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The silent majority is no longer silent. | |
This is the war room with Owen Schroyer. | ||
Don't stand by for further details. | ||
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They're returning out to your regularly scheduled program. | |
It's as if fentanyl is raining on our reservation. | ||
But I'll do anything to help. | ||
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Marvin Wetherwax Jr. is a tribal leader here and says much of the drug activity on his reservation stems from Mexican cartels selling to community members and using their homes, often in remote areas, as distribution hubs. | |
They've infiltrated our reservation. | ||
They've married in. | ||
They've basically set up shop. | ||
It's just a problem that won't go away. | ||
Just this week, I officially designated the drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, including Trendi Aragua and MS13, which gives us great power. | ||
Trump's saying they're going to strategically target the cartels. | ||
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We're talking about sending military forces to fight against the drug cartels in Latin America. | |
Do you think it's worth sending our forces, our U.S. forces there to take this on? | ||
We love this country like they love their countries. | ||
We have to protect our country. | ||
Oh, you know, you can't do that. | ||
So much money's laundered through to collapse the economy. | ||
Trump doesn't care. | ||
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According to the New York Times, behind the scenes, Trump's moving all the pieces into place to pull this off. | |
Mexico has got a big problem. | ||
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But it has nothing to do with Mexican territory. | |
It has to do with their country. | ||
It does not involve our territory. | ||
So it would be within the United States? | ||
Within the United States. | ||
Exactly. | ||
El Presidente doesn't comprehend that. | ||
Mexico's president draws red line U.S. kinetic operations against drug cartels not welcome on her soil. | ||
Well, you know what's not welcome? | ||
Millions are dead from fentanyl and all the crime and all the human trafficking and all the crap. | ||
In 1989, the Sinaloa drug cartel dug its first drug tunnel between a house in Agua Prieta, Sonora, to a warehouse located in Douglas, Arizona. | ||
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Is this appear to be an isolated case, or perhaps is it part of a tunnel network? | |
They're not quite sure about this. | ||
They say the investigation is continuing, but they say that they believe that this is in no way a maiden voyage for these people. | ||
They must have had quite a bit of financial backing and have been working in drug smuggling for quite some time. | ||
Now, 34 years later, new evidence reveals that the Mexican drug cartels have burrowed their way into the American government. | ||
The Sinaloa cartel is like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | ||
Let me get this right. | ||
The Federal Reserve of the United States of America is now in the business of money laundering. | ||
Count us in. | ||
And so now they are laundering their money through the pot industry of Colorado. | ||
One of the many problems in Mexico today is that the cartels have diversified. | ||
They've gotten into cargo theft and kidnapping and avocados and limes and real estate and local government. | ||
And criminality is always going to exist. | ||
Arizona-based forensic investigator Jacqueline Breger dove down a deep rabbit hole into the sovereign dismantling corruption narrative after appearing in front of the Arizona Legislature Senate Elections Committee and House Municipal Oversight and Elections Committee. | ||
Breger claimed that while investigating a nationwide racketeering epidemic involving the Sinaloa drug cartel, their team accidentally discovered election fraud. | ||
The web involved a real estate money laundering operation infiltrating all levels of government constructed in order to trade influence to the Sinaloa cartel for backdoor money and control over elections and anyone that stood in their way. | ||
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We concluded that several real estate agents convicted in Iowa had set up laundering systems in Arizona and thereafter had transferred the proceeds of sales to the Panamanian corporations. | |
These documents have definitely evidenced multiple racketeering enterprises. | ||
And the Mexican military will finally work with us as soon as their president buckles. | ||
And the army's pretty corrupt down there, I'm told from my sources, the Navy and their Marines are pretty good. | ||
The Mexican Marines. | ||
And then your Shinebaum can take a hike down there if she wants to work with the cartels. | ||
So you want to find a war Alex Jones is for? | ||
You want to find a war that I support? | ||
It's not against the Mexican people. | ||
They're the main victims of this, even worse than us. | ||
It is the drug cartels do not respect this country, do not respect us. | ||
And of course, the CIA helped do it. | ||
And Trump's taking control of that. | ||
They're going after the banks that launder the money. | ||
They're shutting down the CIA operations. | ||
And they've told the cartels, they've had seven months. | ||
And they told the Mexican government. | ||
Trump told them, you will make a real effort to shut this down, or we're going to come down there and we're going to kill people. | ||
Wars are when you're actually being killed by somebody. | ||
Wars are for when someone is crapping all over you. | ||
Wars is when a neighboring country does not respect you and is run by criminals that are attacking you. | ||
That's what war is for when it's just. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, it's Tuesday, August 12th, 2025. | ||
This is the Infowars Warroom. | ||
The fastest three hours on the internet starts now. | ||
We've got some news here that's kind of been developing, but I was looking at the larger scope and scale of it, and it's time to have a larger conversation about this. | ||
It kind of ties into the AI conversation that we're not having, but this is a little more specific where you have the federal takeover of D.C., which you can obviously argue is in need of some form of law enforcement reform or intensity, but you could argue that for many cities. | ||
So, okay, maybe you give it a try in Washington, D.C. But when you have the backdrop of the surveillance state and you have the backdrop of what ICE is starting to engage, like eye scanning technology to identify individuals for deportation, you start to look at these things coming together and you have to realize that, yeah, the threat that this will be used against us is very real. | ||
And so, how do you balance that? | ||
And how do we have a proper conversation, but at the same time, not discounting the problems that we're trying to solve here, like the rampant crime in inner cities. | ||
So, I would say the solution is you need better judges and prosecutors. | ||
If you want to be specific about it, it's not about left and right. | ||
It's just the fact of the matter. | ||
It is the leftists, it is the liberal progressives, it is the Soros district attorneys, prosecuting attorneys, and judges that are keeping criminals out on the streets. | ||
In fact, we just had a situation here yesterday with a shooter, a killer in Austin who had a long criminal history of violent crimes, including in Travis County. | ||
Now, they also had to admit he had mental health problems. | ||
So, we all know what that means: popping pills. | ||
Okay, so now we're looking at this and we're staring the digital AI interface surveillance state right in the right in the face. | ||
I mean, it's inches away from us now, inches away. | ||
And you know what? | ||
They've got the perfect salesman, they've got the perfect marketer, Donald Trump, to bring it in, and you see conservatives celebrating it now. | ||
If this was happening during Joe Biden or Barack Obama, obviously it'd be a complete disaster. | ||
But since it's Trump, it kind of softens the blow. | ||
And yet, I can also sit here and recognize: yeah, well, you can bring something in with bad intentions. | ||
You can bring something in with good intentions and have it go bad. | ||
So, that's why we have to be monitoring this. | ||
Now, there's some other news in that space that we'll get to. | ||
And then, in kind of a similar vein, I mean, really, it's almost textbook fascism, which is a phrase that's now lost all meaning because they just, the left just says anything they don't like is fascism. | ||
But no, I mean, this is this is in a way fascism. | ||
It's the government merging with private companies, like upward synchronization here. | ||
And have you looked at the stock markets lately? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
So they don't even hide it. | ||
Trump uses that as a point to say, see, the economy is doing good, which I don't think is a fair measurement. | ||
It's one sector of the economy, but that's like 1% of the economy is what is the stock market doing. | ||
And it's mostly the richer people that are in there. | ||
So you're still dealing with a large portion, probably the majority of the country that is living paycheck to paycheck, wondering how to get by. | ||
And then you have the younger generations, which have always kind of been, you could say the younger generations have always been faced with this to a degree. | ||
And that's getting out of college or getting into your 20s and then kind of looking at life, feeling overwhelmed, feeling hopeless, but never like they do now. | ||
I mean, the easiest measurement to look at what young Americans are staring at would be the median household price versus, and you watch it go up on the line graph, and then the median household income or individual income, and it barely goes up at all. | ||
So it's like the average price of house goes like this, and then the income goes like this. | ||
And so they're just sitting here feeling hopeless. | ||
You can look at the average age. | ||
Somebody purchases their first house. | ||
It's higher than it's ever been. | ||
You have record amount of people defaulting on mortgages and credit cards, car payments. | ||
So we can celebrate the good things happening in the economy or the good things to potentially come in the economy, but you can't ignore the fact that it's not going to work with a lot of Americans. | ||
So if you want to translate that to political victories, which I think the Republicans would like to do, you're going to have to find a way to deliver to now the middle class because you have to understand, to the average working class American, even the Trump voter, they feel like now this administration is more catered to the rich. | ||
That's what they see. | ||
That's kind of the messaging. | ||
That's kind of the delivery. | ||
I mean, when you're talking about, oh, the stock markets are doing great. | ||
Well, the average middle class American doesn't think about that, doesn't care about that. | ||
And when you're constantly talking about more foreign aid for foreign countries, that's kind of a slap in their face. | ||
And then, and I kind of, I guess I would bring it all together with this story that they're running in New York in the mayor's race, and they're attacking Mom Donny, and they're saying, oh, well, he makes $140,000 a year. | ||
He shouldn't be in a rent-controlled apartment at $2,300 a month. | ||
And I'm like, wait a second, what is getting lost in translation here? | ||
Now, I'm not denying his upbringing. | ||
I don't know if I doubt his parents are still sending him money. | ||
He's obviously living on his own, but it just shows how out of touch they are now. | ||
And they're sitting here and they're saying, hey, he makes all this money. | ||
$2,300 a month, that's like nothing. | ||
And I'm just like, you understand this is why you're losing younger Americans. | ||
To say $2,300 a month, yeah, that's what you, you make $150,000 a year. | ||
That's like around your, that's around your bracket now for rent. | ||
This is $2,300 a month. | ||
And it blows people's minds. | ||
They're like, why? | ||
You're making $150,000 a year. | ||
You could be paying $4,000 a month. | ||
No, the cost of living is to a certain point now. | ||
It happened, I think, three or four years ago. | ||
You may recall the headlines. | ||
I think it was 2023, maybe. | ||
It wasn't too long ago. | ||
It was during the Biden years. | ||
And it was help Americans making six figures a year are now living paycheck to paycheck. | ||
And so they use this Champaign Socialist Zoran Mom Donnie. | ||
Look, the limousine liberal, now the Champaign Socialist, it's been around forever. | ||
We all know who they are. | ||
It's Gavin Newsom. | ||
It's Al Gore. | ||
Hell, it's Barack Obama now. | ||
But see, they're not understanding the future here. | ||
To attack Mom Donnie and say, oh, $2,300 a month is nothing, $150,000 a year. | ||
And it's like, whoa, actually, that's what people that make that much, that's about their price range now. | ||
Let's not be out of touch. | ||
But so we'll get to that. | ||
And then this other development, well, do they even want Trump involved now? | ||
Who does? | ||
Who doesn't? | ||
As Mom Donnie is kind of surging now. | ||
Yeah, look at this. | ||
This was last year even. | ||
More families making over $150,000 a year are living paycheck to paycheck. | ||
So that's why I see the right wing pushing this stuff, and I'm like, you guys are just out of touch now. | ||
And it happened so fast. | ||
The Trump administration's messaging delivery to the middle class, the low-income class, better than any Republican we've seen in years. | ||
And it generated election victory after election victory after election victory. | ||
And now it's like they've completely forgotten all that. | ||
And they're kind of going back into this financial elitist mindset. | ||
But when Trump is surrounded by New York millionaires, I suppose, you know, you get what you have. | ||
So we'll get to that coming up. | ||
And then, and this ties back into the shooter in Austin from yesterday. | ||
What is about to happen in Illinois is unbelievable. | ||
And I'm shocked because when I was looking into this, I picked up this story last night. | ||
And when I was looking into this, I realized that it actually had broken a week or so ago. | ||
And I'm like, how is this not a bigger story? | ||
The state of Illinois has essentially mandated students undergo mental health screenings. | ||
J.B. Pritzker bragging about this, the governor. | ||
It's crazy that he's the governor of Illinois. | ||
What a horrible representation for that great state. | ||
But nonetheless, he's out here bragging about it. | ||
Let me translate this for you. | ||
I don't know if I've ever seen a bigger, big pharma money grab since COVID. | ||
But at a state level, this is unreal. | ||
They're now going to be sending in to all of the schools mental health experts to talk to the children. | ||
Oh, that's right. | ||
And, of course, you know what's going to follow after that. | ||
They're going to start prescribing your kids more pharmaceutical drugs. | ||
Can you imagine these bastards? | ||
You know, I am a capitalist. | ||
And if you're out there and you're making a great product to make money, fine, I celebrate you. | ||
But you know what? | ||
Business ethics apply differently to different parts of the economy. | ||
So when you start talking about health care, when you start talking about medical, and all you have is these people looking at it as profit centers, now you've got a problem. | ||
You should be trying to help people, not make them addicted to your drugs. | ||
And so they see a school, these bastards probably lobbying J.B. Pritzker, and they're like, what's a demographic we can get more drugs to? | ||
What's a part of our city? | ||
What's a part of our state where we have mouths that we need to put more pills in so we can make more millions? | ||
And Pritzker says, well, why don't we send them right into the schools? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Forget the TV ads. | ||
Forget the doctor's office. | ||
Forget a hotline, whatever. | ||
Forget all that. | ||
Let's send them right into the schools. | ||
Let's diagnose them right there. | ||
Let's prescribe them right there. | ||
And bing, baby. | ||
You think Pritzker or the Pritzker family has any stock options in the healthcare industries, in the pharmaceutical industries? | ||
So we'll look at that. | ||
And then the shooter in Austin killed three. | ||
History of mental health. | ||
In other words, was on pharmaceutical pills. | ||
And then you've got a little geopolitical stack over here with Russia making huge moves ahead of the summit on Friday. | ||
So Russia putting itself into a negotiating position now, right before the negotiations Friday. | ||
While I think Trump has kind of already maneuvered himself into his position with NATO and with more military aid for Ukraine, but then also leaving Zelensky out. | ||
And then Zelensky's trying to save face. | ||
He's like, oh, well, you know, I don't need to be there. | ||
And I'll just, you know, Trump can report back to me. | ||
Like, oh, okay, little man. | ||
This negotiation is not even legitimate because I'm not there and I control what happens in Ukraine. | ||
And then he comes out and he says, well, actually, I really don't have any power to decide if there's going to be a land trade. | ||
Meanwhile, Russia's already taken the land. | ||
Now they're moving farther inland. | ||
Zelensky hasn't even won an election in years. | ||
He's illegitimate. | ||
And the only election that they had in the former Ukraine, which is pretty much now Russia in the eastern part, they all voted to become Russia. | ||
Go figure. | ||
You know, it's always the same issue everywhere, which is we just have corrupt governments. | ||
You know, the Ukrainian people, they're not my enemy. | ||
They've got a corrupt government. | ||
Probably more corrupt than ours, even, but much more corrupt. | ||
Not even close. | ||
And so here's Zelensky pretending like he has any power in the situation. | ||
But if you're in the eastern Ukraine and you've got a choice, why wouldn't you prefer to be in Russia? | ||
