not their fault. | ||
They're just marketing to these crazy people now. | ||
And I think it's bait, especially when, like, the Juliet one, where it's like, you're just racist. | ||
I go, it has nothing to do with her race. | ||
She's objectively ugly. | ||
Like, I mean, No, they don't do it with the race. | ||
And they're doing it on purpose because they want the outrage. | ||
They want to say, look at these bigots. | ||
But in reality, their movies are failing. | ||
All these Marvel movies are failing. | ||
All these Star Wars movies are failing. | ||
Nobody cares. Nobody cares anymore. | ||
People are going, nah, I'm alright, man. | ||
I'll just go outside, I guess. | ||
Yeah, I don't get how, like, we're in this terrible situation in the real world and we don't even have good media. | ||
Like, it just, everything sucks. | ||
And I actually have that exact article from The Cut. | ||
Romeo and Juliet director calls out the barrage of racist abuse. | ||
So I mean, this is just a marketing program that they run now, right? | ||
You cast a black person in a traditionally white role, and then no matter what happens, | ||
you immediately come out and say, there's been a racist backlash and we must stand up | ||
against these horrible racists. | ||
That I haven't really seen much outrage about this other than just people going, that's | ||
Juliet? | ||
Okay, I mean, that's it, but it's deliberate, right? | ||
I mean, it has to be deliberate. | ||
This is how you get attention to your movies now. | ||
Well, I mean, what's his name? | ||
The actor? Man, I'm forgetting his name. | ||
The guy from Limitless. Tom Holland? | ||
Is that? No, the guy from Limitless was, I forget who his name is. | ||
The guy who was Rocket Raccoon's voice. | ||
Anyway, he played a Jewish character, and the character, the actual person he was playing had a big nose, so you put a prosthetic nose on it, and there was backlash. | ||
There was this whole backlash about like, whoa, why you gotta use a white guy and put a big Jewish nose on him? | ||
And everyone's like, That's what he looked like. | ||
What do you want from us? | ||
But I don't think you can make anybody happy anymore. | ||
It doesn't matter. And like we've said, and we've said it again, when Ryan Gosling is Black Panther, I'll shut up. | ||
I'll shut up, and then I will not complain, because then you guys don't care. | ||
Honestly, that would be such a good movie. It would be great. | ||
Ryan Gosling's great. He's so great in everything. | ||
He'd be a great Malcolm X, I think, a biopic with that. | ||
There's lots of roles he could fill. | ||
You know, but part of it, like, I saw a version of Romeo and Juliet recently, because my wife and I like to go to, like, the, you know, Shakespeare in the Park or whatever it is, and they had gender-swapped, or, no, I guess they gender-swapped Romeo, but, like, the whole story is about gender differences. | ||
The whole story is, like... | ||
Juliet is stuck in a tower because she's a woman and can't go anywhere and Romeo's walking around with his boys getting in fights because that's what boys do. | ||
And so when you swap the genders and you're actually referring to Romeo as she, the whole thing doesn't make sense. | ||
Like they undercut the actual like foundation of the story and they expect you just to go along with it. | ||
None of it made any sense at the end of the day. | ||
So like they're changing these things in a way that fundamentally breaks the story they're trying to tell. | ||
Yeah, they're so devoid of any creativity now. | ||
Everything is just like, alright, hear me out on this. | ||
Superman, but he's trans. | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, okay. Oh God, don't give him my DS merch. | |
Well, you know what's happening is the backlash that I love seeing is characters they make to be bad guys turn out to people love them and they meme them into like being awesome. | ||
Like it happened with Homelander, right? | ||
Homelander's supposed to be, literally had a MAGA hat on at like the end of it and everyone's like, I don't know, he's kind of cool though. | ||
He would be like, he's pretty cool and then he becomes a hero. | ||
They try to make Ken the bad guy in the Barbie movie and everyone's like, I don't know, Ken's kind of a Chad. | ||
So he's pretty cool. | ||
Yeah, the sunglasses meme just wouldn't stop. | ||
It was just making people so mad because they wanted him to be this toxic character. | ||
Then everybody just adopted him. | ||
All the right-wingers were like, yeah, what is it? | ||
Taking the sunglasses off and having the sunglasses on. | ||
It was awesome. People kept telling me I really need some Kennergy. | ||
Yeah, exactly. The backlash is funny, but they'll lie to you. | ||
They're doing it on purpose, right? | ||
Because... No one was going to go watch this movie anyway. | ||
No one was going to go watch the Tomahawk. | ||
So the way you get people to go watch the movie now is you make outrage. | ||
They tried that with that Magical Negroes movie and now it got kicked out of the theaters after three weeks because nobody saw it. | ||
It's like Daffy Duck where you could only do these tricks once and afterwards people are like, nah, this is bait. | ||
I really don't care. Look at that. | ||
It's a mustache. Juliet looks like Bruno Mars. | ||
I don't know what you want me to tell you here. | ||
That's weird to me. | ||
It's weird. What is that haircut? | ||
unidentified
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It's very weird. It's very weird. | |
She looks like Avon Barksdale's sister from The Wire. | ||
Oh, man. Oh, that's Julia. | ||
You wouldn't kill yourself over not being able to be with her? | ||
No, I would if I had to be. | ||
It's quite the opposite. First of all, I wouldn't kill myself over any of these hoes, but definitely not that one. | ||
Yeah, Mersh is all about fresh and fit, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. That's a whole other can of worms we can open up if we really want to. | |
We're starting a new show. | ||
It's Fresh and Fit and Mersh. | ||
And Mersh. Fresh and Fit and Mersh. | ||
My God. Yeah, it's... | ||
I mean, everything's insane. | ||
I just saw Don Lemon is trying to come out with a show on X. I didn't even realize he's doing a show, but it's failing utterly. | ||
I mean, everything the mainstream tried to do, it's becoming obvious now. | ||
They were entirely propped up the entire time, and now that that's been broken, they're just embarrassing. | ||
They're just flailing around trying to get attention, and nobody cares, which is why... | ||
Our side is exploding and blown up, and it's cliche at this point, conservatism is the new counterculture, but in a lot of ways it really is. | ||
I mean, we really are the alternative to whatever's happening in mainstream, which is just ugly and gross and annoying. | ||
We'll be back on the other side, final segment with Revenge of the Cis. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. It's the war room on Infowars.com forward slash show. | ||
Share that link. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The War Room, Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, sitting in, of course, for Owen Schroyer. | ||
And I think I'll be back here tomorrow, although, I don't know, I heard Alex say he's going to be back tomorrow, so maybe I'll be on American War Room. | ||
I don't know. We're playing a little bit of musical chairs here. | ||
But I'm very happy to be here on The War Room because I am joined by Revenge of the Cis, Royce and Mersch at ROTC Radio on X and Revengeofthecis.com, where they stream on Rumble and Locals. | ||
Okay, so every day I'm having to cover just these crazy stories, whether it's geopolitics in Israel or just poisoning the tap water. | ||
I mean, there's always so much insane stuff to cover that I never get to the fun stories that I just want to riff on for a little while. | ||
So I'm going to use you guys as an excuse to just cover some of the things that I print out and then I carry around with me and then I never end up actually bringing to the show. | ||
I'm bringing them to the show now. And I just feel like this sort of encapsulates a lot of the modern world as a TikTok video. | ||
And it's going to be weird for me to even read this, but it's a blonde woman who says, My bikini waxer says something that blew my mind this week. | ||
We were talking about feeling lost after turning 34 and why we felt that way. | ||
Then she said, quote, We're the first generation of 30-somethings, not building traditional families. | ||
There's no blueprint for us. | ||
We're paving the way. | ||
Where are they paving the way to, fellas? | ||
Paving the... You're a bikini waxer. | ||
You're literally near people's buttholes all day. | ||
Come on. Do not... Paving the way for what? | ||
Paving the way for what? | ||
