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The silent majority is no longer silent. | |
| This with Owen Schroer. | ||
| Please stand by for further details. | ||
| We will be now to your regularly scheduled program. | ||
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Chaos and fear are what erupted in the hallways of STEM School in Highlands Ranch, Colorado as the gunshots rang out. | |
| Police say 18-year-old Devin Erickson and another student started shooting inside of classrooms just before 2 p.m. local time. | ||
| Multiple people have died this morning, including that shooter who was taken down by Metro Police. | ||
| Audrey Hale identified as transgender. | ||
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This is what the cover of the New York Post looked like Tuesday while the hashtag transterrorism trended on Twitter. | |
| A shooting by a fellow student Wednesday killed 14-year-old Christian Ngulo and Mason Shermahor and teachers Richard Aspenwall and Christina Irami. | ||
| Two school resource officers confronted the suspect and took him into custody. | ||
| Police say he was armed with an AR platform style weapon. | ||
| Units, we've got an active shooter situation at Terry High School. | ||
| The shooter has been identified as 17-year-old Dylan Butler. | ||
| Tragedy in Minneapolis after a shooter opened fire during a morning mass at a Catholic grammar school. | ||
| Two children killed, eight and ten years old, and 17 others were rushed to the hospital. | ||
| 14 of them were children. | ||
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The shooter identified as transgender and he left behind a trail of clues that appeared to show that he was targeting these kids because of their Christian faith. | |
| Police identified the shooter as Robin Westman, 23-year-old. | ||
| He was born Robert, but reportedly changed his name legally in 2020. | ||
| Robin Westman's motive was a clear hit against Christians. | ||
| Even more chilling, Westman wasn't just armed. | ||
| He was ready to trap kids inside. | ||
| In the video, he shows off a 2x4 meant to jam the school's exit door. | ||
| Across it in black marker, no escape. | ||
| What jumps out, though, is the firing range target pinned to his wall. | ||
| The headshot wasn't a silhouette. | ||
| It was Jesus Christ, crown of thorns and all. | ||
| Scattered across the bed were magazines for those firearms, each one defaced with messages. | ||
| One read, where is your God? | ||
| Another read, for the children. | ||
| And the largest magazine of all, killed Donald Trump. | ||
| Just two years ago, another trans 20-something walked into a Christian school in Nashville with a rifle and shot three kids and three adults. | ||
| They buried the manifesto and locked down the case. | ||
| We've seen trans shootings in Colorado and in Maryland. | ||
| They even shot up an ICE facility in Texas. | ||
| And it seems like half of Antifa is trans. | ||
| A couple of they thems just got popped for firebombing Teslas. | ||
| The mayor of Minneapolis says you can't say that. | ||
| Anybody who is using this as an using this as an opportunity to villainize our trans community or any other community out there has lost their sense of common humanity. | ||
| Welcome everyone to the war room. | ||
| I'm your host, Rob Dew. | ||
| Thank you for joining us here on Band.Video and on InfoWars at InfoWars on X. I've got a lot of news. | ||
| I got a lot of videos. | ||
| This is going to be a jam-packed show. | ||
| I've got a guest in the second hour, BX on X. She's a researcher covering a lot of these kind of like satanic shooters that cross over into trans. | ||
| So we're going to talk a lot about that in the second hour, second half of the second hour, definitely. | ||
| But I want to go into, let's just start off with the Trump effect. | ||
| And I want to go into first, let's just look at, this is a video off MSNBC talking about what the private sector wages and almost a percent raise, which is an annualized pace is going to be about 5%. | ||
| But here's that clip. | ||
| Here is private sector wages up 0.7%. | ||
| That's pretty strong. | ||
|
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Pretty strong. | |
| That's a strong number. | ||
| Do you want to annualize that on national television? | ||
| Or should I do it for you? | ||
| You're at about 5%. | ||
| You're about 5%. | ||
| Those are strong numbers suggesting of a strong labor market. | ||
| How is the labor market weak if wages are going up quite so strongly? | ||
| Yeah, and so we've also had the Fed telegraph that they're going to basically lower interest rates because they were looking at a weaker labor market. | ||
| But now we see these statistics. | ||
| And, you know, at this point, I'm not sure what statistics we look at because they seem to be getting fudged everywhere. | ||
| Here's a post that was put out by a Trump war room. | ||
| Fill up those tanks. | ||
| Patriots, President Trump has delivered the lowest gas prices since 2020, the Trump effect. | ||
| Trump's energy agenda delivers the lowest holiday gas prices in half a decade. | ||
| Labor Day gas prices lowest since 2020. | ||
| Gas hasn't been this cheap since Labor Day. | ||
| 2020. | ||
| And we knew, we know back in 2020, it was the pandemic and not a lot of people were traveling. | ||
| And that was sort of, I guess, the end of the summer. | ||
| And a lot of states were still locked down. | ||
| So you had a lot less demand, which lower or increased the supply, which lowered the price. | ||
| I'll tell you this. | ||
| I paid $2.79 this morning for gas, which is actually, I've paid as low as $235, I think was the lowest I've had since Trump got into office. | ||
| So it's, for me, it's gone up a little bit. | ||
| I asked people on X what they thought. | ||
| So I'll maybe dig those up in a little bit and see what people are saying, what gas prices are in their area. | ||
| So let's go to now another part of the Trump effect is this war on just rampant criminality going on. | ||
| He's gone through and just cut the crime rates in D.C. in just nine days. | ||
| Violent crimes dropped 35%. | ||
| Robberies are down 55%. | ||
| Carjackings are down. | ||
| Murders. | ||
| I don't think there's been a murder in, I guess, three weeks. | ||
| We haven't heard of one yet. | ||
| I'm sure if there is one, we would hear it from all over the place in the mainstream media. | ||
| See, Trump's plans don't work. | ||
| We've got a murder here in D.C., even though they're having one every other day, it seemed like for years and years and years. | ||
| But here's J.D. Vance talking about how we don't have to live with the lawlessness. | ||
| All you have to do is act. | ||
| And I'm going to finish up all this stuff on Trump with a pretty good inspirational piece, not from Trump, but just about how we should be conducting ourselves. | ||
| But here's J.D. Vance talking about it. | ||
| So crazy statistic. | ||
| You know, violent crime has dropped in D.C. 35% in nine days. | ||
| Robberies in D.C. have dropped 55% in nine days. | ||
| And it highlights the fact that this living with lawlessness and disorder, that's fundamentally a question of political will. | ||
| If you've got the political will to enforce the law, you can make even cities like D.C. safe again. | ||
| And that's what we're demonstrating. | ||
| And I hope that the American people take an important lesson from this because obviously D.C. is a federal city. | ||
| New York, L.A., these places are not. | ||
| I hope the American people just recognize that you don't have to live with lawlessness. | ||
| You don't have to live with third world murder rates. | ||
| If you just take control of these cities, you can make them safe places to live again. | ||
| So your pal Gavin Newsom calls this an abuse of power, that this is just a power grab and this is all a stunt for show, and that you all are going to roll through other cities. | ||
| You've heard things about, oh, it's martial law is going to be declared. | ||
| And to that, you say? | ||
| Well, first of all, how is it a power grab or how is it a stunt when we've already declined murders by 35% in nine days? | ||
| How many people are living and breathing today because Donald Trump had the willpower to say, you know what, we're sick of D.C. being a home to lawlessness. | ||
| We're going to bring some public order back to the nation's capital. | ||
| So what I would say to Gavin Newsom or to anybody else in some of these big blue states or big blue cities is you can have law and order. | ||
| You can have common decency. | ||
| You can have public spaces that young families can go to again. | ||
| Tell you the story, Laura. | ||
| A couple of years ago, the last time I was in Union Station, I took my little kids there to get lunch and they were being screened at by homeless people, not compassionate to the homeless people to let them just fester when they clearly have mental health problems. | ||
| Not compassionate to young families to not be able to go into one of America's great public spaces without being screened at by a person clearly suffering. | ||
| Why are Democrats? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Why is this a political strategy? | ||
| Laura, I have thought about this so often and so many times. | ||
| I don't know why Democrats seem to love public disorder and chaos almost as a political ideology. | ||
| And I think that part of what's going on is Democrats have gotten so divorced from the communities that they allegedly serve that they don't realize the gross majority of residents in D.C., they want to walk through Union Station and just have a bite to eat or enjoy the space with their families. | ||
| They don't realize we can pull this down. | ||
| Oh, I'll tell you why, J.D. Vance, because it's a plan. | ||
| It's a communist plan to basically disrupt society so much so people call in for police on the streets and military on the streets. | ||
| You make it so bad. | ||
| You make it so crazy. | ||
| Then you bring in the police. | ||
| Although I think what happened was they wanted to be in charge of the police that they were going to bring in on the streets and then basically go after law-abiding citizens because that's usually what they do. | ||
| If you're a law-abiding citizen, you're a milk cow to these tax authorities. | ||
| So, yeah, President Trump, it worked. | ||
| Obviously, I don't want to see police or military on the streets. | ||
| So, we have to watch what's going on and we have to report. | ||
| But right now, I haven't seen anything bad coming from the military other than, oh, they were picking up trash. | ||
| People were bitching about that. | ||
| They're picking up trash around D.C. We're paying a million dollars for them to pick up trash. | ||
| Well, you know, here's the problem: if you would have kept your city clean, if you would have cleaned up the crime, there wouldn't be no need for this. | ||
| But you've created these atmospheres. | ||
| You defunded the police. | ||
| You let criminals back out on the streets, and you're still doing it. | ||
| So clean up your act, and then maybe we don't have to come clean up your mess because the adults have to come enter the room at some point and finish it. | ||
| All right, I'll get to this in a second. | ||
| This, what do they call it? | ||
| A pocket. | ||
| He's using a pocket rescission. | ||
| Trump used a pocket rescission. | ||
| But let's go to Tom Homan next. | ||
| That's going to be clip eight, Rob. | ||
| Got Agueros back there on the switcher. | ||
| Tom Holman, 28,000 of Biden's 300,000 missing traffic children located. | ||
| The last administration wasn't even looking for them. | ||
| Here's Tom Homan on Fox News because nobody else wants to talk to him. | ||
| Out of the 300,000 children, I looked at the numbers just yesterday. | ||
| We've located over 23,000 of them. | ||
| So 23,000 locations of the 300,000. | ||
| Well, President Trump's committed, we're not going to stop till we find every one of them or at least run every lead down on those 300,000 children. | ||
| That's a big plus for the administration because the last administration wasn't even looking for them. | ||
| So as far as what Chicago, Chicago is coming along with every other sanctuary city, President Trump is committed that we're going to focus and prioritize sanctuary cities because that is where the problem is. | ||
| We know for a fact they're releasing public safety threats to the streets every day rather than handing them over to ICE so we can deport them. | ||
| Yeah, that's what the criminal networks are. | ||
| They're in the blue cities. | ||
| They've been allowed to run rampant. | ||
| And look, I'm not going to say the red cities are much better overall. | ||
| I think a lot of this has to do with the economy. | ||
| If the economy would get better, you'd see, which we're seeing some indications that it is getting better. | ||
| I think you'd see a lot more crime go away. | ||
| It seems to be when the economy starts to go in the tubes, you know, robberies start happening, more break-ins, people are stealing cars. | ||
| I was talking earlier about the gas prices. | ||
| I tweeted out today, my gas was $279. | ||
| I filled up today, and I didn't even know that this Trump effect thing was going to be in effect, but I asked people what they were getting. | ||
| And another guy said $320. | ||
| That was Canal Noir. | ||
| Country Goose said $309. | ||
| Dutch 1777 said gas is down, but electricity is up. | ||
| Trump promised to reduce electricity by 50% to 70% in one year to 18 months. | ||
| Well, we still got a little bit of time there. | ||
| Joe Biggs, $329. | ||
| He's out in Florida. | ||
| Rex Garland, $459 in Camie, Florida. | ||
| I mean, I can't believe the gas prices in California. | ||
| It's ridiculous. | ||
| Skibo, 74, 259 near Nashville. | ||
| Big John, $2.99. | ||
| Three months ago, it was $269. | ||
| Yeah, I saw it three months ago being a little bit better. | ||
| Now it's gone up again, but that could just be the Labor Day rush. | ||
| 80s fans for Trump said if energy prices go down, food prices and goods should go down too, yet restaurants and landlords refuse to adjust their prices. | ||
| I think you're going to see that coming soon. | ||
| I think everybody just needs to be patient. | ||
| I just paid $279 in South Carolina. | ||
| Trump could have called the Saudis and got it down to 75%, 75 cents, not with all the taxes that they add on these. | ||
| $329 in Red Indiana. | ||
| RSK says $289 in the Hill Country. | ||
| It was $229 in October 2024. | ||
| It has gone up since Trump got elected. | ||
| Paying $279 for gas. | ||
| I think I got it $329 for diesel. | ||
| That's skinny kinney. | ||
| So we're seeing varying averages. | ||
| Seems to be between $3 and $250. | ||
| Seems to be the range going on. | ||
| But you can check that out at my ex at Deuce News, D-W-S-N-E-W-Z. | ||
| Let's continue. | ||
| Let's go to this story here. | ||
| Let's talk about this, what Trump signed yesterday. | ||
| Basically, canceling $4.9 million in woke aid. | ||
| We're going to get a breakdown first from First Post America. | ||
| Democrats funneled $260 million of your tax dollars straight into George Soros' hands. | ||
| So here's that clip. | ||
| Donald Trump claims Hungarian-American billionaire George Soros is responsible for interfering in the political landscape of many countries. | ||
| An organization connected to George Soros received $260 million from USAID to promote the rule of law in Georgia, strengthen civil society in Uganda, and advance Serbia's EU talks. | ||
| According to reports, the East West Management Institute, an organization that partnered with Soros's Open Society Foundation, received over $260 million in USAID grants over 15 years. | ||
| According to Elon Musk, EWMI is a Soros front that allegedly funnels American taxpayer dollars from USAID to launch and pay for far-left political agendas and manipulate foreign governments with U.S. taxpayer money. | ||
| Some accuse USAID of being the, quote, number one sponsor of terror on the planet. | ||
| EWMI and Open Society Foundation have a work together on initiatives funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. | ||
| They share leadership and staff and engage in the same projects with the same goals. | ||
| Now this comes as the Trump administration continues to freeze USAID's budget, describing its initiatives as misaligned with American interests and accusing them of destabilizing global peace. | ||
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Well, many ideas, but look, he's done a great job. | |
| Look at all the fraud that he's found in this U.S. AID. | ||
| It's a disaster what the people radical left lunatics. | ||
| They have things that nobody would have even believed that the whole thing with 100 million spent on you know what, with money going to all sorts of groups that shouldn't deserve to get any money with the money. | ||
| I'd like to see what the kickbacks are. | ||
| And we saw the first cutting of money through Doge. | ||
| It was about, I think, $4 billion. | ||
| And I think that's just what that's like Act 1. | ||
| And that was to set up the infrastructure to do this to see what the Democrats would do in retaliation to see how they would fight that. | ||
| I think now that that's not, they see that they can't fight it. | ||
| Once Congress goes in, I think you're going to see a lot more of that. | ||
| And we've got another year for them to cut more. | ||
| But Trump just cut $4.9 billion using a pocket rescission. | ||
| So in accordance with Section 1012A of the Congressional Budget and Empowerment Control Act of 1974, which was a Nixon era, hereby report 15 rescissions of budget authority totaling $4.9 million or $4.9 billion, sorry. | ||
| And then they put out a statement this morning, his historic pocket rescissions package. | ||
| So what is this pocket rescission? | ||
| Basically, back in the day, before the Nixon era, say you were going to give somebody a billion dollars. | ||
| Well, it was like you had to give them a billion dollars. | ||
| You couldn't give them less than that. | ||
| Even though, you know, it was like, we're going to budget you a billion dollars, but before 1974, you didn't have to give them a billion dollars. | ||
| Now it was like the, once they took power away from Nixon, it was like, oh, now you got to spend that billion so you can get more next year, 10% more next year. | ||
| Instead of the executive looking at it and going, no, we don't need to spend that much this year. | ||
| We could take this money and put it somewhere else. | ||
| So they were trying to take that away from Trump and saying he doesn't have that authority. | ||
| Well, now he's reauthorizing this authority for himself. | ||
| President using his authority under the Empoundment Control Act to deploy a pocket rescission canceling $5 billion in foreign aid. | ||
| So we got $3.2 billion that was going to USAID and Development Assistance, DA. | ||
| I like this, what they say. | ||
| Development Assistance has provided endless handouts that allow recipient governments to eschew responsibilities to their own citizens rather than equipping countries to build their own workforces and self-reliance. | ||
| So basically just another kind of DEI trope here. | ||
| So $400 million. | ||
| This is going to take out $400 million for global climate grift projects, $24 million to build climate resilience in Honduras, $38.6 for biodiversity and low emissions development in West Africa, $60,000 for listening tours and local development in Timor-Leste, $12,000 for telling the USAID story in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and $13.4 million in civic engagement in Zimbabwe. | ||
| They're also cutting out the USA and State Department Democracy Fund, $322 million. | ||
| And you could just read and go through this. | ||
| They're cutting money off to the UN, $521 million to UN and UN-affiliated organizations. | ||
| So we are starting to see some cuts. | ||
| Obviously, we'd all like to see more. | ||
| We know there's more. | ||
| There's probably 10 times what they're cutting now, but this is a good start, and we have to start somewhere. | ||
| And so let's see what Trump can do with this. | ||
| I'm liking this. | ||
| This is something I voted for. | ||
| I'm going to see this money cut. | ||
| And this is a good thing. | ||
| Now let's get to some butt hurtness. | ||
