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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 now to your regularly scheduled program. | ||
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And I read an article from the New York Times. | |
Thank you. | ||
That Bill Gates had just donated $50 million to Kamala Harris' campaign. | ||
And the article said that it was the first donation that he's made in 20 years. | ||
That he stayed out of politics. | ||
It was a dark money donation. | ||
He didn't intend for it to be public. | ||
He routed the donation through a 501 form. | ||
Which was an organization that was set up to conceal large money donations to the Harris campaign. | ||
Do you think he made it out of a humanitarian impulse? | ||
Well, there was something else, another article about Bill Gates that came out today that said he has just been indicted. | ||
A court in the Netherlands has ruled that Bill Gates along with other defendants including Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla and former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte must stand trial over allegations related to injuries caused by COVID-19 vaccines. | ||
The case brought by seven plaintiffs claims that Gates and others misled the public about the safety of these vaccines asserting they knew the vaccines were not safe or effective This legal action represents a significant challenge to Gates, focusing on his role in the global push for vaccinations through his foundation's involvement in the pandemic response. | ||
We should have free speech, but if you're inciting violence, if you're causing people not to take vaccines, where are those boundaries that even the U.S. Should, you know, have rules. | ||
And then if you have rules, you know, what is it? | ||
Is there some AI that encodes those rules? | ||
Because you have billions of activity and, you know, if you catch it a day later, the harm is done. | ||
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In my medical opinion, these are the most toxic pharmaceutical products that have ever been released on the market. | |
And, of course, most profitable. | ||
As we heard from Dr. | ||
Julie Paness, Pfizer last year made revenues of over $100 billion. | ||
That's just Pfizer. | ||
That doesn't include Moderna. | ||
That doesn't include BioNTech. | ||
Of course, you had AstraZeneca, Johnson& Johnson, and so on. | ||
This is a multi-hundred billion dollar industry. | ||
And it seems that nobody cares how many people get hurt, how many people get injured, how many people die. | ||
And to give you an idea for the scale of the vaccine injuries, 10 to 15%, this is straight out of CDC, V-safe data, where people were actually recording their side effects into an app. | ||
About 10 million people, they didn't want to release the data, they were forced to release it. | ||
About 10 to 15% have had a serious injury. | ||
About 1% have been permanently disabled. | ||
This is coming out of US insurance data. | ||
Edward Dowd has been reporting on this. | ||
And about 0.1% have died. | ||
These are excess deaths that are unexplainable. | ||
And 0.1% may not sound like a lot, but that's one in a thousand. | ||
Why did it take numerous legal demands, multiple appeals, two lawsuits in fact, before the CDC finally handed over the V-safe data, which is already de-identified data for the most part that they provided. | ||
Just two days ago, 144 million lines of code that they could have provided in a matter of minutes at any point. | ||
Now that we have the data, we can see that getting the vaccine caused 25% of people who got the shot within this data set of 10 million people to miss work. | ||
To have some of the serious event affecting their normal life functions. | ||
The lawsuit was filed in Levarden, challenging the jurisdiction of the Dutch court over Gates, who resides in the U.S. However, the court dismissed Gates' objection, establishing jurisdiction Due to the interconnectedness of the claims against all defendants, which are rooted in a common set of facts concerning the global response to the COVID-19 crisis. | ||
This ruling could set a precedent for similar... | ||
Alright, ladies and gentlemen, the full John Bowne report can be found at band.video. | ||
It's an absolutely insane day in Austin, Texas. | ||
We are in election day. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, it's Friday, October 25th, 2024. | ||
This is the InfoWars War Room, your election headquarters with 10 days, 8 hours left until election day. | ||
But really, we are already in election day. | ||
We've got... | ||
More early return numbers coming in to report for you today. | ||
We have a very important statement from Donald Trump, who, speaking of, is in Austin, Texas today. | ||
He did a press conference from the airport about an hour or so ago, and then he was on his way to the Joe Rogan podcast. | ||
And that was the motorcade that you saw there on the screen. | ||
And pretty much the entire roadways here are either blocked or traffic jammed into a parking lot. | ||
Unfortunately, I had to experience that personally. | ||
Not very fun. | ||
But that's what you get. | ||
That's what you get when the Democrat Party and the deep state are trying to kill Donald Trump, trying to assassinate him. | ||
You have to take extra caution and ridiculous level security measures. | ||
So that's what's going on. | ||
I could not even get to my home before the show. | ||
So maybe we'll give you a little more of an idea and have some fun about that later. | ||
But we won't start off the show with that. | ||
Instead, we will get into some of these early numbers and then some breaking news dealing with where the election is going to be won or lost, and that is in the courts. | ||
What have I been saying? | ||
This election will be won or lost in the courts, not the ballot box. | ||
Now, I want to address one thing before we get into the news and the early numbers, and we got a ton of video clips today as well. | ||
We also have a very important in-studio guest that you're not going to want to miss. | ||
It's a bit of an epic moment, even. | ||
One of the Capitol Police officers that arrested me is in studio today. | ||
And since the arrest of me, he has left the D.C. Capitol Police. | ||
He's now a whistleblower. | ||
And funny enough, he is a fan of mine in the show. | ||
So, that's going to be fun. | ||
Former officer Tariq Johnson in studio. | ||
We're hoping he's in at four, but considering the traffic situation, we shall see. | ||
But he will be in studio today. | ||
Now, this election will be won or lost in the courts. | ||
And I want to explain something because, again, Sometimes I have to use the incoming that I receive to cater the message on this show. | ||
So what am I talking about? | ||
Incoming. | ||
What's coming to me? | ||
People are sending me these stories, and I covered them too. | ||
Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, all these leftist organizations. | ||
I got clips today. | ||
CNN. They don't want to endorse Kamala Harris anymore. | ||
They don't want to talk about, they don't want to say she's doing well, she's going to win. | ||
But people need to understand something. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty clear at this point Donald Trump is way ahead. | ||
They're even reporting now he could win the popular vote. | ||
Now that's irrelevant. | ||
The point is that the Kamala Harris momentum... | ||
The Kamala Harris excitement, enthusiasm is gone. | ||
They're not even willing to fake it anymore. | ||
And these news outlets that have been endorsing Democrats for decades refuse to endorse her. | ||
So people are saying, well, this is proof Trump's going to win. | ||
Sure, okay, yeah. | ||
In a fair election, of course. | ||
We don't have a fair election. | ||
Most of these people still don't get it. | ||
When I say that you, listening to this broadcast, are amongst the top 1% of informed people, I mean it. | ||
Yeah, most of the people at the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, CNN, all these people, they really don't think elections are stolen except when a Democrat loses. | ||
They really don't believe it. | ||
They really don't think there's massive fraud. | ||
So yeah, I get it. | ||
They all see Kamala Harris is going down in flames. | ||
They don't understand the steal. | ||
They don't even believe 2020 had any issues and was stolen. | ||
So yeah, okay, they see the landslide. | ||
But they didn't see what happened in 2020. | ||
So no, just because you see that doesn't mean it's over. | ||
Doesn't mean they're not going to steal it. | ||
Let's get real. | ||
Now, the Democrats in the deep state could wave the white flag and say this is too big to steal. | ||
It'd be too obvious. | ||
Maybe that's going on, but I wouldn't sit here and take these leftist organizations saying, oh, it looks like Trump's going to win now as the proof that they're waving the white flag or the proof that they're not going to try to steal it. | ||
Certainly wouldn't do that. | ||
Now, this election will be won or lost at the court, not the ballot box. | ||
And we have more proof of that today. | ||
Look at what's going on in Georgia. | ||
Really, look at what's going on in all the important states. | ||
Where are all the big legal battles? | ||
All the big swing states. | ||
Where have the legal battles been fought for the last year? | ||
Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania. | ||
These are where the big legal battles are on, even in Texas. | ||
This is where the big legal fight was on. | ||
And so you saw what happened in Georgia right before they started early voting. | ||
Now there's news out of Virginia. | ||
Federal judge signs with Biden-Harris DOJ requires Virginia to allow non-citizens to vote in election. | ||
That's right. | ||
Now this is deeper than that. | ||
Because Virginia removed a bunch of people off the voter rolls and now they're just saying, oh no, you can't do that. | ||
The Biden-Harris DOJ suit against Virginia over the removal of non-citizens and other ineligible voters ahead of Election Day has resulted in courts forcing the state to put those names back on the voter rolls. | ||
They're putting ineligible voters back on the rolls. | ||
Federal judge required the state to stop the lawful removal of non-citizen voters and restore names that had been removed. | ||
Put those illegal voters back on the ballot. | ||
I mean, folks, again, they know it. | ||
They know this election is going to be won or lost at the courts. | ||
So before we get into Donald Trump's statement, this is the governor of Virginia, Glenn Youngkin, responding to this earlier this morning in clip six. | ||
unidentified
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Back on the voter rolls. | |
And what's even more astounding is the vast majority of these folks had presented immigration documents confirming that they were non-citizens. | ||
And we recently had that verified by federal authorities. | ||
So here we are with a judge saying, put people back on the voter rolls who you know are noncitizens. | ||
And this is under a law in Virginia that's been in effect since 2006. | ||
It has been applied by Republican and Democrat governors alike into this 90-day period. | ||
And here we are 11 days before a presidential election and a federal judge is ordering them back on the voter rolls. | ||
It's astounding to me that this could possibly happen. | ||
I mean, listen, common sense says non-citizens aren't on the voter rolls, but the Constitution and the law say it as well. | ||
And that's why we are immediately petitioning the Fourth Circuit for an emergency stay here on this injunction. | ||
And we will immediately go to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. | ||
But we are not going to sit by and let this happen. | ||
I'm reading, Governor, that the executive order requiring the removal of them came on August 7th, which was 90 days before Election Day. | ||
So clearly you had begun this process far ahead of when the DOJ- You really think the Democrats aren't trying to steal this deal? | ||
unidentified
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I mean, give me a break. | |
As the election is happening, A judge in Virginia says, nope, non-citizens get to vote. | ||
As the election is beginning in Georgia, a judge does virtually the same thing with the law to make sure the Democrats can steal it. | ||
unidentified
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I mean, folks, come on. | |
Come on. | ||
Now, we got more issues with election fraud, voter fraud that we'll be covering. | ||
This is the second time... | ||
Donald Trump has made a statement beginning with cease and desist when talking about election integrity warning the criminals not to steal it. | ||
So this is his statement from today, just a few hours ago. | ||
Cease and desist. | ||
I, together with many attorneys and legal scholars, am watching the sanctity of the 2024 presidential election very closely because I know better than most the rampant cheating and skullduggery that has taken place by the Democrats in the 2020 presidential election. | ||
It was a disgrace to our nation. | ||
Therefore, the 2024 election, where votes have just started being cast, will be under the closest professional scrutiny. | ||
And when I win, those people that cheated will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, which will include long-term prison sentences so that this depravity of justice does not happen again. | ||
We cannot let our country further devolve into a third world nation and we won't. | ||
Please beware that this legal exposure extends to lawyers, political operatives, donors, illegal voters, and corrupt election officials. | ||
Those involved in the unscrupulous behavior will be sought out, caught, and prosecuted at levels unfortunately never seen before in our country. | ||
Now, is that Donald Trump? | ||
I won't say bluffing, because it's not that he's bluffing. | ||
I just wonder what he has to really back it up. | ||
Can he really back it up? | ||
Is there, I mean, you read into that, sounds like there's an operation going on. | ||
Never before seen in our country, to quote. | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
And really, this is the biggest difference between 2020 and 2024. | ||
Most people were afraid after they stole the election in 2020 to talk about it, to call it out, to point it out, to address it. | ||
Most people were afraid. | ||
And even then, the Republicans basically folded on January 6th after things got out of hand. | ||
Because they were there to review the process. | ||
But then once they shut it down, it was over. | ||
And they just gave up. | ||
So, now, it's not going to be like that. | ||
I don't know the level of commitment they would have to saying it was rigged, but it certainly is higher than in 2020 and 2020. | ||
Most of these people just go along with the wind. | ||
Most of these people just see which way the wind is blowing, read the room, and then decide how they're going to play it. | ||
So if you have Republicans and they view it that, oh, wow, okay, most Republicans, my voters, my constituents, they think it was rigged, then they'll come out and say it was rigged. | ||
Same thing with conservatives on the mainstream news. | ||
Once people like me... | ||
And outlets like Infowars make it safe to talk about an election being stolen. | ||
Then the rest of them, it's like, they let us go through it first. | ||
We cross the barbed wire first. | ||
And then they climb over our bloody corpses. | ||
It's been going on for years. | ||
So, that's the new element to 2024 that we didn't have in 2020. | ||
And I'm already seeing it. | ||
Where some of these Republicans are doing radio hits, TV hits. | ||
But you get back to Trump's statement, second time he said this. | ||
So are they really doing something to monitor this election differently in 2020? | ||
Do they really have a plan to catch people stealing it? | ||
Or is he making a power play to try to stop them from stealing it? | ||
But think about how desperate they are. | ||
Think about what they're looking at where they come out and they say, we're going to put non-citizens back on the voter rolls. | ||
It's not even going to change the result in Virginia. | ||
I still think Trump wins Virginia anyway. | ||
But the fact that they would do it The fact that a judge in Georgia would come out and say, nope, we're not hand counting ballots. | ||
Nope, we're not doing anything to make sure there's no cheating. | ||
We're not doing any of that. | ||
Nope, we're doing the same thing we did in 2020. | ||
Right as the election is starting. | ||
I mean, they're going for it, folks. | ||
They're going for it. | ||
10 to 1 poll watchers, Democrats or Republicans in Pennsylvania. | ||
Mail-in ballots out the wazoo in Wisconsin, in Michigan, in Pennsylvania. | ||
Voter signature ID, non-existent. | ||
They won those states. | ||
The Democrats won the legal battle in those states. | ||
I believe they'll win those states. | ||
The Republicans were winning in Georgia, and then the judge just reversed the whole thing. | ||
The Republicans won in Virginia. | ||
Judge trying to reverse the whole thing. | ||
Same thing they're trying to do in Texas. | ||
1.1 million ineligible voters removed in Texas, and then the judges and the Democrats are trying to come in and say, nope, put them back on. | ||
1.1 million. | ||
They know where this election is going to be won or lost. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
In the courts. | ||
Not at the ballot box. | ||
If you had a fully legitimate election with the utmost integrity, one legal voter, one legal vote, Donald Trump wins in a landslide, Donald Trump wins the popular vote, at least 343 in the electoral college. | ||
But we don't have that, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We don't have that. | ||
And anybody that thinks we do is living in la-la land. | ||
You're not a serious person, and unfortunately, you just don't live in reality. | ||
Could Trump win Colorado? | ||
I don't have him winning Colorado, but maybe there's some skullduggery. | ||
We should bring that word back. | ||
Skullduggery going on in Colorado. | ||
Listen to this local news report in clip 5. | ||
unidentified
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One received a notice and alerted the clerk's office to fraud. | |
Another voter contacted the office after learning from the state's ballot tracking system that their ballot had been turned in by someone else. | ||
Election officials began comparing signatures and noted some of them appeared to be signed by the same person. | ||
They launched an investigation, but not before three of the stolen ballots had already been counted. | ||
Those ballots cannot be retrieved, and the votes will count, but the three voters will receive new ballots. | ||
This shows the resiliency of our process here in Colorado, that if somebody tries to do nefarious things, it will be discovered through our processes. | ||
Mesa County is... | ||
So this is happening all over. | ||
North Carolina, we played a local news report, similar story. | ||
Guy shows up, told he'd already voted. | ||
Now, if he would have done that on election day, he wouldn't have been able to vote. | ||
They had to go through days of process just to get him corrected on the voter rolls and allow him to vote. | ||
This election will be won or lost in the courtroom, not the ballot box. | ||
And I think now it's all coming down to Georgia. | ||
All coming down to Georgia. | ||
And if their big plan was to stuff the ballots in Fulton County, stuff the ballots in Atlanta with the mail-in ballots, no voter signature, illegitimate addresses, whatever, well, there's going to be no background check now. | ||