This is... Again, this is... | ||
People make all these mistakes, and instead of being like, man, you know, maybe there's some stuff that other people were saying that did make sense, but now it's like, no, no. | ||
We're paving the way to what? | ||
An Etsy store? | ||
Yeah, you're paving the way to being in a state-run hospice care someday while somebody's going through your belongings. | ||
Yeah, it's excuses because some people will do anything other than have accountability. | ||
Girls, we're paving the way to just probably going into some kind of state mass grave and they're just gonna throw our stuff out in the trash. | ||
Yeah, and who said that? Oh yeah, someone who sees my butthole every month. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. The butthole maintenance lady told me we're creating a new world here. | ||
I mean, and that's the thing. | ||
It's like, do they think it wasn't always an option? | ||
Like, do they think their grandmother's You always could just be a whore. | ||
Through all of time, you could have been a whore. | ||
That was always an option. | ||
The people that came before us chose a more responsible, traditional path on purpose. | ||
They're acting like they've just discovered being an irresponsible loser at 34. | ||
No, you're just... Justifying terrible decisions you're making. | ||
But it's like it encapsulates so much of what's wrong with our country where they look around. | ||
They know in the back of their head, they know like, man, I'm screwing up here. | ||
Like I've wasted a lot of my life. | ||
I'm not where I'm supposed to be. | ||
And they almost have to compensate for it, overcompensate and say, no, actually, we're paving the way to a new generation. | ||
It's just like, okay. Alright, I guess. | ||
That sounds like something that a bigot who's never had a bikini wax would say. | ||
That's what I think. It's guilty. It is just a huge cope though and it's like, it's basically whenever somebody's just screaming something over and over again and it's just like, are you trying to convince me or are you trying to convince yourself? | ||
Like, are you just trying to quiet that little voice inside of you where you're like, you know, like you said, there is a little voice in you going, oh man, this isn't right. | ||
But they're like, I am so happy in my studio apartment. | ||
I will tell you, I love living in a big city. | ||
Sure, I'm scared every day, but that's just part and parcel. | ||
And you're like, man, that doesn't sound good at all. | ||
It sounds terrible. Yeah. | ||
It's the Big Apple, folks. | ||
I get to walk down the street and, you know, walk by piss and have a bum punch me in the face. | ||
There's no city like it. | ||
There's a lot of cities like it now, actually. | ||
Yeah. We got good food. | ||
Yeah, your food's really great. | ||
That's good. You want some street gerbil? | ||
That sounds awesome. No, thank you. | ||
I live in a city that has like maybe 20,000 people that live in it. | ||
Our food is fine. It's fine. | ||
Hey, guess what? There's still Chinese restaurants in it. | ||
Do you understand you could have a safe city and still have Chinese restaurants without importing the world? | ||
Yeah, it turns out you don't have to import the third world to have like tacos. | ||
I'm sorry. I have it on reliable authority that in order to have spicy food, we have to just completely abandon and demographically change our entire nation. | ||
Is that not a requirement? Have I been lied to here? | ||
No, it turns out they sell curry at Publix. | ||
Yeah. You can go buy it and make your own. | ||
They have it everywhere now, honestly. | ||
It's true. It's 100%. | ||
It's like the excuse always, and there's unironically people that post up and be like, oh, I wouldn't trade it for all the yummy food I have. | ||
I'm like, man, we had Mexican food my whole life. | ||
Like, what are you talking about? | ||
Like, the food's always going to be there. | ||
It's a cope because they know that it's bad. | ||
We actually just saw John Stossel talk about how they passed that law, the gig economy, where they had to give medical and everything, and they repealed all of it because everyone was like, this is horrible. | ||
I can't make any money being a contractor. | ||
I can't do anything. | ||
Because they think that money solves the problem, when in reality, what people really want is... | ||
They want freedom. They want freedom. | ||
Leave people alone. They'll be okay. | ||
Most people have been left alone for the entirety of humankind, and they were okay. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, there's just something about the cope, the overcompensation of the cope, where it's like they have to act like being a failure is some—they're trailblazing. | ||
Like, they couch it in the language of, like, we are changing the world. | ||
It's like when you see ads for, like, Monsanto's that's just like— We're good to go. | ||
Here at Raytheon, we believe that every human is a person. | ||
Here at Raytheon, trans people matter. | ||
And you're like, you're Raytheon! | ||
Shut up! Brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Okay, yeah, because everything is run by these corporations. | ||
And I think... One of the biggest mistakes that I think conservatives made, especially in the 90s and the early 2000s, was give all these mega corporations a free pass. | ||
Because... They did, and all these corporations, as soon as they saw the tide turn, there's no loyalty to Republicans. | ||
They're like, no, no, no, trans stuff. | ||
We're all trans now. | ||
Yeah, you know, but isn't it kind of funny that, like, because, you know, Raytheon, these big companies, actually are, you know, they actually can't hire illegal immigrants. | ||
So, like, the only place where, like, Americans can actually get good, like, engineering jobs are the weapons manufacturing companies that are responsible for the wars that are destroying. | ||
So it's almost like a... | ||
It's almost like the system has a self-healing attribute where they start all the wars, they drive our country to the brink, but then somehow they're the last bastion of, like, American exceptionalism. | ||
So I'm sort of torn on it. | ||
We are really good at killing people. | ||
unidentified
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No, we're awesome. We are, like, literally the best empire in history at killing people. | |
Yeah, like, you know, we could do it from a strip mall now. | ||
Like, we don't even have to go there anymore. | ||
It's pretty, I mean, we're one of the only countries that'll have a war going on, and we're like, let's start another war. | ||
We could take them on to it once. | ||
Yeah, two or three. What's up, Korea? | ||
Yeah. North or South, I don't care. | ||
Bring them all. Bring them all. | ||
Biden still thinks we're at war in Vietnam, so God only knows where we're going to war next. | ||
He is in here. | ||
Harrison, he is in here. | ||
He's always be there. He just saw a full metal jacket on Air Force One. | ||
That's what happened. I know that's what happened. | ||
We're gonna stop Gorbachev. | ||
We're entrenched in a Cold War. | ||
They're rounding up Jews in Poland. | ||
You're like, this is a whole different era, bro. | ||
Okay, come on, man. No, but it's... | ||
But the COPUS is hilarious because they know that they created it. | ||
And one of the hardest things, I think, as a human to do is accept that you were wrong. | ||
It's really difficult. Nobody wants to do it. | ||
And I think if some people are just to go, you know, man, I got fooled by the vax. | ||
You know, man, I got fooled by this. | ||
You know, it would be so much better. | ||
But we can't because we're so polarized. | ||
And is there a middle anymore? | ||
People talk about independence. | ||
Do they even exist? Because I don't know anyone that is one. | ||
Yeah, I don't know either. But it seems like all the lines are shifting. | ||
And that's sort of what we were talking about at the beginning of the conversation is like, you know, this weird thing where it's like, you know, you think of like the stone toss comic of pulling the rope and you look over and you're like, why is the squad on my side? | ||
Like, what is going on here? | ||
Why is the squad on my side and the Republican leadership on the other side? | ||
The divisions don't really make sense anymore. | ||
I mean, I think a lot of that is purely political. | ||
I mean, look, I think the best example of the division has been the Palestine-Israel stuff now. | ||
Like, when you're really starting to see, when you have the unlikely allies, where you're like, wow. | ||
And I think it's moved, at least with this kind of stuff, it's shifted a lot from left and right to war and anti-war. | ||
Right. And that is the division, isn't it? | ||
Yeah, I don't think it's mutually exclusive to any particular party. | ||