| I think it was the staff of Vanity Fair said they were going to walk if they put Melania Trump on the cover of Vanity Fair. | ||
| So there it is. | ||
| Is it Vogue or Vanity Fair? | ||
| Was this the only thing I'm not down with this crown? | ||
| This crown looks a little middle-earthian, like more of the something Sour Man would have put on his head. | ||
| I'm not a fan of this crown. | ||
| Doesn't look very elegant. | ||
| It looks very Eastern European, which is where she's from. | ||
| So I guess that makes sense. | ||
| But their cover of Vanity Fair, the American Queen, Melania Trump's silent revolution. | ||
| Other people thought it should have been this. | ||
| Here, guys, cut to this one right here. | ||
| They thought it should be, this should be the American Queen, Big Mike. | ||
| So that's secrets from inside the White House bedroom. | ||
| So that's what people wanted to see. | ||
| But instead, we got Melania on the cover of Vanity Fair, and it's sure to piss a lot of people off. | ||
| Let's look at another part of the Trump agenda. | ||
| Killing a lot of student visas is having a effect on housing. | ||
| So let's go to clip two and look at Boston housing. | ||
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Normally, these streets are buzzing with people moving in, but this year it's eerily quiet this close to September 1st. | |
| Now's a great time to find a great deal. | ||
| According to Boston Pads, the number of empty apartments here in Mission Hill is up 93% compared to last year. | ||
| About a half a mile away in Ford Hill, that neighborhood saw a 74% increase. | ||
| And available apartments near Northeastern jumped by 154% compared to a 5% rise across the city overall. | ||
| I also think that the universities will react differently next year and start their enrollment a little bit sooner because I think they were caught off guard. | ||
| Experts say there's a surge in empty units because less international students are getting visas. | ||
| On the Pat administration, this time of year, we would get a lot of inquiries. | ||
| Now that's not really happening. | ||
| Boston University, Northeastern, and Harvard didn't respond to our requests for student enrollment data since the Trump administration's heightened vetting began. | ||
| Some people have very strong opinions on certain subjects, and that will make them not want to come to the U.S. and, you know, commit to a long-term lease, knowing that their visa at any point without any notice may be revoked. | ||
| With less international students on campus, landlords are left with vacant units, and that means lower rents. | ||
| What you're seeing landlords do right now is they're paying the full brokerage commission and they're also reducing rents because no one wants to go vacant on September 1st. | ||
| How do landlords feel about it? | ||
| I mean, landlords are not happy about it, but it's a free market, supply and demand, and they'll deal with it. | ||
| So if you're a student or just a procrastinating house hunter, now is your time to shine. | ||
| If you want the latest on this story or any other housing story, I'm on it. | ||
| Follow NBC10 Boston on TikTok. | ||
| There you go. | ||
| And I think a lot of people got mad. | ||
| And this is something we should hold Trump's feet to the fire and speak out more about it. | ||
| The 600,000 visas he wants to give to Chinese students to prop up higher education Democrat indoctrination centers across the country. | ||
| I'm against that. | ||
| I say, you know what? | ||
| They maybe need to change what they're teaching, maybe need to go into more vocational things, maybe need to go into apprenticeships across the country. | ||
| And let's educate the people here in this country instead of taking them from China and bringing them here and let them go on vacations and possibly turn into spies. | ||
| But what you're seeing is the effect is now there's a bit of a housing opening. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| Oh, you deport 55 million visa holders. | ||
| You might see the housing prices go down because guess what? | ||
| There's less demand. | ||
| And that's kind of how supply and demand works. | ||
| This is very basic economics. | ||
| I was just told, though, earlier that this Vanity Fair cover, which I kind of thought the crown was a little weird, this crown here was fake. | ||
| Melania Trump Vanity Fair cover celebrated by MAGA, but it's fake. | ||
| As usual, we are going to, but we know this one is real right here, this American Queen. | ||
| We know our American McQueen here, Big Mike. | ||
| There it is. | ||
| She doesn't have time to do a Vanity Fair cover is what she says. | ||
| And she does it. | ||
| Who has time to sit down for these things? | ||
| This is stuff that the left is into. | ||
| They're into this posturing Oscars, awards, patting each other on the back. | ||
| We don't really need it. | ||
| Now, When we come back, I'll finish up on this. | ||
| But I just want to take a second to just, let's play this clip. | ||
| This is clip seven. | ||
| These are the warships that are now going and just arriving to South America. | ||
| Go ahead and play this out as we go to break. | ||
| We got about a minute left. | ||
| And this is your tax dollars at work. | ||
| I don't know what's going on, but this is how many seven U.S. warships, including an assault ship, a cruiser, and a nuclear submarine, have arrived in South America. | ||
| But what's really driving this sudden move near Venezuela? | ||
| Obviously, there's going to be something going on with Venezuela, and we're going to see something going on. | ||
| But here you go. | ||
| This is what you pay for, I guess. | ||
| Warships cruising down and asserting their dominance. | ||
| So we're going to have, I guess this is going to be the next, I don't know, of a theater of battle or just a posturing movement. | ||
| I mean, you have what they call peace through strength, and this is one way to show it. | ||
| Fly your planes around and run your ships around. | ||
| I don't want to see anything, any other fields of war open up. | ||
| And I don't think we're going to see much. | ||
| I think we're going to just see maybe a blockade, maybe looking for drug dealers out with their submarines. | ||
| This is a little bit of an overkill, though, bringing an aircraft carrier and some battleships. | ||
| But we'll see where this goes. | ||
| We'll be right back with more of the Trump effect. | ||
| There's our Scottish heroine bringing us back in from break, making glorious memes and fueling the fight for freedom over in the United Kingdom. | ||
| Yeah, that's a good one. | ||
| I hadn't seen that one. | ||
| That's good. | ||
| Now, we were talking about the fake Vanity Fair cover earlier. | ||
| And we had a video crop up this morning. | ||
| It got a lot of views. | ||
| So the general posted 1776 General, they sent the entire department to arrest a 14-year-old girl defending herself. | ||
| And we could roll that video real quick. | ||
| This is actually German police arresting a girl at a pro-Palestinian rally. | ||
| So who knows what's going on? | ||
| And I think this girl's 14. | ||
| The other girl, our Scottish heroine, is only 12. | ||
| And you can see that this girl's a lot taller, but she does have ripped up jeans. | ||
| So that must be what everybody saw. | ||
| They saw the ripped jeans and they're like, this must be her because that seemed to be her trademark telltale sign was the ripped up jeans. | ||
| But this is, obviously, it's a fake video. | ||
| But once again, we're getting duped. | ||
| So as we go along, we have to get better at spotting these things, looking at them. | ||
| I think Elon posted something, one of his rockets landing, and he goes, it's so real. | ||
| You know it's real because it looks so fake. | ||
| I'm like, nah, dude, if it looks fake, it's usually fake. | ||
| Although I've looked at water sometimes and like, that looks like computer generated water. | ||
| And I know you've probably done that out there too. | ||
| You're sitting there watching the water waves and moving. | ||
| You're like, that looks computer generated. | ||
| Are we in a simulation? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| But that's the little bit on our Scottish heroin. | ||
| That was a fake video. | ||
| So I just wanted to put that out there because I almost retweeted it this morning and then somebody said, it's fake. | ||
| It's fake. | ||
| All right, let's get back to the Trump effect. | ||
| We had Lisa Cook call the president a fascist, essentially. | ||
| And I want to get into, you know, all he's asking is that people follow the, no one's above the law, right? | ||
| Weren't we told that? | ||
| No one is above the law. | ||
| Yet, I guess if you're Lisa Cook, you can have as many properties as you want and call them your primary residence. | ||
| But here she is. | ||
| Short clip, calling the president a fascist. | ||
|
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|
We have seen this before. | |
| And that's why my European friends told me before Trump was elected not to make fun of what was happening, to take very seriously what was happening, because they've had recent skirmishes with fascism. | ||
| They know the impact of fascism. | ||
| And this guy is definitely a fascist and embraces that. | ||
| And will sow divisions in this country that we can will take a long time to mend. | ||
| He's a fascist. | ||
| It's so pathetic. | ||
| These people are so pathetic. | ||
| That's a professional victim right there. | ||
| She's going to bring out the best victimhood that she can in her lawsuit. | ||
| But now we have a third property. | ||
| It wasn't just two that she had a primary residence in. | ||
| It's now three. | ||
| FHFA director Bill Pultey dropped a second criminal referral against Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook based on evidence she entered into a 15-year mortgage on a third property, which she listed as her second home. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| But that's kind of, that's kind of dimtard right there. | ||
| That's like the super fuzzy meth. | ||
| It's my second home. | ||
| It's my third home, but I'm calling it my second home. | ||
| But it's actually my primary home, right? | ||
| So she noted it as an in her in her ethics form. | ||
| She noted it as an investment rental property. | ||
| Yet the mortgage, it was listed as a second home. | ||
| The new criminal referral follows an initial referral Polty made after Cook listed two properties as her primary residence in 2021, occidentally reaping her manifold benefits of tax treatment and interest rates, which means you get lower tax interest rates and you get to take more in taxes off of that. | ||
| You pay lower property taxes because you can use it as a homestead in some states. | ||
| And then, of course, she called it a clerical error. | ||
| And she described that in 2023, though, she said this is a clerical error with the first two properties. | ||
| But now we got a third. | ||
| She said she had significant experience in banking and finance, as evident as her service on the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank in Chicago and the Community Development Financial Institution in Michigan, in addition to employment at an investment bank and a large commercial bank. | ||
| Yet she's able to get and she thinks it's okay to get three different houses and call them her primary residence, three different domains. | ||
| And so she claims, you know, claims to be a banking expert. | ||
| And it's interesting, the judge that has been assigned to her, I believe I saw that this is her sorority sister. | ||
| So we know we're not going to get a very fair trial because they were, you know, chugging beers back in college. | ||
| Because that's how it works. | ||
| Sorority sister. | ||
| She gives the proper little hand signal, the handshake, whatever. | ||
| There it is. | ||
| Biden judge cast doubt on Trump's order of firing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. | ||
| There's her sorority sister. | ||
| So she doesn't deny that these are her mortgage documents. | ||
| So she's saying these are all my mortgage documents. | ||
| This is okay, but this must be clerical errors because I wouldn't make a mistake like that. | ||
| She just got caught. | ||
| That's what it is. | ||
| So now it's a clerical error now that she got caught. | ||
| It's only a mistake when they get caught. | ||
| But if they didn't get caught, she would just be running around with these. | ||
| And she would have never said anything. | ||
| But in light of all this, Jerome Powell is still allowing Lisa Cook to have access to her office and electronics, despite President Trump ordering her firing. | ||
| So Trump said pursue it under the authority of Article 2 of the Constitution and the Federal Reserve Act as amended. | ||
| You hereby are removed from your position on the board of governors. | ||
| Effective immediately, President Trump wrote in a letter to Lisa Cook. | ||
| I've determined there's significant cause to remove you from this position. | ||
| And he cited just at the time, it was just the one criminal referral, but now there's two. | ||
| Now there's two. | ||
| So now we have two criminal referrals, but that's, and this is part of the Trump effect. | ||
| At least holding some accountability to the Federal Reserve. | ||
| And I'm going to get to some C DBC information here in a second. | ||
| A couple videos, one from Ed Dowd and one from Yuval Noah Harari, the little gay gullum of the elites. | ||
| But before we do that, I just want to let everybody know: if you are a big supporter of InfoWars and you like to enter in these contests, you've seen the people we brought on who have won trucks and other vehicles in the past. | ||
| Now we've got this is the last chance for the Jeep Gladiator. | ||
| And I think this is the last day to get if you buy every dollar, it gets an entry. | ||
| So every dollar will get you, oh, I'm sorry. | ||
| I'm sorry. | ||
| I said every dollar gets you an entry. | ||
| Every dollar gets you 50 times entries to win either the 2025 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon or the C8 Corvette Stingray and $20,000 in cash. | ||
| So that's at thealexjonestore.com. | ||
| These vehicles are valued at over $150,000 combined. | ||
| But we also have a special. | ||
| So if you go buy any two bottles of any of our supplements, say you get two of the Life Force or two of the Methyl Drive or two of the power plant, you also get a free bottle of CMOS gummies. | ||
| So say you buy two CMOS gummies, you get a third CMOS gummy for free. | ||
| So any of our supplement bottles, you buy two, you get one bottle of the CMOS gummies for free. | ||
| And of course, a lot of our products are 50% off if you get them on subscription. | ||
| The Shilajee gummies are 50% off when you subscribe. | ||
| Ultimate Life Force, 50% off when you subscribe. | ||
| The Bovine Colostrum, which has been a big seller, and the three-pack of the methylene blue tincture has an added 40% off. | ||
| So you get the three-pack of methylene blue tincture, which I think also will get you a free bottle of CMOS gummies. | ||
| That's 40% off the power drive bundle formulated by Rex Jones with power plant and methyl drive, which you should be using with your methylene blue, 50% off when you subscribe. | ||
| So check all those out at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
| Get your buy any two free bottles, get a free bottle of CMOS gummies. | ||
| And every dollar you spend, say you spend $50. | ||
| Oh my God, $50 times 50 entries. | ||
| What's that? | ||
| 200 and 2,500 entries? | ||
| Holy cow, 2,500 entries into both the Jeep Gladiator Rubicon or the Corvette Stingray. | ||
| Guys, check my math. | ||
| They didn't hire me for my math skills here. | ||
| I'll tell you that. | ||
| But check it all out at thealexjonestore.com. | ||
| It is the way you support us, especially in light of all these attacks. | ||
| I had a meeting this morning on what's going on, and it could be two weeks. | ||
| It could be a month. | ||
| It could be another three months. | ||
| I don't know what's going to happen, but we're going to continue fighting. | ||
| We will always be here as long as you're supporting us. | ||
| We may not be in this building, but we will always be with you in one form or another continuing forward because the fight is not over. | ||
| As you can see, I've just shown you a lot of, I think, good things Trump has done. | ||
| But we still have a long way to go. | ||
| We still got to see the Epstein documents. | ||
| We still need to see more cuts. | ||
| We still need to see more Doge codification. | ||
| We need to see election reform, getting rid of mail-in ballots. | ||
| I like the fact that he said he wants to get in, get rid of mail-in ballots. | ||
| Let's see it happen. | ||
| I've heard a rumor that the IRS people are getting rehired, the ones that he fired. | ||
| So I'd like to see that be reversed. | ||
| I'd like to see what's going on with that. | ||
| So there's, but there are some good things. | ||
| And so I don't think we could throw everything out. | ||
| It's like this. | ||
| We got a clock. | ||
| All right. | ||
| I'll turn it this way. | ||
| So you got negative and positive. | ||
| All right. | ||
| If we had Kamala in office, we'd be about 60% negative. | ||
| With Trump, I'm about 25%, almost 30% positive because we've seen him do really good on the border. | ||
| We've seen some of the spending cuts. | ||
| We've seen, I mean, first of all, 10% right off the bat for pardoning the J6 political prisoners on day one. | ||
| I mean, I think that deserves, that just deserves, you know, that needed to be done. | ||
| So we're getting some good things. | ||
| Now, with the CDB, CDBC, Central Bank Digital Currencies, he said we're not going to have one. | ||
| They're going to try and push one. | ||
| They're going to try to create some sort of weird financial collapse and then say the only way to help us will be with the CDBC. | ||
| So let's go to Yaval Noah Harari first, who wants to tell you how this is a good thing because this is, you know, the simpering voice of the New World Order coming at you. | ||
| Like, oh, I'm non-threatening. | ||
| I'm just going to control everything you spend and how you spend it and not let you spend it on the things you want to spend it on, but the things we want you to spend it on. | ||
| Because at the end of the day, that is what the CDBC is. | ||
| It is to institute a social credit courses, social credit score system, which will take away any last bit of freedom you have left. | ||
| So here is Naval Noah Harari admitting this in a podcast. | ||
| Social credit system is basically an expansion of money or a new kind of money. | ||
| You know, when you think about traditional money, gold coins, dollars, even Bitcoins, they give value only to specific parts of human reality. | ||
| Some things you do, like you work, you gain money, you want to buy airline tickets, you pay money, but other things you go visit your friends, you go visit your grandmother, even you throw trash in the street. | ||
| This is no monetary value. | ||
| The idea of the social credit is to monetize everything, to give value to every single thing you do in life. | ||
| And this is your score. | ||
| So even things that traditionally were not about money, they're about reputation or status. | ||
| But that's what you're saying. | ||
| Suddenly you get precise points for them. | ||
| And also anything you want to do, you need to use your social credit for it. | ||
| So again, it has positive potential in some regards. | ||
| It could create the most totalitarian, again, systems in history where anything you do impacts your ability to get a job, to gain a loan, to travel. | ||
| And in a way, you see this not only in China, you see it all over the world, also in the US. | ||
| This because it's a function of surveillance. | ||
| That traditionally, only some areas of life were monitored and surveyed. | ||
| And even in dictatorships, there was privacy. | ||
| If you live in the Soviet Union, so the KGB can't follow you around all the time. | ||
| They just don't have enough agents. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| They tried, but they tried. | ||
| They tried, but you know, you have 200 million Soviet citizens. | ||
| They don't have 200 million agents. | ||
