| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
|
unidentified
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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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We remember you now to your regular scheduled program. | |
| Ladies and gentlemen, it is Monday, August 25th, 2025. | ||
| This is the InfoWars War Room. | ||
| The fastest three hours on the internet starts now. | ||
| And yes, your favorite host in the world is back. | ||
| I hope you didn't miss me too much. | ||
| But we are back today with stacks of news. | ||
| And it was kind of fitting when I was getting back into my normal groove, let's say, today. | ||
| Trump had really two press conferences. | ||
| He had one earlier this morning, and then he had one after the South Korean president arrived at the White House. | ||
| And both of them, I would say, were very solid, very fantastic. | ||
| And everything does hit differently when you've stepped away for a week, as I did. | ||
| And somebody asked me the question, and I thought enough of it to actually print it out and put it on my desk. | ||
| They said, okay, you've been away for a week. | ||
| What have you learned? | ||
| Because every time I do this, I talk about there's kind of a little learning curve there. | ||
| So I'll try to address that as well. | ||
| But it was fitting that, okay, here I am getting back in the swing of things. | ||
| And there's Trump addressing the nation with two press conferences, unofficial press conferences. | ||
| And I wouldn't be surprised if we don't hear from the president again before the end of the day. | ||
| Just getting me fully in the swing of things. | ||
| But it does hit different when you haven't been in the plays, when you haven't been in the arena with all the different developments and idiosyncrasies and the different info wars going on and all the different stuff to just kind of step away, look at the bigger things, and then to jump right back in. | ||
| And then there's President Trump addressing the nation. | ||
| And I'd say mostly saying things that are just everybody should agree with that are good. | ||
| And the most impactful, meaningful things, and you can kind of see how he operates there, being a businessman and negotiator, and how he communicates. | ||
| So he kind of learned to, it's like, okay, what did he say? | ||
| But what is he really saying? | ||
| What does he really mean? | ||
| And you can see sometimes when he's got the president in there, it's not supposed to be this big, long press conference. | ||
| It went on for like an hour. | ||
| They were just sitting in the Oval Office. | ||
| It wasn't like an official press conference with letterhead and podiums and flags in the background. | ||
| And it just kind of went on and on. | ||
| And there were a couple of times where some controversial questions came up and he'd be like, well, you know, I haven't really, I haven't really spoken to the president yet about this. | ||
| We can comment on it now. | ||
| And he kind of looks over and the South Korean president is like, okay, yeah, we'll talk about it right now. | ||
| So he kind of just went for it and just said, oh, okay, we'll just address all this stuff now. | ||
| We haven't even had time to talk behind the scenes, but we'll just talk right here right now then. | ||
| How about that? | ||
| And so when you see how he works, and he is a businessman, and it's always about negotiating, and it's always about leverage. | ||
| And he felt very loose today with the South Korean president, very comfortable. | ||
| And so you can kind of see from that perspective after stepping back for a while and to say, okay, well, you see what's meaningful here and you see what's not. | ||
| So he's like, well, I thought I could end the war with Russia and Ukraine, short order, but it turns out there's a lot of other things that I didn't understand. | ||
| And so maybe now we have a better grasp of them. | ||
| Maybe we can try again. | ||
| And he relates it to what's happening with North Korea and South Korea. | ||
| And he says basically the same thing. | ||
| He says, you know what? | ||
| We had a deeper understanding of that war. | ||
| We were directly involved in it. | ||
| And so I was able to work some things out with Kim Jong-un. | ||
| And, you know, maybe we can have another time where I can go visit and cross the line again. | ||
| Maybe we can have another time to try to negotiate peace. | ||
| And then there were issues with South Korea and Japan. | ||
| He's like, I'm not sure we want to go there. | ||
| We should probably talk in private first. | ||
| South Korean president says, no, I'll say that right now. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| We'd like to have peace negotiations with Japan. | ||
| And so I'm seeing all of this develop. | ||
| And then kind of the background and the shifting of everything that's going on. | ||
| And it does give me a better picture. | ||
| And I think that we kind of already ID'd it with saying things like, this is the boomers' last gasp, or saying things like, DC is being handed over from the military industrial complex to the tech bros. | ||
| But as I just dive right back in, listening to Trump talk today, it's like, yep, that's what's going on. | ||
| And there's a reason why everything is speeding up. | ||
| Well, the hair is a little longer. | ||
| The beard is a little shorter. | ||
| The attention span is a little more concentrated. | ||
| Maybe you could say that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
| But I am back. | ||
| It's great to be back with the crew here on the InfoWars airwaves. | ||
| It was questionable whether there'd even be airwaves to come back to. | ||
| But here we are having more fun than any human being should be allowed to have. | ||
| You know, I was going to start off with the headlines here today, but maybe I should just get this out of the way, like an intellectual hurdle and intellectual leap and then just dive into all of these headlines. | ||
| I didn't even take any of the clips from President Trump earlier today at the White House twice, but the long press conference with the South Korean president, which I thought was fantastic, really just addressing a lot of geopolitical issues, but then taking any questions on all things. | ||
| So it was very interesting to watch that develop today that ended up going long. | ||
| And, you know, it's a weird thing, too. | ||
| We saw this, I think, really exaggerated with the last administration. | ||
| What is with these women that they have in the White House? | ||
| And I guess they run the press corps. | ||
| And did the Trump team carry over the Biden team? | ||
| I'd never really seen it until the Biden years, how aggressive they were. | ||
| But they do the same thing now. | ||
| And you've got these three women that run around the Oval Office screaming at people, screaming into cameras and microphones. | ||
| It's like, hey, you know what? | ||
| You can say it's over once and maybe give them 30 seconds to clear out. | ||
| Anyway, just a suggestion. | ||
| It's a little obnoxious. | ||
| So somebody asked me, what did I learn in my time off? | ||
| Because there always is a bit of a learning curve. | ||
| And that's why when I take time off, I genuinely really just get away from it all. | ||
| You don't hear from me. | ||
| I have it in my peripheries, and I kind of, you know, it's impossible not to see and hear stuff. | ||
| And when you're a creature of habit, you know, you're always going to find a way to consume news, even though you're not desiring to or trying to. | ||
| But I would say it's impossible to put it all into perspective in a short segment, but I think we can do so effectively here. | ||
| I'd say the big things from my takeaway of just stepping away from it all, not being in the arena and just going out into the concourse, let's say, is we are seeing a major, major turning. | ||
| And I think everybody kind of sees it. | ||
| It's like this unspoken recognition of a changing of the times, a changing of the guard, entering a new era of human civilization. | ||
| It's like we're on the cusp right now. | ||
| So it's like, you can kind of see it's like jumping out of an airplane. | ||
| It's like you're in the air. | ||
| The door's not open yet, but you're in the air. | ||
| You got your gear on, and the instructor is standing up and he's about to do another check to make sure everybody's got their equipment. | ||
| Everybody's got their parachute. | ||
| Everybody's feeling comfortable. | ||
| Everything's ready to go. | ||
| So the door's not open. | ||
| We haven't jumped out yet, but we're on the plane. | ||
| We're in the sky. | ||
| The instructor is standing up and he's getting ready to tell everybody how it's all going to go down. | ||
| One last equipment check. | ||
| We are going into a new era of human civilization. | ||
| And really, because you can be positive with Trump, you can be negative with Trump. | ||
| Throw it all out. | ||
| Trump defeating Hillary Clinton in 2016 was so important because it reshaped the American political class for good or for bad. | ||
| It did. | ||
| I would obviously say Trump and whatever he's going to leave as a dynasty or a legacy is going to be better than whatever we would have gotten from Clinton or anybody else. | ||
| But the immediate results of that were you saw the global agenda kind of go through its final stages, and then it was the revelation, and now it's kind of dying. | ||
| Now, that's not to say it's not going to take another stab at it. | ||
| They could try another pandemic and have success. | ||
| They've tried it before and failed since COVID, but they could run another pandemic. | ||
| Running any type of operation, cyber attack, anything to try to centralize power, anything to try to bring in this philosophical political ideology that you live on a one world, you're all affected by the same thing, and so you all have to move together. | ||
| You have to act as a one-world government. | ||
| And it looks like their next big thing is going to be a water crisis. | ||
| At least that's what they're saying. | ||
| So I'll address that coming up. | ||
| But see, we kind of went through it and then had the understanding of it, had the knowledge of it, saw the blueprint and the game plan, started to learn the vocabulary, and then they rolled it out on us with COVID. | ||
| And we went through that. | ||
| And permanent damage was done to the United States, by the way. | ||
| Two things happened to the United States in the last five years that will do permanent damage to this country. | ||
| It's unfortunate, but it's done. | ||
| It will leave a permanent scar. | ||
| Or you could even consider it like an amputation, honestly. | ||
| But what was done to this country economically with the COVID lockdown, permanent damage, I don't know if we'll ever come back. | ||
| And the things that President Trump would have to do to really get a recovery going, it's the kind of stuff that probably gets you killed, quite frankly. | ||
| So I don't know. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I don't know if we'll ever be able to recover from the COVID lockdowns. | ||
| That was such a disaster. | ||
| That was permanent damage. | ||
| And then there was the invasion of the country, 20 million, 30 million, whatever the number is. | ||
| Now we're learning more about that. | ||
| These are things that happen to our country that is permanent damage. | ||
| We'll probably never be able to recover. | ||
| It might have to be an amputation. | ||
| Now, it's like you can amputate a leg and then you can get up and start walking again with a fake leg, but that's permanent damage. | ||
| So it's like this country can get up again, but the damage done by the COVID lockdown is permanent damage. | ||
| The damage done by the invasion, permanent damage. | ||
| And that's why when I sit back and look at it, because I get a lot of questions about why hasn't this person been arrested or do you think anything's going to happen here? | ||
| Or is Trump really going to drain the swamp? | ||
| And you kind of, the Trump gravity kind of distracts from what's really going on. | ||
| Those two phenomenons are the things that really need to be focused on and investigated. | ||
| Now, you have to make a decision. | ||
| And maybe this is why if you're going to get any deep state arrests, maybe you get them over the illegal spying on Trump's campaign. | ||
| Because you have to look at it from an execution standpoint. | ||
| You actually have to go through the process to get an indictment and then get a charge and then get it to stick in the justice system. | ||
| That is not easy to do when you're dealing with professional political criminals, professionals. | ||
| These are professional political criminals, folks. | ||
| They know what they're doing and they know how to get away with their crimes, even when they're caught. | ||
| So the Trump team could be sitting back saying, this is really difficult. | ||
| They really know how to get away with stuff. | ||
| The Trump team could be sitting back saying, well, if we do go down this path and arrest 20 people, 30 people, 100 people, 1,000 people, whatever it is that we consider the corrupt deep state, however you want to package it, whatever avenue you want to use, from as broad as treason to as narrow as lying on a federal document. | ||
| The Trump team could be saying, well, if we go down this road, there's no going back. | ||
| And the pushback would be, well, you didn't go down this road. | ||
| They went down this road. | ||
| They went down this road when they came after you. | ||
| They went down this road when they tried to impeach you and sued you and arrested you and everything. | ||
| They went down this road. | ||
| Yeah, but maybe we don't want to go any further down this road. | ||
| Maybe we can put brakes to this now and say we don't want to see this. | ||
| We don't want to see the U.S. political system become a civil war, a cold civil war all the time with every election cycle. | ||
| We just don't want to see it. | ||
| Maybe we can stop it now and maybe we can heal things by actually getting a good economy going and getting the country going in the right direction. | ||
| And I do think there's a sense of understanding, and I think this gets into the larger geopolitical issues, that yes, we are coming into a new civilizational age. | ||
| I don't know if you could put it this simply, but I think that there's something here. | ||
| I don't think that the new upcoming political class is as corrupted or corruptible as the political class that we've had in power for the last, say, three, four decades. | ||
| So I think there's this unspoken recognition that the way politics has been run with corruption and scandal and blackmail and bought and paid for people and all of this stuff, all the propaganda, everybody kind of senses that this is coming to an end. | ||
| Everybody kind of senses that, you know what, this is over. | ||
| And I'll even tie it into the Mom Donnie race, which got some news coming on here now. | ||
| But that's what this represents. | ||
| All these things that the older generations could have never believed are all happening in front of their eyes. | ||
| And it's like, okay, it's the acceptance stage now. | ||
| It's like, I don't have to, I don't, I don't want a communist to win the mayor of New York race, but looks like that's going to happen. | ||
| So I can either just get mad or I can say, why did this happen? | ||
| How is this happening? | ||
| And what does it represent? | ||
| Well, it represents that the new generational left is on the rise. | ||
| And in response to that, there's going to have to be a new generational right. | ||
| So the dying political class right now knows they've basically hollowed this country out. | ||
| And to many degrees, the entire planet, they've hollowed it out. | ||
| But they kind of built a bit of an infrastructure that they could prop themselves up with the corporate global government and then saying, we're going to have the working class people over here. | ||
| We're going to have the consuming class people over here. | ||
| We're going to have kind of the resource class over here. | ||
| And there's all these different classes that they'll have. | ||
| So they built the whole thing up. | ||
| But now it's going to fail. | ||
| The younger generations don't want it. | ||
| They can't sell it to us. | ||
| It's dead on arrival. | ||
| So now they're looking at this whole corrupt system that's about to collapse. | ||
| New people are about to take it over. | ||
| And they know they've basically got this tiny window of time to grab as much loot as they can and then get out. | ||
| They hope without going to jail with their lives, is what they hope. | ||
| So that's why you see Russia doing what it's doing in Ukraine. | ||
| That's why you see Israel doing what it's doing in Gaza and Jordan and Lebanon and Syria and everywhere else. | ||
| That's why I'd say now many people think China is about to make more aggressive moves in the South China Sea. | ||
| And even with some of the stump, Trump is kind of throwing against the wall, like, oh, we'll take Canada or we'll take Greenland. | ||
| Everybody knows we're about to enter a new age, a new age of human civilization. | ||
| So everybody's kind of picking their pieces and trying to close certain doors and seal the leaks and everything else before we fully go into that. | ||
| And on the other side of that, now you're going to be dealing with AI. | ||
| Now you're going to be dealing with quantum computing. | ||
| You're going to be dealing with drone deliveries and automatic cars all over the roads. | ||
| So that's where it's going. | ||
| And yeah, it could also represent a less corrupted political class, but a more powerful economic class, a more powerful corporate class. | ||
| And the two used to be kind of intertwined, but now there's more of a resentment politically to those corporate elites. | ||
| Or at least they're going to have to pretend there's something there because that's how you're going to get elected. | ||
| So I think that this is what we're seeing. | ||
| We're going into a new age. | ||
| We're on the cusp of it. | ||
| All the political criminals are trying to steal all their loot and get away with it before it all collapses. | ||
| All the larger geopolitical agendas when it comes to land and resources, they're all going for everything because they know they have to do it now. | ||
| They're not going to be in power much longer. | ||
| So this is where everything is going. | ||
| Now, when you get into the daily life of an average American, they're not really thinking about this. | ||
| They're just not. | ||
| Most of them really aren't even thinking about Trump. | ||
| They might have some political issues. | ||
| Most of them probably feel more favorable of Trump now than they did, say, eight years ago. | ||
| And certainly the political direction of Trump is more favorable than the political direction of the left. | ||
| But the average issue of the American person is still not being addressed politically. | ||
| And so these are huge political wins to come in here and secure the border. | ||
| And these are huge geopolitical wins to come in here. | ||
| And I think Trump has gotten seven peace deals, seven wars that have stopped. | ||
| So far, I think like five of them permanently, like they're done. | ||
| And he claims he stopped the Israel-Iran war. | ||
| You know, so, okay, there's open for interpretation. | ||
| But no, he's come in here and he's got a lot of peace deals done. | ||
| And he's kind of bringing in the economic stuff and pushing out the war stuff. | ||
| But the average American is still sitting here trying to figure out how they're going to pay their bills. | ||
| The average American is dealing with the most corrupted insurance industries in the history of this country. | ||
| I mean, the health insurance industries, folks, it's such a scam. | ||
| It's so corrupt, you wouldn't even believe it. | ||
| Most of my video list today is people complaining about what they're going through with healthcare and the ludicrous bills they get, and the insurance companies don't even cover it. | ||
| Most young Americans are feeling completely financially hopeless. | ||