I just think that there's these anti-war people, and then there's the war people, and that's why you see a lot of weird, a lot of weird masks. | ||
So right now, if you go, look, I don't want war. | ||
I don't want to be funding Israel's war forever. | ||
They go, okay, yeah, you know who else thinks that? | ||
Leftists. And you're like, I don't really care what they think. | ||
I'm telling you what I think. | ||
Thing is, I'm not even anti-war. | ||
I'm just like, explain how this war benefits me. | ||
What are we doing? | ||
Why are they the bad guys? | ||
What are we doing it for? | ||
How are we going to get out of... But this is literally just blindly writing blank checks. | ||
Lindsey Graham's like, we need to assassinate Putin. | ||
You can't say that on TV. You can't call for Russian people to kill their president on TV. Oh, but I did. | ||
Oh, but I did. | ||
unidentified
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I like to see you stop me. | |
Any day where a child's not getting bombed is a bad day for Dan Crenshaw and Lindsey Graham. | ||
Honestly, that investigation that caught that dude, that intelligence guy that said he was nudging it, he had big Lindsey Graham vibes, if you know what I mean. | ||
Yeah, I very much know what you mean. | ||
Guys, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Revenge of the Sis at ROTC Radio on X, revengeofthesis.com, streaming on Rumble. | ||
A pleasure as always, gentlemen. | ||
A recent investigation by Plus 972 Magazine and Local Call reveals that the Israeli army has developed an artificial intelligence-based program known as Lavender, which does exactly that. | ||
According to six Israeli intelligence officers with first-hand experience, the Lavender AI machine determined who to kill and was obeyed with military discipline. | ||
During the first weeks of the war, the Lavender system designated about 37,000 Palestinians as targets and directed airstrikes on their homes. | ||
Despite knowing that the system makes errors about 10% of the time, there was no requirement to check the machine's data. | ||
The Israeli army systematically attacked the targeted individuals at night, in their homes, while their whole family was present. | ||
An automated system known as Where's Daddy was used to track the targeted individuals and carry out bombings when they entered their family's residences. | ||
The obvious result was that thousands of women and children were wiped out by Israeli airstrikes. | ||
According to these Israeli intelligence officers, the IDF bombed them in homes as a first option. | ||
And on several occasions, entire families were murdered when the actual target was not inside. | ||
In one instance, four buildings were destroyed along with everyone inside because a single target was in one of them. | ||
When it came to targets marked as low level by the AI Lavender system, cheaper bombs were used, which destroyed entire buildings, killing mostly civilians and entire families. | ||
This was done because the IDF did not want to waste expensive bombs on who they deemed as unimportant people. | ||
It was decided that for every low-level Hamas operative that Lavender marked, it was permissible to kill up to 15 or 20 civilians. | ||
And if the target was a senior Hamas official, more than 100 civilians was acceptable. | ||
Most of these AI targets were never tracked before the war. | ||
The Lavender software analyzed information collected on the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip through a system of mass surveillance, assessed the likelihood of each person being a militant, and gave a rating from 1 to 100. | ||
If the rating was high enough, then they were killed along with their entire family. | ||
Lavender flagged individuals who had patterns similar to Hamas, including police, civil defense, relatives, and residents who had similar names and nicknames. | ||
This sort of tracking system has existed in the U.S. for years. | ||
unidentified
|
What I will be providing you and the fine gentleman of the Secret Service is a list of every threat made about the president since February 3rd and a profile of every threat maker. | |
And these are, like, existing targets? | ||
Exhibit A. Oakland resident Justin Pinsky posted on a message board, Romania has a storied history of executing their leaders, couldn't they do us a solid, and take out Bush? | ||
How is this all possible? | ||
Um, keyword selectors. | ||
Attack, take out, Bush. | ||
So think of it as a Google search, except instead of searching only what people make public, we're also looking at everything they don't. | ||
So emails, chats, SMS, whatever. | ||
Yeah, but which people? | ||
The whole kingdom's not white. | ||
And while many people claim that Israel controls the US, Joe Biden said that Israel serves US interests. | ||
unidentified
|
There's no apology to be made. | |
None. It is the best $3 billion investment we make. | ||
Were there not an Israel, the United States of America would have to invent an Israel to protect her interest in the region. | ||
The United States would have to go out and invent an Israel. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
All right, folks, that is the latest from Greg Reese. | ||
Find and share that at band.video and InfoWars.com. | ||
And please do remember to go to InfoWarsStore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
We rely completely on your support at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
We would not be here without you. | ||
We will not be here without your support at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Go today, get Survival Shield X3 or TurboForce or Bodies, all of those 40% off, incredibly powerful supplements. | ||
And of course, just peruse around. | ||
See what's good for you at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Maybe get a water filter. After all, your water is filled with poison. | ||
Maybe you should start filtering it. | ||
unidentified
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We'll be right back. The War Room with Harrison Smith is where the shields of truth are forged in the fires of inquiry. | |
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to the War Room. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined today by Josie the Red-Headed Libertarian. | ||
She is a TimCast contributor and host of Spaces with Josie. | ||
You can find her at TRHLOfficial on X and also on X at Spaces with Josie. | ||
You can find her on TimCast at TimCast.com slash channel slash spaces dash Josie. | ||
One of my favorite Twitter accounts. | ||
Very happy to talk to you for the first time. | ||
unidentified
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Welcome to the show, Josie. Thank you so much for having me, Harrison. | |
Well, it's my pleasure and I'm glad you're here because you have been digging into a story that we've been covering ever since it broke and even before. | ||
And it's a story that I think encapsulates a lot of trends going on around the world. | ||
And that is the Brazilian judge that's now wrangling with Elon Musk to censor X. And you've done a lot of research on this. | ||
You know a lot more about it than I do. | ||
Tell us what exactly is happening with this Brazilian judge and X. So essentially this Brazilian judge and Lula over in Brazil are trying to ban certain X accounts. | ||
And X is even forbidden from telling us which accounts are on the ban list. | ||
And they're fighting this because it's unconstitutional. | ||
So what I did is I dug into their constitution. | ||
Their constitution is something like 423 pages long. | ||
So I just looked at kind of the fundamental rights and guarantees to see what they were violating. | ||
And there's several. I mean, so this government has probably some of the best property rights, | ||
rights that I've ever seen enshrined in any constitution ever. | ||
But this one actually talks a lot about your associations and your rights. | ||
And it says it in ways that are written so that anybody can understand them. | ||
So I dug into that and turned out there were like six or seven rights out of their fundamental rights | ||
that they're violating by not letting people associate with these ex-accounts. | ||
And it's amazing that Elon Musk is standing up so forcefully against them from Wall Street Journal. | ||
It says, Elon says, quote, we were being given demands to suspend sitting members of parliament and major journalists, and moreover, we could not even tell them that this was at the behest of this judge. | ||
We had to pretend that it was due to our rules of service. | ||
So, I mean, this is the definition of tyranny. | ||
This is the definition of censorship, arbitrarily and secretly silencing your opponents. | ||
You think they're just sort of testing this in Brazil? | ||
What connection do you think this has to censorship drives here in the States? | ||
