Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The War Room. | ||
I'm Harrison Smith sitting in today for Owen Schroyer. | ||
We have a heck of a lot to talk about. | ||
Donald Trump, of course, still making waves and deals in the Middle East. | ||
And we'll talk about what he's been up to recently. | ||
But we got news across the board, including some just absolutely terrible and, frankly, unconscionable. | ||
Concepts from the likes of the New York Times is they wrote an article called The Case for Not Being Born. | ||
The Case for Not Being Born. | ||
We'll get into that in case you're wondering just how deep the antinatalist sentiment goes. | ||
Also, apparently, someone named Summer Lee has introduced a billion-dollar reparations deal for black Americans. | ||
So we'll touch on that as well as we continue to watch in real time as America descends into South Africanization. | ||
South Africanization, I'm calling it. | ||
Meanwhile, Minneapolis and state leaders prepare for possible Derek Chauvin pardon, because as you know, there will be riots. | ||
The city will burn if they dare to release this totally innocent person, the likes of Marjorie Taylor Greene and others, finally acknowledging. | ||
What we acknowledged practically the day it happened that George Floyd died from a drug overdose. | ||
And Derek Chauvin was sent to prison for the rest of his life for following the instructions he was trained to do. | ||
It's pretty outrageous, including, I wouldn't say just Derek Chauvin, but the other police officers thrown in prison for doing things like standing nearby. | ||
If you remember, there was an Asian cop who was about three feet away. | ||
Helping to keep back the crowd. | ||
He also was sentenced to years in prison in a desperate attempt to mollify the raging mobs that were using terrorism to get their way. | ||
So we'll talk about that as well. | ||
What preparations need to be made for the possible pardon of Derek Chauvin? | ||
And is the fact that they're preparing for this, allegedly and apparently, does that mean that the pardon is incoming? | ||
Because that would be a very, very good thing to see. | ||
If you care about stuff like justice, if you care about justice, you should be in favor of this. | ||
Meanwhile, the grand jury deciding the fate of the Wisconsin judge who was arrested for attempting to avoid capture, help a illegal immigrant avoid being arrested for his crime. | ||
She has been... | ||
The grand jury indicted this Wisconsin judge on obstruction charges alleging she may have helped illegally evade ICE outside of the courthouse. | ||
So we'll touch on that again. | ||
I think I was hosting War Room on that day. | ||
And then she was arrested, talking about the absolute insanity of a judge trying to help a fugitive avoid the law. | ||
Something that I don't think she would do for her own brother, but somehow... | ||
Democrats have this, I don't know, pathological altruism when it comes to illegal immigrants. | ||
And we'll talk about that. | ||
I mean, honestly, we're seeing some of the most bizarre images in American history these days as buses full of illegal aliens, tatted up murderers, criminals, and there's like old liberal women with signs being like, I love you. | ||
I love you. | ||
I'm so sorry this is happening. | ||
And they're just like, I mean, they know. | ||
They know. | ||
They know what they're getting away with. | ||
And finally, we have the ongoing response to the acceptance by Trump of 59 South African refugees, including the African National Congress itself, saying they're evading retribution, evading the revenge to be dealt out to them. | ||
For daring to be white and in Africa. | ||
Because apparently, for the first time ever, leftists have decided that actually being native to a place means that it is your land and you have a right to keep other people out of it. | ||
Not the same view they hold for Europe, I don't think I need to tell you. | ||
All of this and a hell of a lot more. | ||
We got RFK putting on a absolute masterclass, knocking down objections from Democratic lawmakers. | ||
We'll show you lots of clips from that hearing as well. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
It's thewarroominfowars.com. | ||
All right. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is. | ||
We got a lot to talk about. | ||
We got multiple hearings going on on Capitol Hill that we'll show you clips from, including RFK Jr. absolutely demolishing Democrat arguments about things like fluoride, vaccines, plastics. | ||
You know, in the foodstuffs, food dies in their danger. | ||
Just absolutely fantastic stuff from RFK Jr. | ||
We have, of course, and also being interrupted by protesters and all sorts of insanity happening there. | ||
There's another hearing going on that's all state whistleblowers, as increasingly so in the last little while. | ||
The corruption of insurance companies is coming under investigation. | ||
It's pretty crazy what they're finding, so we'll show you some clips from that as well. | ||
Donald Trump, of course, continues his jaunt through the Middle East, making absolutely massive deals and completely rearranging the world order as we know it. | ||
Very exciting stuff to talk about in that regard. | ||
And we're also going to mock relentlessly Sri, old Sri Theander, Thanedar. | ||
Sri Thanedar. | ||
I don't know how to pronounce his name, but I don't care to. | ||
He's the... | ||
Indian-born congressman who's impeaching Donald Trump for the third time and not having a great go of it, being humiliated relentlessly and proving that he doesn't even know the name of the city that he represents in Congress, really highlighting his priorities in this effort, not looking after the people he is supposed to represent. | ||
He doesn't even know who they are. | ||
Instead, using his platform to try to... | ||
You know, achieve some more wide-ranging political goals. | ||
And so we'll get into all of it. | ||
But I kind of want to start today just thinking about the successes that Trump has had and continues to have and are happening on almost an hourly basis. | ||
And of course, everything out of the Middle East is so epic. | ||
It is so crazy. | ||
Clip number six here, we can roll as B-roll. | ||
Six and seven. | ||
As Trump's motorcade, just everywhere it goes in the Middle East, is flanked by battalions of cavalry. | ||
I mean, you want to talk about a red carpet greeting. | ||
You want to talk about honor being paid to our leader. | ||
This is what it looks like. | ||
Holding the American flag. | ||
Arabian horsemen escorting the President of the United States. | ||
They wouldn't even take Joe Biden's phone calls, folks. | ||
They wouldn't even answer the phone for decrepit shell of a human Joe Biden. | ||
But when Donald Trump comes to town, the avenue was lined with horsemen. | ||
This is some cyber trucks escorting Trump. | ||
In Qatar, I believe, is where this is, or the UAE. | ||
I'm not even sure. | ||
He's gallivanting. | ||
This is in Qatar. | ||
He's gallivanting around the Middle East. | ||
In a way that only Trump can. | ||
And the deals that he's making are truly astonishingly gigantic. | ||
And the speeches that he's giving are again indicative of the rewriting of the world order as we know it. | ||
And everybody's mad that he accepted the gift of a jet. | ||
Everybody's very mad that Qatar gave him a jet. | ||
Because I guess they have to be mad about something. | ||
I guess they don't have anything real to be angry about. | ||
So they're desperately scrambling for something to claim is bad. | ||
Because everything's actually pretty dang great. | ||
I'm going to go to some videos here. | ||
I guess we'll start with Trump's speech. | ||
Trump's speech in Saudi Arabia. | ||
Because he did absolutely Abolish the last 30 years of American so-called diplomacy. | ||
Whatever that was, we were engaged in for the last 30 years where we would bomb the hell out of strangers and then demand that they love us. | ||
And it didn't work very well, actually. | ||
And this speech represents an absolute triumph for our side of the aisle. | ||
Our lonely side of the aisle that neither fell for the communistic, socialistic brainwashing of the left, Or the warmongering of the right and instead stood on principle and always argued against intervention overseas on the basis that it does nothing for America. | ||
Trump took a flamethrower to the last several decades of American foreign policy in his speech in Saudi Arabia yesterday. | ||
Let's go to clip number eight here. | ||
I'm sure you've seen this if you've been online in the last 24 hours, but it broke. | ||
Last night, or gave this speech last night, and it really is an absolute triumph, an absolute victory crown on our movement. | ||
Let's go now to clip number eight. | ||
The transformations have been unbelievably remarkable. | ||
Before our eyes, a new generation of leaders is transcending the ancient conflicts of tired divisions of the past and forging a future where the Middle East is defined by commerce, not chaos. | ||
Where it exports technology, not terrorism. | ||
And where people of different nations, religions and creeds are building cities together, not bombing each other out of existence. | ||
We don't want that. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
And it's crucial for the wider world to note this great transformation has not come from... | ||
Western interventionists or flying people in beautiful planes giving you lectures on how to live and how to govern your own affairs. | ||
No, the gleaming marvels of Riyadh and Abu Dhabi were not created by the so-called nation builders, neocons, or liberal non-profits like those who spent trillions and trillions of dollars failing to develop. | ||
Kabul, Baghdad, so many other cities. | ||
Instead, the birth of a modern Middle East has been brought by The people that have lived here all their lives, developing your own sovereign countries, pursuing your own unique visions and charting your own destinies in your own way. | ||
It's really incredible what you've done. | ||
In the end, the so-called nation builders... | ||
Wrecked far more nations than they built and the interventionalists were intervening in complex societies that they did not even understand themselves. | ||
They told you how to do it, but they had no idea how to do it themselves. | ||
Peace, prosperity, and progress ultimately came not from a radical rejection of your heritage, but rather from embracing your national traditions and embracing that same heritage that you love. | ||
unidentified
|
so dearly. | |
And it's something only you could do. | ||
You achieved a modern miracle. | ||
The Arabian way. | ||
That's a good way. | ||
So like I said, just absolutely abolishing 30 years of American foreign policy. | ||
Saying what the American people have felt for a long time. | ||
This is not our job to be world policemen. | ||
It's not our job to force other countries to abandon their heritage or traditions. | ||
Democrats to fly Qatar Alago banner near Trump's Palm Beach home. | ||
Oh, that'll teach him. | ||
That'll teach Trump, the Qatari agent. | ||
Is that what's happening? | ||
Is Qatar becoming the new Russia? | ||
Is that what's going on? | ||
Are the Israelis mad that another Middle East country figured out, read their playbook, is now running the plays even better than them? | ||
How dare they bribe Trump? | ||
That's our job. | ||
Yeah, we're happy. | ||
We're happy about this. | ||
We're very happy that he's taking a, as I would put it, nationalist approach. | ||
This is the culmination of the victory of nationalism over globalism. | ||
Globalism seeks to degrade various and, to use a... | ||
Co-opted term. | ||
Diverse cultures into one monoculture plastic corporate package, rejecting that in favor of nationalism, of countries defending themselves, building themselves up, and charting their own destiny. | ||
And of course, Trump is succeeding so wildly these days. | ||
He's having such incredible diplomatic victories across the board. | ||
I keep seeing headlines like this. | ||
Trump is reluctantly becoming a peacemaker. | ||
Reluctantly becoming a peacemaker. | ||
As if he didn't run on being a peacemaker for every day, for every campaign he's ever been on. | ||
They say when you're running a superpower, you can't just ignore the outside world. | ||
They're so desperate for something to criticize Trump for. | ||
They're basically like, yeah, he's making peace, but he didn't really want to. | ||
We're making him declare peace. | ||
It's like they have nothing. | ||
They have less than nothing. | ||
They are so scrambling and desperate that they're writing headlines like this. | ||
Trump's egg-priced fiction has suddenly become a reality. | ||
So what this headline means, I think, I think I'm interpreting this correctly, is Trump was telling the truth, but we're still going to say he was lying. | ||
That somehow... | ||
President Trump's false claim turns out to be true, but it's still a false claim somehow. | ||
I mean, they are so desperate for something to criticize Trump for. | ||
They really are making fools out of themselves. | ||
And I got a couple videos about this. | ||
We'll go to the fun one first. | ||
Both these happen to feature black men. | ||
The first one is clip 14 here. | ||
I'm not even sure if this video is going to make any sense from the amount that we had to censor it. | ||
But I think this guy gets across how a lot of us feel these days. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. | |
I thought y 'all was talking about, oh, China's gonna, we need China cheap goods and all this other stuff. | ||
We need Mexicans. | ||
Because our avocado's gonna be so motherfucking high. | ||
You bitches don't know. | ||
You just be talking out your ass. | ||
I can't stand you bitches. | ||
I swear to God, every last one of you motherfucking Democrats, bro, y 'all bitches got to fight me, man. | ||
I want to fight. | ||
Because y 'all don't be right about shit. | ||
And then when you're wrong, you move the goalpost way over there. | ||
Bitch, I can't cake way over there. | ||
Because you just made some shit up. | ||
I hate you bitches. | ||
Man, I swear to God, dog. | ||
Oh, I hate you bitches. | ||
Now, come to find out, China just lost that tariff wall. | ||
They're closing buildings out there. | ||
I agree. | ||
I agree. | ||
Ace smart underscore 11 on TikTok. | ||
Ace smart. | ||
I love it. | ||
Find one thing wrong that he said right there. | ||
Just absolutely destroying the Democrat mindset, the lies, how they just operate in complete, abject bad faith. | ||
It doesn't matter how good you are. | ||
It doesn't matter how successful you are. | ||
It doesn't matter if you're bringing peace. | ||
And bringing egg prices down and bringing manufacturing back home, they hate you. | ||
And it's actually not, when you really listen to them, it's not contradictory. | ||
All of their policies are designed to destroy America, so they hate it when you stop them destroying America. | ||
It's not actually that complicated. | ||
Look at the South African refugees. | ||
How easy would it have been for the Democrats to just swallow their anger, swallow their pride? | ||
And pretend to go along with this. | ||
It would have been easy. | ||
It would have been a political home run. | ||
They could still call Trump racist. | ||
They could still do all of that. | ||
And say, look, this is why we love the refugee program. | ||
Of course refugees are always welcome. | ||
We'd be total hypocrites if we said that some overweight Latina from Guatemala qualifies as a refugee. | ||
People from South Africa being hunted for their race don't. | ||
It would have been so easy for them just to go along with it. | ||
It's 60 people. | ||
It's 60. Was it really that big of a deal? | ||
But they can't do it. | ||
They can't swallow their pride. | ||
They can't tamp down on their seething hatred of white people for long enough not to expose everything that they're about. | ||
To expose the fact that... | ||
And it's astonishing. | ||
I've made the joke over and over. | ||
It's not really a joke. | ||
It's actually completely true now that we know that, like, if instead of criminals and drug dealers and rapists coming across the border, it was, I'd always say, Norwegian engineers, then they would be, you know, completely in favor of Border Patrol. | ||
They'd be expelling those people as fast as they can. | ||
It's actually come true with the South Africans. | ||
They genuinely do not want people that will contribute to society, that are actually being hunted. | ||
You know, slaughtered for their race. | ||
They are the most pathetic hypocrites ever. | ||
But again, it's not really hypocrisy because underlying all of their schemes, all of their policies, is this seething hatred of America and specifically white people. | ||
I was going to say white Americans, but white South Africans, Europeans. | ||
And we'll get back into that. | ||
But it's just another victory to pile onto Trump's. | ||
Increasingly large stack of victories over the last week that he has once again forced the Democrats to reveal exactly who they are and what they care about and what they're all about. | ||
Here's Larry Elder responding to a caller, again, desperately seeking, desperately searching for something to criticize Trump about. | ||
They have absolutely nothing. | ||
And so in this case, I guess they're mad that Trump's administration is respectful to him. | ||
Honestly, that, I think, is the complaint here. | ||
And Larry Elder absolutely smacks him down in a brilliant way. | ||
Clip number 10. Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Jimmy is in Charlotte, North Carolina. | |
Jimmy, how are you? | ||
Yeah, Larry, I'm doing well. | ||
Hey, when they go around at the cabinet meetings with Trump and kind of drool over him North Korean style, are you kind of embarrassed by that? | ||
Is that your question? | ||
Were you embarrassed to watch Joe Biden drool for four years? | ||
Were you embarrassed to watch Joe Biden stumble going up and down the stairs? | ||
Were you embarrassed to watch Joe Biden trip on the stage? | ||
Were you embarrassed to watch Joe Biden avoid taking a cognitive test? | ||
Are you embarrassed that Trump took it and passed it with flying colors? | ||
Are you embarrassed the way Joe Biden pulled out of Afghanistan? | ||
Leaving behind $7 billion of equipment. | ||
