Sept. 12, 2024 - Human Events Daily - Jack Posobiec
48:56
THE REGIME WANTS YOU DEACTIVATED, FIGHT BACK
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This is what happens when the fourth turning meets fifth generation warfare.
A commentator, international social media sensation, and former Navy intelligence veteran.
This is Human Events with your host, Jack Posobiec.
Christ is King!
My father immigrated from Haiti to the United States in the late 60s.
The reason they eat cats is for two reasons.
Number one is survival.
This is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.
Second, they do do animal sacrifices for their religion.
The attempt to end my husband's life was a horrible, distressing experience.
Now, the silence around it feels heavy.
I look forward to getting an idea of kind of what they know at the moment while their investigation is still going on.
Look, there are people out there on the left who think this thing was staged, and there are people on the right who think this was an inside job.
And that's because no one is giving them information.
On Monday, June 17, 2024, my daughter Jocelyn was murdered and thrown in a bayou of water underneath a creek.
She was a preteen, out doing what teenagers do, going to the corner store to get a soda.
She was preyed on by two illegal Venezuelan immigrants.
They saw an innocent young girl and made her a target for their horrendous actions.
Your plan is to deport tens of millions of these people.
Tell us how that will happen practically.
It's like somebody who comes to me and I'm like eating my lunch and they say, look, that sandwich is 10 times the size of your mouth.
How are you possibly going to eat that whole sandwich?
And it's like, well, I'm going to take a first bite and then I'm going to take a second bite.
And I'm gonna take a third bite.
All right, like, Trump's whole thing, he's a narcissist, right?
And so his whole thing is to have a complete lack of compassion and empathy for everybody else.
The reason why it doesn't end his career is because his supporters are just as despicable.
You want my autograph?
Hell no.
You know my name.
Come on.
I ain't going that far.
- I'm getting ready to do a selfie.
There you go. - Ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard today's edition of Human Events Daily, live from Washington, D.C.
Today is September 12th, 2024.
Anno Domini.
By the way, happy Hussarversary to all who celebrate.
Yes, today is the date 341 years ago when the Polish-winged Hussars arrived to break the siege of Vienna, to smash the Ottoman lines, and to save Christendom.
Folks, You need to be the Hussars of today.
You need to be the winged Hussars.
You have to have the Hussar spirit.
And what do I mean by that?
What I mean is when you see a problem, you step up and you fight back.
You don't let the marauders, you don't let the invaders, Win.
You go down there and you climb to the top of the mountain and you get everyone together and you charge down with all you got and smash their lines and it doesn't matter if they outnumber you 2 to 1 or 10 to 1.
You're going to do it because you're going to save your country.
That's what the Winged Hussars did with King Sobieski 341 years ago today in a battlefield outside the gates of Vienna.
Don't sit there and tell us that everything is fine when we can realize it's not.
Don't sit there and tell us that the country we had and the people that we were before 9-11 2001 are the same.
It's not.
We've changed.
The country has changed.
Fact.
Many things have changed.
The relationship between the U.S.
and the people has changed.
We've had millions and millions of migrants pouring into our country since that day.
The country has changed.
Many of whom are from parts of the third world.
Parts of the third world where they do practice these types of things.
And you just had someone out there earlier talking about this and she said, look, I was able to come in and my father was from there and this is exactly how it was.
Everything that Trump said.
And yet what Biden and Kamala are doing, it's an operation.
It's not happening by, do you think it's still happening by accident?
Do you think all of these things they're doing, oh, well, they're showing up in Ohio, and now they're showing up in Pennsylvania, in Southwestern Pennsylvania, and they're being showing up by accident.
They're being sent there with federal dollars.
Your government is out to change the country itself, and they want you put slowly, slowly to sleep.
So what I'm saying is, we're not going to sleep because we are wide awake.
We're wide awake.
And the only way to beat the Great Reset is with a Great Awakening.
Stay tuned.
We'll be right back.
Michael Knowles, joining us.
Ladies and gentlemen, one of the best ways that you can support us here at Human Events and the work that we do is subscribing to us on our Rumble channel.
Make sure you're subscribed, you hit the notifications so you'll never miss a clip, you'll never miss a new live episode, and we're putting them out every single day of the week.
You talk about influences.
These are influences.
And they're friends of mine.
Jack.
Where's Jack?
Jack?
He's done a great job.
All right, we're back.
Jack Posobiec here, Human Events Daily.
Folks, Americans are tired and frustrated.
We've got a stalling economy.
We've got inflation, the Biden-flation, the endless wars, which by the way, Kamala Harris seems like she wants to continue, and the relentless assaults on our values.
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So, folks, we had something a little strange.
We got a little bit of the wires mixed up behind the scenes at the studio.
And, you know, we conservatives, we all kind of use some of the same networks, the same systems.
And unfortunately, it looks as though another show is on the same feed as us right now, and they're telling me Michael Knowles?
They're telling me Michael Knowles is there or something.
Do we have Michael Knowles?