| Now, you can monitor everybody all the time. | ||
| You don't need human agents or analysts. | ||
| You have the computers, smartphones, cameras, drones, microphones everywhere. | ||
| And you have the AIs analyzing all the ocean of information. | ||
| So this creates the potential for total surveillance. | ||
| And it can take the form of the social credit system. | ||
| You can see there a little bit from a Black Mirror episode where the girl's trying to, I think, make it to a wedding. | ||
| She was trying to up her social standing and make it to this high-end society's wedding, one of her so-called friends. | ||
| But now she can't rent a car. | ||
| She can't get a plane, a ticket. | ||
| She can't do anything. | ||
| And she's just, oh, now she has an outburst. | ||
| Oh, you're being bad. | ||
| Look at that. | ||
| And then, boom, they just start lowering her score. | ||
| And that's the future. | ||
| That's the future that Naval Har Yuval Noah Harari wants right there. | ||
| Dropping your social credit score down. | ||
| But what will be different is the elites will be exempt from all these rules. | ||
| They won't be part of any of this. | ||
| Oh, she got a double damage. | ||
| You know, they will get to eat meat. | ||
| They will get to fly on jets wherever they want to. | ||
| They will get to be mean to people. | ||
| They will get to scream and yell. | ||
| You will get to do nothing but shut up and be an obedient slave. | ||
| And this is what Ed Dowd was talking with Maria Z just the other day. | ||
| This came out yesterday. | ||
| And he brings up an Infowars phrase. | ||
| It's literally a prison planet talking about what's going to happen if we do go to a CDBC. | ||
| So here is that clip. | ||
| I want to ask you if you believe that the collapse is orchestrated in order to bring in central backed digital currencies. | ||
| And do you think you mentioned a timeline to me before that was anywhere from two months to three years? | ||
| What is the realistic, what are the realistic steps that you think they'll take to get us there? | ||
| So the system is going to collapse of its own weight. | ||
| And if you know that it's going to collapse, wouldn't you like to introduce a system where you're in control of the new system? | ||
| So that's what I believe is going on. | ||
| They can't, I don't think, a lot of people say, are they doing this on purpose? | ||
| Well, it was going to happen anyways. | ||
| So, and if it's going to happen, wouldn't you like to control it on the way down and get rid of the regional banks and make the banking system very consolidated into six big banks in the U.S. so that then it would be a lot easier to introduce a central bank digital currency. | ||
| And so banking becomes like a utility pretty much owned by the government and linked to the central bank digital currency. | ||
| And then from there, once the central bank digital currency is linked to all your credit cards and bank accounts, then social controls can be implemented. | ||
| You can't have, if you're a dissenter like me talking about truth, they shut you down. | ||
| It's just shut off your account. | ||
| If they decided that cow farts are a big thing and they don't want you to eat meat, you'll have a quota. | ||
| You go to the cash register and you try to ring up your meat and the woman at the cash register says, it won't let me ring you up. | ||
| That's just a kind of control, end-to-end control. | ||
| It is literally a prison planet, so to speak. | ||
| There it is, the prison planet. | ||
| So these are things we have to oppose. | ||
| We do not want a social credit score. | ||
| That's for places like China, because that's what they like to do to their people. | ||
| They like to control every little bit, every little facet, every little tracking system. | ||
| And you can see you don't cross the street right. | ||
| You don't look at somebody the right way. | ||
| You get pissed off because you're having a bad day. | ||
| Well, that just lowers your social credit score even more. | ||
| So at the end of this, I just want everybody to look at and sort of be patient. | ||
| We're not even a full year into the Trump presidency. | ||
| We have seen some good things. | ||
| We've seen some stupid things, a lot of stupid things. | ||
| Once again, he's not making good picks. | ||
| I think we can all agree Cash Patel was not a good pick for the FBI director. | ||
| Cross-eyed faggot. | ||
| We got Pam Bondi. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| We'll see. | ||
| I haven't seen any indictments from her yet. | ||
| You know, where's Dan Bongino? | ||
| Haven't seen much of him lately. | ||
| I think he's probably packing up and getting out of there because he's realizing that the government is a giant blob and it can't, it's going to be a hard, it's going to be hard, it's going to be hard to stop that monster. | ||
| It's going to be very hard, but it can be done. | ||
| It's not all going to be done in a day, though. | ||
| Although the Democrats had it pretty easy with demolishing our country, demolishing our border, demolishing the cities. | ||
| It didn't take them just a few years. | ||
| I think you have to go back, though, to the end of George Bush's presidency with the banking crisis and take it from there because that's kind of where we're still feeling the effects of that. | ||
| So we got to call the balls, call the strikes. | ||
| I think this 600,000 Chinese visas, student visas, I mean, I say none. | ||
| Why are we letting the Chinese back into our house? | ||
| Unless they're paying a lot of money, a lot of money. | ||
| Maybe, I mean, that'd only be $600 million if you get a million dollars for each one of those. | ||
| So, or no, that'd be $600 billion. | ||
| Would that be $6 billion? | ||
| Maybe $6 billion. | ||
| Like I said, they didn't hire me for my math. | ||
| But I want to talk to people as we end this little segment on this on the Trump effect. | ||
| Trump said something a while back that I saw, and I don't know where this is where this clip is, but he talks about in business, you have to have, what's it called? | ||
| Momentum. | ||
| You have to have momentum. | ||
| So you get something started, it starts moving, and you can't just stop it and start it. | ||
| You have to keep the momentum going. | ||
| And he talks a story about this guy who was really good at business and he took, he sold the business and he took a couple years off, then he got bored, he went back into it, and he couldn't get it back going because he had lost his momentum. | ||
| He had lost the immovable, the force that's around us that we can't really see, but that is making things push forward. | ||
| But another thing, another part of that is procrastination. | ||
| And this is something I suffer with too. | ||
| So I'm going to try to work on this too. | ||
| Procrastination fades the moment you see through its illusion. | ||
| There is no later. | ||
| There is only now. | ||
| When you act in the now, you touch the flow of life itself. | ||
| Begin with even the smallest step and you'll discover movement reveals truth and that thoughts alone can never reach. | ||
| So here is that clip on procrastination. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Overcome procrastination. | |
| It's not the thief of time. | ||
| It's the thief of life. | ||
| And the way that you overcome procrastination is by using affirmations. | ||
| And the most powerful affirmation of all is do it now. | ||
| Do it now. | ||
| W. Clement Stone built a billion-dollar fortune by rehearsing and then getting everybody in his company to say 50 times every morning, do it now. | ||
| Do it now. | ||
| Do it now. | ||
| Drive that. | ||
| Impress that into your mind. | ||
| When I first learned this simple technique, I used to find myself procrastinating just like we all do. | ||
| But the more I repeat it, just do it now, do it now, do it now, do it now, do it now, do it now. | ||
| The more you repeat it, the more you find that eventually it works automatically. | ||
| And it has a tendency to drive you to start a task when your natural tendency is to put it off or procrastinate. | ||
| The most important quality that you can develop with regard to this is what is called a sense of urgency. | ||
| A sense of urgency means that you get on with it and you do the job fast. | ||
| We said earlier that time is your most precious resource. | ||
| Time is the scarcest and most precious resource of accomplishment in our civilization. | ||
| And that people who have a sense of urgency are always the most valued people in our society. | ||
| Develop. | ||
| There you go. | ||
| A sense of urgency. | ||
| When I was in college, I had a lighting teacher, and she used to say, there's four things I want you to do. | ||
| I want you to work with intensity, purpose, speed, and alacrity. | ||
| Intensity, purpose, speed, and alacrity. | ||
| And what's alacrity? | ||
| Nobody knew what alacrity was. | ||
| It was a cheerful willingness to do things. | ||
| Intensity, purpose, speed, and alacrity. | ||
| That's part of the urgency. | ||
| That's part of the do-it-now. | ||
| So stop thinking about the things you're going to do and start doing them. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| And don't worry about what the government's doing. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Because the government can't control you yet. | ||
| The government doesn't have your brain chip in yet. | ||
| So until that time happens, until they strap you down and stick that boot on your head and stick a brain chip in, which is, I think, a few years off, do what you got to do. | ||
| Do it now. | ||
| As Sith Lord Palpatine says, do it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Do it. | |
| Don't stop. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Do it. | |
| And as Yoda says, do or do not, there is no try. | ||
| So you have to do all these things. | ||
| You have to be in the moment. | ||
| You have to look at the moment, the present moment. | ||
| See, I dropped this pin. | ||
| That's in the past. | ||
| I can pick it back up again. | ||
| Drop it again. | ||
| Pick it back up again. | ||
| See, the act of doing things, the act of doing things is what's going to give you success. | ||
| So stop dwelling on all the things you can't do or the things you're not able to do or the obstacles that are in your way. | ||
| Figure out a way out of them. | ||
| But the one way to do it is to pick up that ball. | ||
| And that's Alex Jones' success. | ||
| He carries that ball every day. | ||
| He doesn't matter. | ||
| It doesn't matter. | ||
| He picks it up every day and carries it, whether it's five yards, whether it's 15 yards, whether it's a 100-yard touchdown. | ||
| Every day he carries the ball. | ||
| What are you doing to carry that ball? | ||
| All right, we'll be back with more starting of the second hour of the war room. | ||
| Thanks for joining us. | ||
| Well, we got breaking news. | ||
| RFK Jr. revokes emergency use authorization for COVID injections. | ||
| Once again, the Trump effect is in effect. | ||
| On Wednesday, Health and Human Services Secretary RFK Jr. rescinded the emergency use authorization for COVID gene therapy vaccines. | ||
| The EUA was previously used as a legal justification to mandate the shots in the workplace and college while providing pharmaceutical companies that manufacture them the legal liability from resulting injury and death. | ||
| That means they could kill you and it doesn't matter. | ||
| They could put dog poop in the vaccine and inject it in you and it doesn't matter. | ||
| That's what that means. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The emergency youth authorization for COVID vaccines once used to justify broad mandates on the general public during the Biden administration are now rescinded. | |
| RFK Jr. said in a post. | ||
| I'm sorry, I shouldn't make fun of the guy. | ||
| He kicks ass, actually. | ||
| He said he promised four things to end COVID vaccine mandates, to keep vaccines available to people who want them, especially the stupid, and to demand placebo-controlled trials from companies, which we've never had, and to end the emergency. | ||
| And he did these today, or it was actually Wednesday. | ||
| And we do have a clip on that. | ||
|
unidentified
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It is nope. | |
| It's not that one. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Where's the? | |
| There it is. | ||
| It's the FDA head talking about how they removed the emergency youth authorization. | ||
| Here is that clip. | ||
| I don't have a number for you. | ||
| Oh, let's see. | ||
| Maybe I do. | ||
| Clip 18. | ||
| The FDA did two things. | ||
| One, we approved COVID vaccines for the newest strain, and they're for high-risk individuals. | ||
| Second thing we did is remove the emergency use authorization for COVID vaccines, which will eliminate the possibility of doing mandates in young, healthy subjects. | ||
| Mandates are no longer legally possible. | ||
| But anyone who wants to get a vaccine can get a vaccine. | ||
| Remember, 20% of medications in the United States are given off-label. | ||
| The vaccines will still be available. | ||
| Dr. McCary, I noticed the role of the physician seems to be increasing here. | ||
| As a practicing physician, I'm sensitive to that. | ||
| In other words, doctors are more involved in deciding who gets these vaccines. | ||
| Talk to me about it. | ||
| Well, look, that's exactly what we want. | ||
| We want to put the power back with doctors and their patients. | ||
| We want these decisions to be a discussion. | ||
| The government is not your doctor. | ||
| Yeah, the government's not your doctor. | ||
| The doctor is your doctor. | ||
| And now they're going to let the doctors be doctors, and they're going to start holding some accountability to these vaccine companies. | ||
| So now that there's no emergency youth authorization, well, they're going to lose that. | ||
| One, we're going to be able to, doctors will be able to prescribe ivermectin, butesidine, things that work, especially when you get to them early, early treatment protocols, as they were called back during COVID. | ||
| So you're going to see a lot of that, which is great. | ||
| This is what we want to see. | ||
| And of course, you know, people want to see all this stuff happen in a day. | ||
| You got to line everything up. | ||
| You got to make sure all your ducks are in a row. | ||
| You know, we've seen the CDC director doesn't want to leave, even though she's been told she needs to leave. | ||
| She's like, no, I'm not going to leave. | ||
| She's saying, I'm not leaving. | ||
| I think Jones played that clip today. | ||
| But a lot of people did leave. | ||
| In fact, I'm going to get into this probably in the third hour because this guy is off the hook. | ||
| He was head of, he was director of national, it was like infectious and respiratory diseases. | ||
| He was a director at the CDC. | ||
| Dr. Dimitri Dakalakis. | ||
| Well, wait till you see what he likes to do in his spare time. | ||
| Basically, dress up like a satanic god or a satanic demon, whatever you want to call it. | ||
| But we'll get to that in the third hour. | ||
| I'm going to get into some of this trans insanity coming up. | ||
| Go out, buy a gun. | ||
|
unidentified
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It's okay to be angry. | |
| Get out of my face now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
If you try to stop me from going into a woman's bathroom, excuse me, it's ma'am. | |
| Be the last mistake you ever make. | ||
|
unidentified
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It is ma'am. | |
| Find that anger. | ||
| Harness it to do good in the world This anger We could just make a bad to say that some of us well anger is probably my primary source of motivation | ||
| For everything that I do, cut that out now, or you'll go home in an ambulance. | ||
| It was a call to action or a call to arms. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's fire! | |
| It's fire! | ||
| Don't be afraid to show your anger. | ||
| Well, I'm fully creeped out. | ||
| These people are something else. | ||
| And those are the adults. | ||
| Most of those people, there's a few young kids in there, but most of those people were over the age of 18. | ||
| So they were adults making decisions for themselves. | ||
| But can you imagine this kid? | ||
| Well, I guess he's 23 when he did this, but 17 when he transitioned. | ||
| You know, his parents said it was okay. | ||
| And happened during 2020 when you saw a lot of transitions because you saw a lot of kids cooped up in their houses watching videos and these trans videos went out like little anglerfish, you know, putting that little lure out there, a little lure so you could find it. | ||
| And you go, oh, a light. | ||
| Oh, that looks cool. | ||
| I'll be trans. | ||
| People will accept me. | ||
| And then, oh, the angler fish gets you. | ||
| And they bring you into the trans cult. | ||
| And what is the trans cult? | ||
| The trans cults filled with psychologists and surgeons and doctors that are basically looking for lifelong patients. | ||
| And they found a system that they could get government money from. | ||
| They can get parents on board. | ||
| And they could basically mess with kids starting at, you know, around the age of puberty. | ||
| So between 12 and 15, start these kids on puberty blockers. | ||
| Well, you're not going to take those puberty blockers for a year. | ||
| You're going to take them for the rest of your life. | ||
| And then if you go and get these top and bottom surgeries, that's more money. | ||
| That's more drugs you have to take. | ||
| So they're creating an industry. | ||
| And, you know, guys, maybe y'all can look that up in the back of what that industry is worth at this point, the trans industry, what it because I think they said it was about 9 million per child that they get when they get them into this system. | ||
| That's what they're worth on the average. | ||
| So with drugs and therapy and this constant validation, and we're seeing some of that change. | ||
| Look, there's made the net cover of National Geographic, the gender revolution. | ||
| Is that really a revolution? | ||
| Telling confused kids going through puberty who may be having some emotional issues that, oh, they're really in the wrong sex. | ||
| That's where we're at. | ||
| And it's sad and it's wrong. | ||
| You know, you want to be an adult and do that? | ||
| Have fun. | ||
| You know, it's your life. | ||
| You're not going to like it. | ||
| The trans shooter before he went on his rampage. | ||
| The gender, look at that. | ||
| The genital mutilation market business is booming. | ||
| Literally, oh, $5 billion by the end of this decade. | ||
| $5 billion industry, gender-affirming care. | ||
| And that's what they call it. | ||
| They don't call it mutilation. | ||
| They call it gender-affirming care. | ||
| It's not, it's not. | ||
| So $25,000 to over $100,000. | ||
| Many reporting six-figure bills, even with insurance. | ||
| Estimated lifetime costs of gender-affirming care. | ||
| Oh, how big you want your boobs? | ||
| If you're yeah. | ||
| I almost don't want to tell this story, but I'm going to tell it because I know he's watching. | ||
| Darren McBreen, I said, hey, babe, you got to come look at this video. | ||
| And it's two what you think are girls kind of dancing around like this. | ||
| And I said, look closer. | ||
| And let me tell you, they were sporting kill bosses in their panties. | ||
| Kind of gross when you see it and you're like, damn. | ||
| I mean, what they do to these kids, screwing them up and screwing up, it's all about, this is part of the whole leftist mentality. | ||
| Screwing everything up so nobody can even tell you what a woman is. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| None of these people on the left can tell you what a woman is, but they could scream at you and call you a bigot. | ||
| Well, you can look at some of the surgeries. | ||
| Bring that back up. | ||
| Let's look at that. | ||
| The top surgery. | ||
| So we got top surgery is about 10,000. | ||
| Breast augmentation is around 9,000. | ||
| So you're either going to cut them off or add them. | ||
| Vaginoplasty, about 50,000. | ||
| Well, it costs about $130,000 to put a schlong on. | ||