| They feel they're basically going to be debt slaves for the rest of their lives. | ||
| They feel that nobody represents them politically. | ||
| They don't have anybody representing them. | ||
| But unfortunately, the only people that they are receiving the messages that they're sending out, the only party that's sending them back anything is really the Democrats. | ||
| And that's the communist side of the Democrats. | ||
| Now, the Republicans will be forced to change in time. | ||
| It looks like the rise of the generational left is going to happen before the rise of the generational right, the new generational that is. | ||
| But the younger right, they don't really like leaning left. | ||
| It's like they might go vote for Imam Donnie just because he's giving them the signals that they're looking for, but they would rather not vote for a communist. | ||
| They'd rather not vote for a Democrat. | ||
| They'd rather not vote for a leftist. | ||
| If there was somebody on the right that was young and up and coming and was actually speaking to the youth in the ways that matter, but coming from conservative values, right-wing values, then they would win easily. | ||
| But most of these people get pushed out still by the Republican Party. | ||
| And really, you don't even have those younger voices getting any stage time at all. | ||
| And so the people that end up kind of representing this political class are your Marjorie Taylor Greens and your Thomas Masseys. | ||
| And of course, you see what gets done to them. | ||
| Massey, they try to push him out of the Republican Party. | ||
| Marjorie Taylor Greene is being attacked 24-7 online because of foreign policy disputes. | ||
| But that's the future of the right. | ||
| It's Thomas Massey. | ||
| It's Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
| They're not going to have their moment anytime soon, but you can see that that's where it's going. | ||
| But you have to understand, on the larger scale, the real big geopolitical pieces with all of the money and all the political influence and power, they see what's happening. | ||
| They see there's a new left on the rise in the West. | ||
| They see there's a new right on the rise in the West, and they know what it represents and what it represents as a threat to them. | ||
| So they're just going for broke. | ||
| They're going to try to steal everything they can steal. | ||
| And they're going to try to take whatever land, whatever resources that they can, before it becomes too politically dangerous to actually do so. | ||
| But I think Trump has just decided at this point the biggest thing that he can do is to basically try to, it's like, why is he talking about building ships? | ||
| Why is Trump in the White House today bragging about how we're going to start building ships? | ||
| I think Trump has come to terms with the facts that America has really already collapsed. | ||
| And if there was a time to say, well, when did the fall of America happen? | ||
| It was 2020. | ||
| It was Joe Biden. | ||
| It was them stealing an election and then opening the borders and facilitating an invasion in this country of rapists and murderers and criminals. | ||
| I mean, if there was a line to say America collapsed, that was it. | ||
| It was Joe Biden. | ||
| It was four years of Joe Biden and a border invasion, which was right on the heels of, of course, the COVID lockdowns. | ||
| So I think Trump just sees all this and he's like, well, I could choose to take a stand on this issue or I could choose to take a stand on that issue. | ||
| And he's just decided he's not going to do any of it. | ||
| And so he's going to try to get as many peace deals done and then he's going to build the infrastructure for the future, assuming the worst. | ||
| If the dollar collapses, if everything collapses, if the world collapses, if there's a nuclear war, well, we'll have a hub to manufacture ships. | ||
| We'll have steel production back up and running. | ||
| We're going to make sure there's no foreign criminals in the country. | ||
| We'll have backup financial services, hopefully via crypto. | ||
| We'll see what we can do with the oil reserves. | ||
| That's a whole other thing they got to fix from the Biden years. | ||
| But then I see that interview with Maxwell. | ||
| And I see all of these big Trump supporters saying, look, Maxwell says it's all fine and Trump's the best ever. | ||
| It's like, are you kidding me right now? | ||
| You're now, so it's now, look, Maxwell's one of us. | ||
| That's where we're at now? | ||
| That's where MAGA's at? | ||
| Hey, look, guys, Maxwell's one of us. | ||
| I mean, folks, let's just be honest. | ||
| This was the most obvious scripted setup you've ever seen in your life. | ||
| They obviously cut a deal with Maxwell. | ||
| They said, hey, we're going to come in here. | ||
| We're going to record a conversation. | ||
| You're going to say Trump is innocent. | ||
| You're going to say you don't know about nothing. | ||
| We're going to put it out to the public and we're going to move you to Hotel Fed. | ||
| Understood? | ||
| Great. | ||
| And then they feed that out there and all the MAGA cult just slops it up. | ||
| So of course they do it. | ||
| So I get why Trump does it. | ||
| Now, it's a horrible look. | ||
| It's like, oh boy, you know, stay silent on that Israel cybersecurity guy, that Israel cybersecurity guy who gets caught in some pedophile sting and gets to flee to Israel. | ||
| It's like, oh, yeah, you know, keep that silent. | ||
| And then tell everybody how Maxwell says Trump is the best. | ||
| See, Maxwell's one of us now. | ||
| And then MAGA eats it up. | ||
| And it's like, guys, clearly they did a deal here. | ||
| They don't want you to know about the Epstein files. | ||
| They don't want you to talk about the Epstein files. | ||
| Nobody has the Epstein files in this country anymore. | ||
| And Maxwell was sent out there like a puppet of the DOJ. | ||
| And I see MAGA going around. | ||
| Look, Maxwell's one of us. | ||
| So the whole thing is crazy, folks. | ||
| Politics is crazy. | ||
| It's an insane world. | ||
| We're living in insane times. | ||
| And then somebody asked me, like, well, when will there be the American Revolution? | ||
| It's like, how can I even answer that? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can't answer that. | |
| Not in the way you want me to answer that, but I actually do have your answer. | ||
| If you are looking for a revolution, if you listening to this right now, much like me, are sick of your government, sick of the corruption, sick of the lying media, sick of all the foreign propaganda, war propaganda, just all of it, and you're out there and you're seeking an American revolution. | ||
| I actually do have the answer. | ||
| If you want a revolution, if you're looking for a revolution and you're saying, well, you're looking for a leader or asking somebody else to do it or looking around for answers, the revolution starts in one place and ends in one place. | ||
| And that's you. | ||
| That's you. | ||
| If you want a revolution, then you have to be the revolution. | ||
| Simple as that. | ||
| It's a revolution of your mind. | ||
| It's a revolution of your soul. | ||
| It's a revolution of your body. | ||
| You have to be the revolution. | ||
| Nobody's coming to save you. | ||
| There is no magic pill. | ||
| There is no magic plan. | ||
| There's just you. | ||
| And you only can control you. | ||
| So if you're looking for a revolution, you can start today. | ||
| You can improve your mind. | ||
| You can improve your body. | ||
| You can improve your soul. | ||
| And then you can set examples, set examples for the next minds and bodies and souls. | ||
| There's your revolution, folks. | ||
| It's you. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Well, I suppose we should cover some news here, huh? | ||
| How about that? | ||
| Maybe we shall. | ||
| A couple things out of the White House here. | ||
| Trump flag burning executive order could flip First Amendment on its head with new court ruling. | ||
| The Trump administration likely set to challenge a Supreme Court ruling that protected the burning of the American flag under the First Amendment with a new executive order calling for those who desecrate the U.S. flag while inciting violence or breaking other laws to face prosecution. | ||
| Yeah, this is a little messy, and you can see how they're trying to have their cake and eat it too here. | ||
| It's like, well, you know, we're just, you know, not, it's not just burning a flag, but we're going to say it's an attempt to incite violence. | ||
| Well, of course, the interpretation is that burning the American flag is the incitement of violence. | ||
| So they are essentially saying that, no, that is an incitement of violence, where the Supreme Court already ruled that burning an American flag is a First Amendment right. | ||
| You know, this is one of those deals where it's like this is not a hill to die on, either way, because you can certainly understand the argument that was already won at the Supreme Court level that burning the American flag is a First Amendment right. | ||
| And if it's your own property, then how can a government step in to say no? | ||
| But then, of course, if you're an American patriot like me, you say, well, what? | ||
| Am I really going to stand up here and say you can burn the American flag? | ||
| Yeah, I'm not really interested in doing that either. | ||
| So you kind of understand both the implications. | ||
| But remember, I mean, it's so crazy that this is now the backdrop to everything. | ||
| And I think, guys, do we have Trump? | ||
| Is Trump live right now? | ||
| They just put Trump on my side screen here. | ||
| I'm assuming he is live from the Oval Office. | ||
| We may pop into that. | ||
| But it's just the backdrop of everything. | ||
| It's like, oh, now it's John Bolton working for Qatar. | ||
| Oh, yeah, how perfect. | ||
| Who's running all the Qatar propaganda right now? | ||
| Oh, and now they're looking for Bolton and Qatar. | ||
| Like, oh, okay. | ||
| Let's now do that with Ukraine, shall we? | ||
| Oh, no, no, no. | ||
| We're not going to be dealing with people going over to Ukraine and engaging in diplomacy there outside of the White House. | ||
| But for Qatar to get negative Qatar into the press, it's like, yeah, we'll do that with John Bolton. | ||
| Nobody likes him. | ||
| So now it's three weeks ago, burning an Israeli flag is considered a hate crime. | ||
| That got all the negative backlash. | ||
| So it's like, whoa, hey, hold on. | ||
| Burning an Israeli flag is illegal in America, but not burning an American flag? | ||
| Let's correct course on that. | ||
| That's not a good look. | ||
| Oh, okay. | ||
| And then the U.S. to take 10% equity stake in Intel in Trump's latest corporate move. | ||
| Now, this is fascism. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So I really don't even know what else to say. | ||
| This is, by definition, fascism. | ||
| Now, I can sit here and throw my arms up in the air and start screaming fascist. | ||
| Or I can listen to what President Trump said earlier today about this and say, okay, well, this is the direction. | ||
| It's kind of like when Byron Donalds went on, I don't remember where he went on, but he had a leftist host basically trying to get him on Social Security. | ||
| And Donalds was saying social security is a disaster. | ||
| Donald's pointing out all the problems with Social Security, bleeding heart liberal talk show host talking about all the necessities. | ||
| And Donalds basically says, hey, look, here's the deal. | ||
| From a raw financial standpoint, you realize that Social Security would be better in the private market. | ||
| You realize that you can get much more return in the stock market or anywhere else with all the Social Security money. | ||
| Meanwhile, it just sits in these government piggy banks that it ends up getting looted. | ||
| So Trump's just looking at this pragmatically and he's saying, well, if the United States gets stake in Intel and let's say Intel does really well or it's new AI it's working on or it gets new government contracts, all this other stuff, and then that makes America money. | ||
| It's like, okay, from a raw financial standpoint, politics aside, Trump's just like pragmatically, financially, I'm signing this deal. | ||
| And by the way, he said today he wants to do it with other corporations. | ||
| So, I mean, you're fascism light, fashion light. | ||
| It's a little fashion light. | ||
| But Trump's like, yeah, well, we're in debt. | ||
| So as a principled, as a principled, what, anti-fascist, I guess? | ||
| Let's see if anti-fascists are out on the streets. | ||
| As a principled anti-fascist, you'd say no. | ||
| As somebody that recognized this country is spiraling into a debt hole that they'll never climb out of, you say, well, I guess you got to try extreme things. | ||
| It's kind of like what's going on with D.C. Now they're threatening Chicago. | ||
| Chicago leaders denounce Pentagon plans for military deployment in the city. | ||
| It's like, do I want to see military on the streets? | ||
| No. | ||
| No, I don't. | ||
| But I also don't want, guys, let's do it. | ||
| It is Monday. | ||
| Over-under. | ||
| Chicago this weekend. | ||
| I'm going to go four killed. | ||
| No, we're going to bump that. | ||
| Money's coming in early. | ||
| We're going to go four and a half killed. | ||
| Four and a half killed, 19 shot in Chicago this weekend. | ||
| We're just making the odds here, folks. | ||
| Money was coming in. | ||
| Money was coming in on the over early on four, so we had to bump that to four and a half. | ||
| So it's like six dead, 27 hurt. | ||
| Yeah, well, we should have gone higher on the over. | ||
| So that's in Chicago this weekend. | ||
| So it's like, yeah, I don't want to see Chicago militarized. | ||
| I don't want to see another six people shot and killed. | ||
| I don't want to have another 27 people in the hospital with a with a gunshot wound. | ||
| Unnecessary violence. | ||
| So it's like, yeah, I don't want to see a nation $40 trillion in debt. | ||
| Well, I might not want to see our government start investing in companies. | ||
| There's a little fascism light for you, but I guess we got to pay the bill somehow. | ||
| So this is where things are going and fast. | ||
| Now, Trump has just gone live from the White House. | ||
| He's got the FIFA World Cup trophy stationed there next to Benjamin Benjamin Franklin on his left. | ||
| And it looks like this is more of a glad-handing situation here. | ||
| Let's tune in real quick, find out what's going on. | ||
| A busy day at the White House. | ||
|
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Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson. | |
| That's Monroe of the Monroe document. | ||
| Okay, these are gold star families here being celebrated. | ||
|
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A couple of non-Benjamin Franklin, not a president. | |
| I wish Tina Peters could be there. | ||
|
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Discovered electricity, a couple of other things. | |
| But we have a lot of great presidents. | ||
| But think of it. | ||
| They've been down there. | ||
| This, George Washington, the big one. | ||
| They've been down there for, in some cases, much more than 100 years. | ||
| And we brought them out. | ||
| I went through the vaults myself. | ||
| I spent hours down there looking. | ||
| It's in between Russia, Ukraine, China, all the other stuff. | ||
| We do it. | ||
| I want to thank Doug Collins for being here. | ||
| The Secretary has done an unbelievable job. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| And JD, thank you very much. | ||
| You've been fantastic. | ||
| And all of the others, Pete, we did a little thing with Pete about Secretary of War today, and it seemed to be well listening. | ||
| We'll do it a couple of more times. | ||
| Okay, so yeah, you know what? | ||
| Now that he mentions that, I heard Trump say it three times earlier today. | ||
| He just brings it up again. | ||
| I guess President Trump wants to change it back to the Department of War. | ||
| Guys, see what we have in the headlines from this one today. | ||
| And, you know, that could have been the type of thing that kind of slips through the cracks when you take a week off and you're just kind of taking the major consumables and not the tiny bits and pieces. | ||
| But this is now the fourth time I've heard Trump say this today from the White House. | ||
| He wants to switch back to the Department of War. | ||
| Now, this is a crazy deal because he gets into some of the history of it. | ||
| And, you know, this is some of the history that when you talk to people that are big time against the Federal Reserve or even talking about some post-World War II history type stuff, you know, that's the kind of stuff that people point to and they say, whatever decisions were made when it was switched from the Department of War to the Department of Defense were made, it's like the whole thing was a propaganda operation. | ||
| Because now, oh, it's Department of Defense. | ||
| Oh, well, defense, you can spend that in a thousand different ways to spend money. | ||
| Department of War, that's a little different. | ||
| It's harder to get a bunch of money to spend on war than it is for defense. | ||
| So Trump was kind of hinting at that and getting into some of the historical references. | ||
| The historical reference points to that as well. | ||
| So I don't know what the larger plan is. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| In fact, hey, Crew, has that been something he's been talking about for the last week? | ||
| Has anybody heard him say that in the last week? | ||
| I'm just asking. | ||
| Okay, so yeah, it wasn't like it was something that I missed that kind of just slips through the cracks when I'm gone, not inundated with the news all day. | ||
| By the way, I feel comfortable asking the crew that because they just sit here 10 hours a day consuming news too. | ||
| So I don't know what, I don't know where the president's going to that. | ||
| In fact, Hegzeth is talking right now. | ||
| Let's see if he has something to say. | ||
| Oh, next to Gorka, gross. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| There needed an even deeper dive. | ||
| So Sean Parnell, our Pentagon spokesman, who himself is an Afghanistan veteran, is leading this effort. | ||
| It's a top priority for us. | ||
| We're getting access to all the documents necessary, why decisions were made, why they weren't made, why certain force protection measures were ignored. | ||
| Again, there's never been accountability for this. | ||
| It's something that Joe Biden allowed to happen that never should have happened. | ||
| Anybody who, any objective observer, is how you leave a country. | ||
| And certainly these families know better than anyone else. | ||
| These families deserve answers. | ||
| We're going to be honest about it. | ||
| We're going to get to the bottom of it. | ||
| Sean Parnell, an Afghanistan vet, is leading it, and we're doing it on behalf of the American people. | ||
| So I would anticipate middle of 2026. | ||
| That's how thorough of a review we're doing. | ||
| Hopefully a little bit sooner, but we're going into everything to get an understanding of what happened. | ||
|
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So we remember these great 13 souls. | |
| So these are the Gold Star families from the Afghanistan disaster. | ||
|
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32 of them, approximately. | |
| And we're in contact with them always also. | ||
| They lost arms and legs and their faces were blown to pieces. | ||
| And they're incredible. | ||
| And they suffer with it. | ||
| And so we understand that. | ||
| It should have never happened, should have never been allowed to have happened. | ||
| And they were in the wrong place. | ||
| So, oh, man, you know, I almost don't even want to do this twice in the first hour. | ||
| I don't know, guys. | ||
| Should I go off the rails again here? | ||
| I can't help it. | ||
| I see Gorka up there. | ||
| This is, you know what? | ||
| I'll do it again because it's kind of another part of the learning curve of when you step away. | ||