Leaving behind hundreds of Americans, thousands of Afghans, 13 service members killed at Abbey Gate, several more injured, thousands Afghans killed. | ||
Very likely encourage Putin to invade Ukraine. | ||
Very likely encourage Hamas to slaughter Israelis on October 7. Are you embarrassed that Joe Biden said nobody told him that the Taliban would come back and that the Afghan government would dissolve, even though generals testified under oath that that was exactly the advice that he was given? | ||
Are you embarrassed that former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, Democrat, served under Bill Clinton, told Joe Biden that all the spending would be inflationary? | ||
He did it anyway. | ||
Are you embarrassed we had 9% inflation? | ||
Are you embarrassed that gas prices under Joe Biden were 50% higher than under Donald Trump when he came into office? | ||
Are you embarrassed that all of these Democrats and much of the media covered up for Biden's cognitive decline? | ||
Are you embarrassed that Mike Johnson, the speaker, said that he had a private conversation with Joe Biden finally after all the aides were dismissed? | ||
He said, Mr. President, Please explain to me why you signed an executive order banning the export of LNG, liquefied natural gas. | ||
And Biden said, I didn't do that. | ||
He said, Mr. President, yes, you did. | ||
No, I didn't. | ||
He goes, oh, oh, oh, I know what I did. | ||
I signed an executive order to study this. | ||
He said, no, you didn't. | ||
Does that embarrass you? | ||
None of this stuff embarrasses you. | ||
Are you embarrassed that for four years we were told you needed comprehensive immigration reform in order to close the southern border? | ||
Are you embarrassed that Donald Trump succeeded in closing the border in 30 days without any new legislation? | ||
Are you embarrassed by any of this? | ||
Are you embarrassed by all the waste, the fraud, and the abuse that Trump and Doge are finding? | ||
Does any of this stuff embarrass you? | ||
Stop. | ||
unidentified
|
Stop. | |
He's already dead. | ||
You don't have to keep killing him. | ||
Absolute masterclass by Larry Elder. | ||
I'm sure that was just the stuff off the top of his head. | ||
You could continue that list for 20 more minutes at that cadence. | ||
You know, just to really, like, hammer it home, this guy says, are you embarrassed that people are, you know, treat Trump like a North Korean leader? | ||
Why? | ||
Because they say, Mr. President, by the way, I should have brought in the clip, but there's a clip of Trump actually talking about this, going, I've known this guy since kindergarten. | ||
He's always calling me Don. | ||
Hey, Don, how you doing, Don? | ||
Suddenly I come president. | ||
He's all, oh, hello, Mr. President. | ||
Yes, Mr. President. | ||
I'm saying, call me Don. | ||
You can just call me Don. | ||
He doesn't even want people to be obsequious to him. | ||
But they are because they respect him and they respect the office. | ||
That apparently is a bridge too far for the leftist. | ||
And so, yeah, Larry Elder lists out all of these embarrassing things about the Biden administration. | ||
But even just on the criticism that was leveled against Trump, Joe Biden was so much worse. | ||
How many times? | ||
Did we hear his aides or, you know, White House officials or the media go on and on about how brilliant and sharp and capable Joe Biden was? | ||
I mean, you want to talk about North Korean. | ||
You want to talk about a North Korean level of propaganda and obsequiousness. | ||
You've got during the campaign, especially before, you know, everybody could no longer ignore what we'd been saying the whole time that Joe Biden was completely incompetent. | ||
You would have Joe Biden getting completely lost on stage, just zoning out, just being a complete mental retard, total incompetent. | ||
I mean, you want to talk about North Korean levels of gaslighting the American people about the On that topic alone, Joe Biden blows Trump out of the water. | ||
And then you add on all the other stuff that he completely failed to get a handle on, or more accurately, deliberately sabotaged things like the border. | ||
And we'll get back into that a little bit later as well, since more and more information is coming out about just how bad and damaging those four years under President Biden truly were. | ||
And so when we come back on the other side of a short commercial break, I'm just going to go through just some of Trump's victories just over the last week. | ||
And genuinely, I couldn't keep up with them. | ||
As I was compiling a list of victories and successes Trump has had, more were being announced. | ||
Like already, today, they're announcing billion-dollar deals with Qatar, hundreds of millions of dollars being invested back in the United States, Heinz. | ||
The ketchup makers just agreed to fund $3 billion to reshore manufacturing here in the States. | ||
So it's just victory upon victory for Trump. | ||
We're going to celebrate that and point that out because nobody else is. | ||
Yeah, there's one of him talking about getting mad. | ||
Getting mad. | ||
Yeah, let's go to this. | ||
So again, you know, Trump's, oh, he's a dictator. | ||
He makes everybody be obsequious. | ||
Here's how Trump actually is, in case you needed a reminder. | ||
Here it is. | ||
The age is a big thing. | ||
You know, I have a friend who's a great lawyer in New York. | ||
He said, President? | ||
He never calls me. | ||
You know, I lost all my friends. | ||
Because I lost all my friends. | ||
I have no more friends. | ||
They used to call me, hey, Don, want to go out? | ||
Come on, let's go to dinner. | ||
Let's have fun. | ||
And they'd say, I have friends. | ||
unidentified
|
He said, I have friends. | |
No, but I lost all my friends. | ||
Because they used to be loose, right? | ||
To have friendship. | ||
Now they call up. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, Mr. President. | |
I'm a jack of a flash. | ||
unidentified
|
Aw. | |
Trump, you have 80 million friends. | ||
You have 80 million friends in this country. | ||
And we'll call you Don. | ||
We're going to go over his monumental successes of the last week on the other side. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
This is War Room. | ||
Harrison Smith sitting in for Owen Schroer today. | ||
Again, just marveling at the success that Trump has had in his first 100-and-something days in office. | ||
It really has been a monumental reshaping of the global order by force and for the benefit of everybody. | ||
Not just Americans, but people in countries that we do business slash war with. | ||
you He's being so successful, the mainstream media is really having trouble covering it. | ||
And so you're left with headlines like this from CNN. | ||
Trump's egg price fiction has suddenly become reality. | ||
All of the sudden, you say. | ||
For months, President Trump falsely claimed that egg prices are tumbling. | ||
It wasn't true, but it's true now. | ||
Okay. | ||
Egg prices fell 12.7% last month, the biggest monthly decline since 1984, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Tuesday, and they could continue to fall this month, too. | ||
The USDA reported last week that a dozen large white-shell eggs now cost $3.30 on average, down a whopping 69 cents from just a week before. | ||
Well, how did that happen, I wonder? | ||
What I'm saying is, you've got to be able to picture this stuff as if we didn't live in a world Controlled by really abject liars. | ||
The way this article should have been written is, Trump's right. | ||
Egg prices are down a lot. | ||
Thanks, Trump. | ||
Trump lowered our egg prices significantly. | ||
Here's how he did it. | ||
Instead, they have to phrase it as, Trump's fiction has suddenly become reality. | ||
As if he's just out there lying and it just so happens, coincidentally, and outside of his control. | ||
Things change to make him right, but that still doesn't mean he's right. | ||
It's still a fiction. | ||
He's still lying, but it's true now. | ||
I mean, it's just, it's absurd. | ||
It's absurd. | ||
Look at that drop-off in March. | ||
Look at that drop-off of egg prices in March. | ||
That is incredible. | ||
Good find, crew. | ||
But they'll never give him credit. | ||
They can't. | ||
They don't even give him credit here. | ||
So, I mean, what are you supposed to do? | ||
What are you supposed to do? | ||
And I just wonder, I hope, I genuinely hope that the American people have just the basic level of intelligence to see through this stuff. | ||
But they don't. | ||
But unfortunately, I don't think they do. | ||
This is the type of article that if you read to a liberal, they'll just see nothing wrong with it. | ||
They're just like, yeah, no, that all makes perfect sense. | ||
It's like, okay, if this was Joe Biden, it would just say, Joe Biden lowered egg prices. | ||
Thank you, Joe Biden. | ||
That's all I would say. | ||
Because it's Trump, they have to frame it in this completely dishonest way, accusing him of dishonesty at the same time because they can't do anything without being really, really pathetically hypocritical. | ||
In the last week, Donald Trump has achieved certainly no less than four major diplomatic breakthroughs, and that's not even including some of the other major victories he's helped bring about. | ||
On things like prescription prices. | ||
So let's just list these out, shall we? | ||
We'll take down footage of the chickens pooping out eggs. | ||
And we'll go over just a quick list, quick brief overview of just some of the successes he's had in the last week. | ||
Russia, Ukraine set for first direct talks since war began with U.S. President. | ||
So he got Russia and Ukraine to agree to sit down at a table for the first time in the... | ||
Well, yeah, he did broker a peace deal between India and Pakistan. | ||
That could have easily gone into nuclear conflict and spiraled out into a third world war. | ||
But Trump stepped in with J.D. Vance and put a stop to it immediately. | ||
But he didn't want to. | ||
And we have problems with... | ||
How exactly he did it. | ||
It's just like, shut up. | ||
He brought peace. | ||
So, okay. | ||
Got Russia and Ukraine to sit down for the first time. | ||
Stopped the Pakistan-India conflict from spiraling out of control and brought peace there. | ||
Donald Trump secures historic trade win for the United States against China. | ||
On the heels of the brand new deal with the United Kingdom, President Donald Trump reached an agreement with China to reduce China's tariffs and eliminate retaliation, retain a US baseline tariff on China, and set a path for future discussions. | ||
To open market access for American exports. | ||
So he won the trade conflict with China this round. | ||
He also, of course, signed the executive order, lowering drug prices by up to 80 percent by forcing the pharmaceutical companies to adhere to the most favored nation prescription drug pricing, lowering costs dramatically for American patients. | ||
He, of course, got Hamas to release the last U.S. hostage Adan Alexander in a goodwill gesture to Trump. | ||
On Monday, Hamas released Israeli-American Edan Alexander after more than 19 months in captivity, a result of direct talks between U.S. and Hamas officials in recent days, again completely credited to Trump. | ||
He also announced a plan for migrants to self-deport from the U.S., including free flights and a cash bonus, a program that I personally was advocating for long before I thought it was a remote possibility, yet here it is. | ||
He signed an executive order establishing a new self-deportation program offering free flights and cash bonuses to undocumented migrants to help them leave America voluntarily. | ||
That's Project Homecoming. | ||
He also signed an order for the VA to build homeless veteran centers all over the United States, including in a West LA campus. | ||
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Friday that aims to create a center for homeless veterans in Los Angeles and improve medical care access across the Department of Veterans Affairs. | ||
It's not impossible to do these things if you want to do them. | ||
It's just that the people in power before didn't want to do them. | ||
Of course, Newsweek compiles these. | ||
Trump scores four diplomatic victories. | ||
Talking about the hostage in Gaza, the China tariff agreement, the India-Pakistan ceasefire, and Russia agreeing to meet with Ukraine to talk peace in Istanbul. | ||
So those are just some of the executive orders and You know, diplomatic success as Trump has. | ||
That doesn't even include the incredible deals that he's been making and the, you know, effect of bringing back manufacturing to the United States. | ||
Ketchup maker Kraft Heinz is investing $3 billion upgrading U.S. manufacturing. | ||
They're spending $3 billion to upgrade U.S. factories, the largest investment in its plants in a decade, even as executives say consumer sentiment. | ||
It's its second lowest point in 70 years. | ||
It has cut sales and profit forecasts. | ||
The upgrades will help lower costs by making the plants more efficient, which in turn may help offset President Trump's tariffs, which factored into the company's decision to make the investments, said Pedro Navio, Kraft Heinz's president in North America in an interview with Reuters. | ||
Okay, so the tariffs are effectively bringing back U.S. manufacturing. | ||
$3 billion is a sizable chunk of change to be reinvested. | ||
This, of course, comes in the heels of Budweiser making a similar announcement, investing a measly $300 million in U.S. facilities on May 12th, two days ago. | ||
So, again, can you point me to a single week time period in maybe all of American history, certainly in my lifetime, where a president has had this many victories in this short amount of time? | ||
I didn't even get into the Qatar deal with Boeing. | ||
That's worth billions or possibly trillions agreements with Saudi Arabia and others. | ||
He just is changing the world. | ||
Like, it is absolutely insane how successful Trump is being and continues to be and the victories that he continues to have. | ||
Hell, I mean, if you want to keep racking up victories, you've got the grand jury indictment of the judge that tried to... | ||
Help an illegal immigrant evade capture. | ||
You've got court decisions going his direction. | ||
Supreme Court allowing him to do things like using the Alien Enemies Act to expel foreigners. | ||
And it really is making the Democrats scramble and flail and shriek in desperation as they try somehow, somehow to justify their resistance to what are obviously good programs. | ||
And that's the other thing that sort of characterizes a lot of this stuff, is it's not necessarily traditionally right-wing topics. | ||
I mean, things like the pharmaceutical executive order, that's been on the progressive checklist forever. | ||
I mean, ask Bernie Sanders how he feels about big pharmaceutical companies taking advantage of the American system to jack up their prices. | ||
In fact... | ||
I mean, the most disappointing thing about Trump's entire administration so far, the second round, and the first round for that matter, is the utter incompetence and ineptitude and just listlessness of the Congress, of Congress and Senate. | ||
They're not doing what they should be to codify his changes into law, to back him up, to provide funding for the things that he needs. | ||
I mean, he's also talking about hiring 20,000 new Border Patrol agents. | ||
Right now, there are 6,000 agents in America carrying out deportations. | ||
He's upping that by 20,000. | ||
If Congress will give them the budget. | ||
So the Republicans in Congress are completely failing to uphold their end of the bargain. | ||
In fact, the only time I see statements from congressmen like Tom Cotton or Lindsey Graham is when Trump distances himself from Israel and they come out furious that we're not going to war with Iran. | ||
So they suck and should be replaced. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
I genuinely don't understand how the Republicans in Congress don't get that this is an existential point for them. | ||
If they don't go along with Trump's agenda, if they don't show that they are worthy of being in the MAGA coalition, they're going to get removed. | ||
And so, I mean, it's like even if the argument is just for your own sake and for your own self-aggrandizement and for your own benefit, they should be going along with Trump. | ||
They just can't do it for some reason. | ||
Can't tell you why. | ||
But at the same time, Democrat congressmen are now supporting and codifying into law things like his pharmaceutical EEO. | ||
A congressman just put it forward today, saying, look, what Trump did was exactly right, and Congress should back that up by making it official. | ||
So it's actually kind of weird. | ||
So these things aren't victories exclusively for MAGA. | ||
Yeah, so shame on GOP houses is the article from Gateway Pundit. | ||
Democrat Ro Khanna files bill to codify Trump's drug prices order while Republican leadership sits on their hands. | ||
Yeah, well, what they're doing is almost worse than nothing, but they certainly are doing nothing. | ||
So again, what is, I don't even get what the issue is. | ||
I was talking to somebody the other day, a family member. | ||
I said, how's it going? | ||
They said, well, I'm just sick of Trump. | ||
I just thought, well, but why? | ||
But what is he doing? | ||
What are you sick of? | ||
I mean, I feel bad. | ||
I feel bad for people that live in this delusional construct of the leftist media that's constantly bombarding these poor, innocent American citizens with lies about Trump. | ||
In an effort to keep them furious and discombobulated, it's like Trump is doing everything right. | ||
Everything he's doing is good. | ||
He is literally bringing peace across the world, one conflict at a time. | ||
He's separating us from Israel, who's attempting to get us into World War III. | ||
So he's stopping that catastrophe from taking place. | ||
Again, victory after victory after victory after victory. | ||
And they are... | ||
So desperate to come up with just something, anything. | ||
They're begging Trump to do something they can sink their teeth into. | ||
So far, everything they try to stand up against Trump on just completely collapses in failure. | ||
Even though they aren't really talking too much about Kilmara Brego or whatever that guy's name is, right? | ||
