| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| All right, ladies and gentlemen, Owen Schroyer Live, episode 45. | ||
| And we've got an interesting story here today where the Washington Post has made a big mistake. | ||
| They've made a big mistake intentionally or not. | ||
| I guess we'll wait and see. | ||
| But we'll be talking about that tonight and taking your calls on that. | ||
| I need to address a couple things as well before I do that. | ||
| We're coming to you through the Wolfpack.gold microphone. | ||
| Folks, I'm telling you, now is a better time than ever to get your savings out of the bank and into something tangible like precious metals, gold, silver. | ||
| And there's no better way to do it. | ||
| There is no better way to do it than becoming a member of the pack at wolfpack.gold. | ||
| Monthly subscriptions start as low as $35 a month, or you can become a Sage Wolf at $1,000 a month and really get some extra bang for your buck. | ||
| But we all win when we're a member of the pack. | ||
| What are you waiting for? | ||
| Become a member of the pack now at wolfpack.gold. | ||
| Trust me, you won't regret it. | ||
| It's the only subscription that pays you back. | ||
| And don't forget, AIM316 says Merry Christmas back in the house, extremely generous. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| And this is part of my problem here that I'm going to talk about because I just feel like I can never thank the audience enough. | ||
| And I guess the way that I try to pay it forward or just show my gratitude to all the support I get is just never stopping, just never stopping, never taking a playoff. | ||
| Like I just got off the air with Christy Lee, and I mean, I barely have time to even eat these days. | ||
| And I was sitting there thinking tonight, I was like, I got to do this interview with Christy Lee. | ||
| I was on One America Newsnet earlier. | ||
| I had legal console meetings earlier today because of this story I'm about to tell you with the Washington Post. | ||
| And I was like, man, it's like, I really just need to take this night off. | ||
| I got 100 other things to do around my house. | ||
| But I said, no, I can't do that. | ||
| I can't not show up for the audience that always shows up for me. | ||
| So it's just if I don't say thank you enough, because you're probably sick of hearing it, and I can't say thank you enough. | ||
| I don't really know how to express my gratitude to the audience. | ||
| I mean, from all the letters to the mail I continue to get to the support I get here and at InfoWars and everywhere else, I just, I don't, I don't even, I don't even have the words. | ||
| It's just I'm pouring my heart out into everything I do. | ||
| And it's, it's, it's my way of paying it forward and saying thank you, really, in a way. | ||
| But I don't want to get too mushy on you here. | ||
| It's just, I love you guys. | ||
| I really do. | ||
| And it's just, I just thank you a million times. | ||
| Thank you to everybody that has prayed for me and for everybody that sent me mail and I mean people that make financial contributions and everything else. | ||
| It's just, I can't say thank you enough. | ||
| So if you're sick of it, I'll try to stop, but I just can't. | ||
| Now, remember, though, at owenschroyer.store, this is your last chance to get all of this merchandise. | ||
| This is your last chance because we are going to be doing limited releases. | ||
| If you weren't here last week, I explained this, but I will explain it again for you right now. | ||
| All of this merchandise is going to be gone as soon as the new year starts. | ||
| All of this merchandise is going to be gone as soon as the new year starts. | ||
| And what we're going to be doing basically is limited release merchandise. | ||
| Every month, there's going to be kind of a new theme and new products there every month, but you have a month to purchase it and then it's gone for good. | ||
| So if you're looking to get any of these shirts or hoodies at owenschroyer.store, you've got just a couple weeks left. | ||
| And once January hits, it's going to be a completely new line of products. | ||
| So take advantage of that while supplies last. | ||
| All right. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Merry Christmas, Cable Slicer in Texas. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| Speaking of Texas, let me give one more shout out here. | ||
| And I got a couple of shout-outs that I need to give, actually. | ||
| I got a couple of shout-outs that I need to give. | ||
| And you might need to be patient with me for one of these because I'm going to need to look something up. | ||
| I want to give a big shout-out to Fafo Farms in Texas. | ||
| Come and taste it. | ||
| I want to give a big shout-out to my friends over there. | ||
| These people are incredible. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| These people are absolutely incredible. | ||
| FaffoFarms TX.com. | ||
| This is not a paid for promotion, by the way. | ||
| But when I got out of prison, they sent me a cooler. | ||
| In fact, they might have, it might be this is what they sent me. | ||
| Let me see. | ||
| Yeah, raw milk, cheese, chicken, soaps, and the butter. | ||
| Oh, my gosh. | ||
| The butter. | ||
| If you're in Texas and I don't know exactly, I forget exactly where they're located. | ||
| I'm sure it's somewhere on here. | ||
| But, oh, look, they got the Inforce. | ||
| Let's go Brandon shirt on. | ||
| I'm telling you, I love these guys. | ||
| I know they deliver to Austin and San Antonio. | ||
| They're in Permela, Texas. | ||
| There's all their email and information. | ||
| This is a free plug because they sent me a cooler as soon as I got out of prison. | ||
| It had a whole chicken. | ||
| It had a bunch of eggs and it had raw milk, raw butter, raw cheese, soaps. | ||
| Oh, my gosh. | ||
| This butter. | ||
| I don't want to ever try. | ||
| I'm telling you, I don't want to ever. | ||
| I don't think I can ever consume any other butter besides their butter now. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| I mean, you want to talk about sweet and fresh tasting? | ||
| It puts all other butters to shame. | ||
| Like, holy smokes. | ||
| And if there was one thing I was behind on the health kick, it was the raw milk. | ||
| I was still drinking like almond milk, coconut milk, some other stuff. | ||
| I am now fully on the raw milk craze. | ||
| And so I wanted to give a shout out to them. | ||
| Big ups to them. | ||
| And you know what? | ||
| I owe another group a shout out, but I'll save that. | ||
| I'll save that for next week. | ||
| But I had to give them a shout out because they sent me a nice little goodie bag when I got out of prison. | ||
| And the raw milk was amazing. | ||
| But the butter, I mean, my goodness. | ||
| Oh my gosh. | ||
| That butter, that butter is something else. | ||
| Butter me up with that. | ||
| I'll put that butter on everything. | ||
| I will put that butter on everything. | ||
| It tastes so good. | ||
| It's unbelievable. | ||
| Some of you I see are already about to take advantage. | ||
| I am telling you, you will not regret this. | ||
| I couldn't even believe it when they sent me this cooler. | ||
| It was like too good to be true. | ||
| But needless to say, I have taken full advantage of that. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Here is the story of the night Darren McBreen brought it to my attention a couple days ago. | ||
| Or I guess it was yesterday morning he posted this on his Twitter account. | ||
| The Washington Post went out of their way to misrepresent InfoWars toast Owen Schroyer on January 6th. | ||
| The picture they posted is not Owen Schroyer, and they know it. | ||