Oh, yeah, absolutely. A lot of what we're seeing happen, they kind of have their own J6 over there. | ||
A lot of what we see happen in Brazil is mirroring what happens in America, so it could definitely be a test run. | ||
But they're trying to do all of this unconstitutionally, to their constitution, and they're trying to do this without any due process, okay? | ||
So in their constitution, it says that they can do things like this, but it has to be through due process. | ||
They can end associations, but it has to be with due process, and they haven't They haven't done that. | ||
They haven't used this due process. | ||
But what they're doing is the very definition of tyranny. | ||
It is the definition of authoritarianism. | ||
And it's frankly horrifying that they think they can do this. | ||
But this guy, this judge, thinks he's some kind of a king and just has the right to just unilaterally and arbitrarily ban voices. | ||
I mean, Parliament? Like, this is a big deal. | ||
And it's, you know, as it says there, he's then launching an investigation against Musk for criminal activity, which is exactly what we saw here in the States. | ||
When Elon Musk bought Twitter and turned it into X, they launched investigation after investigation. | ||
Whatever, you know, agency they could get to go after Musk in whichever way they could, they did and they have. | ||
And they're being successful in a lot of ways, stealing literally billions of dollars from him. | ||
How can people not see what this is? | ||
Like, people are so easy to fool, I guess, or are they in on it? | ||
I guess that's the question I want to know. | ||
Do people actually think, well, our system is simply going after lawbreakers, and Elon Musk broke the law, so they're going— Like, do they actually buy that, or do they understand, no, they're going after Elon Musk because they hate free speech, and I'm fine with that? | ||
Are they okay with the corruption, or do they not know what's going on? | ||
Because it's got to be one of those, right? | ||
Yeah, this is lawfare, and this is kind of a new— A new way of warfare that we're seeing happen, you know, from everybody, from Elon Musk to Donald Trump. | ||
We're seeing them go after them and exhaust them and, you know, take their money and fight them in a totally different way. | ||
And you gotta know it's wrong. | ||
I mean, anybody with any sort of Entry-level understanding of history knows that anybody who's ever censored anybody has not been the good guy. | ||
Censors are the good guy. | ||
They've never been the good guy. | ||
There's no point in history where they were ever the good guy. | ||
So I think that what it comes down to is the people who don't like Elon Musk or don't like Donald Trump. | ||
unidentified
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They haven't been told no since 2012. | |
They haven't been told no. | ||
They haven't been told this is wrong. | ||
So they've had their confirmation bias inflated for all of these years, and now they're being Anytime something happens and it agrees with them, they're just right again. | ||
It's a sense of arrogance. | ||
It just feeds the narcissism, and that's what we're seeing, and that's why there's so many mentally ill people, and it's just all right out there in our faces. | ||
Yeah, I think you're exactly right. | ||
And I think we're in a weird position because I feel like it sort of used to be that you could expose this sort of stuff and people would be outraged by it. | ||
Now it's all happening in the open. | ||
And it's almost like instead of telling people this is happening, we have to try to get them to care that it's happening. | ||
It's almost like we have to try to explain to people why they should even want free speech. | ||
It's like we've lost the fundamentals of our belief system completely. | ||
How do we do that? How do we convey to people why it's even important that free speech exists? | ||
Because they don't seem to care at this point. | ||
I think a lot of it is nobody was taught correct history, you know? | ||
So we have people who don't understand the founding of our country. | ||
They don't understand what kind of censorship went on with our founding fathers. | ||
They don't know any of that. | ||
So they... | ||
They were convinced that safety, any of these rights can be altered for safety. | ||
And that's okay. That's an exception. | ||
But it's not an exception. | ||
Unless you're going to offer a constitutional amendment to repeal and replace the First Amendment, then no. | ||
It doesn't matter what you rule. | ||
The Constitution is above all of that. | ||
But they have no understanding of this. | ||
They're pretty much told We're in a generation of people who are taught how to take a test, but not how to understand what they were reading and what they were learning. | ||
They never ended up retaining any of that information, so they just parrot these talking points that are handed to them that make them sound super smart. | ||
Yeah, and it seems to me, I mean, talking about the founding fathers, one thing I've always thought is, you know, one of the five freedoms in the First Amendment is freedom of the press. | ||
But I don't think they were talking about that the way we use the term the press to mean the media landscape. | ||
I mean, at the time, the press was a piece of technology, right? | ||
So, you know, if the Bill of Rights was written today, it'd probably say something like freedom of the Internet, right? | ||
Freedom of the technology necessary to spread ideas to the wider public, you know, more than you can just... | ||
I mean, the press was the technology you needed to get ideas to a mass amount of people. | ||
So I think that is also a sort of fundamental misunderstanding that we have a right to use the technology to spread our ideas, not just stand on a soapbox on our corner. | ||
Would you agree with that? I would agree with that. | ||
I think that that is the way that the Constitution was meant to be interpreted. | ||
Because the press, as we know them, the mainstream media, they use this line in an effort to convey themselves as a protected class because they're enshrined in the Constitution, and that's not the way that it was ever meant to be. | ||
Right. I agree. | ||
I think it just meant freedom of the technology. | ||
That's what the press was back then. | ||
And another trend that we're seeing, and it plays into this Brazil story, is that censorship is being outsourced now. | ||
I mean, but that's the way it's going to happen, right? | ||
I don't see it as any different. | ||
They say, well, they're not censoring them, but they're getting the social media companies | ||
to censor. | ||
But like, that's how you censor, you know, you don't have to have an FBI agent go in | ||
and take the computer of the person they don't want speaking. | ||
They do it through the corporations or they do it through the systems that are available | ||
to them. | ||
But they do it in a way that I think they think, and technically maybe they're right, | ||
circumvents the restrictions placed on them by the Bill of Rights. | ||
And so they're able to censor people without technically censoring people by outsourcing it to the social media companies, which is why they probably hate Elon Musk so much. | ||
But how do we put a stop to that when they're able to stick so closely to the letter of the law while clearly violating the spirit of the law? | ||
You are absolutely correct on that. | ||
And that's been going on forever. | ||
There was actually... Something called the Twitter Portal Partnership. | ||
Something like that. All those words, I'm saying it wrong. | ||
But that was going on since 2016. | ||
And it was this partnership between the government and Twitter to make sure that no one is spreading disinformation. | ||
And we saw that. | ||
We saw what that was with the Twitter files. | ||
And so I think that the way... | ||
Through that is what Elon Musk did. | ||
So Facebook is captured. | ||
No one's ever going to buy Facebook and fix that. | ||
That's captured. Same goes for Instagram. | ||
You know, same owner. Any other way to get through that. | ||
So I think that what you do is you leave those platforms and you go to platforms like Rumble. | ||
Go to platforms like X. Platforms where you can speak and that's where you have your voice and share your thoughts because it's almost like You know, the world is captured, okay? | ||
But there's just this tunnel out into this freedom where you can talk to everybody else. | ||
So I would just go to those places and voice your feelings and your opinions there and just let them manifest into the atmosphere. | ||
And that's the best way to fight this. | ||
Yeah, I completely agree. | ||
And of course, the newest technology that we have to be concerned about is AI and the way that they're censoring AI or manipulating AI in very disturbing ways. | ||