Turns out, being feverishly in support of a... | ||
Terroristic gang member, wife-beating human trafficker, not the most popular thing with the American people. | ||
So they've sort of let that go to the wayside, even though they'll still bring it up. | ||
They just don't want to get into the details, but they'll say, well, he ignored the Supreme Court. | ||
In fact, I'll show you a video where Sri, our good friend Sri, tries desperately to justify his attempt to impeach Donald Trump. | ||
And we can go to a couple videos of this little guy now. | ||
This little fella. | ||
We'll go to clip number 24 here. | ||
Sri Theander is very mad that people are making fun of him. | ||
But frankly, it's his fault for looking like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. | |
Clip 24. But they talk about my hair. | ||
They talk about my hair. | ||
They talk about my appearance. | ||
Oh, look at you. | ||
unidentified
|
They talk about where I was born. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
They talk about everything, my looks. | |
They talk about my age. | ||
They talk about why I should be deported back to the country where I was born. | ||
They talk about my past business dealings and they distort my business record. | ||
They do everything. | ||
Hey. | ||
Hey. | ||
Yeah, yeah, we do. | ||
No, yeah, that is accurate. | ||
I mean, guilty. | ||
Guilty as charged. | ||
I plead guilty to making fun of Sri, the funny little man. | ||
I mean, are we not supposed to? | ||
I mean, what are we supposed to say? | ||
What are we supposed to do? | ||
Just act like this is normal? | ||
Supposed to act like he's not a weird little goblin? | ||
No, he's a weird little goblin. | ||
We're going to say that. | ||
And we're going to make fun of his Beatles haircut, too. | ||
And his accent. | ||
Because we don't respect him. | ||
Because what he's saying isn't worth actually reacting to or arguing with. | ||
It's worth pointing out that he's not born in America. | ||
That he's a foreigner. | ||
That he came to this country from a... | ||
Not as good place. | ||
Oh, I'll be nice. | ||
From a place that's not as nice as America is, with the sole intended purpose of opening up the gates for billions of his co-ethnics to flood in. | ||
I didn't even bring in the video, but I found a video. | ||
And so my ex, if the crew wants to pull it in, said I dug up this old video because I was sorting some old videos from years ago, and I happened to find... | ||
This clip, a Michigan congressional candidate says we need less white people in the United States. | ||
So it's like, okay, you're a weird little foreigner that came to this country, tortured beagles to death for a little while, somehow made millions of dollars off that, and then got into Congress to disrupt the effective governance of Donald Trump and to... | ||
You know, benefit and ideally bring in millions upon millions of people just like him. | ||
So, yeah, we're not going to listen to you. | ||
We're going to make fun of you. | ||
And we're going to point out that this is the pernicious influence of foreigners in our government. | ||
You're making our case for us, and you're a great example of what we don't want anymore and never did for that matter. | ||
Now, lucky for us, somebody named... | ||
Charlie Leduff caught up with old Sri and asked him about some of these things. | ||
We'll go now to clip number 26. Here's an interview with Sri, the puppy killer, in which he reveals he doesn't even know the names of the towns he represents. | ||
He does not know the names of the incorporated cities that make up his congressional district. | ||
I'm not exaggerating. | ||
I'm not lying. | ||
He evades the question and can't answer the names of the neighborhoods where his constituents live. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
You're getting nailed with this one. | |
The beagles. | ||
You abandoned the beagles, left them to die in their cages. | ||
Oh, I love animals. | ||
Look, I love animals. | ||
Yes, he does. | ||
He loves beagles to death. | ||
And if there's anything in life that Detroit Congressman Shri Tandahar loves more than beagles. | ||
It's impeaching Donald J. Trump. | ||
You want to impeach Trump again and why is that his third time's a charm? | ||
Well, look, he has done unconstitutional activities, broken the law. | ||
Give me a list. | ||
Well, look, he has deported people without due process. | ||
You mean Obrega Garcia? | ||
Yes, he has... | ||
He did get his process, though. | ||
He got adjudicated to be deported. | ||
Well, look, the Supreme Court asked him in a 9-0 decision to facilitate bringing Mr. Garcia back. | ||
And he refused to do that. | ||
What if we brought him, Garcia, to Guam... | ||
Would that satisfy you? | ||
Well, look, so he defied Supreme Court orders. | ||
Is this a fundraising stunt? | ||
Your campaign owes you $11 million. | ||
Why not just forgive the loan? | ||
Are you not worth the money? | ||
I always forgive the loan. | ||
That's what happened when I ran for governor. | ||
And not a penny of my loan was paid by the campaign, and I forgave it. | ||
And that's what it will end up happening. | ||
It will end up happening. | ||
It's still on the books, though. | ||
Yeah, it looks, yeah. | ||
A little trivia. | ||
Where is the Hitzville Museum? | ||
Which museum? | ||
Hitzville. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What are the five gross points cities? | ||
Well, look, I'm not here to answer a quiz. | ||
I'm here to say that I'm going to fight for the people of Detroit. | ||
I'm going to fight for my constituents. | ||
And all of the gross points and all of Taylor and every part of the 13th district. | ||
Let me just do this real quick. | ||
Gross Point, Gross Point Park, Gross Point Woods. | ||
Gross Point Farms and Gross Point Shores. | ||
You know, on your campaign filings, it says occupation. | ||
Yours says United States government. | ||
Aren't you employed by the people of the United States? | ||
Yeah, I am. | ||
Okay, you fixed that one. | ||
Okay, and finally, you're getting nailed with this one. | ||
The beagles. | ||
You abandoned the beagles, left them to die in their cages. | ||
Oh, I love animals. | ||
Look, I love animals. | ||
My family loves animals. | ||
We have raised a beagle, a Shiva. | ||
Those are all... | ||
You know, attacks, political attacks on me. | ||
I love animals. | ||
Is there an explanation real quick? | ||
I have been awarded by the Humane Society. | ||
They've given me two awards as the best legislator in protecting animal rights. | ||
So my record is good. | ||
We believe that they have never been outside ever. | ||
I don't think that they've actually had their... | ||
Their paws on the grass. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't know what all the problem is with it anyway, because those beagles were gonna die because they're getting tested anyway, so... | |
Look, I love animals. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Vegetarian? | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, brother. | ||
This is good. | ||
A couple of the co-sponsors pulled their name off of the impeachment papers. | ||
Why is that? | ||
Well, they have a right to do that. | ||
Of course they do. | ||
Why'd they do it? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You had to ask them. | ||
See you, thank you. | ||
It's Congressman Sri Tanidar, 13th Congressional District, here at the town hall meeting on the Trump impeachment process, sure to be a barn burner here on this Mother's Day weekend. | ||
Let's go inside, shall we? | ||
Tanidar, that's how you say it. | ||
Absolutely, oh man, and then the empty room. | ||
I didn't even see that part. | ||
Wow, how pathetic. | ||
Michigan, enjoy her. | ||
It's a beautiful day. | ||
That was Charlie LeDuff, Michigan enjoyer. | ||
And as much as it's fun to laugh at this dude, this congressman, because he kills puppies and can hardly speak English, it's actually a fundamental problem. | ||
Do we have this video? | ||
All right, so here's the video from back when he was running. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
America is becoming more diverse. | |
You know, celebrating our diversity. | ||
And our diversity is our strength. | ||
And we are seeing that diversity in academia. | ||
We have seen that in businesses. | ||
And now we are seeing that in politics. | ||
And which is really important. | ||
Which is really important that we focus on and celebrate our diversity. | ||
Because it is the diversity that has made this America as great a country as it is. | ||
Wow, great point, Sri. | ||
No, I hadn't thought of it that way. | ||
And diversity is our strength because diversity is good. | ||
Diversity is good and it is our strength. | ||
It's like, great. | ||
Great. | ||
No, very compelling. | ||
Very compelling stuff here. | ||
Diversity, of course, means no white people. | ||
Means less white people. | ||
Perfect diversity is no white people. | ||
The perfectly diverse array of humans is when they're all black women. | ||
That's the most diverse you can be. | ||
Because diversity is code word for not white. | ||
So that's his ultimate agenda. | ||
So while it's, you know, fun to poke at this guy and everything he represents, it's actually a lot deeper of an issue. | ||
I mean, the idea, if the founders understood that one day foreigners would be elected to office who could not even name the cities they represent, who have no experience, they didn't grow up there, they don't know what it's like to live there, they don't know the interests or concerns of the people. | ||
That they're supposed to represent. | ||
They are totally and utterly disconnected in every possible way. | ||
I mean, you know, the fact that he can't name the cities is a big problem. | ||
But, you know, the guy asked, well, where's the museum, right? | ||
There's a big museum in his district. | ||
It's very popular. | ||
He doesn't even, he's like never even heard of the museum. | ||
How messed up and wrong is it? | ||
How, you know, how many of the problems that we face in America, their ultimate source is this fact, is the fact that we are represented by people who I don't know what's | ||
unidentified
|
going to happen in the future. | |
I'm saying to you, we've not called for the killing of white people, at least for now. | ||
I can't guarantee the future. | ||
You'd understand somebody watching that, especially as it gets shared on Twitter, they freak out. | ||
It sounds like a genocidal... | ||
Ah, cry babies. | ||
If things are going the way they are... | ||
There will be a revolution in this country, I can tell you now. | ||
According to the Transvaal Agricultural Union of South Africa, approximately 635 farm murders occurred between 2014 and 2024, averaging 63 per year, with 50 recorded in 2023 and 32 in 2024. | ||
AFRI Forum, a minority rights group, Reported 49 farm murders in 2023, aligning with Tao Essay's figures. | ||
unidentified
|
And at that point, my husband got up for the last time. | |
And the one attacker said, just kill him, brother. | ||
And they shot him in the head, execution style, in front of us. | ||
And he literally fell at my feet on his face. | ||
The government dismisses it. | ||
The government denies that it's happening. | ||
Our own president came to New York in September and he stated in an interview with Bloomberg Killings of farmers or white farmers in South Africa. | ||
There's no land grab in South Africa. | ||
We are involved in a process of discussing land reform. | ||
South African police service statistics indicate that 12 farm-related murders occurred between October and December 2024. | ||
These grim numbers are a small fraction of South Africa's 19,000-plus annual murders, illustrating that the land of Zef... | ||
Americans don't understand that the rest of the world is not like America. | ||
We have a lot of very difficult things happening in the world today. | ||
And it was very complicated because there are 27 tribes, black tribes. | ||
There are really two white tribes, Afrikaans and English. | ||
And they hate each other more than the black on white situation. | ||
The history of the fighting between the Dutch and the English just... | ||
It makes most wars look tame. | ||
And then the black tribes all hated each other for their hundreds of thousands of years of history. | ||
And so the level of violence was just extraordinary. | ||
I remember getting to this concert, and the train doors open. | ||
And there's two black guys, and there's one black guy, and I just caught the end of the fight, takes a knife and stabs it into the side of this guy's head, like right there. | ||
And this guy just drops dead. | ||
unidentified
|
Boom. | |
And you're on the train, but a whole bunch of people behind you want to get off the train, but you've just got this dead guy in front of you. | ||
A 2012 Reuters report noted a one-third decline in white farmers since 1997, emphasizing robbery as the primary motive, not race. | ||
Yet. | ||
The brutality, torture, machete attacks, and prolonged Mad Max-level assaults continued to fuel a Western propagandized media, feverishly denying reality and stoking the flames of division. | ||
So if the Afrikaners don't actually like the land, they can leave. | ||
That country. | ||
They are. | ||
They're leaving to come here. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
These refugees are coming here. | ||
They can actually leave and go to where their native land is, which is probably Germany. | ||
unidentified
|
So the Trump administration, they're saying that essentially these white South Africans assimilate better and they're also not as much of a security risk. | |
That's really causing a lot of people to be appalled, frankly. | ||
These are the descendants of the people who created the most diabolical system of white supremacy in human history, apartheid. | ||
unidentified
|
And about the white Afrikaners who were allowed into the country and what that means for the Don, this is a slap in the face to America's black farmers right now. | |
The mindless underbelly of American victimhood isn't rolling out the red carpet either. | ||
Regardless that these refugees are a tiny number, mainly families waving the American flag. | ||
All right, folks, that is the latest from John Bowne, the truth about the Afrikaner refugees. | ||
The full video is about twice that long, about seven minutes. | ||
Go find and share it today, right now, at ban.video. | ||
And it's been posted on Alex's Twitter at RealAlexJones. | ||
Find and share that video. | ||
It's insane how these people are treating a couple of refugees from South Africa just because they're white. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is The War Room. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Please do support us by going to thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
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I think our coffee really stands head and shoulders above our competition. | ||
Our coffee is fantastic. | ||
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And, of course, keep us on the air in the fight and winning victory after victory against the globalist scum whose ultimate design is nothing less than global slavery and the wholesale eradication of humanity itself. | ||
And we'll get into that. | ||
But it's worth reminding everybody, like a little touchstone. | ||
Once in a while, go back and go. | ||
We might be talking about... | ||
Weird little congressman trying to impeach Trump or these big deals that are happening and it's victory against the globalists. | ||
But you really got to understand that without the Trump interruption, we probably would be in it already by now. | ||
The total panopticon control grid of the globalists. | ||
It's only with Trump's intervention in the awakening of populism and the nationalist... | ||
Impulses of the average American that we've avoided just absolute catastrophic developments in that regard. | ||
Like, they actually want everybody on a biometric control grid where they get to control whether or not you eat because they'll cut off your money if you don't obey them. | ||
This is the ultimate plan, and it was very much within their grasp. | ||
At least they thought it was. | ||
And I think if Hillary Clinton had won, if things had gone to plan, it would have been Jeb! | ||
versus Madam President Hillary. | ||
Hillary would have won. | ||
And all of the things that you've seen since 2016 still would have happened in some regard. | ||
Remember, they launched the fake news PSYOP the day after the election happened because they were planning. | ||
Assuming that Hillary had won, they were planning to really crack down on dissident voices across the United States. | ||
And they were so confident and overconfident in their ability to rig the election and prevent Trump from winning. | ||
They did the Russiagate scandal, which is blown up in their faces because they were sloppy. | ||
They didn't think they'd get caught. | ||
They thought Hillary Clinton would be in office. | ||
She'd help cover it up. | ||
It never would have seen the light of day. | ||
Because the American people stood up and elected Donald Trump. | ||
All of their plans have gone in complete disarray, and it's forced their hand in some regards. | ||
They would have released COVID in one way or another. | ||
I think they, in a lot of ways, felt they had to do it in 2020 because they had to rig that election because they didn't think they could survive four more years of Trump. | ||
And they thought for sure, again, that they had it in the bag that, okay, all we have to do is rig this election. | ||
And then we'll get Trump on all these charges we have him. | ||
He'll be in jail and we'll put down this little rebellion and he'll never crop up again. | ||
And we'll be able to use Trump as an example to suppress and oppress the American people moving forward. | ||
But of course, like always, their plans backfire in their faces. | ||
Their evil schemes fall apart and they end up worse than where they started off. | ||
If they had just let him win in 2020, 100 days ago, he would have been retired. | ||
And they could have gone back to trying to enslave us in peace. | ||
They had to. | ||
They were compelled by whatever demon controls them to cheat, try to get Joe Biden in. | ||
Again, on the assumption like, okay, we flood the country with enough illegals. | ||
We do all the... | ||
Drive up inflation. | ||