| This is a deliberate attempt to make Owen appear violent and promote the Deep States lie that J6 was a planned insurrection. | ||
| Washington Post is trash. | ||
| And so obviously you can see that picture there is not me. | ||
| And at the Washington Post, you should either be completely embarrassed that you got it so wrong or perhaps more embarrassed that you're such a shame to your industry that you would purposely put an image up there like that to make me look bad. | ||
| Now, obviously, I didn't engage in any violence that day. | ||
| Not only is that not me, I didn't engage in any violence that day, didn't go into the Capitol, didn't touch a police officer, and certainly never looked crazed like that with any of the interactions that happened that day that involved me. | ||
| So I have had legal counsel about this because, you know, I'm not busy enough. | ||
| And that's the problem is that the left, throughout world history, but specifically the American left wants to keep you so bogged down with all their propaganda, all their lies, all their law affair against you, all their censorship and everything else that they do to try to destroy you that you just give up. | ||
| Well, I'm not going to give up. | ||
| So we have moved forward. | ||
| We have sent a letter demanding the Washington Post issue a retraction apology and removal of this and a correction. | ||
| And they have a certain amount of time to do so. | ||
| And if not, we will move forward with further litigation. | ||
| And so that's where we're at right now. | ||
| This is the last thing I want to do over the Christmas holiday, but it has to be done. | ||
| These bastards, these absolute pieces of trash that are the American left want to destroy us. | ||
| And they assume we're too busy. | ||
| And they assume because we don't want to be litigious and we don't want to be corrupt and sad, pathetic, miserable human pukes like they are that they can just win through either atrophy or futility. | ||
| And so I will not, I will not let these people defeat me through futility or atrophy. | ||
| And so there you go. | ||
| Clearly not me. | ||
| Clearly a misrepresentation of me. | ||
| We will see what the Washington Post does or doesn't do in response to the letter that we sent them. | ||
| And then we may have to engage further in litigation if they do not correct this story and image that is clearly a misrepresentation of me, which how could they not have done this intentionally? | ||
| Or how could they be so incompetent to do this, even if it is accidentally? | ||
| But knowing how the Washington Post and American liberals operate, I think we would probably assume that this was done intentionally with the intent to deceive. | ||
| So we will see what happens next. | ||
| We will see. | ||
| But as of this morning, when we sent the letter to the Washington Post, I have not been informed that they have offered any response to that or tried to correct the story. | ||
| So that's where we're at on that. | ||
| And I will keep you posted. | ||
| Stay tuned to the InfoWars War Room this week for further updates. | ||
| Is this going to be, let me take a look at the calendar here. | ||
| This is probably going to be the last Owen Schroeder Live of the year. | ||
| At least in our regularly scheduled Monday evening times, because next Monday is Christmas, and then the next Monday is New Year's Day. | ||
| So we might be dormant here for a couple of weeks. | ||
| Now, if you remember when I launched this channel, the goal was to have 10,000 followers. | ||
| We're going to fall short of that, but that's okay because I was in jail for two months and wasn't able to broadcast at all. | ||
| So, okay, considering that, I think we're doing fine. | ||
| But more importantly, we got a good audience here, and you guys tune in every Monday. | ||
| And I'd like to be able to do a better transmission. | ||
| But the problem is, I basically just have to sit down and fire it up, and I don't even really have time to do any prep work anymore because I'm doing four or five interviews a day. | ||
| I'm involved in all this litigation and defense and everything else, not to mention trying to have some sort of a personal life. | ||
| As far as the X account is concerned, nothing on that. | ||
| Nothing still from Twitter on that. | ||
| So basically, I've got a couple options on that. | ||
| I can continue to try to get that account back, which would be my first option. | ||
| I'm going to try to get at Owenschroyer Live back to do this live stream on Twitter. | ||
| If that becomes too much of a pain to do, then I will start streaming this on one of my other accounts, either at Owenschroyer1776 or at AllIDOISOwen, which I'm trying to get to premium right now, but they won't let me because I was dormant for the time that I was inactive. | ||
| So they're saying because I was dormant for all this time, they have to wait for me to be active for 30 days before they can get me premium. | ||
| So I have to wait for that process to hit. | ||
| We're also waiting for the War Room account to be accepted as premium. | ||
| And once that happens, the InfoWars War Room will be back live on Twitter. | ||
| So that's what's going on. | ||
| To those telling me I need to take time off and relax in the comments, look, you're preaching to the choir. | ||
| The truth is I can't. | ||
| And it's not even that, I mean, even if I wanted to, I can't. | ||
| I just, it's. | ||
| There's always something I have to do. | ||
| There's always something that needs to be done. | ||
| And so I just don't know. | ||
| I'll probably maybe get a little time off this Christmas. | ||
| But I've got a hundred things I need to do in my personal life that I just keep putting off. | ||
| Yeah, I guess I did just take some time off. | ||
| I'm not able to travel. | ||
| I can't travel because of my legal restrictions. | ||
| I'm not allowed to travel, so can't go home for Christmas. | ||
| So I'll be right here. | ||
| I'm going to have to fly my family down here. | ||
| I did just fly some friends out here so I could see them for the weekend. | ||
| But yeah, they did finally, they did finally remove the individual that was defaming me and stealing my digital identity on Twitter. | ||
| But that litigation is still ongoing because we demanded the individual's identity so that we could sue him individually. | ||
| And he's probably tuned in right now. | ||
| And I don't want to say too much, obviously, for legal reasons, but I think I know who it is. | ||
| This person is not smart and probably clearly deranged. | ||
| But nonetheless, we're taking all the necessary steps to be perfectly accurate in our legal action here. | ||
| So we'll just leave it at that for now. | ||
| But, you know, we're going to take calls the rest of the way. | ||
| I can only be on here for an hour tonight, so we'll take about 40 or so minutes worth of calls. | ||
| Revenge of the Sis, I am going to be co-labbing with them on Thursday, I believe it is, or is it Friday? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I don't have my calendar in front of me, but I am going on the air with Revenge of the Sis either Thursday or Friday. | ||
| But it's one of those two days, and they should be promoting it on their socials. | ||
| They told me they were going to be promoting that on their socials. | ||
| Let me see. | ||
| may have already taken that. | ||
| Let's see if they've promoted that yet. | ||
| Yeah, here you go. | ||
| It's going to be Thursday. | ||
| Oh, isn't that nice? | ||
| This Thursday, we will have one of our favorite people and friends on the show. | ||
| Don't miss it or else. | ||
| There you go. | ||
| So that's going to be Thursday at 4 p.m. Central Time. | ||