Because a judge made that ruling just before the election started. | ||
And when you look at the mail-in ballots coming in, yeah, that's their plan. | ||
So now Trump would probably have to win Georgia by 500,000 votes. | ||
When he normally would probably win it by 300,000, 400,000. | ||
Gonna have to be about 500,000 now. | ||
The vote Viagra is happening now. | ||
They're not doing it on election night. | ||
They're not doing it at 3.30 in the morning when the results are all in. | ||
They're doing the vote Viagra now. | ||
They're stuffing the mail-in ballots now so that they don't have the obvious phenomenon of Trump leading in those five states until 3.30 in the morning and then the perfect number of votes come in for Joe Biden and then they declare Joe Biden the winner. | ||
That was too obvious. | ||
We caught him. | ||
So now they're doing it before election night. | ||
Here's some of the other numbers. | ||
North Carolina still looking good for Donald Trump. | ||
Still basically just a One-third split in all directions, Republican, Democrat, and Independent. | ||
But looking good for Trump, and when you hear from North Carolina, even people in Western North Carolina, even people in the mountains are able to vote, and it's deep, dark red. | ||
Even Asheville, that's normally a dark blue, is a light blue. | ||
So North Carolina, I'd say, looking good for Donald Trump. | ||
Pennsylvania, not so much. | ||
The early splits are bad. | ||
Continues to favor the Democrats. | ||
Male and absentee voting continues to favor the Democrats. | ||
They're doubling up Republicans right now. | ||
And of course, it's almost all in Philadelphia. | ||
The mail-in votes in Philadelphia. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, baby. | |
I mean, it's just ridiculous. | ||
Everybody and their mama's mailing in their ballots in Philadelphia. | ||
Philadelphia, there can't be anyone left to vote. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
And look, you could sit here and say, and we'll see what happens after the election, the actual election night... | ||
Pennsylvania, because all the things were, oh, Republicans have more registered votes, Republicans are flipping Pennsylvania. | ||
You look at these early numbers, Pennsylvania's never been that blue ever in my life. | ||
Except maybe Obama. | ||
This is bluer than Pennsylvania has been in 2016 or 2020. | ||
Now again, you can say, well, only Democrats mail-in vote, or you can say the mail-in vote is how they stuff the ballots and basically get four times the vote. | ||
But that's what you have going on right now, and you've already had thousands of fraudulent mail-in ballots detected, but that's not, I mean, you know, that's not going to change the results. | ||
By the way, same thing going on in Georgia, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I mean, look at the mail-in ballots in Georgia here. | ||
And early voting, it's all in Atlanta. | ||
And so this is how they overwhelm. | ||
This is how the blue cities overwhelm the rest of the states. | ||
And if you don't stop the fraud, you lose. | ||
It's all on Georgia now. | ||
Alright, we got more breaking election news for you right now. | ||
In Pennsylvania, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania uncovers and halts suspected voter registration fraud scheme. | ||
Potentially thousands of fraudulent applications submitted just before the deadline. | ||
Here is that press conference from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. | ||
unidentified
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Good morning, everyone. | |
Thank you for being here. | ||
My name is Ray D'Agostino. | ||
I am the vice chairman of the Lancaster County Board of Commissioners and also the chairman of the Lancaster County Board of Elections. | ||
As we, the Board of County Commissioners and the Board of Elections have said throughout this entire election cycle and years prior, Lancaster County runs each election with the principles of integrity, veracity, and transparency. | ||
It is our duty as elected leaders of this county conduct elections that the voters can feel confident in. | ||
We take that role seriously and serve the hard-working staff in the elections office and our volunteers. | ||
Through training and expertise, it is their work and the work of hundreds of volunteers that allows us to conduct elections that are safe, secure, and allow every eligible voter to legally cast their ballot. | ||
The staff take seriously all the principles that I just outlined. | ||
In all facets of our election, from voter registration to the publishing of results and all aspects in between. | ||
It is through their diligence that our staff uncovered apparent incidents of attempted voter registration fraud here in Lancaster County. | ||
To the staff's normal review process, As many as 2,500 completed voter registration forms are being researched for potential fraud stemming from two separate drop batches by individuals. | ||
At that time, staff contacted the district attorney's office and members of the board of elections. | ||
Applications in these batches are going through an extensive multi-step review process, including the district attorney's office, for further investigation is warranted. | ||
This includes issues of duplicate handwriting matching other voter registration forms in the batches, inconsistent signatures with what is on the file in the SURE system, because some of these or many of these are duplicates, Unverifiable and or accurate addresses and inaccurate driver's license or social security number of verification. | ||
We have an obligation under the election code, not only that but a moral obligation to investigate any matters of potential fraud. | ||
Applications that have gone through this extensive review and investigative process and are not deemed to be fraudulent are being processed. | ||
I want to stress this. | ||
No eligible voter will be turned away. | ||
We'll also add that the Commonwealth Department of State and the Attorney's General Office has been notified of this matter. | ||
We've called this press conference today to share this information with voters and with all the views that people can feel confident in the security of Lancaster County's elections and that we take these matters seriously. | ||
As we have said previously, and I just mentioned in elections here, we do it with integrity, veracity, and transparency. | ||
And here in Pennsylvania, elections have become more complex as we have been conducting now for at least a couple of weeks, three different types of elections simultaneously. | ||
Adding this challenging matter on top of this adds to that task. | ||
So on behalf of the board, I want to sincerely thank Krista Miller, the Chief Clerk of the Elections Board and Voter Registrations Commission, her staff and volunteers, for their hard work, dedication, diligence, and perseverance, particularly in the face of recent false and misleading statements regarding aspects of their work. | ||
I also want to thank Larry George and the Board of... | ||
So, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, there's their press conference media release. | ||
Discussing this potential massive voter fraud operation that they uncovered. | ||
This is basically Philadelphia. | ||
It's just a county over from Philadelphia, a county or two over from Philadelphia. | ||
But it's the greater Philadelphia area. | ||
It's greater Philadelphia, basically. | ||
Oh, what do you know? | ||
And in fact, I'll have to dig it out of my stack here, but we can tie that into what we're seeing. | ||
unidentified
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On the map, let's see what we have. | |
Oh yeah, big, oh yeah, oh yeah, lots of mail-in ballots coming into Lancaster County. | ||
Isn't that something? | ||
Lots of them. | ||
unidentified
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Right there. | |
Right there. | ||
Just before election, they're all getting in. | ||
Now, I don't know about the political dynamics of greater Philadelphia like I might in areas where I've lived. | ||
This could be a blue area. | ||
It could be a red area that just gets overwhelmed with the gerrymandering and then the mail-in ballots. | ||
But again, you can go back and look at any electoral college map, but specifically since Donald Trump is the most applicable here, Pennsylvania has never been this blue. | ||
Pennsylvania is a red state. | ||
And then you have Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. | ||
And Pittsburgh seems to be red right now. | ||
But you look at the mail-in ballots, it's dark blue. | ||
So look, and this isn't the only case, by the way. | ||
From the Gateway Pundit story, just as Lancaster County, Pennsylvania uncovers a suspected voter registration fraud scheme, similar election security concerns have arisen in Mesa County, Arizona, where over a dozen mailed ballots were fraudulently cast before their intended recipients even had the chance to receive them. | ||
And you know these aren't isolated incidents. | ||
They're not able to catch every single one. | ||
In Phoenix, Arizona, firefighting crews responded to a fire outside of the post office near 7th and Indian School Road. | ||
After extinguishing the flames, they delivered roughly 20 electoral ballots, and other mail pieces were damaged in the blaze. | ||
Florida, Orange County ballots, United States Postal Service master keys, stolen from mailboxes, found at a storm drain. | ||
I mean, this stuff is going on all over the place. | ||
So, same thing in California. | ||
So look, you've got to have... | ||
What is that from, guys? | ||
So yeah, okay. | ||
The crew doing great work behind me. | ||
They're pulling up. | ||
Lancaster County is actually a red area. | ||
Even as recently as 2020, Lancaster County was for Donald Trump. | ||
But again, you look at the mail-in balance now. | ||
Lancaster County, probably number, I mean, top five in Pennsylvania for mail-in ballots, and now it's blue. | ||
And now they discover this massive voter fraud scheme. | ||
Too predictable. | ||
Too predictable. | ||
We have to do something about our elections, folks. | ||
It's bad. | ||
We have to do something. | ||
We have to reach a common sense conclusion. | ||
And really, the only hope we have is if Trump gets in. | ||
And I hope he takes this seriously. | ||
I mean, he's probably the biggest victim of election fraud in the history of this country. | ||
But we need a complete renovation of our election system. | ||
I mean, this is ridiculous. | ||
First of all, mail-in ballots should never be accepted. | ||
Absentee ballots require proof of citizenship just to get it. | ||
So there's a process to get your absentee ballot. | ||
But if you just want to do a mail-in ballot, no. | ||
No. | ||
Mail-in ballots should be completely illegal. | ||
And if you want to try to make it so it's not as painstaking to go vote, I mean, you know, there's other ways you can do it. | ||
But let's just say we still let everybody vote. | ||
We don't remove anybody that's an American citizen and over 18 from voting. | ||
Even though we should have a civics test. | ||
We should have a basic civics test before you're eligible to vote. | ||
If you don't know the three branches of government or, you know, if you don't know all four of the people on the presidential ticket, then you probably shouldn't vote. | ||
You should probably go home. | ||
But whatever. | ||
Forget that for a second. | ||
Yeah, there's your 2016 results as well. | ||
But oh, these mail-in ballots, now Lancaster's blue. | ||
I mean, this is a joke, man. | ||
So again, I've been saying I hope I'm wrong. | ||
I feel bad for all the people making the effort for Trump to win Pennsylvania and if it goes blue anyway. | ||
I mean, maybe they need a wake-up call too. | ||
Everybody needs a wake-up call. | ||
Everybody needs a wake-up call here. | ||
So we have to completely renovate our election process. | ||
And, I mean, we just have to have a serious conversation. | ||
Election Day needs to be a holiday, or maybe you have it election weekend, or maybe you can do the early voting as well, but it has to be in, you have to be on scene, voter ID, I mean, it's just ridiculous. | ||
It's not that complicated, folks. | ||
They intentionally make it complicated. | ||
They intentionally make it complicated with the mail-in votes and all the other shenanigans and the voting machines. | ||
I mean, fine, even use voting machines. | ||
Make it a transparent process. | ||
I go vote. | ||
I want a live tally right there in front of me. | ||
I want a live tally right in front of me so that when I put my deal into that voting machine, I can sit there and watch the tally go up for who I voted for. | ||
So you can even have the voting machines. | ||
Make it transparent. | ||
But this is just ridiculous. | ||
Mail-in ballots are ludicrous. | ||
Mail-in ballots are just... | ||
I mean, voting machines, you already have issues. | ||
Mail-in ballots are just, I mean, beyond the voting machines. | ||
Mail-in ballots are insane that we accept this. | ||
Mail-in ballots. | ||
What a joke. | ||
What an absolute joke. | ||
And notice, notice who the mail-in ballots always help. | ||
The Democrats. | ||
Every single time. | ||
Throughout U.S. history, mail-in ballots have always helped Democrats. | ||
Just like it is right now. | ||
Just like it did in 2020. | ||
So, this has to stop. | ||
Mail-in ballots have to stop. | ||
That's just part one of trying to restore faith in our elections. | ||
And then there's other things to do, too. | ||
But this isn't complicated. | ||
Mail-in ballots. | ||
What an absolute joke. | ||
What an absolute joke that is. | ||
Alright, now... | ||
As I was saying earlier, don't get too excited. | ||
The Washington Post refusing to endorse Kamala Harris. | ||
First time since the 80s. | ||
They won't endorse a Democrat. | ||
Los Angeles Times, all these... | ||
I mean, now I've got clips of CNN and all of them talking about how Trump's going to win. | ||
They don't understand elections are rigged either, folks. | ||
So yeah, they see Trump's about to win in a landslide. | ||
They're not taking in the factor of the mass voter fraud that's going to happen. | ||
The mass election fraud. | ||
They don't even think there was any in 2020. | ||
So it's not like they're giving away, oh, that's the Democrats waving the white flag. | ||
No, they don't know what's going on. | ||
They're the same morons that believe in Russian collusion. | ||
They're the same morons that told you the Biden laptop was fake. | ||
It means nothing other than they recognize that in a fair election, Trump wins in a landslide. | ||
So I'm going to show you some of these clips here. | ||
CNN and others just falling apart now. | ||
And then, you know, somebody subtly endorsed Trump that maybe will have an impact. | ||
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So let's go look at some of the response here. | ||
Now, Anderson Cooper basically takes a shot... | ||
At MSNBC, and I will tell you, I monitor all the news, and obviously CNN is, you know, mostly still in the tank for the Democrats, but you can tell, you know, some want to at least appear to have some modicum of honesty or integrity in reporting fair and balanced or neutral. | ||
And so that's why Cooper, you know, he had to ask Harris some real questions. | ||
And then he's basically saying how people were attacking him for doing that. | ||
And then he takes a shot at MSNBC saying, hey, CNN's real news, not Democrat propaganda like you. | ||
Listen to this in clip three. | ||
unidentified
|
This country where, you know what, I got so many, I don't look at comments about myself, but I was looking up some comments about my grief podcast, and I came across this whole inundation from people who are Harris supporters saying to me online today, like, how dare you, what a betrayal that you would ask her these questions. | |
And I'm like, you misunderstand what my job is. | ||
I'm not on MSNBC, or I'm, no disrespect, what they do is, they're very talented. | ||
But I don't watch it. | ||
I'm not interested in watching what these overpaid blow-dried anchors think. | ||
And I include myself in that overpaid blow-dried, although I don't blow-dry. | ||
I am overpaid. | ||
But I don't want that. | ||
I'm not interested in the anchors' opinion. | ||
I'm interested in facts and letting the viewers make up their own minds. | ||
So anyway, I'm sorry this has devolved into something else, but this is fascinating. | ||
This isn't MSNBC, says CNN. Yeah, okay, you have like two less Democrat stripes than MSNBC. No, but look, the truth is, as I was saying the other day, I mean, at least CNN will put a conservative on a panel. | ||
I mean, CNN will put a Republican on a panel. | ||
You won't even find it on MSNBC. CNN will have a Republican guest. | ||
The only person on MSNBC that isn't just completely up Kamala Harris' butt at this point is Alex Wagner. | ||
The rest are just psychotic leftists. | ||
I mean, just broken people. | ||
So, I mean, at least you get a little bit of debate, and then Anderson Cooper's like, I'm going to try to appear to be a real journalist. | ||
I'm going to try to appear to be a real anchor. | ||
unidentified
|
But it's still CNN. Let's just be clear. | |
And this is the type of conversation they were having with Charlemagne. | ||
I mean, this is the state. | ||
This is the state of the left-wing media. | ||
This is the state of the Democrat propagandist. | ||
They don't know what to do. | ||
Listen to what they talk about now, clip four. | ||
Conversations about it. | ||
I feel like I heard more on this network about is Kamala Harris black than I do about, you know, Donald Trump being a fascist. | ||
Am I wrong, Angelo? | ||
unidentified
|
Honestly, that's bullshit. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
Ooh, I like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead, Anderson. | |
No, no, I'm not. | ||
Look, I'm a huge fan of yours. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
But to say that we're sitting around discussing is Kamala Harris black, like, I... Oh, I've seen that. | |
I've seen open around table discussions a lot. | ||
Now, that's bullshit, Anderson. | ||
For you to say that y'all don't have those conversations. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never asked somebody is... | |
Oh, I'm not saying you. | ||
I said the network. | ||
unidentified
|
He said the network. | |
I don't think any anchor on this network has been going around saying, is she black? | ||
Y'all have never had a... | ||
unidentified
|
It's definitely... | |
We have had... | ||
Look, I'm sure we have had... | ||
You know, nutty people or people who have strongly held beliefs who I may disagree with, who somewhere on some panel have said something. | ||
But, you know, I will just speak up for what I do on the show. | ||
I do believe it's important to get people different viewpoints as long as they're willing to have a legitimate conversation. | ||
What I don't like are surrogates who come out and just spout talking points that they don't even believe. | ||
And those are people I tried to eliminate from having ever on the air again. | ||
I think no network has honest conversations about Donald Trump. | ||
Nobody's had honest conversations about Donald Trump since 2016. | ||
I saw last night they were talking about the double standard that exists between Donald Trump and the vice president. | ||
But it's always a double standard with Trump, whether it's with Hillary, whether it's against Biden, now with Kamala. | ||
We talk about him being a threat to democracy, but we don't treat him like one. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, I don't know what you've been watching, but, like, I don't know of any Trump supporters out there or people who like him who are tuning in to me every night to try to get, you know, to be validated in their opinions. | |