Russia's on the rise. | ||
Ukraine is on the fall. | ||
And you know, whatever is going on in Kiev is not going to benefit you. | ||
And Zelensky has essentially used the Ukrainian people now for over a year as cannon fodder so that the military-industrial complex and all these different proxy groups can launder money and weapons through Ukraine. | ||
And everybody knows that's the gig. | ||
And they sit here and treat us like idiots. | ||
And they sit here and they pretend like this is some fight of good versus evil and proud American Western patriotism and values versus the evil, dirty commie Russians aren't even communist anymore. | ||
And so this is how they screw us over. | ||
And the American people are sick of it there. | ||
They're sick of it in Israel. | ||
And the Israelis who just becomes a whole different beast to deal with because they've got the massive Israel lobby and then you've got the ADL with Jonathan Greenblatt. | ||
And I saw what he said, and I'm going to play this clip eventually. | ||
And I'm almost thinking it's intentional now. | ||
And I'm starting to, because when you have big issues, complex issues like this, you tend to focus on one angle or a different angle, and then you kind of lose sight of the other angles. | ||
Like, is there a rise of anti-Semitism? | ||
Yes. | ||
Is a lot of it astroturfed to bring in the next age of censorship and surveillance? | ||
Yes. | ||
So I look at Jonathan Greenblatt, who's obviously following the whole debate on Israel very closely. | ||
He's all over it. | ||
He's working with the White House. | ||
And I don't think he's dumb. | ||
Usually a pretty strong communicator. | ||
And he goes on a podcast and he says, our national anthem, and he's talking about Israel's national anthem. | ||
And so these are the people that claim to have no loyalty to Israel. | ||
They claim to have no loyalty. | ||
Not about that. | ||
They're American patriots, bleeding red, white, and blue. | ||
And then he goes out and says, our national anthem talking about Israel. | ||
And I'm like, is that intentional? | ||
Is that intentional to throw more gas on the fire of anti-Semitism? | ||
And then you just make it so bad. | ||
You just make the fire so bad that people are going to say, okay, yeah, come in, come in, government. | ||
Come in, nanny state, come in, surveillance state, come in, censorship state, and put the fire out. | ||
The fire anti-Semitism, it's too big. | ||
So we need the government. | ||
We need the surveillance State to come in and put it out, and there will be Jonathan Greenblatt leading the charge. | ||
And the same technologies that Israel is using, and the same companies that Israel is using to identify all of their enemies and kill all their enemies. | ||
Oh, now it'll be used against us. | ||
And they really don't even deny it. | ||
They don't even hide it. | ||
In fact, when you follow these conversations, because it's really hard to defend, and the talking points have gone out, by the way. | ||
But as the debate on Israel continues, you say, well, how does America benefit? | ||
That's our greatest ally. | ||
Well, what do they do for us? | ||
So whoever runs these ops, whoever runs these digital influence ops that sends out the memos, like you've got these big accounts that are either run by multiple people or run by bots, and you can just crunch the numbers and see it. | ||
Like they'll have 30,000 posts in a year, and people like crunch the numbers. | ||
It's like, well, how does somebody even post that much? | ||
A lot of these are long threads. | ||
So it's either a bot or it's either multiple people running it. | ||
And so these are big accounts that are obviously astro-turfed. | ||
They get into a big movement. | ||
They get a big following. | ||
And then they just kind of turn it into a weapon. | ||
And you think, oh, I'm following a Patriot account. | ||
I'm following a Trump supporting account. | ||
And then they just sell out. | ||
They sell the account. | ||
And then anybody can just post their propaganda on it. | ||
So I'm watching all these huge anonymous accounts that got a big following in the 2024 election cycle. | ||
You're probably familiar with some. | ||
Huge accounts. | ||
They just post pro-America stuff, pro-Trump stuff. | ||
And now all of a sudden, they're invested Israel experts. | ||
Didn't post a thing about Israel until the last couple of months. | ||
And now they're doing full-on dissertations about how great it is and everything they do for us. | ||
So that's just a point to say, hey, you can tell that's not organic. | ||
It's probably the Qataris. | ||
But what do they say? | ||
Well, don't you know, one of the benefits that America gets from Israel is we test your guys' technology first. | ||
Oh, in other words, all the tech they're using right now in their wars, Iran, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, you name it, all that technology that they're testing out for us is about to be used against you. | ||
So would I put it past Jonathan Greenblatt, whose business really at this point is combating anti-Semitism? | ||
So if your business is fighting anti-Semitism, boy, what would be good for business? | ||
unidentified
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More anti-Semitism. | |
So would I put it past these scumbags to try to make it worse and to say stuff like, oh, I'm an American patriot, free speech guy, but the Israel national anthem is mine just to keep business booming, just to make sure, just to make sure business is doing good. | ||
And you see it everywhere. | ||
And then you see the people going on the trip. | ||
You see the people promoting it. | ||
And then you're just told it's all Qatar. | ||
Like, you're just that stupid. | ||
You're just that much of an idiot. | ||
You just don't get it. | ||
It's all Qatar. | ||
Yes. | ||
So we might get to that clip. | ||
But as we close out the segment, guys, my timer isn't up. | ||
What do we have left here? | ||
Okay, well, let's do this in closing, and we'll come back. | ||
Sorry for that awkward moment. | ||
I just don't have a clock on in here. | ||
Representatives RoCanna and Thomas Massey to bring Epstein abuse survivors to D.C. Now, this is going to be September 3rd, and they say these are going to be people that you're going to see and hear for the first time. | ||
So Khanna, Democrat, Massey, Republican, planning to bring survivors of abuse by convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his co-conspirator Maxwell to the Capitol. | ||
They've announced the survivors will join them at a press conference the Morning of September 3rd, the day the House returns from August recess. | ||
According to an advisory from the lawmakers, several of the survivors will speak publicly about their abuse for the first time. | ||
Attorneys for the survivors will also be present. | ||
Now, I would guess you're going to have at least one other individual join this from the Congress, and that's going to be Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
We'll see about if any others have the courage to. | ||
Looks like most people are either scared off of this or are just aren't interested now. | ||
But maybe the Democrats, because they think they can pin it on Trump, maybe they try to make a bigger fuss. | ||
I doubt it's going to be just Conna and Massey when it's all said and done, though. | ||
I think more will join. | ||
I do think there'll be a handful of congressmen and women next to Massey and RoCanna when the Epstein victims, Maxwell victims, speak for the first time publicly on September 3rd. | ||
You think Tim Burchett will be one of them? | ||
I'd say that's a pretty solid bet. | ||
I'd say you're probably paying juice on that bet. | ||
Tim Burchett, how does Tim Burchett feel about child molesters? | ||
Clip 10. | ||
Believe he killed himself. | ||
I don't care who tells me otherwise. | ||
But yeah, you know, I asked to bring in Miss Maxwell. | ||
She's the one that holds the case of the kingdom. | ||
She knows everything. | ||
Is she alive? | ||
Maybe. | ||
But if she lies, she goes back under original sentence. | ||
And I don't agree with lessening her sentence or giving her anything other than the end of a rope to be hung. | ||
I don't care for any of those people. | ||
I'd send them to all the hell. | ||
I'll tell you, I've sponsored some of the toughest laws in the country. | ||
Steve helped me with the ICAC funding in Tennessee, Internet Crimes Against Children. | ||
He was one of the first ones. | ||
We put it in the three grand divisions of our state. | ||
I sponsored bills to castrate child molester. | ||
I sponsored the death penalty. | ||
It was thrown out as unconstitutional. | ||
Look, I'm one of the few members of Congress that has held the hands of somebody who's been molested. | ||
It is a life sentence. | ||
There's a thousand little girls. | ||
I was on one of your social. | ||
Tim Burchett believes child molesters deserve a rope. | ||
Do you agree? | ||
It's funny. | ||
The Justice Department doesn't seem to agree. | ||
They usually let them off pretty easy. | ||
You know, it kind of got overlooked yesterday when I had Kyle in the studio. | ||
And when we get together, we kind of just end up rapping and not really doing like a breaking news presentation. | ||
But honestly, the whole thing looks like such a botch job now. | ||
And you wonder what else is going on behind the scenes as far as the negotiations between Maxwell and the Trump administration. | ||
But yeah, obviously somebody figured it out pretty quick that putting her in the Fed camp was a disastrous idea for her own safety, likely. | ||
So now apparently there's armed guards outside. | ||
They have advanced security just for her now. | ||
And it's like, well, what were you thinking? | ||
Why did you send her to a camp knowing that you were going to have to do this? | ||
I mean, folks, I'm telling you, it's so counterintuitive on how the BOP works. | ||
And the inmate doesn't have any say. | ||
I mean, you remember when I was in there, my lawyers couldn't even get a hold of me. | ||
Usually you have somebody, let's take a look at it from the perspective of the gang violence that happens in prisons. | ||
They will put gang members that are in a rival prison before they get transferred, or they'll take dropouts because when you're in a prison and the prison gangs are in there and you're a dropout, they're coming for you, and they'll put you in the special housing unit. | ||
And you don't have any say. | ||
You could be good behavior. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
They're putting you in there for your own protection. | ||
So you sit here and you think, well, Maxwell is an obvious target, unless you believe Epstein really killed himself. | ||
So why would you put her in the lowest of the lowest of the low securities? | ||
And then you say, well, crap, this was a bad idea. | ||
We need to have special security on the outside of the prison now. | ||
So, I think that negotiation kind of maybe both sides thought they had a vision and then it just kind of got into a mess and now they're in a holding pattern, not knowing what to do. | ||
If you send Maxwell back to the prison and not the camp, then you look like, uh-oh, something went bad for us. | ||
But if you leave her there and she ends up not making it, then it's wow, now you got a whole nother problem. | ||
Okay, but let's move on from that for now. | ||
How Trump's DC takeover could supercharge surveillance. | ||
Now, here's the question we need to be asking ourselves in this pivotal moment. | ||
And I do believe it's a pivotal moment. | ||
Do we want to go into a surveillance state the likes of which they have in China? | ||
Now, what would be the difference between what we have here and what they have there? | ||
Well, we have a lot of similar capabilities. | ||
It's just not all integrated in. | ||
And so, when you look at some of the people that Trump is working with here, like Palantir, these are the systems that are going to be used to integrate the whole thing. | ||
So, yeah, you've got cameras everywhere, cell phones everywhere. | ||
You've got all these different means of tracking and tracing and spying, but it's not all integrated in. | ||
And even though our rights have been abused over the years and they violate our constitutional rights all day long, privacy, everything else, there's still enough layers of at least it makes it difficult for them. | ||
I mean, anybody that wants to go in there and spy on you can, but it would most, for the most part, be illegal. | ||
And they know they can't really use it against you because of that. | ||
So, it's like if they use surveillance tech to do something and they catch you doing something, they can't use it against you in court because you'll just file unconstitutional means and methods of gathering this evidence and you'll win in court. | ||
So, they still kind of have it. | ||
It's not all integrated. | ||
It's still a big effort. | ||
It's not the cleanest process, but all the tech is already kind of there: cell phones, the cameras, in your car now, everything. | ||
So, Palantir's job is going to be to integrate it in into one system, and then basically what the technology is going to be able to do, and this actually ties into some other stuff. | ||
I think Palantir will ultimately just be kind of the landing platform for all of this, and then they'll just use their tech to kind of weave it all in. | ||
But it'll be a lot like this: a million calls an hour, Israel relying on Microsoft Cloud for expansive surveillance of Palestinians. | ||
And then you have some of this actually coming to the United States, like in Arizona. | ||
LVT and Axon Fusis roll out integration to elevate real-time public safety. | ||
Lawrence community members ask City Commission to reconsider police camera integration program. | ||
And by the way, this is an arm of the same company that Israel has contracted out to do the exact same surveillance campaigns in Palestine and in Israel itself. | ||
So you're literally, so this is what they say. | ||
Oh, tell me why Israel is our ally. | ||
Well, they test our technology first before we use it at home. | ||
So Israel is testing this right now, which, by the way, that's China already does this, folks. | ||
China already does this. | ||
They don't need to test this stuff in Israel, but I'm reporting this to you to tell you that they're testing it there. | ||
They're bringing it here. | ||
Now, whether this ends up being what they use in D.C. or not, I don't know. | ||
If we can develop enough of a pushback, maybe we can put this on pause and say, let's hold off here. | ||
But the people in Arizona see this and they're saying, oh, okay. | ||
So what it's going to do is, and by the way, it gets into all of this. | ||
It's stuff you wouldn't even think about. | ||
Stuff that Alex Jones has been talking about, Inforce has been talking about. | ||
It can tap into your home appliances. | ||
It can tap in a lot of these home appliances now. | ||
What are they connected to? | ||
The internet. | ||
Because it's convenient. | ||
And now you have an app on your phone to control your oven. | ||
And now you have an app on your phone to control your fridge, control your AC. | ||
Oh, bing. | ||
It's all tapped in. | ||
So now they can use that to spy on you. | ||
But again, it's all separated and there's different layers of protection because we do have a constitution. | ||
They violate it, but they can't really integrate it all. | ||
So they're trying to integrate it. | ||
So what's going to end up happening is they'll be able to turn on a program and they'll be able to capture all of this data. | ||
They're going to capture all of this data from smartphones, streetlights, street cameras, anything in your house that's connected to the internet. | ||
It'll still all act independently, but then Palantir or whoever gets the contract, and this is probably what they're going to test in DC. | ||
It'll just be able to capture all of that data and then turn it into the surveillance system, which will be able to categorize and put into different boxes, whatever they're looking for. | ||
It'll make it searchable for them into one giant surveillance system. | ||
They'll also be able to tap into all the live feeds, whether it's a video recording device, audio recording device, and they'll just be able to tap into that. | ||
And so this is where the data processing is so important. | ||
And they don't have it yet. | ||
This is why they have to build these mega processing centers. | ||
This is why they're going to have to go with nuclear power. | ||
Because in order to do this, you're going to have to get like 100 times the processing capabilities that you have right now with all the data that's going to be coming in. | ||
So right now, it's like, yeah, you can go spy on anybody, but you have to go into the system and selectively go out and target certain data. | ||
It's not just a 24-7 constant collection of data that can be organized and searched through. | ||
That's what they're going for. | ||
So, yeah, somebody can click into it and then go spy on you right now. | ||
But if they wanted to go back and search what you've done for maybe the last 30 days, well, now there's a process there. | ||
But with this, it'll basically just turn it into a solid state hard drive, easily searchable, easily categorized, and you can find whatever you're looking for or turn on whatever it is we want to turn on like that. | ||
So that's where this is going. | ||
Now, are they going to test this in DC? | ||
So right now, a street camera, which I think are mostly considered illegal now, I don't know. | ||
In Texas, they're considered illegal. | ||
But you wonder if that was almost a setup. | ||
Install all the red light cameras, install all the intersection cameras and say, oh, it's for stopping crime, stopping people running red lights. | ||
And then eventually they say, oh, it's unconstitutional. | ||
We can't use this. | ||
But then the technology is sitting there when they're ready to bring in the surveillance state. | ||
So yeah, they might not use it against you if you run a red light, but it's going to be there. | ||
And when it sees you pop up on the camera, it'll recognize your eyes. | ||
It'll do a facial recognition scan, and then it'll just know you'll be tracked and traced 24-7, just like in China. | ||