| I'm going to be on with Revenge of the Sis right here on Rumble. | ||
| X suspended Buck Fiden. | ||
| They suspended you for what? | ||
| What did you do? | ||
|
unidentified
|
You don't know. | |
| They didn't send you a reason or nothing in an email. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
| Well, you were putting up some fire content before they took you down. | ||
| Well, they, they, they should have sent you an email telling you. | ||
| That's odd. | ||
| Were you like spamming the same video over and over again? | ||
| Because I know they'll hit you for that. | ||
| If you just keep going on different posts and putting the same video up over and over and over again, they will sometimes hit you for that. | ||
| Usually they'll let you back after 30 days, if that's the reason. | ||
| But there should be a reason in your email. | ||
| Ask Grok. | ||
| I guess that's the I guess that's the Twitter AI. | ||
| Grok. | ||
| Twitter AI. | ||
| What a weird thing. | ||
| What an odd thing it is. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Let's go ahead and open up the phone lines. | ||
| 747-255-60. | ||
| And these phone lines are wild, folks. | ||
| So you can pretty much call in with whatever the hell you want. | ||
| In fact, sometimes the crazier it is, the better. | ||
| I like it because we like to get a little crazy here at times. | ||
| But yeah, we're doing good, guys. | ||
| I just pretty much wake up every day and then work and then go to bed. | ||
| So that's exactly how it ought to be. | ||
| All right, first caller of the night. | ||
| This is how it goes. | ||
| I pick up. | ||
| I ask you your name, where you're from, and you're live on the air. | ||
| So first caller, what's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, Terry from Australia, mate. | |
| Terry from Australia. | ||
| How are we doing? | ||
| What time is it over there? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, good thanks, mate. | |
| You know, sending love, mate. | ||
| I'm glad to see they've released you from the Tin Can mate inside. | ||
| I'm just curious. | ||
| Are you one of the individuals? | ||
| I got like three or four letters from Australia. | ||
| Was one of them from you? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh, look, I tried to send some stuff, but I don't know, man. | |
| I tried sending something, but I'm not sure. | ||
| It might have come in. | ||
| It might not have come in. | ||
| Well, they would have sent it back if they didn't take it. | ||
| But if you sent mail and you didn't get it back, then I would have got that. | ||
| I got three or four letters from Australia. | ||
| I think, I don't remember it. | ||
| I wrote it down, but I got letters from like eight different countries while I was in there. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, I would, one of them should have come from me. | |
| So, yeah. | ||
| That's awesome. | ||
| When I saw that, man, that was so cool. | ||
| From Australia, that was awesome. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mate, you've been bent over completely by their system. | |
| And that's what the system does. | ||
| They shit on anyone who attempts to break the shackles of what they are. | ||
| They've done it to me here. | ||
| It's just saddening, but it's good to see that you're out. | ||
| You're stronger than ever. | ||
| And I know people tell you, I'll take a break for mental health now. | ||
| You've come out stronger. | ||
| You come out more fiery. | ||
| Now they're fucked. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's all I'm saying. | |
| They're fucked. | ||
| Well, look, it goes one of two ways from here. | ||
| Either the American people look at my case and they get more motivated to stand up to this tyranny, or the opposite happens and people look at my case and they get more afraid to stand up to this tyranny. | ||
| And so that's what their goal. | ||
| That's what their goal is. | ||
| They want people afraid and they want me to be the example, specifically journalists. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, well, journalists these days are a bunch of softcocks, mate. | |
| You would have seen. | ||
| The majority of them don't have balls, man. | ||
| Their balls are owned by the people they work for. | ||
| It's time for people to start standing up and saying, get fucked. | ||
| Stand up for your rights. | ||
| Stand up for what you believe in. | ||
| But too many people are scared to stand up for what they believe in. | ||
| We saw that during COVID, man. | ||
| Too many people. | ||
| I'm scared I'm going to lose my job. | ||
| I'm scared people are going to react to me. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Then you've got cojones for a reason. | |
| You're a man. | ||
| You're a woman. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Fucking stand up for what you believe in, for what's right. | |
| But no, people don't want to do that. | ||
| They're too afraid. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's the same thing. | |
| It's the same thing now with the Israel-Palestine or the Russian Ukraine. | ||
| Oh, you know, we can't talk about, you know, peace and stuff. | ||
| No, we have to take a specific side. | ||
| No, how about stamp for neutrality? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Nothing. | |
| I don't want my country, Australia, getting involved in any war. | ||
| I don't want to see this shit. | ||
| Fuck A. Fuck this. | ||
| How about you stand and be neutral like Switzerland does? | ||
| I don't take a position. | ||
| I don't want war. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Because you know what? | |
| I want my grandkids to be here around on a nice and decent planet. | ||
| But no, we can't have that anymore. | ||
| And I'm sick and tired of it, Olin. | ||
| And keep standing for the truth. | ||
| Keep standing for liberty and freedom because that's what we need. | ||
| And too many people, they don't want to do it. | ||
| It's sad to see, but they don't want to do it. | ||
| Well, I hope, I mean, I'm seeing a trend now where let's just say non-pussies, non-wimps, non-cucks, non-frauds are wanting to run for office. | ||
| And, you know, I'm hoping there's a new brand of conservative politician that starts to emerge. | ||
| I mean, we're already starting to see it. | ||
| It's making a bit of a ripple, but it's nowhere near where it needs to be. | ||
| But I'm hoping there's a new brand of conservative politician. | ||
|
unidentified
|
When you look at the Republicans, man, look at the Republicans right now. | |
| You have your one type of Republican, you know, you have your traditional, you know, traditional ones like Nikki Haley. | ||
| She's an absolute disgrace, corrupt mold that she is. | ||
| And you know exactly, you know exactly those types. | ||
| And then you've got your Trumps, you've got your Vivex, who are your more populist Republicans. | ||
| And that's what we need. | ||
| We need more populist libertarians that want to run on freedom, liberty, and for non-big government. | ||
| We need less government. | ||
| That's what we saw in Argentina, although the jury's out on the guy in Argentina. | ||
| He's got good and bad things. | ||
| We're seeing that with the Netherlands, although, again, the jury's out with him. | ||
| He's been a career politician. | ||
| So this is what we need more of. | ||
| We don't need more of the same. | ||
| We need difference. | ||
| Well, we just need if they push Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis, I'm shit scared for you guys. | ||
| They're not going to get away with it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I'm shit scared for you guys. | |