I think I may have gotten this from your Twitter feed. | ||
I'm not sure if not from Neil underscore Chilson on X. | ||
He says there's a new AI proposal from AI policy US. | ||
It would slam the Overton window shut. | ||
It's the most authoritarian piece of tech legislation. | ||
I've read my entire policy career. | ||
Everything in the bill is aimed at creating a democratically unaccountable government job program for Doomers who want | ||
to regulate math. | ||
So basically they're already they're sort of getting ahead of the curve with AI and making sure AI strictly adheres to | ||
their, you know framework of the world. | ||
Another another place where I think Elon Musk is on the right | ||
side of history, but how do we deal with this? | ||
This emergent technology of AI is already being twisted and manipulated and laws are being written to make sure that it complies with the lies that are told by the establishment. | ||
What do we do about that? | ||
Is there anything to do about that? | ||
Or just what are your feelings on emergent AI and some of the rules being written for it? | ||
I think that you've got to open up the code that's, you know, Baseline what you do. | ||
I've seen it weaponized. | ||
I've had AI weaponized against me in ways that you could probably imagine as a woman on the internet. | ||
And it is scary. | ||
It is dangerous. It is disgusting. | ||
And I mean, just the way to beat that is to, I mean, not let Congress handle it. | ||
They make everything worse that they touch. | ||
But what they're saying essentially is AI is too dangerous for you, so we need to control it. | ||
And they say something like that. | ||
That's even worse. | ||
They're gonna make it much, much worse. | ||
Anything the government touches is worse. | ||
Yeah, and it's, I mean, I think it's particularly dangerous because once they start implementing AI in censorship protocol or to, like, in a threat matrix sort of way, determine who's a threat and who's not, you know, it's being deliberately filled with biases by the people who are writing it. | ||
Not even like unconscious bias. | ||
Like they are literally going in and putting in sort of like stopgap measures to make sure the wrong answer is never given out. | ||
I mean, the Google AI, the Gemini AI is a perfect example where they were saying, oh, well, y'all, it made some mistakes. | ||
And it's like it wasn't making mistakes. You deliberately wrote it so that it would actually input different commands than the one that the user put in. | ||
So if you said, show me a pope, it would add in Asian woman pope, right? | ||
It would add So they're deliberately altering the outcome, but then they're going to be able to point to it and go, well, a robot came up with this. | ||
You can't argue with it. | ||
It's a calculator. You're arguing with a calculator? | ||
So, I mean, if we don't stop this now before AI is truly implemented at like a policy level, it's over for humanity, I think. | ||
Yeah, I know that they want to start implementing AI into lesson plans for teachers and things like that. | ||
And that's just, it's just stopping lazy. | ||
Just do it yourself. | ||
Oh my gosh. You know, like, but AI is going to take over a lot of jobs and it's going to take it over in a way that fits the establishment if we don't get ahead of it. | ||
And I wish I had more answers for how to get ahead of it. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, it's just like, it's like everything that we cover now, like I was saying earlier, you know, used to be that, like, you would uncover something, and, you know, people would have to respond to it, they'd have to, like, do something about it, or you, you know, I could take stories, then interpret them, and try to, you know, express what's being hidden, but now it's just all out in the open, and so it's like, well... | ||
What do you even need me here for? | ||
They're just telling you what they're doing. | ||
I'm not a conspiracy theorist anymore. | ||
I'm just reading the mainstream news to people. | ||
So it's weird whether it's AI or censorship. | ||
It's obvious what they're doing. | ||
It's obvious it's wrong. | ||
Beyond making that argument, it's hard to know How to convince people to stand up against this, but we obviously have to. | ||
And I still consider myself a libertarian, despite maybe I've moved away a little bit from the sort of classical libertarian, but I still have liberty as my highest value, the thing that I think is just superlative. | ||
It's the only thing that matters at the end of the day. | ||
But how do we have a libertarian society when you have corporations like this with the power that they have now? | ||
How do we deal with the massive power of corporations without empowering a corrupt government? | ||
What's the path forward for libertarianism in this brave new world? | ||
We have to return to the Bill of Rights as close as we can to the Bill of Rights because that's what we needed. | ||
I think we're good to go. | ||
I think we're good to go. | ||
The federal government will be enshrined in the articles. | ||
And if they're not written down there and there's no argument in there saying that the states can't do that, then that power falls to the states and to the individuals. | ||
So we need to return to a society like that. | ||
High fences, make good neighbors. | ||
A strong republic of states with trade agreements. | ||
That's what our country was founded on. | ||
We've become this bloated, bastardized federal Federal government just one people, which we aren't. | ||
We're all separate individuals. | ||
We live in different states. We have different values. | ||
And that's okay. We just need to learn how to coexist with each other in that way without people trying to terrorize us and tyranny from a loaded government. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, no, I completely agree. | ||
And it almost seems like we're in a transition period right now where we're moving towards | ||
total despotism, but they still have to kind of pay lip service to the foundational principles | ||
of this country, right? | ||
With the undercover video where the guy was saying, you know, he admitted that there were | ||
undercover operatives on in January 6th. | ||
Then he was talking about, well, we don't, we don't entrap people, but we do nudge them, | ||
right? | ||
They still kind of have to pay lip service and go, well, we're technically not allowed | ||
to entrap people. | ||
And the legal system would still stop us from using, you know, evidence that we acquire | ||
through an illegal means. | ||
So we have to do it this way. | ||
But really we're in this transition period where they're not even paying lip service | ||
And it's just gonna be outright tyranny, outright despotism. | ||
They're proud of it. They admit it. | ||
And nobody in America knows enough to stop them. | ||
I mean, again, how do we impart to the American people the importance of not allowing this to go any further? | ||
And is it even possible to vote our way out of it at this point? | ||
I don't trust the elections personally. | ||
Get to a state that represents your values, because we need to balkanize, because that's what's happening. | ||
We saw states starting to really start to balkanize around COVID when we saw Florida look totally different than New York, for instance. | ||
And we were starting to see 50 separate, unique states. | ||
And we need to look like 50 separate countries who just happen to work together as the United States. | ||
We need to be these United States again. | ||
So I would just recommend people get to a state that represents their values. | ||
And I mean, I did. | ||
I fled Massachusetts and came to Florida. | ||
And that's, you know, one of the best things that I could have done for my family. | ||
So that's the way forward, in my opinion. | ||
It's so funny. Whether it's the Bill of Rights or just the concept of America as a collection of independent states or almost nations that are unified, it's this weird situation that we're in where it's like we need a re-revolution. | ||
We need a revolution because obviously things are messed up, but it's like we need some new idea. | ||
Which is where I think the socialists and the communists, that's where they sink their teeth in. | ||
Everybody knows how messed up everything is, so they're able to offer this dream of like, | ||
well, we haven't tried this yet. | ||
And we're in this weird position where we're like, no, we had it right 200 years ago. | ||
Let's go back to that. | ||
How do we achieve that? | ||
How do we bring about the re-revolution? | ||
Obviously, we can raise our kids to understand and believe and truly comprehend the principles that created this country, but they're not getting it from public school, and their friends in the neighborhood probably aren't getting it from their parents. | ||