Like, I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I disagree. | ||
I don't think it's about validating. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Validating the Trump opinion? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you're saying, like, that we're not, that I guess you're saying I'm not... | |
Discussing all the things he is saying and doing and pointing it out and talking to, you know, what John Kelly... | ||
So, I mean, they're just broke. | ||
I don't even think they know what they're talking about anymore. | ||
People are talking about, is Kamala Harris black or not? | ||
We don't talk about that. | ||
I always hear you talking about that. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never talked about that. | |
You don't give Trump fair coverage. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
I always attack Trump. | ||
They're broken, man. | ||
They are just broken. | ||
They don't know what to do. | ||
Anderson Cooper is not dumb. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
Angela Rye is, I don't know, Charlamagne Tha God. | ||
I really don't know. | ||
I think he just kind of shows up and talks. | ||
But if he's listening to CNN, as he claims, then surely he's been propagandized to an extreme degree. | ||
But it's like, they won't have an honest conversation about Trump, but then he wants them to attack Trump more? | ||
So you won't have an honest conversation about Trump. | ||
It's insane. | ||
It's just absolutely insane. | ||
Maybe we can get an honest conversation with Hillary Clinton. | ||
You know, you want to talk about extremism on the air. | ||
Listen to Hillary Clinton in clip seven. | ||
You know, one other thing that you'll see next week, Caitlin, is Trump actually reenacting the Madison Square Garden rally in 1939. | ||
I write about this in my book. | ||
President Franklin Roosevelt was appalled that neo-Nazis, fascists in America were lining up to essentially Pledge their support for the kind of government that they were seeing in Germany. | ||
So, I don't think we can ignore it. | ||
Oh, Donald, Top of Drudge. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
I mean, they want somebody to go out and shoot Trump, folks. | ||
They want some leftist schizo. | ||
To pick up a gun and go shoot Donald Trump. | ||
He's a Nazi. | ||
He's a fascist. | ||
He's a threat to democracy. | ||
He hates women. | ||
He'll take your abortion rights. | ||
They want a leftist psychotic, and there are millions of them, tens of millions of them, to pick up a gun and go try to kill Donald Trump. | ||
That's what they're doing. | ||
Oh, but she's peddling her new book, of course, too. | ||
Donald Trump reenacting a 1939 Nazi rally. | ||
What an absolute joke. | ||
This is where they're at. | ||
This is where they're at. | ||
It's like, I don't even want to get into the history of it, but, I mean, America was working with the Nazis before they got involved in the war. | ||
I mean, they were sending materials, so... | ||
Whatever, man. | ||
I don't even want to have these history deals. | ||
It's like, why even argue history with these people? | ||
It doesn't even matter. | ||
The point is, they're trying to invoke violence against Trump and Trump supporters. | ||
They're trying to separate American voters from Trump. | ||
They're trying to paint this nasty picture of Trump. | ||
And they're the ones. | ||
It's them. | ||
It's Bill Clinton that eulogizes literal KKK grand dragon wizards. | ||
It's Bill Clinton that goes and hangs out with Epstein. | ||
So, but by the way, maybe we can squeeze this in before the break. | ||
Probably not. | ||
I want to find out, though, what day Trump is at Madison Square Garden, and are the Yankees in the World Series that same night? | ||
Because I believe the World Series, it does start tonight, I believe in Los Angeles, so that means they'll be in Los Angeles Friday, Saturday, and then probably at Yankee Stadium Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. | ||
So, I... I don't think it's going to line up, unfortunately. | ||
But Trump should go to the Yankees World Series game. | ||
That would be epic. | ||
That would be incredible. | ||
All right. | ||
First hour in the books. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
In-studio guests coming up. | ||
You're not going to want to miss it. | ||
All right. | ||
We are about to be joined in studio by Tariq T.K. Johnson. | ||
And this is a wild story. | ||
When I was arrested at the Capitol... | ||
In January of 2020, it was Officer Johnson that was there and ordered my arrest that day. | ||
That's him in the video right there calling it in. | ||
Now, he has since left the Capitol Police. | ||
He has also testified as a January 6th whistleblower and now, I'm proud to say, is even a fan of the show. | ||
And so it was a crazy merger of worlds. | ||
He didn't even realize that that was me until recently when I re-shared that video and he reached out saying, I can't believe that's you. | ||
I didn't even realize that. | ||
I'm a follower of you on X now. | ||
And he's been blowing the whistle on what he witnessed as a member of the Capitol Police on January 6th. | ||
And so we're going to talk about that. | ||
Just a crazy meeting of the minds here. | ||
Talk about D.C. Talk about where he's at politically after working in D.C. What he sees there. | ||
So that's all coming up. | ||
As he's about to join me in studio, he didn't get completely ruined by the traffic. | ||
So he made it in time. | ||
This is a short compilation, a short cut of that process that day. | ||
And just for context, and I'll bring this up with him as well. | ||
The day before, exact same spot in the Capitol, you had 40 anti-Trump protesters there. | ||
They were not arrested. | ||
But I was. | ||
So we'll get his opinion on that as well as some other aspects from that. | ||
January 6th and then just generally speaking, D.C., why he decided to leave the Capitol Police and become a whistleblower. | ||
But here's the moment. | ||
This is the moment. | ||
Officer Johnson calling for my arrest. | ||
unidentified
|
Consider an act of demonstration, and if you don't see some distance, we'll be arrested. | |
Sir, the impeached Trump protesters come here every single day. | ||
We saw them here, we actually confronted them. | ||
Is there a reason why they aren't arrested every day? | ||
What if I just get rid of the sign and hold this? | ||
That's a good issue, right? | ||
That's holding up the sign, that's a sign of demonstration. | ||
You can't forget any demonstration activities in the Capitol, but it looks like it's a demonstration. | ||
How come the impeached Trump protesters are allowed to be out here every day? | ||
We saw them the other day. | ||
They were standing out here. | ||
No one came up to them. | ||
Is there a reason? | ||
You want to arrest me? | ||
Okay, come back. | ||
I don't want to go to jail, but if this is how free speech is going to be violated and you want to arrest me in front of all these people, go ahead. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
There you go, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Arrest me in front of all these people so they can see the censorship in this country. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
I want everybody to see the censorship in this country. | ||
Impeach Trump protesters come here every day and have never been arrested. | ||
But I'm arrested today because I have this sign. | ||
That's the attack on free speech in this country. | ||
That's the two-tier justice system that we're dealing with. | ||
If you're an impeach Trump liberal Democrat protester, you get to come here every day with no consequence. | ||
But I have security all over me because I'm standing here silently. | ||
And if that doesn't show you the attack on free speech, if that doesn't show you the two tiered system, I don't know what will. | ||
How many warnings do you give to the impeached Trump protesters when they come here today? | ||
How many warnings do you give to the impeached Trump protesters? | ||
How come the impeached Trump protesters are allowed to come stand out here, and he cannot silently stand here? | ||
Are you arresting me in front of all these people here today? | ||
And if that's what you guys wanna do, then that's what you wanna do. | ||
Gentlemen, no one can answer me. | ||
How come the impeached Trump protesters are allowed to stand out here and he's not? | ||
Can I get any comment on this? | ||
Sir, are you gonna put your sign away? | ||
You guys think I should put my sign away? | ||
Watch the American Journal weekday mornings 8 to 11 central at band.video. | ||
Live from the Infowars.com studios, it's Alex Jones. | ||
The silent majority is no longer silent. | ||
This is The War Room with Owen Schroyer. | ||
Please stand by for further details. | ||
We return you now to your regularly scheduled program. | ||
Are they gonna arrest me for doing exactly what they did? | ||
Well, I guess we're going to find out. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Sir, is there an issue with this down here? | ||
Act of demonstration, and you don't see something, this place will be arrested. | ||
What if I just get rid of the sign and hold those? | ||
That's a good tool, right? | ||
Hold those signs, that's a sign of demonstration. | ||
You can't believe any demonstration activities. | ||
It's a couple of minutes left. | ||
It's a demonstration for each other. | ||
No, I don't want to go to jail, but if this is how free speech is going to be violated, and you want to arrest me in front of all these people, go ahead. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
There you go, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Arrest me in front of all these people so they can see the censorship in this country. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
I want everybody to see the censorship in this country. | ||
Impeach Trump protesters come here every day and have never been arrested. | ||
But I'm arrested today because I have this sign. | ||
That's the attack on free speech in this country. | ||
That's the two-tier justice system that we're dealing with. | ||
If you're an impeach Trump liberal Democrat protester, you get to come here every day with no consequences. | ||
But I have security all over me because I'm standing here silently. | ||
And if that doesn't show you the attack on free speech, if that doesn't show you the two-tiered system, I don't know what will. | ||
Second one is to get in front of all these people here today. | ||
And if that's what you guys want to do, then that's what you want to do. | ||
Sir, are you going to put your sign away? | ||
Do you guys think I should put my sign away or no? | ||
Do you think they should arrest me in front of you guys right now? | ||
What do you guys think? | ||
So is this your last one? | ||
Is this your last and final one? | ||
Will you pick this out on the way and something? | ||
Do you guys tell the impeached Trump protesters the same thing? | ||
No, I can't. | ||
I'm just asking. | ||
I just want to know. | ||
You don't want to play with me. | ||
me i'm just standing here there you go There you go, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Another Trump supporter receives second-class citizen treatment. | ||
Another conservative receives second-class citizen treatment. | ||
If you're an impeached Trump protester, you can come out here and protest and demonstrate all day long. | ||
But if you're Owen Schroer, they arrest you. | ||
So there you go. | ||
Sorry. | ||
So there they are, calling me off to the D.C. Gulag. | ||
And one officer, and I, you know, I gotta say, when you watch that video and the whole process, it was Officer Johnson, Tariq Johnson, joining me in studio now. | ||
He was trying, he didn't want to arrest me. | ||
He gave me, like, three warnings. | ||
You could tell he was like, please, just another warning, please. | ||
And I just, I refused. | ||
I was being stubborn. | ||
I wanted to make the point. | ||
And I think the point was certainly heard. | ||
But this is incredible. | ||
So, Tariq Johnson, Officer Johnson, I was a lieutenant at the time. | ||
Okay, you were a lieutenant at the time, and that's important because it kind of determines who has the power, who has the say in the process. | ||
Joins me now. | ||
This is the first time we've ever met since that arrest. | ||
The story is kind of wild. | ||
When I reposted that video, you weren't even aware that that was me, that you were arresting that day. | ||
So I want to talk about that day. | ||
I want to talk about January 6th, and then we'll talk about just general election stuff leading up to this. | ||
But here's the story for that day, and here's why I did that. | ||
The day before, and I'm sure you know this, you worked there. | ||
The day before, I was in the same spot at the Capitol. | ||
And the crew can probably find the video somewhere buried in the archives. | ||
And there were probably 20, 40, I don't remember, a bunch of anti-Trump protesters. | ||
And they were there all the time. | ||
And so I was like, okay, well, if the anti-Trump protesters can demonstrate out here, I'll do a demonstration and let's see what happened. | ||
And of course, I was arrested. | ||
They were not. | ||
Why is that? | ||
Why is that? | ||
Other than just the blatant, you know, two-tiered system of justice, I mean, how does that actually happen? | ||
Are there orders coming down from the top? | ||
How does that actually play out where they can do that and I can't? | ||
Well, I would like to actually see that clip. | ||
Sure, yeah, yeah, they'll find it. | ||
We got plenty of time. | ||
They'll definitely find it by the end of the segment. | ||
Yeah, so I'd like to see the clip, and then I can probably tell you what occurred or why those people didn't get arrested. | ||
In your case, it was a little different. | ||
You had the three warnings, and after that, that was it. | ||
So it's disorderly conduct, and under that statute, there's a—what we do is a lieutenant or above, which was me. | ||
If you look at the video, the officer was going to arrest you immediately. | ||
I don't know if you know— And that was the taller white guy? | ||
That was him, yes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And he looked like a newer guy, younger guy. | ||
He was a newer guy. | ||
So I told him, no, no. | ||
I want to give him three warnings. | ||
And that makes the case stronger in court because you don't want to... | ||
When you arrest somebody, you're taking their freedom. | ||
And it's a big deal. | ||
So you don't want to do it if you don't have to. | ||
And that's why we do the three warnings. | ||
So just to make sure that you know what's going to happen. | ||
So that's why I gave you the warnings like that. | ||
And I told you that if you continue... | ||
If you didn't cease and desist, you would be arrested. | ||
And you kept going. | ||
Because I didn't want to arrest you. | ||
Yeah, you could tell. | ||
You kept giving me the warnings. | ||
And I was stubborn. | ||
Because I was trying to make a point. | ||
And then there was some other stuff that developed after that that we can bring up, too. | ||
And we'll show that video. | ||
Here's a question I would have. | ||
Because you said you might be able to answer some of these questions. | ||
You might not. | ||
What's crazy is... | ||
And the same reporter that was filming that was there for this, too... | ||
When I walked into the Capitol that day, now I was arrested for disrupting a congressional hearing, I forget the actual charge, a month before that, maybe a month and a half before that. | ||
That was not in the Capitol. | ||
That was in a different congressional building where they were having one of the Trump impeachment hearings. | ||
So when I got arrested for that, which again, most of the time you guys will just detain and release, I actually got arrested, charged, and went to the D.C. jail. | ||
And so that's a whole other double standard, but you weren't involved in that. | ||
But I'm guessing that's why when I went to the Capitol that day, and I wasn't banned from the Capitol. | ||
I was just waiting trial at that point. | ||
There was no probation or anything. | ||
I received my citation, and I was just in the process of waiting for trial. | ||
When I went to the Capitol that day, the police officers at the door... | ||
Like, I could tell they knew something was up, because when I walked to the door, and you go through the screening process, they kind of, like, went like this, and were taken aback, and then looked at each other like, uh... | ||
And they're like, uh, Mr. | ||
Schroyer? | ||
And I was like, yes. | ||
They're like, you can't go in there. | ||
I was like, what are you talking about? | ||
They're like, we... | ||
We can't let you in there. | ||
I'm like, I'm not on probation. | ||
There's nothing that says I can't go in there. | ||
They're like, well, we're going to arrest you if you go in there. | ||
And I'm like, I'm not doing anything illegal. | ||
I'm not here to... | ||
And so they were like, okay. | ||
And they wanted me and took me in. | ||
Why? | ||
Do you have any idea why that might have happened? | ||
Are you saying that when you walk in the Capitol? | ||
Yes. | ||
That day when I had you arrested? | ||
Yes. | ||
It's possible that they recognize you because it's crazy because I remember back during those times, I never even heard of Infowars until much later. | ||
But people actually watched that. | ||
Capitol Police officers watched it and some of them told me about it. | ||
So they recognize you and they probably know that you were arrested recently and just was surprised that you were back. | ||
Sometimes they put stay-away orders on people who have been arrested not to come back. | ||
I don't know if you had one, but probably not because that would have been another violation. | ||
But they could have thought you had a stay-away order. | ||
So they did try to get a stay-away order after my first court date. | ||
I did not have one at that time. | ||
But based off the vibe from those officers, it was like they were warning me. | ||
It was like they knew, like, hey... | ||
People want you arrested. | ||
You shouldn't go in there. | ||
And I was like, hey, I'm going in here. | ||
And they were like, all right. | ||
So that was kind of the process. | ||
So you think it was more people who just knew who I was and were maybe trying to stop me? | ||
Yes, I think it was one. | ||
Or they recognized you and they didn't know if you had an active stay away order. | ||
They could have probably, after you came in, they could have called down to the detail office to see if you had any active stay away orders. | ||
They could have did it over the radio. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I didn't know who you were back then. | ||
So I would say they probably recognized you. | ||
Now here's another question and this deals with my The original charges that I was facing... | ||
Again, I think it was disrupting a congressional hearing or whatever. | ||
This happens quite often. | ||
You guys deal with protesters quite often. | ||
They get into these hearings. | ||
They stand up. | ||
They make a scene. | ||
One high-profile case that we looked into would be David Hogg. | ||
I don't know if you're familiar with him. | ||
He's an anti-gun activist. | ||
He's a big anti-gun activist. | ||
And he's disrupted Congress. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
There's the clip. | ||
Okay, so beautiful. | ||
So this is the clip of all the anti-Trump protesters there from the day before... | ||
Folks, you can see on the screen here, that's the exact same place. | ||