| They're not going to get away with it. | ||
| Haley and DeSantis. | ||
| I mean, look, DeSantis has had a bit of a redemption arc. | ||
| I think he noticed that once he started working for the neocons, his popularity declined rapidly. | ||
| So I think he's trying to redeem himself. | ||
| And he knows attacking Nikki Haley is one way to do it. | ||
| So I now have faith that there's a redemption arc for Ron DeSantis. | ||
| Haley's just total garbage. | ||
| I mean, she's just total trash. | ||
| Everybody knows that. | ||
| So there's no chance for her. | ||
| They can try to run her out there. | ||
| They can try to kamikaze Trump with Chris Christie. | ||
| The good news is, even if their plan somehow works, we've got Vivek Ramaswamy, who I believe will end up finishing number two behind Donald Trump. | ||
| He will have to leapfrog DeSantis, but he's been running a great campaign. | ||
| Hey, thank you for the call. | ||
| Thank you for the mail. | ||
| Can't tell you how much it meant to me. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| And let's take our second caller of the night. | ||
| What's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
| Hey, Schroyer, how's it going, man? | ||
| It's Buck Fiden. | ||
| So they hit you with the account ban, and you haven't gotten an email about it. | ||
| Yeah, no, they hit me like two days after you were out. | ||
| They hit me with the spam, and I keep asking them what the deal is, and they're not responding back. | ||
| So they did hit you with the spam. | ||
| I know what's going on. | ||
| What happens is when you reply to a bunch of different posts with the same post virtually, they hit you with spam. | ||
| It's a way for them to try to root out AI or people that just spam with like marketing and sales and advertising. | ||
| So there's a legitimate reason why they do that. | ||
| Your case is probably not what they're trying to do specifically. | ||
| But nonetheless, that's what they do. | ||
| Either way, hey, it's an honor to talk to you, man. | ||
| I mean, hey, the reason I did that, we hammered those videos while you were in there, man. | ||
| I don't know how, I don't know how, you know, if anything got back to you, but I'll tell you, you were pretty much all over Twitter the entire time or X, you know, so everybody, the fans got behind it. | ||
| I mean, we put you all over the map, man. | ||
| So I don't know if that's coming back to you yet. | ||
| Well, the specifics of it, no, but the effects of it, yes. | ||
| I will tell you, the effects of it, yes. | ||
| It was, yeah, it was pretty cool to see, man. | ||
| It was pretty cool to see all the fans joined in. | ||
| I mean, we pretty much saw X just evolve, you know, and in the time period you were in there. | ||
| It was almost poetic, you getting out early and this whole thing, you know, kind of culminating together was unbelievable, man. | ||
| So, well, I'm glad that you're out. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| I'm sorry to cut you off there. | ||
| Well, again, I was obviously in the hole. | ||
| So I had no access to the internet. | ||
| I didn't actually see what was going on. | ||
| And I mean, quite frankly, I've been so busy since I got out. | ||
| I haven't even had a second to look back in time, and I don't suspect I will. | ||
| But the effect of it was very much felt. | ||
| I would not have got out of the special housing unit early if it wasn't for the attention that this audience was able to continue to put on my case. | ||
| They'd eventually made it to the congressional hearings that eventually made it with so much political pressure that they had to let me out of the shoe early. | ||
| Otherwise, I probably would have spent almost my entire time in that confinement, which would not have been ideal. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| We were hitting MTG. | ||
| We were hitting Matt Gates. | ||
| I mean, everybody, everybody joined in. | ||
| They could tell that the public pressure, all the eyes were on you. | ||
| We weren't going to stop doing that. | ||
| So that was what I did it for, man. | ||
| So hopefully I can get the account back. | ||
| But if not, it served its purpose. | ||
| But hey, I wanted to ask you, I'm just looking at this. | ||
| Even the last day, you came on the air straight away like an animal, man, just right out of the gates. | ||
| And I mean, I'm making videos this whole time you're gone. | ||
| And then you just hit the ground running again. | ||
| And it was pretty surreal, I think, even for a lot of your audience to just, you know, see you, you know, just take the reins and just go right back to it, man. | ||
| But it was pretty inspirational. | ||
| And, you know, we definitely appreciate it. | ||
| I mean, one question I did want to ask you, if you don't mind, you know, you went into, you know, to this whole situation, you know, the most banned man out there, you know, all your accounts were gone. | ||
| You didn't have really a voice, you know, so to speak, in terms of these platforms. | ||
| And then you come out and it's like all the floodgates are opened up, right? | ||
| I mean, how has that been? | ||
| It's taken me, oh man. | ||
| Well, I would say, let me respond to this in a couple of ways. | ||
| One, when I got out, I think I made this analogy last week. | ||
| Imagine a guy who smokes a pack a day for 10 years and then quits smoking for 10 years and then smokes his first cigarette. | ||
| He's basically hacking up a lung. | ||
| That was kind of how it felt getting back into political media. | ||
| It's such an animalistic and toxic environment. | ||
| I mean, really, it is, in a lot of ways, it's disgusting. | ||
| And the using and abusing, and in a lot of ways, you know, we always point at the left and say, oh, they've lost their soul. | ||
| And they're obviously worse than conservatives. | ||
| But let me tell you, the conservative media, there's a lot of soullessness in the conservative media as well. | ||
| I mean, there's a lot of desperation and chasing fame and fortune and clout and attention in the conservative media. | ||
| It's very toxic. | ||
| And so it really did take me a couple of days to kind of get over that, to kind of get through that coughing spell and get my legs back under me. | ||
| Because I got to tell you, the first couple days, the way I was kind of treated, for lack of a better word, I mean, it was sick, to be honest. | ||
| It was sick. | ||
| And really, I mean, look, I don't really care. | ||
| I mean, I've given it. | ||
| I've given myself over to this in a way. | ||
| And that's my own choice that I'm probably sick for that too, that I've just decided that I'm just giving it over. | ||
| I'm fighting corruption. | ||
| I'm fighting tyranny. | ||
| I'm putting all I'm going all in and there's going to be a price to pay, no doubt. | ||
| So, you know, part of that is my own choice. | ||
| But I got to tell you, man, it was the first couple of days, it was sick going through that process again, going through those coughing spells, trying to smoke that first cigarette in the analogy. | ||
| It was kind of filthy and disgusting in a way. | ||
| It made me feel dirty. | ||
| But I got my legs back under me now. | ||
| And I'm fully engaged now. | ||
| So it's all good. | ||
| It's all good. | ||
| But as far as getting Twitter back, here's the crazy thing about it. | ||
| I hate social media. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Genuinely. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I hate social media. | |
| Now, it's a paradox because in order to be successful in the modern day media market, you have to be on social media. | ||
| You do. | ||
| But I hate it. | ||