Just crush the American people in all these different ways. | ||
Launch the disinformation governance boards and all these other things they tried to pull off under Joe Biden. | ||
They really thought that they would put the final nail in the coffin of American populism and human liberty. | ||
And time and time again they fail because the American people are privy to their scams, their schemes, and their designs. | ||
So we counteract them. | ||
We defeat them. | ||
It forces them to And I give massive, massive credit to Alex Jones for laying the groundwork for all of this. | ||
And Really setting the agenda moving forward. | ||
Now, the video that you just saw from John Bowne lays out a lot about the South Africa situation. | ||
I spent so long on it yesterday, I don't think I'm going to get into it very much today because not a lot of new arguments have been made. | ||
But again, I think the takeaway from all of it is just the fact that it's never been more clear. | ||
That the democratic policies are exclusively designed for our destruction. | ||
And the minute that, you know, decent, respectable people start claiming asylum when they actually deserve it, they flip out and can't handle it and just go fully mask off. | ||
And it's really kind of disgusting to see. | ||
But we're not going to spend too much time on that because I guess I spent the half of American Journal yesterday. | ||
Just systematically destroying all of their arguments in every possible way they make it. | ||
But a lot of stuff has happened today that, again, represents the transformation of the Republican Party from basically just a cabal of warmongers using the aesthetics of American patriotism to trick the American people into going to war for no particular reason. | ||
Reason that would benefit the United States. | ||
Into a party that actually serves the American people. | ||
Even those on the left, who for decades apparently have tried to achieve what RFK Jr. has achieved in 100 days. | ||
Things like removing food dyes, artificial food dyes from food. | ||
Seed oils. | ||
Taking down pharmaceutical companies. | ||
And they are panicking right now, by the way. | ||
The pharmaceutical companies. | ||
Executive order Trump signed is really going to cut into their profits quite a bit. | ||
I think he should go even farther and ban them from advertising on television. | ||
After all, there's only two countries in the world that advertise pharmaceutical drugs on TV. | ||
It's America and New Zealand. | ||
And the majority of income, places like CNN and MSNBC and even Fox News, comes from these pharmaceutical companies. | ||
So it would really be two birds with one stone. | ||
Move to ban them from advertising because not only would you cut off their ability to sell their poison to the American people, you would cut off the funding of these fake news outlets. | ||
But I'm not complaining. | ||
I'm not complaining. | ||
I'm just suggesting further steps that we can and should take. | ||
But let's talk about RFK Jr. | ||
HHS Secretary RFK testifies at Senate hearing on health budget and it has been a cacophony of Let me be clear. | ||
We intend to make the Trump HHS not just the most effective, but also the most compassionate in U.S. history. | ||
Our official budget statement outlines many priorities, but I will highlight a few. | ||
First, we will consolidate programs to better tackle mental health and addiction. | ||
These issues now rival chronic disease and their impact. | ||
HHS will aggressively combat the opioid crisis, especially the spread of synthetic drugs like fentanyl. | ||
We will empower state, local, and tribal leaders to create effective solutions. | ||
Second, we will address nutrition, physical activity, and healthy lifestyles. | ||
The present budget requests $94 billion in discretionary funds to support these priorities, including the Administration for Healthy America. | ||
We will emphasize healthy eating and Head Start and ensure the program continues to serve its 750,000 children and parents effectively. | ||
Third, we will equip the FDA to expand its food safety efforts through research, regulations, independence, and education to remove harmful chemicals from food and packaging. | ||
And we're already doing this more aggressively than any other administration in history. | ||
We will fund cutting-edge research at the NIH while cutting risky or non-essential services. | ||
That includes ending of gain-of-function experiments and research based upon Radical gender ideology. | ||
I mean, you almost forget how much of what InfoWars has championed over the last couple decades has to do with health. | ||
You think of it as such a political show and these conspiracy theories, but as the list RFK Jr. just rattled off, this is the wish list of dissident activists for decades. | ||
Gain-of-function research taken out. | ||
Vaccine safety finally being prioritized. | ||
Getting food dyes and artificial flavoring that is straight-up poison out of this stuff. | ||
Seed oils. | ||
The gender-affirming care crap. | ||
The transgenderism nonsense that we have to deal with. | ||
I mean, it just goes on and on, the number of issues that, again, should never have been allowed to fester. | ||
Why, for decades, were we just allowing food companies to put artificial dyes? | ||
In their food that was harming the health of the American people. | ||
Well, why were we allowing the border to be open? | ||
10,000 people to cross daily over the Mexican border. | ||
Because it destroys the country and that's the design of the Democrats. | ||
It's not actually that complicated. | ||
Look at their policies. | ||
Look at the effects they have. | ||
And every single time, without fail, you'll find that... | ||
It makes everything worse for everyone. | ||
In-N-Out announces removal of artificial dyes and sweeteners to multiple items, echoing RFK Jr.'s concerns. | ||
This is the level of victory that we're having. | ||
We don't even have to pass the laws anymore. | ||
Our ideas are now so dominant and so popular that companies will choose to do it knowing that they'll increase profits if they do. | ||
Knowing that these positions, these stances, actions like that, removing... | ||
Artificial food dyes is going to increase their profits because so many people are finally aware of the danger these things represent and are making choices on that basis. | ||
So really, it's hard to oversell just how powerful this movement has been and continues to be. | ||
We'll go now to clip number one. | ||
This is RFK on gain-of-function research, saying it has no place in a civilized society. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
We've also proposed a methodology for regulating and for determining what is dangerous gain-of-function and what is legitimate scientific investigation and how to bring the public into that debate, which I think, as you point out, is absolutely critical. | ||
That is where we messed up last time. | ||
And as you know... | ||
We have some of the Democrats here who are, you know, talking about the great science from NIH, but now we have a major agency, intelligence agency, the CIA, the FBI, the DOE, and the State Department have all agreed that NIH research almost certainly led to the pandemic, the COVID pandemic. | ||
So that's not the kind of the result that we should be allowing or enabling, and we're going to end that now. | ||
How was there ever justification for gain-of-function research? | ||
I mean, it makes no sense. | ||
It's like the COVID skit opens up with the back-and-forth thing where they go, good news, we've rolled back the ban on gain-of-function research. | ||
And it's just like, but why? | ||
Why? | ||
Well, so we can make viruses more deadly and transmissible to humans. | ||
It's like, but why would you want to do that? | ||
But what is the point of that? | ||
What is the point of playing with fire like this? | ||
There's no benefit, as far as I can tell. | ||
It's like, okay, it works, and you have a disease that's dangerous. | ||
Great. | ||
It doesn't work, and that disease infects everybody and causes a global lockdown, economic collapse, mass death. | ||
So it's like, what is the benefit? | ||
You're taking this enormous risk, and the benefit is nonexistent. | ||
And when you arrive at a conclusion like that, when you are thinking about things like this and you go and you figure out, like, okay, this doesn't make any sense. | ||
There's no benefit, but there's a massive risk. | ||
What that means is you're missing something. | ||
What that means is you're missing the real impetus behind this, the real purpose behind it, the real target of the design. | ||
Because the benefit for them... | ||
Is that they could then release a man-made virus and lock down the world at a whim. | ||
See, it doesn't make any sense if you're thinking about the people doing these things as human beings with, you know, reasonable concerns and who value life, but that's not who we're dealing with. | ||
It's not who we're dealing with. | ||
We're dealing with mad scientist psychopaths, power-hungry weirdos. | ||
That are ready and willing and eager to kill millions of people to achieve their ends. | ||
So that's the missing component. | ||
That's the missing puzzle piece that you put in. | ||
You go, oh, that's why they're doing gain-of-function research? | ||
Because they're evil, tyrannical scum. | ||
Right, I forgot. | ||
I forgot about that little part. | ||
We're going on to clip number two. | ||
This is RFK Jr. | ||
Again, being confronted by Democrats with just absolute lies, which must be... | ||
Doubly bizarre for him, because he was a Democrat his entire life, and the things that he's doing are the things they used to celebrate him for. | ||
Now they're desperate and willing to lie about anything and everything to try to discredit the same actions that they supported when it wasn't Trump championing it. | ||
A lot of stuff being revealed here. | ||
Above all, the psychotic ineptitude of the Democrats. | ||
Let's go now to clip number two. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, well, I'm asking if anybody here, because you're here. | |
You're asking us for money. | ||
We appropriated the funds. | ||
Did you talk to any of us? | ||
Democrat or Republican? | ||
You know what? | ||
There are actually some very bright Republicans, I will say that. | ||
On both sides of the aisle. | ||
So the answer to that question is no. | ||
So your decisions, were they based on merit or generated by an algorithm? | ||
Did somebody get an Elon Musk computer and say, okay, just make... | ||
20% cuts? | ||
I disagree with your entire characterization. | ||
It was like the recitation of a narrative that everybody knows out there. | ||
And it's the Democratic Party narrative. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm just going to ask you a question. | |
It's just not true. | ||
We weren't cutting thousands of scientists. | ||
We weren't cutting a clinical trial. | ||
I mean, everything you said was essentially dishonest. | ||
unidentified
|
She's like, well, all right, all right, fine. | |
Okay, fine. | ||
I was lying about everything. | ||
You got me. | ||
We'll move on. | ||
Yeah, protesters interrupted you. | ||
I don't even want to give them the time of day. | ||
I genuinely don't even understand what they're protesting. | ||
I guess it was the CEO of Ben and Jerry's protesting RFK Jr.? | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
I guess. | ||
Do that then. | ||
Now, RFK Jr. did get a little bit heated here. | ||
He did not mince words with the Democratic members of Congress. | ||
We'll go to clip number 22 now. | ||
RFK Jr. going off on the absolute failure of this system that they love so very much. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Anybody thinks that we did gold standard medicine in this country from these institutions, look at our children. | ||
They're the sickest children in the world. | ||
Lori, you say that. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Congressman DeLauro, you say that you've worked for 20 years on getting food dye out. | ||
Give me credit. | ||
I got it out in 100 days. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll give you that credit. | |
All right, so let's work together and do something that we all believe in, which is have healthy kids in our country, for God's sake. | ||
We can all put that together. | ||
There's no such thing as Republican children or Democratic children. | ||
There's just kids, and we should all be concerned with them. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Secretary. | ||
You can hear the frustration in his voice, and for good reason. | ||
At least there, she acknowledges what he's saying. | ||
What he's saying is no small feat. | ||
He's like, for 20 years, you've tried to get food dyes out. | ||
I got it done in 100 days, and here you are attacking me. | ||
Here I am, achieving the goals that you yourselves have failed to achieve for decades. | ||
I pull him off in 100 days, and you want to call me the bad guy and not help me do more. | ||
These people suck, man. | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
There's more sophisticated ways to say it, but that does sum it up in total. | ||
Like, these Democrats are just evil, evil people. | ||
And I'm just constantly reminded of just... | ||
What it's like having an insane girlfriend. | ||
If you've ever had an insane girlfriend, it's very similar to being with Democrats. | ||
Just trying to deal with people who refuse to acknowledge reality, refuse to admit they're wrong, refuse to give you credit for anything. | ||
It's just like, these people are insufferable. | ||
And that really is as much analysis it deserves. | ||
We'll go to one more video here. | ||
Clip 28. Representative Mike Simpson tried to challenge Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on fluoride. | ||
It didn't quite go so well for him. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
If you are successful in banning fluoride, I noticed you graduated Utah and Florida, I think, for banning it. | |
That's up to them. | ||
They can do what they want. | ||
But we better put a lot more money into dental education because we're going to need a whole lot more dentists. | ||
I think that Marty McCary is concerned with ingestible fluoride. | ||
Is that the emerging science shows the benefits of fluoride, to CARES, and to cavity prevention comes from topical exposures rather than it was once thought that it was systemic, that if you ingested it, that the benefit came from that. | ||
We now know that virtually all the benefit is from topical, and we can get that through mouthwashes, we can get through fluoridated toothpastes. | ||
A national toxicity program issued a report in August, a meta-review of all the science that now exists on fluoride, and showed a direct inverse correlation between fluoride exposure, dose-related, and lower IQ. | ||
It's an issue that we have to all be concerned with. | ||
We want high IQ kids. | ||
Mr. Hoyer. | ||
unidentified
|
I appreciate that. | |
I look forward to working with you on it. | ||
Okay. | ||
U.S. government reports that fluoride... | ||
It says fluoride at twice-recommended limit is linked to lower IQ in kids. | ||
Now, multiply that generation over generation, year over year. | ||
You know, a lot of fluoride. | ||
The fact that they sell fluoridated water meant for babies. | ||
I mean, just think about the deliberateness of that. | ||
They literally sell water for babies that don't have their teeth yet and say it needs to be fluoridated. | ||
So just imagine what this world would look like if everybody for the last 100 years was 10 IQ points higher. | ||
That's what it's saying. | ||
Standard deviation. | ||
They've shown that it can lower your IQ by standard deviation. | ||
And they've done this research in China. | ||
Harvard has done a study. | ||
I mean, it shows it. | ||
And I've had conversations with people where it's like, hey, fluoride lowers your IQ, and they're like, yeah, but it helps your teeth. | ||
Nobody, no single person in America that's being honest would make the deal. | ||
If I said, you'll never get a cavity again, but I'm going to take 10 points off your IQ, nobody would make that deal. | ||
Nobody would make that deal. | ||
Who wants to be 10 IQ points lower? | ||
Who wants to not be able to figure out what they used to be able to figure out? | ||
They've been making us dumber for decades on purpose, and we're stopping it. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We got a lot still to cover in today's program. | ||
This is War Room. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Probably going to open up the phone lines for calls. | ||
We'll take calls in the final hour. | ||
I'll take them as soon as they start rolling in. | ||
If you want to call in, the number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Again, we got a lot of news to run through here. | ||
Sometimes you see a headline. | ||
I'm just sort of baffled at this one. | ||
I don't even think I printed this one out because I think it broke right before the show started. | ||
At least I saw it right before the show started. | ||
It's from Newsweek and it says, student loans could be forgiven in exchange for volunteer work. | ||
What? | ||
Student loans could be forgiven in exchange for volunteer work? | ||
That's just work. | ||
You're just working then. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
So many times I'm just confused. | ||
It's like you've got a problem. | ||
People aren't paying off their student loans. | ||
People can't pay back their student loans. | ||
Student loans were given out for careers that don't exist. | ||
And then we have to come up with a way to solve this. | ||
And so what they come up with is if you volunteer, they'll settle your student loan. | ||
Isn't that just working? | ||
Can't you just work and then get paid and use the money from working to pay off your student loan? | ||
I just don't get it. | ||
I just don't understand. | ||
I guess they want people to be volunteer firefighters. | ||
Goldman, Dan Goldman, who's an evil son of a gun. | ||
His bill seeks to expand the existing public service loan forgiveness program, which already offers student loan forgiveness to various public service employees, such as career firefighters. | ||
But he believes volunteers who do the work for free across the United States should enjoy similar benefits. | ||