So, I mean, do you think a re-revolution is the most graceful term for it, but... | ||
But it really is sort of looking back at the past and seeing we just need to get back to the basics, don't we? | ||
Yeah. So we have, you can homeschool your kids, you can grow your own garden, you can buy your own property, have a farm, have your friends all come live on your farm with you. | ||
There's ways to kind of get off the grid, ways to kind of do it yourself. | ||
People need to stop relying on things that their government does for them and find a state that isn't going to bend the knee to the federal government. | ||
If the bird flu turns out to be 100 times worse than COVID, like they're telling us it's going to be this year. | ||
So it's about finding as much independence as you can away from the state and doing that the best that you can and doing what you can that's best for your family. | ||
Is that not... Because I agree with you, but I'm always torn. | ||
Especially with homeschooling, I'm the same way, where it's like I don't want... | ||
My kid taught this horrible stuff, so I don't want to send them to school. | ||
At the same time, I don't want any kids being taught this. | ||
And it feels to me a little bit like retreating. | ||
It feels like abandoning the ground to our enemies when we aren't engaged at the state level. | ||
Is there a way to do both? | ||
Is there a way to protect yourself personally and separate yourself from the negative effects of the modern world while simultaneously fighting to correct it at a governmental level? | ||
What do you see the balance in those two tactics or strategies? | ||
I guess that would more be a federal strategy than a state strategy. | ||
And, I mean, I'm an anti-federalist. | ||
I'm all about just states. | ||
I don't like the federal government at all. | ||
But I would start with abolishing the Department of Education. | ||
Let me start finding more representatives in Congress, like Thomas Massey, like Rand Paul, like Mike Lee, in order to try to fight for constitutional principles and just hope we can go somewhere from there. | ||
Yeah, and of course, it really does seem like the possibility of us doing that is rapidly vanishing. | ||
And that again takes us back to the first story that we were covering, the Brazilian judge, because what we saw happen here in America was done almost... | ||
Line by line, verbatim, what happened in Brazil. | ||
They did the January 6th scam. | ||
They actually wrote articles. | ||
I don't know if you've seen the Financial Times article, very similar to the Time magazine article where they said they fortified the 2020 election. | ||
I mean, they're bragging about State Department and CIA operatives going down to Brazil to ensure their democracy got the right answer, which, of course, was Lula de Silva or whatever his name is. | ||
Proto-communist socialistic ruler of Brazil. | ||
So it's a worldwide conflict. | ||
It is a conflict between the unelected deep state and the people. | ||
And it's right out in front of it for everybody to notice, but it seems like only a few do. | ||
We'll be right back with Josie, the red-headed libertarian. | ||
Follow her on X at TRHLOfficial, at Spaces with Josie. | ||
And we'll talk about Spaces on the other side, too, because I think that is a fascinating new form of conversation that has very big political implications. | ||
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Stay with us. You may not think that rural America has anything to do with you, but let me explain why it does. | |
You see, small towns like this, like Keys, Oklahoma, are all too common now. | ||
The agriculture economy has been hit so hard in this country that all the jobs associated with it are gone. | ||
The lumber stores are closed, the grocery stores are gone, the gas stations. | ||
What does this mean for you? | ||
It means that in agriculture in America, it's gotten so hard because of our politicians selling out the American farmer and rancher. | ||
That people don't want to fight it anymore. | ||
They sell their land, they move to the big cities, and they live out the rest of their days as best they can. | ||
What does this mean for you? It means that with every producer we lose on the land in this country, it means that a corporation comes in and takes it over. | ||
And that if people like Bill Gates control our food supply in America, we lose our freedom. | ||
Like the wildfires in Texas and Oklahoma, for example. | ||
This devastating ordeal will cause many ranchers to go out of business, lessening the competition for Bill Gates and his lab-grown meat, and setting us on a path to where an elite few control our food supply and force us to eat not real food, or bugs, or worse. Remember, it's your food. | ||
It's your food supply. | ||
Follow and like, and I'll explain more about agriculture in our country. | ||
Yeah, I wish I could tell you who posted that because it's a great video and it very much is exactly what's happening. | ||
I'm Harrison Smith. I'm here with Josie the Red-Headed Libertarian at TRHL Official or at Spaces with Josie on X. She is a contributor to TimCast. | ||
But this is kind of the disturbing aspect of the attack on humanity, isn't it, Josie? | ||
That's not just coming from governments. | ||
It's coming from corporations as well who are collaborating with each other and with governments where they don't have to pass a law saying you can't buy meat. | ||
They'll just buy up the cattle company, shut it down, and then the only thing available on the store shelves will be bug meat and lab-grown meat. | ||
And they're really doing a very good job of this. | ||
And I don't know if you saw this as well. | ||
Chicken keepers in the UK must register to beat bird flu. | ||
So now, to beat the bird flu, you have to register your chickens, which I think is almost certainly just a prelude to making it illegal to have your own food. | ||
They're coming out with articles saying growing tomatoes in your backyard is worse for the environment than buying them from the store. | ||
There's a concerted effort to attack our food system right now, isn't there? | ||
Yes, there is. And it's using existentialism. | ||
So it's using the climate, for instance, with the tomatoes. | ||
It's using another pandemic, which we just survived and everybody has PTSD from, about the chickens. | ||
And that's like a primary food source, whether it's eggs are in everything. | ||
Chicken is a cheap, easy meat to feed your families. | ||
I have been saying that in order to stay on target with the 2030 project, we needed to be, and you can look this up, but I've said this a million times, we need to be having a global food crisis by 2025. | ||
And, you know, this whole bird flu thing is coming just at the right time, and why not, you know, Kill two birds with one stone, no pun intended, and have a pandemic at the same time, you know? | ||
Why not? Well, and that's the thing. | ||
It's like the policy is indistinguishable from natural disasters at this point. | ||
As the video pointed out, the fires in Texas that destroyed the grazing land of 80% of the cattle in Texas. | ||
I mean, maybe that was natural. | ||
Maybe it was an accident. Maybe it wasn't caused by space lasers or whatever. | ||
But It fits right in with the rest of the agenda, doesn't it? | ||
I mean, how bad are things that we cannot tell whether it's on purpose or a natural disaster when our government does something like this or when something like this happens? | ||
It's sort of horrifying, isn't it? | ||
I mean, do you think there's any legitimacy to the idea that the government is actually burning food processing centers? | ||
We've seen tons of those burn. | ||
How extreme do you think they're going to make this drive for their 2030 agenda deadline? | ||
I think nothing is off the table. | ||
And they've said that with anybody who tries to stop them, that nothing is off the table. | ||
And they're arrogant about it. | ||
And they're very blatant and transparent about Right. | ||
doing that. Like, well, here's why that was all a good thing. You know, it was for you. | ||
It was to save the climate, you know, so it's all happening. | ||
Nothing's off the table. And it's I mean, the best way to fight back against it is by | ||
not complying by growing your own garden, by raising your own chickens, you know. | ||
And I know Thomas Massey has several bills going through the process right now in the House of ways to further protect our food security, because it is a big deal. | ||
We do see that Bill Gates is buying up all the farmland, and who knows why, if he wants to hoard it or if he wants to I don't know, but it's sinister. | ||
Whatever he's doing, it's not because he loves us. | ||
I think that should be clear to everybody. | ||