| And then per episode cost, I guess you got to do like, you know, schlong maintenance, $63,000. | ||
| Female feminization surgery, where I think they cut down your Adam's apple and mess with your cheekbones and all that, $70,000. | ||
| That's a lot of money. | ||
| And then on top of that, you got all the drugs and you got the doctor's visits and you got the checkups. | ||
| And it never ends. | ||
| You're going to be in for a lifetime of fixing, as they say. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| I'll bring this clip up with our guests. | ||
| We're going to have our guest here in about 16, 17 minutes, BX on X, Becca, who's done a lot of research into these groups. | ||
| But, you know, right now, I think what we need, we kind of need, I think we need a moment of Zen to kind of like focus back into what we were talking about. | ||
| So let's go to that moment of Zen real quick. | ||
|
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it is and so that's that's our and i wouldn't even consider them our enemies | |
| Those are the people that hate us because I don't hate these people. | ||
| I feel sad for them. | ||
| I feel sad for them that they are so misguided. | ||
| They've bought into whatever mind control program is out there on the left to really screw people up. | ||
| And they're so screwed up. | ||
| This is posted today. | ||
| A TikToker is an unhinged liberal who's part of the Rainbow Mafia says he laughs at the children killed in the Minnesota shooting. | ||
| I mean, just despicable. | ||
| Let's see if I can find that number for you. | ||
| Yep, that's right. | ||
| Yep, there it is. | ||
| So let's go to 13. | ||
| It's a quick 30-second clip, but this is these are the people who, this is what they think of you. | ||
|
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And you know what? | |
| There's going to be a lot more of that coming up. | ||
| You know, especially with these religious areas, you know, hey, we've had enough of your kind coming after public schools, right? | ||
| It's about time. | ||
| Yeah, churches and Catholic schools and religious schools. | ||
| It's about time they get their turn. | ||
| That's what I think. | ||
| That's what I think. | ||
| I'm just going to sit back and watch people do it. | ||
| And I'm going to fucking laugh. | ||
| I'm laughing about yesterday. | ||
| You guys want to laugh about us? | ||
| We're going to laugh about you. | ||
| So I don't get it. | ||
| Is that guy trans? | ||
| What is that guy? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Was he a woman? | ||
| Maybe he's just part of the mafia. | ||
| Maybe he's just a guy that likes to go out and, you know, maybe look for young boys on the weekend. | ||
| Who knows? | ||
| Who knows what these people are into? | ||
| But that's the type of mentality they hate us just for our normalcy. | ||
| They're like, oh, you want a family. | ||
| You want prosperity. | ||
| You want clean air and clean water. | ||
| No, no, no, no, no. | ||
| We have to drug you. | ||
| We have to mind manipulate you. | ||
| We have to make you go through all these different sorts of transhuman rituals to get you to our way of thinking. | ||
| That's what these people want. | ||
| Very, very disturbing. | ||
| And it's going to get worse. | ||
| We have a little list here that Rob Goros put together with the different mass shooters, starting with Maddie Sari in Finland, killed 10 people and then shot himself in the head. | ||
| Pekka Avunan killed eight people and then shot himself in the head. | ||
| Vladislav Roskalov killed 20 people, wounding 67 others for taking his own life. | ||
| Charles Whitman used a knife to kill his mother, then went to UT and shot three people inside, then went up and shot another, killed 11 people, and he was killed by a hero cop. | ||
| I think he was off duty at the time, too. | ||
| I think. | ||
| Or maybe the sheriff's deputy was, it was a sheriff's deputy and a local policeman went up there and got him. | ||
| And that's why the SWAT team was created, actually, because of Charles Whitman, who had brain issues. | ||
| They actually looked at his brain and he had a big tumor in there. | ||
| Interesting movie with Kirk Douglas's Charles Whitman. | ||
| Mark Lapine murdered 14 women, wounded another 10, 10 women and four men, then killed himself. | ||
| Anders Brevik did the 2011 Norway attacks. | ||
| And these are people who basically killed a lot of people and then killed himself, except Anders Brevik was caught and was put in jail. | ||
| Killed 69 participants in a youth summer camp, went to this, it was like an island, and he went out there and killed all these kids. | ||
| And then James Holmes, the Aurora shooter, killed 12 people, injured seven others, and he was caught basically in a daze in his car and out in jail. | ||
| And I think his dad was part of a mind control program. | ||
| He was part of a mind control program. | ||
| There's a lot of, when you look at the ones in the United States, they all have weird CIA connections or military industrial complex connections or weird education connections. | ||
| It's always the same type of people. | ||
| And so we're going to talk about that with our guests coming up in about 11 minutes. | ||
| But I'd like to play this clip. | ||
| This is Minnesota's lieutenant governor wearing her protect all trans kids shirt with the big knives, you know, because that's what, you know, if you don't treat these children with mental illnesses as normal, then we're going to gut you like a bonefish. | ||
| So here's the Minnesota lieutenant governor. | ||
|
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Because let's be clear, this is life-affirming and life-saving health care. | |
| When our children tell us who they are, it is our job as grown-ups to listen and to believe them. | ||
| That's what it means to be a good parent. | ||
| That's the lieutenant governor. | ||
| And they throw this trope out that if you don't change the sex of your child when your child is confused or sad or being encouraged to do this, then they're going to commit suicide. | ||
| But if you look, trans people, in fact, guys, pull it up. | ||
| What's the suicide rate for trans people? | ||
| It's very high compared to the national average. | ||
| Because they're on these SSRIs, because they're on these hormone blockers. | ||
| They're killing themselves and they're killing other people. | ||
| And it's not my fault and it's not your fault, but we need to be aware of it. | ||
| And we need to speak out about it. | ||
| More than 40% of transgender adults in the U.S. have committed suicide. | ||
| That's crazy. | ||
| That is crazy. | ||
| Here's a tweet from Dr. Joseph, Dr. Joseph W.D.: Trans use are often put on powerful drugs, Lupron, estratadol, testosterone, spironolaconaton tone. | ||
| Who knows what that is? | ||
| And with all the psychiatric side effects, add in the high rates of SSRIs, antipsychotics, and stimulants, and you've got a recipe for mania, disinhibition, and sometimes violence. | ||
| And he went on the Tucker Carlson podcast, which we wrote about in Infowars. | ||
| Kellen McBreen did a good breakdown of it. | ||
| Popular journalist Tucker Carlson interviewed psychiatrist Joseph Widoring this week, and the conversation focused on America's overuse of antidepressant medicines and other health issues. | ||
| Carlson and the psychiatrist covered the corrupt FDA, the bad side effects of SSRIs, the withdrawal effects, the increase in doctors prescribing drugs to children, and more. | ||
| The conversation is especially important following the mass shooting at the Minnesota Catholic School on Wednesday. | ||
| And even, I think Alex played this clip either yesterday or the day before, but Robert F. Kennedy talking about the black box warnings. | ||
| In fact, if you guys could find that, we played it yesterday, I think, on the show in the first hour on Alex's show. | ||
| Do you have that one? | ||
| It starts with Alex talking about mass murder suicide pills from Piers Morgan in 2013, January 2013, and then Robert F. Kennedy talking about it, and then a little more with Alex. | ||
| See if y'all can find that one, and we'll go to it before the end of this segment. | ||
| So, Robert F. Kennedy was asked about the link between transgender hormone drugs and mass shooting events, and he talked about the black box labeling on the SSRIs. | ||
| So, he says they're doing those kind of studies at the NIH. | ||
| We're launching studies on potential contribution to some SSRI drugs and some other psychiatric drugs that may be contributing to violence, Kennedy said. | ||
| Info War's founder, Alex Jones, sounded the alarm about the connection between selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or SSRIs and mass shootings for over a decade. | ||
| In 2013, Jones made a historic appearance on CNN with host Piers Morgan, where he called out Big Pharma for its role in poisoning the minds of American children, and he called them suicide mass murder pills. | ||
|
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Here is that clip: The U.S. number one cause of death is suicide now because they give people suicide mass murder pills. | |
| And we're still trying to get a lot of answers to a ton of questions. | ||
| But the one thing is clear: you are dealing with a person who's trans, they was transitioning. | ||
| Are you going to be examining it all some of the drugs that are used in order to make that transition happening to see if it plays a role? | ||
| Because we also know there was a trans shooter in the Tennessee situation. | ||
| Yeah, we are doing those kind of studies now at NIH. | ||
| We're launching studies on the potential contribution of some of the SSRI drugs and some of the other psychiatric drugs that might be contributing to violence. | ||
| You know, many of them on there have black box warnings that warn of suicidal ideation and homicidal ideation. | ||
| So, we need, we can't exclude those as a culprit, and those are the kind of studies that we're doing. | ||
| So, I've never seen that medicine, but you're saying that if you get it, some of the side effects could be homicide, suicide? | ||
| Well, there are black box warnings on some of these psychiatric drugs that warn about in their clinical trials that they saw suicidal and homicidal ideation. | ||
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You will not take my right. | |
| You go through background checks to get guns. | ||
| How about Prozac? | ||
| You know, the number one, oh, that's the big sponsor, isn't it? | ||
| Or that whole class of drugs. | ||
| Let me ask you a question. | ||
| Oh, whoa, got to cut that off, don't you? | ||
| Don't want to talk about the U.S. number one cause of death is suicide now because they give people suicide mass murder pills. | ||
| Calm down. | ||
|
unidentified
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Your answer is get more money of the psychiatrists and psychologists to put more crazy people on drugs that make them kill people, Pierce. | |
| Let's try and have a debate here. | ||
|
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
| Answer me this question. | ||
|
unidentified
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I'm sick of the same old script here, bud. | |
| It's fine, Bud. | ||
|
unidentified
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You've had a lot to say. | |
| No, my point is that the Second Amendment is sacrificed. | ||
| Do you know which weapon was used in the Oregon shopping mall mass shooting recently? | ||
| I understand that people who are mentally ill on all the serrogen and reuptake inhibitors who play these shoot-em-up games want to go out and do this. | ||
|
unidentified
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Because there's criminals, I don't lose my rights, Pierce. | |
| Because there's criminals, I don't lose my rights. | ||
| That's what they want to do. | ||
| They want to make it all about the type of gun that was used. | ||
| Not the fact that people were murdered. | ||
| It's the type of gun. | ||
| It's always about the type of gun. | ||
| And when it doesn't fit their agenda, they don't want to talk about it. | ||
| But then the story is so big, like what happened on Wednesday, they went full bore with it, but they didn't want to say who the person was or how they identified. | ||
| That's the story we broke. | ||
| And then the rest of X started finding little bits and pieces. | ||
| And then the manifesto came out and the videos and everything else. | ||
| And it all just kind of flew into place. | ||
| So when you had the chief of police in Minneapolis and the attorney, the federal attorney there, they're saying, we don't know what the motive is. | ||
| When you can look at what the individual wrote on the guns and what they wrote about in their journals. | ||
| In fact, there's an image somewhere. | ||
| It was on last, I was watching Matt Bracken, and he had his, I don't know if it was Russian or Ukrainian writing and then what it translated to. | ||
| But we had all that. | ||
| And so that's where we're at. | ||
| So I want to end with this clip that we started the whole show with, with this transgender violence compilation. | ||
| And when we come back from break, we're going to have Becca BX on X, and we're going to cover more into this, probably more than we've probably covered this more in the last three days than anybody else. | ||
| So here's that clip. | ||
| Here we go. | ||
|
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Shots fired in the school at the STEM schools. | |
| Chaos and fear are what erupted in the hallways of STEM School in Highlands Ranch, Colorado as the gunshots rang out. | ||
| Police say 18-year-old Debin Erickson and another student started shooting inside of classrooms just before 2 p.m. local time. | ||
| Multiple people have died this morning, including that shooter who was taken down by Metro Police. | ||
| Audrey Hale identified as transgender. | ||
|
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This is what the cover of the New York Post looked like Tuesday, while the hashtag transterrorism trended on Twitter. | |
| A shooting by a fellow student Wednesday killed 14-year-old Christian Ngulo and Mason Shermahor and teachers Richard Aspenwall and Christina Irami. | ||
| Two school resource officers confronted the suspect and took him into custody. | ||
| Police say he was armed with an AR platform style weapon. | ||
| Units, we've got an active shooter situation at Perry High School. | ||
| The shooter has been identified as 17-year-old Dylan Butler. | ||
| Tragedy in Minneapolis after a shooter opened fire during a morning mass at a Catholic grammar school. | ||
| Two children killed, eight and 10 years old, and 17 others were rushed to the hospital. | ||
| 14 of them were children. | ||
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The shooter identified as transgender and he left behind a trail of clues that appeared to show that he was targeting these kids because of their Christian faith. | |
| Police identified the shooter as Robin Westman, 23-year-old. | ||
| He was born Robert, but reportedly changed his name legally in 2020. | ||
| Robin Westman's motive was a clear hit against Christians. | ||
| Even more chilling, Westman wasn't just armed. | ||
| He was ready to trap kids inside. | ||
| In the video, he shows off a 2x4 meant to jam the school's exit door. | ||
| Across it in black marker, no escape. | ||
| What jumps out, though, is the firing range target pinned to his wall. | ||
| The headshot wasn't a silhouette. | ||
| It was Jesus Christ, crown of thorns and all. | ||
| Scattered across the bed were magazines for those firearms, each one defaced with messages. | ||
| One read, where is your God? | ||
| Another read, for the children. | ||
| And the largest magazine of all, killed Donald Trump. | ||
| Just two years ago, another trans 20-something walked into a Christian school in Nashville with a rifle and shot three kids and three adults. | ||
| They buried the manifesto and locked down the case. | ||
| We've seen trans shootings in Colorado and in Maryland. | ||
| They even shot up an ICE facility in Texas. | ||
| And it seems like half of Antifa is trans. | ||
| A couple of they, thems just got popped for firebombing Teslas. | ||
| The mayor of Minneapolis says, you can't say that. | ||
| Anybody who is using this as an opportunity to villainize our trans community or any other community out there has lost their sense of common humanity. | ||
| Well, that was an interesting description of what I do. | ||
| I thought I mainly just talked shit about the New World Order. | ||
| During the break, Thomas brought it. | ||
| He goes, hey, I know we've talked about this before, but here, here's, did you know this show Euphoria started off, I guess, as a, it has Sidney Sweeney in it, interestingly enough. | ||
| But it started off as an Israeli show. | ||
| And the guy that wrote it, his husband, literally does top surgeries on transgender youth. | ||
| So, and I guess they both met when they were serving in the IDF. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| It's an interestingly depraved society. | ||
| And when you look at who's resigning from the CDC, which I'll go into later in the next hour, I mean, it's just, I don't know where these people come from. | ||
| But my next guest here, we're going to talk about, I don't know where we're going to go with this interview because you covered a lot. | ||
| I saw you're on Harrison's show this morning, Becca, but we have BX on X. You could check out her writing on Substack. | ||
| bxrights.substack.com, BX underscore on underscore X for on X, and then Rumble, BX on Rumble. | ||
| Check out her stuff. | ||
| She does a lot of independent investigations on these, what is it, the 75-something cult and the zero, what is it, 764 and the 09A cults. | ||
| I guess these are groups of kids that go around and try to get other kids to either kill themselves or commit murder. | ||
| But where do you want to start, Becca? | ||
| Hey, Rob. | ||
| Yeah, thanks for having me back. | ||
| I was just with Harrison earlier, so it's been kind of a busy day. | ||
| But yeah, I mean, wherever you want to go, I mean, would you like me to start at the beginning and explain kind of what these groups are and what they do? | ||
| Yeah, I'm, you know, I don't get into this stuff a lot. | ||
| I've seen some of your work. | ||
| I think I saw where did I first see you? | ||
| You did something like who is Jade or Where is Jade? | ||
| A documentary? | ||
| I think that was a piece I saw of yours. | ||
| And so that got me. | ||
| Yeah, I have a five-part. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah, I have a five-part docuseries that I put together that really does a better job of explaining this stuff than I can do. | ||
| I always say I'm a better writer than a speaker. | ||
| And it's a very complicated, very convoluted stuff. | ||
| So if you really want to dig into this stuff, definitely go check out my five-part docuseries. | ||
| You can watch it on X or on Rumble. | ||
| But essentially, I found myself kind of investigating mass shootings probably about three, almost four years ago now. | ||
| And I was looking for like, you know, what was going on in the background? | ||
| Like what I noticed that all these kids seem to be, you know, maybe being, maybe the right word would be being groomed in like chat rooms and stuff and like, you know, connected to all these online groups. | ||
| And so I just kind of like got in there and started to get my hands dirty and try to figure out what was actually going on. | ||
| Well, it wasn't too long before I discovered, you know, this idea of accelerationism, which is this idea that by pissing everybody off and getting everybody to fight each other and inciting political division, that you can kind of move society towards its breaking point, towards collapse. | ||
| There's a lot of different types of accelerationists out there, but the one that was most interesting to me had to do with a satanic cult, actually, called the Order of Nine Angles. | ||
| So I had originally kind of got the feeling and I'd gotten information from like you mentioned, Jade Parker, that, you know, the Order of Nine Angles satanic cult might be behind some of these mass shootings, as crazy as it sounded. | ||
| I did find that to be the case. | ||