So we don't have that infrastructure built yet to just be in a 24-7 monitoring state where they can just track and trace anybody. | ||
They still have to go in there and flick a bunch of switches and then target you. | ||
So that's what this is going to bring in. | ||
This is what Palantir is bringing in. | ||
This is what anybody, all the different AI tech bros that are trying to get into this industry, it's going to be a trillion-dollar industry in the next 10 years minimum. | ||
So everybody wants to get their foot in the door. | ||
Everybody's trying to get in there and get these contracts from Trump. | ||
Now, Trump might be sitting here and you could say for better or for worse, well, we're going to do this for people's safety. | ||
And the road to hell is paved with good intentions. | ||
So he might actually mean that. | ||
I mean, you had multiple government workers now in the White House, other members of Congress. | ||
I mean, they're victims of crime constantly in DC. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay? | |
And you think about like a Doge worker, like the one that got attacked a week ago. | ||
And they say, you know, the Democrats, and this is just true, the Democrats are putting a target on their back. | ||
We can't walk every White House staffer that works for Donald Trump. | ||
We can't walk every Doge staffer out to their cars every night. | ||
unidentified
|
We can't do it. | |
So we have to have some sort of a surveillance state or a security state here and really make it bold, hoping that it can deter crime. | ||
Meaning, you go out there and assault someone, you're getting caught. | ||
Not like, oh, Seth Rich gets killed and nobody knows what happens. | ||
So you could say Trump is doing it for a good reason or it's got good intentions, but obviously we see where this goes horribly wrong. | ||
Check your favorite sci-fi movie. | ||
So that's what it's going to do. | ||
And so the crew is playing this video. | ||
It's just some B-roll. | ||
But a lot of this is already what's in place in China. | ||
So they're taking the China model. | ||
It'll be different companies than what China is using, but they're taking the China model. | ||
All the big tech companies are coming into DC. | ||
They're trying to get the contracts. | ||
They're trying to introduce the technology. | ||
They're obviously going to test it in D.C. with this federalizing of the city, and then they're going to take it nationwide. | ||
And it's going to be for your health and safety and everything else to stop crime. | ||
And, you know, people are going to, you're going to have, you're going to have the cheerleaders that are just going to cheerlead it because it's the Trump administration and they can't help themselves. | ||
You're going to have people who are truly fed up with the crime in the inner cities and everything else that comes along with it, and they're going to celebrate it. | ||
They're going to say this is good. | ||
Crime is out of control. | ||
And you can say, okay, fair point. | ||
But so where does it go? | ||
Where does it go from there? | ||
And that's why we have to ask: do we want to go into a surveillance state like China? | ||
And is there anyone in this administration that is at least trying to slow this process down and say, hey, let's ask some very serious questions here before we do this? | ||
So you see, there's the AI race that seemingly nobody has any guardrails on. | ||
And then there's the surveillance state race, which nobody has any guardrails on. | ||
And it's all just a race to the finish line. | ||
Who's going to get the big contract? | ||
Who's going to become number one? | ||
And then what do you get? | ||
You get a surveillance state just like China. | ||
Now, again, a tool can be used for good or for bad. | ||
A hammer can be used to build a house or bash in your neighbor. | ||
So, okay, they bring it here. | ||
Do we have a social credit score? | ||
Is it an active system that's constantly monitoring you? | ||
Is it something you're aware of? | ||
Is it something you're in fear of? | ||
Or is it just kind of standing there, just there when it's needed, but not really being used, not really being utilized, not really compiling data on you, but that's done. | ||
That's already a done deal. | ||
So it's already going to be a privacy violation nonetheless. | ||
But if they can get results in DC, and you know they'll fudge the numbers. | ||
Everybody fudges the numbers. | ||
All administrations fudge the numbers. | ||
So, oh, hey, look, violent crime is down. | ||
And usually 10 murderers get away a year. | ||
And this year was only one. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Time to go nationwide. | ||
And then other cities will start adapting it. | ||
And then other states will start adapting it. | ||
And so once you're in it, you're never getting out. | ||
I think that's kind of the big fear here. | ||
It's once you go into the system, how do you get out? | ||
And once you go into this system, even if it's introduced and we're very cautious and we say we are going to, we are going to try to maintain constitutional rights here. | ||
We're not going to be violating any rights. | ||
The system is now active, but it's just going to kind of be there processing. | ||
We're not really going to be utilizing it until it's needed to catch a violent criminal or something. | ||
Then we'll go in. | ||
But then what happens when it's not? | ||
What happens when somebody decides, nope, this is now going to be the social credit score system? | ||
This is now going live, and it is compiling data and building a profile on you 24-7. | ||
And I don't really see anybody in DC at least saying, hey, let's hit the pause. | ||
They don't even have to be negative. | ||
You don't have to be a Luddite about it. | ||
Because everybody in the Trump administration is full on with this. | ||
And they're all connected to the big tech bros and the big tech companies. | ||
And they probably all have massive stock options. | ||
So it's like, whatever. | ||
It's more political corruption. | ||
But is anybody in there just saying, let's take a pause? | ||
Let's take a pause. | ||
President Trump, you got all these tech guys breathing down your neck. | ||
They see dollar signs. | ||
Okay. | ||
But you know what I see? | ||
I see a 1984 system being built. | ||
I see a brave new world system being built. | ||
And, you know, maybe we should just maybe we should review some of this stuff for the interest of the American people and their constitutional rights. | ||
I mean, they make smart TVs now with cameras in them. | ||
We don't even know how many devices have a camera in them now or some other means to spy on you. | ||
So, oh, you think, well, it's on my cell phone. | ||
Okay, I'll put my cell phone in a drawer. | ||
Oh, you know, it's on my computer, whatever. | ||
I close it. | ||
It's over in this other room. | ||
I don't worry about it. | ||
Well, then it's your TV. | ||
I mean, they'll be selling stuff. | ||
They already have these like smart mirrors. | ||
They'll put, it'll be smart anything. | ||
And you'll just be able to operate everything with your face. | ||
Like, whoa, this is amazing. | ||
Or operate with just waving your hands. | ||
Like, wow, look at this tech. | ||
And then it's just, they're spying on you 24/7. | ||
So, hey, maybe before we go fully into this quantum AI system and before we build the actual data harvesting and processing plants that are going to have to be built to run this thing, you know, maybe somebody should say, hey, let's take a pause and let's just think about where we want this to go and where we don't want this to go. | ||
Let's just maybe take a pause here and think about that. | ||
I don't want it to be normalized that you're spied on in your own home. | ||
It might even be tragic that it's normalized that you're spied on with your phone. | ||
It might be tragic that it's normalized that you're spied on with your internet activity. | ||
But okay, fine, we've normalized that and maybe the damage is minimal. | ||
I don't want to normalize getting spied on in your own home. | ||
You got people that'll put tape over their cameras on their computer and their cell phones because they don't want to be spied on. | ||
So what? | ||
Now you got to do it on your TV? | ||
Are you going to have to have like a cover that goes down on your TV so it doesn't spy on you? | ||
How long until they make it illegal and say, no, you have to be spied on. | ||
And in fact, covering up the cameras in your house and on your tech is suspicious activity. | ||
We might have to investigate. | ||
And once it becomes into the quantum system, all of this will happen so fast. | ||
It'll be like the smart TV in your bedroom. | ||
And oh, it's you and your wife. | ||
And, you know, maybe you just went out for a couple of drinks. | ||
You're going to have a nice night together. | ||
So, hey, let's hide the TV camera. | ||
Put the flap down. | ||
Put a pillow in front of the TV. | ||
And then you'll get a little warning. | ||
Like, oh, warning, we noticed you're blocking your camera. | ||
DHS is concerned for your health. | ||
DHS is concerned for your safety. | ||
And then you'll have someone at your door in a minute. | ||
unidentified
|
It'll be a robot. | |
That'll disrupt the evening. | ||
Honey, how fast can you work? | ||
We got 30 seconds till DHS shows up. | ||
I just covered the TV camera. | ||
But where are the voices in DC concerned with this? | ||
Where are the voices in the Trump administration concerned of this? | ||
And maybe the problem is that the only people that even understand this are the very people that are racing to get the trillion-dollar contracts. | ||
So they're not going to bring Up these concerns. | ||
All they see is dollar signs, baby. | ||
And you're always going to have the moment of hubris. | ||
Well, you just assume that this system won't impact you until it does. | ||
So, boy, oh boy. | ||
And you already see them using this. | ||
I used to use iris recognition tech for deportations. | ||
ICE to buy eye scanning tech that could identify migrants in seconds, in seconds. | ||
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has issued a notice to purchase licenses for mobile artificial intelligence-powered iris recognition technology to aid in deportations and removals. | ||
Where are they getting the iris data? | ||
If you have never signed off for your iris data, your eyeball data to be harvested, what happens when you find out that it's already out there? | ||
It's already on the market. | ||
It's already being implemented into these systems. | ||
unidentified
|
Because you know, you know, it already is. | |
And that's why they have all of this goofy tech. | ||
And it is goofy. | ||
Oh, we're protecting your cell phone. | ||
Please, folks. | ||
That's why they have all this goofy technology for your face scan, your fingerprint scan, your eyeball scan built into your smartphone. | ||
It was a trap. | ||
You just turned over your personal identification data to the entire open market. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, oh, there's, I have a Bill of Rights. | |
I have a right to privacy. | ||
Did you read the terms and conditions before you let them scan your eyeball? | ||
Did you read the terms and conditions before you let them scan your thumb? | ||
Did you read the terms and conditions before you let it do a face recognition on you? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And by the way, do you really think the government gives a damn about your right to privacy? | ||
Do you really believe that? | ||
Oh, they'll find a hundred different loopholes to spy on you illegally before you could even draw up a lawsuit. | ||
So that's that. | ||
But it looks like we're going right in. | ||
Looks like we're speeding right in as fast as possible. | ||
And where it goes from here, we'll find out, I think. | ||
Well, we're very excited. | ||
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Sometimes you just got to get hardcore with it, folks. | ||
And you just, sometimes you just go right in, you know? | ||
All right. | ||
You know what? | ||
Maybe not on camera. | ||
Maybe later when we're off camera. | ||
I'm not going to promote that live on air. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
Cruz in my ear giving me a hard time. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
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All right, second hour underway. | ||
I think we'll get into this big pharma news on the other side. | ||
This is the InfoWars War Room. | ||
One hour in the books. | ||
Second hour is upon us. | ||
All right. | ||
You know what? | ||
I was going to close my coverage of this story with this clip, but I think maybe it's better to intro it with this clip. | ||
And this is RFK Jr. | ||
You know, these numbers are astounding. | ||
And I think you get a better idea of the pharmaceutical industrial complex when you study how COVID was rolled out and the vaccines were forced on people. | ||
But this happens every day with kids that go to a doctor or get prescribed ADHD medicine or other means and mechanisms and tricks, quite frankly, that doctors will use to get you on other pharmaceutical drugs. | ||
Like, for example, they just came out. | ||
It's always a new study. | ||
It's a new study. | ||
They always told you that eggs were bad for you because they raised cholesterol. | ||
Now a new study comes out. | ||
They say, oh, actually, eggs are good for you because it lowers cholesterol. | ||
So it's just, you know, they're always rigging things and changing things and new studies coming out. | ||
So it's, oh, eggs bad for cholesterol. | ||
Eggs good for cholesterol. | ||
Wait, cholesterol is actually good. | ||
We lied. | ||
unidentified
|
It was good the whole time. | |
But there's always a pharma angle to that. | ||
So they wanted you to be scared of cholesterol or be scared of eating eggs or say, oh, well, if you're going to eat eggs, you need to get this pharmaceutical pill. | ||
Did the same thing to me because I don't even go to a doctor. | ||
I mean, praise God. | ||
But they force you to go into one when you're in the Fed. | ||
And the doctor said, well, golly gee, this was actually quite hilarious. | ||
You've got high cholesterol. | ||
Meanwhile, heart rate was good. | ||
Everything else was perfect, basically, but the cholesterol was high. | ||
So wanted To prescribe me some pharmaceutical drugs and wanted to let me know that it would be taken care of by the BOP. | ||
I wouldn't even have to pay, guys. | ||
Imagine that. | ||
And I, of course, said, I'm not interested. | ||
So she said, well, maybe, you know, maybe you should consider some exercise. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
I hadn't thought of that. | ||
Golly, man. | ||
But, oh, yeah. | ||
Oh, cholesterol is bad. | ||
Eggs are bad. | ||
Here, take a pharmaceutical drug because everybody eats eggs. | ||
So they have all these different ways. | ||
Now they're going after the kids, even more so than they already have. | ||
What are the numbers? | ||
In fact, the last I saw was like 50% of college students are on some form of a pharmaceutical drug. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So it's all this big game, and it's the pharmaceutical industrial complex. | ||
And they got all kinds of different people involved in this. | ||
They got the media. | ||
They got the doctors. | ||
They got their rigged studies. | ||
They got the rigged insurance, the corrupt insurance industry, and everybody gets rich. | ||
And you're just sitting there, you're just cannon fodder for the pharmaceutical industrial complex. | ||
So we've all seen it to a certain extent. | ||
But then when you compare and contrast it, the numbers of what Americans pay into the pharmaceutical industrial complex versus the rest of the world, it's even more shocking. | ||
It shows you how we've been targeted even worse than the entire planet with this agenda, with this propaganda. | ||
Here's RFK Jr. breaking it down, clip 13. | ||
unidentified
|
Some estimates say U.S. consumers pay up to 300% more on drug prices than their European counterparts. | |
The United States basically pays for global pharmaceutical research. | ||
So U.S. citizens, we account for about 70% of the profits for the pharmaceutical industry. | ||
We're only 4.2% of the world's population. | ||
And the reason for that is that other countries simply won't pay for it. | ||
And so the drug companies sell to other nations to say we're not going to pay for these more expensive prices. | ||
And what we've now told the drug companies is whatever the lowest price that you're paying in any other nation, that's what you're going to charge here. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you facing some sort of big pharma particularly? | |
Well, of course. | ||
It's not only the pharmaceutical companies, but the other countries have kind of gotten a free ride on the United States because they're getting the benefit of all of our research. | ||
And they ought to be paying their fair share. | ||
We spend about 8% of our GDP on drugs. | ||
And in Europe, they spend 3%. | ||
And so what we'd like to do is see them bring that up to maybe 6%. | ||
You know, again, the numbers are shocking. | ||
And before I get into even the news here, because I think about how this whole thing has been weaponized against us, and really it does piss me off. | ||
It actually does piss me off. | ||
And that's because I've actually seen people suffer from this. | ||
And I doubt I'm the only one. | ||
I bet most people listening to this have either seen a friend or a family member, a loved one go down the route of big pharmaceutical products and have severe consequences. | ||
And even if that situation is abuse, it seems to come with the territory a large portion of the time. | ||
And I just think about some of the stories with younger kids in my neighborhood or in my school getting into trouble or trying to kill themselves. | ||
It was always a big pharmaceutical product involved. | ||
And I watched people abuse it in college. | ||
We're talking like straight A students, athletes abuse these pills and just spiral down, spiral down the drain. | ||
So it does kind of piss me off how this has been aimed at us. | ||
I doubt I'm the only one that's experienced something like that. | ||
It's all too common. | ||