| And I was still in touch with some people in D.C. And, you know, people are still feeding me stuff, want me to cover stuff. | ||
| And I'm like, hey, I'm off. | ||
| I don't even want to, you know, talk to me next week. | ||
| But it's funny. | ||
| I see Gorka up there. | ||
| And, you know, this is a guy who, he's a foreigner. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| A, he's a foreigner. | ||
| And B, he is a guy who celebrated Infowars censorship and the law fair against Alex Jones. | ||
| If you're wondering where the original Gorka thing comes from here, it's Gorka celebrated the censorship of Infowars and celebrated the law affair against Alex Jones and then made it personal when I was, I don't remember when it was, I was kicked out of CPAC, or maybe it was Harrison, and Gorka was going around bragging about how basically I guess he feels he made that happen. | ||
| So, so, but why am I talking about this? | ||
| Because it goes back to the learning curve. | ||
| And you may recall, I was told I was too negative. | ||
| So I said, all right, well, you know, I don't look at myself as a pessimist. | ||
| And I heard Alex call me a pessimist on air while I was away. | ||
| I heard it. | ||
| No, I don't think I'm a pessimist at all. | ||
| I think I'm a realist. | ||
|
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But if you, if you, you know, maybe I am being a little too negative. | |
| And so, yeah, okay, Alex says I'm being too negative. | ||
| I'm not just going to discount that in my own pride. | ||
| I'll say, oh, maybe there's something there. | ||
| So maybe that's right. | ||
| I'll step away. | ||
| And I can see how that's happening. | ||
| It's like you're in war. | ||
| You're in war for two years straight or whatever. | ||
| You see nothing but dead people and blood. | ||
| It's like, yeah, you know, it can affect you. | ||
| Maybe you get a little negative. | ||
| You need a furlough. | ||
| So I see Gorka in there. | ||
| And it just, it kind of just sends me back to the negativity thing. | ||
| And I think it's a little bit of a subconscious. | ||
| I think it's a little bit of a subconscious deal where it's not like I want access. | ||
| I will admit I want influence, but winning influence is different than winning access. | ||
| What it takes to win influence is organic. | ||
| What it takes to win access is rigged, is inorganic. | ||
| So Gorka gets access. | ||
| Doesn't really bother me much at all. | ||
| Levin gets access. | ||
| Doesn't really bother me much at all. | ||
| It's their influence that bothers me. | ||
| It's the influence of a Gorka that celebrates censorship. | ||
| It's the influence of a Mark Levin who's never seen another war he doesn't want to send Americans to die in. | ||
| So it's the influence that bothers me. | ||
| But I could see how watching these people take over the movement that we built, watching these creeps and these scumbags and these grifters and these warmongers and these liars and these frauds and these cowards take over this movement that we built. | ||
| I could see how subconsciously that could turn me into a negative person or maybe even psychologically kind of form some resentment. | ||
| I could recognize that as a person now that I've stepped away, not feeling as negative about everything. | ||
| I'll still sit here and point out what a joke the Maxwell tape was. | ||
| I'll still sit here and point out that, yeah, it looks like you're getting the Epstein cover-up job here at 2.0. | ||
| And I don't think, I mean, is there really even a debate anymore about Israel's influence in D.C.? | ||
| I mean, I don't even think, I think that debate's over. | ||
| We've won that debate handedly. | ||
| But I'm actually at peace with it now. | ||
| I really am. | ||
| Because it actually gives me hope that this really is their last gasp. | ||
| This is their last gasp. | ||
| You're not going to see any more Gorkas running around the Republican Party in 10 years. | ||
| You're not going to see it. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| These grifters, these frauds, they're not going to be influencing the political class in another 10 years. | ||
| It's not going to be this way, folks. | ||
| So it sucks that we're getting another punch of politics as usual. | ||
| It sucks that we're getting another punch from this same generational right that is just as much responsible for putting America in the peril that it's in as the old generational left. | ||
| But it reassures me. | ||
| It's like, yeah, this is their last go. | ||
| This is their last grab. | ||
| This is their last go at it. | ||
| They're done after this. | ||
| Politics will change for the better once Trump is out. | ||
| And so I'm okay with that. | ||
| And I don't want access. | ||
| I do want influence. | ||
| And what I see now, if you want to win influence in August of 2025, you have to be honest, folks. | ||
| And this is like hurting me to even say this because at the end of the day, everything is a negotiation. | ||
| Everything is leverage. | ||
| But I give out, I give free advice. | ||
| So whatever. | ||
| I give million dollars of advice out of this show every day. | ||
| So it's fine. | ||
| If you want to win real organic influence in August of 2025, you have to be honest. | ||
| You have to be honest. | ||
| You have to be honest about what you're seeing from this administration. | ||
| You have to be honest about what's going on in different wars across the planet. | ||
| And if you're not willing to be honest, then you're going to lose your influence. | ||
| So I don't need access. | ||
| I don't want access. | ||
| But you know what? | ||
| Influence is earned. | ||
| Influence is earned. | ||
| Not like access that's bought. | ||
| Influence is earned. | ||
| So we're going to earn it here. | ||
| We're going to earn it here. | ||
| And it's going to create a new long-term solution to the uniparty in D.C. And I'd say, you know, what Trump is doing is going to overall benefit the country, I think, in the long term. | ||
| Now, just like we had to deal with the COVID lockdowns, that was the big disaster, permanent disaster. | ||
| There's going to be other things that happen that we're going to have to deal with too in the long term. | ||
| But I do think there will be a better platform with all of it. | ||
| I do think there will be a better platform for a new generational right to launch on because it can't just be making the same promises and then not delivering. | ||
| That's not what's going to work anymore in Republican politics because the youth wants to go right, but they're sick of not getting what they voted for. | ||
| But now that's going to have to be addressed directly. | ||
| Now it's going to have to be addressed directly, probably as soon as the midterms. | ||
| They may think they can kind of just play ball as usual in the midterms. | ||
| It might work. | ||
| But once 2028 rolls around, folks, I'm telling you, it's going to be a whole new world politically. | ||
| It will be a whole new world, and everybody sees it. | ||
| And that's why everybody is pushing the gas right now. | ||
| It's why they're pushing the gas in Ukraine to launder as much money through there as possible. | ||
| It's why they're pushing the gas with NATO to continue to steal money with that false system. | ||
| I think it's why Russia is making aggressive moves in Ukraine to solidify whatever land they can get there. | ||
| I think same situation with Israel and everything it's doing. | ||
| So anybody that has the ability to take right now is taking everything they can because they know once Trump leaves the White House, it's a whole new world politically in America. | ||
| It's a whole new world. | ||
| And a lot of the grifting and a lot of the money laundering and a lot of the waste and a lot of the fraud and the foreign wars and influence, a lot of that game is going to come to an end. | ||
| So they're trying to steal as much as they can before it gets there. | ||
| And we're just going to sit here and watch it happen. | ||
| We're going to sit here and we're going to watch it happen and people are going to be pissed. | ||
| And it's going to create a new political world, a new generational left, which I think, unfortunately, is likely to take power first. | ||
| Now, that's dangerous because once communists take power, do they ever let go of it? | ||
| So you've got to be careful with that. | ||
| But what will result from that is a new generational right, which will be a lot, how can I say? | ||
| It'll be a lot more MAGA than what we got from this MAGA. | ||
| Here's an example. | ||
| FEMA to send states $608 million to build migrant detention centers. | ||
| So now you've got these FEMA insiders that are going to the press and they're saying, well, now we don't have any disaster response. | ||
| Okay, let's just look at this bigger picture. | ||
| First of all, they already gutted the disaster response. | ||
| So they're going to try to pin it on Trump. | ||
| There'll be another disaster. | ||
| It's hurricane season, whatever, whatever happens. | ||
| There'll be another disaster. | ||
| They won't have the relief. | ||
| They'll blame it on Trump. | ||
| Now, the difference is that the Trump administration will actually facilitate relief, however, it's needed, aside from just having some piggy bank that everybody comes in here and grabs a bunch of money from, and then you never really know what ends up happening with it. | ||
| But no, it was in the Biden years. | ||
| So get ready. | ||
| This will happen. | ||
| There'll be a disaster. | ||
| They'll blame Trump. | ||
| There's no aid. | ||
| And then the right will respond. | ||
| They'll say, no, Biden cut it. | ||
| And by the way, here's Biden saying there's no aid for North Carolina and everything else. | ||
| And oh, Biden's spent all the illegals. | ||
| And then the left wing will come out and say, oh, no, Trump's spending it on the illegals. | ||
| He spent a billion dollars on detention centers to put all the illegals in. | ||
| So get ready for that political football to go all around. | ||
| This is what I'm talking about. | ||
| This is the game that I'm talking about. | ||
| This is the game that is in the two-minute warning, folks. | ||
| It's almost over. | ||
| Now, none of this should be a problem. | ||
| None of this should be a problem. | ||
| And this is where the new generational right will come into play. | ||
| And maybe the new generational left. | ||
| And they're going to sit here and they're going to say, okay, maybe we need $1 billion for illegal alien detention and removal. | ||
| Maybe we need a billion dollars for health care. | ||
| Whatever it is. | ||
| Whatever the domestic need is, we need a billion dollars. | ||
| Where are we going to get it? | ||
| You know where we're going to get it? | ||
| Sorry, Israel. | ||
| We don't have the money for you anymore. | ||
| Sorry, Ukraine. | ||
| We don't have the money for you anymore. | ||
| Sorry, NATO. | ||
| We don't have the money for you anymore. | ||
| Now, these are just the big spenders. | ||
| These are just the big client states of the military industrial complex. | ||
| Then you start to get into just the raw aid doled out billions of dollars every year. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| Sorry, Tasmania, Uganda, the lost city of Atlantis, Mars, wherever. | ||
| Sorry, the aid is cut. | ||
| Oh, now look at, oh, wow. | ||
| Now we got $100 billion. | ||
| Now we got $100 billion. | ||
| Oh, all right. | ||
| Now we can actually have illegal alien detention and removal and a new hospital. | ||
| Oh, and another new hospital. | ||
| Oh. | ||
| So this is where it's going. | ||
| The giant foreign aid boondoggle is over. | ||
| Even Doge got shut down. | ||
| Folks, we got $10 billion in Doge. | ||
| And by the way, that's where most of this FEMA cutting came from. | ||
| So yeah, they're going to sit here and they're going to say there's no money in FEMA. | ||
| It's not going to matter. | ||
| If there's a big disaster, the Trump administration will make sure they get the response. | ||
| They cut the money to FEMA, folks, because it was so much waste, fraud, and abuse. | ||
| They just couldn't have the money sitting in the piggy bank. | ||
| It all got stolen. | ||
| But that's what they're going to do: they're going to say, oh, Trump gutted FEMA. | ||
| No, you wasted the money, so we drained the bank accounts. | ||
| Hey, folks, last chance. | ||
| Last chance Gladiator giveaway blowout sale happening right now at the alexjonesstore.com. | ||
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| We got the double deal happening. | ||
| 2025 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon. | ||
| That is the giveaway that will be ending very soon. | ||
| Plus the new truck raffle giveaway. | ||
| Well, it's actually not a truck. | ||
| It's actually a sports car. | ||
| It's actually the Corvette Stingray, the C8 Corvette Stingray. | ||
| I do believe that's the fastest one they make. | ||
| I don't think you can get a faster Corvette than that. | ||
| The C8 Corvette Stingray. | ||
| So you can, when you shop at the AlexJonesShore.com right now, you can be entered to win both of these two separate raffles. | ||
| The Jeep truck Rubicon will be drawn first. | ||
| That will end this week, actually. | ||
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| Every dollar spent gets you five, no, 50 X entries to win these vehicles right now at the AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
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| So get in before this sale comes to an end. | ||
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| But also, you'll be entered into the brand new Stingray, Corvette Stingray raffle drive as well. | ||
| So we decided to make a little change. | ||
| We've been doing the trucks and some of the more high-powered vehicles. | ||
| Now we're bringing you that old-fashioned American muscle. | ||
| Although I guess the Stingray is a rather new fashion. | ||
| It came out when was the first Stingray? | ||
| I think the new models, a couple years back. | ||
| So that's all happening at the AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
| And it's your support there that keeps us on the air. | ||
| Hey, here's a solution. | ||
| Now, I've got all of these videos. | ||
| Actually, I think I did not send the health insurance one to the crew just because it gets a little redundant with a lot of these people's problems. | ||
| I think I maybe brought in one of them. | ||
| I did bring in a lot of videos just with people dealing with the economic stress because they see how they're told, oh, work harder, all this stuff. | ||
| And they're like, hey, I'm already working 50, 60 hours a week. | ||
| There is no work. | ||
| I can't get blood out of a stone here. | ||
| And you've heard this argument for a long time. | ||
| Now, I will say it is much worse now because the millennials, we used to hear this all the time. | ||
| And the millennials, I think my whole crew is millennials. | ||
| They'll probably back me up on this. | ||
| We used to hear this all the time: how, oh, you know, work harder or whatever. | ||
| And it was a little easier, I think, for even millennials to kind of get by because life was nowhere near as expensive. | ||
| It was still difficult to get into the asset column and we still had the debt issues, but life was not nowhere near as expensive. | ||
| I mean, stunningly, the increase. | ||
| Like, I remember the house I used to rent before I moved here in St. Louis, three-bedroom, one bath, it was like $9.50 a month. | ||
| Same, same house now is going for like $2,200. | ||
| So, I mean, that's just a 10-year increase. | ||
| Listen to Ron DeSantis here in clip one from the property tax situation. | ||
| It's very important given how that's pinched so many homeowners, particularly our senior citizens who have their homes paid off and they bought it 30 years ago for a certain amount. | ||
| Now they're being told it's worth so much more and they have to pony up more and more money. | ||
| It's almost like they have to pay rent to the government just to be able to enjoy their property. | ||
| And that's wrong. | ||
| And we need to do something. | ||
| So you want a solution? | ||
| Cut the property tax. | ||
| Cut the property tax now. | ||
| All right, joining me in the studio now. | ||
| Former, and thank God, former January 6th political prisoner, Jeremy Brown, his website, jeremybrowndefense.com. | ||
| Who is JeremyBrown.com? | ||
| You can learn more about his story and how he was being targeted by the Biden administration, feds, and everything else. | ||
| And I was just briefly talking to him before he came on air, kind of setting the stage here. | ||
| And I figured, you know, that's a perfect place to start because I asked him, I said, yeah, I heard on the Joan Show earlier that you and I have a lot of very similar viewpoints and perspectives on where the administration has gone since the election. | ||
| And you brought up the aspect of, well, we were also both in jail. | ||
| And so I sit back and I recognize that and I say, how much of that is really impacting my perspective here? | ||
| Is it because I'd like to think it's not. | ||
| I'd like to think that my viewpoints on this are neutral from my experience. | ||
| I'd like to think that's the case, but I'm human, subconscious exists. | ||
| So maybe there is a different thing. | ||
| And you were kind of saying, no, the view, the lens to look through it is actually, it's this way. | ||
| So you were about to explain that to me before we went on air. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| So first of all, we need our perspectives, right? | ||
| I mean, it's 350 million, depending on what number you believe, that only saw outside looking in, but we're on the inside looking out, right? | ||
| We are the personification of the corruption. | ||
| We are the personification of the coup, right? | ||
| And it's something that I feel like a lot of J6ers themselves want to talk about their experience, and that's great. | ||
| But the real problem, if we really want to get to the bottom of J6, we need to know what the big picture of it was. | ||
| And that's where my story comes in, and which is why I think it's so excluded from the stories is because the government did that to us, right? | ||
| The government, this government, you were in a game of cat and mouse with the government for a little while there. | ||
| Well, yeah, look, they came and tried to get me to be that cool guy that everyone would listen to so that they could either collect from inside or manipulate, which is one of the things that they do, right? | ||
| They use confidential human sources to passively and actively collect. | ||
| So they were trying to recruit you to what? | ||
| Get Trump support more Trump supporters behind bars or what? | ||
| We don't know, right? | ||
| Because you rejected them. | ||
| Before January. | ||
| So this is December 9th of 2020. | ||
| And I recorded that initial, what we call like an initial touch or a soft pitch, right? | ||
| Just to gauge your interest in it. | ||
| Do you think they were interested because of your military experience or was it your support for Trump or like, how did they get drawn to you? | ||
| Well, no, I mean, I think one, because what we know now, right, through discovery, is I have two confidential human source reports from the very meeting in November with the Oath Keepers where I warned them that they were about to be targeted for destruction, right? | ||
| Look, I said, this and we've done this. | ||
| I called in you to you before the election and I showed the diagram of the activity of an insurgency, right? | ||
| And this is the exact document that I'm now briefing them on post-2020 election. | ||
| And I said, you're about to be targeted for destruction. | ||
| You are the type of organization, just like the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, 3%ers. | ||
| These are the types of organizations that the enemy is threatened by. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because you talk about Constitution, you talk about individual liberty, right? | ||
| It's kind of how they've co-opted this idea of sovereign citizen, right? | ||