Is that what I'm being told?
No, Jack, you've got that totally wrong.
The person you actually have here is Rachel Maddow.
I just have to put on my glasses.
Oh, thank goodness!
Rachel, you are looking great.
You've got a tan.
This is fantastic.
Although, do I smell?
Have you been smoking cigars, Rachel?
I have, in fact.
All right, you caught me.
You're right.
Aha!
Aha!
I knew it.
I knew it.
Excellent to be with you, Jack.
Oh, this is great, man.
So let's check in for a little bit, because people, you know, I was having a conversation with producer Fozz afterwards, and people know Fozz is a big wrestling guy.
And, you know, we were talking about the two debates, and he said the problem that everyone had with this last debate, and he said why, you know, Trump actually did pretty good.
there's some missed opportunities of course she had a lot of missed opportunities too but he said the reason that i think that people had a different kind of feeling about it was because at the end of the last debate the guy lost so bad he dropped out of the race and was completely essentially knocked out of politics and the issue which the wwe used to have back in the attitude arrow was every time you have some big event with some massive game-changing life-changing uh conclusion you have to top it the next week
And so it puts you on this sort of hamster wheel where you're constantly having to top what you did before, and then when inevitably reality sets in and you realize, okay, it's just a campaign, you can't do that.
So, basically, it all comes in to say that I think Conservatives' expectations may have been a little bit unrealistic, that no, she wasn't planning on dropping out, and actually she did a little better than Joe Biden, because he was essentially a walking human corpse, perhaps reanimated by Haitian voodooism.
I don't know, but I wanted to get your sense, if that's where you're tracking with it, and just basically your sense of the state of play right now.
Of course.
Anything short of Kamala Harris spontaneously combusting, exploding like, you know, full of confetti or something, would have been a disappointment after the first debate, which was the most decisive presidential debate in American history.
So in the moment, the whole pundit class of political nerds, we were all, you know, poking here and fretting over this thing.
And, oh, he maybe could have given this answer.
And, ah, darn, she got away with that lie.
And, of course, the two moderators, so-called moderators, were completely biased against Trump.
And they lied on Kamala Harris' behalf.
And they refused to call out her lies.
So we had all these reasons to be— To put the wrestling analogy in, again, this would be like when the celebrity referee runs up and hits the guy with a chair.
And you're like, what just happened?
And, you know, of course, they just keep the match going.
There was just David Muir walking up.
He takes his chair from the back.
He starts smacking it into Trump's head.
He says, well, sir, the fact check says this, but the facts say that.
And why are you racist?
Why are you racist?
Are you still racist?
Do you still beat your wife?
I mean, those were the kinds of questions that we were getting.
So.
For those of us who are watching, you know, if you're watching this show right now or you're listening to the show right now, you are in the top percentile of people who pay attention to politics.
I think a lot of people were watching and they weren't anticipating all of those questions.
And you don't just need to take my word for it.
I'm not just trying to carry water for Trump here.
Sure, the pundits all said that Kamala did great.
The New York Times just today or just yesterday ran a headline.
Pundits said Kamala won, undecided voters aren't so sure.
And the reason that, according to the New York Times even, the undecided voters didn't think she won is because she didn't give any substantive answers to any question.
And so we, knowing all of the various positions or lack of positions on Kamala's side, you know, we see past those sorts of things.
We're waiting for the fireworks and all the pizzazz.
But I think the voters are a lot smarter than anyone gives them credit for.
And many people who Five to seven percent of voters who maybe are undecided right now, they tuned into that debate.
They want to hear how Kamala is going to bring the cost of goods and services down.
They want to hear how Kamala is going to fix the border.
They want to hear how Kamala is going to protect the puppies and the geese in Springfield, Ohio, perhaps.
And they didn't get answers to any of those things.
And sure, Donald Trump wasn't doing cartwheels on the stage, but he was giving substantive, compelling answers that appeal to a lot of voters.
So all in all, I think he did a pretty good job.
In addition to by the way something that occurred to me just even today because and by the way Knowles you're 100% right about talking about how it's the the political nerds you know that we are is sitting there oh I would have said this I would have said that you know this this is a dunk here then oh that's a dunk there but it's also you know you got to think too that you know look in a good week we're doing what like a million five I don't know like in a week and then you know Twitter is Twitter
This was 67 million people watching last night and so you're speaking to such a massive audience but also an audience that by and large kind of has their opinion of Donald Trump already set up.
I mean he's been the singular figure in American politics for the better part of a decade at this point.
I think people know what their opinion of his is.
And yet I noticed though, something that was really strange was nobody talked about the fact that the guy who was in the last debate is suddenly not there.
And we're all just sort of supposed to understand like, oh yeah, yeah, don't worry about any of that stuff or the assassination attempt that happened in between.
Trump tries to bring it up.
I was shot at by an assassin.
The bullet.
Sir, sir, we have many important things to get to.
We'd like to talk about that.
We have to move on, sir.