And of course, Thomas Massey's broad attention to things I haven't even mentioned, the tagging of cows, the forced mRNA vaccines into the cattle. | ||
Obviously, that goes with bird flu as well. | ||
And it almost seems, again, that it's like we really have to point this out when they're sitting there going, we're going to eliminate your food supply. | ||
We're going to have everybody eating bugs. | ||
And then the bird flu comes along. | ||
They go, ah, gee, it looks like you have to register your chickens now because of the bird flu. | ||
It's like, who's falling for this? | ||
Obviously, this isn't because of the bird flu. | ||
You know, in registering your chickens, nothing. | ||
If the government wants you to register anything, whether it's you as a person, whether it's your guns, there's chickens historically, that's so they can take it away from you later. | ||
That's so they have a record of it and they can say, actually, you know, look right here. | ||
It says that you have, you know, four of these guns and, you know, those are illegal now and we're going to have to take those from you or you are a felon. | ||
And that's what they're doing with the chickens, too. | ||
So they can come to your house and say, oh, there's a bird flu. | ||
We've got to test your birds. Oh, look, they're all positive. | ||
Now we've got to cull them. | ||
It's exactly the same thing. | ||
And they've historically always done it. | ||
And it always works. There's always stupid, scared people. | ||
You know, how many stupid scared people are there? | ||
Because it seems like an impossible amount at this point. | ||
And this is one of the things where this should not even be a left-right divide. | ||
I thought, you know, the left was all about real food. | ||
I mean, they're the ones who will, in a lot of ways, like, you know, pioneered the idea of, like... | ||
Getting away from the big factory farms. | ||
I mean, being anti-factory farm, I think, would be sort of traditionally a left position in America. | ||
Obviously, that's not accurate because InfoWars has been on this beat forever. | ||
But isn't this somewhere where Americans can come together and go, hey, none of us want our food coming out of these factories. | ||
None of us want to eat bugs. | ||
None of us want to do any of this stuff. | ||
But it seems like the left has been dragged into this and they think all this is awesome. | ||
Is it just, I mean, has the climate change PSYOP really been that effective? | ||
What do you think is behind the failure of the left to stand up for healthy food and stand up against the bug eating stuff? | ||
Why aren't they on our side on this? | ||
They like being told how right they are and how perfect they are all the time. | ||
They used to be anti-war. | ||
Remember that? They're definitely not that anymore. | ||
So they were anti-war. They use science to back up everything because they have to sound smarter than everybody else. | ||
It's science. | ||
You have to follow the science. | ||
This is why transing kids is a good I think so, yeah. Yeah, it's just disturbing to me because it's so obviously wrong and weird. | ||
And when they're literally shutting down cattle farms like they are across all of Europe, you know, big protests that just get shut down with government forces. | ||
They fire, you know, rubber bullets at farmers saying, I don't want to give up the thing my family's been in for generations. | ||
It's like, where is the left? | ||
Oh, right. They're in the museum throwing tomato soup all over the Mona Lisa. | ||
It's like, how did they get you guys? | ||
What did they do to you? We should all be on the same side on this. | ||
It would seem that way, but they're getting a lot of approval from the government. | ||
And since many of them didn't have a father growing up, then this is nice to have approval from daddy government. | ||
And they're doing all the right things to make daddy government happy. | ||
And that's what it goes back to. | ||
It's all psychological. It really is just basic psychology, isn't it? | ||
It really does explain everything. | ||
All right, we'll be back on the other side with the redheaded libertarian for our final Welcome back, folks. This is the final segment of The War Room. | ||
My guest is Josie the red-headed libertarian. | ||
I think just got scared by her cat. | ||
unidentified
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I'm not sure what just happened there. | |
Yes. Cat's lurking in the background. | ||
You can follow Josie on X at TRHLOfficial at Spaces with Josie. | ||
Let's talk about Spaces real quick and then I got a tweet that I got to get your take on. | ||
But Spaces has been really amazing. | ||
I wasn't really into it when it first started. | ||
I didn't really get it. | ||
I'm more into it now. | ||
We're incorporating it into some of our shows. | ||
It's been incredibly effective at getting people involved and excited. | ||
It's a new frontier of, like, politics. | ||
And I think my favorite thing is when you see a Twitter space going on with some people that you follow, and then suddenly Matt Gaetz is in it. | ||
Suddenly other congressmen are in it. | ||
Suddenly Elon Musk is in it. | ||
Suddenly you're talking face-to-face with the richest man in the world. | ||
It's an amazing sort of literal town square where people can go and talk to anybody at any point. | ||
I've been blown away by this. | ||
And you've been using it. Of course, people want to follow your spaces. | ||
They can follow at Spaces with Josie. | ||
How have you incorporated spaces into the work that you do? | ||
That is like the work that I do for Timcast. | ||
You can become a subscriber over Timcast, help support our work that way, timcast.com. | ||
But I've had on Vivek Brahmaswamy, Thomas Massey, Owen Troyer, Scott Adams, Dean Cain, Dinesh D'Souza, Lauren Southern, A.G. Ken Paxton. | ||
I had Clint Russell and Dave Smith versus the Krasensteins on there. | ||
I've had Shia from Lives at TikTok. | ||
I do sometimes individual spaces. | ||
I did on the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. | ||
I told the true story of that because nobody was ever taught it. | ||
I've had on other guests to discuss, like, the Bill of Rights. | ||
And I've talked about the Boston Massacre. | ||
I've talked about The towering and feathering of Thomas Dipson. | ||
I like to go into history on my spaces, too. | ||
But I like to just interview the coolest people I can find and get their hero story. | ||
I like to just learn, like, how did you get here? | ||
Tell me more. Yeah, it's absolutely fascinating. | ||
And again, I think that the most fun part is the unexpected guest that'll show up all of the sudden. | ||
Does that happen to you very often where you're holding a space and suddenly you see somebody and you're like, oh my god, this person's in here. | ||
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How often does that happen? Yeah, that happens maybe like every other space that I do. | |
I did a cool space once. | ||
I did that space with Elon Musk and Alex Jones and I got to speak on that space. | ||
And that was just incredible, just to have to be with Such huge people, and I'm just me, you know? | ||
And just to be able to be in the presence and talk with them, and that was incredible to me. | ||
But yeah, I have surprise guests hop in. | ||
I'll have a congressman jump in. | ||
I was doing on my Boston Tea Party space, I had Grant Cardone pop in, and he's like this real estate mogul, you know? | ||
And I was like, what's going on? | ||
So then my space turned into a real estate space after that. | ||
So it's just crazy how these things can kind of just... | ||
Just unwind and unravel and turn into something. | ||
You just get all these cool people, these cool ideas. | ||
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I love spaces. It really is fascinating. | |
I really love what Elon Musk is doing with that. | ||
I think spaces existed before, but it's just really exploded since then. | ||
And I have this other thing I want to go to, but you teased me. | ||
What's the real story behind the Boston Tea Party? | ||
So, the Boston Tea Party, there's one account of it that exists. | ||
And it's So we were just all kind of, you know, taught just the universal thing that they dressed up like Indians, they threw the tea and then whatever. | ||
But there's one account and it's a firsthand account and it's called a retrospective of the Boston Tea Party. | ||
And it's written by the only person to have witnessed it and wrote about it because they did a 50 year oath where nobody was allowed to talk about it. | ||
And everybody was to keep their own secret. | ||
So nobody ever revealed another person that was in it. | ||
That's why we don't really know. A lot of these people took it to their grave with them, you know? | ||
I think there are 120 that have been revealed, and there were at least 300 that were involved. | ||