So we'll let this clip play out, and I'll ask you the question, because it all ties in. | ||
There they are right there. | ||
So why is it, because we looked into this dealing with my case, facing my charges and the jail time and everything, most people who disrupt congressional hearings do not actually face charges. | ||
They either get dropped or they just get detained and released. | ||
The officers that day, not this day, the day before when I disrupted the impeachment hearing, they were going to release me. | ||
Somebody got onto their walkie and said, no, don't release him, charge him. | ||
Is that a common thing? | ||
Because from our research preparing for this case, we couldn't find these charges sticking most people that disrupt unless they're known to do it multiple times. | ||
Singular offenders, usually the charges were dropped and they just get detained, a warning, and then they're told to go on their way. | ||
Not with me, though. | ||
So, I guess, so I have a couple questions. | ||
The first one, you said that when they were arresting you in the Senate hearing, is that what you were talking about? | ||
It was a House hearing, yes, that's the one. | ||
That was in December of 2019, so it was a month before, a month and a half before the arrest that you made. | ||
Okay, so, and I'm pretty sure when they arrested you, they didn't give you three warnings like I did. | ||
They probably, yes, because they don't do that. | ||
You'll get one warning. | ||
I didn't give it one morning. | ||
I gave myself up. | ||
I stood up and said the impeachment was BS. It was about a 40-second disruption. | ||
And I just, I mean, I just, I cooperated. | ||
I said, yeah, I know. | ||
You guys got to get rid of me. | ||
And I just walked out with them. | ||
And they were about to release me. | ||
I mean, they took me outside of the hearing room. | ||
They put me in cuffs. | ||
They walked out. | ||
They took me outside of the building. | ||
And they were about to release me. | ||
The cop was literally walking over with the with the key and they were going to release me. | ||
And then somebody got on their walkie talkie and said, no, you're you're charging him. | ||
You're taking him to jail. | ||
Yeah, they had to do that because after you disrupted that committee hearing, then that's when they took you out. | ||
And then I don't know why the officer was going to let you take the cuffs off. | ||
But, you know, prior regulations that after they had already taken that position, they had to finish it out and take you to the. | ||
So, OK, so guys, put the put the Trump protesters back on the screen because this is this is the black and white question of it. | ||
Do you believe that there is a political application or political favoritism about who gets to protest at the Capitol and who doesn't? | ||
This is when they're dispersing because they got afraid that I showed up. | ||
But if you show it earlier, yeah, there they are. | ||
Do you believe there's a political application of who gets to protest in the Capitol, who doesn't, who gets to disrupt hearings and not get charged, and who does? | ||
Now, um... | ||
That's a complex question. | ||
So now, in this particular situation, I don't see any officials around. | ||
Like, there are no officers. | ||
I don't see anybody here. | ||
So from the looks of it in this particular frame, there was nobody to arrest them. | ||
There was nobody there. | ||
How many officers were on the scene when I was there? | ||
Like five? | ||
Yes, and sometimes... | ||
Like a whole army to take me out. | ||
In the CVC, sometimes, I mean, it's a big building, and, you know, oh, I see an officer. | ||
Is this the... | ||
That's... | ||
Oh, no, that is that day. | ||
That is that day. | ||
They actually, they removed me for trying to talk to them. | ||
They removed me! | ||
The other thing is, too, do we know if they were part of a group with a congressperson? | ||
Sometimes congressmen bring people in and they do those things. | ||
Sometimes you have events set up by congressmen. | ||
So that could have been set up by a congressman for that particular situation. | ||
Because there were no congressmen or women on the scene. | ||
No, sometimes they're not even there. | ||
So they don't have to be there. | ||
Sometimes they have one of their staff members bring people in, take pictures, and do stuff like that. | ||
So that's like the end around. | ||
Yes, because if a member of Congress brings a group in... | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
So that actually answers the question. | ||
Because what happened when I showed up, because they were there all day. | ||
And when I knew they were there, that's when I was like, okay, let's go shoot a video. | ||
And we did the whole introduction and I walked down the stairs. | ||
That actually makes sense because after I showed up and just was trying to talk to them, when they dispersed, somebody gathered them all around and then they actually went into the proceeding area. | ||
So like they went into the official area where people usually have to line up, you know, to go if they want to go to these hearings. | ||
They got basically ushered in. | ||
They got a pass and they went in. | ||
So that would make sense. | ||
So it was a congressman. | ||
It was a Democrat that brought him in. | ||
It's possible. | ||
All I can go by is what I see here. | ||
And I do know for a fact that sometimes congressmen, they bring some of their constituents in for events, pitchers, meetings, and this could have been that. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
So I won't say it is or it wasn't. | ||
Just from this, you know, this is just not enough. | ||
I don't see a bunch of police officers there around them giving warnings. | ||
So now, when I was with you, I was giving you a warning. | ||
I was giving you several warnings. | ||
I didn't see that here. | ||
So nobody was there. | ||
So this leads me to believe that this event was already planned. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah, the cops showed up to actually get me. | ||
They showed up to get me. | ||
It was only one that day. | ||
It was five the next time. | ||
And I will just tell you this, in case you didn't follow up, I mean, there was no reason for you to. | ||
The judge tossed those charges from that day. | ||
The judge, as soon as it got to his desk, he tossed them. | ||
And thank God he did. | ||
Who knows what they would have done to me. | ||
What's funny is, and I don't know, are you familiar with that D.C. jail where they take you? | ||
Yes. | ||
I, unfortunately, I've been in a few prisons. | ||
I've been in a few jail cells. | ||
That is by far the worst jail I have ever been in. | ||
I mean, do you guys know how disgusting it is down there? | ||
I heard it's pretty bad over there. | ||
Yes, I've heard. | ||
It's a cockroach motel and graveyard. | ||
I mean, this is how bad... | ||
Like, literally, if you fall asleep, you're going to wake up with cockroaches all over you. | ||
All the dead ones are still smashed on the walls and the windows. | ||
There's no airflow. | ||
You're sleeping on a metal pan. | ||
They don't give you anything to sleep on. | ||
There's really no access to anything to eat or drink. | ||
You have to beg a guard to get that. | ||
It was so bad. | ||
The people in the cell... | ||
Because you can't see the people around you. | ||
The people in the cell next to me, you can only hear them. | ||
There was a fight because I guess the guy was like brushing cockroaches off of himself, off of his bed. | ||
And they kept landing on the guy beneath him. | ||
And he was like, stop putting the cockroaches. | ||
Stop putting the cockroaches. | ||
And then eventually he fought. | ||
He like got up and he started fighting him because he kept throwing cockroaches on him. | ||
I don't know if it was intentional or not. | ||
So, I mean, it was the worst. | ||
And then I never get sick. | ||
I was sick for almost a week, like 10 days after that. | ||
I don't know if it was COVID or anything. | ||
Maybe they poisoned me. | ||
But I was sick for 10 days after that. | ||
Couldn't get out of bed. | ||
I mean, that was the worst jail. | ||
I mean, it's like inhumane in there. | ||
Is that what you guys hear? | ||
I heard it's bad. | ||
And sometimes we arrest prisoners and sometimes we arrest them for something else. | ||
And because I was in patrol division before I got promoted to lieutenant some years prior to that. | ||
And sometimes when you arrest them, then they would tell you some of the stories about how bad it was in there. | ||
The guy who I ended up sharing a cell with, I was in there alone for a bit, and then the guy ended up coming in. | ||
This is a guy you guys busted, I guess the D.C. police had busted a couple times for drug charges, and then he got caught with a gun he wasn't allowed to have. | ||
So that's what he was in there for, and yeah, he knew all about it. | ||
He was kind of giving me the ropes about it before we eventually got released. | ||
But let me ask you this then. | ||
Let's kind of look at the larger picture, because we see protests in the Capitol all the time. | ||
And again, you weren't really political when you were a Capitol Police. | ||
Is that fair to say? | ||
Very fair to say. | ||
Okay, so you're not really thinking about it from a political aspect. | ||
Maybe now you kind of view it differently. | ||
But we see people go into the Capitol and do these protests all the time. | ||
I mean, whether it's, you know, the climate change protesters, you had the pink vagina hat wearing protesters. | ||
Recently you have the pro-Palestine protesters. | ||
What is the approach... | ||
To a scene like that, when a mass of people shows up, by the way, these are all leftist groups. | ||
What is the approach to that for Capitol Police? | ||
I would say we like to prepare. | ||
If we know in advance, then we'll have the proper, we'll prepare for arrests, even if we don't have any. | ||
We'll try to seek out whoever's in charge of the group. | ||
So we'll look for the leader of the group. | ||
And like we did this, I've done a gazillion of these. | ||
So we will look for the person in charge of the group and we'll ask them, do you guys plan on getting arrested? | ||
And some of them will say yes, yes, yes. | ||
We'll have, some of them, they'll have their bond money already, you know, and they'll let us know. | ||
That's an important thing. | ||
They already have their bond money ready to go, like it's an organized thing. | ||
Yeah, they're ready to get bailed out. | ||
Yeah, so every situation is different, you know, but we'll typically, we'll seek out whoever's in charge of the group, we'll ask them. | ||
Sometimes they tell us, sometimes they don't. | ||
Sometimes they'll even have an attorney there watching everything and videotaping everything. | ||
You know, and then they'll let, you know, sometimes they'll let us know, hey, I'm an attorney, I'm watching, making sure you don't violate their rights. | ||
So every situation is different. | ||
Like, your situation was different than other arrests that I've made, but every situation is different. | ||
Yeah, and that's interesting, too, because a lot of times, and I'm sure you've seen it, they have the phone number written on their arm and everything because they're ready to go. | ||
I mean, I would argue that everybody should be allowed to protest at the Capitol, and that would probably make a bad environment for you guys because then it would be every day, right? | ||
So, I mean, you could have a debate with that. | ||
I would argue it's a First Amendment right, but I'm kind of on the purest side of the First Amendment argument. | ||
You get no argument from me because I think that it doesn't matter what side of the people. | ||
As long as you're not violent. | ||
As long as you're not violent. | ||
And then they do allow it at the Capitol. | ||
You can protest, but there are certain areas where you can demonstrate. | ||
There are certain areas where you can do that. | ||
Sometimes you have to go get a permit. | ||
We have a special event section. | ||
So if somebody wants to demonstrate there, they call special events and they'll let them know what they can and can't do. | ||
Yeah, and I've heard of that before, and I've also heard of, where was it? | ||
There was somewhere where they would have free speech zones marked off at some of these events. | ||
It would literally be a free speech zone, and it's like, America should be a free speech zone. | ||
I mean, I don't agree with these groups' message at all, but yet I would stand on their right to protest. | ||
I would stand on their right to be there protesting at the Capitol. | ||
As long as they're not violent. | ||
So how do you decide then when these things get big and you have to start making arrests, is it just like a, you know, just pick who you arrest or how do you guys decide who gets arrested? | ||
Is it just who's the fastest to get out of there? | ||
No, we try to get everybody. | ||
You know, so yeah, so we'll bring, it depends if there's 20 people or 30 people, then, you know, we have to bring a bunch of officers. | ||
We'll probably activate a CDU team or Alpha Bravo team, officers who are delegated to, um, Be at a certain place if we have a situation. | ||
And then we'll grab arrest kits. | ||
And then we'll start... | ||
And then even later on, we start bringing video cameras so we can film the people, too. | ||
So sometimes you might see a Capitol Police officer actually filming the entire thing. | ||
And then we'll start making arrests at that point. | ||
I haven't been there... | ||
No, I mean, I've been there 20... | ||
I was there for 23 and a half years. | ||
At the Capitol? | ||
Yeah, well, not... | ||
Capitol Police. | ||
Okay. | ||
So I worked at different places, you know, sometimes at the Capitol, sometimes on the House Division, Senate Division. | ||
I worked a lot of different units there. | ||
But I've never seen anybody run away. | ||
So typically, like, when they're there, they're there, and then we'll just arrest them. | ||
I've never seen anybody run away. | ||
And then we'll get them all. | ||
And then we'll, you know, put them in flex cuffs, and we'll take them away. | ||
Where do they go? | ||
We take them to the, it depends if it's a mass arrest. | ||
Yeah, because they don't have room in that D.C. jail. | ||
Those are tiny. | ||
Well, a lot of those people, they don't even see the jail. | ||
That's what I was told, right. | ||
They don't even see the jail. | ||
They get their citation and they get released. | ||
And they get released right there on the scene because they can't, you know. | ||
Not me, though. | ||
Yeah, we've done like 400 people and then, yeah, a mass arrest and we'll have to, because we can't house all those people. | ||
Right. | ||
Well, and that, when we were doing, when we were looking into all of this stuff, because we were trying to have my case dismissed based off of political persecution, which I still believe is the truth and the evidence is there, but that's what we discovered, is most of the people that either have the charges that I have or just get arrested at the Capitol for whatever, you know, any demonstration, they usually get their citation and released, which I think is fair. | ||
Obviously, I didn't get that treatment. | ||
All right, now here's what I want to do. | ||
We're about to take a short break. | ||
I want to talk about why you became a January 6th whistleblower, but I also want to talk about something as we're leading up to the election now with 11 days to go. | ||
I want to talk about something that not a lot of people talk about, and I wonder if, were you on the ground during the Trump inauguration in 2017? | ||
Yes. | ||
Okay, I really want to talk to you about that because nobody talks about the violence that happened that day, and I'm concerned we could have a similar story at Trump's inauguration in 2025. | ||
Officer Tariq Johnson, he arrested me one time, but I forgive him. | ||
I forgive him and I love him. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Now, I admire Officer Johnson. | ||
I don't blame him for my arrest. | ||
But I admire him because now, despite all the backlash that he got at the time, he ended up testifying in front of Congress about January 6th, and obviously he has intimate knowledge about what went on behind the scenes that day as a Capitol Police officer. | ||
He was also working for Capitol Police during the Trump inauguration of 2017, so I want to talk about that and maybe some anticipation of 2025, but January 6th, to me, is one of the biggest propaganda pieces against the American people for multiple reasons, mostly because the real narrative doesn't reflect what actually happened that day. | ||
And I guess I would ask the question to kind of start the conversation like this. | ||
If you guys had known, because you told me in the break, you guys had no idea what was going on. | ||
You guys were not properly informed. | ||
You did not get the intelligence. | ||
You did not have the proper preparations for that day. | ||
Had there been preparations? | ||
Had there been intel shared with lieutenants like you? | ||
Had there been an extra effort to bring in more police, National Guard, whatever? | ||
Do you think that any of that ever happens? | ||
No, 100%. | ||
And I wanted to correct you on something earlier. | ||
I have not testified in front of Congress. | ||
They won't let me. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
No. | ||
So where did I see that? | ||
Where were you testifying then? | ||
I've never testified. | ||
That wasn't you? | ||
No. | ||
I must be thinking of some other Capitol Police officers. | ||
No. | ||
Okay, so that's what it is. | ||
They only call the ones that want to testify against Trump. | ||
That is correct. | ||
Okay, okay. | ||
And I can tell you this. | ||
There are the intel. | ||
That's insane to me. | ||
Yes, but this is hard to say this, but I'm going to go ahead and say, I don't know if you guys want to play some music. | ||
And this is why I quit the Capitol Police. | ||
My last day, I quit on September the 20th. | ||
I'm sorry, September 23rd of 2022. | ||
And the Capitol Police is one of the most corrupt agencies in the country. | ||
It's no question. | ||
And I'll say it again, just to be clear. | ||
The Capitol Police is one of the most corrupt agencies in the country. | ||
And you worked there for two decades. | ||
I worked there for two decades, but I didn't know. | ||
So now, and when I say the corrupt, it's not the The front-line officers or officials is the higher-ups. | ||
Two of those people right now still work there. | ||
J. Thomas Manger, he's the chief of the Capitol Police now, and Sean Gallagher, he's the assistant chief. | ||
Two of the most corrupt people in the country. | ||
We can prove it. | ||
So now... | ||
On J6, there was intel funneled to Yogananda Pittman, who was then the chief of the intelligence section, IICD, and Sean Gallagher, who was her deputy. | ||
So those two were the two most ranking members of the Capitol Police that had the intelligence. | ||
Now, the intelligence that they had... | ||
So they're anticipating at least half a million people. | ||
They knew people were going to be marching to the Capitol. | ||
They knew there were events planned outside of the Capitol. | ||
They had all of this. | ||
They had that intel. | ||
Oh, and they had more than that. | ||
They knew that the Capitol was going to be broken into. | ||
They knew that people were going to be running into tunnels. | ||
The reports that they had said some people may want to kill officers. | ||
And they did not give that information to the Operations Bureau commander, Chad Thomas, or Chief Stephen Sun, the chief of the Capitol Police. | ||
Now, Sun did testify, is that correct? | ||
He did. | ||