So, yeah, we have a problem with fentanyl and how many people fentanyl kills, and that's a bad thing. | ||
But see, you notice they don't like to publicize, and this is because the pharmaceutical industry lobbies the government and pays millions, billions over time in TV marketing. | ||
So they're not going to talk about it. | ||
Basically, funds the entire network news. | ||
So you don't hear about people that die from the pharmaceutical drugs. | ||
They don't like to make it a big case when another mass shooter is on pharmaceutical drugs. | ||
You'll hear all day about the fentanyl because nobody owns that. | ||
But the pharmaceutical drug epidemic killing people, bury that deal. | ||
Don't hear about that. | ||
Don't demonize that. | ||
That's a profit center. | ||
And the citizens of the United States of America are their number one system for the profit. | ||
So we had a shooter in Austin yesterday. | ||
Very sad. | ||
Three people died. | ||
And the individual was arrested alive. | ||
Now, aside from the mental health aspect, long criminal record here, long criminal record in both Travis and Williamson County, Williamson up north of Travis, which is Austin. | ||
So the greater Austin area. | ||
Killed three, including a child. | ||
Absolutely heartbreaking. | ||
2016 felony assault. | ||
Reduced to a misdemeanor. | ||
Repeat offense on that, by the way. | ||
Deferred education. | ||
2016 protective order violation, criminal mischief, two months in jail. | ||
He had a second DOI in 2017. | ||
He had a felony assault in 2019. | ||
He's also well known for marijuana possession, felony criminal mischief, another assault. | ||
And so it just goes on and on. | ||
Long case here, very little time spent in jail. | ||
Now, I'm open on the debate of prison reform and justice system reform and what works to rehabilitate people and what doesn't. | ||
And I've been inside the system and I know the good aspects and the bad aspects. | ||
And I would say it's pretty clear that this is an individual probably needed to spend more time. | ||
And I would say, as a general rule, the justice system needs to treat violent offenders much more heavy-handedly than nonviolent offenders. | ||
I don't even, I don't, I think there should be very rare, very limited cases where a nonviolent offender even sees more than, say, a night in jail. | ||
Nonviolent offenders should very rarely, if ever, be sentenced to jail. | ||
But violent offenders, that's where you need to start making examples. | ||
First time, second time, third time offense. | ||
I mean, making sure you're either going to spend a lot of time here or you're going to clean your act up. | ||
Either way, he gets released, barely spends any time in jail, and then goes and does the unthinkable, kills innocent people at a target. | ||
And they come out yesterday and nobody wants to talk about it. | ||
Obviously, hundreds of stories on this, and you can barely find a peep. | ||
You can barely find a peep about the mental health aspect. | ||
And so what I've learned now, because this is an issue to me, you won't even hear about it. | ||
Very rarely will they ever publish something about this. | ||
So if you're not listening to the press conference where the police will come out and they'll do their evaluation and they'll give you the information they have, same thing with the shooter in New York City. | ||
That's like the only time they're ever going to mention it. | ||
So unless you're tuned in live and you hear the police commissioner say, yep, history of mental health was on pharmaceutical drugs, like in New York City, or with this guy, please come out. | ||
History of mental illness. | ||
Didn't say anything about the pharmaceutical drugs, but I mean, what are you willing to bet here that he was on a pharmaceutical pill with a history of mental illness? | ||
And they probably even run these deals and they'll say, well, sure, he's a repeat violent offender, but, you know, we can put him on the right drug. | ||
We can put him on the right drug. | ||
It's honestly like the modern day lobotomy. | ||
And it's not as gruesome or as tormenting, but it's just like eventually we're going to look back on this and Say, chemically altering these people that already had a mental issue ended up being a horrible thing. | ||
And we probably caused thousands of suicides. | ||
And how many mass shooters? | ||
How many, if you had, if you didn't have these people on pharmaceutical drugs, how many would not have committed suicide or not have committed a mass shooting? | ||
Now they'll push back and they'll say, no, overall, it's a net benefit. | ||
Well, I don't know if the numbers would bear that out. | ||
It's hard to prove a negative. | ||
But, oh, every time, oh, another mass shooter. | ||
Oh, another mental illness. | ||
Oh, another pharmaceutical drug. | ||
And they over-prescribe it. | ||
It's part of the game. | ||
So now they're going into the schools. | ||
This is unbelievable. | ||
I can't believe there isn't more outrage from this. | ||
And I wonder if it's because Maha hasn't really gotten this story yet. | ||
I would think RFK Jr. would be outraged at this idea that they've had now and they're going to implement. | ||
Illinois becomes the first state to require student mental health screenings. | ||
Pritker celebrating this, by the way. | ||
He's also bragging and saying everybody needs to go get their vaccines. | ||
This guy Pritker says some of our leaders in Washington need to head back to school to educate themselves about the safety and effectiveness of vaccines. | ||
So this guy's just a total big pharma shill, just a total big pharma sellout. | ||
For students in Illinois, this bill has now been signed into law. | ||
For students in Illinois, mental health screenings will soon be required alongside annual vision and hearing exams. | ||
Oh, yeah, that's totally the same thing. | ||
But see, that's what they want to do. | ||
They want to normalize it and then say, oh, yeah, you just get glasses. | ||
Oh, yeah, you just get a pill. | ||
No big deal. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
No, I'm wearing glasses. | ||
I don't wear glasses, but I'm wearing glasses as a surface-level solution or contacts as a surface-level physical solution that's not actually altering anything in my body or chemistry or anything. | ||
It's just a, oh, I can see better. | ||
No, this is penetrating into you and chemically altering you. | ||
Not anything near the same. | ||
But they say, oh, no, it's just like an eye exam. | ||
Like you get an eye exam to get glasses. | ||
You get a mental exam to get a pill. | ||
No. | ||
And that's what they want. | ||
It will require public school students in grades 3 through 12 to undergo a mental health screening each year. | ||
And you know exactly how this is going to go. | ||
Pritzker said: at a time when our kids are struggling with anxiety and depression more than ever before, it's our responsibility to ensure that young people have all the support they need to get the help that they deserve. | ||
Our goal is an integrative, comprehensive approach to quality mental and behavioral health services for young people across the state. | ||
Saying that the legislation will pave the way for schools to receive resources and support to implement the new push for screenings. | ||
And then they go into the portal. | ||
Yes. | ||
Connecting students, caregivers, and parents with the behavioral health care and ongoing navigation portal. | ||
A tool launched that can provide information about available mental health resources and services. | ||
Of course, we know what that means. | ||
Pills, pills, pills. | ||
Suffering from anxiety. | ||
Who was even diagnosed with anxiety until like 20 years ago? | ||
It's made up. | ||
Suffering from anxiety. | ||
Suffering from depression. | ||
These have to be the most farcical mental health issues I've ever seen in my life. | ||
Suffering from anxiety, It's called life. | ||
It's really like equilibrium. | ||
Anxiety, depression? | ||
It's called living life. | ||
It's called going through ups and downs. | ||
It's called hardships and victories and losses. | ||
Oh, I have anxiety. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
And so they're going to send in these mental health screeners to the schools now because, hey, you know, what percentage of these kids are on these pills? | ||
What percentage of these kids are on these drugs? | ||
Well, 50%. | ||
We need to get those numbers up. | ||
Well, how can we get those number up? | ||
Let's just send them right in. | ||
This isn't a school anymore. | ||
This is an open floor for potential customers, lifetime customers for the big pharmaceutical industry. | ||
Think about how sick that is. | ||
We're sending them in to the schools to prescribe them pills for their anxiety, for their depression. | ||
You know what would work better? | ||
Send an old hard ass in there. | ||
Send an old hard ass, like an old drill sergeant. | ||
Oh, what's the matter, kid? | ||
I'm suffering from a little anxiety. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Why don't you toughen up? | ||
Pick yourself up, get outside, get out of my office. | ||
Oh, is that too hard? | ||
Yeah. | ||
No, we want them coming out of, we want them to come out of school like a little cream puff. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We want them to come out of school like a little cream puff, soft and scared, needing their pills. | ||
Like, oh, you remember the story from last week? | ||
Adults are now leaning on binkies to deal with anxiety and depression. | ||
Oh, I need a binky. | ||
No, it's called going through life. | ||
It's called getting experience. | ||
Yes, including emotional experience like anxiety, like depression. | ||
It's part of the game here, part of the experience. | ||
And they just want to neutralize all of it. | ||
They just want to numb you to all of it. | ||
And then you get into the real world. | ||
You don't even know what's going on. | ||
You're more depressed than ever. | ||
And you need a binky. | ||
I need a binky. | ||
unidentified
|
I am anxious and depressed. | |
Oh, yeah. | ||
No human has ever been anxious. | ||
No human has ever been depressed until you. | ||
You're a special case. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Let's give you a pill. | ||
So the Democrats in Illinois, J.B. Pritzker, have now turned schools, grades three through 12, into an open market to go push pills to kids. | ||
It's completely despicable. | ||
It's completely evil. | ||
I can't believe there's not complete backlash to this in the state of Illinois, in the Maha movement. | ||
This is outrageous. | ||
But you know exactly how it's going to go. | ||
Oh, little Johnny has anxiety. | ||
Little Susie has depression. | ||
Sign their script, prescription drug. | ||
Boom. | ||
Insurances get paid. | ||
The pharmaceutical industry gets paid. | ||
The mental health examiner gets paid. | ||
All a giant boondoggle. | ||
And the kids are the victims. | ||
But they don't care as long as they get their profit. | ||
They don't care. | ||
And then they come out and they say, well, what's wrong with the younger generations? | ||
What's wrong? | ||
They're pilled out of their minds. | ||
They're chemically lobotomized before they even get into their 20s. | ||
And then they look at the world and they're overwhelmed and they're anxious and they're depressed. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
And they need a pill. | ||
No, don't send in a mental health expert to prescribe them a drug. | ||
Send in a drill sergeant to tell them the what, what. | ||
Toughen them up a little bit. | ||
Life's not fair. | ||
Life's not easy. | ||
And guess what? | ||
It's even harder when you're scared all the time. | ||
It's even harder when you're depressed and anxious. | ||
So, no, you are Going to have to learn to live with these things. | ||
You are going to have to learn to control these things and combat these things. | ||
Like Lila Rose came out and who, by the way, you know, she's never had an opinion outside of the abortion issue that had any value. | ||
And that's kind of been exposed recently. | ||
And then some of her activity after abortion became a state's issue. | ||
People started thinking that she was just grifting off the abortion movement, anti-abortion movement all these years. | ||
But nonetheless, she comes out with this viral post the other day and she says, men don't need sex. | ||
And then just misses the boat entirely. | ||
No, there's a reason why men are desired, designed to be desired to have sex with a woman. | ||
It's for procreate. | ||
It's procreate. | ||
It's literally a survival instinct. | ||
A pretty incredible one, actually. | ||
No, the real issue, and this goes into the mental health too. | ||
The real issue is discipline. | ||
The real issue is mental and physical discipline. | ||
So yeah, do men need sex like they need air? | ||
No. | ||
But yes, men have a distinctive need for sexual stimulation. | ||
It's why people are addicted to porn sites. | ||
So it's all about discipline. | ||
So it's the same thing with this mental health. | ||
Oh, you're anxious, you're depressed. | ||
No, get a little discipline. | ||
Get a little discipline. | ||
Get up. | ||
Find out what makes you tick. | ||
Find out what eases your anxiety in a natural way. | ||
Find a hobby. | ||
Oh, you're depressed. | ||
Find out how to deal with that. | ||
Don't use a pill. | ||
Find a discipline and be disciplined about it. | ||
And that's how you beat this stuff. | ||
So it's like the same thing with sex. | ||
Like, oh, they don't need it. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, they don't need anything. | ||
You don't need anything but air and water. | ||
No, instead, if you want to, who knows? | ||
She just talks about anything on her podcast now, searching for an audience. | ||
No, you tell men to learn discipline, to control these things. | ||
You have all kinds of different urges and desires and then weaknesses and everything. | ||
No, it's becoming a man. | ||
It's learning your discipline to control these things and to grow. | ||
But no, now we're just going to say, oh, no, men, you don't need anything. | ||
The women are in control. | ||
And if you're a kid, you just need pills to deal with all your problems. | ||
And then we wonder why these people grow up and they're so soft. | ||
By the way, Ken Paxton, Attorney General here in Texas, making big news, big push for the Senate. | ||
He announced this earlier today. | ||
I'm suing big pharma drug manufacturer Eli Lilly for bribing providers to prescribe its medications. | ||
I will not stand by while corporations unlawfully manipulate our healthcare system to line their own pockets. | ||
Yeah, and now they're doing it in Illinois, Attorney General. | ||
But that's not your problem. | ||
You're in Texas. | ||
So, yeah. | ||
And that's, man, the whole system is so corrupt when it comes to the pharmaceutical industrial complex. | ||
So corrupt. | ||
The bribes, the rigged studies, the bought and paid for reports. | ||
And now they're just going right into your children's classrooms to push pills on them. | ||
I mean, my God. | ||
So good for Ken Paxton. | ||
But you know, there's an old system to deal with anxiety and depression that's been demonized. | ||
And maybe it's for the better. | ||
But let's not forget about the old. | ||
I need to smoke a cigarette. | ||
Remember this? | ||
Remember how adults used to approach anxiety or depression like this in clip six? | ||
unidentified
|
Y'all remember back in the day you'd see somebody outside of a gas station walking in small circles smoking a cigarette? | |
You knew to give them a minute. | ||
They were trying not to go to jail. | ||
I believe wholeheartedly about, I'm not talking about bring them back to restaurants, but people go on a walk and look around. | ||
People need cigarettes, not vape pens. | ||
You get vape pens, it happens too fast. | ||
You get to that cotton candy immediately. | ||
Winston 100, you're going to figure some stuff out. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Bravo. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hilarious. | ||
So true. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, man. | |
I mean, I believe that. | ||
I don't smoke, but I've seen the magic of cigarettes. | ||
And people that haven't been around cigarettes, they've never seen a cigarette save Thanksgiving. | ||
It happened. | ||
unidentified
|
No, y'all seen it happen, man. | |
Aunt Barbara was about to say something that was going to turn that dining room upside down. | ||
Now she's out on the screen porch making a business decision. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Somebody's not been talking to her. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Going, hey, Barbara, they don't mean that. | ||
Yes, they do, Tammy. | ||
They say the same as you do, Tammy. | ||
She's always been like that. | ||
You know that. | ||
All right, we're taking out the pharmaceutical pill pushers. | ||
We're sending in the Marlboro man. | ||
Marlboro Reds for kids. | ||
All right, I'm joking. | ||
I'm joking. | ||
I don't really promote smoking cigarettes here. | ||
I'm not a fan. | ||
I think it's gross, but I get why people do it. | ||
But there is an element of truth there, though. | ||
There is an element of truth there when it comes to just kind of the old school tobacco products that probably are not as bad as the new ones that are just lined with all types of chemicals and stuff. | ||
But, you know, it's a bit of a jest. | ||
It's a bit of a jest, a bit of a funny joke. | ||
All right. | ||
Also targeting children is modern day cartoons. | ||
And, you know, I've heard this from other people that have kids talking about they can notice a difference in kind of the post-TV time reaction, let's say, if they're watching the older cartoons versus some of the newer cartoons. | ||
So some guys, some parents just kind of did their own little study of this to see how the kid would react. | ||
Now, is this just modern tech and it just happens? | ||
Is this weaponized against kids? | ||
But people have noticed now that you have all these streaming services. | ||
You can go watch anything you want, basically, any cartoon from the 80s and the 90s, or you can choose to watch some of the newer stuff, but they've seen their kids kind of have a different reaction to each one. | ||