| They don't want you to think that you have rights that you can just demand that they be upheld, right? | ||
| So those organizations were initially targeted. | ||
| We saw it in October with the Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping plot. | ||
| And then we saw the actual carry through by the same leadership team, the same group of FBI leadership field office, you know, some of them are still around. | ||
| Correct. | ||
| Some of them have been promoted, right? | ||
| But they were moved in that kind of dry, dry run, like that dress rehearsal over to J6. | ||
| And then J6 was the big one, right? | ||
| And J6 did not, make no mistake, as bad as it was, J6 did not go the way they wanted. | ||
| They wanted a firefight on Capitol grounds. | ||
| This is why you have, if you read Steven Sun's book or even, you know, look, no matter how propagandistic somebody might be, you could still glean a little bit of information. | ||
| So when you read Julie Kelly's book, I think she references the fact that Lieutenant Bird not only shot and murdered Ashley Babbitt, but also was on the Senate side telling Mitt Romney, no, no, stay in the chambers. | ||
| That's the safest place. | ||
| Even though what should have actually happened utilizing logic and decades of tactical operations is that they should have been evacuated through the tunnel. | ||
| I don't want to re-go through all the January 6th stuff. | ||
| I think we've got a like a 95% understanding of the things that we need to understand there. | ||
| So I'm not looking to relitigate that, but I want to get back to the point that you made of the perspective from being in jail. | ||
| The way I look at it too, and I look at it from your perspective, I look at it from Joe Biggs' perspective. | ||
| You brought up the Oathkeepers. | ||
| I look at it from Stuart Rhodes' perspective. | ||
| I don't even like to look at it through my perspective. | ||
| And that's not even mentioning those three names because they're all veterans, but it's just to say, who is a real criminal? | ||
| Who belongs in jail? | ||
| Because yes, I have been there, but it's like, who's the real criminal? | ||
| Is it Joe Biggs? | ||
| Is it Jeremy Brown? | ||
| Is it Stuart Rhodes? | ||
| Or is it Anthony Fauci? | ||
| Or is it Hillary Clinton? | ||
| And so once you kind of understand that thought dynamic, once you understand that miscarriage of justice, then that's kind of how I like to put it into perspective. | ||
| And then you even understand why the justice system is so screwed up. | ||
| Of all these guys that are sitting in prison, I'd say, I mean, from my experience, one Bureau of Prisons Correction Facility, I'd say half of them don't even belong in prison, probably half. | ||
| So you've got half of these people in this prison. | ||
| They don't even belong there. | ||
| And then the real criminals are running around D.C. making money hand over fist, making the biggest political decisions. | ||
| And it's like, that's the big issue here. | ||
| So it's like you can look at one case here or one case there. | ||
| It's like, no, no, no, you don't belong in prison. | ||
| The people that stood down and wanted D.C. to burn on January 6th, the people that set up the pipe bombs, the people that lied about President Trump, those are the people that belong in prison. | ||
| And yet you're the one that went. | ||
| Well, right. | ||
| And luckily for us, they're a lot of the same people, right? | ||
| I mean, if we just simply took the Biden pardon list, I think we'd probably nail 75% of the culprits, right? | ||
| I mean, because you'd send a shockwave through D.C. enough to paralyze them for probably, you know, two or three election cycles. | ||
| But they know who did what. | ||
| So when they issue their list of people that they think should be pardoned in a preemptive pardon, which isn't even a real thing, right? | ||
| But yeah, if we believe it, it will be. | ||
| And just like the signature, too. | ||
|
unidentified
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Right. | |
| So it's not even a real signature. | ||
| When they list all these people, we should say, well, what are they being listed for? | ||
| Well, this is the bad guy providing their list. | ||
| Yeah, really, it is. | ||
| It's like a guilty list, right? | ||
| It's like, here's the guest list of the party. | ||
| 75% of the bad guys are on that list. | ||
| And then we could probably take those bad guys and get to the other 25% if we really wanted to do that. | ||
| So, I mean, it's all the same people. | ||
| It's all like January 6th is no different than the COVID vax conspiracy, right? | ||
| It's all the same people. | ||
| Why? | ||
| It's all the same people that are compromised and controlled that are told, you will do this. | ||
| You will cover up this. | ||
| You will not talk about this and you will talk about this, right? | ||
| Like these are all, it's all the same actors. | ||
| And so it's not like J6 is one thing and 9-11 is another thing and COVID is another thing. | ||
| No, they're all, like, like I told Alex on his show, they are all single counts on a treason indictment, right? | ||
| Well, and that's, I mean, you talk about 9-11. | ||
| It's really, it's not even a cliche thing. | ||
| And it feels so far in the past now. | ||
| But I mean, really, I think if we had to get to the truth of one thing, if I had to pick one thing to get to the truth down to the bottom line of what really happened that would heal America, I think that would be the most important thing. | ||
| I don't think, you know, JFK, it's too far removed. | ||
| You know, they try to throw Martin Luther King files. | ||
| Like these things are too far removed. | ||
| Most people that were around for that either are, you know, they're past their prime, no offense, or they're just, they're just dead. | ||
| They're not with us anymore. | ||
| So I think 9-11 truth is the most important thing. | ||
| So much of our foreign policy, so much of our domestic policy, so many of the things that were used as an excuse to rob from us and to put us in a prison country all stemmed from September 11th and the false narrative there. | ||
| And I mean, I don't even know it, but it's like, to me, I don't know if President Trump has the agenda to do it, but it's like, that's the most important thing. | ||
| We have to get down to the truth about September 11th. | ||
| And then everything from there, I think, will start to make a lot more sense. | ||
| Well, because September 11th is a case study in incrementalism, right? | ||
| The very search warrant that the FBI framed me with was only possible brought to you by 9-11. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
| Right. | ||
| It's just like everything during 2021, 2022, right, was brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
| Well, illegal search warrants, illegal surveillance, Christopher Ray, NSA, all sitting there saying, oh, no, we don't spy on Americans except in these hundreds of thousands and millions of incidences, but don't worry, it's for your own good. | ||
| That was brought to you by 9-11, right? | ||
| I mean, and so, but here, the, the encouraging thing, and, you know, I'm remiss at the fact that we didn't get to talk about a lot of encouraging things from my perspective over on Alexis Show, so we'll talk about them here, is, you know, he brought up some encouraging things, which is people are awake. | ||
| I mean, Owen, 10 years ago, right? | ||
| When I discovered that 9-11 was not what they told us it was in 2007 as a lieutenant on a fire department and a special forces operations sergeant running operations in Iraq, okay? | ||
| It was devastating to me. | ||
| I was like, oh my gosh, I nearly got out of the military, right? | ||
| I stepped away from my fire department because I was so upset. | ||
| I was so distraught. | ||
| And that was 2007. | ||
| Now, 10 years ago, if I would have said what I have said about 9-11 recently, people would have said, oh, he's a crazy person. | ||
| But now I talk to regular Republicans, right? | ||
| They even profess to be Republicans, right? | ||
| And they're like, oh, yeah, 9-11, they're the ones, they're the new conspiracy theorists, right? | ||
| Normal people are becoming the conspiracy theorists that they all wanted to be a badge of shame, but it's now becoming a badge of honor. | ||
| It's kind of like a political momentum, like a whiplash thing. | ||
| I'm trying to think of a good analogy, but it's like if one big object is moving and it's tethered to another object and then it just comes to a stop, well, that other object eventually comes swinging around. | ||
| So it's like, that's kind of where we're at. | ||
| We're in this political whiplash moment where, like you said, most people, I mean, even myself, I don't know about 10 years ago, maybe 15 or 20 years ago, when I would have people come to me and watch this documentary, 9-11, all this stuff, I'd discount them. | ||
| I'd say, oh, they tell me on the news, whatever. | ||
| I couldn't even comprehend that the world was that corrupt. | ||
| And then it hits you. | ||
| It's a pretty, you know, it's an eye-opening experience. | ||
| But I feel like that's what it is. | ||
| It's like this whiplash moment now where everybody else is, whoa, it's like they can't even, it's a force of momentum. | ||
| They can't even help it. | ||
| It's like, oh, yeah, obviously we got lied to about that. | ||
| It's like, oh, they lied about Trump. | ||
| They lied about COVID. | ||
| They lied about the vaccines. | ||
| They lied about JFK. | ||
| Oh, yeah, they lied about, they lied about 9-11 too. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| Well, and it has become this wait a minute moment, right? | ||
| Because look at all the things they stack on top of each other. | ||
| And it only takes one of those things, right? | ||
| Whether it be COVID, whether it be January 6th, whether it be, you know, whatever the thing, whether it be, you know, men competing as women or knocking them out in MMA fights, right? | ||
| Any one of those things could drive them to a source of information that's like, oh, yeah, we've known about this, right? | ||
| And oh, by the way, here's the other things, right? | ||
| A place like Infowars or, you know, any of the multiple information sources out there that for us, those that have been awake, right? | ||
| We talk, we see all of it, right? | ||
| As it, as it happens, right? | ||
| In real time, we're like, this is a scam. | ||
| This is a lie. | ||
| This is a cover. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| What is it? | ||
| Actually, I think it was Harrison Smith that I don't know if it was his quote, but it was something like, because I just, it resonated with me because what you're saying is just my reality. | ||
| It's not even like a, it's just like, yeah, once you've, once you've learned how to identify propaganda, it's like, you don't even need to look at it twice. | ||
| Well, and this is why special operators are trained to identify propaganda. | ||
| We're trained not just to say, look, see this, this is propaganda, but we're actually trained that this is how they will use your actions in propaganda, right? | ||
| And without going into a bunch of details, which are actually, you know, classified, believe it or not, there are certain things that you're taught in survival, evasion, resistance, and escape school to say, don't do this because this is how it will be used in propaganda, right? | ||
| And so being trained to not only avoid the propaganda, you become aware of the propaganda. | ||
| It's funny. | ||
| I think you guys probably should have been teaching the IDF those techniques because I don't think, I don't know where you're standing on the issue. | ||
| But see, it's war. | ||
| That's where I stand on this. | ||
| That's a fine take. | ||
| But see, this is why, this isn't even my opinion. | ||
| This is why when, you know, because I've been a big critic of Israel lately, and then people will come at me from like an emotional or like a moral argument. | ||
| I'm like, hold on a second. | ||
| I'm like, you have to understand that you're in a different arena than I'm in right now. | ||
| I am simply here reacting and responding to propaganda. | ||
| You have to understand. | ||
| It's like you can, if you want, if you're a big pro-Israel person, that's fine. | ||
| I'm simply saying the American people are being propagandized from all sides of this, by the way. | ||
| It's why I don't like showing a lot of videos on it because I don't know what's real and what's not. | ||
| And it's like, I'm just sitting here pointing out the propaganda that's being fed to people. | ||
| And then somehow that gets turned into some geopolitical opinion being misinterpreted. | ||
| And it's like, no, you need to understand. | ||
| This is just raw propaganda being thrown at you. | ||
| Well, not only that, but we don't want the power to be turned off us suddenly so we can't say anything bad about Israel, right? | ||
| Well, that's a separate issue. | ||
| Everything's going to be deleted as soon as you say it. | ||
| I mean, shut it down. | ||
| My question is this: clean up your own house before you start trying to clean up everybody else's house, right? | ||
| They want us to focus on the exterior, right? | ||
| And there is a quote that I read in prison, and I wish I could remember, but it was basically that domestic liberty is always eroded or depleted or diminished by the threat of something abroad, right? | ||
| I mean, this is how. | ||
| All the founding fathers warned us about it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Well, exactly. | |
| And I wish I could find a quote because I'd love to actually say it correctly. | ||
| But the reality is that the external boogeyman, right? | ||
|
unidentified
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We have to spy on you because of the Muslims. | |
| It comes back to 9-11. | ||
| Right. | ||
| It all goes back, right? | ||
| And so this is always the best way to get people to surrender their liberty is to claim, well, there's this boogeyman. | ||
| And if you don't support our fight against the boogeyman by letting us spy on you so that 20 years later, we can then arrest you for, you know, protesting against, you know, our rigged elections or whatever else. | ||
| Well, then you're not patriotic and that the terrorists win, right? | ||
| I mean, it is the same stuff that you say, and it's almost a joke. | ||
| It is. | ||
| Well, at this point, I think it basically gets rejected, regurgitated upon consumption because it's been used so many times. | ||
| And this is why I do believe there's a new political age rising. | ||
| But you look at a situation like right now, they got the streets of D.C. militarized. | ||
| They're talking about sending them to Chicago. | ||
| And I think it's a similar issue, but it's a different issue. | ||
| It's a similar issue because I would say, hey, I don't want to see Streets of America militarized. | ||
| I don't want to see that. | ||
| But at the same time, every time I sit down on this desk at a Monday, I could pick any major American city and show you a dozen murders, maybe more. | ||
| So it's like, well, okay, I don't want that either. | ||
| So what are we going to do? | ||
| We have to do something here, but we also have to be careful not to go too far. | ||
| But to me, that's not an exterior problem. | ||
| That's an interior problem. | ||
| That's in your front yard. | ||
| That's in your backyard. | ||
| It's like, if we're going to do this stuff, which is flirting with authoritarianism, flirting with the violation of rights, maybe even outrightly doing it. | ||
| But if you're dealing with a problem internally and you're saying, okay, here's the problem. | ||
| Here's how we're dealing with it. | ||
| I can look like I just chewed on a lemon and kind of, but when it's dealing with something on the other side of the planet that shouldn't have anything to do with me, no, I can't justify it. | ||
| And here it's the incremental dependence that we're being conditioned to accept troops on the streets when the actual solution to the problem is arresting the George Soros-backed attorney generals or the prosecutors or the mayors that have that we can provably show, right? | ||
| Because we're told that we already have figured out the whole elections, the election fraud thing, right? | ||
| Okay, well, then let's use that to cut off the heads of the snakes, right? | ||
| That is where the violence is being allowed to happen. | ||
| And I think Harrison made this point brilliantly this morning. | ||
| If they wanted, if Chicago wanted to stop the violence, they could stop the violence, right? | ||
| I mean, they're not short of funding. | ||
| They get federal law enforcement funds. | ||
| They get state. | ||
| They get local tax, right? | ||
| If they wanted to stop it, they could, right? | ||
| But they're allowing it. | ||
| And so they're actually the culprits. | ||
| They are the cartel. | ||
| They are the violence cartel, right? | ||
| If we wanted to stop drugs in America, you should attack the head of the snake, not the low-level dealers, right? | ||
| But this is what we're fed. | ||
| We're fed the you know, the problem reaction solution paradigm, right? | ||
| To get us to accept more law enforcement that is then later next administration be turned on you and me or whoever. | ||
| Plus, with the AI and everything, it's very dangerous. | ||
| Rather than take out the actual true problem, the true source of the problem in the drug war is the cartel. | ||
| The true source of the problem in the fentanyl crisis is China, right? | ||
| The true problem in the blue city violence isn't the gangs that are perpetuated by the drug cartel, by the gun trade, right? | ||
| But it's the fraudulent belief that these people were elected. | ||
| Like that this is what people have chosen. | ||
| And you know, there's probably different phases. | ||
| They have talked a lot about showing a bunch of fraud inside of Act Blue. | ||
| Now, so far, we haven't seen any results from that. | ||
| I wouldn't doubt that they could have actionable cases, but we haven't seen any results from that yet. | ||
| But yeah, like you just pointed out a bunch of different angles. | ||
| It's like, okay, how do these attorneys, how do these judges get into power? | ||
| We know where their money comes from. | ||
| We can at least cut off their money. | ||
| They could stop Act Blue immediately for a fraud investigation. | ||
| And then if they find nothing, which I highly doubt would be the case, okay, then they open it back up. | ||
| It could be stopped right now. | ||
| Stop their funding ahead of the midterms and then just deport George Soros. | ||
| Just kick his old ass out of this country and his money with it. | ||
| Well, he is an insurgent leader, right? | ||
| I mean, he could be easily proclaimed an enemy combatant, right? | ||
| In an insurrection being who's going to cry over George Soros? | ||
| Huma Abedin? | ||
| Well, one, the entire Democrat Party and half of the Republican Party. | ||
| But I don't, but see, but they know Soros is like looked at as like a political demon. | ||
| They're not. | ||
| I can't believe you would talk badly about a Medal of Freedom winner like that. | ||
| Who gave him that? | ||
| Who gave him the Medal of Freedom? | ||
| Did he really, though? | ||
| The auto pen. | ||
| Yeah, right. | ||
| It was probably an auto robot. | ||
| But look, look, this is the problem. | ||
| We have reached analysis paralysis in the Patriot movement, right? | ||
| We are at the point where we already know who all the bad guys are. | ||
| We don't need to be told about endless investigations, right? | ||
| And look, I get it. | ||
| Alex believes indictments are coming. | ||
| I don't, right? | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because I've been told that. | ||
| And I want them to come. | ||
| And I'm be more than happy to wait a few more weeks. | ||
| But I will tell you that arrest for January 6th started within days after January 6th. | ||
| Well, you know what? | ||
| Why did they never need a lot of time to arrest us? | ||
| But we take forever to arrest them or never will. | ||
| We have now reached, it was actually over this weekend. | ||
| I was at this stage of the Biden administration indicted and arrested. | ||