Not as a whistleblower. | ||
He testified. | ||
And he did not testify to the... | ||
The failures of Sean Gallagher and Yogananda Pittman, because he was probably still learning some more stuff, but he didn't testify in front of the J6 Select Committee. | ||
I didn't testify in front of the J6 Select Committee. | ||
Now, there were five Intel Capitol Police whistleblowers who went to the IG to let them know that, hey, listen, Yogananda Pittman and Sean Gallagher had this Intel, and they didn't disseminate the information. | ||
So you know what Sean Gallagher did and Yogananda Pittman did? | ||
They fired all the Intel agents. | ||
Anybody that said anything negative about them, they terminate them. | ||
Now, those intel agents are watching your show right now. | ||
They're watching right now. | ||
I sent them the message. | ||
Totem is on right now. | ||
The ones they fired. | ||
The ones they fired. | ||
And they're welcome to come on the show as well. | ||
They can't, because if they come on the show, then they lose whistleblower protection. | ||
So now the Capitol Police is trying to stop. | ||
So they are talking then, potentially. | ||
They reported it to the IG. The IG went back and told Yogananda Pittman that you have these rogue intel analysts reporting the malfeasance, which you did. | ||
And then they fired the guys. | ||
They fired them all. | ||
I mean, that's insane. | ||
That's like saying, hey, we know somebody's going to come to the Capitol and try to burn it down. | ||
And then you say, well, I'm not going to tell anybody. | ||
And then if they burn it down, it's like, well, you, I mean, you're partially responsible for that. | ||
Yes. | ||
And then it's crazy because one of the two individuals, which I named Sean Gallagher, he went and he told Chuck Schumer, his one of his staff members, what was going to happen. | ||
But he wouldn't tell the chief. | ||
Or of the actual Capitol Police, or he wouldn't tell the chief of the police. | ||
Now, days before January 6th, you had Stevenson trying to go get National Guard assistance on the grounds that day. | ||
But Paul Irving, who works for Nancy Pelosi, told him he did not have the intelligence that would support the National Guard needing to be there. | ||
Pittman and Gallagher had it the whole time. | ||
Wouldn't give it to them. | ||
Because if you have the National Guard there, January 6th doesn't happen. | ||
And they needed January 6th to happen. | ||
And the two people that I named were the two that got promoted after January 6th. | ||
Of course. | ||
Because they did a great job in giving the Democrats exactly what they wanted that day. | ||
And just so people kind of understand the full spectrum here, Pelosi is in charge of the Capitol Police. | ||
Mariel Bowser is in charge of D.C. police and the National Guard. | ||
And both of them, both of those two, stood down knowing there were going to be a million people in D.C., knowing even things I'd never heard before, that there was a known threat even that day, and they still did not give the help. | ||
So... | ||
What's crazy to me, and you can expand on that too before I give you my follow-up, what's crazy about that from hearing you today is that it sounds like the general Capitol Police like yourself were going into that day not really anticipating or expecting anything. | ||
I mean, were you stunned when this all went down? | ||
I thought it was supposed to be a nothing day. | ||
I planned on leaving early that day. | ||
I thought it was nothing. | ||
I got absolutely no intel. | ||
I didn't even go to... | ||
I got to work late that day because I knew it was nothing. | ||
So I got to the office probably a little bit after 7. | ||
Because typically, if there's something big or are we planning for something, then I'm going to get there right at 7 o'clock. | ||
A little early, maybe even 6.30. | ||
But that was a nothing day. | ||
So no, we had no idea. | ||
The officers on the ground had no idea. | ||
The only people that knew Were the commanders of the intelligence section, Yogananda Pittman, and Sean Gallagher. | ||
Where were they? | ||
Where were they? | ||
Yeah. | ||
They were in the command center watching everything unfold on a CCTV. So is that in the Capitol? | ||
That's about three blocks from the Capitol is our police headquarters building. | ||
Okay. | ||
Is that where I probably spent the night in prison? | ||
That's exactly. | ||
Well, no, no, no. | ||
You wouldn't have spent the night there. | ||
They probably took you to CCB. Okay. | ||
But you probably got originally processed, and then they put you in a van or something, and then they took you over to that place. | ||
Yes, okay. | ||
That's what happened. | ||
So they're not even on scene. | ||
They're watching it. | ||
When at what point in time that day, where were you where were you exactly on that day? | ||
And at what point in time did you realize, OK, something something big is about to happen here? | ||
When I heard on the radio that the front line was breached at the fence line was breached. | ||
And the other issue was that once that fence line, once that fence line went down, anybody that came over into the restricted area, even if they didn't know it and broke the law. | ||
So, but even though they didn't mean to, they didn't know. | ||
But when they walked over into that grassy area, they were already breaking the law, even though they didn't know. | ||
But that's when I knew. | ||
And then I knew it was even bad when I was begging and screaming for help on the radio. | ||
And Yogananda Pittman, who was there, Sean Gallagher, who was there, both had the intel, would not give me any help. | ||
And these comms are going to Central. | ||
They're going to Central. | ||
They're hearing. | ||
They hear everything. | ||
Yeah, and it is... | ||
It's even worse. | ||
Okay, so now, you know Ashley Babbitt? | ||
Yes. | ||
Okay, so I evacuated. | ||
I don't know if you know this, but I was the one that made the call to evacuate the Capitol. | ||
So I made the call to evacuate. | ||
And is that the emergency service eventually that went out? | ||
No, it was a call to get the members of Congress out of the building. | ||
Oh, you mean the members of Congress. | ||
Okay, gotcha. | ||
And then I led those evacuations with the help of the officers. | ||
So, I called for the evacuation of the Senate at 228. | ||
Approximately 228. | ||
I called for the evacuation of the House at approximately 236. | ||
If Yogananda Pittman or Sean Gallagher would have helped me with the evacuations at 228, Ashley Babbitt would have never got shot. | ||
Because by the time she made it up to the House floor, Mike Bird wouldn't have been there. | ||
He would have left with the last member of Congress. | ||
So they were still clearing them out at that time. | ||
Yes, because Pittman wouldn't even help me. | ||
Gallagher wouldn't help. | ||
Now, the reason why I didn't do it at the same time is because I was on the Senate side, so I could physically see an exit route. | ||
On the House side, I wasn't there, so I couldn't see an exit route to get the members of Congress out. | ||
And not to save everybody from an insurrection, to de-escalate the situation, because it could get bad if the demonstrators get in there, they encounter some of the members of Congress, they could argue. | ||
So just get the members of Congress out of the building to de-escalate the situation. | ||
I'm calling on the radio, begging for help, begging for help. | ||
All these are, the radio transmissions are public. | ||
So you can go listen to them anytime you want. | ||
So begging for help. | ||
And they're just flat out ignoring me. | ||
So now, and this is the other issue. | ||
So what Pittman and Gallagher were, they could see everything on both sides of the building. | ||
So they could see if there was an exit route on the House side and the Senate side. | ||
Because they got all the cameras right there. | ||
They got all the cameras. | ||
The cameras like this room right here. | ||
Television cameras all over. | ||
And there's like a hundred cameras. | ||
Probably more at the Capitol. | ||
Yes. | ||
So they can see everything. | ||
And they're just looking. | ||
And they will not help. | ||
And so then that's when I called Senator Leahy after January 6th to tell him they were letting it happen. | ||
I listened to the radio. | ||
And then, and this is before I knew about the Intel failures. | ||
And then I found out later from the Intel whistleblowers that they had the information all along. | ||
And I didn't know that. | ||
So gut instincts, while all this is going on, the scenes you just described, the actions that you're taking, your gut instincts are what? | ||
What are you thinking at this time? | ||
That they were letting it happen. | ||
And that scares me, which is why, knowing that the Capitol Police was corrupt, I couldn't stay there anymore. | ||
I was 17 months from full retirement, and I resigned. | ||
Now, if you look up, and just to really bring home the fact that they're corrupt, I don't know if you can put my Twitter handle up. | ||
Somebody can find my Twitter handle and put it up. | ||
I have it pinned to my profile about Sean Gallagher. | ||
Sean Gallagher, about 10 years ago, led a money-stealing scheme where he stole thousands of dollars with other commanders from the Capitol Police. | ||
Stole it. | ||
And then when they caught him, they just made him give the money back. | ||
I think the chief did a declination of non-prosecution so they wouldn't put him in jail. | ||
This is on record? | ||
Yes. | ||
And Steve Baker, I don't know if you... | ||
Do you know who Steve Baker is? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I know he was sentenced. | ||
I don't know if he's served his time yet. | ||
Now, Steve Baker is a reporter, and he broke this story. | ||
And then if you pull that story up and read that story, Sean Gallagher is one of the biggest criminals in the country. | ||
And if you read this, they let him off... | ||
He didn't even get arrested. | ||
He didn't get prosecuted, nothing. | ||
He is super powerful. | ||
When I tell you how powerful Sean Gallagher is, Sean Gallagher is watching this show right now. | ||
He's watching right now. | ||
So, what he did in this money stealing scheme was he should have been in jail. | ||
At the very least, fired. | ||
He got promoted after this money stealing scheme. | ||
Three times. | ||
I feel like there's probably a lot of this that goes on in D.C. It's crazy when I hear you tell the stories and then it's like, these are the people that probably should have lost their jobs. | ||
Instead, they get promoted. | ||
That seems to be the trend whenever you follow big stories like this. | ||
Okay, so, I mean, this is just wild. | ||
We're getting more information. | ||
I've never heard you tell the story this in detail. | ||
And I'm sure it was a shocking thing because, you know, I've had similar experiences where... | ||
For me, it's different, obviously, as a reporter, but it's like, I'll be on the scene of a big event, and in the midst of it, your adrenaline is going, whoa, okay. | ||
And then you get home, and you take a deep breath, and you flip on the news, and they're telling a completely different story. | ||
And that's when, for me, when I was younger and first getting into political media, that was my big thing of like, oh my gosh, they really don't tell the truth in the news, or they don't even know, or they don't even try to. | ||
How does that apply to your experience on January 6th? | ||
And so it's like you're in the heat of the moment. | ||
It's like, whoa, are they standing down? | ||
Are they letting this happen? | ||
And then finally the day kind of calms down. | ||
You hang your hat up. | ||
You go home. | ||
You sit down. | ||
You take a deep breath. | ||
You tune into the news. | ||
What was that processing the event afterwards like for you? | ||
That's all I did. | ||
Because after January 6th, I didn't sleep for two days. | ||
So I just couldn't sleep. | ||
I kept watching the television, didn't want to miss anything. | ||
I was a dead man walking after January 6th. | ||
Didn't know my left and my right. | ||
And then I did get a day of sleep, probably on Friday night into Saturday. | ||
And then that's when I made the call to Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont. | ||
And the reason why, I figured he was a Democrat. | ||
So January 6th was a violent insurrection. | ||
So let me call and tell him that doing this violent insurrection, the commanders in the command center did nothing. | ||
They were letting it happen, which scared me. | ||
You thought that they would want to know that? | ||
I thought they would want to know that. | ||
An hour after I got off the phone with Senator Leahy, the Capitol Police drove to my house, suspended me, took my police powers, gun, everything, badge, and I was on house arrest basically for 17 months. | ||
I couldn't leave the house from the hours of 8 in the morning to 4 p.m. | ||
because I was on administrative leave, but I had to stay in the house. | ||
I couldn't go out for a run, nothing. | ||
If I stepped off my property, I had to call the Capitol Police to let them know that I was off my property. | ||
If I left the house, I had to leave the Capitol Police a telephone number where I could be reached at all times, even if I was on vacation. | ||
That's stricter probation than they had me on. | ||
It was horrible. | ||
I just had to pee in a cup every month. | ||
I wish that's all I had to do, but it was terrible. | ||
I had to call every single day to see if they needed anything at 8 o'clock in the morning. | ||
If I missed my call at 8 o'clock, then they would charge me vacation time if I missed my call at 8 o'clock. | ||
I was like that for 17 months. | ||
You see this, right? | ||
You see it in TV shows, the movies, whatever. | ||
Turn in your badge, turn in your gun, and it's a big scene. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
I mean, I just had another great American... | ||
Zach Apotheker, Border Patrol, they did the exact same thing to him, took his gun, took his badge. | ||
They're doing the exact same thing to you. | ||
It's like if you're a good American, if you're like an upstanding member of society and you care, that's the ones they come after. | ||
But if you steal money, it seems like you get a promotion. | ||
And the good thing is the stuff that I told you about Sean Gallagher, you can't they can't keep it hidden so much longer. | ||
They just want to keep everything under wraps until after the election, because Sean Gallagher and Yogananda Pittman did what they did for to gain the favor of Nancy Pelosi. | ||
I don't know if you really know, but Nancy Pelosi hates Donald Trump. | ||
So really? | ||
Yes, she does. | ||
This is news to me. | ||
Yes. | ||
I don't know. | ||
So I'm not going to assume, you know. | ||
So they did it, you know, I believe they did it to gain her favor and to get promotion and financial favors from her down the road. | ||
But Yogananda Pittman actually went and got a job at California Berkeley as the police chief over there making, I think, $282,000 a year. | ||
And she's getting her Capitol Police pension. | ||
So she's making out real nicely, and I'm sure the UC Berkeley job is a lot easier than the Capitol Police job. | ||
100%, I would say. | ||
And then Sean Gallagher got promoted to assistant chief, so he runs the Capitol Police now. | ||
And I'm telling you, this is all going to come out, but they don't want this to come out until after the election. | ||
You know, because what these people did, they did it to embarrass Trump, to put January 6th on him, and it was not Trump. | ||
The Capitol Police Board is the people that would determine if the National Guard was going to be on the scene, not Donald Trump. | ||
If Donald Trump wanted 10,000 troops on the ground at the Capitol, he couldn't authorize that, because that's the Capitol Police Board, which was ran by Michael Stinger of the Senate. | ||
Sergeant at Arms, Paul Irving of the House Sergeant at Arms, the architect of the Capitol, and the police chief of the Capitol is a non-voting member. | ||
So that's the board. | ||
It's up to them to request a National Guard assistance, not Trump. | ||
And this was not, so January 6th was not on Donald Trump. | ||
It was on, you had two rogue commanders who were just greedy and unethical that wanted to gain the favor of Nancy Pelosi. | ||
And I'm sure you're aware, too. | ||
I mean, Trump requested the National Guard through the mayor of D.C. and he got rejected. | ||
Do you know anything about inside internally with the Capitol? | ||
Like, was there ever a demand for more police? | ||
Was there ever a demand for extra help? | ||
Or was it just total blockade? | ||
And so, I mean, really, you guys were, you on the ground, the officers, you guys were caught off guard. | ||
100%. | ||
And then it was a situation, I mean, you just didn't have the numbers. | ||
I mean, it was just a sheer out, you couldn't, there was nothing you could do at that point. | ||
Right. | ||
Nothing we could do. | ||
And I will say this, Chief Stevenson tried desperately to get the assistance of the National Guard, but Michael Stinger, the Senate Sergeant at Arms, and Paul Irving of the House Sergeant at Arms, who worked directly for Nancy Pelosi, Told Son that he could not articulate the need for the National Guard. | ||
The intelligence wasn't there. | ||
But Pittman and Gallagher had it, would not give it to him. | ||
And you can ask Chief Son, fact-check me. | ||
Ask Chad Thomas. | ||
And you can't ask Chad Thomas because Yogananda Pittman, when she took over the Capitol Police on January the 8th, she had Chad Thomas fired and forced him to sign an NDA so he can't even speak about the events of January 6th. | ||
Well, it's so crazy, too, when I try to talk about January 6th to other people, they just get so many of the facts wrong, or they just are outright lying. | ||
Like, they say that the police officer, I forget the gentleman's name, who died a couple days later from some different health issues, they say, oh, he died because of the riots at the Capitol. | ||
It's just an outright lie. | ||
First, they said he got hit over the head with a fire extinguisher. | ||
Obviously, that never happened. | ||
And so there's all kinds of different things. | ||
Or why at one point did they release the magnetic doors to let people in? | ||
I mean, I'm looking at this and I'm saying, well, maybe it was to try to de-escalate. | ||
Like, hey, they're overwhelming us. | ||
If we let them in and kind of just, like, try to lasso the situation, you know, maybe we can de-escalate. | ||
But, I mean, that's on tape. | ||
And I don't know how much you know about that. | ||
But, I mean, what leads to that process? | ||
Why were police officers at one point removing the barriers and waving people in? | ||
And what... | ||
What led to the decision to release the magnetic doors? | ||
I can tell you without a shadow of a doubt, the officers were just surprised about what occurred on January 6th as anybody else. | ||
They were caught off guard. | ||
They didn't have the intelligence. | ||
That particular incident when you see the officer move the bike racks and wave people in, he moved the bike racks to wave other officers in to tell them to have him come in at the perimeter. | ||
I've been trying to tell everybody this, and I've been adamant about this on social media. | ||
The officers, Owen, and the demonstrators were all set up on January 6th. | ||
We were pawns in a bigger scheme. | ||
So we all should be on the same side. | ||
Yes, some things happened that day, and people get mad at me sometimes because I don't focus on the violence. | ||
Yes, there was violence, but what made that violence occur? | ||
It was withholding that intel that put all of us in the same situation. | ||