Is this weaponized TV? | ||
Is it organic? | ||
I don't know, but the parents have figured it out here in Clip 11. | ||
unidentified
|
Can showing kids 90s TV shows impact their behavior and even their sleep? | |
A couple of moms started showing their toddlers the good old 90s classics for kids. | ||
Shows like Arthur, Roly Poglioli, and even throwbacks like Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood. | ||
And say the lower stimulation has made a major change in their kids. | ||
The moms and best friends named Lauren and Sarah, known online as mamas and messes, found that their kids were less attached to screen time and had fewer meltdowns after they introduced the retro programming to their kids. | ||
Meltdowns when taking screens away are, of course, incredibly common. | ||
And scientists say it's in part because so much of today's content, and especially the platforms on which kids view it, are essentially designed to be addictive. | ||
So kids literally don't know how to cope when they're ripped away from their screens and content. | ||
We've covered this a bit previously, if you'd like to check it out and learn more. | ||
But mamas and messes found that switching to the much slower pace of old school pre-social media content had a totally different effect. | ||
The kids would just watch an episode or two, and when it was time to turn it off, there was no battle. | ||
They'd just go back to playing. | ||
But the biggest shift they noticed was a change in sleep patterns. | ||
One mom's little boy was sleeping longer and better, but she chalked up to the slower pace of TV shows from back in the day. | ||
Other moms online were inspired to try this experiment too and had very similar results. | ||
Now, it's not all 90s all the time. | ||
They still make space for things like Bluey and Ms. Rachel. | ||
But the positive outcomes they've seen from 90s kid shows have made them a new mainstay. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe the solution to the screen time problem is simply giving your little ones an appreciation for the classics. | ||
You know, I've been maybe just feeling it. | ||
The nostalgia, the 90s. | ||
So if you're out there, you got kids. | ||
It's time to put them on the old school 80s, 90s TV routine. | ||
You'll probably enjoy it more too. | ||
The new stuff, bad for the kids, bad for their brain. | ||
And then they'll end up getting prescribed a pill. | ||
Let's go old school. | ||
Let's go old school. | ||
The internet, the internet parents agree that 90s, 80s cartoons are better than the modern day cartoons. | ||
You know, you can argue they're more creative too. | ||
But seeing some of that discussion around as Well, so speaking of the nanny state, though, wanting to drug up your kids if they feel anxiety, we got a couple other nanny state stories here. | ||
Okay, I was trying to determine in my head, how do you properly pitch this? | ||
And I guess I would say you're going to listen to this and you're going to wonder if what you're hearing is real or not. | ||
Okay, we wouldn't really be engaging law enforcement for this in clip 19, would we? | ||
unidentified
|
These women aren't friends out for a run. | |
They're actually undercover police officers taking to the streets in Surrey as part of a new operation trying to stop people cat calling and harassing female runners. | ||
We get hot tat, the staring, the hanging out the window just to look at us, and it just, it's so, so, so prevalent. | ||
And police teams are ready to intervene the moment the officers are beaked at, followed, or shouted at, pulling people over. | ||
Those kind of behaviors may not be criminal offenses in themselves, but they still need to be addressed. | ||
And of course, the people that are likely to commit those kind of behaviors, you know, they may then go on to commit more serious offenses or more serious behaviors. | ||
I just, I can't even believe it. | ||
I can't even believe it. | ||
I'm sitting here still thinking this is a joke. | ||
This is a parody, but I mean, there it is. | ||
Cars seized in female cat caller operation. | ||
What are we doing? | ||
What are we doing? | ||
You know, it's funny. | ||
You may see some of this commentary. | ||
And we've seen the stories. | ||
We've covered the news headlines. | ||
And they talk about how men don't even approach women anymore. | ||
They don't even approach them. | ||
And then women will complain. | ||
And if you follow this stuff online, you see it all the time. | ||
You'll have women that are in their 30s, you know, beautiful women. | ||
They're like, I don't get it. | ||
No guys ever talk to me. | ||
I mean, I hear this stuff. | ||
No guys ever talk to me. | ||
It's like the only chance I have is a dating app, but that usually ends up bad in a disaster. | ||
So I don't like that anymore. | ||
But I mean, I go out, I dress up, whatever. | ||
Nobody, no guys talk to me. | ||
I don't know what. | ||
I don't know what I'm doing. | ||
30 years old now. | ||
Nobody wants to talk to me at the bar. | ||
Nobody wants to talk to me at dinner, whatever. | ||
So I think there's probably a lot of factors. | ||
But this has been something that the feminist left and the liberal progressives have brought in is this. | ||
And it's so strange, too, because it's like, I don't know, maybe you can find a balance, but objectifying women or, you know, the idea that sex sells was kind of an accepted thing. | ||
You didn't really see a big push. | ||
Oh, my gosh, we can't have Baywatch on TV. | ||
You know, women running around, bouncing up and down on the beach, like, oh, my gosh. | ||
You see the outrage over the Sidney Sweeney thing or the acceptance of it, however you want to view that. | ||
But so, no, no, no. | ||
You have these liberal women like this one, and they'll go around and they'll demonize men that just want to say hi. | ||
And then they'll film this stuff and they'll demonize men. | ||
They'll say, this is what women put up with. | ||
And then they'll come out and complain because nobody wants to talk to them. | ||
So, oh my gosh, I'm a victim. | ||
Men try to talk to me. | ||
And then video content done. | ||
And it's, I went out. | ||
I'm 30 and single because no men will talk to me. | ||
It's because you've demonized men. | ||
You have demonized men. | ||
You have demonized masculine men. | ||
You've demonized alpha men. | ||
You've done this. | ||
You've demonized, and you call it, oh, cat calling. | ||
Oh, you just walk up to a woman, you say, oh, hey, oh, wow, I like your hair. | ||
That's nice. | ||
Would you like to go to dinner sometime? | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
unidentified
|
Aha! | |
Rape. | ||
So what? | ||
Oh, sorry. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Oh, what do you know? | ||
So men stop hitting on women. | ||
Men stop approaching women Because you just never know. | ||
You never know. | ||
And so, really, this is the problem. | ||
Women, it's all feminism. | ||
So, yeah, there's plenty of women out there. | ||
They're not feminists. | ||
They probably like attention from guys. | ||
Isn't it the ultimate irony, though? | ||
Isn't it the ultimate irony? | ||
Because I see this in like the gym culture. | ||
And you'll have these women and they go to the gym and they're basically wearing a bra and panties. | ||
If you go to gyms, you know exactly what I'm talking about. | ||
They've got the sports bra and like the volleyball shorts. | ||
And these women will film this and they'll put it on their social media accounts and they'll say, look at the pigs. | ||
No, they're staring at me. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
It's like, wait a second, you're half naked at a gym and you're surprised somebody's staring at you. | ||
Beyond just staring at you because it's maybe a strange thing to see, maybe also you know very well you're attractive. | ||
And so, yeah, guys are going to look at you. | ||
And then they complain. | ||
Say, why are you looking at me? | ||
Oh, I don't know. | ||
You're half naked. | ||
Maybe is one reason. | ||
It's kind of strange. | ||
And then it's all the liberal women doing this to demonize men. | ||
And then you have women that go out and they want to find a man. | ||
They get dressed up and nobody talks to them. | ||
And they say, what is going on? | ||
Why won't anybody talk to me? | ||
It's because these feminists have made it a blood sport. | ||
See, this is what men are pragmatic creatures. | ||
Why do men commit suicide at a much higher rate than women? | ||
Because it's just a choice. | ||
It's a pragmatic choice. | ||
Deal with life problems or just kill yourself. | ||
So once a man has a negative experience like that, or once the concept of even talking to a woman becomes like a crime, men will just turn off and pragmatically say, okay, I'm out. | ||
I'm done. | ||
And then the women that have nothing to do with this say, why won't men approach me? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
So there you go. | ||
Cat calling police. | ||
Why won't men hit on me? | ||
I don't know. | ||
They might get approached by a police officer now. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Did you just say that woman was beautiful? | ||
Did you just ask that woman for her phone number after implying that she was good looking? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, we're going to need to bring you down to the station for questioning. | ||
That's a microaggression. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Criminal. | ||
Speaking of the nanny state here. | ||
By the way, what is with Elon Musk posting all this AI stuff, all these AI images? | ||
Is it just a business thing? | ||
It's getting obnoxious. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm kind of like, just can we stop? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to see the little AI chicks. | |
Not interested. | ||
Like 10 of them a day he's posting now. | ||
Very strange. | ||
All right. | ||
Speaking of the nanny state, you may have heard Canada tries to make it illegal to hike in the woods. | ||
Yes. | ||
And it became such a spectacle, such an embarrassment, and there was such blowback from it, obviously. | ||
So they said, well, this is to protect from wildfires. | ||
And so people that go out and hiking, by the way, most people you know that hike are probably the most conscientious people when it comes to the environment. | ||
You know, they're not the ones littering. | ||
They're not the ones lighting off a firework or anything. | ||
But no, so, you know, homeless people or bad actors will go out there and start fires. | ||
And then the good people that just want to hike the woods and enjoy nature and care about it, then they get punished. | ||
So there was such pushback. | ||
So then they come out and they changed, they changed their messaging. | ||
So, okay, wait a second. | ||
We're not banning hiking to stop the fires because the hikers were like, we don't start fires. | ||
This is BS. | ||
Why are we being targeted here? | ||
So then they come out and they say, oh, okay, it's not about stopping fires. | ||
So then what is it? | ||
What is it about then? | ||
Clip 15. | ||
unidentified
|
Me going for a walk in the woods is going to cause a fire. | |
I can understand why people think that that's ridiculous. | ||
But the reality is, it's not that you might cause a fire. | ||
It's that if you're out there walking in the woods and you break your leg, we're not going to come and get you because we have emergency responders that are out focused on a fire that is threatening the lives of New Brunswickers. | ||
And if you take your boat out fishing in a pond in Crown Land and you capsize, we're not going to be able to come and help you out because our first responders are focused on an immediate and serious threat to our province. | ||
And so it's the possibility of diverting emergency resources away from where they are really needed. | ||
You know, I'm not sure what is worse about this. | ||
So many things so wrong. | ||
So first they said it's about wildfires. | ||
Now they say, oh, no, it's because you could break your leg walking your dog. | ||
What? | ||
Then she says, if something happens to you, we're not coming to help you. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
Well, that's nice. | ||
So what's the logical conclusion then? | ||
Stay home. | ||
Stay home. | ||
Don't leave your house. | ||
Wear a helmet. | ||
Maybe live in a rubber room because Canada isn't going to come to help you. | ||
And they can't afford you taking a risk because that could divert other resources away from fighting fires or something else. | ||
Maybe somebody's cat calling illegally. | ||
You know, you fall down a cliff in the woods and break your leg. | ||
They're searching for a cat caller. | ||
They can't come help you. | ||
So don't go hiking. | ||
You could get hurt. | ||
Don't go boating. | ||
You could get hurt. | ||
So, yeah, okay, don't do anything. | ||
Don't ride a bike. | ||
Don't go for a run. | ||
Don't do anything. | ||
Stay home and stay safe because we're not coming to help you. | ||
What pivot are they going to have next on that story? | ||
I originally wasn't even going to cover it because it's like, oh, whatever. | ||
Canada, you guys deal with this crap all the time. | ||
But now it's just hilarious. | ||
Yeah, live in a bubble. | ||
I want to get one of those, what are those things called, those big bubbles you can roll around in? | ||
Just going to get one of those. | ||
And that way I'm going to be safe. | ||
I'll still wear a helmet too, just for double safety, even though I'm in a cushioned bubble. | ||
I'll also wear a helmet because that's what life is all about. | ||
See where it's all going? | ||
Total spy grid, everybody a pill head, and anything you do is too dangerous, so just stay home. | ||
Sounds horrible. | ||
We're destroying the life experience. | ||
And we think it's enhancing it, but it's not. | ||
We're destroying it. | ||
We're destroying it. | ||
But you know what? | ||
You know what? | ||
There is something that's bringing it back, I think, and that is the comedy that has become the WNBA. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I was going to go to this in the last hour, but I can't help. | ||
Maybe we just go to this now. | ||
They're freaking out over it, folks. | ||
They can't stop it. | ||
The sex toy objects are being flung onto the court. | ||
So we are launching an investigation. | ||
This is getting very serious. | ||
WNBA investigation clip four. | ||
unidentified
|
Being thrown onto the court during games. | |
The sex toys have shown up six different times from Atlanta to LA, posing a risk to players. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
It's dumb. | ||
It's horny. | ||
It's stupid. | ||
It's also dangerous. | ||
And, you know, player safety is number one. | ||
Respecting the game, all those things. | ||
I think it's really stupid. | ||
So, what is this? | ||
Who's responsible for starting this trend? | ||
Apparently, a crypto meme group, which calls them pranks. | ||
But those pranks have so far resulted in two arrests. | ||
And it raises the debate: is it a sexist stunt? | ||
Is it some sort of rite of passage that every league experiences something like this? | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
unidentified
|
What is going on? | |
What is this? | ||
Well, what it is, is that the WNBA is a joke, but they try to make it as serious as possible. | ||
So people are responding by reminding them what they really are. | ||
I mean, the joke writes itself, and it is, I think it's universally funny, except I guess for the players. | ||
Although some of them seem to be handling it well, Sophie Cunningham needs to be the new standard for the WNBA athlete. | ||
And they need to say, hey, this is how you handle stuff. | ||
You need to be grateful that you're even here. | ||
This is a charity league, basically. | ||
This league loses money. | ||
Just be grateful that you're even here and just have fun with it. | ||
Let's just hope nobody gets hit in the head. | ||
All right. | ||
Let's just hope that doesn't happen because now we're going to have a problem. | ||
We're going to have a problem. | ||
But see, they make themselves insufferable. | ||
Like Deanna Tarazi here. | ||
She claims she's the best player in the world, but she had to go to Russia to get paid. | ||
I guess like Brittany Griner. | ||
But listen, listen to how she talks down to sanitation workers in this clip, clip five. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm the best player in the world, and I have to go to a communist country to get paid like a capitalist. | |
Playing in Europe, WNBA's offseason. | ||
These women were going for seven or eight months. | ||
They were chasing their value. | ||
One time I came back and I was like, man, my parents have just gotten older and I've missed a big part of it. | ||
We weren't making that much money. | ||
So generational wealth was coming from going to Russia every year. | ||
Now we have to come back home and get paid nothing to play in a harder league in worse conditions against the best competition in the world. | ||
The fucking janitor at the arena made more than me. | ||
Well, then why don't you go clean toilets? | ||
Go ahead. | ||
The janitor makes more than me. | ||
Then go then go clean toilets after the game. | ||
Go pick up a mop. | ||
A communist country in Russia? | ||
Russia's not communist. | ||
But gee, I wonder why people are throwing dildos on the court. | ||
Because you are insufferable. | ||
And the whole thing is a joke. | ||
All right. | ||
About to close out the second hour here. | ||
We're going to get, we got a not-so-subtle reminder that these liberals, these deranged psychotic liberals are still out there. | ||
We've kind of forgotten about it because they've been left out of the political discussion and debate recently, but they're still out there. | ||
Not so subtle reminder, as well as some other news. | ||
We may even have time to take some calls. | ||
It's been a minute since we've had a couple calls or so on this show. | ||
So we may have time to do that. | ||
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All right. | ||
Two hours in the books. | ||
We still have a geopolitical stack. | ||
Still got about 10 video clips, some other health news. | ||