| They indicted me. | ||
| I was arrested, spent better half of a day in a cell before a magistrate judge released me on my conditions of release. | ||
| You had a different situation. | ||
| But yes, the excuse that we can't do anything. | ||
| It's too soon is obviously a lie. | ||
| It's not true. | ||
| If there's other excuses, maybe they'll explain it later. | ||
| I'm of the belief like you are. | ||
| I don't think any indictments are coming. | ||
| I'd be shocked if there are any big arrests. | ||
| I would be shocked. | ||
| I'll celebrate it. | ||
| I just don't see it. | ||
| I just don't see it. | ||
| And Owen, this is why, you know, my perspective is this. | ||
| I recorded the federal government attempting to recruit me to infiltrate a group that I now know was already infiltrated. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So that means that they were looking for something else out of me. | ||
| So that's why they were coming after you so hard. | ||
| I believe that they were looking to use me as a credible senior leadership source. | ||
| In the FBI's got the attorney general guidelines for use of confidential human sources by the FBI. | ||
| There is in the definition section, it's called a senior leadership source, right? | ||
| That is a source that's being run by the FBI that is actually in a leadership position within the organization in order to direct the organization in the way that it wants to go. | ||
| You can pull the document up on Google, right? | ||
| Signed by William Barr on his last day in office, right? | ||
| This is the FBI's guidelines for how to use their confidential human source network. | ||
| All right, let's get some. | ||
| We're up against a break. | ||
| Let's do five more minutes. | ||
| I got to get to the rest of this news, but let's do five more minutes with Jeremy Brown, and then I'll get to the rest of the news today. | ||
| All right, I want to sum this up with Jeremy Brown before I get back into the news. | ||
| And I guess kind of just ask you the question of what do you make of the Trump administration so far? | ||
| I mean, I don't want to do the whole, you know, give it a grade. | ||
| So I guess I would kind of present it to you like this. | ||
| How can I say this the best way? | ||
| It's not like I've given up hope because I do think bigger picture, as you were explaining in the last segment, I do think bigger picture, like we are winning hearts and minds. | ||
| We are winning the info war. | ||
| We do have all the momentum in our favor. | ||
| And I think there has been a lot of larger viewpoint stuff that is going in our favor. | ||
| But when you get into more of the specific issues politically with this administration, I feel that we've already lost. | ||
| I feel that we've already lost. | ||
| And maybe it's a good thing. | ||
| You know, maybe it's a good thing that it's like, okay, we got Trump in. | ||
| It's like, this is the most hardcore, like right-wing pro-America. | ||
| And it's like, oh, we still got politics as usual. | ||
| So it's like, okay, next time we have to go here. | ||
| It's like, next time we have to go here. | ||
| So I think it can be a good thing. | ||
| But I just think boiling it down to this administration, if I was a gambling man, I'd guess if the over-under on deep state arrests was, let's say, one and a half, I'd take the under if I was a gambling man. | ||
| Now, I can't bet money on that, but what I can do is I can, I can bet my public reputation. | ||
| So I'm coming on air and I'm, I'm not giving people any hope that there's going to be deep state arrests. | ||
| And then if it happens, then we all win. | ||
| It's good for the country. | ||
|
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
| I mean, look, the constant demand for action should never cease, right? | ||
| Even when there's arrest, we should demand more arrests. | ||
| Even when there's more arrests, we should demand the repealing of unconstitutional laws. | ||
| Even when there's the repealing of unconstitutional laws, we should demand constitutionalist judges, right? | ||
| I mean, we should never be satisfied until we reach the point of liberty, right? | ||
| I mean, when the government isn't in my business, then I'll stop complaining about the government being in my business, right? | ||
| And no single act should be good enough to make us back off, right? | ||
| We are the employers, okay? | ||
| Imagine if InfoWars was left to its own devices and Alex wasn't running around the hallway like a madman screaming at everybody, right? | ||
| That doesn't happen. | ||
| Whatever happened. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Because it's his operation. | ||
| He is the boss. | ||
| Well, in America, the citizens are the boss, right? | ||
| We are the bosses, right? | ||
| Not we don't, we shouldn't be looking for our politicians to help us. | ||
| We should be looking for our politicians to obey us, not us obey them, right? | ||
| And so no sooner should we be content with the destruction of what America is or what we want it to be, right? | ||
| We should not be content with that until it is achieved. | ||
| So I would say the measuring stick, Trump's first inaugural address, he said, to me, it was the most powerful thing to say to the American people, to really just encapsulate it. | ||
| He said, I am going to give your country back to you. | ||
| I'm going to give the United States of America back to we the people. | ||
| And if that's the measuring stick, then we're nowhere near. | ||
| Do you feel like it's been given back to you? | ||
| I mean, it's just like in the first administration, you're going to be tired of winning. | ||
| I never once got tired of winning. | ||
| The indictments are coming. | ||
| They never came. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So here's the key point. | ||
| I'm more than happy to play the long game, right? | ||
| I mean, this is what China does, right? | ||
| China doesn't deal in four-year political administrations, right? | ||
| They deal in 100 years at a time, right? | ||
| And so if you're telling, look, if somebody, if anybody on the inside were to just talk to me and be like, hey, tell us about how the government was weaponized against you from your perspective. | ||
| If just one person, it doesn't even have to be Ed Martin. | ||
| It could just be an FBI agent. | ||
| You know, Owen, that I've never been questioned ever once by anybody, not local, not state, not FBI, about my involvement with January 6th or anything, not about the possession of the very grenades that they were prosecuting. | ||
| I've never been questioned. | ||
| My girlfriend at the time was never questioned, right? | ||
| They just simply showed up, put handcuffs on me, threw me in jail, falsely convicted me, and pretended like I never even existed. | ||
| Does that sound like there was an investigation going on? | ||
| Or does it sound like they were just trying to silence me? | ||
| Because you were probably questioned by the FBI, right? | ||
| Very, well, no, I'd say, yeah, pretty thoroughly, actually. | ||
| Right. | ||
| But they realized they realized that there was nothing there. | ||
| The reason the FBI questions suspects is the perjury trap, right? | ||
| See, when you're building a case against somebody that you want to throw away for a long time, you question them about all kinds of dumb things, hoping that they will then later be able to use that in a perjury trap to say, well, you told us this. | ||
| Oh, so you lied to us, right? | ||
| As an additional charge, right? | ||
| Because they love the charge stack. | ||
| With my case, they didn't even do that. | ||
| That is how that is how unconcerned they were about my life. | ||
| Yeah, because they wanted to use you. | ||
| They wanted to use you. | ||
| And when they figured they couldn't, they just said, nope, just show up. | ||
| It's because they knew I recorded them. | ||
| What am I going to say to any question from the FBI? | ||
| I'm going to look at them and be like, what are you talking about? | ||
| You guys know that you tried to recruit me, right? | ||
| Like, yeah, like there was nothing they could ask me. | ||
| I wouldn't say they would. | ||
| They were. | ||
| I wouldn't say they tried to recruit me. | ||
| They definitely wanted to use me against Alex, though. | ||
| I mean, that was 100 percent an agenda. | ||
| Of course. | ||
| That's a recruitment. | ||
| And so and they run a bunch of headlines. | ||
| And it's funny because Alex and I never even talked about it, but they ran a bunch of headlines and they said, Troyer's turned on Jones and everything. | ||
| I said, no, I did cooperate with the feds because I had nothing to hide. | ||
| They basically went through everything. | ||
| My probation was the most invasive probation ever. | ||
| It's so ridiculous stuff. | ||
| Which is a mistake I bet you'll never make again. | ||
| Well, I don't know if I could have gotten a better outcome. | ||
| Definitely. | ||
| I would say the mistake that I learned was anything the feds promise you get in writing because even then it means nothing unless it's signed, sealed and delivered. | ||
| It means nothing. | ||
| But I gave them everything. | ||
| I gave them all the electronic access they wanted. | ||
| They had access to all my phones, anything on them. | ||
| They did a dummy of my phone so they could access anything that was on it. | ||
| Emails, messages, calls, everything. | ||
| And they're like, see, this is it, Troyer turned on Jones. | ||
| No, I didn't even have to talk to Alex about it. | ||
| That's how innocent we were. | ||
| Right. | ||
| But that's what they tried to do. | ||
| But that's what they tried to do. | ||
| But see, they didn't even do that with me. | ||
| They didn't say, hey, why don't you turn on Stuart Rhodes? | ||
| Why don't you turn on Enrique Tarrio? | ||
| Why don't you turn on Kelly Meggs? | ||
| Because they knew that would be pointless because at that point for nine months, I had them on blast saying, these guys are scumbags. | ||
| That's exactly what you're talking about. | ||
| It's like, OK, Trump says the election was stolen. | ||
| So who stole it? | ||
| Why aren't they arrested? | ||
| Trump says Obama committed treason. | ||
| OK, that's a crime. | ||
| Let's let's get some results here. | ||
| That's good. | ||
| And so now here's a perfect example. | ||
| Why did Trump pardon? | ||
| Did you get a full pardon? | ||
| Well, my case was still open. | ||
| So my case was overturned and dismissed. | ||
| So OK, so overturned and dismissed. | ||
| So I got a pardon. | ||
| There were a thousand pardons. | ||
| Why did Trump pardon a thousand J6 defendants? | ||
| Because he knew that the crime was committed against them. | ||
| So it's like the same thing. | ||
| It's like, OK, here you are. | ||
| It's like admitting. | ||
| It's like, OK, they stole the election. | ||
| That's a crime. | ||
| Obama committed treason. | ||
| That's a crime. | ||
| They they illegally locked up a bunch of Trump supporters. | ||
| That's a crime. | ||
| So it's like you're admitting these. | ||
| This is the crime. | ||
| And then where are the arrests? | ||
| Well, even more importantly, as pointed out by Suzanne Monk in her her pardon project, where she worked with Tim Rivers and David Summerall and them, they said the correct solution to this problem is not just a full and unconditional pardon, but a pardon of innocence of which President Trump has given to General Michael Flynn. | ||
| That would have expunged everything that a pardon of innocence says this was never a crime to begin with, but instead full and unconditional pardons legally, according to the Supreme Court, which has ruled that the acceptance of a pardon is an admission of guilt and sought ceases all judicial actions. | ||
| Right. | ||
| So if you have an open appeal, but you accept a pardon, your appeal is now null and void. | ||
| Why? | ||
| Because you've now accepted you've accepted guilt by accepting the pardon. | ||
| And they kind of do that with plea deals, too. | ||
| So the pardon actually codified the false narrative. | ||
| And my question is, why? | ||
| Right. | ||
| Why are you forcing these people? | ||
| Because, look, only like a lot of them were in jail. | ||
| Only 200 and something were in jail. | ||
| That's a lot. | ||
| Right. | ||
| But people in jail of almost 1600 people who had the reason they weren't in jail, because many had pled, forced a plea, meaning the DOJ turned the screws against them until they would do anything to make the pain stop. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| That's the that's what they did to me. | ||
| And they promised no jail time. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's amazing. | |
| Right. | ||
| That's a major group. | ||
| But then there's another group that people don't even think about, which are people like Kenny Harrelson, who served his full sentence. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So what good is a pardon to him? | |
| Right. | ||
| Hey, sorry. | ||
| Sorry about that. | ||
| But you've already served. | ||
| I mean, I was only a few months away from serving over half of my son. | ||
| I would say if I had any hope, if I have any hope, it would be that they're going to wait until, say, mid summer, let's say summer, late summer 2026 to start rolling this stuff out in order to get a bunch of momentum ahead of the midterms. | ||
| But. | ||
| But I've been covering politics long enough. | ||
| I've been covering Republican politics long enough that any hopes that they have strategy like that, it's down. | ||
| It's zero. | ||
| They never do it. | ||
| They never get it. | ||
| They can do it every election cycle. | ||
| They literally never do it. | ||
| So that's why I'm sitting here saying, all right, here's what we're going to get from this administration. | ||
| Here's what we're not going to get from this administration. | ||
| And then you can say, here's the larger picture that I think overall America is waking up. | ||
| But a lot of political action, really a lot of executive action needs to happen to save this country, I think. | ||
| Well, look, a lot of action on the part of the people needs to happen, right? | ||
| Because at the end of the day, there's only two ways to control a politician. | ||
| You either bribe them with campaign donations to get them elected, right? | ||
| Or you shame them to the point where they don't think they're going to get elected, right? | ||
| I mean, that is all they care about. | ||
| They don't care about you. | ||
| They don't care about the Constitution or whatever religion it is that they claim. | ||
| They only care about getting reelected, right? | ||
| I mean, this is why you never see congressmen go there for a couple of years and then step down because they've been grooming their younger, more capable replacement, right? | ||
| They go there. | ||
| They fall in love with the power. | ||
| They fall in love with the pomp and circumstance, and they'll tell you anything you want to hear. | ||
| They will claim, they will come to your barbecue and your hot dog roast, and they will pat you on the back and call you a girl. | ||
| Obama will definitely come to your hot dog, Rose. | ||
| I can almost guarantee you that that's going to happen. | ||
| Well, yeah, you and I are probably not rich enough to buy influence and access. | ||
| No, so we have to use shame. | ||
| We have to go to their events and ask them over and over again. | ||
| That is happening. | ||
| Why aren't you doing this, that, or the other? | ||
| I do have one thing that might work for you before I let you go here. | ||
| Let me just. | ||
| Oh, man, is this going to be. | ||
| This is known to have magical power. | ||
| Oh, geez. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| It's especially with this administration. | ||
| Here, try placing that on your head. | ||
| You place that on your head, and all of a sudden your influence. | ||
| Whoa. | ||
| Whoa, you might actually be able to influence the White House now. | ||
| Well, no, I feel. | ||
| You might actually be able to influence foreign policy now. | ||
| Well, actually, I feel like that the control mechanisms that were pulling my strings have been cut off completely. | ||
| Well, it's amazing because you're a veteran. | ||
| You've served overseas. | ||
| And now I'm a tinfoil Yarmuka. | ||
| But you didn't really have any influence until today. | ||
| Now, there's something magical that's happened here. | ||
| You know, y'all should really brand these tinfoil yarmicas, right? | ||
| I did that as a gag. | ||
| It blocks the influence of the Israel. | ||
| Look at that. | ||
| I did that as a gag like a week or so ago after Alex and I kind of had it out on air. | ||
| And I was like, all right, I got to just reset the buttons with some comedy here. | ||
| And so that was a gag. | ||
| And now we actually do sell it, though. | ||
| Well, we sell make your own. | ||
| I know, but you need the instruction manual as to how to make a tinfoil Yamaka. | ||
| We've got the official Alex Jones tinfoil hat kit. | ||
| It comes with the stress-free ball there, the Alex Jones head. | ||
| So I don't know. | ||
| It's a make-your-own tinfoil Yarmuka. | ||
| Rabbi Schroerberg to come in here and I'm just excited because I've been on InfoWars three shows today. | ||
| I'm excited to go back and read all the comments because how many times will I be accused of being a member of Mossad? | ||
| But see, but you put that on and now you have a lot of influence. | ||
| Yeah, see, now you can start making claims with ADHD. | ||
| I totally can see where Ben Shapiro is coming from. | ||
| Yeah, it makes more sense now. | ||
| There's something about it. | ||
| It's incredible. | ||
| All right, Jeremy Brown. | ||
| And by the way, he's compiling. | ||
| You want to go to source to figure out what really happened on January 6th. | ||
| You can go to, is the best website, whoisjeremybrown.com? | ||
| Whoisjeremybrown.com. | ||
| I've updated that verbiage there to explain what I'm doing now. | ||
| Jeremy Brown Defense has a lot of our historic interviews that I did while I was in prison. | ||
| It is updated to say that I am free, but don't be, you know, it's going to, it is the legacy. | ||
| As free as you can be on the outside. | ||
| All right. | ||
| You know, I'm American, so I'm only semi-free. | ||
| And if you own any property, you know, it's actually the government's property. | ||
| If you want indictments, the minute that somebody contacts me to say, hey, would you like to be a witness in the grand jury testimony? | ||
| I'll let everybody know. | ||
| That's when I'll believe that they're real. | ||
| But until they want to hear from the guy that was actually framed by this government for explaining to the American people that this is what they were trying to do and use me to do, well, then they're not seriously investigating it, right? | ||
| And that's just the bottom line. | ||
| And I want indictments to come. | ||
| I want people to go to prison. | ||
| I want to visit them so I can put $17.76 on their commissary account just so they know that it came from me. | ||
| That's what I want. | ||
| I don't need money. | ||
| I don't need fame. | ||
| I want accountability. | ||
| And if people are going to tell me that it's raining, but yet piss on my leg, then I'm not going to be happy with that. | ||
| So tell me about the indictments, but show me the money. | ||
| You know, it's time to call people like you to testify. | ||
| That's what it is. | ||
| It's time for people like us to be called to testify. | ||
| And, you know, the game of street activism is over. | ||
| It's over. | ||
| That game is done. | ||
| Really, we won that game. | ||
| Got a lot of us arrested. | ||
| Now the game is to call us to testify under oath in front of Congress and then get subpoenas and indictments to follow. | ||
| All right, Jeremy Brown, I really appreciate your time here all day. | ||
| Remember the website for all the information, who is JeremyBrown.com. | ||
| All right, guys, come get him taken care of for me, please. | ||
| I'm not going to go to a break here, guys. | ||
| So let's just do this live. | ||
| I'll get some time to get Jeremy out here by letting you know. | ||
| Thank you, brother. | ||
| It's good to see you. | ||