And we should be on the same side, officers and demonstrators alike. | ||
That's why this is such a powerful interview to me. | ||
And I know you've done some other interviews as well. | ||
But that's why this is so powerful because we're representing both sides of this. | ||
You're representing the Capitol Police side. | ||
I'm representing the other side of a January 6th defendant that spent time in prison. | ||
And we were all completely set up. | ||
And maybe we'll come back to that. | ||
But I want to ask a couple other things about that day. | ||
Obviously, there was some violence. | ||
Neither of us would deny that. | ||
Obviously, there were some people that deserved to go to jail. | ||
You smash a window. | ||
Some people got into confrontations with police as well. | ||
I mean, I wouldn't sit here and defend them and say that they're innocent. | ||
Overall, though, you can either speak to yourself specifically or more of a general attitude, and I don't know how many other police officers you've kind of spoke to about this, but I mean, did you feel threatened that day? | ||
Were officers really feeling threatened that day, or is it really isolated pockets where it was bad? | ||
No, I mean, if... | ||
If you ever have some time, and I can send it to you after the show is over, listen to the radio transmissions. | ||
If you listen to the radio transmissions, it was pandemonium. | ||
And some of the fear was from demonstrators because they were fighting on the west front, not as much as on the east front until a little bit later. | ||
But yeah, I think they were scared. | ||
But I think some of the demonstrators were scared. | ||
I think that after some of the actions that the officers took, but We were all set up. | ||
And then you basically gas lit it by not having enough people there. | ||
And that was done on purpose. | ||
The police... | ||
When you talk about police officers and the officer presence, we're there to protect... | ||
And like laws are, are there to protect people from themselves. | ||
So we should have had a greater presence there to protect the people from themselves because if you would have saw a chain link of National Guard people, would you have tried to push past them? | ||
Probably not. | ||
Or if they would have set up those huge barricades that they did afterwards. | ||
The 10-foot, you know, thick steel fence that they set up afterwards. | ||
Correct. | ||
You know, you didn't even need that. | ||
If you had enough officers there, if you had enough, you had enough National Guard people there. | ||
If if you even had a better preparation plan, it was a nothing day because we did not have the intelligence. | ||
The people who had the intelligence would not send it to the operations bureau to funnel it down. | ||
That's why January 6th occurred. | ||
That's why people are getting arrested. | ||
And then you have the assistant chief who was Sean Gallagher. | ||
They're not going to let anybody testify like, have you ever heard of the term exculpatory evidence? | ||
That's there. | ||
But while Sean Gallagher is there, it's never coming out. | ||
Well, that's why I'm so stunned because they've called up all these January 6th people to testify. | ||
I guess I was thinking of a different interview you did or I just saw the other officers and I don't know, maybe I just didn't put two and two together because there have been that, like, we're going long here. | ||
We'll continue this conversation. | ||
I want to continue this. | ||
This is too important. | ||
But I want to follow up with some of the other things you said. | ||
And you mentioned something that's so important that people don't talk about. | ||
Some of the actions of police officers there that made it worse, like firing smoke bombs into the crowd. | ||
And I could get it like they're afraid, and then the demonstrators are afraid, and then they're enraged, and that's where you saw a lot of the strife. | ||
So we'll come back and ask about that. | ||
All right, again, this is just an incredible testimony here, and I would urge, if this gets to any members of Congress, maybe not this session, but the next, you should be hearing from former Officer Johnson and his testimony, and others as well, quite frankly. | ||
But I'm glad you're opening up about all of this, and I wish other people would listen, and maybe they'll share a lot of these clips. | ||
And let's just get back to something we were talking about. | ||
Reasonable force that day. | ||
They argued it was reasonable for us that day. | ||
No, no, they said it was objectively reasonable, not reasonable, objectively reasonable under the circumstances. | ||
So are we talking about the smoke bombs into the crowd and everything that they kind of did? | ||
I mean, if you were, I guess I would phrase it like this instead. | ||
If there was proper preparation from that day, if there was proper preparation, what would it have looked like on the west side instead of the chaos that broke out? | ||
So I would say this. | ||
if the officers had the information prior to leading up to January 6th, it was going to happen, and we prepared, some of the actions that they probably would not have deemed it objectively reasonable because the officers weren't prepared. | ||
But if they were prepared and some of the stuff happened, then they may have went a different direction. | ||
But you have to, if you fought the officers on January 6th, then that means you have to focus and you have to tag Yogananda Pittman and Sean Gallagher. | ||
And that's not going to happen. | ||
They're too powerful. | ||
So you're not going to touch them. | ||
So if you go after the officers and for what they did as far as use of force, then what are they going to say? | ||
They're going to say, I had no idea. | ||
I didn't have any preparation. | ||
We didn't have the proper equipment because they didn't. | ||
So then they're going to point at the people who actually had the intel and Yogananda Pittman and Sean Gallagher are not going to be touched. | ||
Well, and this kind of gets into a larger thing to zoom out from January 6 and kind of look at the larger debate we have about police force. | ||
You know, people tend to forget that a police officer is a human, right? | ||
And so you have a Second Amendment right as well. | ||
You don't lose your rights when you become a police officer and you don't lose your instincts. | ||
You know, when you're an officer, you have instincts to protect your life, too. | ||
And so, you know, it's kind of like this weird thing. | ||
Like, I saw... | ||
I don't know if you saw the thing in Chicago where they said, well, the officer that shot the guy that was coming at him with a gun, and they said, well, you needed to de-escalate the situation. | ||
So what? | ||
He needed to be shot? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
The officer was supposed to get shot? | ||
Because that's what was going to happen if he didn't shoot him. | ||
He was going to get shot. | ||
Any other circumstance that's reasonable for a human... | ||
Free citizen. | ||
Somebody comes at you with a gun. | ||
You shoot them. | ||
That's totally reasonable. | ||
It's like, oh, an officer isn't allowed to do that? | ||
So, I mean, you get to a point where, yeah, some of these officers there, they're getting basically rammed. | ||
Instincts kick in. | ||
They want to defend themselves. | ||
They can't help it. | ||
They don't want to die. | ||
They don't want to get hurt. | ||
So they defend themselves. | ||
And I'm sure both sides. | ||
I'm sure police officers, protesters, if they knew all this was going to happen, they would have changed their activities. | ||
Nobody was prepared for this. | ||
But, you know, to me, it's like, it's just like, what... | ||
I mean, again, what would these officers have done? | ||
Would they still have fired the smoke bombs? | ||
Would they have said, okay, let's try to manage this. | ||
Let's get people out of the Capitol and then maybe do the tour, like we saw people walking through the velvet ropes. | ||
I mean, what do you think they would have done differently? | ||
If we had prepared for it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We had officers at home just on administrative leave. | ||
My wife was a police officer during that time for the Capitol Police, and they told her to stay home. | ||
We had no idea. | ||
Should have been all hands on deck. | ||
My wife should have been out. | ||
She was a private. | ||
But yeah, she should have been at work. | ||
So we would have had enough officers there. | ||
We would have had the National Guard assistants there. | ||
We would have had better equipment. | ||
Because the safer we are, the safer we can keep the demonstrators there. | ||
So all this goes back to the intelligence that wasn't given to Chief Sun. | ||
And the thing is this. | ||
If you had Yogananda Pittman testify, did you give the information to your deputies? | ||
And why didn't you give the information to your deputies? | ||
Have Sean Gallagher testify. | ||
Because when they both testified in front of Congress, they testified and they were given friendly questions. | ||
They weren't given any hard questions. | ||
You've got to give them the hard questions. | ||
But I can tell you this on after the election at some point, I think that people will start to really focus on Sean Gallagher and Yogananda Pittman and what they did. | ||
Because what they did contributed to everything that occurred that day and everybody that was hurt. | ||
And I think that once you really pinpoint what they did, then they'll start to make the people whole. | ||
We were all set up. | ||
That was the best way to put it. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
All right, this is an incredible... | ||
Now we're going on to our fourth segment. | ||
It's going to be an hour and a half when it's all said and done with former Capitol Police officer Tariq Johnson. | ||
Follow him on X for more information at elionceotk.com. | ||
And we'll put that up on the screen. | ||
There it is right there. | ||
And a lot of this stuff he's talking about, he shares on his X account as well. | ||
But I got some... | ||
I mean, I don't want to focus on January 6th too much because I do want to talk about the Trump inauguration and what I anticipate is going to happen again. | ||
But I guess I would just close with this because you continue to talk about basically the chain of command, where there were failures, how both sides got set up in this deal. | ||
And then just some of the corruption that, I mean, any Capitol Police officer working there can see. | ||
You talk about people not being able to testify. | ||
You talk about people being forced to sign NDAs. | ||
You talk about people like yourself turning your gun, turning your badge, and then the crazy restrictions they put you on. | ||
Can you talk about the morale of Capitol Police when they see stuff like this? | ||
Because my guess is most Capitol Police officers, probably like you and I, maybe they're political, maybe they're not. | ||
They just want to do their job and go home safe to their family. | ||
They don't really care whether your hat is blue or red. | ||
So what is morale like when you go through a big event like this and you kind of have to look in the mirror and say, my goodness, what is this force that I'm working for? | ||
They're crushed. | ||
Right now, like I speak to the whistleblowers with regularity. | ||
For the fact that Sean Gallagher is still leading the department just after the money scheme. | ||
Like I said, it's pinned to my profile so anybody can go read it. | ||
Please read that story. | ||
And after you read that story, you're going to be like, is this true? | ||
Which it is true because Steve Baker did an excellent job. | ||
We got documentation. | ||
Everything can be proven. | ||
Sean Gallagher committed that felony. | ||
There's no question. | ||
And then he is still walking around and getting promoted. | ||
Not one, not two, but three times after he stole the money. | ||
It's totally morale destroying to the officers there and they're still going. | ||
They still feel the same way every single day that they see that guy walking around. | ||
And it's crazy because before January 6th, I liked Sean Gallagher and Yogananda Pittman. | ||
But what they did was just flat out wrong and it was flat out evil. | ||
And even with that, of liking those two, I can't support what they did and I had to quit when it was time for me to go back to work. | ||
I could not work for those people ever again. | ||
I think that this is really the nature of D.C., and it's well before January 6th, obviously. | ||
It's like just a nature of corruption, the district of corruption, the district of criminals. | ||
I mean, that's why I supported Donald Trump. | ||
I mean, that's what I view Donald Trump as, as the guy who actually wants to clean it up. | ||
The guy that doesn't represent the corruption versus the establishment political types that just keep getting in and keep getting in and keep getting in. | ||
It's just this political dynasty of corruption. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
Republican, Democrat, it's the same thing. | ||
No matter what, no matter who runs the House, it's the same story. | ||
And to me, Donald Trump represented at least a change from that. | ||
I mean, he talks about draining the swamp. | ||
I'd like to see it. | ||
But at least he represented a change. | ||
Like, that's why people supported him. | ||
And I feel like that's why all these attacks happened. | ||
That's why they set him up on January 6th. | ||
That's why they tried to put a bullet in his head. | ||
We can go on and on and on. | ||
But that brings me back to this. | ||
And you were working at the Capitol Police in 2017. | ||
I was there in 2017 for the Trump inauguration. | ||
A lot of people don't talk about this story for obvious reasons. | ||
There were riots in D.C. Now, I don't think they ever reached the Capitol. | ||
I think it was mostly just in the streets, so I don't believe it was your jurisdiction. | ||
But I was there. | ||
I witnessed them firebombing cars. | ||
I witnessed them taking baseball bats to buildings. | ||
I witnessed them throwing fireworks into crowds of Trump supporters. | ||
How much of that bled over to the Capitol Police? | ||
And do you anticipate, do the Capitol Police anticipate that are still working there that you may or may not be in contact with, do they anticipate if Trump wins again, is there going to be a worse situation for his inauguration in 2025? | ||
The inauguration, to me, is probably a small thing. | ||
But I think if he wins, what his presidency is going to look like in the fight that he's going to be in to repair our country. | ||
But yes, I do believe that there are going to be instances of... | ||
You know, people getting arrested and maybe some violence there, some demonstrations there. | ||
So I believe that is going to happen in 2025 if he, in fact, wins the election and takes office or, you know, that day when he's sworn in. | ||
I do believe that, you know, you're going to have some of that. | ||
In 2017, When we were preparing for his inauguration, I was there one day and I watched. | ||
I had a CDU squad, right? | ||
So my squad was of 10 and I was under a lieutenant. | ||
And we were on D Street in Northeast near the headquarters building. | ||
And I watched some, it was a lady walking and a guy, she had a Make America gray hat on, red. | ||
So he walked over to her. | ||
I snatched her hat off, threw it on the ground, and lit it on fire right in front of me. | ||
So I wanted to go over there, but my lieutenant told me that I was a sergeant at the time. | ||
There was no TK. Hold the line. | ||
But I was angry. | ||
I voted for Trump. | ||
But it wasn't that I was angry for the political. | ||
It was because that was a crime. | ||
He snatched her hat off her head in front of me, threw it on the ground, and lit it on fire. | ||
And then it makes me think, well, all Trump supporters are violent. | ||
But I watch that, and I see other things, too. | ||
You see the attempts on Trump's life. | ||
But MAGA is violent. | ||
MAGA is evil. | ||
But you see people trying to kill the person that's most likely probably going to be president in another couple months. | ||
But MAGA is the evil ones and violent. | ||
Well, it really is true, and you don't want to become the dog that gets wagged by the tail. | ||
But you'll be, if you take it what the establishment, and mostly the left, the Democrats, if you take what they say and just assume the opposite is true, like 99% of the time you're going to be right. | ||
Oh, Trump supporters are violent. | ||
No, the Trump haters are violent. | ||
So, I mean, again, you don't want to commit anything 100% because then you can be tricked into that as well. | ||
But, I mean, really, that's all it is. | ||
Most Trump supporters are actually peaceful people. | ||
And, in fact, I mean, again, even on January 6th, yeah, there were some bad eggs and there were some bad actors that day. | ||
But... | ||
There's plenty of footage where the Trump supporters are shaking police officers' hands, trying to help them, helping them up if they got knocked down. | ||
I don't want to go back to that. | ||
Let me talk about one other event in D.C. that you may or may not have some experience or intel on. | ||
And that was the summer of 2020, specifically when they had to take Donald Trump to the bunker of the White House when there were all the riots. | ||
That was the summer of 2020 when the George Floyd riots were going on. | ||
What about any preparedness for that? | ||
Was there any Capitol Police activity preparedness for those deals? | ||
You know, it's crazy because I watched... | ||
When I got promoted to lieutenant, I went to the Capitol Division from the House Division. | ||
So I was at the Capitol Division. | ||
And when I got there, so I'm one of the new lieutenants there. | ||
So in the office, all they watched was CNN. So I'm a... | ||
It's like locked on CNN. You can't even change it. | ||
So I'm a junior lieutenant, right, coming in the room with other lieutenants, and they were senior to me, and, you know, they kept on CNN. So I was in the chair, and I was forced to watch CNN for two and a half years every day. | ||
So imagine what that would do to a human being if I put you in front of CNN for all day long, for hours, every single day. | ||
I've seen what it does. | ||
So I was brainwashed, and I voted for Kamala Harris and Biden in 2020. | ||
So now, after voting for Trump the first time, because I was watching CNN every single day, and then what changed me was January 6th, because I was like, that's not what happened. | ||
I'm looking at CNN, because I still kept looking at CNN after, and I'm like, they're not telling the truth. | ||
They're not reporting everything, and Donald Trump said it His entire presidency. | ||
The news is fake. | ||
The news is fake. | ||
I didn't believe him. | ||
And then I believed him because I knew January 6th because I was there. | ||
I was the routine operations commander of the Capitol on the day they were counting the electoral votes. | ||
And I was there for the evacuations because I ordered the evacuations. | ||
I saw the officers who went to report The malfeasance of the higher ranking commanders. | ||
So I'm hearing all this stuff. | ||
The whistleblower letters that are going out. | ||
And there's another big whistleblower letter coming out that I'm posting on X. It was another whistleblower who went. | ||
He hand walked. | ||
He was a high ranking official. | ||
He hand walked the whistleblower letter over to Liz Cheney's people, gave it to her. | ||
Gave it to one of the staff people to give it to Liz Cheney, and Liz Cheney would not even meet with the whistleblower. | ||