| And so I kind of, as I started reporting on it, I was met with a lot of jeering and people calling me crazy and trying to, you know, cancel me for one thing or another. | ||
| And that went on for a couple of years as we kept piling up more data and more proof and more evidence of this. | ||
| Eventually we kind of started to see this really, really, really sick side of this whole world. | ||
| It was a 764 child exploitation and extortion network. | ||
| This is a network of satanic pedophiles, for lack of a better word. | ||
| It's, you know, just an online group that goes around grooming and extorting kids into doing horrible stuff on camera, from sexually exploiting themselves to cutting themselves, killing pets, even killing themselves on camera. | ||
| And it's kind of like a notoriety. | ||
| Like they're doing it as a contest to see who can get the most horrible stuff from these kids. | ||
| And they're doing it as a form of accelerationism. | ||
| They're trying to, I always say it's a terror attack on our kids. | ||
| They're trying to traumatize and, you know, significantly stunt the growth of our kids so that they can damage the future of our country. | ||
| So yeah, as I continued that work, you know, the mass shootings just started to pile up. | ||
| And it was at the point where our research was so on target that we were essentially predicting these shootings before they happened, which happened in preventing a couple. | ||
| We were able to stop a couple of shootings because we're like, this is where they're coming from. | ||
| And so, yeah, then I guess it wasn't until like maybe earlier this year that people started to actually listen. | ||
| The FBI came out and announced, hey, the 76409A thing is real. | ||
| We've got 250 open investigations. | ||
| It's a huge deal. | ||
| We're really, really cracking down on it. | ||
| And that's when everybody started to be like, oh, this isn't crazy. | ||
| It's actually real. | ||
| And so that's where we're at now, where people are starting to realize this stuff exists and definitely is a motivating factor behind at least a few of the recent mass shootings that have happened here in the U.S. Not so sure about the most recent one. | ||
| I don't have anything concrete linking it directly to these satanic terror groups yet. | ||
| Definitely wouldn't be surprised to find a connection there in the future because, like I said, I think the two most recent school shootings before this one were connected. | ||
| So definitely something we're seeing. | ||
| And it's a big risk to our kids. | ||
| And all parents should be aware that the way they're finding these kid victims is because they're unsupervised on the internet. | ||
| And a lot of parents are surprised to learn that games like Roblox are some of their favorite places to find child victims because Roblox is essentially a place where you send your kid into a mock city to go talk to strangers. | ||
| That's where they find the kids and then they pull them into like Discord servers and stuff to groom them. | ||
| So, really, my whole thing has been more on the like the raising awareness to parents part of this because, you know, if we can get them, yeah, this is a whole world that we never grew up with. | ||
| I didn't have Discord servers and Roblox and these interactive games that they have now. | ||
| And, you know, a kid with an iPad can jump on this stuff and boom, they're in they're in another world. | ||
| They're talking to people. | ||
| I've curtailed the Roblox in my house when I started seeing what's going on because it's my kids know they don't talk to anybody on the internet. | ||
| If somebody tries to talk to them, they just ignore them. | ||
| They close the game, move on. | ||
| Because it really does. | ||
| I mean, it's the gateway drug, essentially. | ||
| It seems to be Roblox to get these kids in. | ||
| I guess used to talking to people. | ||
| But like, looking at 764, are these older people? | ||
| Are they younger people? | ||
| Are they the ones who are grooming these kids? | ||
| Is there a military background? | ||
| What kind of are there any patterns to the people that are in this group going after kids? | ||
| So far, the people who've been so earlier on, like probably about two or three years ago, when this cult started to really take off, we were seeing a lot of the early people being a little bit older and being more definitively connected to the Order of Nine Angles. | ||
| But they're still disgusting pedophiles. | ||
| And, you know, they're sick and they want to hurt kids. | ||
| And then as time goes on, we start to notice that some of the newer crops of members of these groups are definitely younger. | ||
| Some of them are just kids themselves that are abusing other kids. | ||
| And, you know, they're being groomed to abuse other kids. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, because they get into these groups and they, so like, I'll take you kind of through what it looks like from an abuser's perspective, right? | ||
| From a young abuser's perspective, is they're playing Roblox and some people start coming up to them with Nazi slogans all over their characters. | ||
| They invite them into a chat room. | ||
| They start bombarding them with gore, child pornography, the most horrible stuff you can imagine, and making it seem cool and like, you know, edgy. | ||
| And, you know, if you want to be cool like us, then you'll, you'll get this kind of content. | ||
| And so from there, the kids just, it's, it's just basically making a monster. | ||
| I don't know how else to say it. | ||
| Like if your kid's 13, 14, and they're being, they're, they're in an online environment like that, they're very susceptible to really these evil, subversive things. | ||
| And unfortunately, that's when we see these kids starting to abuse other kids. | ||
| But there have definitely been some arrests of older people. | ||
| I think the oldest person who's been arrested was 47. | ||
| The youngest, probably as young as 13. | ||
| That's incredible. | ||
| I mean, I just had one of our producers sent me this image that he saw in his kids' Roblox. | ||
| And it's, I can't really tell what the image is, but it looks like some sort of creamed in you shop. | ||
| Yeah, I creamed in you shop. | ||
| I mean, yeah, it's disgusting. | ||
| The whole Roblox thing, I could have another show with you guys to talk about that because recently that got spiraled out of control. | ||
| I'd been working with some of these Roblox pedophile catchers because they've been seeing a lot of 764 people in Roblox and they needed my help understanding. | ||
| And I kind of needed their help understanding Roblox because I'm older. | ||
| I don't know anything. | ||
| My kid doesn't play Roblox and she never will. | ||
| But as I was learning from them, we started to see how bad the 764 and all the child exploitation problem was in Roblox and it's disgusting. | ||
| I mean, it is not a place for kids. | ||
| You know, the fact that it's marketed towards kids is disgusting because it, I mean, it's literally just like sex shops and, you know, people with I love CP on their character, like dressed like little kids in pigtails, pretending to have sex. | ||
| Like it's, it's a, it's disgusting in there. | ||
| Your kids shouldn't be anywhere near Roblox. | ||
| Yeah, that really is. | ||
| It really opened my eyes because you think it's, you know, a game and you look at the gaming culture is usually, you know, little kids, younger kids playing games. | ||
| And you don't think, you know, I guess like an Xbox or something, you're talking to people. | ||
| You have that ability to talk to people, but usually you're talking to your friends or a smaller group of people. | ||
| It's not, it's not anything where you're getting flashed imagery because there's some, I guess you could make up whatever you want in these games. | ||
| But here we're an MSNBC article. | ||
| Popular Games Roblox faces pressure over allegations of child predators on its platform. | ||
| And what are they doing? | ||
| Are they actually doing anything about this? | ||
| Or are they just kind of part of this pressure? | ||
| You know, we started to get loud. | ||
| The more that we started to see how bad the predator problem was on Roblox, the louder we started to get. | ||
| We started just like tweeting nonstop at them, getting like, you know, like tons of views, getting YouTubers to make videos about it. | ||
| I mean, Roblox was in the shit before all this happened. | ||
| And then they made it way, way worse by going and banning one of the guys that I was working with who was one of the biggest predator catchers on Roblox. | ||
| And they banned him for vigilantism while not doing anything about the pedophile problem. | ||
| And that, that, their talk, their, their stocks tumbled and it was just a very, it was a big PR disaster for them. | ||
| You love to see it. | ||
| You love to see these guys sweating, right? | ||
| Oh, definitely. | ||
| And that's one way to hurt him is hurt him in the pocket. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| And it's a beautiful way to hurt them without the government even stepping in. | ||
| You know, we, all we did was just, you know, we, we pressured them publicly. | ||
| We put a little bit of egg on their faces and we pressured them to respond. | ||
| And so I still think that Roblox just should be shut down or made into an adult game. | ||
| But, you know, I guess that I would be, I'm happy to see them at least considering certain reforms very slowly. | ||
| I noticed that they had started to put 18 and up warnings on a lot of the games in there. | ||
| And, you know, meaning that people who are under that age, unless they're lying at other ages, you know, can't can't access those games. | ||
| It's a start because you can only do so much. | ||
| Really, the main barrier to entry here is the parents. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| You have to educate your kids and you have to be aware of what they're doing. | ||
| So you can, and you have to tell them what these warning signs are. | ||
| I mean, my kids are very aware of that type of, and they're older. | ||
| I mean, my youngest one is about to be 10. | ||
| So they're not, you know, just going to talk to anybody at all on any of these games. | ||
| Like they don't talk to anybody. | ||
| It's like, you're not allowed to talk to anybody unless you know them personally. | ||
| You know, not, oh, I know them through this. | ||
| No, no, you have to know them personally. | ||
| And that's the only way you can, you know, but that's mainly with chat groups. | ||
| They have little chat groups where they talk to their friends through the iPads. | ||
| And, you know, that's how, and I, you know, if I was a kid, I would have loved to have that ability to do that, you know, hang out with my friends and play video games and stuff. | ||
| But what it's turned into, it's all, it always seems like the grossest elements of our society figure out a way to come in and just start twisting what could be, you know, a fun outlet for children into this just disgusting, vile, you know, creep zone. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I mean, I tell parents all the time, you know, back when we were kids, yeah, your parents were like, don't take candy from strangers, you know, don't jump into somebody's van or something, you know. | ||
| People don't, you don't need creepy guys on the streets like prowling around in vans anymore because these guys have figured out that they can they can do all the same stuff to your kid um from the comfort of their homes right your kids can be kidnapped in their own homes uh in your own home like your kid can just be in their room being sexually abused by a pedophile with you in the next room and no one else in the house and i think that's scary for a lot of parents that to think about and i think that there's a tendency of parents to kind of bury their head in the sand and say stuff like um oh that would | ||
| ever happened to us or, you know, oh, we teach our kids better and, or we have parental controls, but no, you really do need to stop, stop that and put in your head that, you know, we do need to be vigilant because this could happen to anybody. | ||
| Kids are really, really good at bypassing parental controls. | ||
| My eight-year-old knows more than me about her iPad. | ||
| Like it's actually scary. | ||
| So you, it's a, it's a collaboration you have with your kid. | ||
| Um, not only just like talking them and teaching them how to be safe. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Um, but also making sure that you have full control of that device at all times. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And, and definitely communication is, is the key. | ||
| And then I guess you have this thing where you're not allowed to be, you're not allowed to go out and find these predators. | ||
| Why do you think, do you think they're protecting the predators or do you think they just don't want the bad press? | ||
| So they're trying to shove it under the rug. | ||
| I mean, what are the creators of Roblox doing? | ||
| What do we know about these people? | ||
| I think that's what happened. | ||
| So, so at the time that this happened, I had been working with the guy at the center of it, his name is, is called Schlepp, right? | ||
| So he's this YouTube Roblox creator. | ||
| And at the time, we had been working on uncovering this 764 satanic cult called Spawnism that they were using this Roblox community to basically lure kids into a Discord server thinking it was Roblox server, but really it was a 764 exploitation extortion network. | ||
| They were getting the kids to click on malware that was giving them remote access to their computers. | ||
| I mean, it was really, really malicious. | ||
| And so we started to, once we, once we unraveled this and saw how bad it was and that there was at least one linked suicide just in the couple weeks that we've been watching of like a 14-year-old child, we started to really raise alarm bells and it kind of got viral. | ||
| And then a bunch of YouTubers started to make videos about it. | ||
| And that's when Roblox stepped in and said, you guys, nope, we can't have you guys on the platform anymore. | ||
| And it was like, oh, I see that, you know, for one thing, you know, the 764 network, though, a lot of people still haven't heard of it, but it's having a moment in terms of like lawmakers are paying attention, law enforcement is paying attention. | ||
| So Roblox doesn't want like a huge mainstream article leaking about 764 network being on their platform. | ||
| And I think that I think that's why they took the unfortunate PR route of trying to just stre-sand a, you know, whatever. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What's the word? | |
| They stre-sand affected it, right? | ||
| Trying to cover it up. | ||
| Right. | ||
| They covered it up, but it made it more. | ||
| People started wanting to see more of it. | ||
| Like, what are you trying to hide? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I thought you were a platform for kids. | ||
| Oh, no, you got, you got guys driving around in white vans, literally driving them into kids' rooms virtually and stealing them away. | ||
| It's disgusting. | ||
| And it's, it's, I've seen some horrible stuff, satanic stuff. | ||
| It's beyond, you can't even put into words how horrible it is. | ||
| And I've had to talk to a lot of victims, child victims, and try to convince them to go to the police, try to convince them to give me information that I can use to help find them and save them. | ||
| Try to try to, I've even offered to talk to these kids' parents. | ||
| Would you like me to talk to your parents and tell them how brave you are for coming forward? | ||
| Because, you know, even though they're victims, they're afraid. | ||
| They're being extorted. | ||
| They're being threatened. | ||
| They think they're going to get in trouble. | ||
| And all of those things will prevent kids from coming forward if they don't feel like they have that safe communication with their parents. | ||
| That's why that communication is so important early on. | ||
| And so with the 764 network, aside from the, I guess, the suicides and targeting children, have we seen any mass shooters come out of this network? | ||
| What, you know, where are we seeing from that? | ||
| I guess you said there was two at least that you could trace back, but how long has this network been going on doing this? | ||
| And I mean, it's just incredible that this thing could exist right now. | ||
| Well, so 764 was founded in 2021. | ||
| I think so not that long. | ||
| But, you know, it's recently been kind of co-opted by other terrorist groups. | ||
| You can even say foreign. | ||
| There's even some foreign terrorist groups who've slid in there and tried to infiltrate 764 and try to take those kids who are already bad, already doing bad stuff, and get them to go commit terror attacks. | ||
| And so we've seen a lot of stabbings all over the world, not just in the U.S. In fact, that there have been probably a dozen stabbings linked to this group just in the past year or so by 14, 15-year-old kids who just who live stream it on Discord because somebody provoked them to do it. | ||
| And then for the shootings here in the U.S., there were two school shootings that were connected directly to the 764 network. | ||
| And that was the Madison, Wisconsin shooter, the female shooter in Madison, Wisconsin. | ||
| Her name was Samantha Rupnow. | ||
| And then like a month after that, so when we found Samantha Rupnow and we were like, oh, this is bad. | ||
| She's connected to this group of like mass shooter Columbine Fan Club kids, which is its own thing entirely. | ||
| But she was also connected to some of these 764 groups. | ||
| And then when we started to lay out her network, we saw a lot of other people planning shootings. | ||
| And the one on, you know, the black kid there, Solomon Henderson, you know, the black neo-Nazi, because that makes a lot of sense, right? | ||
| He was, he was one of Samantha Rupnow's friends who we had actually sent a cyber tip with a big list of people and said, these people need to be like looked into because they're probably about to go commit a shooting. | ||
| And then a month later, he did. | ||
| And it was kind of scary because I had engaged with this kid on Twitter several times. | ||
| It was very surreal moment when we heard of another school shooting in Nashville. | ||
| And I'm like, okay, well, let's get the information. | ||
| And I'm like doing a double take. | ||
| I'm like, that's the guy who we were sending to the FBI and saying, like, look into this person. | ||
| And he'd been tweeting at me and stuff. | ||
| It was really crazy. | ||
| So we're really close to the pulse on this thing. | ||
| We can almost predict when these things are going to happen now. | ||
| And it's really, really a bad, explosive situation that's just going to get worse until we can dedicate more resources, more law enforcement resources to trying to stop these networks and get these kids the help they need. | ||
| Or if they're adults, just lock them up forever because what the heck right now. | ||
| And on the cyber front, we've seen when it was Twitter, Facebook, they could target words, even on YouTube. | ||
| They could target words and go, no, this is banned. | ||
| You're kicked off. | ||
| They could do this on this Roblox platform. | ||
| They just decide not to do it. | ||
| It's a willful, it's a willingness to just let these people roam free instead of just going, hey, we're going to clamp down on this, any type of this stuff. | ||
| We're just, boom, you're out of the network. | ||
| Your IP is banned. | ||
| And then you just, you keep banning them. | ||
| As many IPs as they can set up, you just keep banning them. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And, you know, this is not even just a Roblox issue. | ||
| X has the same problem. | ||
| You know, we see a lot of these cultists using X to find kids who are already kind of cutting themselves, already doing self-harm. | ||
| And they have these communities called Self-Harm Twitter, S-H-T-W-T. | ||
| Don't look that up, please. | ||
| But like, you can go to Twitter, and it's just kids cutting themselves and encouraging other kids to cut themselves and just like, you know, engaging all these toxic behaviors. | ||
| And sure enough, there are the pedophiles, they are the groomers just sitting there waiting. | ||