| I hate it. | ||
| When it got popular in high school, I made fun of people that were on it and spent so much time on it. | ||
| And it's so low IQ, generally speaking. | ||
| That's why I always enjoyed talk radio the most because to me, it was the most challenging medium, if not writing, which I did a lot of that when I was younger. | ||
| But to me, talk radio was the most challenging medium in the media. | ||
| And that's why I wanted to do talk radio. | ||
| It was the hardest thing to be good at. | ||
| And it was the hardest thing to be successful at. | ||
| And so really, that's all I cared about. | ||
| I didn't care about any of this other crap. | ||
| I didn't care about Twitter or Facebook. | ||
| I mean, YouTube in a way kind of facilitates the talk radio platform. | ||
| So I never really liked social media. | ||
| And it's such honestly, it's part of the toxicity. | ||
| Really, it's part of the toxicity and the clout chasing and the fame and attention seeking that is part of the toxicity that I'm talking about. | ||
| And it's just, it's sickening to me, but it's part of the beast. | ||
| I accept that. | ||
| It's part of what I have to do for my job. | ||
| The problem is now that I'm lucky that we have a good social media team at Infowars. | ||
| I'm lucky that I've hired my own social media team that can run my Owen Schroer 1776 account. | ||
| But it's just like it becomes this beast where you don't even get to have an identity. | ||
| You don't even get to have any sort of independent identity. | ||
| Everything has to be political. | ||
| Everybody has to get access to whatever audience or following or clout that you have. | ||
| It's a never-ending cycle. | ||
| And it's like, I just, I'm just like, man, I don't care. | ||
| I don't need 100,000 people. | ||
| I don't need a million people following me on Twitter. | ||
| It's just like, I don't know how to explain it. | ||
| It's real briefly, I'll let you go in the same of the call, but I'm not a social media guy either. | ||
| And I only started that to do what I did to help out this situation. | ||
| But yeah, I saw that full force, man. | ||
| It grows legs. | ||
| I mean, it is a force to be reckoned with, the whole situation. | ||
| And it's a very negative. | ||
| And it's so time consuming. | ||
| That was probably, I mean, it's so time consuming. | ||
| To say, yeah, it's ever-evolving. | ||
| I mean, you are, you're at the bottom of the totem pole within three seconds. | ||
| I mean, you know, the stories are coming out so quickly. | ||
| It's just, it's unbelievable. | ||
| And even just looking back at the time period that you were in there, look at all the stuff that happened just in that short, like 40-some days or 47 days you're in there. | ||
| I mean, just an immense amount of garbage and just, you know, liberalism and this and that. | ||
| This happened. | ||
| I mean, you know, so, but yeah. | ||
| So, but anyways, man, you know, it's amazing that you're back out. | ||
| You know, we all knew you'd pull through it, obviously, but we just definitely wanted to have as many eyes on you as possible. | ||
| Well, you guys did it. | ||
| You did it. | ||
| And that's why I'm sure I've thanked the audience a hundred times if I have once, but it's like, I can't really ever express it enough. | ||
| I don't, the only way I can pay it forward is just continuing to hit the ground running, never giving up, never stopping, not caring if I'm low on energy, low on sleep, hungry. | ||
| I don't care because this is so much more important than me. | ||
| This is so much more important than even my life. | ||
| I really believe that. | ||
| Because if we can't defeat tyranny now when it's easy, then the future generations of Americans, I mean, imagine what they're going to have to deal with. | ||
| I mean, it's going to be 100 times what we're dealing with with the corruption and the soullessness that comes out of the government. | ||
| So, but look, no doubt the effort, the effort that was put forth by you and many others to keep the attention on my story made a huge difference. | ||
| So, I just can't thank you enough. | ||
| And I'm just going to continue to do what you guys want me to do. | ||
| Period. | ||
| End of story. | ||
| That's it. | ||
| Because honestly, that's the most valuable thing. | ||
| I could have a million followers on social media. | ||
| I could have a million dollars in my bank account. | ||
| It'd mean nothing to me. | ||
| It'd mean nothing to me. | ||
| The value that I get out of the love and support for my audience is worth more than anything else that could be accomplished in this physical and I mean, just everything that comes with this rat race, you can't buy that. | ||
| That's only something you can earn. | ||
| And so it means more to me than anything else. | ||
| All right, next caller. | ||
| What's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
| This is Albert from Pennsylvania. | ||
| Hello, Albert. | ||
| Hey, Owen. | ||
| Yeah, one quick thing I just mentioned about pack a day smokers. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| I totally hear that. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| Because I'm not saying I'm a pack of day smoker because sometimes I might have a few more. | ||
| What kind of cigarettes do you smoke? | ||
| What's that? | ||
| What kind of smokes? | ||
| What are your smoke choice? | ||
| I do Marlboro Menthol. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Not in all endorsing that habit. | ||
| But I just wanted to, you know, like as far as the vitriol, you know, with the media and the press that you're talking about, I totally understand. | ||
| And I don't think there's a better example than the Washington Post headline that they put out about you. | ||
| You know, because I mean, if Alex Jones's case is worth what 2.75 trillion, then that one's got to be worth like 22 trillion. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| Well, that's it exactly. | ||
| They take a situation that I'm going through and then they try to steal that momentum to drive traffic to their own story. | ||
| Well, no, absolutely. | ||
| Absolutely. | ||
| And I mean, it's like, it's funny because I almost like hear back in my head like flashbacks of everything they were saying about you guys at InfoWars and Alex Jones through that whole ordeal last year and you know, the quote-unquote lies or whatever. | ||
| And I remember seeing, you know, Alex on Piers Morgan there and he was just, you know, grilling him, like giving him all the propaganda and stuff like that, and not letting Alex talk. | ||
| And I just think like, well, I mean, how can you fix your lips to say something about somebody like you or Alex Jones for giving, you know, your own personal opinion about something? | ||
| But see, you just hit something, though. | ||
| But you just hit something there. | ||
| Notice how they never want to actually talk to us, debate us, or have a discussion with us. | ||
| They never do. | ||
| And then you had Abby Phillips of CNN with the Vivekana Swami Town Hall always interrupting him, talking over him, not letting him get his opinion out, his point out, because it wasn't about giving him the platform. | ||
| It was about using him to drive numbers to their show so that they could make money. | ||
| Oh, no, absolutely. | ||
| Absolutely. | ||
| They never want to let you talk or hear you out. | ||
| I mean, I had a personal experience like that. | ||
| You know, like I told you last week, and I've said before, like, you've really inspired me to get more active. | ||
| And I ran into a Republican staffer in my local area. | ||
| And I was trying to have a healthy conversation debate. | ||