After they've provided a decade of service and 120 qualifying payments. | ||
So whatever. | ||
Great idea. | ||
Great idea. | ||
It could just work. | ||
I don't get it, but fine. | ||
Stuff like that. | ||
It's just like, what are we even doing here? | ||
What is this? | ||
Maybe somebody explain to me what it is. | ||
Again, give us a call. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
This is an interesting article from the New York Times. | ||
That I see a lot of people celebrating. | ||
And it is an interesting tactic, if true. | ||
As White House steers Justice Department, Bondi embraces role of TV messenger. | ||
So this might explain and kind of mitigate some of the complaints that we've had about Pam Bondi appearing on Fox News so often when not apparently getting much done. | ||
They say Ms. Bondi, the nation's top law enforcement official, would prioritize a case of primarily a conspiracy theorist, was telling, anxious to appease the rest of MAGA base, she hyped the disclosure, which I guess of, what's his name, Epstein, as breaking news on Fox the night before, part of an effort to fulfill President Trump's campaign promise to reveal new details on the financier Jeffrey Epstein's misdeeds and deaths. | ||
It was a dud. | ||
There were no bombshells, she said, according to one of those invited. | ||
Later, activists on the right lashed out at Ms. Bondi. | ||
She responded by blaming others and then dispatched FBI agents and prosecutors from the Justice Department's National Security Division to scour the archives, officials familiar with the situation said. | ||
They found little. | ||
No one knows when Phase 2 is coming, but it's not likely to amount to much, those people said. | ||
Ms. Bondi earned a reputation as a hard-charging prosecutor known for combating opioids and street crime during two terms as Florida Attorney General. | ||
Since taking office as U.S. Attorney General in early February, she's adopted a conspicuously performative approach to survive inside a Trump cabinet that awards self-promotion, ritualized public flattery, and above all, willingness to execute White House directives with little fuss. | ||
Again, all of this is very normal. | ||
That's all very normal, actually. | ||
Over the past few days, Ms. Bondi signed off on Mr. Trump's acceptance of a luxury Boeing 747-8 plane upgraded to serve as Air Force One donated by a Qatari royal family, which raised a host of ethical and legal questions. | ||
As a lobbyist, Ms. Bondi herself received six-figure consulting fees from Qatar. | ||
The path taken by Ms. Bondi, 59, is common enough in the Trump court. | ||
A few cabinet members have autonomy to chart their own course, but her approach represents a noticeable departure from that of her predecessors at the Justice Department who saw themselves to varying degrees as guardians of institutional independence, attentive but not beholden to the presidency. | ||
see. | ||
So you understand what they're saying, right? | ||
I mean, you understand what that means, right? | ||
They're mad that the resistance inside the White House can't continue. | ||
They're actually writing articles complaining about the fact... | ||
That the people in the executive branch are following the orders of the president instead of acting like a stay-behind network taking orders from somebody other than the president. | ||
If you remember, and I still don't understand how this wasn't a bigger scandal at the time or still hasn't been made a bigger scandal. | ||
The Obama administration... | ||
Almost wholesale moved into a single corporation with an office directly across the street from the White House called West Exec in 2017. | ||
It was Jen Psaki and Anthony Blinken and a number of other Obama holdovers. | ||
They pretty much literally set up an alternative White House right across the street from the White House with all the people who were formerly in the White House who were giving orders to the people who were in the White House or in the executive branch in the Department of Justice. | ||
And the people in these positions were not doing what they were legally and constitutionally obligated to do, which is follow the orders of the elected president, but were instead following the orders of unelected controllers like Anthony Blinken. | ||
The literal destruction of our entire constitutional republic. | ||
Because if you're not able to vote for the people making the decisions, you don't live in a republic anymore. | ||
You don't live in a democracy either. | ||
You live in a shadow tyranny. | ||
And that's what they operated for the first four years of the Trump administration. | ||
Trump learned his lesson. | ||
And this time, that's not happening again. | ||
And the New York Times is pissed. | ||
The New York Times is pissed. | ||
I mean, when they say her predecessors at the Justice Department, who saw themselves as guardians of institutional independence, attentive but not beholden to the presidency, you get that that's what they're saying, right? | ||
They're saying they're pissed that the people, the lifetime, you know, faceless bureaucrats in the DOJ are not able to just ignore the president's orders and do whatever the hell they want in total contradiction to the designs of the duly elected president. | ||
So, okay, keep complaining, I guess. | ||
We're happy about this, actually. | ||
You basically have Steve Miller is running the Justice Department and Pam Bondi is serving as functionally their spokesperson, but not actually making big decisions or being the one to champion these things. | ||
Ms. Bondi said she's returning the department to its core law and order mission. | ||
Under Ms. Bondi, the department has arrested terrorists, cartel kingpins, and gang leaders, helped secure the border, gotten drugs off the street at a historic rate, and assisted in the removal of thousands of criminal aliens. | ||
And they're pissed at that. | ||
And they're pissed. | ||
No, the Justice Department is supposed to go after your political enemies. | ||
Isn't that the whole purpose of the department itself? | ||
So again, it's just like they have nothing, the Democrats. | ||
They have absolutely nothing to point to. | ||
The things they're pointing to really reveal more about their own mindsets, their own inclinations, their own designs than anything that Trump is doing. | ||
And it's pathetic more people can't see this, to be honest with you. | ||
So we like what Pan Bondi's doing. | ||
Meanwhile, I don't know if y 'all ever played the video on War Room. | ||
I played it on American Journal. | ||
The Trinde Aragua members who are spelling out SOS in the prison yard. | ||
Between, you know, soccer matches. | ||
Did y 'all see that? | ||
Maybe y 'all can bring up those images. | ||
Alleged Trinidadragua gangbangers who were begging to be sent home by flashing a banner reading, help, we want to be deported, we are not terrorists, SOS, to a drone overhead this week at the same facility. | ||
Basically, Reuters flew a drone over this prison yard, and the prisoners took a break from their recess to spell out SOS. | ||
Which is like, okay, what are you talking about? | ||
They're all well-fed. | ||
They're all in clean clothes. | ||
They're having fun in the yard. | ||
But they're spelling S-O-S. | ||
And apparently, in addition to recess, they're doing arts and crafts as well. | ||
So it looks like they've made a sign also. | ||
It's like, who are you? | ||
You're not on an island. | ||
You're not on a desert island. | ||
S-O-S, help us. | ||
Also, one of the S's is backwards. | ||
That's funny. | ||
Who are they saying SOS to? | ||
Who are they saying save us to? | ||
The gang? | ||
Are they asking their gang to come break them out of prison? | ||
That's not happening anytime soon. | ||
So it's like, okay, you're criminals. | ||
You had months to leave the United States. | ||
You chose not to. | ||
You got caught and imprisoned. | ||
Who's going to save you? | ||
And from what? | ||
This is the consequences of your own decisions, you morons. | ||
Well, now they've gone even farther. | ||
They're threatening to take hostages and apparently barricaded themselves somehow in this prison. | ||
The group was set to be deported to El Salvador's hellhole Seacott prison, but the Supreme Court temporarily blocked the Trump administration's effort. | ||
And again, this is called dissuading other people. | ||
This is called using... | ||
These criminals to encourage self-deportation. | ||
Because they're like, we just want to go home. | ||
We just want to be deported. | ||
You see what happened? | ||
They thought that they could break American law with impunity. | ||
They thought they could stay here and the worst that would happen to them is that they would be sent back to where they came from and they could just cross the border again the next month and it'd be fine. | ||
They thought that the worst punishment for the crimes they're committing... | ||
Would be to be sent back home, and they were fine with accepting that punishment. | ||
But now they're in jail, and they're not going home. | ||
They're begging to be sent home. | ||
They're begging to get the punishment they thought they were going to get the first time. | ||
This is a message to every other illegal immigrant in the country. | ||
You better go home. | ||
You want to go home, you better go now. | ||
Because if we catch you, you're not going home. | ||
You're going to El Salvador. | ||
It's not pleasant there. | ||
So just get out of the country. | ||
You don't have to be here. | ||
You are the only one to blame if you remain in this country when you know that your presence here is illegal and that if you're arrested, you'll be imprisoned. | ||
What is the issue here? | ||
What is the issue? | ||
You have to leave now. | ||
You have to stop committing crimes. | ||
Nobody feels sorry for you. | ||
This isn't something that was unexpected that you couldn't achieve. | ||
I'm just like, oh, we're just living our life and we got picked up all of a sudden. | ||
It's like, no, you are criminals. | ||
You know you're committing crime. | ||
You know you're not supposed to be here. | ||
You could go home at any point. | ||
You chose not to. | ||
Now you're in prison. | ||
Cry about it. | ||
Suffer. | ||
Suffer all you want. | ||
We don't care. | ||
And now they're like, you know, threatening to take hostages and causing even more problems. | ||
So, I mean, you know, I'm not going to say what I think should happen to them, but. | ||
But basically, the punishment should go in phases, right? | ||
Now they're in prison, begging to be deported. | ||
The next step should be something that makes them beg to be in prison. | ||
First, they're begging to stay, not be deported. | ||
Then you put them in prison, they're begging to be deported. | ||
Then you put them on death row and they'll be begging to go back to prison. | ||
It's just like, you could just leave. | ||
Just leave. | ||
Just leave. | ||
And that's a message to all of the illegal immigrants here. | ||
You don't want to stay. | ||
And in fact, it's easy to go home. | ||
They actually have a program for you now. | ||
They'll actually pay for your flight and give you $1,000 to leave. | ||
So take that offer, folks. | ||
It's not going to last forever. | ||
I want to go out to phone calls because I see Larry Pinkney has called in. | ||
Larry Pinkney has called in with some words of advice for us on line one. | ||
Larry, thank you so much for calling in. | ||
Mr. Pinkney, I should say. | ||
How are you? | ||
I am. | ||
I'm maintaining my good brother. | ||
It is a delight, a pleasure, and an honor to be speaking with you. | ||
I just wanted to call in very briefly to really express my gratitude to you, Alex, Owen, Chase, the entire crew, the brothers and sisters crew of InfoWars. | ||
You know what? | ||
You, brothers and sisters, are doing a magnificent and much-needed job. | ||
We love you. | ||
We love all of you. | ||
And, you know, I am so gratified to have heard what you played by Larry Elder. | ||
That was fantastic. | ||
We need to understand that... | ||
The demon rats, a.k.a. | ||
Democrats, have always, and I repeat, always, been nothing more than insidious opportunists. | ||
And that, you know, it's something, they haven't changed. | ||
They're snakes. | ||
They're serpents. | ||
They're probably even worse. | ||
So, you know, the awakening that is happening, it's not enough, but it is. | ||
It's certainly strong. | ||
It's certainly continuing. | ||
And I just want to commend you, brothers and sisters, all of you. | ||
We are so proud of you. | ||
We are so proud of you. | ||
I also want to express my deepest, deepest condolences regarding Jamie Way. | ||
It broke my heart. | ||
And to his family and to all of his friends. | ||
This is what we're up against. | ||
We're up against a cold, callous, callous, hypocritical, I'll just say, I'm trying to be nice here, a bunch of folks, indeed, these creatures. | ||
They're unbelievable. | ||
So just stay strong, carry on. | ||
I send you all my love, my strength, my fortitude, my determination. | ||
We've only just begun to fight. | ||
We have only just begun. | ||
And we will and must intensify. | ||
You are fantastic, brother, as are all the other presenters and the magnificent crew. | ||
That's it. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, thank you very much. | ||
I'm humbled by that. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And, I mean, you've been in this for... | ||
For decades now, and I mean, it's amazing to see the way the culture is turning, the way people are waking up, but like you said, it's not enough. | ||
But I mean, how crazy is it to see all of these victories racking up, or just the awareness about, I mean, the health stuff, and to know that Alex Jones sort of charted this path 30 years ago, and we have not deviated from it. | ||
I mean, how amazing are some of the developments over the last couple years, Larry? | ||
It is incredible. | ||
I mean, and I'm saying that with utter seriousness. | ||
It is absolutely incredible. | ||
You know, I've been involved in this struggle on the front lines for approximately 50 years. | ||
And I thank God. | ||
I thank God for the awakening. | ||
That is taking place. | ||
And I repeat, it's not by osmosis. | ||
It's by hard, hard work. | ||
There's nothing romantic about it. | ||
It's hard work. | ||
And you, brothers and sisters, and the incredible Infowars audience, that's who's making it real. | ||
It was a song that came out back in the 60s and 70s called Try to Make It Real, But Compared to What? | ||
Well, compared to you, brothers and sisters, compared to the Infowars tip of the spear audience, love you all so much. | ||
And I'm going to let you go. | ||
I know there are other people who want to get in, but I really felt compelled to share that. | ||
And I hope it will inspire you and strengthen you all to continue and indeed to intensify. | ||
Well, it does do that. | ||
I'd love to talk to you. | ||
We'll have to have you on as a full-fledged guest. | ||
Very soon, because I would love to talk to you about what's going on in the world today, but we'll give a chance to the other callers. | ||
Any final words there, Mr. Pinckney? | ||
Just love and strength and watch your back and carry on. | ||
Carry on, intensify. | ||
Much love to my brothers and sisters. | ||
Black, white, brown, red, yellow. | ||
U.S. citizens. | ||
That's what I'm talking about. | ||
America must come first. | ||
Charity, and this is not charity, but it begins in America, our country, our republic. | ||
So thank you. | ||
Take care, my brother. | ||
Amen. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I guess this is the song he was mentioning. | ||
I was confused. | ||
I thought we were coming to a commercial break. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
What's happening? | ||
Man, powerful stuff. | ||
And I'll tell you, you know, it's true what he's saying. | ||
Not to pat myself on the back, but to pat the crew on the back and the other hosts on the back. | ||
And just this whole organization is so far above any other organization. | ||
I mean, I know people in the other organizations, and I see what people say online. | ||
And it really rubs me the wrong way, and it really does kind of piss me off when people sort of lump Infowars in with some of these other outlets that are paid to hold certain positions, that are, you know, that have ulterior motives in mind. | ||
Infowars is just... | ||
Alex is just the straightest shooter of all time. | ||
Everything he says, you can take to the bank on air. | ||
I find out stuff about Infowars from him on air. | ||
Nothing is hidden. | ||
There's no scheming. | ||
And the work that this crew puts in, the work that our hosts put in, I mean, these other places, they'll do one show a week. | ||
They'll do one podcast, two podcasts a week, something like that. | ||
And they're living in luxury, and it's like we are just diehard, dedicated, day in, day out, 12 hours a day, dedicated to this movement. | ||
And, you know, even under the immense pressure that we've been faced with, the crushing weight of the bankruptcy and the totally fraudulent trials we've had to go through, everybody here, you know, gets it, understands. | ||
Like, it's not easy. | ||
It's not. | ||
This isn't a place that you come to be shot up a ladder to mainstream success. | ||
We're the rebels. | ||
We're the outlaws. | ||
Even by just being on InfoWars, we aren't going to be allowed on a lot of other platforms. | ||
And you just know that's the case. | ||
You know that's how it is. | ||
But it doesn't matter because if we don't win this contest, if we don't reassert the supremacy of individual liberty and our national character, then... | ||
Who cares? | ||
Oh, you're going to have the best job on the Titanic? | ||
Great. | ||
Okay, you'll freeze to death in the water a little later than everybody else, but you're going to freeze to death still. | ||
We're trying to steer the boat away from the iceberg. | ||
And if we can do that, then we'll do it in the steerage if we have to. | ||
So, you know, I don't even like bragging about InfoWars that much, but you've got to know it's true. | ||
You've got to know the work that we put in. | ||
The risks that we take, the effort that we expend on this mission is very real. | ||
And even stuff, you know, people are like, oh, Alex Jones, he sells snake oil. | ||
I think I've explained this before. | ||