| And then they're in their comments saying, hey, can you DM me? | ||
| I have a request. | ||
| And then they're already in. | ||
| Like, that's how they're taking these victims. | ||
| So we've been trying to rally X to like, hey, stop this. | ||
| Like, shut this hashtag down. | ||
| They have the ability to shut down hashtags. | ||
| Right. | ||
| That's how they manage this CSAM problem. | ||
| And so, yeah, we couldn't just, we couldn't understand why X couldn't get this under control. | ||
| And it's obviously against TOS for kids to be cutting themselves. | ||
| And when I say cutting themselves, like these kids are like, there's some stuff that I can't unsee, like grievous injuries kind of stuff, suicide kind of stuff. | ||
| And it's just circulating on X and they're not doing anything to fix it. | ||
| It's mind-boggling. | ||
| You know, but they have a whole system they could set up where if you say something wrong about the government, they could track you. | ||
| Or if you make the wrong type of transaction, they could get you. | ||
| But it's like seems to be, oh, maybe some parts of the government. | ||
| And when you see the guy that just resigned from the CDC dressed up as Baphomet, you know, you're like, oh, well, this is who runs our government. | ||
| This is the people in our government. | ||
| So maybe they don't care. | ||
| Maybe they want this to go on. | ||
| We got about a minute left. | ||
| How can people support your work? | ||
| Definitely go check out my sub stack. | ||
| It's bxrights, like rights.substack.com. | ||
| That's where I release a lot of this stuff way before the media releases it. | ||
| I have a reputation for being early. | ||
| So go follow me and support me there. | ||
| That's the best way to support me. | ||
| Also, please follow me on X, BX underscore on underscore X, and share all of the information that you find in here with other parents. | ||
| It could literally save a kid's life if you share the stuff about 764 with other parents. | ||
| Yeah, and especially, you know, on the Roblox front, because there's a lot of parents out there that let their kids play Roblox. | ||
| And if they knew really well. | ||
| I just wrote an article about that. | ||
| Yeah, they wouldn't do it. | ||
| They wouldn't let, you know, if they saw. | ||
| And all it takes is one time. | ||
| One open door, one van, virtual van drives in there and grabs your kid, and that's it. | ||
| Then you got a lifetime of misery. | ||
| So thanks for joining us. | ||
| Really appreciate it. | ||
| Yeah, thanks, Rob. | ||
| Keep working. | ||
| Enjoy your work. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Thank you guys. | ||
| Bye-bye. | ||
| Have a good one. | ||
| We'll be right back. | ||
| So DNA is an information storage system. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| And it also is an application that can tell things to happen in your body. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| So it can instruct your cells to make certain proteins. | ||
| It can instruct your cells to grow uncontrollably. | ||
| Oftentimes, cancers are a genetic aberration that occurs, a mutation of some sort. | ||
| So you don't want to be bombarding your genome with random mutations. | ||
| And that's our fear of what could be going on with these vaccines. | ||
| That the moment you start including DNA in these vaccines, particularly DNA that has sequences that instruct it to go to the nucleus and make a change, you're running the risk of the vaccines causing cancer. | ||
| The RNA vaccines, the RNA part of it, was supposed to give a temporary instruction to your body. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| And it's not doing that. | ||
| And they told you to last, what, 48 hours, right? | ||
| And now the papers that have come out are showing detection out to 60 days from the Rolt Gen paper. | ||
| We have the Krausen paper showing it out in 30 days in the heart tissue. | ||
| People are finding it in placentas. | ||
| People are finding it in breast milk. | ||
| People are finding it in plasma 28 days later. | ||
| So there's this persistence problem that no one seems to understand or predicts. | ||
| So something is staying in your body that is continuing, presumably, to give instructions far beyond what we thought. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| Make spike protein. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| So what should people be concerned about with what you found? | ||
| If someone's had COVID vaccines, what would be their concern? | ||
| I would keep an eye on if any of your family members come down with an unexplained cancer, get a pathologist involved to get a slide or a sample so that the people who are studying this can begin to look for whether there's vaccine sequence in there. | ||
| So we have a person who had four Pfizer vaccines. | ||
| So and then a year after that came down with a colon cancer and there were three biopsies taken, two before death and one after the person died of this diagnosis within 30 days. | ||
| Those samples were then, we used a tool called PCR to look for the Pfizer's vaccine sequence and then resorted to a process known as voluminous sequencing to sequence the tissue to see if there's any Pfizer sequence in there. | ||
| And there is. | ||
| And shockingly, there's a lot of it, and that was not expected. | ||
| The only way that happens is if it got into the cells and amplified and started replicating. | ||
| Does it imply that it caused the cancer or just the fact that it was present in the cancer is concerning? | ||
| Yes, it's a good question. | ||
| We can't nail causality from the data we have, but it is certainly a concern when you see a sequence like that. | ||
| So there are mechanisms where this could be playing a role in cancer. | ||
| So the reason we'd like to get this message out is that I think too many of these tumor biopsies are getting thrown away and the evidence is disappearing. | ||
| And it's important for folks going through that process to try to retain the biopsies if they can so that we can go back and see if this is in fact the case. | ||
| And what are you all cumulatively learning or expect to learn in the coming year or two about all of this? | ||
| Well, we want to understand how long does this stuff last in patients because this DNA was not consented to. | ||
| We didn't expect it. | ||
| So now there's a new question of how long does it last. | ||
| We've already seen papers come out showing that they can detect nucleic acid in placentas and there was vaccine nucleic acid in those. | ||
| These mothers, unfortunately, I believe were force vaccinated for the birthing center. | ||
| So we don't really know how long it lasts in placenta. | ||
| And if it's in placenta, it's probably getting into the newborn. | ||
| So there's an ongoing question in the whole field of where is this vaccine going? | ||
| How long is it lasting? | ||
| And what is its contribution to disease? | ||
| And we have to track the molecules of DNA and RNA to sort that out. | ||
| Are you surprised if the government isn't doing this kind of tracking? | ||
| Because it would seem a natural thing that they'd want to have to answer. | ||
| Well, that would be that would be a normal consideration. | ||
| But in the peak of the pandemic, there was an enormous amount of revenue coming in to our government agencies, which leads me to believe they were not motivated to look for hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin or alternative tools that might treat coronavirus. | ||
| They wanted the vaccine to be the only solution because that's what lined their pockets. | ||
| Many establishment scientific authorities acknowledge the DNA discovered in COVID vaccines, but they say the amounts are too low to pose a risk. | ||
| Of course, it's safe and effective. | ||
| There's no reason anybody should be getting turbo cancer. | ||
| But there, you just heard it from four vaccines. | ||
| Boom, dead in 60 days from a colon cancer diagnosis. | ||
| And what are we seeing rising all over the place? | ||
| Colon cancer. | ||
| Oh, it's in young people and numbers we've never seen before. | ||
| What could have happened? | ||
| We have no idea. | ||
| All right, guys, 1-877-789-2539-877-789-2539. | ||
| Call lines are open. | ||
| We're going to be covering a bunch of COVID information and taking your calls all next hour. | ||
| Yeah, it was just a few days ago. | ||
| It was the 30th anniversary, 35th anniversary of Stevie Rayvon dying. | ||
| Well, I'm old. | ||
| Bluesong brought that up. | ||
| I think it was on the 27th. | ||
| That helicopter crash. | ||
| Welcome back to the war room. | ||
| It's the third hour. | ||
| I'm going to get into a lot of like kind of COVID health news. | ||
| I was going to do this in the first part of the show, but then I decided to just push it all to the second part while we take your calls. | ||
| We got the phone lines lighting up. | ||
| Throw up that phone number again, guys. | ||
| 877-789-2539, 877-789-2539. | ||
| I don't care what you want to talk about. | ||
| Talk about what you want. | ||
| I think it's open season. | ||
| I've got some videos I want to play. | ||
| I thought that was a pretty interesting Kevin McKernan interview we played there in the first segment. | ||
| Now, he worked on the Human Genome Project where they sequenced humans back in like the early 2000s. | ||
| And so the guy knows his stuff. | ||
| He's known Johnny Cumb lately. | ||
| And, You know, they're looking at people's tumors and they're finding pieces of the vaccine in their tumors. | ||
| And, you know, I guess turbo, I don't know if you're, you know, if you're lucky enough not to get turbo cancer, you could get other stuff. | ||
| Here's a daily mail article. | ||
| We're America's vaccine guinea pigs and we helped save humanity from COVID, which is bull. | ||
| That's what they've been told. | ||
| Now we've been left with terrifying diseases. | ||
| So they say 200,000 volunteers signed up to participate in clinical trials in 2020 that would test the safety and efficacy of vaccines developed to combat COVID. | ||
| But a handful claim those that didn't die, because they took out the ones that died. | ||
| Remember, they said, oh, you guys aren't in the study anymore. | ||
| Handful claim the trials left them with permanent life-changing injuries. | ||
| Mother of two Breanne Dressen, then 39, a former preschool owner who loves skiing, swimming, and rock climbing, received a single dose of AstraZeneca's Utah trials in 2020. | ||
| Now listen to what happened. | ||
| Within an hour, I developed a tingling in my injection arm, which moved to my other arm, my legs and head. | ||
| I developed horrible electrical pulsating sensation throughout my body 24-7. | ||
| She said her symptoms worsened. | ||
| Soon she was unable to walk. | ||
| And for the next four months, she could not tolerate light, sound, or touch. | ||
| Even hugs and conversations with her children were painful. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Now she experiences, this is after many doctors' visits. | ||
| Of course, they're talking. | ||
| We don't know what's wrong. | ||
| She's got autoimmune nerve damage known as chronic deemlating polyneuropathy, which she alleged in her lawsuit to AstraZeneca refused to care for. | ||
| She also experiences fatigue, internal buzzing sensation, weakness in her arms and legs, which she sometimes needs a wheelchair, tinnitis, nausea, a weak bladder, food allergies, posterior arthrostatic tachycardia syndrome, which is also known as POTS. | ||
| Which, guys, just do a little search on TikTok or X for videos of women talking about having POTS. | ||
| And they're all probably from in the last couple years. | ||
| An irregular heartbeat and dizziness. | ||
| This POTS thing is definitely something they say, oh, it's been around forever, but you're seeing an increase just like the turbo cancers that they don't want to say is caused by the vaccines. | ||
| But you know what? | ||
| In probably five years' time, did you take a COVID vaccine and get turbo cancer? | ||
| Because they got to wait for a lot of these people to die so they can't sue. | ||
| So they'll wait and then the class action lawsuits will start up, you know, just like if you were drinking water at Camp, was it Camp Lejeune? | ||
| You're going to have all that. | ||
| So there's Miss Dressen, sometimes in a wheelchair, because she took one dose of the AstraZeneca. | ||
| Imagine if she got in a booster. | ||
| Well, she probably wouldn't even be with us today. | ||
| Probably wouldn't even be with us today. | ||
| So let's see. | ||
| I'm going to put on my glasses and go to this, but let's go to this other clip speaking about cancer in the cancer industry. | ||
| This is Dr. Patrick Soon Seong, who's doing an interview with Megan Kelly. | ||
| And he talks about the problem with how we're going after cancer. | ||
| Basically taking chemical weapons, injecting them into people's bodies. | ||
| And if it doesn't kill them, it might kill the tumor and then they can go on living. | ||
| But usually that doesn't happen. | ||
| They have this thing that they call the MTD, which is the maximum tolerated dose. | ||
| Interestingly enough, when I sold Kirby vacuum cleaners for a very short period of time, we had what we called the DTL, which was the dirt tolerance level. | ||
| You would keep vacuuming, pulling dirt out of their carpet and showing it to the people because you didn't have a vacuum cleaner bag. | ||
| You had these claws and you'd pop them off and you would just keep vacuuming and showing them the dirt coming out of there until you reached their dirt tolerance level, where then they would go, hey, I want to buy your overpriced vacuum. | ||
| Well, they do that with the FDA and their metric for drug approval is the maximum tolerated dose, finding the highest dose of poison a human can endure without dying. | ||
| So let's go to that clip now and then we'll come back with your calls. | ||
| But the fundamental thing, Megan, is the world needs to recognize that we've gone down the wrong assumptions for 75 years. | ||
| We have thought that we could using tools of war, poisons like nitrogen gas, and that became the chemotherapy, poisons like radiation, that if we could nuke the tumor without killing the person, we would be able to win the war. | ||
| We're nuking the tumor and we're nuking your natural killer cells in T cells. | ||
| Now think of this vicious cycle. | ||
| We give chemotherapy, we give radiation, we do a CBC, we see that, oh my goodness, you have anemia because we created that. | ||
| Now there's a drug called epigen. | ||
| We give you the epigen so that you can get more chemotherapy so that you can wipe out more NK and T cells. | ||
| We then look at the patient's CBC again and says, oh my goodness, you've lost your neutrophils. | ||
| There's another drug called nupogen, which we give so that we can give you more chemotherapy so that we can wipe out more lymphocytes in NK cells. | ||
| Think of that madness that we've been doing. | ||
| If we said, why don't you go do leeching, you know, use leeches, I think 20 years from now, maybe less, we'll say, why were we doing that to the patient's body? | ||
| When you go to the FDA, guess how they ask you to develop the drug? | ||
| They use this term called MTD. | ||
| What is MTD? | ||
| Maximum tolerated dose. | ||
| Find the maximum tolerated dose. | ||
| That's the dose that we want you to give, just below the maximum tolerated dose. | ||
| That's the current thinking of the FDA. | ||
| It's not talking about any human being. | ||
| There are some people there that are still perpetuating that. | ||
| They're still there. | ||
| Then they say, okay, because this maximum tolerated dose is going to nuke it, we look at the response rate, meaning the shrinkage of the tumor. | ||
| Well, do you want to look at the overall survival? | ||
| Because the tumor will shrink, but the patient will die. | ||
| No, we're not really interested in overall survival as an endpoint. | ||
| Can you imagine that? | ||
| That is today's thinking. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can. | |
| I can imagine it. | ||
| Because that seems to be our choice. | ||
| It seems to be a willing choice because we've gone so long without making much progress. | ||
| It is. | ||
| And what is the progress? | ||
| The progress is to keep that industry afloat by not really curing cancer. | ||
| Because you see videos of people, you know, taking ivermectin and fembizadol and some other things and knocking out their tumors. | ||
| They're taking large amounts of these drugs, but you don't see that being touted by there's no studies. | ||
| And there's no studies that prove it works, but we won't do any studies either. | ||
| Because if it does work, then we can't worry about it. | ||
| So let's go to the phones now. | ||
| Let's go to Natty Boy in New York. | ||
| Wants to talk about the rising cancer cause. | ||
| What do you think it is? | ||
| You think it's too much Mountain Dew? | ||
| Absolutely. | ||
| That's one contributing factor, 100%. | ||
| If you look at the actual flavors of Mountain Dew, it actually predicts the future of the New World Order. | ||
| Have you ever heard that one? | ||
| No, no. | ||
| Yes, yes, it's true. | ||
| Look into that. | ||
| And then also, 100% the shots are wiping people out. | ||
| I mean, I have multiple young men in their 30s and 40s whose wives found them dead on their couches. | ||
| My family members, forget about it, the cancer rate is just through the roof. | ||
| I was sitting at the table the other day with my uncle. | ||
| He has weird leukemia. | ||
| He can't figure out the doctors are gaslighting. | ||
| He has sores in his mouth and everything. | ||
| They don't know what it is, but he took the shot. | ||
| My dad's got lesions all over his legs and everything. | ||
| My stepmother had cancer in her freaking lung. | ||
| I mean, I could just keep going on and on. | ||
| Those are just three people in the room with me the other day. | ||
| And they can't figure it out. | ||
| That all of them have one common denominator, the shot. | ||
| But also, also the phones, man. | ||
| They won't even let these phones, the new phones, they won't even let out in France because of the radiation that's being emitted from them. | ||
| Do you know what I mean? | ||
| So it's a whole bunch of things, man. | ||
| They are just wiping us out, man. | ||
| I mean, they're after, in my opinion, they're after the natural resources of America, how they bounced around. | ||
| Latin America used to be beautiful, better, higher standard of life than America. | ||
| These little demons went over there, same thing. | ||
| Take all the resources, create desperate, so on. | ||
| So that's what they do. | ||
| They hop around, they steal resources. | ||
| Now, they want to build up that greater Israel project. | ||
| They're all working together, and they're after America's resources. | ||
| That's the play, everybody. | ||
| But we still have a constitution, and we can't stop it. | ||
| Everyone's got to come together. | ||
| Anybody that's dividing with Democrat, Republican, they're not on our side, and they're part of the problem. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| Yeah, and we still have our guns, too. | ||
| We have a lot of guns in this country, and I think that's what's really the only bulwark keeping total tyranny at bay is the thought. | ||
| I think they think they could roll us over because they saw what they did with COVID. | ||
| They were able to convince everyone to lock down, but you know, and in some cities, even with Minneapolis, they were going to shooting people with pepper balls to go back into their houses. | ||
| And you didn't see people, you know, stand up to that. | ||
| They just kind of took it. | ||
| So I think they think we're going to lay down. | ||
| But I think the pandemic backfired because it didn't go totally where they wanted to go. | ||
| They didn't get 100% compliance. | ||
| And so I think they're kind of worried right now at this point, especially at the United States. | ||
| And then you look at these other countries. | ||
| People are starting to stand up. | ||
| They're doing a little bit, but we got to do a lot more. | ||
| We got a long way to go. | ||
| Don't you think? | ||
| Yeah, absolutely. | ||