| And as soon as I, you know, brought up InfoWars or anything like that, you know, the immediate response is like just, I don't want to talk to you. | ||
| Like your arguments automatically invalidated because I'm some kind of nutcase or something like that. | ||
| And the level of arrogancy coming from these people, the level of condescension is just ridiculous. | ||
| So, you know, I had to fire back at him. | ||
| I figured, you know, two can play at that game. | ||
| So I fire back at him by asking him how he can have such a condescending attitude when I'm out there working every day and you're basically on welfare, you know. | ||
| He didn't like that. | ||
| That's where conversation ended. | ||
| But I get you. | ||
| I get you on that. | ||
| Well, we definitely need new blood in the Republican Party. | ||
| And it's been stated so much by the good members of the Republicans in Congress, like Ana Paulina Luna. | ||
| And they get it now that it's not just about going after Democrats, even though they're the source of most of our problems. | ||
| We've got, quote unquote, conservatives and Republicans that are nothing more than establishment hacks and neocon warmongers like Nikki Haley that deserve to feel the pain of the new conservative movement, populist movement, and commentary. | ||
| I mean, somebody like Nikki Haley should never be close to any Republican office ever again. | ||
| And maybe when she suffers a very embarrassing defeat coming up here soon, we won't have to worry about it. | ||
| Next caller, what's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
| Sleepy Rick. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sleepy Rick. | |
| Or Nikki Haley. | ||
| And I tell you what, Paulina Luna. | ||
| I dig her. | ||
| She's got it going without question. | ||
| But first and foremost, man. | ||
| All right, hold on. | ||
| Is Anna Paulina Luna the hottest female in Congress? | ||
| Dude, we're going to get into that conversation again. | ||
| But that's just like the lovely Barbie conversation, regardless of that. | ||
| First and foremost, dude. | ||
| You're talking about Margo Robbie being mid. | ||
| Mid, baby, mid. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| You just read exactly where I was going. | ||
| Paulina Luna. | ||
| Yes, she's mid, very mid. | ||
| But, hey, first and foremost, I got off topic. | ||
| Colin Burgess, 77, good life, ACDC, brother. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You know how servant I am. | |
| And I figured ACDC is one of your favorites based on the fact that I believe in the living room you have an album cover hanging up, if I'm not mistaken. | ||
| I do. | ||
| I do have the album cover, excuse me, in my album collection. | ||
| And, you know, ACDC, three of the members of the original ACDC have died. | ||
| Two of the members of the modern, well-known ACDC have died. | ||
| I consider anybody who doesn't consider ACDC amongst, I mean, they're on the Mount Rushmore of rock bands. | ||
| I don't even care. | ||
| That is a universal statement. | ||
| You might not think that they have the best music ever. | ||
| And I could even understand that argument that they might not be the most talented band, rock band of all time. | ||
| They don't have much range. | ||
| And, you know, their style of music is probably not for everyone. | ||
| But I mean, ACDC is the definition of legendary. | ||
| They are the definition of a warrior's mentality. | ||
| These guys played rock and roll music, toured around the world and made albums till the day they died for more than 50 years. | ||
| I mean, I look at that as like the most inspirational thing ever. | ||
| I mean, seriously. | ||
| Anybody who that's a warrior's death. | ||
| ACDC is going out with a warrior's death. | ||
| They are going to play rock and roll and make albums and do live shows until they literally die. | ||
| Until the bitter end. | ||
| And I will agree with you on that aspect. | ||
| I want to say no questions asked. | ||
| Literally, ACDC is, and I've been to a fuckload, pardon the French, been to a lot of concerts. | ||
| ACDC is without question the loudest concert I've ever been to. | ||
| My ears rang for literally two days afterwards. | ||
| Well, they played themselves deaf too. | ||
| I thought I had to probably go and get my ears checked because it just was. | ||
| Let me see. | ||
| ACDC, I think, let me try to think. | ||
| I think ACDC, probably the third loudest concert. | ||
| The loudest I've ever been to was Ramstein and then Death Clock and then probably ACDC. | ||
| So I will go back to the headline piece, WAPO, useless defamation. | ||
| Hopefully you can sue, but who knows? | ||
| You know, Bezos, he's a three-letter act. | ||
| So I'm hoping to give you the retractions. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Well, we'll see what happens. | ||
| They have a certain period of time. | ||
| I don't know what it is to respond to this, but if we have to, we'll move forward. | ||
| And, you know, this is what we have to do now: we have to get litigious, unfortunately. | ||
| Thanks for the call. | ||
| Good to hear from you, Rick. | ||
| Next caller, what's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
| What's going on on Dennis from Kentucky? | ||
| What's up, Dennis? | ||
| So, I got three questions for you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm just going to start at the first one, okay? | |
| Yep, go ahead. | ||
| Did you peep how they did UN recruitment in Illinois? | ||
| What do you mean? | ||
| They tried to, they recruited blue hats in Illinois. | ||
| Don't you remember when the alderman went to go ask for UN policing? | ||
| I'm not sure. | ||
| Okay, so bring you up to speed. | ||
| It was an alderman from Illinois, Chicago, that went to go get UN for police. | ||
| Like the illegal, like the illegal immigrants. | ||
| So, what happened is they did UN recruitment in blue states across the United States. | ||
| For real, you can go look it up. | ||
| They did UN blue hat recruitment in the United States. | ||
| Well, they were always, if they were ever going to bring the UN or get anybody to do it, it was always going to have to be leftist communists that would have no problem killing their own fellow citizens because it makes them feel good. | ||
| So, that's just kind of a repeat of history. | ||
| I know they were recruiting illegal immigrants to join law enforcement, but I didn't hear about the UN. | ||
| That's what I'm trying to get you. | ||
| That was the law enforcement that they were talking about. | ||
| And they kept that very hush. | ||
| I mean, very hush. | ||
| The second thing I wanted to hit you with is that I think that you will concur with this. | ||
| The reason that we're seeing everything that's happening right now is because they want to keep the same COVID protocols in place. | ||
| Think of the lockdowns, everything like that. | ||
| They want to keep those same laws they had in place of power. | ||
| The reason that they want to do that is because they've seen the excess of money they had available ready to them. | ||
| The money is what's driving them. | ||
| The money, the control, that money, they've seen how much money they got off of COVID by keeping people in a certain predicament. | ||
| You follow me? | ||
| Yeah, it's an easy way to control the people, and you control the people, you control the flow of currency. | ||
| But look at how they was printing it and who they were bailing out. | ||
| So they got the overall, like you do the over-unders, right? | ||
| You do the over-unders. | ||
| I bet overall that they seen how much they can make off of a large-scale thing. | ||
| Oh, well, we, that was that was, yeah, that was big news, actually. | ||