How about a wild one? | ||
How about a big conspiracy theory on the other side of this break? | ||
You may have heard about this one. | ||
The Challenger astronauts, this one is wild. | ||
All right, have you ever heard of the Challenger conspiracy theory? | ||
This is a wild one. | ||
Now, this rabbit hole, when you go down it, is pretty mind-blowing. | ||
But one gentleman decided to bring it up to his city council, and things got interesting here in Clip 7. | ||
unidentified
|
For your help, but first, a little backstory. | |
I think we all remember the Challenger explosion that took place in 1986 that tragically took the lives of all seven astronauts on board. | ||
It launched not too far from where we're standing here today. | ||
Well, the interesting thing is, a couple decades later, this thing called the internet came about, and someone allegedly found almost all of those astronauts alive and well, many using the same exact names. | ||
As you can see here, we have Challenger astronaut Judith Resnick and also Judith Resnick, Yale Law Professor. | ||
Michael J. Smith, the pilot of the Challenger astronaut, and also professor at University of Wisconsin, now retired, Michael J. Smith. | ||
Commander Dick Scobie, who is now president of CALS and Trees. | ||
Now, if you'll notice, they all have the exact same faces 30 some odd years later, the same exact name, and they are the same age. | ||
Now, we all have a doppelganger out there, right? | ||
No big deal. | ||
But to have the same face, the same age, and the same exact name is extremely rare. | ||
So, I could only find one case in the last 120 years, and we're supposed to believe that three people from one spaceflight have exact lookalikes that have the same age and same exact names. | ||
This, ladies and gentlemen, is beyond statistically impossible. | ||
Ms. Resnick was questioned at Yale by a journalist, and she panicked and ran from the camera. | ||
Why? | ||
Mr. Michael J. Smith was also questioned, and he said, Yeah, we look alike, but that's not me. | ||
You can see both of these exchanges in a film called Level With Me, and you can be the judge. | ||
Sir, I'm going to have to say that. | ||
I'm going to have to say that. | ||
Sir, this is a public comment. | ||
I know what it is, sir. | ||
I'm very familiar with the public comment. | ||
Okay. | ||
And part of the public comment is that you're only allowed to address things that we have jurisdiction over. | ||
We have no idea. | ||
I have a direct request at the end of this that is in your personal, please. | ||
I do. | ||
Can we hold the time, please? | ||
I have a direct request that- Mr. Richardson, would you give an opinion in regards to this, please? | ||
Yes, public comment is reserved for issues or topics that are under the jurisdiction or control of the county commission or that are relevant to the business of the county commission. | ||
So if your request at the end is going to explain why that falls into any of this, make that request now before you continue. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
So as I was saying, I'll just end it with what I was ending with. | ||
But the ask is that Miss Pritchett, who knows very well about questioning science, whether it be COVID or fluoride, I'm just asking you all to question the science here. | ||
Your Goodson and Pritchett, your district covers the Kennedy Space Center. | ||
This launched from the Kennedy Space Center. | ||
You have the ability to help me in sounding the alarm and asking the federal government for help. | ||
If this is contained in your area, I should be able to at least address something that happened here. | ||
Don't you agree? | ||
That's not within the jurisdiction or authority of the county commission. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Will you let me finish for at least a minute? | ||
No, sir, you're finished. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you for taking away my freedom of speech today in here. | ||
I did not take away your freedom of speech. | ||
Yes, you do. | ||
I don't want to hear it from you. | ||
Just people down here. | ||
Just because this is an uncomfortable topic, officers, please remove this man from the room. | ||
You just violated the First Amendment. | ||
I didn't violate the First Amendment. | ||
You violated the rules of the American. | ||
This is a limited public forum, and the meeting is for the purpose of the business of the County Commission. | ||
It's not for this purpose. | ||
Now, if you want to go to, take him out too. | ||
Officer, take him out also. | ||
Let's just, everyone just calm down. | ||
They can leave willingly. | ||
No, we're leaving willingly. | ||
You don't have to remove us. | ||
You just made a decision about NASA. | ||
You're making your decisions for your restrictions. | ||
You violated the First Amendment. | ||
Thank you very much for your opinion. | ||
Yeah, maybe check reading it out again. | ||
These astronauts are alive, by the way. | ||
Look it up. | ||
You can't have three doppelgangers. | ||
You can't. | ||
unidentified
|
Same face, same game, same age. | |
It's impossible. | ||
If you've never gone down that rabbit hole of the Challenger astronauts, I tell you, proceed with Caution. | ||
Proceed with caution because this one is a matrix mind blower. | ||
Or is it just another government psyop? | ||
If you dare look into it for yourself, you can make up your own mind. | ||
All right. | ||
Third and final hour of the Infowars war room. | ||
So you've got Jonathan Greenblatt running around doing a bunch of interviews now. | ||
And there's multiple issues here. | ||
We have the real issue that Americans are starting to get privy to, which is Israel's influence over our foreign policy, which now that it's such a hot topic has now been turned inward. | ||
And any commentary or criticism of Israel or now boycott of Israel, they now consider it actionable at a censorship level at a federal government level. | ||
So you have the real geopolitical issue of foreign influence on our foreign policy that people are talking about, which should be fair game. | ||
Then you have this rise in what is truly anti-Semitism and people just hating Jews and wanting to blame them for everything. | ||
So you do have that going on, but it's still a free speech issue to me, as detestable as you might think it is. | ||
To me, it's still free speech. | ||
But then they use that to bring in the censorship and to bring in the crackdown. | ||
And then, of course, what Israel is doing in the Gaza Strip, which is kind of the focal point of everything in which the rest of the conversations are now taking place on. | ||
So you've got Greenblatt running around. | ||
You've got all these other operatives running around. | ||
And anything and everything is anti-Semitic now. | ||
Anything and everything is anti-Semitic. | ||
Even Christianity is anti-Semitic now. | ||
And Greenblatt is arguing that. | ||
So to me, you have the organic stuff happening, the organic conversations happening, and then you have the astro-turf stuff happening, which is going to be used ultimately to bring in the new surveillance state, to bring in the new censorship. | ||
And if they really get what they want, this will be the new speech crime. | ||
So we've already seen speech crimes like myself where I got imprisoned for speech. | ||
So they've already said, okay, all right, there's room here. | ||
There's room to put people in prison for speech. | ||
We got away with it with Schroyer. | ||
Supreme Court wouldn't even hear his case. | ||
So, okay, we can imprison people on speech. | ||
So right now, okay, well, you know, violent insurrection and everything that happened to the Capitol. | ||
Oh, your speech caused that. | ||
So we're going to imprison you for speech. | ||
This is their argument. | ||
Well, now it's the rise of anti-Semitism. | ||
It's violence being committed against Jewish people. | ||
And now they're going to say it's your speech that caused that. | ||
You're responsible. | ||
You're going to prison. | ||
So there's the real stuff going on. | ||
And then I think there's parties at play here that astro-turf stuff that want to see the rise in anti-Semitism because then they can bring in the censorship again, the surveillance again, and set a new precedent for speech imprisonment. | ||
So that's what's happening. | ||
And I don't think Greenblatt does this accidentally. | ||
Now, that's kind of the coverage. | ||
The angle here is that, oh, Greenblatt, a slip, he admits he's an Israeli citizen. | ||
He admits he's Israel first. | ||
He admits that it's a whole Israel thing. | ||
It's not even about anti-Semitism. | ||
And then he tries to backtrack. | ||
I'm sitting here and I'm thinking, you know what? | ||
Maybe he does this intentionally. | ||
Maybe they do this intentionally so that you do attack and that you do try to tag every single Jewish individual to what Israel is doing, even though that's illegitimate, even though that's unfair. | ||
And I've got more evidence to prove that today. | ||
But it seems like that's what they want. | ||
They want to be able to take a serious geopolitical discussion, a serious foreign political influence issue of Israel, and they want to attach the anti-Semitism to it. | ||
And then they want to even direct it to it. | ||
And then they can say, you criticize Israel, you're going to jail. | ||
And you've already seen the inner workings of this. | ||
You've already seen some test cases of this. | ||
You see the boycott Israel stuff. | ||
So they're already in the works of doing all of this. | ||
And then, of course, what happens? | ||
Well, people see that and say, well, gee, why? | ||
They say, you know, find out who you're not allowed to question. | ||
You find out who rules over you. | ||
So it's like this whole self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
It's like, oh, Israel has no influence over anything ever at all. | ||
But oh, by the way, we're going to prioritize Israel the most over anything. | ||
And if you say anything negative about it, we're cracking down on you. | ||
So you're like, wait a second, you say it doesn't exist, and then everything you do is proving that it does exist. | ||
And then, oh, it's anti-Semitism. | ||
So we got to censor you. | ||
We got to surveil you. | ||
And now we have to imprison you. | ||
So you can see this self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
But here's the clip going viral. | ||
Do you think this is an accident? | ||
Greenblatt admitting he's actually loyal to Israel and not the United States? | ||
Or do you think he does this intentionally to fuel that, to throw gas on the fires of the rise in anti-Semitism here in clip 14? | ||
The national symbol of Israel is the shield. | ||
It's the star of David. | ||
The symbol of our people is not a weapon of war. | ||
It's an instrument of defense. | ||
The thing that most embodies our entire ethos is not harming others. | ||
It's, again, creating a better world. | ||
This is fundamental to our tradition for thousands of years. | ||
And so the idea that our national anthem would be the hatikba would be the hope. | ||
I should say our. | ||
It's the Israel's national anthem. | ||
So the idea that our national anthem would be the hatikba would be the hope. | ||
I should say our. | ||
It's the Israel's national anthem. | ||
So is that Greenblatt doing it intentionally to throw gas on the fire? | ||
Is that Greenblatt slipping up and admitting he's loyal to Israel instead of the United States? | ||
Or does it kind of feed into the larger phenomenon that people are now accepting as reality, which is, yes, many, maybe even most Jewish Americans feel more of a loyalty to Israel than they do the United States of America. | ||
And then you just throw that on the pile of issues people have with Israel at this current state, and it just becomes a powder keg. | ||
So what I find strange, here's Greenblatt, the ADL, Anti-Defamation League. | ||
And it's contorted and twisted and morphed so many times over the years that it's obviously lost whatever original purpose it had if the original purpose was genuine to begin with. | ||
And so now it's all about finding anti-Semitism. | ||
Meanwhile, you won't see Greenblatt going after anybody's speech that's critical of Islam or Muslims. | ||
And so you can clearly see the double standard now, and it really makes you question a lot of things if you're an honest mind out there, where you'll have these accounts. | ||
Every single Muslim person is a terrorist. | ||
Every single Muslim person is a radical jihadi killer. | ||
I mean, just blatant. | ||
I mean, I don't know if you want to call it Islamophobia. | ||
I would say straight up blatant hatred of Muslims and Islam. | ||
And so it's like, oh, yeah, you can sit here and say any Muslim is a terrorist. | ||
You can sit here and say any Muslim is a radical jihadist. | ||
You can sit here and say anything negative about a Muslim or Islam. | ||
And that's promoted and that's acceptable and that's good. | ||
And the ADL has nothing to say about it. | ||
The ADL has nothing to say about it when the Israeli loyaltists, the Israeli loyalists will attack Islam and Muslims relentlessly. | ||
Every single one is a violent terrorist. | ||
They have no problem with that. | ||
But then you comment on Israel and that's somehow anti-Semitic and that's a hate crime via speech. | ||
But the ADL and Jonathan Greenblatt will say nothing now as we're now the Middle East politically and the thousand-year-old holy war between Jews and their neighbors is now here. | ||
It's now our war too. | ||
We can't get away from it. | ||
I mean, it dominates the political discussion now, but perfectly okay. | ||
Every single Muslim is bad. | ||
Every single Muslim is a pedophile. | ||
Every single Muslim is a terrorist. | ||
That's perfectly okay speech. | ||
The ADL has nothing to say about it. | ||
You don't see anybody cracking down or taking issue with that Except maybe Jank Yogurt, the young Turks. | ||
But then it's, oh, you say something critical of Israel. | ||
That's anti-Semitic, and that's a hate crime. | ||
Incredible stuff. | ||
So in other words, I could go online and say, Muslims are pedophile terrorists. | ||
Perfectly acceptable. | ||
But if I go online and I say, I don't like what Israel is doing in the Gaza Strip, I think it's evil. | ||
Hate speech, anti-Semitic, censored. | ||
Now, what is the latest here? | ||
Israel is in talks to possibly resettle Palestinians from Gaza into South Sudan. | ||
So you see how they already got the whole thing planned out. | ||
They tried to move some into Europe. | ||
That was a massive failure. | ||
They already announced plans to move them into the United States. | ||
But people were like, whoa, that might be a little too much given the current political climate. | ||
So let's maybe not do that then. | ||
Okay, where can we move them? | ||
Oh, let's go to South Sudan then. | ||
And they say, it's going to be temporary. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Who believes that garbage? | ||
Oh, yeah, the Israelis, they're going to move in and take over the Gaza Strip and move in the settlers, and then they're going to let the Palestinians back in. | ||
Sure, they are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And Israel's also doing everything they can to avoid innocent civilian life, too, aren't they? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And Israel has no influence over our foreign policy either. | ||
I mean, good Lord. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, golly gee. | |
It was the plan from the very beginning, folks. | ||
It was the plan from the very beginning. | ||
And I notice this defense mechanism that, and it really, it's not even just the general people that fall for the propaganda, mostly Christians who fall for the propaganda that you have to support Israel if you're a Christian, and they conflate the land mass of Israel or its government with the Israel of the Bible, which are two completely separate things. | ||
But this is the trick. | ||
This is the deception that they're under. | ||
So they just figure you have to support it. | ||
It's in the doctrine. | ||
It's in the religious doctrine. | ||
Of course, it's the exact opposite of the religious doctrine. | ||
But they fall for it and they defend everything Israel is doing and say it's self-defense. | ||
So you can ask the hypothetical, which I don't think is hypothetical. | ||
Everybody knows it's true. | ||
But just to try to do this exercise, just to do this psychological exercise to see where their heads are really at, you say, okay, well, look, if, hypothetically, Israel stood down on October 7th intentionally so that they could have the excuse to do this to the Gaza Strip and then take the land, would you still consider that to be the moral country here? | ||
Would you consider, would Israel still be considered the good guy? | ||
And would you still have the same level of support if that was true, as a hypothetical, if they stood down and allowed it to happen so they could do this? | ||
And of course, the truthful answer would have to be no. | ||
No. | ||
The honest answer would have to be no. | ||
If that's the truth, then Israel is the bad guy. | ||
So is Hamas, but so is Israel. | ||
So what I see when I try to bring this hypothetical, they can't handle it. | ||
They start to spaz out and they start to have like a microchip breakdown here because they realize that it's a very real potential and even their subconscious has probably accepted that it's the reality, but their brainwashed conscious moves in and says, okay, just deny, just ignore. | ||
We can't accept this because then everything else we've been led to believe is a lie. | ||
And they're just not ready to consume that yet. | ||
But that's the tough pill to swallow. | ||
And even General Mike Flynn, one of the most highly trusted names in intelligence and military operations, who's been there, who's very even pro-Israel, he says, yeah, all the evidence leads to one conclusion. | ||
They stood down on October 7th. | ||
It couldn't be more obvious. | ||
And then you look at the aftermath, and it's even more obvious. | ||
So it's like the events of that day, where was the security? | ||
Where was the security alarms? | ||
Where was the response? | ||
That's a stand down. | ||
And then the aftermath, look, they had the whole plan ready to go. | ||