So many of them just, they did their duty, and then they took it with them back to the grave, you know? | ||
So I think that that speaks a lot to loyalty and honor and things that we don't really have in this era. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And I recently read an account about the impact that the British East India | ||
Company had on the formation of the American Revolution and looking into some of the tyrannical | ||
things that that company did in India. And basically the Americans were going, all right, | ||
they're about to do that here and we have to stop them before they're able to carry | ||
out this despotic action here in America like they did in India. It's all very fascinating. | ||
You think you know American history and then you get a different angle on it and it's like, | ||
oh my God, there's a whole other dimension to this. I had no idea. | ||
Not only were they not paying, like, they weren't paying any taxes on whatever came | ||
They were writing those taxes off to Americans to have to pay. | ||
Right. All right? So they were writing these taxes. | ||
And not only that, but any of their lost product was fully refunded by the crown. | ||
They were, like, in bed with the crown, with King George. | ||
I mean, this was really bad stuff that was going on, really corrupt stuff. | ||
They were, like, the first multi-collaborate The first corporation, I think, yeah. | ||
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Yeah, that was in bed with the government. | |
And we see a lot of repeats of how their behavior was and how the behavior of some corporations are today. | ||
They were just rubbing each other's backs. | ||
Yeah, and I've, ever since, there was one particular talk I saw that just opened my eyes to the whole thing, and I keep teasing my audience saying I'm going to do a full report, but I really do have to do like a full deep dive on it because, you know, people think, well, 1% tax on tea, you revolted over that, but it was about how the tax, how in America at the time, these little town halls and these little, you know, community organizations got to determine whether or not The government got the taxes, and they're basically taking that power away, | ||
so then the imperial overlords would be completely unaccountable to the people that they were ruling over. | ||
It's just absolutely fascinating stuff. | ||
I'll have to check out that space that you did on it, because I love American history, and I think I know it until I hear a different angle, and then it's like, my God, I don't know anything. | ||
What the heck? Go ahead. | ||
It was more like, I think it was 17%, like when you did the math. | ||
I actually did the redcoat math out with the pence and all of the money that they used. | ||
I did the math. I have it written down. | ||
That's complicated. That's complicated, because it's like 26 shillings per farthing, and it's like, what the heck is this? | ||
It's not decimal. Yeah, actually, I was doing it when I was in Connecticut. | ||
I was doing a talk on that, actually. | ||
I had Clint Russell, who's like this finance And he was, like, helping me with the math so that I could write this stuff down and be able to teach people it because it was just so complicated. | ||
It is really fascinating. | ||
And, yeah, these guys, I mean, they started this country on such a good foot. | ||
And we really have shamed their legacy by not upholding it. | ||
I got to get your input on this because I just saw this. | ||
Libs of TikTok posted a few days ago. | ||
And this is something that I see from liberals all the time. | ||
It says that she just received this from a teacher in California, a California elementary school. | ||
First graders are being given an assignment praising Governor Newsom for being a champion for people's rights and are asked to list praises for him. | ||
Blatant government-funded propaganda and indoctrination. | ||
So they literally, it's a picture of Gavin Newsom and it's an assignment saying, write about changes Gavin Newsom made as mayor to respect people's rights. | ||
Like, I get this if you're doing, I know, yeah, do you? | ||
I'm as shocked as you are. | ||
How do they get away with this? | ||
And this, I mean, if you go into Barnes& Noble kids section, it's all Kamala Harris, you know, just Michelle Obama. | ||
They have this hero worship of people who are currently existing. | ||
That's creepy to me, Josie. | ||
This is North Korea. | ||
This is what they do in North Korea. | ||
You have worship, you have hero worship of, you know, Kim Jong-un. | ||
Even in North Korea, they wrote, it's Kim Jong-un's grandfather, I would think. | ||
So it's not Kim Jong-il, it's Kim Jong-dong or whatever the heck his name is. | ||
They actually put him into their constitution in 2016 as their eternal president forever. | ||
Kim Jong-il is like their eternal chairman forever. | ||
And they worship these people like gods, you know? | ||
These are gods to them, and that's what they're trying to do to the children in our country with, like, what are all the great things that Gavin Newsom has done? | ||
unidentified
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And, I mean, you can't answer any of the bad things that he's done. | |
Right. You gotta... | ||
Flatter him. And they say, you know, Gavin said the people could marry who they choose. | ||
Sometimes Gavin helped marry people. | ||
Some marriages were not between a man and a woman. | ||
He made sure that people's rights were respected. | ||
I mean, the education system is so deeply in their hands at this point. | ||
It is looking an awful lot like North Korea. | ||
Well, we're coming to the end of the show here. | ||
I want to thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Josie, the red-headed libertarian at TRHL official at Spaces with Josie. | ||
Do you have any big spaces coming up? | ||
Anything people can join you on? | ||
I have Jack Posobiec on with me tomorrow. | ||
We're going to talk about Unhumans, so you should definitely check that out. | ||
I'm really excited for that space. | ||
That will be great. | ||
Well, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Keep up all the great work. | ||
Again, TRHL official at Spaces with Josie, and she's on TimCast. | ||
Go to TimCast.com to sign up for that. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us, Josie. | ||
Thank you for having me, Harrison. My pleasure. | ||
All right, folks, that's going to do it for us here on The War Room. | ||
I will be back tomorrow. | ||
I think I'll be back tomorrow. | ||
I don't know. I've got to talk to the producers behind the scenes. | ||
But please do go to Infowarsstore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
And one way or another, I'll be back somewhere on Infowars tomorrow to continue to fight the good fight. | ||
I hope to see you there, folks. | ||
You stay classy, Infowarriors. | ||
unidentified
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TurboForce was developed by one of the top scientists, sports, nutrition experts in the country. | ||
And obviously, because of all the attacks on M4s, it was a private contract. | ||
But we paid him to develop what he believed, with the ingredients available, would be the best, cleanest, long-term, 10-hour clean energy. | ||
And we were able to develop turbo force. | ||
Only takes a little bit, and it time releases. | ||
Hits in about 30 minutes, but the different natural compounds that are in it synergistically work to give you energy on average for 10 hours with no letdown. | ||
Now that doesn't mean if you end up not sleeping all night on it, you're not going to be tired the next day. | ||
But if you take it in the morning, say, and then work till midnight, I have no hangover from it. | ||
My crew doesn't. The listeners love it. | ||
So I want to encourage all the viewers and listeners out there that want to support the broadcast. | ||
At the same time, get an incredible product. | ||
Go to InfoWarsStore.com today and peruse the site. | ||
And while you're there, get a canister of TurboForce. | ||
We used to have it in little individual serving packets, but most folks told us the full packet was too much. | ||
So now it's in a single scooper, and this formula is even stronger. | ||
That's why it's TurboForce+. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, TurboForce doesn't just boost Your focus and your clarity and your stamina and your libido and so much more. | ||
It doesn't just do it in a clean, focused way. | ||
It also funds the Infowar. | ||
Are there a few other energy drinks and energy mixes out there that are, quite frankly, just as good? | ||
Yeah. This guy that developed ours developed those as well. | ||
But this is in the top three or four in the world. | ||
It works the best and it funds the Infowar, a 360 win. |