The idea of snake oil is that the guy you bought it from would be out of town the next day. | ||
You buy it from a guy at a carnival, the next day the carnival would pack up and move out of town. | ||
You'd never see him again. | ||
So it didn't matter what he sold you because he was just trying to make the quick buck and get out of there before you could get mad at him. | ||
Our entire system is predicated, like Infowars, our system is predicated on return customers, on people coming back over and over again. | ||
So it only makes sense that we sell you the best products available, and it's not a complicated system. | ||
We try desperately to tell you the truth. | ||
We try desperately to inform you about the reality behind the headlines. | ||
And if you think we do a good job, we ask you to go to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
or thealexjonesstore.com And that's it. | ||
That's the deal. | ||
That's the deal that we make. | ||
You like the information? | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com We'll keep giving it to you. | ||
If you don't, we'll go away. | ||
We have no other concerns. | ||
There's no investors we have to please. | ||
There's no advertisers we have to concern ourselves with. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
We tell you the truth. | ||
You go to thealexjonesstore.com and keep us on the air. | ||
And then we sweeten the deal by giving you incredible products that work really well and will change your life and that you can't find anywhere else. | ||
Certainly not at the quality or the prices that we offer them, thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
And in fact, on that note, we have somebody called in. | ||
Bandwagon in Arizona on line four. | ||
Bandwagon, thanks for calling in. | ||
You say you tried the Methylen Blue. | ||
How was it for you? | ||
unidentified
|
Hear me. | |
I can hear you. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
So, I want to talk about the snake oil that you were just speaking about. | |
Do you know anything about one-hit wonders? | ||
The songs or the... | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
So if Chase is on in the background somewhere, he might as well hit the record button and here goes that one-hit wonder. | |
My back used to hurt, but it doesn't hurt anymore. | ||
And that's how I feel right now, man. | ||
Methyl and blue. | ||
That's pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't know why you guys haven't used that, but I took the methylene blue about a week ago, and the reason why I know it's not a placebo effect is because I did not take it for what I expected the methylene blue to do to me. | |
What did it do for you? | ||
We're coming up on a break. | ||
What did it do for you? | ||
unidentified
|
Agonizing pain. | |
My back was agonizing, and I only took it because I wanted energy, but it cured my back pain. | ||
I mean, honestly, that is the amazing thing about so many products that we sell. | ||
You don't know that you're missing them. | ||
You don't know what it's going to do for you. | ||
You don't know what the cause of some of your troubles are. | ||
Until you take these products, you go, oh, that's what it was. | ||
Incredible. | ||
Ultramethyl and blue. | ||
Buy one, get one 50% off. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, third hour is on here at the War Room. | ||
Is it already the third hour? | ||
Time flies. | ||
Time flies when you're having fun. | ||
We're going to go to more of your calls this hour. | ||
We still have a lot of stories to cover, more videos to get to. | ||
Still a lot to come in today's broadcast. | ||
I want to go now to a video by James Lee about private equity. | ||
This is something that we... | ||
We're one of the first outlets to have on Tiffany Cianci, who is sort of leading the charge in exposing how private equity is deliberately bankrupting American institutions. | ||
And we're actually going to have on Ian Carroll on American Journal on Friday. | ||
He's currently hosting Candace Owens' show Monday through Thursday while she is on maternity leave. | ||
But I reached out to him because I thought this is something that... | ||
Awareness is not at the level it should be. | ||
More people need to be aware of the way private equity is dismantling our system, shutting down small businesses, ruthlessly corrupting the capitalistic system that we rely on. | ||
And I think it's something that genuinely, if enough people become aware of this and speak up about this, this is a major problem that we can have a powerful influence in stopping. | ||
So I want to go to this video by James Lee about private equity and the way that they are abusing Americans and it's not being reported on. | ||
This is the dark and twisted story of how the private equity empire built by the late owner of the San Diego Padres, Pete Seidler, drove a small business owner into a forced abortion, allegedly. | ||
Meet Tiffany Cianci, the former owner of The Little Gym, which teaches kids things through movement. | ||
Now, back a few years ago. | ||
The Little Gym was acquired by a company called Unleash Brands. | ||
And Unleash Brands is owned by Seidler Equity Partners, a private equity firm, which was co-founded by the late Pete Seidler, who owned the San Diego Padres. | ||
Now, when Unleash Brands took over the Little Gym, they started making policy changes that were, let's just say, good for corporate, but bad for franchise owners like Tiffany. | ||
This included policies that would, quote, Extract more cash from franchise owners, also making all the franchise owners sign a sketchy new agreement that could potentially, quote, siphon fees from their account automatically. | ||
But in response, Tiffany organized a franchise association, which is kind of like a union, so that her and her fellow owners could bargain collectively. | ||
But the very next day, Unleash terminated her contract, which was bad. | ||
But Tiffany said, OK, fine, I'll just rebrand my business into something else so I could still offer these child enrichment services to my small community. | ||
And that's when Unleash Brands unleashed their fury on her, sued her, took her to court, and she's been fighting for her business and her life ever since. | ||
I sat down with Tiffany and the things that she told me that they did to her just... | ||
Wow. | ||
Wow. | ||
So what's happened since then? | ||
unidentified
|
After that, they exploited all of my relationships that were left of all of the small business owners that were supporting me. | |
They published press releases telling everyone what was happening to me and how much they were spending. | ||
In the most egregious instance, there was a point, and most journalists don't like to talk about this, but where I was going through a difficult pregnancy during my case, I had something called a subchorionic hematoma. | ||
That meant that when I had high blood pressure, I could bleed a lot. | ||
When we told them and gave them the medical records to prove it so I could get a ceasefire, they increased their filings against me. | ||
They threatened me with all of these actions if I didn't keep producing documents and keep showing up for all these cases. | ||
And then when I was put on bed rest, they issued a subpoena to force me to fly to Arizona even though I was on a no-travel bed rest. | ||
The stress of all of that pushed me to a point where I went into early labor. | ||
And when that happened, they filed a motion to compel me to be produced bedside in labor for 18 hours of depositions. | ||
Bedside in labor. | ||
And when that didn't work... | ||
They filed a motion to compel me to expedite the scheduling of an abortion against my will, against my religious beliefs. | ||
Ultimately, they did depose me while I was still having contractions, still in labor pains. | ||
The footage of it is horrific. | ||
When I go back and look at it now, I don't even know how anyone could do the things that were so inhuman that they did. | ||
So it's absolutely brutal, but that's on an individual level. | ||
What's happening with private equity is the reason why things like Joanne's Fabric is going out of business despite 90-plus percent of their stores being profitable. | ||
They are deliberately destroying corporations through this private equity mechanism, and we have to speak up and stop it, or else it's going to just systematically destroy all of these. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
This is War Room. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Lots to cover in this hour. | ||
Phone calls take as well. | ||
Should we gaze into the abyss? | ||
Will you join me in peering into the fetid swamp in human shape? | ||
That is, David Benatar and Joshua Rothman. | ||
Because they wrote an article, or Rothman wrote an article about David Benatar for The New Yorker called The Case for Not Being Born. | ||
The case for not being born. | ||
The anti-natalist philosopher David Benatar argues that it would be better if no one had children ever again. | ||
What do they think this article would do? | ||
What is the psychology behind writing an article like this? | ||
It's really sick. | ||
I don't think I need to necessarily elaborate on this. | ||
This is an older article. | ||
Why was it being spread so much today? | ||
This article is from November 27, 2017. | ||
Everything that was old is new again, the crew tells me. | ||
I'm just hearing this, that everything old is new. | ||
Well, okay. | ||
Either way, I'd never seen this particular article. | ||
I'd seen other ones like it. | ||
And it certainly reflects a deep-seated evil in these people's minds that still exists in a very powerful way. | ||
Dave Benatar may be the world's most pessimistic philosopher and antinatalist. | ||
He believes that life is so bad, so painful. | ||
That human beings should stop having children for reasons of compassion. | ||
Compassion. | ||
Okay. | ||
Quote, In Benatar's view, reproducing is intrinsically cruel and irresponsible. | ||
Not just because a horrible fate can befall anyone, but because life itself is permeated by badness. | ||
In part for this reason, he thinks the world would be a better place if sentient life disappeared altogether. | ||
At least he's honest. | ||
At least he's being honest, right? | ||
Of course, I don't know. | ||
This is one of these stories where it's like, I guess I should. | ||
Do I really have to? | ||
Is it not just repulsive on a cellular level? | ||
And that's the real concerning thing. | ||
Not even that somebody would say this, but that they would publish it as if it's meaningful and important and good. | ||
Obviously, the only response to this It's a very simple command to kill yourself, David Benatar. | ||
If life is so bad, kill yourself immediately. | ||
Please, for the love of God, kill yourself. | ||
David Benatar, Joshua Rothman, kill yourself, okay? | ||
Spare yourself the pain of living. | ||
As we know, I mean, life is so horrible, kill yourself, okay? | ||
That's got to be the only response to this. | ||
But of course, you know... | ||
That human beings are malleable. | ||
And especially in America, the easiest way to influence people is to appeal to their good nature. | ||
Because by and large, people are good, and they want to be good, and they want to be compassionate, and they want to be loving, and they want to be protective. | ||
And it's those people that will read this with an open mind and actually be... | ||
Even if they're not convinced by it, they'll certainly be influenced by it. | ||
And it is sickening, but this mindset has spread. | ||
And I've had conversations with people, acquaintances, that say, like, I'm never having kids because the world is too cruel. | ||
The world is falling apart and global warming is going to kill us all. | ||
So I'm not having kids to save the earth. | ||
It's like, I'm not even necessarily mad at these people. | ||
I feel sorry for them. | ||
Like, what have they done to you? | ||
How do you let these people rob your most basic humanity? | ||
You don't have to. | ||
You can just scoff at this. | ||
We can scoff. | ||
We don't have to debate it. | ||
We don't have to discuss it. | ||
If somebody's telling you not to have kids, they're evil and bad, you should stay away from them. | ||
The people cheering for humanity's end. | ||
I mean, they should just kill themselves. | ||
Like, what is the issue? | ||
What is the big deal? | ||
You don't like it here? | ||
Leave. | ||
A disparate group of thinkers say we should welcome our own demise. | ||
So it just, you know, how do people see stuff like this being written? | ||
And then they ask us, why do you call people anti-human? | ||
You say your opposition is anti-human. | ||
You're just disparaging them. | ||
No, they're anti-human. | ||
Okay, I wish I'd never been born. | ||
The rise of antinatalists. | ||
Adherents view life not as a gift and a miracle, but a harm and imposition. | ||
And their notion that having children may be a bad idea seems to be gaining mainstream popularity. | ||
See, it's not. | ||
It's not gaining mainstream popularity. | ||
But they're attempting to manufacture this consensus. | ||
By writing the same story over and over, they can give the illusion of this being a widespread and accepted position. | ||
It's not. | ||
These people are insane. | ||
Everybody knows they're insane. | ||
But this really is the mindset that's informing a lot of the decisions being made from the people at the top, let's just say. | ||
They say humankind cannot bear very much reality and promises to provide grim answers to questions such as, do our lives have meaning or would it be better if we could live forever? | ||
Benatar was born in South Africa in 1966. | ||
He's head of the philosophy department at the University of Cape Town, where he also directs the university's bioethics center. | ||
The bioethicist of a university thinks that all human life should be eradicated. | ||
So again, I don't even want to give this guy attention. | ||
It's just, it's worth... | ||
Emphasizing how truly, sickeningly, almost unimaginably evil these people are. | ||
So there it is. | ||
There it is. | ||
Just to let you all know what the philosophers are talking about with the people who believe this stuff, welcome this stuff, and think somehow they are above it all. | ||
Just insane. | ||
It's just, I mean, actually insane. | ||
Actually, mental illness. | ||
Let's go out to calls now. | ||
We've got Mark in California has called in about Pam Bondi. | ||
Mark, do you have inside information about this, I hear? | ||
Well, yes, I do. | ||
So, first of all, Harrison Smith, first time calling to the war room, but I listen to you every morning. | ||
That's the first thing I do at 5.45 in the morning is for you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Let me give you this. | ||
You are... | ||
I've got to give you a title. | ||
You're either the Saber of Truth or the Truth Saber. | ||
Truth Saber. | ||
A little bit of a hats off for your fencing background and your love for swords. | ||
So I think you should be either the Saber of Truth or the Truth Saber. | ||
Oh, Saber. | ||
Okay, okay. | ||
I thought you were saying Saver. | ||
Saber. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
S-A-B-R-E. | ||
I'm the Truth Rapier. | ||
Okay. | ||
You know what? | ||
You don't have to give me full credit. | ||
I gave you the idea. | ||
You can be the truth of rapier. | ||
I like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, truth samurai. | |
I like that. | ||
All right. | ||
Okay. | ||
So the point is, I'll make this quick, just like, I'll make this fast, just like my car. | ||
So first of all, Mr. Pinckney, dittles to everything he said. | ||
I love the man. | ||
And of course, my skin is much lighter than his. | ||
Number two. | ||
Is the fact that Pam Bondi, I believe she's either Jeff Sessions in drag or something else. | ||
She's slow walking the Jeffrey Epstein stuff. | ||
She's also stonewalling the Tish James stuff, and I'll tell you why. | ||
You need to get on our buddy Joel Gilbert, which you've had him on in the past. | ||
He only lives like 10 miles from me in Thousand Oaks, California, or at least that's where he hails from. | ||
He's got the lowdown. | ||
She's the one, this goes back to 2012, so we're talking 13 years ago, okay? | ||
She's the one that was either in the DOJ office of the state of Florida or was the attorney general of the state of Florida. | ||
But she's the one where George Zimmerman had to do what he had to do to Trayvon Martin. | ||
The police department at the time when George Zimmerman was taken in because of the shooting for Trayvon Martin. | ||
He was released by the police department because it was a righteous shooting, because he had to defend his life. | ||
He was cleared. | ||
Now, it was because of all the public protests that the state, the governor, Rick Scott, I believe it was, or the governor, whoever it was of Florida, had pressured the DOJ of Florida to press charges against George Zimmerman. | ||
It was Pam Bondi. | ||
And Joel Gilbert has all this information. | ||
He has the documentation. | ||
It was Pam Bondi that wrote a 41-page letter to the court that would not allow the court to bring in the evidence and proof that the woman, quote-unquote, that was Trayvon Martin's girlfriend, was a complete fraud. | ||
And so it was Pam Bondi, okay? | ||
That pushed that and did not allow them to bring in that evidence. | ||
So she's the one that pushed the prosecution of George Zimmerman, i.e. | ||
stoking up all this racial tension, which they're still using even today, i.e. | ||
with the Afrikaners coming into this country now, we have 59 white people being protected here in this country. | ||
And yet, all the people on CNN and all the rest, Alex is right. | ||
They're driving up this white-on-black tension for this summer to go against Trump. | ||
But I'm telling you now, this has been a long thing coming. | ||
And Pam Bondi, I'm sorry to say this as much as I like the woman, and she's only two years younger than my wife of 38 years, and I think she's very attractive. | ||
She's a complete deep state shill. | ||
All right? | ||
So we're in big trouble. | ||
I think we got a bad summer going ahead. | ||
And Joel Gilbert, you need to have him on again. | ||
I think you've had, I know he's been on your network several times. | ||