| You got it. | ||
| You got it. | ||
| So we mentioned, no, I need that. | ||
| He tried to take my tiny. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, you got to go get your own tinfoil hat kit. | |
| Unbelievable. | ||
| This was sculpted with my bare hands. | ||
| Six million drops of sweat. | ||
| All right, that might have been a little anyway. | ||
| All right. | ||
| So you can, though, get your make your own tinfoil hat set up there at the alexjonesstore.com. | ||
| That's a new one. | ||
| Includes the stress ball, by the way. | ||
| See, I've already done, see, I've already got mine. | ||
| I already made my, uh, I already made mine here, but you can now do it for yourself. | ||
| You can have your own little kit here. | ||
| The Alex Jones tinfoil hat kit, all-time classic. | ||
| We should almost do like a tinfoil hat competition. | ||
| You know, who can make the most creative tinfoil hat? | ||
| I want somebody to make one. | ||
| 50 feet of tinfoil, by the way. | ||
| I assume you can use it for whatever other needs you need with tinfoil. | ||
| So I guess just get your tinfoil from us now, too. | ||
| I want to see somebody make up a tinfoil hat into like a satellite. | ||
| So it's like got the hat, like your head is the base, and then it's got like a satellite beaming out of it to really, I don't know if you're receiving the signal or if you're pushing back on the signal, but you can only do this. | ||
| There's only one place, and that's at the alexjonesstore.com. | ||
| You got to get your Alex Jones tinfoil hat kit and probably your stress ball as well, just to really get the full feel, the full effect. | ||
| And then as you're sculpting your tinfoil hat, as you're sculpting it, you can have the Alex Jones stress ball there on your desk, and it looks like he's screaming at you. | ||
| So it's like a motivational factor. | ||
| You're being screamed at by Alex to get your tinfoil hat right and to go to the alexjonesstore.com. | ||
| So that's how that goes. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Let's do this now. | ||
| Let's do this. | ||
| I kind of got pushed a little long earlier when I played the Ron DeSantis clip here. | ||
| So let's just revisit this real quickly, guys, in clip one, because this is the simplest solution. | ||
| And this is why it's so frustrating that we do all these different end arounds, like we run the most difficult plays possible. | ||
| It's like you're sitting at the goal line on the one-yard line, and you have Jerome Bettis and Mike Allstott in the backfield. | ||
| It's like you run the ball. | ||
| And instead, we're going to call a flea flicker, end around, double reverse, you know, statue of liberty play. | ||
| You're like, what the fuck? | ||
| I've got Jerome Bettis. | ||
| What am I doing here? | ||
| So they try to do all these different things. | ||
| It's like, no, just cut the taxes, you know? | ||
| No, just give the ball to the, just give the ball to the guy that's 300 pounds and runs a 4540. | ||
| Probably just give the ball to him. | ||
| It's like, just cut the taxes. | ||
| So here's Ron DeSantis, clip one. | ||
| From the property tax situation, it's very important given how that's pinched so many homeowners, particularly our senior citizens who have their homes paid off and they bought it 30 years ago for a certain amount. | ||
| Now they're being told it's worth so much more and they have to pony up more and more money. | ||
| It's almost like they have to pay rent to the government just to be able to enjoy their property. | ||
| And that's wrong. | ||
| And we need to do something about it. | ||
| We need to abolish property taxes. | ||
| Property taxes need to be completely illegal. | ||
| And he mentions the senior aspect there. | ||
| And he's the governor of Florida, a lot of seniors. | ||
| So, okay, it makes sense he's going at it from that angle. | ||
| But this affects so many different angles. | ||
| You're a young person and you're already barely getting by. | ||
| You want to own a home. | ||
| The property tax aspect of that can either take you out of the process or give you some breathing room to be in the process. | ||
| It's like they just voted in Austin. | ||
| I can't even believe it. | ||
| It'll likely get rejected later on. | ||
| It's insane. | ||
| I don't know if every place is like Travis County. | ||
| The fluctuation that we get in property taxes here would blow your mind, blow your mind. | ||
| If you have a mortgage in Travis County, you know exactly what I'm talking about. | ||
| Your mortgage will like double, and you'll be like, what the hell just happened? | ||
| They just doubled property taxes. | ||
| You're like, what? | ||
| So they just did it again. | ||
| They just voted to raise property taxes in Travis. | ||
| Just cut taxes. | ||
| What does the government need all of our money for? | ||
| Another war in the other side of the world? | ||
| Another war in the Middle East? | ||
| Another foreign conflict? | ||
| Another foreign country? | ||
| Another foreigner? | ||
| What do they need all of our money for? | ||
| No, it's to keep you enslaved, to keep you financially desperate. | ||
| So property tax is a good place to start, but I wouldn't stop there. | ||
| We should do a fundamental review of every single tax that gets paid out in this country, corporate tax, private tax, whatever it is. | ||
| And I'd cut 95% of them. | ||
| I'd say, present to me every single tax right now that the Americans are facing. | ||
| Give me every single one. | ||
| And we're cutting 95% of them. | ||
| We're cutting 95% of them. | ||
| So it's like you go to a corporate CEO and you say, we need to cut staffing 20% or whatever it is. | ||
| He's got to cut 20%. | ||
| No, there needs to be a mandate. | ||
| Cut 95% of the taxes. | ||
| And the minute you start to make an excuse, you're fired. | ||
| Well, we need it for the foreign aid. | ||
| You're fired. | ||
| Well, we need it to give to a foreign country. | ||
| You're fired. | ||
| Well, we need it for this welfare. | ||
| You're fired. | ||
| Until somebody gets in there and says, yes, 95%. | ||
| And we'll be just fine. | ||
| We will be just fine. | ||
| We'll be just fine. | ||
| And then, wow, what a noble concept. | ||
| Who could have ever thought of such a revolutionary idea? | ||
| You shouldn't be taxed to own your property. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| I wish somebody would have thought of that sooner. | ||
| You know, it's almost like, what a revolutionary idea. | ||
| It's almost like you could spawn an entirely new concept of self-government of a sovereign nation, even a people independent that can decide their own destiny. | ||
| Wow, what an unbelievable idea that could have unbelievable results. | ||
| I wish somebody would have thought of it before. | ||
| Cut 95% of the taxes, but you never really hear this. | ||
| Trump's mentioned it a couple of times. | ||
| Let's just do it. | ||
| Let's just do it already. | ||
| Cut the corporate tax rate down to almost nothing. | ||
| Who cares if the liberals and the bleeding hearts on TV news want to cry? | ||
| Who cares? | ||
| You'll start to bring manufacturing back. | ||
| You'll start to bring all these companies back that went overseas for the better corporate tax rate, went overseas because they don't have all the regulations and all the minutiae of going through it. | ||
| Just get the government out of our lives. | ||
| But it starts starting to look like it's going a different direction now. | ||
| Because once they build this Skynet run by AI, folks, you're never getting away from it. | ||
| You're never getting away from it. | ||
| I mean, if you want to put your phone on the counter and go to the bathroom and sit down to take a nice Hillary, maybe you'll have some privacy then until you have a smart toilet. | ||
| Those already exist, by the way. | ||
| You'll have a smart toilet. | ||
| Then that'll be in communication with the government. | ||
| Then that'll be connected to the internet. | ||
| That'll be connected to the AI. | ||
| That'll be letting the government know every time you want to go take a nice Hillary and how many times you flush and everything else that's involved with that process. | ||
| But no, that's where it's all going. | ||
| So you're not getting less government involvement. | ||
| You're getting more government involvement. | ||
| And this isn't something that's like, okay, let's go into the streets of D.C., let's go into the streets of Chicago, see if we can't clean up the crime here and make a point like we did at the border. | ||
| It's like, no, you can get border crossings down to zero. | ||
| No, you can get murders down to zero. | ||
| You can do it. | ||
| So this isn't something where you can just go in, make a point, have a solution, and get out. | ||
| No, this is building a surveillance system that will have the government involved with you every breath you take. | ||
| It's like that old song: every breath you take, every step you take, the government will be right there sending that metadata to the quantum computing AI epicenter being built right here in America. | ||
| Total corporate spy grid. | ||
| How does it feel to be free? | ||
| So, in many ways, the World Economic Forum has fallen flat, But it will rise like a zombie lusting for brains or a vampire lusting for blood. | ||
| They just need a new angle. | ||
| They need a new angle. | ||
| The climate change, the pandemic, these things have kind of been exposed as fraud. | ||
| So where can they go next? | ||
| Let's listen to this freak at the WEF basically waving the white flag on the climate change push. | ||
| So where will they go next? | ||
| Where will they go next to enslave the world? | ||
| Clip two. | ||
|
unidentified
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And our nation and globally. | |
| And did we solve that? | ||
| Did we actually manage to vaccinate everyone in the world? | ||
| No. | ||
| So highlighting water as a global commons and what it means to work together and see it, both out of that kind of global commons perspective, but also the self-interest perspective, because it does have that parallel. | ||
| It's not only important, but it's also important because we haven't managed to solve those problems, which had similar attributes. | ||
| And water is something that people understand. | ||
| You know, climate change is a bit abstract. | ||
| Some people understand it really well. | ||
| Some understand it a bit. | ||
| Some just don't understand it. | ||
| Water. | ||
| Every kid knows how important it is to have water. | ||
| When you're playing football and you're thirsty, you need water. | ||
| So there's also something about really getting citizen engagement around this and really, in some ways, experimenting with this notion of the common good. | ||
| Can we actually deliver this time in ways that we have failed miserably other times? | ||
| And hopefully we won't keep failing on the other things. | ||
| But anyway. | ||
| Well, you know, I appreciate the honesty. | ||
| I must admit. | ||
| I do appreciate the honesty here. | ||
| But think about what she's saying. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| This is how the people, the financial elites that believe they've been anointed stewardship over this planet, which results in them believing they need to cull the population. | ||
| This is how they operate. | ||
| This is how they think. | ||
| Now, that could just be some ding bat woman who's gotten up there because her honesty is a little too much. | ||
| But they say, well, what's something that every human can relate to that we can kind of penetrate? | ||
| We can penetrate their consciousness because they know what it is and they know it affects them. | ||
| Climate, weather. | ||
| Oh, okay, let's go with that angle. | ||
| Let's go with the climate, the weather angle. | ||
| Oh, that didn't really work. | ||
| Oh, let's go with the sickness. | ||
| Yeah, people don't like to be sick. | ||
| Virus? | ||
| Yeah, let's go with that angle. | ||
| Maybe we can get them all under control over the virus deal. | ||
| That failed too. | ||
| So now she says, water. | ||
| Now keep in mind, they rig up weather reports. | ||
| They even manipulate the weather. | ||
| And then they use that to get control, attempting to get control over the planet, calling it man-made climate change. | ||
| Same thing with the virus. | ||
| They make a virus in a lab, they release it, they run the propaganda on TV to put you in fear, hoping they can have a centralized government where every human is afraid of a virus on the planet, and then you go to them for the final decision. | ||
| Well, they failed. | ||
| So now they're going with water. | ||
| Well, what's the problem with that? | ||
| At least from your standpoint or my standpoint. | ||
| How are you going to get an American to buy into a global government over water? | ||
| I can go outside right now and pull a faucet in an alleyway at our office and water comes out. | ||
| I can go outside my house, turn the hose on, drink from the hose if I want. | ||
| So, you know, most Americans, there's no problem with accessing water. | ||
| So what are you going to do in that situation? | ||
| You're going to have a water shortage. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| What could possibly cause a water shortage? | ||
| Well, you just had one because of policy in California. | ||
| Hmm. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Maybe something comes along, some new technology that needs more water than anything we've ever seen. | ||
| Like, oh, I don't know, AI databases, quantum computing, programming, computers. | ||
| Oh, these things need a lot of water. | ||
| They chug through a lot of water. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
| Are they setting the stage? | ||
| Are they setting the stage? | ||
| And I do believe, you know, all these different entities just, they play off the chessboard that they're in. | ||
| So I'm not going to sit here and say, oh, the WEF is forcing all this AI stuff. | ||
| No, I think the AI stuff, the tech stuff, that's its own sector. | ||
| And then the WEF just says, hey, this is going to take up a lot of water. | ||
| Let's do a fake water crisis now to have the World Economic Forum come back to influence and power and a corporate world government. | ||
| Water shortages? | ||
| I think that's their next big play, folks. | ||
| Water shortages. | ||
| Okay, let's see. | ||
| Cut the property taxes. | ||
| They're getting ready to run a water shortage. | ||
| All the pieces are in place for that. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Here's a funny one. | ||
| Chuck Schumer. | ||
| Now, there's no doubt. | ||
| I think the level of ego that Trump has is probably unmatched by many, if not by any. | ||
| But to say that Trump wants to do this 250th celebration as some homage to himself, I don't know if that's totally fair. | ||
| I mean, he definitely likes kind of working that into his image and the icon of his legacy. | ||
| But Schumer thinks he wants to make it all about him. | ||
| So this is Chuck Schumer. | ||
| He's got a plan. | ||
| He's going to have his own 250th celebration. | ||
| He's going to do it in New York City. | ||
| And he's brought in a ringer, guys. | ||
| Schumer has brought in a ringer. | ||
| So here he is to tell you all about it. | ||
| He's going to trump even Trump's 250th anniversary of America in New York. | ||
| Chuck Schumer brings in the ringer, guys. | ||
| Let's hear from Chuck in clip six. | ||
| I'm so proud to be here with the great Jack Schlossberg. | ||
| And we couldn't think of the promenade with the Statue of Liberty, the New York City. | ||
| Anybody ever heard of him, by the way? | ||
| I never heard of Brooklyn Bridge to announce that I am so proud to appoint Jack to the America 250 Commission, which will be in charge of how we celebrate our great 250th birthday. | ||
| Why am I putting Jack there? | ||
| We know that Donald Trump will try to aggrandize the whole thing and make it part of him and his ego. | ||
| There's no better person to push back on that than you, Jack. | ||
| There's no way you will be able to make it. | ||
| Hold on, guys. | ||
| There's no better person than Jack Schlossberg. | ||
| I'm dead serious. | ||
| Has anybody ever heard of this guy? | ||
| Has anybody ever heard of Jack Schlossberg? | ||
| Chuck Schumer taps controversial JFK scion Jack Schlossberg for America 250 Commission. | ||
| It had to be a Berg, of course. | ||
| It had to be a Berg. | ||
| Oh, my gosh. | ||
| You couldn't even find somebody whose last name was like Smith or Jones or Washington or Jefferson. | ||
| Schlossberg? | ||
| I mean, it's just the whole thing is ridiculous. | ||
| The big heavy hitter, guys, Schumer's going to do it bigger than Trump, and he's brought in the ringer, Schlossberg. | ||
| That'll move the needle. | ||
| All right, that's good. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| The only grandson of the 35th president of the United States of JFK, Schlossberg. | ||
| Boy, that's a real victory, huh? | ||
| How about that? | ||
| Oh, my gosh. | ||
| Oh, boy. | ||
| Are we getting a little too conspiratorial here? | ||
| Wow. | ||
| JFK assassinated. | ||
| And now what remains is Schossberg. | ||
| Beautiful. | ||
| Just magical stuff right there. | ||
| I'll tell you. | ||
| Well, since we've gone there, we might as well go into this geopolitical stack. | ||
| I suppose we can start here. | ||
| This is getting really strange. | ||
| You know, I have always liked Mike Huckabee, and I've always viewed him as a trustworthy and an honest guy. | ||
| And even if I have a different opinion on Israel or all of that, you know, all the controversy that comes around with that conversation, I'm okay with somebody having a different opinion than me, and I can still say that I think he's a good person. | ||
| So what's been going on with Huckabee, though, in the last month or so has been really strange. | ||
| I have to admit, it's been really strange. | ||
| And things really got strange after he dared tell the American people about Israel blowing up that church. | ||
| And then all of a sudden, things just got weird. | ||
| And then they were like, he had like multiple, it was like, I don't even know if you would call it interventions, but it was like, no, they came in and got him on record. | ||
| And they put him right back on track real quick. | ||
| So now he's having all these meetings with Jewish leaders and rabbis and weird photo ops and with Netanyahu. | ||
| And it's just like, what in the heck is going on? | ||
| He's got his six foot nine wife up there. | ||
| Things just got very weird. | ||
| And then he had this meeting. | ||
| Listen to this. | ||
| He's meeting with some rabbis. | ||
| And let me just kind of put this out there as a general qualifier because I see this happening all the time. | ||
| You can't just take some rabbi just like you can't take some Muslim leader, just like you can't take some Catholic or whatever it is, and they say something radical. | ||
| And then you say, see, this is how all Jews feel. | ||
| Or see, this is how all Muslims feel. | ||
| No, I'm not playing that game. | ||
| I'm not playing that propaganda game aimed at our country. | ||
| I'm not doing it. | ||
| So, yeah, you've got radical Muslims that'll say the craziest crap you've ever heard, and you've got radical rabbis that'll say the craziest crap you ever heard. | ||
| I'm not playing that game. | ||
| But this is strange. | ||
| This is Huckabee clearly in some weird, like, get him back under control ritual, meeting with these rabbis for everybody to see. | ||
| But what they say here is quite shocking because I was told we weren't involved in a war against Iran, but then listen to this with no pushback from Huckabee here in clip four. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The rabbi wants to express his gratitude, his thanks to Donald, President Donald Trump, and to the American people for their sent that support of the Jewish people, and particularly in this last episode, last war with Iran, and expresses thanks and gratitude. | |
| Thank you, Rabbi. | ||
| And what even is this? | ||
| He's reading off a script. | ||
| Huckabee doesn't look comfortable at all. | ||