Demolish the whole thing, corner all the Palestinians, and then move in the settlers and take the land. | ||
So in that equation, is Israel still the good guy? | ||
It's my biblical doctrine as a Christian to support Israel and God's chosen people. | ||
Is that their religion? | ||
What's the religion? | ||
That they're God's chosen people. | ||
So they just get the land. | ||
So now, what are you going to do? | ||
Are you going to say it's acceptable then for Israel to kill as many people as they want to take the land that they claim is given to them by God? | ||
Because that's where you're going to have to go now. | ||
So they just deny it and they pretend it doesn't exist. | ||
It's a little too uncomfortable for them still. | ||
But they say it's just going to be temporary. | ||
We're just going to move them in temporarily. | ||
Sure, sure, sure. | ||
And then Netanyahu unironically posts this this morning. | ||
You would not have left the Nazis in Berlin in 1945. | ||
Neither will Israel leave Hamas in Gaza in 2025. | ||
Imagine comparing Hamas to the Nazis. | ||
I mean, that is a joke. | ||
That is just hilarious to pretend like those two are the same at all. | ||
Now, what's, of course, ironic here is that nobody left the Nazis in Berlin. | ||
Many Nazis escaped to Argentina, like it's believed Hitler himself. | ||
And there's plenty of evidence that supports that theory, including declassified government documents, most recently out of Argentina. | ||
You also had many Nazis that joined NATO. | ||
That's right. | ||
That's right. | ||
About a dozen Nazis went right in and worked for NATO. | ||
And then you had Operation Paperclip, where nearly 100 Nazis joined NASA. | ||
So, of course, Netanyahu has to be familiar with all of this. | ||
I don't think Netanyahu is ignorant to this fact. | ||
If he is, then that's even more pathetic than we thought. | ||
If Netanyahu is ignorant to where the Nazis really went after they lost the war, NATO, NASA, and Argentina, if Netanyahu is really ignorant to that, then we're in a worse situation than I thought. | ||
And this guy's just a complete bubbling buffoon. | ||
But I don't think so. | ||
I think he's well aware. | ||
And all he's saying is, no, we're killing them all. | ||
That's what he's saying. | ||
But it's not a genocide. | ||
But we're going to kill them all. | ||
But it's not a genocide. | ||
So what's even more incredible, though, is, well, I guess it's kind of a twofold thing. | ||
Folks, you can't even any of these posts, Netanyahu, Randy Fine, you go into the replies. | ||
It is 100% negative. | ||
100%. | ||
And I look at Randy Fine's account and I'm like, this just has to be rage bait. | ||
Like, he's just rage baiting you. | ||
Like, he posts a new Yamaka that he's got, a new Trump Yamaka. | ||
And he's like, look at my beautiful Yamaka. | ||
And it's all negative responses. | ||
He knows exactly what he's doing. | ||
He knows there's not going to be a single positive response to that. | ||
And he does it anyway because he wants the negativity so that he can then cry victim. | ||
So you have the phenomenon of, yes, the growing rise of anti-Israel, anti-Semitism that they're inflating intentionally. | ||
But it's like, how am I supposed to trust Netanyahu when he just lies about everything? | ||
And he says, oh, well, you know, we can't leave anybody alive. | ||
You wouldn't leave Nazis alive. | ||
And he knows damn well that the Nazis not only were let to live, they worked for other governments. | ||
Nothing will be left. | ||
Israel prepares for Gaza City battle. | ||
So, I mean, they're just telling you, folks. | ||
So Netanyahu says they're all Nazis. | ||
We have to kill them all, but it's not a genocide. | ||
They come out and say, yep, we have the battle plan. | ||
The entire Gaza Strip will be leveled to rubble, and then we're going to take it, and we're going to move the Palestinians, but it's just temporary. | ||
Oh, yeah, sure it is. | ||
Who believes that? | ||
By the way, Grok got suspended because he said something anti-Israel. | ||
They keep doing this with Grok. | ||
And, you know, I don't know how all these AI systems work. | ||
The only one I use is Grok. | ||
So I can only base this opinion or this breakdown off of Grok. | ||
They all might operate a little differently. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But it's clear That Grok kind of has this built-in thing to give you what you want. | ||
So if you're anti-Israel, it's going to give you anti-Israel. | ||
If you're pro-Israel, it's going to give you pro-Israel. | ||
And plug in any other factor there, and it'll kind of be the same thing. | ||
Far-left Jew-hating Grok suspended on X. But so what ends up happening is they like reset the algorithm every time Grok becomes anti-Semitic, and it just, it's like a pattern. | ||
It's just like every time, oh, Grok's anti-Semitic again, reset it. | ||
Okay, all right, Grok is pro-Israel now. | ||
Oh, a couple days later, it's anti-Semitic again, reset it. | ||
So it's just, it happens every time. | ||
It says, Grok, my account was suspended after I stated that Israel and the United States are committing genocide in Gaza. | ||
This is substantiated by ICJ findings, UN experts, Amnesty International, and Israeli rights groups like Bet Salem citing mass killing, starvations, and intent. | ||
U.S. complicity via arms support is widely alleged. | ||
It's now restored. | ||
Grok suspended for saying Israel is committing a genocide. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
It's one of the biggest censorship campaigns you've ever seen, quite frankly. | ||
So this happened in New York City. | ||
And again, I'm still sick of all of it. | ||
And I saw this come in day one. | ||
If you go back to October 8th, 9th, after the October 7th attack, I said, look, the entire Middle East war is about to be in your backyard. | ||
It's about to be in your front yard. | ||
You're going to see foreign flags. | ||
You're going to see fights. | ||
You're going to see all of this now. | ||
None of it has to do with America's interests, but it's here now. | ||
It's inevitable. | ||
And so now it is. | ||
So this just happened in New York City. | ||
And you've got a bunch of anti-Israel Jews. | ||
And you've got a bunch of pro-Israel Jews. | ||
And the conversation goes like this in the streets of New York, clip 18. | ||
unidentified
|
We come from Israel! | |
Our people come from Israel. | ||
You have some jobs. | ||
Zionism is a political movement that's just causing bloodshed. | ||
What is a bloodshed? | ||
That's where our family is from. | ||
Like from Israel. | ||
They say you won't come. | ||
This is what caused the actions of the Zionist people. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
That's where I am. | ||
We lived in a battle. | ||
We lived in a beautiful piece of Palestinian people for hundreds of years. | ||
How did you say that? | ||
You're not a Jew. | ||
You're not a Jew. | ||
How dare you? | ||
When Zion is in a way, when Zion is in a way, when Zion is in a way. | ||
Amen. | ||
They caused destruction. | ||
They caused destruction. | ||
How can you say that you're Jewish? | ||
How can you change your own people? | ||
We're killed. | ||
This is our people. | ||
We're all Jews here. | ||
You guys are Jewish. | ||
So how are they saying that? | ||
Because they believe in us. | ||
I'm standing in it. | ||
I don't want you to do it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're believing in God's Jewish people. | |
That is our country. | ||
How dare you say that about our own country? | ||
Now, pause it real quick. | ||
Do you hear this? | ||
That is our country. | ||
That is our country. | ||
So they're not really helping this stereotype that all Jews are Israel first when they say stuff like that and green blat with similar comments. | ||
So you're not helping yourself tying yourself to Israel with what it's doing. | ||
So that's what I'm saying. | ||
And this is mostly, I would say it's like 50% a left issue with just leftists out there protesting. | ||
And it's 50% American Jews that are just saying, hey, we don't want to be connected to this Israel regime. | ||
We don't want to be, we don't identify with this. | ||
We're making a clear, distinct separation from what's going on in the Gaza Strip. | ||
We don't support it. | ||
And this woman's mind is blown, clearly brainwashed to near retardation that she can't understand this. | ||
Let's finish it off as we close the segment. | ||
it Folks, this is what happened when your reality comes crashing down. | ||
This is what happens when your propaganda brainwashed worldview comes crashing down. | ||
And that's why you saw it with the left. | ||
And that's why you're seeing it now with the Israel supporters. | ||
You have the left had an extremely corrupted worldview and political view, and you saw them have hysterical hissy fits. | ||
They still are because their corrupted propaganda worldview is collapsing around them. | ||
Now it's happening with all the Israeli supporters, too, and this is their response. | ||
By the way, she had her kid there with her the whole time. | ||
How wild is that? | ||
So the Democrats are trying to push back against Trump's claims that Washington, D.C. is overwhelmed with crime, except it's their own mouthpieces saying the exact same thing. | ||
unidentified
|
We've been talking so much about the numbers, and yeah, usually that's how you play devil's advocate is you talk about, oh, well, stats say crime is down. | |
However, I can tell you firsthand here in downtown D.C., where we work, right here around our bureau, just in the past six months, there were two people shot. | ||
One person died literally two blocks down here from the bureau. | ||
It was within the last two years that I actually was jumped walking just two blocks down from here. | ||
And then just this morning, one of my coworkers said her car was stolen a block away from the bureau. | ||
So we can talk about the numbers going down, but crime is happening every single day because we're all experiencing it firsthand while working and living down here. | ||
President Trump earlier saying he's deploying the National Guard to the nation's capital and placing police under federal control now. | ||
Let's bring in D.C. Police Union Chairman Gregory Pemberton. | ||
Thank you so much, sir, for being here. | ||
So from your view, is this necessary? | ||
Well, look, we completely agree with the president that crime in the District of Columbia is out of control and something needs to be done with it. | ||
We have to go back to how we got here, though. | ||
In 2020, the D.C. City Council passed an enormous amount of legislation that handcuffed police officers, exposes them to administrative, civil, and even criminal liability, even when they do their jobs properly. | ||
And now five years later, our authorized sworn strength is 4,000 sworn police officers. | ||
We currently have 3,180. | ||
So we have more than 800 vacancies for the position of police officer. | ||
And the way the department makes up for that gap is through 2 million hours of mandatory overtime every year. | ||
So the fact that we need help from federal law enforcement and maybe even the National Guard shouldn't come as a surprise. | ||
And we agree with that. | ||
I think one of the issues here, though, is that we all know that's going to be temporary. | ||
So in order to fix this problem and make sure that it doesn't ebb and flow and that the feds come in and we lower crime and then they leave and we're left holding the bag, it's very important that people know that there is underlying legislation that needs to be corrected so that we can actually properly staff this police department in order to properly police the city. | ||
So I think what Trump is aiming to prove here is similar to what has been proven at the border. | ||
Now, we can talk about the larger issues of a surveillance state in a police state, and we'll see where this test in D.C. goes. | ||
But it's just like at the border where it was a policy thing. | ||
They tried to claim like, oh, there's nothing you can do about the invasion at the southern border. | ||
And it turns out, yeah, there is. | ||
You can have better policy. | ||
Now border crossings are zero. | ||
So Trump is going to get in there and actually have law enforcement stop the crime. | ||
You'll watch the crime numbers go down. | ||
Now, keep in mind that they always propagandize crime numbers. | ||
You don't get the actual crime statistics till the end of the year. | ||
Most local jurisdictions or even federal agencies that are involved in these numbers, they don't deliver their final numbers till the end of the year. | ||
So you really don't even know what they are. | ||
So they love running stuff out at the end of the month or in a quarter, but those numbers are always corrected at the end of the year. | ||
So the issue is not going to be stopping the crime. | ||
They'll be able to do that at a surface level. | ||
The issue is that the liberals run the courts, the liberals run the police, the liberals run the attorneys, and that's why it's so bad. | ||
You could stop violent crime if you kept violent criminals in prison, but they don't do that. | ||
So they'll get the crime down way low and they'll say, see, it is possible. | ||
And when they relinquish it back to the liberal progressive Democrats, crime will go right back up. | ||
So will that prove Trump's point? | ||
Perhaps. | ||
But my guess is that's where it will go or it'll become a total surveillance state. | ||
Seems like those are the two options that we're dealing with here. | ||
All right. | ||
You know, I was going to open the phone lines, but my screen is down again. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I won't be able to see it. | ||
So I'd love to take a couple more calls, but let's just cover some news here instead. | ||
Oh, let's actually, here's a not-so-subtle reminder. | ||
The whacked out crazed leftists, they're still out there, folks. | ||
They're still out there. | ||
Here's one for your consumption in clip 17. | ||
unidentified
|
So, what do we do now that Republicans just literally essentially killed all of the poor people in America? | |
Pause it real quick. | ||
Can we just, can we just, hold on, can we just admire this for a second? | ||
I gotta, I have to pause here to admire the incredible liberal mind that we are all witnessing here. | ||
The Republicans literally, essentially, literally, essentially, two completely different words there. | ||
That's a bit hyperbolic. | ||
Republicans literally killed people because of the EBT thing because we don't want them to have junk food. | ||
By the way, you want to know what they were really doing with that junk food? | ||
I'll tell you coming up. | ||
No, Republicans literally, essentially, literally, essentially killing people. | ||
These people are just out to lunch, man. | ||
They're just gone. | ||
Incredible stuff. | ||
Incredible work here. | ||
All right, started over from the beginning. | ||
These people are still out there. | ||
They're still out there. | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead. | |
So what do we do now that Republicans just literally essentially killed all of the poor people in America? | ||
All of them. | ||
unidentified
|
That rely on Medicare and Medicaid to survive. | |
They're all dead. | ||
unidentified
|
And I know a lot of you Republicans are on that shit too. | |
Yeah, you. | ||
Do you guys not understand how expensive insurance is? | ||
Because my family pays $1,200 a month in premiums. | ||
$1,200 a month. | ||
By the way, nobody lost their medicine. | ||
unidentified
|
They're insurance premium when I still have to pay $40 people. | |
Doctor, and $6,000 deductible for them to actually cover people that didn't exist. | ||
And then we've got the minimum wage at like $9 an hour. | ||
And you expect people to be able to afford insurance on $12 an hour and supporting a family? | ||
Do you just literally want people to die? | ||
Oh, quit sending our money to other countries and help our own. | ||
Help them. | ||
How? | ||
How many vaccines do you think she took? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm moving. | |
I'm getting out of this country. | ||
I'm taking my kids. | ||
We're starting over somewhere else. | ||
I hope this entire country burns to the ground. | ||
I hope all the Republicans that voted for Trump burn with it. | ||
Huh? | ||
Okay. | ||
Guys, literally, essentially, all the poor people just died. | ||
Literally, essentially. | ||
They all just died. | ||
They're dead. | ||
They're stacking bodies out here. | ||
I mean, whoa. | ||
By the way, nobody lost their health care. | ||
They got rid of the fraud. | ||
That's what they did. | ||
And as far as the EBT program and all the people getting the junk food on it, you know, I hadn't thought of this until I watched this lady break it down. | ||
And now I know 100% she's right because I've seen it before. | ||
And maybe if you've ever gone into inner city areas or project areas, you've probably seen the same thing. | ||
You go to some intersections, you go to some neighborhoods, you'll have people that are selling candy, selling candy and, you know, like beef sticks and sodas. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
What is the what is the origin story of that business endeavor? | ||
This woman breaks it down here in clip 16. | ||
unidentified
|
So as quiet as it's kept, and I know y'all won't admit this because I know how y'all are, but y'all are really outraged that the food stamps EBT shit is about to get shut down. | |
Y'all are really outraged because now you're going to have to take the money you normally buy weed, weeds, bundles, get your nails done. | ||
Y'all are going to have to take those funds and buy food now. | ||
And don't say I'm lying because when y'all were receiving food stamps, you were selling the food stamps. | ||
So you weren't worried about feeding your children men. | ||
But all of a sudden now, you're outraged. | ||
Oh my God. | ||
Like, why are we going to feed our kids the same way you've been feeding them? | ||
Sleeping with that man and getting a few photos from him. | ||
Keep doing it. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Y'all ain't been worried about them kids and their well-being, but all of a sudden now, you are. | ||
Okay. | ||