Yeah, well, and I remember and really enjoyed the documentary he made about Trayvon Martin and exposing that the girlfriend wasn't really the girlfriend. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of good information in that documentary. | ||
I forgot that Ms. Bondi, or I maybe never knew that Ms. Bondi was, Pam Bondi was a part of that. | ||
I thought you were going to talk about the fact that she was in the office in Florida when Epstein was first tried and given the sweetheart deal. | ||
So you're right. | ||
I mean, she's been involved in a lot of these national stories for a long time. | ||
I did not realize the thing about Trayvon Martin. | ||
And that was, I mean, that was the kickoff, right? | ||
That was the launchpad for all of Black Lives Matter. | ||
Following after that, the hands up, don't shoot. | ||
I mean, every single one of these cases has been flagrantly and deliberately misinterpreted by the mainstream media, lied about, and created something where there was nothing. | ||
But regardless, I mean, we've seen the effects that it's had, and they've successfully terrorized the governmental and corporate world in America to promise to stop hiring white people and do all this other destructive stuff. | ||
Didn't realize Pam Bondi was a part of that. | ||
I mean, what do you make of the article that we were reading earlier about the fact that Pam Bondi seems to be operating largely as a spokesperson and that the actual decisions from the DOJ are coming directly from the White House from people? | ||
Well, she's playing her part because, remember, with the Trump 1.0, we had Jeff Sessions. | ||
You know, the whole Q thing, which I knew was a sci-up from the beginning, it was all, Jeff Sessions is working on it, White Hats are back there working on it, and he was a complete plug in the pipes of justice. | ||
And the pipes, when I say pipes, I'm talking water pipes, okay? | ||
I gotcha. | ||
And Bondi is the same thing. | ||
Remember, it was Matt Gaetz that was supposed to be the AG of the DOJ. | ||
And then... | ||
All of a sudden, we got this beautiful 59-year-old blonde woman, okay? | ||
Who, by the way, and I'm just saying this because I've been only married to one woman, but I've got many women in my life. | ||
My own mother, other grandmothers, and daughters, and sisters, okay? | ||
She's never had children. | ||
A lot of like Angela Merkel and all that. | ||
It just seems to me to be this thing about women. | ||
They'd never have children. | ||
They'd get into positions of power, okay, that can be controlled. | ||
That's just a conjecture on my part. | ||
But take it from a guy in his, you know, mid-60s who's been married to the same woman but had interactions with many women. | ||
The point is, she is, I'm coming full circle, she's, as far as I'm concerned, she's Jeff Shessens in drag. | ||
Jeff Shesson came in at the beginning of Trump's first administration, and we were all relying on him to do the right things. | ||
He never did a darn thing, okay? | ||
And it was Mike Pence. | ||
I'm coming full circle again. | ||
Mike Pence was the one who was the very beginning of the saboteur of the first Trump administration because he's the one that threw Mike Flynn under the bus, that started the whole ball rolling with the Russian— Yeah, absolutely. | ||
And Pam Bundy's holding back on everything with Tisha James, Jeffrey Epstein, and I'm just telling you, she's the saboteur, my opinion. | ||
Well, I know, here's the Miami Herald article from way back then, says Pam Bundy looks into the Trayvon Martin case. | ||
The good news is, nobody trusts Pam Bundy. | ||
I mean, nobody I listen to, I mean, outside of, you know, the Fox News show, she goes on. | ||
Not a lot of people are happy with Pam Bondi. | ||
I think she completely bungled the Epstein release. | ||
I mean, there's still a lot of unanswered questions about that. | ||
Looking through it in the most optimistic view, and this is pure speculation and probably just hopium at this point, there is a possibility that the Epstein files have something to do with the He'll turn that Trump has taken over the last couple of weeks where he apparently is no longer playing ball with Israel, | ||
not even interacting with Netanyahu, making sort of a fool of them when it comes to the hostage situation, getting out the last hostage from Hamas when Israel is basically stonewalled any other hostage negotiations, negotiating with Iran. | ||
You know, no longer carrying out attacks against the Houthis for their behalf. | ||
I mean, a lot has changed in terms of America and Israel's relationship. | ||
And I can't help but wonder if that has something to do with the Epstein files. | ||
As we know, Epstein was one node of a very large and sophisticated intelligence operation carried out by Israel. | ||
And so I just wonder, and I don't have any information to back this up, but it's just... | ||
And believe it or not, believe it or don't believe it, it's up to you, but it would explain at least potentially why the Epstein files haven't been released in full. | ||
If you really do have thousands of hours of this stuff and FBI agents pouring through it, and if you can make a compelling case for the fact that this was an Israeli spy operation, a Mossad program being carried out, that would either give plenty of reason for the... | ||
American administration to cut ties, at least in some part, from the Israeli operatives in our government like Mike Waltz. | ||
Or it could be actually potentially blackmail material on Israel going, hey, if we release this to the American people, everybody's going to not like you anymore and not want you to be funded by America anymore. | ||
You really don't want this information coming out. | ||
So, you know, now we're talking on even terms. | ||
I don't know if that's the case, but it's a possibility. | ||
And I can't help but notice the temporal alignment of these things. | ||
Thank you very much for the call, Mark. | ||
And yeah, I don't think you need to tell any MAGA diehards not to trust Pam Bondi. | ||
I think we're all looking a little asconced at her. | ||
The fact that she's got more Fox News appearances than indictments under her belt is not a good thing. | ||
Thank you for that, Mark. | ||
Let's go to the King of Wonderland in Wisconsin, KOW. | ||
Go ahead, you're on the air. | ||
Hey, Harrison. | ||
Yeah, I'm kind of upset. | ||
I don't know if you do this, but have you ever looked into, in the world, who has the cheapest gas per gallon? | ||
I have never looked into that, nope. | ||
Isn't that weird? | ||
You know, we always talk about gas prices, and I was wondering, like, does the U.S. even have, like, how do we rank? | ||
You know, we're number one in the world with so many things. | ||
And I was surprised to see the list that, like, in Iran, apparently a giant enemy of the world, they have 12 cents a gallon per gallon of gas. | ||
It's crazy to me. | ||
And it's like this small country that has a GDP and technology nowhere near the U.S. has such cheap gas prices. | ||
And I looked into it. | ||
It's because the people of Iran... | ||
That it's, you know, you're pulling the gas from our land, that we should have subsidies. | ||
And I'm not saying maybe, you know, it can't be in the U.S., but can it be a buck? | ||
You know, we have so much gas reserves here in the U.S., you know, I don't understand why that's not possible. | ||
Well, okay, you're asking questions that get into very deep history. | ||
I mean, the reason Iran is the way it is now is because... | ||
Basically, they wanted to nationalize the oil reserves. | ||
BP, it was the precursor to BP. | ||
British Petroleum had control of Iran and was exporting their – was getting all the profit from the oil they were harvesting from Iran, and Iran didn't like that anymore. | ||
So that kind of makes sense that they would pass the savings on to their people. | ||
But, I mean, when you talk about gas prices, there are so many things that are kind of – They're kind of counterintuitive with gas prices. | ||
I mean, basically, you know, Saudi Arabia being the primary supplier of gas right now have the ability to just to raise billions of dollars on a whim by just ratcheting up gas prices for a little while. | ||
And that'll crush industry around the world. | ||
I mean, there's a reason why things like, you know, free energy are suppressed so aggressively. | ||
And it's because the whole world and our entire governmental, international, geopolitical, commercial system is predicated on the flow of oil, and you disrupt that, you disrupt absolutely everything. | ||
So, yeah, it's not something you can overlook when it comes to all of everything going on in the Middle East, is the usefulness and the way that they use gas prices, oil production, and our Middle Eastern allies. | ||
So, yeah, if you want to know why Iran's gas prices... | ||
Are so cheap, you're going to have to go back to the 1950s and then the 70s and look at the way that the oil under Iran has been a major source of strife for them under BP and others. | ||
We'll go back to more calls on the other side. | ||
We've got a couple of callers from Canada, I see. | ||
We'll go to some of you guys. | ||
And I'll take some criticism as well, so stay tuned for that. | ||
I do want to remind you to go to the Alex Jones store. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com to support absolutely everything that we do here. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com. | ||
No matter what happens with InfoWars in the future and our fate is still up in the air, we're still waiting on decisions from the court to determine whether we can even exist or not. | ||
Regardless of what happens, TheAlexJonesStore.com supports us, keeps us on the air, keeps us in the fight, and keeps us continuing to tell the truth into the future. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com. | ||
Methyl and Blue is now. | ||
Buy one, get one. | ||
50% off. | ||
So if you were thinking about buying it, now's the time. | ||
If you like it, stock up, thealexjohnestore.com. | ||
All right, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, final segment of The War Room for today's broadcast, Wednesday, 14th of May. | ||
I got some stories that I want to at least touch on and tell you about. | ||
And one final video to get to before we continue to take your calls. | ||
First of all, just breaking. | ||
Rogue communication devices found in Chinese solar power inverters. | ||
This is from Reuters.com, published just earlier today. | ||
U.S. energy officials are reassessing the risk posed by Chinese-made devices that play a critical role in renewable energy infrastructure after unexplained communication equipment was found inside some of them, two people familiar with the matter said. | ||
Power inverters, which are predominantly produced in China, are used throughout the world to connect solar panels and wind turbines to electricity grids. | ||
They're also found in batteries, heat pumps, and electric vehicle chargers. | ||
While inverters are built to allow remote access for updates and maintenance, the utility companies that use them typically install firewalls to prevent direct communication back to China. | ||
However, rogue communication devices not listed in product documents have been found in some Chinese solar power inverters by U.S. experts who stripped down equipment hooked up to grids to check for security issues. | ||
The two people said over the last nine months, undocumented communication devices, including cellular radios, Have also been found in some batteries from multiple Chinese suppliers, one of them said. | ||
And so this is actually something that's gone on for a while, and we've reported on it. | ||
And the stories I don't think ever get as much attention as they should, but it just shows another major glaring issue in relying on your geopolitical enemy to produce everything you need to run your country. | ||
I mean, this is ridiculous. | ||
We are giving... | ||
China, the ability to remotely shut off our electricity grid at a whim. | ||
Why do we allow this? | ||
And how long has this gone on? | ||
And how many of these types of things have gone totally unnoticed? | ||
It's just absolutely completely insane. | ||
But it's just another reminder that, yes, things that we get from China are often, they often contain weird communication devices. | ||
That China apparently can control and that they don't tell us about until we catch them. | ||
So just a fair warning for everybody of what's going to happen when and if China and America go to war. | ||
They basically have an off switch for our entire electric grid because we've allowed this to happen because we're ruled and run by traitors. | ||
So there you go. | ||
So there you go. | ||
unidentified
|
Meanwhile... | |
Talking about the Democrats flailing incompetence, they're really setting new benchmarks for this. | ||
DNC subcommittee votes to void election of David Hogg, Kenyatta, as vice chairs. | ||
David Hogg, who's been at the center of the Democratic National Committee controversy over his efforts to primary, quote, out-of-touch, ineffective incumbents in Congress, is at risk of losing his position as the committee's vice chair. | ||
Hogg announced in April that his group, Leaders We Deserve, was pouring $20 million to help fund young candidates who will challenge incumbents in safe blue districts. | ||
DNC Chairman Ken Martin has urged officials to remain neutral in primary elections, giving Hogg an ultimatum of resigning from the committee or divorcing himself from his organization. | ||
And it goes even deeper than that. | ||
Hogg was basically using the DNC mailing list to try to fundraise for his own private organization. | ||
And it's just like, what do you expect? | ||
What do you expect? | ||
You're running an organization composed of stupid people and evil people. | ||
I mean, what do you expect? | ||
I saw somebody post, you know, David Hogg shocked at the We Hate White People party, oust him for being white. | ||
And that is what's happening. | ||
Apparently, the credentials committee of the DNC voted in favor of a resolution on Monday recommending voiding. | ||
The February election, they made Hogg and Malcolm Kenyatta vice chairs. | ||
It's like, how many parts of this? | ||
How many parts of this are like so stereotypical? | ||
It's completely crazy. | ||
You've got the fact that they're putting radicals in positions of power, destroying their own chances at governance, sort of a habit of the Democrats. | ||
You've got the fact that they bring on David Hogg, who is a total media creation, right, after Parkland. | ||
He wasn't even at the school. | ||
Somehow he became the spokesperson. | ||
People from Parkland going, we don't like this guy. | ||
He's basically grandstanding on the bodies of our dead classmates. | ||
Regardless, he's an anti-gun activist. | ||
He's a son of an FBI agent. | ||
He's like an establishment creation. | ||
He's still not good enough for them. | ||
They vote for the radical to be in charge. | ||
He immediately starts basically hijacking their platform to fundraise for himself because, of course, that's what they always do. | ||
And then they oust him by undoing the election. | ||
You know, the champions of democracy saying, actually, our committee's decided the election doesn't count because we don't like the person you elected. | ||
It's just, it's kind of perfect. | ||
It's all kind of actually perfect. | ||
And the reason that they're... | ||
Shutting it down is because of diversity. | ||
The vote comes after DNC member Kaylin Free, who ran for the vice chair position, argued in a complaint that the procedure by which Hogg and Kenyatta were elected, quote, unfairly disadvantaged the female candidates on the ballot. | ||
So it's like they don't adhere to the results of elections. | ||
Their ranks are fraught with... | ||
Just radicals and scam artists skimming off the top. | ||
They're destroying themselves over diversity drive. | ||
It's just like, how much more perfect could it be? | ||
How much more perfect could it be? | ||
That's what a white man gets for trying to be a part of the We Hate White People party. | ||
But honestly, I'm sticking by it. | ||
I've been saying for a long time, I'm Team Hogg. | ||
I'm Team Hogg. | ||
I say you voted for him, you gotta stick with him. | ||
David Hogg should do everything in his power to resist being so unfairly and unlawfully removed from the position that he earned, that he deserves, that he should have. | ||
I don't think the DNC should get to degrade their own reputation by refusing to adhere to the results of an election that they held. | ||
I think they have to stick to it. | ||
I think... | ||
It's best for them, and for their own good, you have to stick with Hogg. | ||
We're Team Hogg, 100% here. | ||
We love David Hogg, and we're so happy that he is in charge of the DNC, and it would be a terrible mistake to remove him. | ||
Please keep him in control. | ||
It's going so well. | ||
We love to see it. | ||
So good luck. | ||
So good luck to all of them. | ||
Meanwhile, and in a story you'll likely only find here on Infowars, Tony Blair... | ||
Apparently it's still around and making decisions. | ||
Wants UK to enable animal gene editing and precision bred livestock. | ||
Certainly this isn't a can of worms. | ||
This isn't a Pandora's box just waiting to have horrific outcomes come about. | ||
Is genetically editing animals really about preventing pandemics or is there something deeper to it? | ||
I think there's something deeper to it actually. | ||
Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair calls on the British government to enable gene editing and fund precision-bred livestock research to make animals, quote, more resilient to viruses and prevent the spread of dangerous pathogens to humans. | ||
So we're now doing gain-of-function programming on cows, is what they want. | ||
Gene editing to prevent further pandemics. | ||
I mean, you remember that pandemic we released, right? | ||
We created a virus in a lab, released it on the world, and now we need to edit your genes to prevent that from happening again. | ||
Problem, reaction, solution. | ||
How absurd. | ||
The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change published a lengthy report, co-written by Sir Anthony Blair himself, called A New National Purpose Biosecurity as the Foundation for Growth and Global Leadership. | ||
It focuses on several biosecurity risks ranging from pandemics to DNA synthesis and biological warfare, along with policy proposals to tackle them. | ||