| How, I mean, at the end of COVID, it really just became a giant wealth transfer. | ||
| I mean, at the end of the day, it just became a gigantic wealth transfer. | ||
| Giant wealth transfer. | ||
| Every government across the globe profited. | ||
| And oh, of course, the big pharmaceutical companies. | ||
| And now that the stock in the big pharmaceutical companies is tanking, they tell you, oh, there's a new virus and you need a new vaccine. | ||
| And they own the media and they own the politicians and they think they can save their stock. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
| Because that's what they're looking at: their stock portfolio. | ||
| Their stock portfolio lets you know how they already invest. | ||
| That's how they, that's how you can follow all of this. | ||
| It's their open stock portfolio. | ||
| But if you get into forensics, it's another side. | ||
| Now, I have been seeing a new trend in the last month that when you were gone, and guess what's happening? | ||
| We have put together that there were always people here in America. | ||
| There were always Aboriginals in America. | ||
| And it's coming to a head. | ||
| I had called in to Chase and I asked him and I told him, and I'm going to ask you the same question. | ||
| Do you think any African American can receive reparations from the United States? | ||
| Do you believe that? | ||
| Well, I mean, what do you mean? | ||
| I mean, the government could cut a check to every person that identifies as black tomorrow. | ||
| No, they won't. | ||
| I really want you to hold on. | ||
| Hone in on what I'm saying. | ||
| African American. | ||
| Well, what are you trying to do? | ||
| What are you trying to do? | ||
| What's defined as African American then? | ||
| Okay, so check this out. | ||
| You need to cut a check to Britain, France, and Spain because those were the three colonizers amongst the slave trade, correct? | ||
| Well, really, the majority of slaves from Africa actually wound up in Brazil. | ||
| And that's why Brazil has a darker skin complexion. | ||
| It's not just about being below the equator. | ||
| Most of the African slave trade, they wound up in Brazil. | ||
| Right. | ||
| I get what you're saying. | ||
| I'm saying for any person in America that thinks that they can get reparations, being of African descent, the United States never brought them here. | ||
| They're not responsible for those people. | ||
| They came from Britain. | ||
| They came from France and they came for Spain. | ||
| Those are the people that transferred these people. | ||
| Trump needs to sue these countries for these people. | ||
| I'm serious. | ||
| Look at the turn the whole narrative onto the historical perspective. | ||
| That's them. | ||
| That's what them people did. | ||
| That's what Great Britain, Spain, and France did. | ||
| The United States or its 13 colonies, which was still Great Britain, they did not import. | ||
| The United States didn't go to Africa to get stuff. | ||
| Those people were brought here, bro. | ||
| And they started out in the West Indies and worked their way up. | ||
| I'm serious. | ||
| All somebody, I swear, if someone can get that to Trump, because he's going to win. | ||
| I'm serious to Great Britain to France and to Spain for the black community. | ||
| And you watch, because then all of a sudden, that entire narrative would change. | ||
| Dennis is always thinking outside the box, isn't he? | ||
| Next caller, what's your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
| Hey, it's Errol Darts. | ||
| How do you hear me? | ||
| Hey, we're good. | ||
| How are we doing? | ||
| Hey, Owen. | ||
| Glad you're out because a lot of people were worried about you when they lost contact with you. | ||
| And your lawyer came on Alex show and was talking about it. | ||
| And when he finally made contact with you and said you were okay, I think everyone was really happy about that. | ||
| Well, they tried to just cut me off from the world and do me as dirty as possible. | ||
| And it comes from the very top of the DOJ. | ||
| And I'll leave it at that. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| And there was a hearing where Matt Gates and a few of the others, I think you're talking to the head of the prison system or something. | ||
| And your name came up. | ||
| And of course, you know, she said, oh, no, I've never heard of him. | ||
| Yeah, Colette Peters. | ||
| I did. | ||
| And she might have never heard about me. | ||
| I wouldn't really be surprised if she did or didn't. | ||
| But she, here's the thing. | ||
| Colette Peters and the Bureau of Prisons wanted $2 billion annually from the U.S. taxpayers. | ||
| $2 billion. | ||
| Now, they don't. | ||
| Well, here's the thing. | ||
| The argument is that the prisons are falling apart and they can't get competent help, which is actually true. | ||
| The prisons are in really bad conditions, and the competency of the BOP employees is also an issue. | ||
| But they don't need $2 billion. | ||
| What they need is to find out what $2 billion worth of prisoners are every year and just release them tomorrow. | ||
| Save yourself $2 billion a year. | ||
| Don't take $2 billion more from us. | ||
| Empty the prisons of non-violent criminals and political prisoners tomorrow, and you'll save $2 billion. | ||
| That's how you do that. | ||
| But see, but they just want more money, more prisoners, more money, more prisoners. | ||
| It's so corrupt. | ||
| I'm telling you, I need to do a broadcast dedicated to this. | ||
| It's going to be a major theme, I think, in the book that I'm writing. | ||
| Someday I hopefully have time to finish it. | ||
| But look, it's bad, man. | ||
| As bad as we thought it was. | ||
| The corruption in the justice system is much worse than you can even imagine. | ||
| I had to see it firsthand to know how bad it actually is. | ||
| And it is bad. | ||
| It should not be like this in the United States of America. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, a lot of things shouldn't be the way it is. | ||
| But now, I remember when you and your lawyer came out after they sentenced you, and you made some statements. | ||
| Is your case going to actually try to be taken upward to the Supreme Court for freedom of speech? | ||
| Well, it depends on the appeals process. | ||
| But right now, it would appear that, yes, that is ultimately where this will end up. | ||
| And I hope they hear it because this is a major free speech precedent that they're trying to use me as the president-setting case. | ||
| And then every time a journalist is about to go to prison, they're going to cite U.S. government versus Schroyer as the reason to put a journalist in prison. | ||
| And I hope it's the exact opposite. | ||
| I hope that the United States versus Schroyer is what's used to stop the government from imprisoning people for speaking and for doing honest journalism. | ||
| And it looks like it could end up being the case. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Let's take one more call. | ||
| Final caller of the night. | ||
| What is your name? | ||
| Where are you from? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hello. | |
| Yes. | ||
| Hi. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
| My name's Karina and I'm from Arizona. | ||
| All right, Karina. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
| I wrote you while you were in prison, and my son drew pictures, and I sent you like a Tamale prison recipe and a word search I made. | ||
| But I just want to say thank you. | ||
| You've been an inspiration. | ||
| And like your mother, when she called, you're a warrior and we prayed for you and just keep doing what you're doing, Owen. | ||