| And then the guy says, the Jewish people's war against Iran, thank you for America getting involved. | ||
| What is this stuff, man? | ||
| It's getting weirder. | ||
| It's just getting weirder. | ||
| Did you see this one? | ||
| It's been a non-stop apology to her. | ||
| Poor Huckabee. | ||
| You almost feel bad for the guy. | ||
| It's like, he's like, hey, you know, they just blew up this Christian church. | ||
| I'm a Christian. | ||
| I think I got to say something about this. | ||
| And then it's nothing but an apology to her, shaking rabbi after rabbi after rabbi's hands. | ||
| And who knows where those hands have been. | ||
| All right. | ||
| France summons U.S. Ambassador Charles Kushner over unacceptable anti-Semitism claims. | ||
| Yes, this is the father of Jared Kushner, the ambassador to France. | ||
| What to know about Charles Kushner, the U.S. diplomat, being summoned to Paris over Macron letter. | ||
| Well, you didn't hear? | ||
| Kushner scolded Macron and said that France is not doing enough for Israel and that France is not doing enough to fight anti-Semitism. | ||
| Isn't that something? | ||
| Isn't that amazing? | ||
| Tell me why any of this has to do with a U.S. ambassador to France. | ||
| Because the big secret that everybody knows now, I don't really know. | ||
| Look, people debate over the power dynamic between Israel and the United States. | ||
| Like, is Israel really running things or is America really running things? | ||
| Whatever. | ||
| Have the debate. | ||
| But the thing that is now completely undeniable is, at least right now, these two bodies move in unison. | ||
| And there's nothing the other can do about it. | ||
| So Israel wants to do something, whether the administration likes it or not, whether the American people like it or not, it's like they're going to do it. | ||
| We're going to have to go along with it. | ||
| Nothing we can do. | ||
| So you can kind of say the same thing with America, but at the bottom line, it does seem that one has the final say, and it's not you. | ||
| No, it's not you. | ||
| Why is the ambassador to France? | ||
| So the U.S., Jared Kushner's dad, Charles Kushner, is scolding France for not doing enough for Israel. | ||
| Yeah, you're really just not doing yourself any favors to claim that Israel doesn't have control over the United States when you see stuff like this happening every day. | ||
| In fact, at this point, it's just undeniable. | ||
| And then whether maybe people liked Israel, maybe people still do like Israel, but they don't like war. | ||
| And they don't like what the IDF is doing, and rightfully so. | ||
| They continue to bomb all their neighbors, the friendly country of Israel. | ||
| Israeli bombardment kills 10 in Yemen's Sana'a after Houthi attacks that did nothing. | ||
| It's like the Houthis like throw rocks at you and then they hit you with a missile. | ||
| Israelis strike Yemen capital in retaliation for earlier attacks. | ||
| It looks like maybe 100 or so people were Israel or were injured by Israel in that deal. | ||
| So it's Yemen, it's Gaza, it's the Golanites, it's the West Bank, it's Jordan, it's Lebanon, it's Iran. | ||
| Oh, man, friendliest country on earth, Israel. | ||
| Israel says it regrets deaths as airstrike hits Gaza hospital, killing journalists. | ||
| They regret nothing. | ||
| They just regret you reading about it. | ||
| By the way, it's proof that they don't regret it because they did it twice. | ||
| Israel strikes Gaza Hospital twice, killing at least 20. | ||
| So they struck the hospital, and then they waited for journalists and medical teams to arrive, and then they struck it again. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| So, hey, I get it. | ||
| Israel answers to nobody but Israel. | ||
| So you kind of have to be envious of that. | ||
| It's like our administration answers to somebody. | ||
| We can't get what the American people want, but okay. | ||
| So I get it. | ||
| Israel's saying, hey, we don't want all these doctors in here healing people up. | ||
| We're in a war. | ||
| They are trying to annihilate the Gaza Strip, folks. | ||
| They are going to annihilate it. | ||
| There will not be a building standing. | ||
| There might not be a building standing right now. | ||
| And they're going to go in there and they're going to take it. | ||
| It's going to be theirs. | ||
| They're going to claim it's Israel. | ||
| This is clearly the agenda. | ||
| They're going for it. | ||
| So I get, you're Israel. | ||
| You're in mindset. | ||
| You're in an all-out war. | ||
| Extincting your enemy is the only option. | ||
| So any doctors and medical teams that are there healing your enemy, kill them. | ||
| Any journalists that are there documenting all of your dastardly deeds that the world is sick of, kill them. | ||
| That's what they're doing. | ||
| So the only way you support that is, I guess, if you're an Israel first term, which are now running our foreign policy. | ||
| And now they are going into Gaza to begin the takeover. | ||
| They're saying, oh, it's temporary. | ||
| Oh, it's an occupation. | ||
| Oh, it's cleaning. | ||
| Shut up. | ||
| You're taking the land. | ||
| Stop lying to everybody. | ||
| It's so obvious. | ||
| Israel says it will begin Gaza City military takeover next month. | ||
| Next month, they will be taking the land from the million-plus Palestinians that have lived there, that were there before any of the Israelis were. | ||
| And they're just going to go ahead and do that. | ||
| And anybody that gets in their way, unfortunately for you, it's a brave effort to document this stuff or to go in there and try to help the kids that they're maiming permanently. | ||
| But it's going to be a bad result for you. | ||
| It's not good. | ||
| Israel rolling ahead with Gaza City takeover to free hostages and defeat Hamas. | ||
| Yeah, that's their excuse. | ||
| Israel put Hamas in. | ||
| Israel created Hamas. | ||
| Israel doesn't give a damn about the hostages. | ||
| They probably killed half of them in their strikes. | ||
| They want the land. | ||
| That's what they want. | ||
| And whatever else is in the land. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| The beachfront, the oil, who knows what else is over there? | ||
| Making a new straight. | ||
| Egypt is getting ready for this to get hostile. | ||
| Egyptian army reinforces its eastern border ahead of Israel's Gaza City takeover. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So yeah, they don't want to deal with any of it. | |
| You know what blows my mind? | ||
| And this really doesn't get talked about at all. | ||
| So I say this not as an insult because nobody really talks about it. | ||
| But I mean, it's like, did you know that Tel Aviv is about 40 miles from the Gaza Strip? | ||
| It's about 40 miles. | ||
| It's less than an hour drive. | ||
| Blows my mind. | ||
| Because, first of all, it's such a dehumanizing revelation to me. | ||
| Israel is literally over here just slaughtering its neighbors day after day, night after night. | ||
| Meanwhile, you get a couple miles in, you're in Tel Aviv. | ||
| It's just normal life now. | ||
| Now that Iran's not bombing them anymore, it's going back to the beaches, going back to school, commerce is back and everything. | ||
| And it's just like right down the road. | ||
| It's like me driving up to Round Rock. | ||
| That's my neighbor. | ||
| And it's just like they don't, I just don't even know. | ||
| How could you live next to something like that? | ||
| How could you be so emotionally detached from your own neighbor? | ||
| How could you know, you know, I don't like calling it a genocide, but whatever. | ||
| We all know what's going on. | ||
| It's an annihilation. | ||
| The only reason I don't like calling it a genocide, because I do think if Israel wanted to kill a million of them, they could. | ||
| I think they could. | ||
| There's different ways they could have done it. | ||
| But if they really just wanted to kill as many people as possible, they could have and they would have done it. | ||
| So I don't think it's about killing as many as possible. | ||
| Now, I do think they don't really care about how many they kill, but I think for Israel, it was all about just taking the land. | ||
| That's what it was all about. | ||
| They're just going in. | ||
| They're just taking the land. | ||
| Anything else that happens in that is just cannon fodder, including Israelis that die or Palestinians that die. | ||
| So I don't like calling it a genocide because I do believe if Israel, if it was all about killing Palestinians, then they wouldn't be doing that. | ||
| I think to them the death count is just, they just don't care. | ||
| It's all about taking the land. | ||
| But aside from that, I just don't understand. | ||
| And there are protests that are going on in Israel, and they are getting bigger, actually. | ||
| They are getting bigger. | ||
| They just had their biggest one a couple weeks ago. | ||
| And there's some pretty influential Jewish Israelis starting to get involved in this stuff as it gets out of control, including a lot of them that were obviously, you know, in the reactionary response, like, okay, go in there after October 7th. | ||
| But now it's like, whoa, this has become something different. | ||
| And that's why it's almost not even fair because they continue to do this October 7th bit. | ||
| They did it again today at the White House, October 7th. | ||
| This is separated from October 7th now. | ||
| This is an entirely different thing now. | ||
| And they can continue to try to make it about that as their excuse, but that's not really working anymore. | ||
| I just don't understand how you can sit there and have this going, this total devastation, this total annihilation of an entire civilization of people. | ||
| And you're 40 miles away, like nothing. | ||
| I don't understand that that level. | ||
| And maybe that's just Middle East culture, I think. | ||
| Maybe that's just Middle East lifestyle. | ||
| Maybe that's just Middle East culture is to know that a short drive, you know, down the roads, a short drive away, people are just getting slaughtered and entire civilizations just getting bombed into oblivion. | ||
| It's like, oh, yeah. | ||
| Yeah, Middle East life. | ||
| So maybe that's just life over there, which is another reason why I want nothing to do with it. | ||
| They're all savages in that regard. | ||
| There's no, oh, we're less savage or we're more moral or we have the moral high ground or we're the good guys. | ||
| You're all savages. | ||
| You've been savages for thousands of years. | ||
| That's why people get the hell out of the Middle East. | ||
| That's why Egypt is putting up military on its border saying, hey, don't, no, no, no, not us. | ||
| Don't get us involved with this crap. | ||
| You guys want to continue to kill each other and have to restart your civilizations and rebuild your cities every five, 10, 20 years? | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| We're out. | ||
| We're done. | ||
| But to me, it's a sickening revelation of what it's like that 40 miles away from Tel Aviv, they are completely annihilating an entire civilization. | ||
| And it's like, how can you live like that? | ||
| How can you know that's going on? | ||
| That's just crazy to me. | ||
| But that's what it is. | ||
| But I am curious. | ||
| Guys, did you know that? | ||
| Did you know Tel Aviv is about 40 miles from the Gaza Strip? | ||
| So, I mean, am I overreacting to that? | ||
| Or is that not just mind-blowing? | ||
| It's just like, I can't even imagine something was happening like that in Round Rock. | ||
| I don't know, like a massive fire or something, or like a huge war was raging. | ||
| It's right up in Round Rock. | ||
| It's like, whoa, that's, but it's just like, oh, no, that's just normal stuff. | ||
| Oh, yeah, they're bombing and killing kids. | ||
| They don't know. | ||
| People are starving. | ||
| Whatever. | ||
| It's just 40 miles down the road in Palestine. | ||
| Who cares? | ||
| Who cares? | ||
| That's wild to me. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can't even believe it. | |
| But that's, you know, that's what it's like in the Middle East, apparently, forever. | ||
| Apparently around Israel, that's how it's always going to be. | ||
| So I want nothing to do with it as an American. | ||
| I want a total divorce from the region altogether. | ||
| And they can decide. | ||
| You can all either kill each other for the rest of your lives or you can move on and leave the past discretions from your ancient, ancient, ancient, ancient, ancient ancestors behind. | ||
| But I guess it's not so ancient. | ||
| It's them. | ||
| It's them. | ||
| They dealt with it on October 7th, and they dealt with it in the Gaza Strip. | ||
| So it's just continuous. | ||
| It's just perpetual. | ||
| Just never ends. | ||
| And everything is anti-Semitism, by the way. | ||
| So 47 Israelis were stuck in Bosnia because some passports ended up in the trash. | ||
| Now, naturally, you had all these different groups coming out saying it's anti-Semitism. | ||
| Oh, the persecution of Jews, the persecution of Israelis. | ||
| You know, the same thing. | ||
| Everything is anti-Semitism. | ||
| So they did an investigation to find out how these passports ended up in the trash because obviously it was an act of anti-Semitism, right? | ||
| I mean, obviously some anti-Semite did this. | ||
| So they pulled the security footage. | ||
| Now, this is pretty crazy. | ||
| They found the security footage of how the passports ended up in the trash. | ||
| And they actually do, here it is on the screen. | ||
| They actually do fall off of a shelf next to a trash can. | ||
| I mean, is there such thing as an act of God? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Whoa. | |
| Hey, easy there, Schroyer. | ||
| God is not an anti-Semite. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
| This bag of passports falls off the shelf next to a trash can, and somebody comes up thinking it's a bag of trash, puts it in the trash can, and takes the trash out. | ||
| So it's a crazy event, but it was an actual innocent deal, a freak deal where these passports fell next to a trash can. | ||
| Somebody thought it was trash. | ||
| And of course, this is, you know, this footage comes out a couple days after all the cries of anti-Semitism and, oh, the victimhood, oh, the hussy, everywhere we go, we're persecuted. | ||
| Oh, it was literally a bag of passports fell into the trash, essentially. | ||
| So, you know, it's amazing, isn't it? | ||
| It's a crazy world we live in. | ||
| Tell you that much. | ||
| Jeffrey Epstein victims blast U.S. Justice Chiefs over Maxwell tapes. | ||
| Yeah, I got to say, the whole thing is wild. | ||
| I listened to some of it. | ||
| I couldn't even stand it. | ||
| It was so fake. | ||
| And it's like the whole presentation here is that Maxwell is innocent. | ||
| What are we doing? | ||
| So if you just have an isolated viewing experience, you say, here's the DOJ talking to Maxwell about Epstein stuff, and you don't know anything else. | ||
| And you go into that, you'd think Maxwell is innocent. | ||
| You'd think Maxwell is somehow a victim in this game. | ||
| And that the larger picture is to paint Jeffrey Epstein as innocent. | ||
| And I'm sitting here, and look, I understand the drive-by media concept. | ||
| I get it. | ||
| Where you don't really look at a story, but you drive by, you see one headline, and then you respond to that. | ||
| So I get why all these MAGA people are like, oh, Maxwell's one of us. | ||
| Look, she says Trump is innocent. | ||
| It's so great. | ||
| I'm like, did you even listen to it? | ||
| Did you even get the attitude here? | ||
| The attitude is that Maxwell and Epstein are innocent. | ||
| Is this where you're at? | ||
| Okay, that's something. | ||
| So at this point, I'm like, Maxwell, pardon? | ||
| Is that going to happen now? | ||
| How are we going to respond to that? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Maybe a little fash light here. | ||
| Some more fash light. | ||
| Trump's gutting of PBS and bringing in Prager U. So I do know people they like the Prager U content for kids. | ||
| I don't think it's propaganda. | ||
| But the IDF does basically run Prager U. Kind of like the IDF runs all social media now. | ||
| So just a little fash light there. | ||
| Oh, and no, they don't. | ||
| Folks, it's literally on record. | ||
| Former IDF people now running social media content moderation and running PragerU. | ||
| So, you know, your denial is just unfortunate ignorance at this point. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| Let's get some of these video clips out here. | ||
| Maybe we'll get to the rest of this headline stacks over here. | ||
| But Thomas Massey, one of the good ones, Thomas Massey really breaks it down here with Theo Vaughn on the omnibus bill. | ||
| And by the way, just to kind of give you a little cultural paradigm here of if you want to gauge of where things are going and why I talk about the new generational left and the new generational right, look at late night TV shows and how irrelevant they are. | ||
| And I think Colbert is off air now even. | ||
| I know that his show was done. | ||
| I don't know if it's off air yet. | ||
| I think another one just got canceled. | ||
| So they're totally irrelevant. | ||
| The only time these late night show hosts ever do anything relevant is when they do something so far left on the propaganda scale that people respond to it and say, look at how crazy this is. | ||
| They don't do anything else that's worthwhile. | ||
| The last time Jimmy Fallon did something worthwhile was when he brought on Greg Gutfield. | ||
| So these people are totally irrelevant. | ||
| Theo Vaughn, Tim Dylan, you could say Joe Rogan. | ||
| It's already very established. | ||
| But this is where things are going. | ||
| So the new culture comedy kind of talk show, the late night talk shows, they're irrelevant. | ||
| Nobody cares anymore. | ||
| Your Jimmy Kimmels, your Fallons, your Colberts and the rest of them, they're virtually irrelevant. | ||
| They fill time and space and they'll have a purpose, but they don't have any influence. | ||
| They don't have any movement anymore. | ||
| But somebody like a Tim Dylan, a Theo Vaughn, a Joe Rogan, this is where you can really get a pulse of the culture in America now. | ||
| These are the relevant people now. | ||
| And so if you kind of want to get an idea of where things are going, that will kind of give you an idea right there. | ||
| So these are the people that aren't really politically driven that just like to tune into kind of entertainment comedy content, but also with guys that aren't afraid to get political. | ||
| And so if you want to see where kind of the middle of the road stuff is going on now, that's a good barometer, I would say. | ||
| So this is Thomas Massey with Theo Vaughan explaining why these omnibus bills need to be stopped. | ||
| And he's 100% right, Clip 3. | ||
| I'll tell you right now, this would be 50% of solving the problem. | ||
| Get rid of the giant bills. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| The omnibus bills, the continuing resolutions, and even the big beautiful bill. | ||
| Bring up omnibus bill. | ||
| We looked it up the other day when Mr. Vance was here, but I just want to go over it again. | ||
| An omnibus bill is proposed law that covers a number of diverse or unrelated topics. | ||
| So it's not even really fair because you only get one vote on the bill. | ||
| Correct. | ||
| And so typically an omnibus bill, it includes at least 12 other bills. | ||
| Why not put that shit on the floor one at a time? | ||
| I agree. | ||
| And then that way, you can go to your representative or your senators and say, why did you vote for that? | ||
| Right now, they can say, well, Theo, I had to vote for it. | ||
| I had a pay raise for soldiers. | ||
| They literally will put a pay raise for soldiers in every freaking giant bill so that if you vote against it, you have to go back home and watch TV ads that say he voted against a pay raise for the soldiers. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Even though he may have voted for 90 other amazing things on the bill, right? | ||
| Right. | ||