And I'm sure this is all about making farming and raising livestock safer and better and more productive, right? | ||
I mean, that would be weird if it was. | ||
It would be weird if this program helped farmers because everything else these people do is very... | ||
Carefully designed to destroy the ability of people to feed themselves. | ||
Do I need to remind you that the UK recently greenlit a plan to block out the sun? | ||
Probably not great for people who want to raise crops. | ||
And at the same time, they're going after farmers in every way that they possibly can with an excise tax or a death tax on English farmers, forcing them off of their ancestral lands because they can't afford to pay the extortionary. | ||
Fees for dying, totally insane, but absolutely destroying the ability of small farms to exist in England. | ||
And that, of course, is just the UK. | ||
If you go to the Netherlands and France and Germany and Spain, all of their farmers are facing massive impediments to success, massive restrictions, all for sort of different excuses, but the result is always the same, that it's harder, more difficult, and in some cases impossible to continue. | ||
To produce food at the levels that they produce them because they don't control seeds. | ||
Because the people in power can't turn off food if you can grow it on the ground. | ||
If you can plant a seed, grow food, take the seed from that food and plant more, that is the Earth's natural bounty providing for humanity. | ||
And they see that as a challenge. | ||
They're jealous of that. | ||
They don't want us to be able to take advantage. | ||
They'd rather us live in concrete boxes and everything would be factory farmed or produced in a lab somewhere. | ||
That way, if we misbehave, they can kill us. | ||
That's what it's about. | ||
That's what the purpose of it is. | ||
So it would be very, very strange to me if they're now introducing gene editing and precision-bred livestock in order to help the people that they claim are destroying the earth by raising cows. | ||
So be suspicious of that. | ||
Now, the UK has taken a very bizarre and, as far as I can tell, inexplicable turn against immigrants. | ||
And I'm having trouble wrapping my mind around this. | ||
First of all, we know this is the case in all of Europe, although the numbers out of Spain are particularly crazy from Infowars. | ||
Nearly 80% of arrests in Barcelona involve foreign nationals. | ||
80% of the people arrested in Barcelona, Spain, are foreign nationals. | ||
Which is just, okay. | ||
I mean, it's just insane. | ||
It's just completely crazy. | ||
Just imagine a world where there's 80% less crime. | ||
That's the case if you just don't have tens of millions of migrants flooding into your country. | ||
It's one of those things, like, what would happen if you removed all of the immigrants? | ||
Well, crime would go down 80%. | ||
You would save billions upon billions of dollars a year. | ||
House prices would collapse. | ||
And families would be able to buy homes rather than paying endlessly into the coffers of landlords. | ||
Everything gets worse when these people's policies go into action because that's the point of the policies. | ||
Prime Minister of Britain has done a complete 180 on this. | ||
Again, I can't tell. | ||
I mean, this is really impossible to explain. | ||
This is like you turn on TV and Smokey the Bear is telling you to light the forest on fire. | ||
It's like, this is not right. | ||
How is this happening? | ||
Why are these people suddenly and without explanation completely reversing their long-held and strident stances? | ||
This doesn't make any sense. | ||
Keir Starmer on X says, settlement in the UK is a privilege that is earned, not a right. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
Since when? | ||
He says, I've already returned over 24,000 people with no right to be here, and I won't stop there. | ||
Okay, and is he being arrested? | ||
And is Keir Starmer being thrown in prison for hate speech? | ||
Because that's the type of stuff that would get you thrown in prison for hate speech under Keir Starmer. | ||
So what is happening here? | ||
What is this? | ||
What's going on? | ||
The only thing I can figure out from this is that they must have run some, you know, AI simulation that told them like, okay, this is unsustainable. | ||
The peasants are going to revolt if we keep trying to replace them all with Africans. | ||
We have to reverse course because nothing happened, right? | ||
I mean, this would... | ||
Kind of makes sense if it occurred after some of the brutal murders that have taken place at the hands of immigrants. | ||
In response to that, we're going to take a look at this. | ||
But in that case, they imprisoned everybody who spoke up against the vicious murders of little English girls by insane migrants and would throw you in jail for saying things like they don't have a right to be in the UK. | ||
But now Keir Starmer himself is putting this out. | ||
Really, I'm missing some connections here. | ||
You go from imprisoning people saying this to saying it yourself. | ||
This requires an explanation. | ||
What changed in your mind? | ||
And it may just be polling. | ||
It may just be like, well, we're just going to lose if we keep pushing this because this position is so unpopular now. | ||
Which in and of itself, I guess you could consider a victory for us. | ||
A victory for the pro-Europe. | ||
Pro-English side of things, knowing that the discussion about this has gone so far that even the Liberal government has to comply with the demands to deport some of these people. | ||
It's all very interesting. | ||
And recently a journalist from the UK went in and asked some people about what was going on. | ||
His name's Patrick Christie. | ||
We'll go to clip number 30 here. | ||
This is him talking to some migrants about why they want to go to England, and I'll just take a look. | ||
Why should English people pay for you to have a house? | ||
unidentified
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Maybe they give me a house, give me anything I can need, give me. | |
Just give it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Why? | ||
unidentified
|
Because people in England are perfect. | |
Oh, so you think we're all rich people? | ||
Can I tell you something? | ||
We are not all rich people. | ||
If I said to you, look, we don't have enough houses in England, would that stop you coming to England? | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe I come back to my country and I change to another country. | |
Yeah, maybe you try another country if you realize that we can't afford England, yeah? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Yeah, okay. | ||
Now, I just want everyone at home to understand that every single person in this room is absolutely desperate to come to Britain. | ||
The only reason they are here is to try to come to Britain. | ||
So he's in Calais, the port. | ||
City of Calais. | ||
I mean, you couldn't make propaganda better if you tried. | ||
You really couldn't. | ||
Why should the English people give you a house? | ||
Give it to me? | ||
Sorry, give it to me. | ||
I want it, give it to me. | ||
Okay, but why? | ||
Because you have it and I want it. | ||
Give it to me. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like... | |
Yeah. | ||
10 million of those guys. | ||
Making the country better, aren't they? | ||
Let's go out to your calls now. | ||
I mean, what is there more to say? | ||
It's like some of this stuff, sure, I could pontificate on it. | ||
I could go on for an hour about that video that we just saw. | ||
Do I need to? | ||
I mean, you saw yourself. | ||
Why should we give you a house? | ||
Gimme, gimme, gimme. | ||
This is the argument from the migrants. | ||
Because you're all so rich and wealthy and well-off. | ||
Which in and of itself, even if it was true... | ||
You don't deserve it. | ||
Like, what are you talking about? | ||
It's his mindset. | ||
It's just crazy. | ||
It's like they think this stuff just fell from the sky. | ||
These houses just appeared one day, and the English happened to be lucky enough to get it, and that's unfair, so he wants one too. | ||
It's like, all right, I don't need to go on. | ||
I really don't, because you saw it right there. | ||
Gimme, gimme, gimme. | ||
It's like, you know, there's one phrase in English, and it's give that to me. | ||
And apparently that's probably going to work. | ||
He's probably going to be, you know. | ||
Living in a Victorian-era hotel by the end of the week. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Let's go to Andrew in Indianapolis first. | ||
Thank you for holding, Andrew. | ||
You're on the air, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey there, Harrison. | |
Love you guys and the great job you all do. | ||
I've been listening to Alex for like 20 years, and every day you're on at least three devices streaming 24-7 in our house. | ||
So it drives my family nuts. | ||
They love it, too. | ||
They're learning whether they like it or not. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, for real. | |
Yeah. | ||
Anyway, I just called to give you a product plug. | ||
I've been drinking a lot for many years. | ||
I got to a point where, like, I'd wake up with the shakes and morning nausea, you know? | ||
Definitely a lot of put together. | ||
But, yeah, I had that, you know, how they always say, like, oh, just do a shot to calm the nerves, you know? | ||
And so I got to where I just... | ||
I wouldn't get buzzed or anything, but throughout the day, if I felt that coming on, I'd just do a shot, and it worked. | ||
But on April 21st, my first order of methylene blue came in, and so I was still doing the shots throughout the day, you know, but I took a full dose. | ||
No, actually, I did a half dose the first day. | ||
And I still kept drinking throughout the night, didn't think anything of it. | ||
And I noticed the same stuff that, like, Dr. Kirk and Alex talk about, where I had, like, the finger tingles. | ||
The air felt lighter. | ||
Like a huge fog got lifted off my brain. | ||
And I didn't think much of it. | ||
But the next morning when I woke up, I had no shakes, no nausea. | ||
Like, it was gone. | ||
And I didn't know what to make of it, so I gave it a couple hours just to see. | ||
You know, I was just waiting for it to kick in. | ||
And nothing. | ||
So I took my vodka off the counter. | ||
Been there probably more than 10 years every day. | ||
I threw it in the cabinet, did another shot of methylene blue, and I've been, I guess, a recovering alcoholic ever since April 22nd. | ||
Wow, that is amazing. | ||
So it's been almost a month now, and you're still going well? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, after more than a decade, yeah. | |
And I mention it to my doctor, because we've been trying to combat a plan, you know, because I didn't want to necessarily quit, but just, you know, like, cut back. | ||
And I had been. | ||
I told her, she's like, "Oh, why didn't I think of that?" So, apparently there's some data, you know, to support a positive reaction in cases of, like, alcohol withdrawal symptoms. | ||
But it was something I was totally not expecting at all. | ||
I was just seeing what the stuff was all about, and that was a very positive side effect. | ||
So, I hadn't heard anybody tell any reaction like that, and that was mine, and it's pretty crazy. | ||
That is absolutely incredible. | ||
Well, congratulations, Andrea, and I hope you keep it up. | ||
Glad Methyl and Blue has helped you with that. | ||
I'm telling you, I said it last, I mean, somebody call in and says chronic back pain went away, alcoholics getting off the sauce. | ||
It's like you really, I'm telling you, you don't know what it's going to do for you until you try it. | ||
You really don't. | ||
And it's the same with iodine. | ||
It's the same with a lot of stuff that we sell. | ||
It's like, until you take it, you don't know what positive effect it's going to have. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, and I do like all your products, too. | |
I mean, I've probably tried about 80% of them. | ||
I still probably get about... | ||
60% of the ones I've tried just regularly. | ||
My wife loves them, too. | ||
That is fantastic. | ||
Well, hey, folks, get yours today, thealexjonesstore.com, Methyl and Blue, on sale now. | ||
Buy one, get one 50% off, and just see what happens, folks. | ||
And it is powerful stuff, and I feel like every time I plug it, I need to say, make sure it's right for you. | ||
Make sure you talk to your doctor. | ||
I'm glad you talked to your doctor about it, because... | ||
You know, ultramethyl and blue is the most powerful stuff on the market. | ||
Methyl and blue itself, no matter what, is going to be powerful. | ||
And, you know, make sure it's right for you before you take it. | ||
Make sure it's not going to, you know, interact with the medications that you take. | ||
That's sort of the primary issue, really the only issue people have with it. | ||
But it's just incredible. | ||
That's fantastic here. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, Andrew. | ||
Thank you for holding on to tell us that story. | ||
And congratulations. | ||
Sir, I want to go quickly. | ||
We only have about a minute and a half left, but Marcus in Idaho had some criticism for me, so I wanted to hear that. | ||
Go ahead, Marcus, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, Harrison. | |
I think it was terrible that you told those people to kill them. | ||
And I also think that you need to give other people a lot more time because you think too highly of yourself. | ||
You're always about you, you, you, and your ideas and your ideas. | ||
I think you need to give people more time. | ||
Okay. | ||
You have time. | ||
What would you like to say? | ||
Well, you don't like that I told the people advocating for the end of life on Earth to kill themselves? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I don't. | |
No, I don't. | ||
I think that's a totally leftist idea. | ||
Somebody saying, kill yourself, is somebody that's totally leftist. | ||
That's what people in Canada do. | ||
That's what people on the other websites do. | ||
They say, kill yourself. | ||
Please kill yourself. | ||
And that's pretty terrible. | ||
Okay, but I'm not saying for them to kill themselves because I don't like them. | ||
I'm saying that if they're advocating for an end of life on Earth, they have no right to dictate life on Earth. | ||
They have one life that they're in charge of. | ||
They have one life that's up to them to dispose of. | ||
So if they're desperate to end life on Earth, there's one life that they can take out, and that's their own. | ||
So I say that to people who are advocating mass death, mass suicide, essentially. | ||
So it's just turning it around on themselves. | ||
I would much rather have them come to Jesus and stop spreading a philosophy of total human death and absolute destruction. | ||
Sorry I didn't give you more time, Marcus, fulfilling your criticism. | ||
I'll be back tomorrow morning to talk even more on American Journal. | ||
See you then. | ||
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Oh, God Almighty. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, God Almighty. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, we only promote the very best supplements that we know are good for you and we know really work, so you want to come back and buy them again. | ||
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But my friends, this methylene blue that we got that's medical grade is such a game changer. | ||
And you hear the listeners that have gotten theirs and used it calling in. | ||
Even when I'm not asking callers to call in about it, they call in other topics, but just rave about it because it's so amazing. | ||
Let me tell you about the methylene blue. | ||
I have a renter, and he came walking up to my house to pay his rent, and he looked like a walking corpse. | ||
He worked at our local packing plant, Tyson, night shift. | ||
I mean, he looked like, I said, walking corpse. | ||
I gave him two huge shots of that methylene blue, and then saw him a couple days later. | ||
He looked like a different person. | ||
He said he was still feeling the effects of it. | ||
Now, Robert McKinney Jr. has been seen taking three doses of it, three droppers. | ||
I don't do that. | ||
I only take it every two or three days, take about a half dose, half a dropper, because it's just too good if I take more. | ||
And by too good, I'm so happy and so content. | ||
Literally, I suddenly don't even want to fight the New World Order. | ||
But what it does is it opens up your cells, cleans them out, empowers the mitochondria, the engines of them, and there's literally hundreds and hundreds of studies on how amazing it is. | ||
But consult your physician before, because some people have conditions that methylene blue can not be good with. | ||
So, do your own research, consult your physician, but if you want to try the strongest, best methylene blue we've ever found, It's available at thealexnoshore.com, ultra-methylene blue. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm about to unleash my unlimited power. | |
I just wanted to promote the methylene blue. | ||
My husband and I own a heat and air business, and every time a new technician comes in, I'm like, all right, you've got to try it. | ||
All right, 15 minutes, how do you feel? | ||
Talk to me. | ||
And it's definitely put a pep in my step-mama for it. | ||
So you're doing the same thing we're doing on air. | ||
So how many people have you given ultra-methylene blue to? | ||
unidentified
|
I've given it to eight different people. | |
And only one of them, who's super athletic, didn't have a huge... | ||
He said it felt like a cup of coffee, but all the other guys, night and day. | ||
Well, that's the thing, and that's in the medical literature. | ||
The more problems you have mitochondrally, and you can be in great shape, but not have good mitochondria genetics, is the more you feel it, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
For me, it's like a fog lifted. | ||
It's kind of like, oh, I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not happy. | |
I'm not sad. | ||
unidentified
|
But it was like a... | |
A veil lifted off, you know? | ||
Incredible. |