Oh, of course not. | ||
Yeah, so when I post a letter, I want everybody to realize that this is the letter that Liz Cheney read and would not even meet with the whistleblower, trying to tell people about what occurred on January 6th, that it was, you know, she wouldn't even meet with the guy. | ||
So, looking at the CNN, listening to all the whistleblowers coming out, and I'm like, this is not true. | ||
Why won't CNN report this? | ||
Why won't they report this? | ||
And I realized Donald Trump was telling the truth and the news is fake. | ||
And I apologize because I didn't vote for Donald Trump in 2020 because I didn't, I believe CNN. I was brainwashed and I consider myself a fairly intelligent guy. | ||
I mean, a college degree. | ||
I got promoted three times to a higher ranking position at the Capitol Police. | ||
My degree is in history and government because I plan on running for Congress after my career was over with the Capitol Police. | ||
So, but watching CNN... It changed me. | ||
And I'm a very—what's the word I'm looking for? | ||
I'm a strong-minded person, and it got me. | ||
So if it got me, I know it can get other people. | ||
So other people are going to be brainwashed when they watch these programs. | ||
But Donald Trump said, listen, the news is not real. | ||
The news is not real. | ||
So I got it. | ||
Trump 2024 for me, and I got it. | ||
Well, and this goes back to what I was saying earlier. | ||
And for me— There were probably a dozen instances, but when you go to an event and you're there and you witness it with your eyes and then you go home and you see the media telling a completely different story, it changes everything. | ||
It changes everything. | ||
And that's the thing. | ||
People kind of – even when Trump says, oh, the fake news, the fake news – It's like, oh, it's kind of a catchphrase, buzzword. | ||
No, like, literally. | ||
It's fake news. | ||
He's telling the truth. | ||
And I did not believe it until... | ||
Now, if January 6th doesn't happen, I still... | ||
I wouldn't have believed... | ||
I would have been cackling with Kamala and I would be voting for her in 2024. | ||
Well, maybe there's the silver lining. | ||
It is, but it taught me, and I can teach my daughter, that the news is not real. | ||
It's for entertainment. | ||
If you want to get the truth... | ||
And propaganda. | ||
Yes. | ||
You've got to go to Twitter. | ||
You've got to go to other... | ||
Well, thank goodness for asking. | ||
Yeah, you've got to go to other things, and there's probably some liberal sites out there, too, that... | ||
That actually want to report the truth. | ||
But you can't go to mainstream media if you want the truth. | ||
It's for entertainment so they can make money. | ||
That's what it's for. | ||
I mean, imagine, though, if you're Donald Trump and it's just like... | ||
For hours a day, they lie about you. | ||
And it's like, you... | ||
It's like, I'm literally Donald Trump, and I know that's fake. | ||
Like, that's your life, is you turn on the TV, and they just lie about you. | ||
And it's like, you know it's a lie. | ||
It's like, it's fake. | ||
Donald Trump... | ||
And I was laughing, because I was in the back, and I was listening to your... | ||
You were talking today and you were saying that the liberals talk about Donald Trump being a threat. | ||
No, no. | ||
What they say is that Donald Trump is an existential threat because they wanted to sound more dramatic. | ||
Oh, he's an existential threat. | ||
They'll probably add a new word in front of that. | ||
There'll be a new adjective. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
But I watched the reporting of January 6th for years, for two years almost, before I came back to work because I was out for 17 months. | ||
So when I came back to work, my whole goal was to quit. | ||
And I quit as soon as I could get the heck out of there because I watched them. | ||
I watched everybody. | ||
They made Yogananda Pittman look like she saved democracy. | ||
And if you look at what is written, the record reflects that she saved democracy, even though we know that's not true. | ||
And she watched. | ||
As the officers fought and watched as demonstrators were gas-lipped to fight officers and to hurt themselves. | ||
She watched that and she set that up. | ||
She had the intel and they know it because they were hand-walked letters with... | ||
To members of Congress, hand-walked letters to staff people to give to people in the J6 Committee. | ||
And then how do you have a select committee, but you don't let any USCP whistleblowers testify? | ||
None. | ||
Because you can't have, I'm not like, they've had people from- Well, it's select. | ||
It's select, and then they select who- So now you had whistleblowers from the FBI came out to speak. | ||
You had like Steve Friend. | ||
He's been speaking out. | ||
And you had people from the National Guard. | ||
But you haven't seen one USCP whistleblower testify during the select committee or after. | ||
You can't. | ||
Because, and I know who the whistleblowers are, it's too damning. | ||
And you can't have that out before the election. | ||
It's all narrative control. | ||
After the election, they can put it out and they can start really getting into what really occurred and what made J6 happen. | ||
But you can't have any whistleblowers testify from the Capitol Police until after... | ||
Well, what's so frustrating to me is, and I don't think J6 really hits for this election. | ||
I think they want it to. | ||
I don't know if it really moves the needle for them. | ||
They certainly want it to. | ||
Every leftist and Democrat you talk to will certainly bring it up if you end up in a political debate. | ||
But that's why getting the other side of the story from you is so important. | ||
But even not just the side of the story, just what you went through and how it changed your worldview and your perspective. | ||
Let me ask you this, because there have been other challenges to elections as well. | ||
Obviously, they didn't get much publicity and you didn't have a million people there. | ||
Which I think says a lot as well. | ||
But I mean, other challenges to elections, it happened, you know, Bush versus Gore, happened Bush versus Kerry. | ||
I mean, you've witnessed that before. | ||
Did you ever work at the Capitol when they went through that same process? | ||
Of course. | ||
And no, this was different. | ||
Now, the Capitol Police wasn't always a corrupt agency. | ||
You know, the heads of the Capitol Police, let me get that clear, is not the officers, frontline officers, or the junior officials. | ||
It's the senior leadership of the Capitol Police. | ||
It's absolutely corrupt. | ||
And when you read the article about Sean Gallagher, that should start to let people see that I'm telling the truth. | ||
But it wasn't always like that. | ||
These people just came in power within the last 10 years. | ||
So you're not going to have a January 6th because they want to police... | ||
Not just for Democrats. | ||
They're not going to police just for Republicans. | ||
They're going to police for Democrats and Republicans. | ||
Now, the Capitol Police is a Democratic agency now. | ||
It's 100%. | ||
The leader of it is his wife ran for a Democratic seat in Maryland. | ||
The police chief's wife ran for a Democratic seat in Maryland. | ||
So you have to understand that the Capitol Police is a Democratic agency. | ||
And it's ran by two corrupt individuals. | ||
And it is what it is. | ||
And until those people are removed, the Capitol Police is going to remain what it is right now until they're gone. | ||
I'm curious. | ||
I mean, I'd like you to speak at a Trump rally. | ||
I'd like people within... | ||
unidentified
|
If somebody... | |
If they give me a call, T.K. Johnson will show up. | ||
You're on there? | ||
I'd come. | ||
You should. | ||
You should. | ||
And you don't even have to necessarily make it about... | ||
You know, you don't have to do a January 6th thing. | ||
Just talk about, hey, you know, I worked there and I saw them lie about Trump. | ||
I mean, to me, that's... | ||
Again, I don't know if January 6th really moves the needle in this election. | ||
I don't think it does. | ||
I think it's more of a just attack Donald Trump with the legal persecution at this point more than anything... | ||
But what does is somebody that worked in D.C. for decades, somebody that worked in the Capitol Police saying, hey, I watched the media lie. | ||
I used to believe the media. | ||
He's telling the truth when he calls it fake news. | ||
It's literally fake news. | ||
I mean, that's the kind of stuff that would be great at a Trump rally. | ||
At the very least, I mean, we're so close to Election Day now, it's probably mostly mapped out. | ||
But I mean... | ||
At the very least, I would hope that other people at least get you onto their shows to hear your story. | ||
Because, you know, here's another important thing, too. | ||
And this is what happens with other... | ||
I mean, you're not technically a whistleblower, but I mean, you're a truth teller, whatever you want to say. | ||
It's the same thing, whether it's Border Patrol, Capitol Police, all these different people I interview, they always say the same thing. | ||
They say, oh, and look, I'm a voice for the whistleblowers that can't talk. | ||
I'm a voice for the people that are still working their jobs because they got to have the paycheck, whatever. | ||
I'm their voice. | ||
I need to speak for them. | ||
And so you kind of represent that as well. | ||
That's why that's why not just your personal story is important, but also being a voice for the unheard voices. | ||
I love it. | ||
And that's the main reason why I wanted it to come out early. | ||
But I can't, and I've been trying. | ||
If you look at my Twitter for the last couple years, I've been trying to have Manger, Pittman, Gallagher get rid of these guys because after they're gone, Pittman's gone. | ||
But after you get rid of the Manger and the Sean Gallagher influence, then people can start to come out and they can say, well, yeah, I saw this, I saw that. | ||
And they can help, you know, people can testify in trials. | ||
They can release exculpatory evidence. | ||
All this can happen, but it can't happen until Sean Gallagher and Manger are gone. | ||
Which probably won't happen until at least Trump gets in the White House or the Republicans maintain control of the House And get somebody as the speaker that's actually serious business. | ||
Not Mike Johnson. | ||
Not Kevin McCarthy. | ||
Somebody that's serious business. | ||
Somebody that actually wants to change the entire nature of D.C. Yeah, and I was talking to, when I was talking to Harrison today, I was explaining to him, you know, and I explained on your show now too. | ||
When the corruption is at a level four, and you're a three and you witness it, you can go to the level five and report it. | ||
If the corruption's at a level 7 and you're a 6, you can report it to the 8 and they can fix it. | ||
But if the corruption is at a level 10, and this is where these people are, at a level 10... | ||
On a scale of 1 to 10, there's nobody to go to. | ||
So you can't go to an 11 because there is none there. | ||
Or they take your gun, they take your badge. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So the only thing you can hope for is that even after all this stuff, nothing's going to ever happen to Sean Gallagher. | ||
If he got rid of, if he didn't go to jail, and it's crazy because he's the biggest hypocrite, because he's going to make sure that people get prosecuted to the fullest for misdemeanors, but he committed a felony and he got off of nothing. | ||
You know, but so nothing's going to happen to this guy even after this airs or people look at it or, you know, read the story about what he did stealing the money with the money stealing scheme. | ||
Nothing's going to happen to Sean Gallagher because he's just too powerful. | ||
But you can start to fix the people that you broke. | ||
That's all I want. | ||
I'm not looking for accountability. | ||
I'm looking for justice and justice is getting people out of jail, getting people's finances taken care of to be made whole. | ||
Trump has talked about pardoning a lot of the January 6th defendants, and that's one aspect of this, certainly. | ||
And there needs to probably be investigations about what led up to it. | ||
I mean, criminal negligence, malfeasance, standing down the intelligence, everything you've described here today. | ||
And I would hope... | ||
Like with so many different levels of the corruption in D.C. that there is a reformation of the D.C. police and that an officer like you maybe one day wants to go back and work, you know? | ||
It's funny that you say that because I was speaking to a whistleblower and he could go back right now and he could fix the agency. | ||
But, you know, and he actually applied for the job and couldn't get it when it was opening. | ||
They gave it to Sean Gallagher, shockingly, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So Sean Gallagher got the job that he applied for because he has integrity and he would fix the agency. | ||
They can't let somebody in there like that because then they're going to release the skeletons. | ||
But the thing is this. | ||
This is what we need. | ||
We need, if Trump comes in, And they put together a committee. | ||
Now, the thing is, I would caution against trying to go get accountability for all these people. | ||
Because even if Trump was in, it'll still be difficult. | ||
Just make it about reforming it, getting it back to it. | ||
Reforming it, and then fixing the people, demonstrators, and just January 6th, demonstrators and police officers that were hurt because they were all set up. | ||
And just making it right for those people, and then moving on. | ||
You said you wanted to run for Congress. | ||
Do you still want to run for Congress? | ||
I'm in my last year. | ||
I got one more year left of federal service where I have to do and then I'll be eligible for retirement because what I did was I left the Capitol Police and I transferred to another federal agency. | ||
I can't say what it is on the air because I didn't get permission to talk about it. | ||
But I transferred to another federal agency so I can finish out my retirement. | ||
So I actually like it there now. | ||
So I don't know exactly what I want to do yet. | ||
I don't know if I even want to be in politics now. | ||
I said, I'm going to focus on, you know, my new job. | ||
I love my boss. | ||
I have a great boss. | ||
And I realized after working for Sean Gallagher and Yogan on the pitman, it's good to have a great boss. | ||
But so I'm happy where I am. | ||
So I said, I told the wife, we'll see. | ||
I'd like to see you run for Congress. | ||
And I don't want to put anything down on paper. | ||
But it would be pretty epic. | ||
This was epic today. | ||
But imagine if the next time we met, we were both members of Congress. | ||
That would have him running for the hills. | ||
Alright, this was incredible, folks. | ||
You gotta follow him on X. At ElionCEOTK, former officer Tariq Johnson. | ||
Yes, he was the one that arrested me years ago. | ||
Now I'm happy to call us friends. | ||
This was a powerful interview. | ||
Please share it far and wide. | ||
We'll put the entire thing up on my X account. | ||
And this is beyond just January 6th truth. | ||
It's about an awakening. | ||
It's about people coming together, trying to save this country, free us from the corruption in Washington, D.C. that has been plaguing our country for our entire lives. | ||
Alright, wow. | ||
That was incredible. | ||
We still have 25 minutes left of the show, but I mean, that's like... | ||
Okay, ACDC just finished. | ||
You're up next. | ||
Oh, I gotta follow ACDC. Great. | ||
Cool. | ||
Good luck with that. | ||
We do have some news to cover, and we might play some of President Trump's press conference today in Austin, Texas as well. | ||
Trump is recording with Joe Rogan right now. | ||
And so this thing will probably be the biggest thing that's hit the internet. | ||
It'll probably be the number one Joe Rogan, bigger than Elon Musk, bigger than Alex Jones. | ||
It'll probably even beat Trump Musk on X. And those are like the biggest things right now. | ||
And this is going to be huge. | ||
And again, I don't even know if it would matter. | ||
It's got to be too big to rig. | ||
Most Rogan supporters, where are they at politically? | ||
Rogan kind of, you know, tries to remain neutral, but, you know, just tell the truth about other things, other red pills. | ||
I don't know if he would endorse Donald Trump. | ||
But the point is, he can have a real conversation. | ||
Trump can actually hold himself, obviously, with Joe Rogan for three hours. | ||
Kamala Harris could not. | ||
And it's just, people get to see the real Donald Trump. | ||
People get to see and hear from him, and it's just... | ||
And I think Rogan will ask some good questions and give Donald Trump the opportunity to talk about things like draining the swamp, like getting rid of the corruption, like getting rid of all the excess spending and ridiculous spending and everything else. | ||
So in a big three-hour forum like that, you know, this thing is going to be huge. | ||
People are sitting with anticipation waiting for this to come out, obviously myself included. | ||
So, and I'm sure there'll be a couple moments that are just viral power. | ||
Might not even be political stuff, just maybe some funny stuff, too. | ||
And so, that is happening right now in Austin, Texas. | ||
Now, I don't think they're, it's not live, guys, correct? | ||
It's being recorded. | ||
Yeah, they're pre-recording it, and I believe that's because they're not doing it at the normal studios. | ||
And so I think that's why they're pre-taping it. | ||
I think maybe they might not even have the live capability where they're taping it. | ||
Do we know when it's supposed to come out, guys? | ||
Okay, so we don't know. | ||
The crew is in my ear. | ||
That's who I'm talking to here. | ||
So it might not be till next week. | ||
We shall see. | ||
Either way, this thing is going to be huge. | ||
All right. | ||
I got some other news to cover. | ||
Do we have the Trump press conference, by the way, too? | ||
You guys can just let me know. | ||
Okay, we do have that. | ||
I may have time to get to that. | ||
Let me do this, folks. | ||
That was just an incredible interview. | ||
I mean, I was like tuned into it just like you were. | ||
I couldn't look away. | ||
And so we got to pay some bills around here. | ||
Don't forget to support us. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com By the way, brand new mega sale that just went live at TheAlexJonesStore.com And it's every product, the new products, some of the original products, the t-shirts, the hats, additional products. | ||
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So, thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
All right. | ||
Still so much. | ||
We probably won't have time for all of it. | ||
I wanted to do... | ||
Let me just kind of do this as a bit of a buffer here. | ||
I want to see how Don Lemon... | ||
Let me just... | ||
Guys, let's just check in on Don Lemon real quick. | ||
Let me just see here. | ||
Clip nine. | ||
unidentified
|
I'd be like, that's what's up. | |
You would say, that's not my name. | ||
That's the only reason I said it. | ||
And I would respect you enough. | ||
Hold on, Jimmy. | ||
Jimmy, Jason. | ||
unidentified
|
I respect you enough to call you by the right name. | |
I understand. | ||
Well, if my name was Jimmy, and you called me Jason, and Jimmy was running for president and didn't receive a single vote in the primary, I would take more issue with that versus you calling me Jason. | ||