| And that was the one, that was one thing that was tied in there that if you went this way, you know, it may have been like oxygen for grandmothers, right? | ||
| Literally, there probably is that in there. | ||
| But if you vote for oxygen for grandmothers, then you cannot, they're not going to give. | ||
| So I see that I voted against oxygen for grandmothers so many times, they can't even run that ad anymore. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It doesn't even seem real. | |
| Single issue bills. | ||
| Rand Paul says he agrees. | ||
| Bring each bill to the floor for a vote one at a time. | ||
| This will allow good legislation to succeed and bad ideas to fail. | ||
| Who would disagree with that? | ||
| Well, only the deep state, only the corrupt DC machine would agree with that. | ||
| Single item bills. | ||
| I would even do maybe I'm getting a little authoritarian here, but if you're authoritarian against the government, maybe it's a good authoritarian. | ||
| I would even say no bill should ever get to Congress longer than 10 pages. | ||
| If it's longer than 10 pages, we got a problem. | ||
| Or maybe do a character limit, like a thousand words or something. | ||
| You need to limit these bills. | ||
| So you could, because they'll find a way. | ||
| Single issue bills. | ||
| They'll find a way to make a thousand issues one issue. | ||
| They'll always find a way. | ||
| The DC machine, the corrupt DC criminal machine will always find a way to rig the rules into their favor. | ||
| So that's why I would go way authoritarian and say any, maybe two pages. | ||
| No, I'd say maybe a thousand characters or something. | ||
| Really make the parameters of a bill so small that there's no way for them to wiggle out of its purpose of a single issue, a single vote on a single issue. | ||
| Like this from Marjorie Taylor Greene: no tax on home sales act. | ||
| We will eliminate capital gains taxes when you sell your primary home. | ||
| This will drastically increase the supply of homes in the market and allow people to keep all the equity they have earned in their home. | ||
| Hope I have bipartisan support. | ||
| So she's still pushing this bill. | ||
| She's been pushing for it a couple months. | ||
| Of course, Congress, the House has been in recess for, I think, 50 days now. | ||
| It must be nice. | ||
| 50-day vacation. | ||
| Very good. | ||
| So you start to see stuff like this in the housing market. | ||
| New houses are now cheaper than existing homes. | ||
| Now, a lot of this, I think, has to do with there was some temporary stuff that went on in the COVID years where housing prices shot up enormously in red states because people were fleeing blue states. | ||
| This happened big time in Texas. | ||
| So when you have people fleeing New York and California, where it's extremely expensive to purchase a house into states like Florida or Texas where it was significantly cheaper, all of a sudden the market can fluctuate in a big way. | ||
| So you kind of have that going on. | ||
| But what you really have happening is this is what I've been talking about for a while. | ||
| I've been talking about how the housing market has reached this point now where, and you see some of the headlines on this, where it's even cheaper now to rent. | ||
| It's cheaper to rent because your equity is wiped out. | ||
| At the current interest rates and in the current market, unless you've owned a home for maybe 15 or 20 plus years, it's almost impossible to get equity. | ||
| So why is a new house cheaper? | ||
| Because people bought their house at the inflated market value and now they want to sell it, at least for what they paid for it. | ||
| But most people buy a house. | ||
| They want to get a higher number on the sale. | ||
| You can't do it. | ||
| There are very few markets right now where it's a guarantee you're going to get more than what you paid for. | ||
| And I mean, I kind of have my local purview because I've been just looking at this in Texas for a while, but it's almost impossible to get, aside from certain areas, it's almost impossible to get what you paid for a house. | ||
| If you've bought in the last 10 years, it's very tough. | ||
| There are some select areas that are really highly valued places where you can probably at least get maybe the same or more, but most of it, it's all down. | ||
| So you have all these people that are trying to get more than what they paid. | ||
| They can't do it. | ||
| They end up getting less. | ||
| But the new house market comes in competitively. | ||
| So you have the homeowners who are about to lose all their equity with their price up here because they want to keep their equity. | ||
| Well, the new homes can come in and they can undercut that and sell for a real value. | ||
| And then the homeowners have to go beneath the new house so they're losing all their equity. | ||
| It's an insane thing. | ||
| It's an insane thing. | ||
| And you do need to lower interest rates and you do need to lower property taxes. | ||
| But it's like how Marjorie Taylor Greene brings up, we get taxed in all these ways. | ||
| Another deal is, well, why do these homeowners feel like they have to sell at a higher value? | ||
| Because imagine all the money they paid in property taxes. | ||
| So you're taking a net loss there, no matter what. | ||
| Then there's all these different fees and fines and taxes just when you make a sale or make a purchase. | ||
| So then you got to find another way to make up for that on the sales end. | ||
| Just cut the damn taxes, man. | ||
| Just cut the damn taxes. | ||
| You shouldn't be taxed seven different times when you're trying to buy and sell a home, but you are. | ||
| Seven different freaking times. | ||
| So then that inflates the market. | ||
| And then you got interest rates to deal with, which are a nightmare. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And now I got all these videos with the people complaining about it. | ||
| So I guess we can go to them now because I am just telling Republicans, I hope we don't have to face the music in the midterms because I'd rather not deal with it, but it's a good chance you will. | ||
| I'm telling Republicans right now, the two words that will poison any right-wing movement, the two words that will crush any right-wing momentum right now are Israel is our greatest ally and the economy is doing great. | ||
| Stop it. | ||
| I don't even care if you believe those things. | ||
| If you keep telling these two things to people under 30, maybe under 40, definitely under 30. | ||
| If you continue to tell people under 30 Israel is our greatest ally and that the economy is going great and they think that's the Republican messaging, they're never going to vote. | ||
| They're never going to want to vote Republican. | ||
| Now, they might just because the Democrats are so bad, but just as a spite vote, they will say, I'm not voting for a Republican. | ||
| I'm not going to sit here and vote for Republican that all they can tell me is that Israel is my greatest ally and that the economy is great. | ||
| And I'm sitting here as an American and I can tell you neither one of those things is true as far as I'm concerned. | ||
| So maybe you can get away with the Israel thing. | ||
| I don't think so. | ||
| I think that political referendum is going to happen in the New York City mayor's race in November, where by the way, you know, Mom Donnie, the big anti-semit, you know, he's got a 17-point lead on the Jewish vote in New York City. | ||
| 17 points. | ||
| So all that shilling for Israel that these conservatives do, all the pathetic groveling to the victim status, the ultimate Uber victim status of Jews, you still don't even get their votes. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They still don't vote for you. | |
| When was the last time American Jews voted more for a Republican than a Democrat? | ||
| I don't know the last time. | ||
| Wasn't this last election? | ||
| Pretty mind-blowing number, isn't it? | ||
| As you watch the Republicans just grovel and grovel and, oh my gosh. | ||
| And then the Jews here don't even vote for them. | ||
| They're going to vote for Mom Dani. | ||
| He's up 17 points with the Jewish American vote. | ||
| There's your referendum right there. | ||
| So I anticipate it'll hit in November and then we'll see how people feel about it. | ||
| But here you go. | ||
| Let's go to some of these clips. | ||
| I could do this all day long. | ||
| I'll tell you what, though. | ||
| Let's just do this, guys. | ||
| Let's just go down each one of them. | ||
| Let's just go 7 to 11 here. | ||
| Okay? | ||
| Because this is what the young people are dealing with. | ||
| And I would say, even because I was talking to this with the crew about this before the show. | ||
| Like, even millennials, let's put things into a decade. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So you got your 30s to 40s and you got your 30 and under. | ||
| So 20 to 30 and 30 to 40. | ||
| Even millennials like somebody like me that grew up financially disenfranchised, we at least could get breathing room. | ||
| Like, yeah, when I was in college, I had to work to pay bills and stuff. | ||
| And when I was in my 20s, I mean, mostly probably until I started here, I was probably working 40, 50, maybe sometimes 60 hours a week to pay bills. | ||
| And I did work extra because I like to have a little cash if I wanted to take a girl out on a date or something. | ||
| But it was like, we could, if we wanted to, we could work. | ||
| I mean, I had friends. | ||
| They'd get paid, you know, time and a half double for overtime. | ||
| They'd take it. | ||
| So it's like we could. | ||
| Yeah, we were pretty financially in a bad position. | ||
| Millennials, let's say people now older than 30. | ||
| It's like we were kind of in a bad position when we were in our 20s, but we could, we had options to get out of it. | ||
| So if that meant working 60 hours a week or working four different jobs or, you know, doing a side, whatever it was, it's like we had an outlet to make it up. | ||
| We had the outlet. | ||
| They don't have the outlet, folks. | ||
| 30, the millennial generations, let's say 30 to 40 year olds, like we had an outlet where even though times are financially tough, we could go out there and get another job or find another opportunity and get the bills paid, even if we were just living paycheck to paycheck. | ||
| Now, 20 to 30 year olds, they don't have the outlet, folks. | ||
| The jobs don't pay enough and living is too expensive. | ||
| And I just looked at it because I was like, oh, well, what was it like when I was that age? | ||
| Oh, okay. | ||
| I was in my early 20s, you know, sometimes working five, six different jobs, sometimes working 50-some hours a week. | ||
| But the house that I was renting at the time, three bedroom, one bath, was like 900, I think 900, 950 bucks. | ||
| Same place now, 2,200 bucks. | ||
| So, I mean, I wouldn't be able to afford that. | ||
| I don't know what I would do at that juncture. | ||
| So this is the reality now and the difference between these two generations. | ||
| And you notice how it's exponentially getting worse. | ||
| So here you go. | ||
| Here's younger Americans. | ||
| This is what they're dealing with. | ||
| And I'm telling you, you tell them the economy is good, folks. | ||
| You're going to let them, they're going to run to Democrat socialists. | ||
| They're going to run to them because it's a survival thing. | ||
| They might not like the policy, but they feel it's a survival thing. | ||
| And if the Republicans are saying, hey, the economy is good as they're drowning, it's a survival thing. | ||
| They're not going to vote for Republicans. | ||
| So here you go. | ||
| Let's just go 7 through 11 here. | ||
| I could play these clips all day long, folks. | ||
| Could play them all day long. | ||
| This is the message that if Republicans continue to ignore, they're going to miss out on one of the greatest political opportunities of all time, which is seizing the youth vote and becoming a political powerhouse, a political movement for three or four election cycles. | ||
| But if you lose the youth over the economy, then it's going to be a problem. | ||
| So here they are. | ||
| These are the Americans the Republicans need to be reaching out to and working with. | ||
| And they can do it if they want to, but they're just not because it goes against the narrative that the economy is good. | ||
| Here it is, clips seven through 11, guys. | ||
| Just roll them all. | ||
| So I just left my wick appointment crying. | ||
| And that might sound really insensitive, but I got denied. | ||
| And I'm just like so tired of living and working and doing this every single day and having nothing. | ||
| Like I am on my maternity leave. | ||
| My husband is unemployed. | ||
| Can't get a job because there's nothing in Arizona. | ||
| Like nothing. | ||
| We just had a baby and I applied before and I made not even a couple dollars too much and I got denied. | ||
| A couple dollars too much. | ||
| And they recently increased the income requirements and I recently had my baby and so I reapplied. | ||
| Do I have time to reapply, go to these appointments? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, but I really need help. | |
| Like, desperately need assistance, and I've tried everything. | ||
| My husband's type 1 diabetic. | ||
| His insulin is $200 a month. | ||
| Like, not even including all his other supplies. | ||
| I'm having medical problems. | ||
| I can't even get into the doctor because x-rays and MRIs are $500, let alone a colonoscopy and anoscopy that I need. | ||
| Like, I can't afford anything. | ||
| My doctors cancel my appointments. | ||
| Like, there's just no resources for anyone. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like, I don't have childcare. | |
| I don't know how I'm going to get child care when I have to work 40 hours a week because I can't even afford to see my family as is. | ||
| Can't afford therapy. | ||
| Yeah, well, don't go to therapy. | ||
| That's a waste of time and money. | ||
| This world is just not meant to be. | ||
| Like, we need to make change for us, for each other. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Please. | |
| I just need somebody else to tell me that they're living paycheck to paycheck and putting themselves into credit card debt out of necessity, not because of fun. | ||
| I am 28 years old. | ||
| I work a decent paying job. | ||
| I love my job. | ||
| I make good income. | ||
| We have no kids, me and my fiancé, and we're still barely scraping by. | ||
| Our bills are paid, but we can't save any money. | ||
| We can't go on vacation. | ||
| I mean, we do little things here and there, but realistically, we don't really do anything and we still live paycheck to paycheck. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| I don't understand how people with kids are doing this. | ||
| Props to y'all. | ||
| I mean, seriously, the utmost respect because I feel like I'm drowning and I only have cats. | ||
| Any money that we're able to save ends up getting spent on the car or the cat has to go to the vet or one of us has a medical emergency. | ||
| Like, it's just gone. | ||
| It's gone. | ||
| I don't understand. | ||
| We don't live beyond our means. | ||
| Are we all just collectively putting ourselves into debt because I don't know what else to do? | ||
| Now, here's another person explaining how she can't afford her student debt. | ||
| And because of that, the debt just gets worse with the interest. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This right here is a great example of why people hate student loans. | |
| So original loan that I took out, $8,600. | ||
| Total payments I've made over the years total to $7,400. | ||
| The interest rate on this loan is pretty bad. | ||
| It's 8%. | ||
| And I still owe $8,750. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So I've paid $7,500 towards $1,000 less than the original amount. | |
| I owe $100 more than the original amount. | ||
| That's why people hate student loans. | ||
| So I don't normally ever come on here and post anything except of my dog because he's absolutely gorgeous. | ||
| But I am extremely frustrated being a full-time employed person living in Florida and not being able to afford to live. | ||
| I have spent my whole fucking day off trying to find a, you know, more affordable place to live because I can't afford fucking $1,300 a month in rent and then fucking $6,000. | ||
| We need to search for that one. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's all right. | |
| I think I think we all get the point here. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And then you got you. | |
| I just, it can't be emphasized enough. | ||
| And I'm trying to make a bridge of communication here because believe me, I get it. | ||
| Most people probably in some way, shape, or form financially struggle in their 20s. | ||
| It's not, or in college. | ||
| It's not known as a time for the average person to be, you know, rich and flush with extra cash. | ||
| That's when you're grinding and that's when you're figuring things out and having to do it. | ||
| But I'm telling you folks, the things, it's different now. | ||
| They're not grinding to get by. | ||
| They're grinding and just going into debt. | ||
| And they can't find a way out of it. | ||
| So it's just, it's not, it's not reaching the older generation's ears. | ||
| They don't get it because they try to relate it to their own circumstances when they were 20 and they say, oh, you'll be fine. | ||
| It's not like that anymore. | ||
| It's not an, oh, you'll be fine anymore. | ||
| It's a, oh, I'm going into my 30s and I can't even get out of debt. | ||
| They're not living beyond their means. | ||
| So yeah, you could, and I just could use my experience because most of my friends were the same way. | ||
| I had some friends that were, you know, well off and some friends that did better than others. | ||
| But I mean, you know, most of us were just grinding, getting by. | ||
| But we had the option. | ||
| It's like, yeah, you could do the minimal and get by with the minimal, or you could work a little bit extra, find another job here or there, make some extra cash and have a little more breathing room there. | ||
| That option isn't available anymore. | ||
| It's take every opportunity just to pay the bills now. | ||
| And I would hate to see an entire generation of would-be conservatives and would-be right-leaning Americans get pushed to the left because of their financial struggles and then being told by Republicans that the economy is great when for them, they've never seen a great economy in their life. | ||
| Never seen it. | ||
| And if they had a hint of seeing it, it all got shattered by the COVID lockdowns. | ||
| So it'd be very foolish. | ||
| It'd be very foolish not to listen to these voices. | ||
| Don't discount these voices as, oh, young millennials and lazy young people and oh, college liberals. | ||
| No, folks, this is very common now. | ||
| It's not a political thing. | ||
| Not a political thing. | ||
| This is a very real situation. | ||
| And you have to understand this. | ||
| Oh, well, get a better job. | ||
| Well, how do you get a better job? | ||
| Usually that means taking time and either working for free or working for a low wage to build a reputation and build experience and then working your way up a ladder with an apprenticeship or something else. | ||
| You can't do that anymore. | ||
| Every hour you spend working, you have to get paid. | ||
| You can't do an apprenticeship. | ||
| You can't do an internship. | ||
| You can't afford it. | ||
| Not to mention, you know, we just found out this, this news should have been, this should have been red alert. | ||
| 55 million visa holders subjected to continuous vetting amid Trump administration crackdown. | ||
| 55 million people are in this country on visas, folks. | ||
| How many of them do you think are work visas, H-1B visas? | ||
| A lot of these jobs are filled up by foreigners. | ||
| We got a big problem. | ||
| And this Trump administration can address it and win for four election cycles, but they have to admit it's real. | ||
| I've been hearing about this for years, and now it's all the rage. | ||
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