| But I think that they, on the bad guy's side, they're definitely winning if 70% of our population went to parking lots and got poisoned shot inside them. | ||
| And then you literally have the prime minister of Israel telling you what it was, which is exactly what mRNA was developed for for biometric tracking. | ||
| I mean, and everyone is still acting sunad, and nobody can put the pieces together. | ||
| That is clearly radiation poisoning that we're seeing. | ||
| And then you can go look at mRNA right there. | ||
| It's labeled any material bound to a radioactive substance. | ||
| And all the disease and everything you're seeing is right on par with radiation poisoning. | ||
| But yet you don't have Roger Malone. | ||
| You don't have McCullen. | ||
| You don't got no one putting those pieces together. | ||
| I'm a dumb construction worker. | ||
| I'm putting those pieces together. | ||
| You guys aren't putting the pieces together. | ||
| I mean, what's the problem here? | ||
| Everyone's working together. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Alternative media, mainstream media. | |
| People, it's us versus everyone. | ||
| So we have to unite. | ||
| No one's worried. | ||
| Everyone's playing stupid. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| And that's it, man. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| Like, how come nobody can make that distinction that it's radiation poison from the mRNA? | ||
| I mean, you can just look up what I'm, everyone can just look up, type up what I'm saying, and it's right there in front of you. | ||
| And the fibrous blood clots is a dead giveaway. | ||
| That is a sign of radiation poisoning. | ||
| And that would make sense with the shedding, too. | ||
| You have the shedding, which is basically just radioactive particles moving from one human to the next one. | ||
| 100%, sir. | ||
| And everyone knows this, but everyone's in on it. | ||
| Malone's in on it. | ||
| McCullough's in it. | ||
| Everyone's sucking us dry while they kill us, everybody. | ||
| So that's what's going down. | ||
| And God bless. | ||
| Get your heads out of your rear end and teach your kids the right way. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| There you go. | ||
| Thanks for the call, Natty Boy. | ||
| Appreciate it. | ||
| Let's go to Willie in California. | ||
| Has a new word for us to learn. | ||
| Go for it, Willie. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Hey, Rob, great hosting today. | ||
| Yeah, it's called anarcho-tyranny. | ||
| It's a new term I stumbled across coined by a guy named Samuel Francis describing government system that fails to enforce laws while simultaneously oppressing its citizens. | ||
| It represents a combination of anarchy, where the state does not protect its citizens, and tyranny, where it enforces laws for oppressive purposes. | ||
| I think no further do we have to go than Shiloh Hendricks now being prosecuted for a ridiculous video sequence from, I think, Minnesota. | ||
| And then these young Scottish girls defending themselves. | ||
| And, you know, lately, the Minnesota shooting. | ||
| But it's beyond tyranny by minority. | ||
| It's just called anarcho-tyranny. | ||
| I kind of like that word. | ||
| Anarcho-tyranny. | ||
| There it is. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And I think the selective oppression of certain populations, I think you could say with that, because some people seem to get a little more oppressed than others. | ||
| Very true. | ||
| Very true. | ||
| And it's all from one side, you know, and it's eliminating the middle class. | ||
| It pretty much describes everything that, you know, the government is eliminating the middle class. | ||
| We're going back to feudalism, it feels like. | ||
| Yeah, that's definitely one of the ways, you know, with the elites, they want no middle class. | ||
| They want an elite and a lower class of serf to serve the elite. | ||
| And if you're not one of those, you're going to be eliminated. | ||
| So you're either going to serve or you're going to be eliminated. | ||
| That's where we're going. | ||
| Thank you for the call. | ||
| Let's go to Bandwagon in Arizona. | ||
| Let's talk about vaccines and Trump. | ||
| Go ahead, Bandwagon. | ||
| Hey, Rob, what's going on? | ||
| How are you today? | ||
| So just, you know, there's a billion things that I would love to talk about, but obviously, you know, this whole shot thing is still bothering me a lot. | ||
| I've never really been a true Trump fan. | ||
| I'm from New York. | ||
| Never really, you know, liked them too much. | ||
| A lot of people liked them, but obviously, you know, his things were more on my side of politics, I guess, and I know it was into politics. | ||
| But this whole shot, man, unless he comes out clean and says, you know, the war seed, which is war seed, not warp speed, is the worst thing I ever done and, you know, rejected totally. | ||
| Like, I can never trust the guy. | ||
| And now what's got me worried is last week or a couple of days ago, Maria C was on, and she was saying that, yeah, RSK, you know, banned or, you know, put a stop to the emergency order. | ||
| But then, you know, she says, listen to the language that he used. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It stopped for healthy people or for sick people. | |
| So they could just say, you're sick and you're going to have to take this. | ||
| So this is worrying or whatever. | ||
| So, and I also want to say thanks to Alex's dad for bringing Alex to us. | ||
| That's all I got to say today, man. | ||
| Yeah, it was pretty interesting. | ||
| They did that picture. | ||
| They brought that picture to life today. | ||
| Talking about the COVID shot, they've got this new graph that's come out. | ||
| All non-COVID natural causes of death ages zero to four. | ||
| So they have a deviation from 2018, 2019, and then they trend to 2025, which is 2023, 2024. | ||
| So mortality group, respiratory diseases and failure. | ||
| In 2018, 2019, they saw about 1,994. | ||
| In 2023, 2024, it jumped up to 3,075, an increase of 54%. | ||
| Congenital malformations, increase of 51%. | ||
| Cardiopulmonary disorders, increase of 38%. | ||
| Increases susceptibility to narcotics, increase of 384%. | ||
| Viruses and septicomenia susceptibility, increase of 90%. | ||
| Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality, increase of 93%. | ||
| Epilepsy and nervous-related incidents, increase of 37%. | ||
| Increase the susceptibility of non-fatal submersion Eve. | ||
| I'm not sure what that is. | ||
| 37%. | ||
| Disorders of the liver and digestive tract. | ||
| That's how you stay healthy is having a good liver and a good digestive tract. | ||
| 82%. | ||
| Renal function-related. | ||
| That's your kidneys. | ||
| People were dying from taking Remdesivir. | ||
| Increase 135%. | ||
| Asphyxia and respiratory arrest, increase of 24%. | ||
| Meningitis, various increase of 112%. | ||
| So you see these, they're seeing these increases after these kids' parents were getting vaccinated. | ||
| And this is what's coming out. | ||
| These kids that are born or they got the vax at a very young age. | ||
| So there's that chart. | ||
| You can see that. | ||
| And that's been corroborated across the so that's put out by Dr. Claire, Dr. Claire Craig. | ||
| Thanks for calling Bandwagon. | ||
| Let's go to James in Indiana, the Montana shooter and the VA. | ||
| Go ahead, James. | ||
| Yeah, news came out on the Montana shooter. | ||
| He was trying to get help from the VA as they continued pushing him away. | ||
| As a family member said, the system is broken. | ||
| We have a serious problem in this country where grievances are not being addressed. | ||
| I would urge any veteran having issues with the federal government to reach out to their local congressional office for help. | ||
| Yeah, that seems to be the way to do it. | ||
| It's like the workaround. | ||
| It's like they'll open doors for you, especially if they're more, I guess, more amiable to veterans, which they should all be. | ||
| But there's definitely probably some representatives who have a more open-door policy. | ||
| Have you had to do that? | ||
| Oh, I've gotten numerous veterans' help. | ||
| There's an article that needs some attention. | ||
| It's called Kokomo, or I'm sorry, yeah, Kokomo Tribune. | ||
| VA needs national audit. | ||
| It's over all these veteran suicides. | ||
| A lot of veterans are afraid to speak out because the VA is notorious for retaliating against people. | ||
| There was a suicide in Texas, and Mr. Miller was going off. | ||
| He said the psychologist drugged him instead of helping him, and the VA is absolutely at fault. | ||
| They're breaking federal prescribing laws, and they're putting a lot of these vets on these drugs that cause suicide. | ||
| There needs national attention to that art news article. | ||
| So if anybody out there is listening, get that to a congressional office or a senator or even to the Trumps because they will pay attention to that. | ||
| Go ahead and repeat that article again, repeat that headline. | ||
| It's Kokomo Tribune. | ||
| VA needs national audit. | ||
| It's over all these VA veteran parking lot suicides. | ||
| Yeah, so the veterans are literally sitting in the parking lot, don't know what else to do. | ||
| They're screwed up from all the SSRIs, and then they decide to just end it right there. | ||
| Is that what's going on? | ||
| Oh, absolutely. | ||
| See, when I was in the VA, I thought it was normal to see a doctor once a year while the pills just kept coming in. | ||
| My wife got me out of there, went into private care. | ||
| And that's why I told my doctor, I said, RLC and here's what we do with the VA. | ||
| She goes, What are you talking about? | ||
| I lose my prescribing license. | ||
| And that's when it dawned on me. | ||
| They were breaking federal prescribing laws, and they won't address this. | ||
| I mean, this is bigger than the Phoenix scandal. | ||
| I mean, they'll probably try to have me killed for even mentioning all this stuff. | ||
| I'm not trying to get anybody fired. | ||
| I just want somebody to step in and try to, you know, say, hey, we got to fix this solution. | ||
| You know, talk to us, have a congressional meeting over it, whatever they want to do, but something needs to be done because it is out of control. | ||
| And I got one more last article for you. | ||
| You guys are talking about all the pedophile stuff, which is, I don't like listening to that stuff. | ||
| It's gross. | ||
| But there's news out of Indiana article called Father Charged with Killing Pizza Trash Convict whom lost his young relative, giving stunning jailhouse confession. | ||
| People are calling for jury nullification. | ||
| This guy killed a pedophile. | ||
| Well, I'd say that's what I call a good start. | ||
| You need to get it to Alex Rosen. | ||
| He needs to see that article. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| I'll send it to him. | ||
| Definitely. | ||
| Hey, we're going to break. | ||
| Thanks for the call, James. | ||
| Good information. | ||
| And we'll be right back with the last half hour of the war room. | ||
| watching us on InfoWars.com. | ||
| Thank you for joining me on this show. | ||
| You know, I still have a little bit of stuff I haven't covered yet, but your calls are pretty interesting. | ||
| So I'm definitely going to take more calls. | ||
| And I want to, and I'm also going to read some of this guy's CDC guy, one of the guys that left, resigned in disgust because now we're not pushing vaccines on people. | ||
| But I want to go back, put the caller screen back up first. | ||
| We'll take another call and then I'll get into that because I want to set up a couple things. | ||
| All right, let's go to Michelle in Kansas, has a question on shedding. | ||
| What is it? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hi, how are you doing? | |
| I'm doing good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I was curious about it, and I've been trying to find some information on it, and I just don't understand what that means. | |
| What do you mean by the shedding? | ||
| Okay, so the shedding, I guess the best way of saying it is it's sort of like the same thing you see a dog shed. | ||
| So you pet a dog and hair comes off the dog. | ||
| Okay. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| And in the same way that happens when somebody takes a vaccine, and this is, this is, I'm going to do old school shedding and then I'm going to do the new shedding with the mRNA vaccine. | ||
| So the old school shedding is they would give somebody a weakened virus and they would take that in and then their immune system would activate to that virus, usually because they put aluminum in there. | ||
| That would stimulate the immune system. | ||
| And so they would actually get a little bit sick. | ||
| They would have the virus, but a weak inversion. | ||
| Now that weakened version could then be transferred to other people. | ||
| And I'll give you, I know of a person whose father got a shingles vaccine and then all the grandkids got chickenpox from the shingles vaccine. | ||
| There was no chickenpox in the area, nothing, but this shingles vaccine basically shedded and caused a different virus, but basically the same type of virus. | ||
| So the shingles virus is like a chickenpox virus, but for older people, it's sort of the same type of virus. | ||
| So that's the old version of shedding. | ||
| Now with the mRNA vaccine, what people were seeing and what people were discovering. | ||
| So the mRNA is inside of like an oily substance that was in the vaccine vials and they had to keep it really cold. | ||
| So if they kept it cold, then that means it was really potent. | ||
| And so they would inject that into people and then the mRNA would start replicating inside people's bodies. | ||
| And so they would express it out of their mouths by breathing through sexual intercourse. | ||
| There's a lot of different ways you could express the mRNA. | ||
| So this stuff is going around and then other people are inhaling it. | ||
| They're getting it on them. | ||
| It's going into their bodies and then they're having symptoms of being sick. | ||
| We've had people call in. | ||
| Their girlfriend had gotten the vaccine, like a Pfizer vaccine. | ||
| And then, like, they would feel sick every time they slept over at their house the next day. | ||
| They would feel like crap. | ||
| So, and you can look up, there is scientific evidence of shedding. | ||
| They've done studies on it. | ||
| That's sort of the layman's sitting at the bar type version of shedding. | ||
| But there's, you know, kind of two different types: one where you're actually getting the virus, and the other where this mRNA, which isn't necessarily of what was mRNA of the COVID vaccine that would then replicate in your body. | ||
| So it's acting differently. | ||
| One, you're getting sick from something. | ||
| The other one, you're getting this mRNA into your system, and then it's transferring to other people. | ||
| Does that make sense? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay, it sure does. | |
| Thank you so much. | ||
| Yep. | ||
| Thanks for calling. | ||
| All right, let's go to Chris in Kansas. | ||
| We'll finish up Kansas. | ||
| Chris, here we go. | ||
| Hi. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| First of all, I just gotta say it's a rare treat to hear you host. | ||
| And like the board says, I'm just a looking for some advice. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| So let me put it to you this way. | ||
| Let's say that you listen to someone who is like a patriot just like you. | ||
| You respect them and you look up to them. | ||
| And then out of nowhere, you just hear him talk about people in a certain profession that you just happen to be in and how much disdain that they have for them. | ||
| And it's like such a gut punch that you don't really know if you should support them or not. | ||
| Oh, what profession would this be? | ||
| Truck drivers. | ||
| Just like me. | ||
| I'm a truck driver. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Well, I can tell you this. | ||
| I think, you know, as I did a documentary on trucking back in the early 2000s, which is interesting because it was before 9-11, and we were a lot different world back before 9-11. | ||
| And you could see it in the way these guys talked and interacted with each other. | ||
| But now you've got the way the trucking industry has, you know, been, I would say, maligned and also attacked in terms of you've got they're letting in a lot of foreigners in, and now we're seeing a lot of these reports of foreigners causing crashes. | ||
| I don't think that's a reflection of the trucking industry per se, but it is a symptom of things that we're not doing right because to me, it seems like the trucking industry might be trying to cut corners. | ||
| That's why they're hiring these people and probably not paying them as much as they would an American trucker, if that makes any sense. | ||
| And in fact, you could probably shed light into that. | ||
| Do you have any experience with that? | ||
| I'm afraid I don't really have any experience as far as like any companies that are hiring foreigners because I kind of moved out of those carriers a while ago. | ||
| And are you a local guy or do you go cross-country? | ||
| What's your main thought? | ||
| I'm local. | ||
| In fact, the correct term is linehaul. | ||
| I just kind of operate out one terminal and then go to another town that's like in another part of the state and then come back. | ||
| And I do that every day. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And let me ask you this: are you worried about robot trucks coming and self-driving trucks? | ||
| I do see them coming. | ||
| However, I talked to my boss about this and he says that they're not going to replace me in this lifetime because in his words, they can't figure out automated cars. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I see him driving around here all the time, though. | ||
| We got the Waymos and the Teslas driving around with no drivers. | ||
| It's pretty spooky. | ||
| I don't really see them where I'm at. | ||
| However, I have seen a couple of semi-trucks with just these large plastic boxes lining up on the front and the top, but I haven't seen them for a while. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, they might be. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Where are you at in Kansas? | |
| I, Well, it's kind of giving a little bit away, but I'm just outside of the Kansas City area on the Kansas side. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Well, okay, going back to your original premise, you know, somebody who's talking about trucking, it's probably because of these wrecks that have been happening with the foreigners driving, the guy making the U-turn, and now it seems like... | ||
| I'm pretty sure these accidents have been happening all along for the last few years. | ||
| And now we're just hearing about them because people are like, oh, this is a story now. | ||
| People didn't realize it was a story until we saw a guy make a U-turn, another guy crash in his car into it and killed three people. | ||
| So I think people are seeing that now. | ||
| And it's sort of a there's some people out there that'll attack all Muslims. | ||
| You know, go, oh, we can't have any type, we can't have Muslims here. | ||
| You know, the Nation of Islam people, I think, are actually pretty self-sufficient, hardworking people. | ||
| You know, I see kind of them as sort of a society sort of like Amish. | ||
| They want to be by, they want their own society with their own, and I think that's fine. | ||
| I think if people want to act in their own self-interest, I think that's fine as long as you're not being predatory on anybody else, you know, kind of what the Amish are doing. | ||
| But, you know, I don't know why people would be going after truckers at this point. | ||
| But I would say, you know, if you don't like what they're saying, either speak out to them or move on. | ||
| You know, I guess that would be my advice. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| You got a lot of podcast time out there driving around, I'm sure. | ||
| You get a lot of time to listen to stuff. | ||
| I do. | ||
| I do. | ||
| Did your company make you get the shot or what was their vaccine policy? | ||