I'm taking issues with both of them. | ||
unidentified
|
I would take issues with both of them if I believed what you said. | |
I don't believe that what you're saying is accurate. | ||
unidentified
|
Is it not accurate that no one voted for her if she wasn't primary? | |
Is that not accurate? | ||
One does not negate the other. | ||
You can respect someone and call them by the right name. | ||
Say her name, though. | ||
How do you say it? | ||
It wasn't a democratic process. | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
So which is the bigger ticket item? | ||
People mispronounce in a syllable. | ||
He doesn't even have his mic on. | ||
unidentified
|
Or is the democratic process being neglected? | |
I would say both. | ||
I think you have to respect people. | ||
unidentified
|
Which is a bigger deal in the modern world? | |
I think you have his mic. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you think calling someone Jason when their name is Jimmy is equivalent to the democratic process being robbed? | |
Yes, I do, because if someone said Daniel Trump is on the ticket, I would say Donald. | ||
Okay, fair enough. | ||
But if Donald didn't receive a single primary vote, and he is the candidate of half the electoral, Is that not a... | ||
That's an issue, right? | ||
No, it's not an issue for me because I would say the Republican Party's choice is limited. | ||
And that's the thing. | ||
But that's the thing. | ||
That's what happens. | ||
unidentified
|
Are we for oligarchy or we're democracy? | |
Darn it! | ||
You know, okay, Don Lemon getting going on his own stream. | ||
I was hoping he would say the name. | ||
Look, folks, I'm not trying to play a game here. | ||
They're making this big fuss about how to pronounce the name Kamala. | ||
How do you say it? | ||
They say it differently. | ||
I've heard them say Kamala. | ||
I've heard them say Kamala. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What is it? | ||
And to sit here and act like, oh, you got Jimmy and Jason wrong, it'd be like Jason and Jason. | ||
Kamala's not really a normal name. | ||
I don't think anybody else has ever been named Kamala that I've ever heard of. | ||
Has anybody ever heard of anybody named Kamala? | ||
It's just this ridiculous... | ||
Oh, but see, you're racist. | ||
You don't know how to pronounce her name. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, you're disrespecting her. | |
There's a WWF wrestler named Kamala Harris. | ||
That's true. | ||
I think he was of Indian descent, too. | ||
Wasn't he an Indian? | ||
So what is it, Don? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You guys say Kamala, but when I say Kamala, I get it wrong. | ||
I prefer that Kamala Harris. | ||
It's the one on the right, isn't it? | ||
Or is it... | ||
Which one is it? | ||
I believe it's the Indian on the right with the face painting. | ||
That's Kamala Harris. | ||
Okay. | ||
Anyway, I was hoping he would say the name there so I could get it right, but I just couldn't. | ||
It just didn't happen. | ||
Is this... | ||
Wait a second. | ||
Mel Gibson, will you be voting for Donald Trump? | ||
Clip 12. | ||
unidentified
|
Being voted on in days. | |
What's your thoughts? | ||
Oh man, that's a big question. | ||
What's Trump? | ||
I don't think it's going to surprise anyone who I vote for. | ||
Well, so, I mean, I'm going to just, I'm going to guess, I'm going to guess Trump. | ||
Is that a bad guess? | ||
I think it's a pretty good guess. | ||
Well, what do you think the world will be like in a second term? | ||
With a President Trump second term? | ||
I know what it would be like if we let her in. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
And that ain't good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Miserable track record. | ||
Appalling track record. | ||
No policies to speak out. | ||
unidentified
|
And the border, right? | |
And she's got the IQ of a fence post. | ||
How could you insult a fence post like that? | ||
Mel Gibson, Kamala Harris has the IQ of a fence post. | ||
That's rude to a fence post, honestly. | ||
Fence post is pretty good at its job, normally. | ||
Mel Gibson. | ||
One of us. | ||
Weeble wobble, one of us. | ||
By the way, Thomas Massey. | ||
Thomas Massey has just came out and endorsed Donald Trump. | ||
Donald Trump will put Americans first by securing our liberties at home and preventing needless wars abroad. | ||
He will make America healthy again by empowering small farmers and taking on special interests that have corrupted our healthcare system. | ||
He has even committed to freeing Ross Ulbricht, who is wrongfully sentenced. | ||
For these and many other reasons, he has my full endorsement. | ||
I encourage conservatives as well as independents and libertarians to join me in voting for Donald J. Trump for president. | ||
Thomas Massey, probably the best in Congress. | ||
He's up there, if not the best amongst the best. | ||
Maybe the best scorecard, maybe the best rhetoric, maybe the best on policy. | ||
Thomas Massey in Kentucky. | ||
Good for him. | ||
All right, what do we want to do here? | ||
Do you want to see how bad it is for Kamala Harris right now? | ||
Bruce Springsteen... | ||
So Kamala has to have concerts for people to show up. | ||
And now it's a Bruce Springsteen concert and then she gives a speech afterwards. | ||
Not like Donald Trump who shows up and packs the stadiums to the rafters just for himself, you know, lined up outside the door. | ||
Kamala Harris needs a performance. | ||
But... | ||
What is going on here with Bruce Springsteen? | ||
I don't even think... | ||
I don't even know if I should even frame this. | ||
And let's just see if you pick up... | ||
I mean, what is going on here? | ||
Here's Bruce Springsteen performing for Kamala Harris in clip 16. | ||
unidentified
|
They'll be carving you up all right Say you gotta stay hungry Well, I'm just about starving tonight I'm dying for some action I'm sick of sitting around here trying to write this book I need a love reaction Come on now, | |
baby, give me just one look You can't start a fire Sitting around crying over a broken heart This gun's for hire All right. | ||
I've never seen Bruce Springsteen live. | ||
I would imagine he's got to normally be better than that. | ||
I think he's touring right now. | ||
I mean, I'm not sitting here acting like I could, you know, perform better, but I'm not a professional musician. | ||
Guys, does he not sound awful? | ||
I mean, seriously. | ||
That's like, he sounds like bad. | ||
You know, maybe he's in the middle of a tour and he's just like, he's supposed to be having a rest day, but that is, wow. | ||
That is really too bad. | ||
What do we got? | ||
Well, we got white dudes for Harris. | ||
We got white dudes for Harris, which, you know, is a little racist if you think about it. | ||
And I thought the Democrats didn't like white dudes, so white dudes for Harris. | ||
You'd think they'd be more excited here. | ||
What about black dudes for Trump, clip eight? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, Donald Trump is what Americans love. | |
Donald Trump is what Americans aspire to be. | ||
Rich, powerful, do what you want to do, say what you want to say, be how you want to be. | ||
That's kind of been like the American dream. | ||
So, he looks like a boss to everybody. | ||
Americans love to have a boss. | ||
So, you know, that's his appeal to me, you know. | ||
He's protesting. | ||
He's like, he's like, he's picking the arm up. | ||
Kevin Harlan's here in a moment with Donald Trump and Dana White. | ||
Yeah! | ||
If I'm voting for Trump, so what somebody's going to do about it? | ||
I don't think anybody, I mean, I'm going to disagree with you. | ||
Oh yeah, but I'm going to talk about, so what? | ||
Yeah, does it make you feel weird that people... | ||
unidentified
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So what? | |
So people, why is it people care about your opinion so much? | ||
Is that weird to you that people freak out about your opinion? | ||
unidentified
|
No, they believe I have a lot of followers, this and that, but this is my opinion. | |
This is what I believe. | ||
Am I going to say, yeah man, let's go for cops killing... | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
unidentified
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But if I like Donald Trump and I want to vote for him, I'm gonna do it. | |
So what? | ||
What are you gonna do? | ||
unidentified
|
Shoot me? | |
Beat me up? | ||
No, I don't think so. | ||
Come up here. | ||
unidentified
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Tommy the Hitman! | |
We love Tommy. | ||
I want so much money betting on this guy. | ||
He was brutal. | ||
unidentified
|
We love that. | |
Look at him. | ||
He still looks good. | ||
He still looks good. | ||
There's a right there! | ||
Back in the glorious 80s, Thomas Hearn's blood chilling stick. | ||
Always ready for the fight. | ||
Fight! | ||
I love that. | ||
Antonio Brown! | ||
He is a one-man rookie crew! | ||
Touchdown, Steelers! | ||
All right. | ||
Now, what about... | ||
A day in the life of Trump. | ||
What do you think a Kamala Harris day looks like? | ||
You wake up, you decide which wine to drink, and then people tell you where to go, and then you fumble and mumble through interviews and embarrass yourself and then watch yourself tank in the polls before you get up and do it the next day. | ||
What about for Trump? | ||
Clip two. | ||
unidentified
|
Starting our day off bright and early. | |
It is 7.30 a.m., and we are leaving Trump Tower and heading to Fox Studios. | ||
President Trump was excited to join Fox& Friends live from the famous Kirby Couch. | ||
Never far behind are the men who keep our boss safe every day, and we are thankful for them. | ||
The day continues rolling as he joins Dan Bongino for a live stream, and he never leaves without signing a MAGA hat. | ||
Now on to our third interview of the morning with legendary WWE's Mark Calloway, also known as The Undertaker. | ||
We film a quick TikTok, depart the city, and two hours later, we are wheels down in Michigan. | ||
President Trump stops by to shake hands and thank the tireless Michigan campaign team. | ||
The motorcade heads to our next stop, where President Trump arrives to speak at a roundtable on building America's future. | ||
If you're lucky, he may even sign your shirt. | ||
Pulling into our final event of the day, and before he heads on stage, he always makes time to take photos with law enforcement. | ||
And now the fun begins. | ||
There is nothing like the energy of a Trump rally. | ||
President Trump delivers his promise to make America safe and prosperous again. | ||
It's not over until you see the iconic Trump dance. | ||
And just when you think he might be finished, he has his fourth interview of the day and calls into a tele-rally for Carrie Lake. | ||
It's 1am back in New York City and that's a wrap. | ||
Wow. | ||
You know, I typically go like 8am to midnight. | ||
This guy is ridiculous. | ||
And I'm beat, but it's like this guy, he goes from 7 a.m. | ||
to 1 a.m. | ||
So he's got me beat. | ||
He's got us all beat. | ||
And he's, how old is he? | ||
Like 70-something? | ||
Gonna be, I think, 80 when he finishes his second term? | ||
There he is outside of a Cuban kitchen and bakery with thousands of people outside cheering, chanting his name, chanting USA. Oh, man. | ||
You feel like this is our chance, you know? | ||
This is our chance to save the country politically. | ||
This is our chance to have a real president. | ||
This is our chance to change the face of the Republican Party, the attitude of the Republican Party, the approach of the Republican Party forever, and then hopefully just extinct the Democrat Party politically, and then maybe the Republican Party kind of splits off into... | ||
You know, two different groups. | ||
But the Democrats, the left, communists, socialists, they just have to be extinct politically. | ||
Just no more. | ||
People need to know how corrupt that party is. | ||
It's just out of control. | ||
I mean, sheesh. | ||
You want to look at the state of Joe Biden, by the way? | ||
Do you want to see the state of Joe Biden? | ||
He's on an apology tour. | ||
He's on an Indian apology tour. | ||
Very strange stuff. | ||
So here he is apologizing in clip 11. | ||
Now he's running. | ||
He's on the run. | ||
What is that? | ||
He's literally on the run. | ||
I'm heading to do something that should have been done a long time ago. | ||
Make a formal apology to the Indian nation for the way we treated their children for so many years. | ||
That's why I'm going, that's why I'm heading west. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
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And then he runs again, he hits the run. | |
So strange. | ||
To the children. | ||
What is he even talking about, to the children? | ||
What about the missing children from the border? | ||
Well, how did it go? | ||
How did his apology go? | ||
Let's check in clip 10. | ||
unidentified
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And to the Hila Indian River community, the Hila, nothing wrong with me. | |
Ah, yeah. | ||
Very good. | ||
But you know what? | ||
I agree. | ||
We should apologize to what we've done to the Redskins. | ||
And we should bring the Redskins logo back. | ||
And we should respect the family's wishes of the chief that was honored and the other tribal chiefs that have come out and said to restore the Washington Redskins, especially now that they're returning to a state of prominence in the NFC East with Jaden Daniels. | ||
So we need to bring the Redskins back and we need to do it now. | ||
The Commanders is actually a very racist name. | ||
It's a racist dog whistle. | ||
Okay? | ||
Okay. | ||
And if we're going to apologize to the Indians, let's go all the way. | ||
Let's bring back the Redskins. | ||
And let's not stop there. | ||
Let's also bring back the Cleveland Indians while we're at it. | ||
Let's bring back Chief Woohoo. | ||
We have somebody who's an Indians fan in the crew. | ||
It's Chief Wahoo. | ||
Okay? | ||
Okay. | ||
Alright, so the same guy that couldn't even capture the handshake on camera is correcting me on Chief Wahoo now. | ||
So, see how that works? | ||
We get Chief Wahoo, but we don't even get the handshake. | ||
Yep. | ||
That's what happens around here on a Friday with Donald Trump in town, shutting down all the highways. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
And by the way, if you see Chase Geyser's video of me in the break room, just in case you're wondering... | ||
No, I don't normally wear shorts on the air. | ||
Normally, I also have my watch on. | ||
I literally, I literally, there he is right there. | ||
He pulled a fast one on me today. | ||
He was recording me getting a cup of water in the break room, and he caught me wearing shorts because I literally could not get to my house today before the show. | ||
Literally. | ||
The highway, the roads were shut down, and so I could not, I could not get to my house, and so Chase thought it would be funny to record me in shorts. | ||
So, no, he did not expose me. | ||
I have not been exposed. | ||
I do not wear shorts on the air. | ||
There are other pictures where I'm in my, you can see my entire body, I'm usually wearing either khakis or jeans or suit pants, okay? | ||
So no, Chase Geyser did not expose me. | ||
He did not, he caught me off guard. | ||
No, I'm not going to, no, no. | ||
I'm not going to give you the satisfaction. | ||
See, you don't know what I'm wearing under the desk. | ||
That's the beauty of it. | ||
But I'm never wearing shorts. | ||
I'm not Brian Stelter. | ||
Actually, does he even have shorts on or is he in underwear? | ||
Okay, so that's a completely different question. | ||
But for those of you thinking that, oh, I wear shorts on air. | ||
No, I don't. | ||
I could not get to my house because the roads were shut down today. | ||
I could not go home. | ||
I was stuck in traffic for two hours and I had to come right in studio and I could not even get into my house. | ||
You can't tell... | ||
Don't... | ||
Roger... | ||
Don't bring Roger Stone into this. | ||
He would understand. | ||
All right? | ||
All right. | ||
Okay, we're having a little fun here on a Friday before we sign off. | ||
All right, we covered some serious news today. | ||
We're almost out of time. | ||
Folks, it is election. | ||
We are in the election. | ||
Continue to stay tuned right here to the Infowars War Room, your election headquarters. | ||
And when we come back on Monday, it's going to be in the single digits. | ||
It's going to be in the single digits of days until the official election day. | ||
But the election is already ongoing. | ||
Keep your eyes on Georgia. | ||
Keep your eyes on Pennsylvania. | ||
Keep your eyes on Arizona. | ||
Keep your eyes on Nevada. | ||
I think these are going to be the major states that are going to determine this deal. | ||
And What I'd like to see is continuing to expose the anomalies, the fraud, the theft in Pennsylvania, continuing to expose the legal battles going on in Arizona, affirming that Donald Trump is going to win Nevada. | ||
But then now, and I think most importantly, watching the situation in Georgia where they're trying to Pennsylvania, Georgia, and overwhelm the people's vote with mail-in ballots, specifically in Atlanta. | ||
And we're all going to be awaiting the epic Donald Trump-Joe Rogan interview that is being recorded right now. | ||
I hope to God it doesn't conclude before I get out of this studio and I can't even go home for the second time today. | ||
All right. | ||
From all of us here at InfoWars, we love you. | ||
Have a great weekend. | ||
We will see you next week. | ||
So, I'm just asking you to keep me in the fight, and we got great t-shirts and incredible blow-you-away supplements and everything, and our great sponsor, DallasJonesStore.com. | ||
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We're fighting the new world order. | ||
I don't have millionaire backers. | ||
I am not controlled by anybody, but my own soul, my own brain, I'm trying to do the best job I can. | ||
TheAllocShowStore.com It's up to you whether you want to back the number one broadcaster that the enemy hates the most. | ||
I mean, they literally hate my guts because they know I'm for real, and I can't be bought, and I can't be intimidated, and I'm wild, and I scare them. | ||
And I just don't know why I'm such a lovable, friendly person, but Satanists and pedophiles do not like me. | ||
And that's good, because I don't like them either. | ||
And look, we've already done irrevocable harm to them. | ||
We've already... | ||
Just devastated them. | ||
I mean, world government, the New World Orders, everywhere is being talked about. | ||
The whole world's turning against them. | ||
They're super dangerous. | ||
They're throwing the kitchen sink at us to try to keep control. | ||
And I just don't think at 50 years old, after 30 years, when I understand things better than I've ever understood, that I should let these Criminals, these globalists, run me to ground. | ||
So, again, I don't give up. | ||
Vince Lombardi, winners never quit and quitters never win. | ||
I mean, I have moral fortitude and will and commitment. | ||
I just instinctively can't stand these people. | ||
I know they're super dangerous villains. | ||
I know they want to break all of our wills and make us super poor to dictate total control over the social credit score and that it's a super high-tech system of slavery. | ||
And you look at the globalists, they're the most slithering, disgusting snakes and scum And are we going to sell out our species like this? | ||
I mean, it's just... | ||
This is a joke. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
We're changing the world. |