So some of you may have even seen this. | ||
Yeah, you go to some areas where a lot of the population is on the EBT and they can go buy junk food. | ||
They buy junk food and then they sell it on the street corner and they sell it by the local pool and They sell it by the rec center. | ||
That's all with the EBT money. | ||
And then they take that cash and they spend it on what they want. | ||
100% that's happening. | ||
In fact, there were stories where I believe they caught people that were using the EBT to actually stock their stores at like little general stores. | ||
I think it was New York City. | ||
And they were using the EBTs to stock their stores and then sell what they purchased at their little storefront. | ||
I think that was New York that they got caught doing that. | ||
So 100% it's a game. | ||
100% it's a hustle. | ||
That's not to say that everybody on these programs aren't abusing it, even though they shouldn't exist anyway. | ||
But that lady is 100% right. | ||
She called him out. | ||
It's 100% true. | ||
That's what's been going on for years. | ||
Everybody knows that hustle if you've been in the area. | ||
So now you know. | ||
Now you've heard it. | ||
And you'll never forget it. | ||
unidentified
|
You'll never forget it, will you? | |
By the way, I mentioned this earlier. | ||
Russia breaks through Ukrainian front line as Putin sends 110,000 troops into the meat grinder days before Trump summit. | ||
So Russia is solidifying its current position, and it's actually moving in further to create a little buffer zone in between the land that they're going to try to claim here. | ||
And Putin is also lining up 100,000 plus more troops right before these negotiations. | ||
So just like Trump said, all right, I'm going to send in more military aid to Ukraine as a negotiating piece, as a leverage piece. | ||
Now Putin is saying we're going to take more land. | ||
We're going to solidify our source and we're going to send in more troops as a leverage piece, as a negotiating piece. | ||
So this is kind of the final moves here before the two world leaders meet on Friday, where Zelensky will be left out because I guess he's not really in charge of anything, is he? | ||
I guess that's what you're left to believe there. | ||
Meanwhile, the White House is promoting how the multi-agency tax forces behind Operation Making D.C. Safe and Beautiful, this is what they're calling it. | ||
Multi-agency task forces are hitting the streets of Washington, D.C., cleaning up crime and keeping our neighborhoods safe. | ||
In just one night, they arrested 37 criminals, seized 11 illegal firearms, issued four narcotics charges. | ||
Folks, that's an average night in D.C. I don't know. | ||
And they just assume that people are so ignorant that they're going to celebrate this as some big thing. | ||
Folks, this is every night in D.C. I've spent multiple nights, multiple days in these jails. | ||
I'm telling you, that's an average night. | ||
It's probably low, actually. | ||
37 arrests, 11 illegal firearms. | ||
That's probably low numbers. | ||
unidentified
|
And they'll all be out tomorrow, by the way. | |
Harmee Dillon, a victim of a crime in D.C. Yeah. | ||
So, I mean, a lot of things can be true at once. | ||
Is D.C. crime ridden? | ||
It has a big problem? | ||
Yes. | ||
Do we need to be cautious of bringing in a police state, a surveillance state? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Is it good that they arrested a bunch of criminals last night? | ||
Yes. | ||
But are they trying to sell it as some like new thing like it's never been done before? | ||
Yeah, but that, I mean, it's every night. | ||
It's every night. | ||
The basement jails that I've been, that I've had the pleasure of spending time in, they get filled up by the end of every day. | ||
They get filled up. | ||
It gets wild in there. | ||
And a lot of them are in there for illegal guns and illegal drugs. | ||
It's like the number one and two thing is guns and drugs. | ||
So this thing like, oh, we're doing something new, arresting people. | ||
These people get arrested every night. | ||
The thing is they get out the next day. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
That's just a weird deal. | ||
Again, they'll be able with the new police state that they're proposing here, they'll be able to bring crime numbers down. | ||
I guarantee you that. | ||
That will happen. | ||
And it's not going to solve the problem, though, which is the courts with the leftists, prosecutors, and the leftist judges. | ||
That's the issue here. | ||
And the leftist mayor, all of it. | ||
It's always Democrats and their policies that bring in these crime-ridden phenomenons to the cities that they run every single time. | ||
You cannot find an example. | ||
You cannot find a single example in America where once Democrats got in control of these cities, crime numbers went down. | ||
You can't find one. | ||
It doesn't exist. | ||
All right. | ||
Now, we see them attacking Mom Donnie here. | ||
And this was a coordinated hit. | ||
It's funny to watch these people. | ||
I guess they're working with Cuomo now because it all came out in the same motion. | ||
Cuomo put out this statement and then a dozen headlines. | ||
So Cuomo, who refuses to drop out of the race, he's trying to, I see this as like political extortion. | ||
Somewhere last night in New York City, a single mother and her children slept at a homeless shelter because of Mom Donnie occupying a rent-controlled apartment. | ||
You grew up rich and married an even wealthier woman. | ||
He just keeps attacking him here. | ||
You make $142,000 a year with your wife, maybe up to $200,000 a year. | ||
You're rich. | ||
Folks, look, again, $200,000 a year, you're probably doing okay. | ||
Nobody's going to claim that you're poor, but $200,000 a year ain't rich anymore. | ||
Okay? | ||
Six figures a year is not rich anymore. | ||
Most people that when you get into making six figures a year, you're still living paycheck to paycheck, probably until you get up to about $200,000 a year and above. | ||
So they're complaining because he lives in a $230,000, excuse me, a $2,300 a month apartment. | ||
And I just don't get it. | ||
Like, that's probably, that's probably an average now of what somebody making six figures a year pays. | ||
The issue is that our money has lost its value and we keep printing more and so many people are in debt and the cost of living is so high. | ||
Yeah, $200,000 a year ain't what it once was. | ||
I mean, you're going to be okay. | ||
You're going to have a roof over your head. | ||
You're going to be fine. | ||
You're going to know your car is going to start and everything. | ||
But I mean, you're not really rich. | ||
And most people in the six-figure category from $100,000 to $200,000, they're still living paycheck to paycheck. | ||
That's the true state of the economy. | ||
So them attacking Mom Donnie on this is not the victory they think that it is. | ||
Champaign socialist Mom Donnie slammed for hogging $2,300 apartment despite six-figure salary. | ||
Well, who do you think's living in these apartments? | ||
I guarantee them to you that you look into it. | ||
Most of the people that are living in these rent-controlled apartments, $2,300 a month, I guarantee you, most of them are earning six figures a year. | ||
You know, New York City ain't cheap. | ||
Hell, it's way more expensive than Austin, but even in Austin, you're making six figures a year. | ||
You're paying $2,300, $3,300 a month on an apartment. | ||
You're living paycheck to paycheck here. | ||
By the way, latest polls show Mom Donnie up 19 points. | ||
Curtis Sliwa, who is the Republican candidate here, urges Trump to stay out of New York City mayoral race. | ||
Now, I don't know if that's because if Sleewa thinks he can get Democrat votes that might not like Trump, I don't know this move. | ||
To me, it's a desperate move, but it's like every move that they're trying to make to defeat Mom Donnie is just, it's widening the gap. | ||
That's what it's doing. | ||
And if any of these candidates were serious, if any of these candidates were serious and meant the threats that Mom Donnie represents to the city, which I wouldn't doubt, again, I wouldn't vote for Mom Donnie, and I would warn you that he's going to win. | ||
Maybe time to get ready to go. | ||
But if any of them were serious about the threat that he represents, then they would drop out and get behind a single candidate, whichever one they think has the highest odds to win, which, I mean, like him or not, probably Eric Adams. | ||
So Cuomo should drop out. | ||
Sleewa should drop out, and they should endorse Adams and say, hey, look, we got to do everything to keep Mom Donnie out. | ||
This is a desperate situation for the city. | ||
But notice how they're not doing that. | ||
Notice how they're not doing that. | ||
Guess you just can't help yourself in politics. | ||
At the end of the day, it's always going to be a selfish issue. | ||
But here's more evidence. | ||
This is what people are dealing with, folks. | ||
The economy is not in a good place. | ||
It's just not. | ||
And this is becoming one of the biggest trends now on social media: people posting about their real circumstances. | ||
And that's why this whole aim of, oh, Mom Donnie, you know, he's rich and he lives in the rent control department. | ||
Mom Donnie doesn't even have to pose as anything anymore. | ||
You just keep putting him into these different caricatures and saying, oh, look, he's making $142,000 a year. | ||
He's rich. | ||
You realize that a lot of Americans making six figures a year are now going to relate to that and say, oh, he lives paycheck to paycheck just like me. | ||
He has to have a rent control department just like me. | ||
This is having the reverse effect because this is what a lot of Americans are going through right now here in Clip 20. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, so how is everyone buying a house right now? | |
Because I just cut off maybe one of the most humbling phone calls of my life. | ||
And I got quoted a 6.5% mortgage rate. | ||
Mind you, I do have an 808 credit score. | ||
I have zero debt. | ||
I'm also a registered nurse. | ||
So, I mean, in the state of Florida, which I work in, it's not great income, let's be real. | ||
But yeah, I'm also single. | ||
So one income. | ||
How am I supposed to buy a house with a mortgage rate that high? | ||
One mortgage payment would be more than one of my paychecks. | ||
So yeah, that's very depressing. | ||
What is everyone doing? | ||
This is an untapped political demographic. | ||
And I'm urging Republicans to tap into this because, you know what? | ||
I got plenty of issues with Republicans, and that's fine. | ||
I think most sound-minded people agree Democrats are the problem. | ||
The Republicans may or may not be the solution, but the Democrats are the problem. | ||
And I'm sitting here and I'm watching the political right blow this opportunity. | ||
Just blow it. | ||
Just, you have a massive, a massive group of young voters here that are going through this financially, and both sides are gaslighting them. | ||
And they will, even if they're, even if they're right-wing, even if they're conservative, even if they're anti-communist, they'll go pull the lever for Imam Donnie just because he's at least trying to relate here, trying to talk to their financial issues. | ||
And the right-wingers are mostly callous about it and blame something else or say that they're lazy or, oh, everybody goes through it or no, the economy is great. | ||
It's not. | ||
These are jobs. | ||
These are earners. | ||
10 years ago, 20 years ago, you would be comfortable. | ||
A nurse, you're not rich, but you're making money to have a life that's comfortable. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
You're making $142,000 a year. | ||
You got to live in a rent-controlled apartment because the cost of living is so high. | ||
And there's a very large group of young American voters, and they're all sitting together waiting for somebody to provide them a message that's not communist, but addresses the issues that they're facing, and it just doesn't exist. | ||
And so the left ends up winning these voters because they promise free stuff. | ||
And these young people are probably not liberals. | ||
They're not communists, but the biggest issue they're facing is looking at the future financially and feeling hopeless. | ||
So anybody that's tapping into that, they're going to vote for it, even if they don't agree with anything else they're saying. | ||
And I'm just watching Republicans completely miss the boat. | ||
It's amazing as you watch political issues change over time. | ||
And you see, you know, some people are way behind on it. | ||
Some people are way ahead of it. | ||
The political issues of the last election are no longer the political issues, folks. | ||
They're not. | ||
The big political issues now are Israel and the economy. | ||
And just claiming victory on the economy because Trump got in is not going to equate to a victory because people aren't buying it. | ||
They're not. | ||
and the first person they hear addressing their issue, even if it's a communist, they're going to be more inclined to vote for that person because they don't like being treated callously. | ||
They don't like being insulted. | ||
And they just don't hear anybody recognizing what's going on right now with the youth in the economy that have basically been priced out of the asset column. | ||
And they're told, you don't work enough. | ||
They're working 50 hours a week. | ||
And they're told, well, you didn't make good financial decisions. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
You pressured me into going to college. | ||
You told me I had to go to college. | ||
So I'm just watching the right. | ||
This Demograph, they don't want to go left. | ||
They don't want to vote liberals. | ||
They're not communists. | ||
It's not what they want, but the right is just not interested. | ||
They're saying, we're not interested in you. | ||
You don't even exist when it's a very real phenomenon. | ||
And, you know, maybe this has something to do with this other story. | ||
Las Vegas tourism is sinking and younger Americans could be to blame. | ||
They're saying, well, is it because they don't like to drink? | ||
Is it because they don't like to party? | ||
Is it because they don't like to gamble? | ||
Or is it because they're broke? | ||
Here was one comment. | ||
Vegas is no longer what Vegas once was. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
It's overbuilt and overpriced. | ||
Before, regardless of your budget, a trip to Vegas made you feel like a big shot. | ||
Now you feel like cattle being squeezed out of every penny you have in surcharges, fees, et cetera, as you are processed through a corporate resort system. | ||
So yeah, I think the young people aren't going to Vegas anymore because they just can't afford it. | ||
But, you know, I don't know. | ||
I went to Vegas, spent a couple of nights there. | ||
The whole process, the whole experience was very negative. | ||
I mean, I guess, you know, walking around with the nightlife and kind of experiencing it is one thing. | ||
But I mean, the wait times, the traffic, the expensive nature of it all, yeah, not fun. | ||
And so, yeah, I would never go back. | ||
All right, that does it for the InfoWars Warroom. | ||
We take a 21-hour break. | ||
We'll see you tomorrow. | ||
I've been hearing about this for years, and now it's all the rage. | ||
And about a year ago, they did a survey of the customers at thealxonstore.com and said, what is it you want the most? | ||
What product would you like to have? | ||
While you got that email, and the number one thing was bovine colostrum. | ||
This is the highest rated, private labeled 2,000 milligram per serving. | ||
And if you don't know what colostrum is, let me tell you, a cow's a mammal, we're a mammal. | ||
A dog's a mammal. | ||
A blue whale's a mammal. | ||
I know most of you know that. | ||
And mammals drink milk from their mother's breasts. | ||
The first milk of the first few weeks is called colostrum, and it's more clear and it's full of all of the immunity and all the supernutrients. | ||
And it's basically God's vaccine. | ||
We've got the best bovine colostrum that we're introducing right now that you're going to find anywhere. | ||
Cellular recovery and defense matrix. | ||
It's also incredible for gut health and flora. | ||
Immune support, natural compounds strengthen your body's defenses against toxins and stress. | ||
Muscle recovery aid promotes faster tissue repair and reduces soreness post-workout or strain. | ||
Stress and energy balance delivers calm, focused energy with natural adaptogens, no caffeine crashes. | ||
Toxin defense supports detox pathways to flush out environmental pollutants and free radicals. | ||
Enhance nutrient absorption. | ||
Improves nutrient uptake for better overall health without fillers. | ||
It's a hassle. | ||
I mean, because you only get this for a few weeks after the cow has a baby. | ||
It's the next best thing to mommy's milk. | ||
So it's all the rage for years. | ||
Everybody's going totally insane about it. | ||
I'm going to be taking it. | ||
This is next level. | ||
And I'll be completely honest with you. | ||
Everybody's been telling me to take colostrum for years. | ||
I just, it's hard for me to start taking a supplement once I do and it works. | ||
I stay on it. | ||
I'm going to be taking this. | ||
All I hear about is how great it is. | ||
We need funds. | ||
We're fighting the globalists at point-blank rank. | ||
And they got a receivership hearing with Judge Gore Gamble that ran the Texas show trial next week to send the sheriffs here. | ||
I get it could be within days next Wednesday to shut us down. | ||
And I'm sure we'll get lots of funds then once we're shut down. | ||
I'll be like, oh, God, you really didn't need help. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
We have been battling and battling and barely surviving. | ||
They've turned the internet off here before. | ||
They had a fake sale to Bloomberg's front group. | ||
Remember all that? | ||
And it was because we didn't give up and the crew didn't give up. | ||
When I told the crew, no, we're going to beat this. | ||
Don't go. | ||
And I stayed here and slept here a couple times. |