| And even here in Amfast, America, here in Arizona, that Charlie Kirk hurts every year. | ||
| Carrie Lake, who we love, also mentioned you and how we have to keep fighting and not be afraid to speak like you do. | ||
| Did she mention my name? | ||
|
unidentified
|
She didn't mention your name, but she mentioned that you had just gotten out of prison and that another journalist was also going into prison. | |
| Yeah, that's true. | ||
| They're using my case to send other journalists to prison now. | ||
| And God bless Carrie Lake. | ||
| Now, I just want to try to pinpoint this. | ||
| When did you send your letter? | ||
| You said it was a homemade word search? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, I made one like online and I put like InfoWars, your name, political prison. | |
| Okay. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| Unfortunately, I have not yet received that. | ||
| Now, what they're supposed to do is all the mail that is still incoming to the prison in my name, they're supposed to mail that to me. | ||
| Now, I wouldn't be surprised if they don't, given the laziness and incompetent inside of the prison system. | ||
| I mean, it's bad. | ||
| And I don't know how many, I don't know if I ever told the full story last week or not. | ||
| I can't remember. | ||
| But I mean, you know, they lost about $1,500 worth of my property. | ||
| They lost or stole about 100 letters that were unopened. | ||
| They lost or stole about 100 books that were sent to me. | ||
| They dropped me off at the wrong bus stop when they released me. | ||
| I mean, it was just one, it was just one story of incompetence and laziness followed by the next. | ||
| So hopefully I will get that. | ||
| I got to tell you, one of the coolest things amongst the mail that I got, oh my gosh, and I'm so glad I'm thinking of this right now. | ||
| Thank you for calling in about this. | ||
| The coolest part of the mail that I received was when young children, I don't know how old you're, you said your son wrote me a drawing, did me a drawing? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, he has, he's five years old and he drew a cross and he said that Jesus loved you and that you're his hero. | |
| Well, I really hope he tape in his mouth. | ||
| I really hope that I get that because that was some of the coolest and most uplifting mail I received. | ||
| And a lot of kids, a lot of, I guess, the children of the parents that listen to me did personal drawings. | ||
| Two of them, the BOP, threw away, lost, or stole. | ||
| And it breaks my heart because those little kids wrote that for me and I was going to keep it forever. | ||
| And they threw it away or lost it. | ||
| Just didn't even care. | ||
| And so unfortunately, that happened too much. | ||
| There was an entire grade school, or no, it was an entire classroom in California. | ||
| If you're listening to this, because I'm sure this is what happened, that a teacher decided to have her classroom write to a political prisoner for some, maybe a history project or social studies project or something. | ||
| And the entire class wrote me, the entire class. | ||
| And some wrote me and they put Bible verses, some did a drawing, some had really nice things to say. | ||
| You could tell some just did the assignment and, you know, the least possible. | ||
| But nonetheless, that was one of the coolest things. | ||
| There are about 25 or so letters from a, from a, I'm sure it was a private school in California. | ||
| I don't want to put out too much information about it. | ||
| I saved them all. | ||
| I do have the letters. | ||
| I mean, look, one day I'm going to take the time and sit down and go through all this mail and go through some of the more inspiring mail that I got and some of the cool stories in the mail that I got and stuff like that. | ||
| Someday, hopefully, I'll have time to do that. | ||
| I always say that and I never have the time, but maybe someday God will allow me the time to do that. | ||
| But the mail that I got from young kids writing me stories and drawings, it was probably some of the most uplifting stuff that I got and some of the most meaningful stuff that I got. | ||
| And so I'm hoping that the drawing that came from your kid will eventually make it to me and I will save that and cherish that. | ||
| So I guess, you know, maybe that's how this will go. | ||
| I'll wait till or see if they ever deliver my mail that's still incoming to me. | ||
| And then we'll finally do that transmission there over Christmas. | ||
| Hey, I'm so glad you called. | ||
| I think it's the first time you've ever called in. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes, I have. | |
| I have one more question. | ||
| Have you played the Alex Jones game? | ||
| And are you already going to add a level for you of the Shorier shoot escape or something like that? | ||
| I wish I had time to play that game. | ||
| Look, when I tell you that I literally don't even have a minute of free time, I mean, I'm not trying to be graphic here, folks. | ||
| I mean, I barely even have time to sit down on a toilet, okay? | ||
| If you catch my drift, I'll leave it at that. | ||
| So I hope someday I'll get to try the game. | ||
| I will tell you this: I did record a series of voiceovers, and they are adding me as a character. | ||
| So I will be a playable character in the Alex Jones New World Order video game probably next month, I'm guessing. | ||
| They will introduce me as a character, but it was really fun. | ||
| I helped design the character, and I did a series of voiceovers. | ||
| So really looking forward to me being introduced as a character. | ||
| And then maybe when that happens, I'll play it live here on the show, and then we can all have a good time with it. | ||
| And I'll kind of just debut it that way. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| Well, Merry Christmas. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Merry Christmas. | |
| Merry Christmas. | ||
| And hopefully, I'll get that letter soon. | ||
| I'll show it on the air and your son can get all excited to see that his drawing made it to me because that would be really cool. | ||
| That would be really awesome. | ||
| And I remember I used to write to some of the people that inspired me when I was younger. | ||
| And few and far between would ever write you back. | ||
| But the ones that did, it was awesome. | ||
| I'll never forget when Ken Griffey Jr. wrote me back with a little signed letterhead. | ||
| It was one of the coolest things when you're a young kid to have those people. | ||
| By the way, I see some people asking, my birthday is in June. | ||
| My birthday is in June. | ||
| Some of these comments tonight are crazy. | ||
| Oh, boy. | ||
| It's always wild over here in the live chat on Rumble. | ||
| And I do monitor and read the comments. | ||
| And you're all very sweet and spicy. | ||
| Some sweet, some spicy. | ||
| And we like them all. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So Merry Christmas to all. | ||
| And we're going to go out. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We're going to go out with a little ACDC. | |
| Have you heard the ACDC Mistress for Christmas holiday classic? | ||
| Probably not. | ||
| Behave yourselves out there. | ||
| Restrain yourselves. | ||
| Discipline. | ||
| Focus. | ||
| Conquer. | ||
| I'll be back tomorrow on the InfoWars War Room. | ||
| And probably 500 interviews and everything else I got going on. | ||
| I love you. | ||
| I love life. | ||
| I love everybody. | ||
| Good night, y'all. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We get it. | |
| I want it. | ||
| Can't get it. | ||
| But I want it. |