| So I was, I heard that the company that I worked for when all the COVID stuff was going around, the company called a meeting for all the terminal managers around the nation. | ||
| And they and the company had asked all the managers, should we employ a vaccine and mask mandate? | ||
| And the answer was an overwhelming no. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Because you're in your truck all the time. | ||
| You're not around people. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| It's ridiculous. | ||
| And also, a lot of people in this business are patriots just like us. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| No, I'm a big supporter of truckers. | ||
| When I'm driving around, if I see a truck wanting to get over, I back up. | ||
| I let them in because, you know, they got a hard enough job as it is. | ||
| I don't need to be making their job any more difficult. | ||
| So I am a friend and supporter of the trucking industry. | ||
| I think it's the backbone of our country. | ||
| And what's the main, I'll ask you this. | ||
| This is in the documentary. | ||
| What's the main thing people wouldn't get if we didn't have trucks? | ||
| What do they talk about the most? | ||
| I'm sorry. | ||
| Can you repeat that? | ||
| So truckers, when they're always talking about these are the things we bring to everybody, what's the main thing they always mention, the one thing? | ||
| I would say, I'm not entirely sure, to be honest, probably food. | ||
| Food's one. | ||
| And yeah. | ||
| What do you need after you eat food? | ||
| Toilet paper. | ||
| Toilet paper is what they always talk about. | ||
| We're bringing toilet paper to people. | ||
| That was the one thing when we interviewed these truckers, every one of them said toilet paper. | ||
| Nobody would have their toilet paper if there were no trucks. | ||
| And that's what I always think of when I see them driving down the road. | ||
| I was a big Smoky in the Bandit fan, too. | ||
| Thanks for calling, Chris. | ||
| Hope that advice helped. | ||
| We're going to finish up your calls here, and I'm going to get to this resignation letter in a second, but I just want to let everybody know it's your last chance to get 50 times for every dollar you spend, you get 50 times entries to win the Jeep Gladiator Rubicon or the Corvette Stingrader entering into both. | ||
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| So if you buy now, every dollar you spend, I think I figured out the math for $50 worth, you get 2,500 entries. | ||
| So just imagine how much that increases your chances. | ||
| So you got the Jeep Rubicon ends this week, and then the next giveaway is the Corvette Stingray. | ||
| Plus, you get $20,000 in cash. | ||
| That's all at the AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
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| So, check that out as well. | ||
| Free CMOS gummies with every uh with every buy there, and also 50% off when you buy when you subscribe to colostrum. | ||
| If you subscribe to it, you get 50% off. | ||
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| It's how you support everything here. | ||
| We got about another 10 minutes left, guys. | ||
| Do you have the modifications ready for me to read this resignation letter? | ||
| Well, let's do one more caller. | ||
| Let's pull up the color screen. | ||
| Let's go to Tim in Seattle. | ||
| Wants to talk about the nanotech in blood. | ||
| Go ahead, Tim. | ||
| How's it going, Rob? | ||
| Greetings, Tim the Sorcerer. | ||
| Hi. | ||
| No, I'm just the bullhorn operator. | ||
| I'm not a sorcerer. | ||
| No, okay. | ||
| Bullhorn operator. | ||
| Yes, that's me. | ||
| Have you heard? | ||
| Did you see Dr. Group's latest video? | ||
| I just thought it's like a minute and 38. | ||
| It's talking about the ingredients of blood. | ||
| Look, I have it right here. | ||
| I was going to go to that. | ||
| That's why I went to you so I could actually play that video. | ||
| But go ahead. | ||
| Please do. | ||
| No, I just want the world to know what they did to us and what, you know, and actually take it personal. | ||
| Yeah, the cesium 137 kind of goes in what Natty Boy was saying, how it's all radiation that they're getting us, you know. | ||
| Hell, and the world, I mean, ever since Fukushima hit, I've been telling everybody, I've been calling into you guys. | ||
| I know it's a huge topic to digest and everything, but this stuff, Fukushima was deliberate. | ||
| None of their nanoparticles, nanotech, mRNA stuff would be working if they didn't do Fukushima. | ||
| So using an earthquake machine or something, then creating that tidal wave to the research I heard was that an Israeli security company showed up to that plant a few days prior and installed a security system that had an 1100-pound camera. | ||
| Ah, well, there was an explosion there during the tsunami, right after the tsunami. | ||
| There was a big explosion that everybody saw. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| Remember that? | ||
| Remember that big explosion? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| The plume went up to 3,000 feet. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| But they did it on purpose, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
| I know it's hard to admit, and you don't want to because it makes the world more complicated, but they've been doing this stuff to us on purpose. | ||
| I agree. | ||
| Let's go to that clip right now and we'll come back. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| Because we are under attack with so many different things right now. | ||
| Our transhumanism research team, by the way, we're just now getting the electron microscope up and running. | ||
| And we are finally confirming the nanotech inside people's blood and tissues. | ||
| And we're seeing, you know, we have an electron microscope, which there's only like 30 of these in the world. | ||
| And we're the only independent research team that has one. | ||
| All the other ones are in universities. | ||
| And this specific electron microscope that we have also has what's called an S, it's an SEM scanning electron microscope, but it also has the ability to scan and identify and tell you what the compounds that you're looking under the microscope are made of. | ||
| And we were shocked over the last couple of days. | ||
| This is the first time I'm giving this information out. | ||
| We were shocked the last couple of days to see that one of the biggest components of the nanotechnology that we've been looking at that's coming up under the electron microscope and it's scanning it is strontium. | ||
| Now, what have they been spraying in the air in the chemtrails for years that we've known about? | ||
| Strontium, bariums. | ||
| And we're also seeing cesium and cesium-137, which coincides with the Department of Energy's documentation that I received a couple weeks ago from Todd Callender Clarifying that the Department of Energy is the main culprit of creating over 470,000 bioweapons. | ||
| They need everything from Lyme disease to herpes to shit, you know, every single kind of disease we've suffered from and selling it on the black market. | ||
| Well, and he gets kind of cut off there, but that is the clip. | ||
| And that's Dr. Group, who we used to get on here a lot. | ||
| He used to come on a lot. | ||
| And then, you know, they threatened Dr. Group. | ||
| And, you know, this job ain't for everybody, that's for sure. | ||
| But he's still speaking out, and I'm glad. | ||
| He's a great guy. | ||
| Love Dr. Group. | ||
| Love all the work he's done. | ||
| And, you know, he's just a guy that's just trying to keep people healthy and keep them in the truth. | ||
| We've got about five minutes left. | ||
| I do want to go over this because one of the victories we had with all these CDC resignations is this disgusting looking Dr. Dimitri. | ||
| He was the position as director of, he was at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. | ||
| And let's just show some of the images of this guy. | ||
| This is who resigned from the CDC, and I'll read a little bit of his note. | ||
| And then maybe we'll play that short clip of all them talking. | ||
| He's one of the guys talking about him. | ||
| Not that picture. | ||
| No, show me the good picture. | ||
| There we go. | ||
| Yeah, this is what this guy does in his spare time. | ||
| He's worried. | ||
| He's the one leading your health policy. | ||
| So while I hold immense respect for your institution and my colleagues, I believe it is imperative to align my professional responsibilities, my system of ethics, and my understanding of the science of effectiveness disease and immunology. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And my promise to serve the American people. | |
| This step is necessary to assure that I can continue effectively in my capacity. | ||
| That allows me to remain true to my principles. | ||
| What do you think these principles are? | ||
| What do you think the principles are of a person that dresses like that and hangs out with people like that and is in charge of your medical policies? | ||
| And what is he not like? | ||
| Oh, the lack of communication between HHS and the CDC political leadership. | ||
| So he doesn't like the fact that they started making decisions to help the American people and not to mandate things. | ||
| But what is he really mad about? | ||
| Oh, he doesn't like the changing COVID recommendations for children and pregnant people and firing scientists who post with an ex post instead of direct communication. | ||
| So this guy literally wanted to inject people to cause them harm. | ||
| That's my opinion. | ||
| That's what he wanted to do. | ||
| And this is how you know this guy's a collectivist. | ||
| Public health is not merely about the health of the individual, but it is about the health of the community, the nation, and the world. | ||
| See, if not everybody's vaccinated, then nobody's vaccinated. | ||
| If not one person's safe, then nobody's safe. | ||
| That's the type of people, that's the mindset, the demonic mindset we're dealing with. | ||
| Let's go back to calls. | ||
| Let's go to Jared in Washington. | ||
| Go ahead, Jared. | ||
| Good to speak with you. | ||
| One of the focuses that I we don't have much time, so BlackRock. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Basically, he, the new guy, flips over the magazine, the big one, and it says, sponsored by BlackRock. | ||
| The Crooks guy was on a BlackRock video. | ||
| I think we got to follow the money. | ||
| We need to follow the trends that basically it's multiple people and their involvement in BlackRock. | ||
| Crooks is definitely a red flag. | ||
| I mean, he's in the commercial. | ||
| This other guy writing BlackRock, it seems like he was just writing everything under the sun, too. | ||
| I mean, this seems like a kid who's online looking at things. | ||
| He knows people don't like BlackRock. | ||
| I'm going to write BlackRock on my gun. | ||
| I don't think this guy probably has a BlackRock connection. | ||
| It seems like he was definitely drugged up for the last five years. | ||
| And at some point, you know, he decided he's going to go out with a bang and get some notoriety. | ||
| I mean, obviously, totally deranged. | ||
| And that's why his mother's lawyering up and doesn't want to talk to anybody. | ||
| But BlackRock, nonetheless, is a big problem because one of the things they like to do is go in and buy up single-family housing and jack up the prices on people. | ||
| People want to be pissed off about the price of housing. | ||
| Go look at BlackRock. | ||
| Go look at what they're doing. | ||
| They're predators. | ||
| They're involved in everything. | ||
| And I got to plug real quick. | ||
| The methylene blue. | ||
| Oh, my God, dude. | ||
| Most energy I've ever had. | ||
| Like, I'm doing projects around the house. | ||
| Like, I'm all over doing everything, the kind of OCD in it. | ||
| And I got to say the methylene blue. | ||
| And I got my mom the life force because she got the vaccine. | ||
| So hopefully that does some good for her. | ||
| You got to do some spike detox, man. | ||
| Definitely. | ||
| Well, that's great. | ||
| It's good to hear. | ||
| I hate to run. | ||
| I want to get one more caller in. | ||
| We got a minute left. | ||
| Let's go to Daniel in Kansas. | ||
| Go ahead, Daniel. | ||
| Daniel, are you there? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| Go ahead. | ||
| You got one minute. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh, I just actually watched it on TV and it's not even showing. | |
| Anyway, it's different. | ||
| But anyway, I just wanted to say I appreciate what you guys. | ||
| That's called a delay. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Yeah, I just want to thank you guys for what you do and bringing the truth to the public. | ||
| There's a lot of us that, you know, woke up later on in life. | ||
| I've been listening to you guys for about, I don't know, five or six years. | ||
| And anyway, it's just nice to hear people talk the truth instead of, you know, propaganda and lies and everything we hear every day. | ||
| So. | ||
| Well, you know, Daniel, it doesn't matter when you woke up. | ||
| What matters is what are you going to do now that you've woken up? | ||
| You can't put that genie back in the bottle. | ||
| You have to do something. | ||
| You have to wake other people up. | ||
| And that's where you can't stop. | ||
| You can't stop waking. | ||
| So now that you're awake, wake up somebody else. | ||
| Thanks for watching the war room. | ||
| Appreciate everybody's calls. | ||
| Appreciate all the work of the crew and everything. | ||
| It's the end of the week. | ||
| So enjoy your weekend. | ||
| It's going to be a long weekend. | ||
| Have fun and we'll see you next week. | ||
| And, you know, do something. | ||
| Don't procrastinate. | ||
| I've been hearing about this for years and now it's all the rage. | ||
| And about a year ago, they did a survey of the customers at thealxinsword.com and said, what is it you want the most? | ||
| What product would you like to have? | ||
| Why do you got that email? | ||
| And the number one thing was bovine colostrum. | ||
| This is the highest rated, private labeled 2,000 milligram per serving. | ||
| And if you don't know what colostrum is, let me tell you, a cow's a mammal. | ||
| We're a mammal. | ||
| A dog's a mammal. | ||
| A blue whale's a mammal. | ||
| I know most of you know that. | ||
| And mammals drink milk from their mother's breasts. | ||
| The first milk of the first few weeks is called colostrum, and it's more clear and it's full of all of the immunity and all the supernutrients. | ||
| And it's basically God's vaccine. | ||
| We've got the best bovine colostrum that we're introducing right now that you're going to find anywhere. | ||
| Cellular recovery and defense matrix. | ||
| It's also incredible for gut health and flora. | ||
| Immune support, natural compounds strengthen your body's defenses against toxins and stress. | ||
| Muscle recovery aid promotes faster tissue repair and reduces soreness post-workout or strain. | ||
| Stress and energy balance delivers calm, focused energy with natural adaptogens, no caffeine crashes. | ||
| Toxin defense supports detox pathways to flush out environmental pollutants and free radicals. | ||
| Enhance nutrient absorption. | ||
| Improves nutrient uptake for better overall health without fillers. | ||
| It's a hassle. | ||
| I mean, because you only get this for a few weeks after the cow has a baby. | ||
| It's the next best thing to mommy's milk. | ||
| So it's all the rage for years. | ||
| Everybody's going totally insane about it. | ||
| I'm going to be taking it. | ||
| This is next level. | ||
| And I'll be completely honest with you. | ||
| Everybody's been telling me to take colostrum for years. | ||
| I just, it's hard for me to start taking a supplement once I do and it works. | ||
| I stay on it. | ||
| I'm going to be taking this. | ||
| All I hear about is how great it is. | ||
| I am proud to announce Ultimate Life Force. | ||
| Now, ladies and gentlemen, in the last four plus years, there's been a lot of great formulas out there put out by a lot of doctors and health experts that have known healthy natural compounds in them that help clean out your blood and help get rid of the spike protein. | ||
| Because even if you haven't ever taken one of the experimental COVID shots that orders your body from Pfizer and Moderna with the mRNA to mass produce the HIV spike protein, that's literally what it does. | ||
| It's crazy to say that still years later, I can't believe it. | ||
| It's so crazy. | ||
| That's just publicly what they did. | ||
| That they welded onto the virus that they artificially created in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and then shipped out to Wuhan so they could release it and claim the Chinese did it. | ||
| Peter Dasik, Dossi, and the rest of them, it's all come out. | ||
| That whether you got the wild virus or whether you took the poison shot, most people, when they've studied them, still have their body producing the spike protein, whether you caught the virus or whether you took a shot that was obviously much, much, much, much worse. | ||
| And some people, when they do the regimen of the anti-spike protein compounds that are out there, it goes away and they get tested later and never comes back. | ||
| Some people, it does come back over time. | ||
| And I can't tell you how many friends and family and people I know that have what they call long COVID, either from natural COVID, of course, it wasn't natural, but I mean, catching the man-made virus out in the wild or getting the accelerated version of it and your body actually replicating the spike protein from the poison shots, from the mRNA gene therapy injections. | ||
| So do your own research. | ||
| I'm not a scientist. | ||
| I'm not a doctor. | ||
| I just have talked to a lot of them and interviewed them and read countless studies on there. | ||
| We've covered it. | ||
| And you notice we didn't come out with a spike detox in the last four plus years because there were a lot of other good brands out there. | ||
| But talking to researchers in the last year and things, they were saying, well, this formula is good over here, but it doesn't have this. | ||
| So you should take this formula over there. | ||
| And so when I was buying about a year ago, all the time, I was just doing a few months ago for my lawyer as well, the different formulas online to go give it to them. | ||
| I said, wait a minute, why don't we just combine all the known best formulas? | ||
| And I checked with the scientists, the nutritionists, they say it's fine to combine all these and then put it out in one pill so you get all the benefits from all the different angles. | ||
| And that's exactly what we've done with Ultimate Life Force. | ||
| So everybody should be on it. | ||
| And it's not just for cleaning out the blood. | ||
| All the things that are in this are known to just do incredible things for your overall health, the antioxidants, all the things it does are just so synergistically good together. | ||
| And let me just tell you about the 400 milligrams per capsule, that's a big dose of NAC. | ||
| Now, it's the precursor of glutathione, your body's main and most powerful antioxidant. | ||
| But if you take just raw glutathione, for whatever reason, it doesn't absorb very well. | ||
| But if you get it as NAC, that's the precursor, it breaks down and it's much more absorbable, according to the research. | ||
| It's involved in nearly every core process of cellular cleanup in your body. | ||
| This is the key compound to take if you care about your health. | ||
| They even tried to ban NAC during COVID because it was so effective. | ||
| Selenium is also key for liver and lung health. | ||
| And all experts have been saying this for decades, not to mention all the key compounds contained in this blend design to make your body's cleanup engines even more powerful. | ||
| It's all supercharged. | ||
| It's all there. | ||
| Get yours today. | ||
| And that's just a few of the ingredients. | ||
| Everything known to clean out your cardiovascular system, to boost your vascular health, for the brain, for the lungs, for the heart, for your arteries, your capillaries. | ||
| This is it. |