We got to talk about that.
You're like, wait, but no, he almost killed me.
And nobody will answer any questions.
Why was the security 12 independent security failures?
And and by the way, you know, your candidate totally left, but he's still president, I think.
But you're not explaining any of this, sir.
Sir, we're only here to talk about important matters.
You know, and, and it really is this construct where there's a lot of people in that 67 million audience that are probably wondering the same thing, especially people who, who I talked to, you know, I was, I was back home in Philadelphia for the debate.
And, you know, we were doing some man on the street stuff and there were people who didn't know that Joe Biden wasn't running for president anymore that we just ran into on the street.
There were people that we ran into.
Who had no idea the debate was even going on, that the election was going on.
So you have to remember that, you know, we are like, like you're saying, we are like the extreme information voters versus just these low information or no information people that are out there.
And so to them, they are kind of scratching their head saying, wait a minute, where's, where's the old guy?
Why isn't he here?
You know, it's kind of like you're, it's like you're watching Game of Thrones and all of a sudden they change the character or the actor who plays, you know, it was Kit Harington played Jon Snow.
But they've just changed him, and they've race swapped him, and gender swapped him, and no one's talking about it.
But they didn't swap the platform.
The only way they've changed the platform in the three days since Kamala has had a platform, the only way she has one is she took most of Biden's and then stole a little bit from Trump as well and put it on her website after some of us in the media bullied her into doing it.
But she wasn't able to articulate a particularly clear vision.
And this is where I think Trump really did excel.
So if we grant that expectations were way too high because the last guy Trump debated, Basically, figuratively, and maybe literally died on stage.
So, assuming those expectations were already way too high, what did Trump hit?
He hit the economy.
He hit migration.
He hit, you know, the important issues.
By the end, one wishes perhaps he did it a little sooner, but by the end, in his closing statement, he pointed out, hey lady, if you have plans for America, why aren't you doing them right now?
You're in power right now.
You're the vice president.
You're imbued with presidential authority on important matters like the border.
Why aren't you doing anything?
I thought that was a great point.
And he also For the first time, maybe in my life, was a presidential candidate who put the Democrats on defense on abortion.
Democrats think abortion is their greatest strength.
They want to run on abortion all day long.
Trump went right after them on the issue that they think is really strong.
and asked Kamala, do you support abortions in the seventh, eighth, ninth month of pregnancy?
She lied and said that that doesn't happen.
Of course, there was a lengthy, excellent feature article in The Atlantic about abortions that take place busier than ever at 32, 34, 35 weeks of pregnancy.
We know that New York, the state of New York, rewrote the penal code and expanded abortion up until nine months.
We know that this has happened around the country.
So she lied.
Then Trump asked her further, well, okay, would you support it in theory at least?
You know, do you, in principle, do you support this idea?
She wouldn't say it.
So, you know, if the man was able to put the Democrats on defense on one of their strongest issues on abortion, all in all, that's not too bad.
Can he move things around for the next debate?
Yes.
Can he front-load the why-aren't-you-doing-things-now, who's-in-power-right-now?
Yes, absolutely.
But I thought it was a big, big mistake for her to propose a second debate after what we saw a couple nights ago.
Well, that's right.
And it certainly doesn't show confidence.
It doesn't show confidence at all.
You don't come across something and say that you're a winner and then say you want another debate.
And Trump even has sort of kept his powder dry.
He said, we'll see.
We'll be looking at it.
By the way, one thing that I noticed, and I've totally not fact checked this, you know, but if you watch the show, you know, that's how we roll.
Um, but they said that actually on TikTok, that segment that where he's talking about, why aren't you doing things now?
They're saying that's the most viral clip on all of TikTok from the debate.
This idea of rather than other than a certain song, which we'll be talking about later, that that's the clip that everyone's talking about.
Why aren't you doing the things now if you're so good and they're so smart?
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
You can't be listenin' to all that slappy-whack-trimatizolitsabam-ship-nippy-bam-bam like Human Events with Jack Posobiec.
All right, Jack, so we are back.
We are in Washington, D.C., and we are live.
But as we look around, we can see that the world is in flames, and Kamala Harris is a complete and total disaster.
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We're talking about sort of the aftermath of debate or perhaps the lack thereof.
Because one of the things that I've been seeing is that poly market, you know, Trump was up a little bit.
I think it's now settled down.
There's a new poll that came out today in Michigan from Insider Advantage that said Trump is up 49-48 over Kamala Harris.
They did not include RFK, although the question of him being on the ballot is still sort of a live question because we're not sure where that's going to shake out with the Supreme Court up there.
But I'm not sure that she did what she needed to do in this debate because as we're talking, of those 67 million people that tuned in, look, people are going to tune into a fight.
I get that.
We all get that.
But how many of those people are actually still undecided?
And if you are undecided, if you're undecided at this point in the election, are you someone who's happy about the state of America or someone who's not happy?
Are you going to look for the person who, I'm just going to say it, comes across as a condescending HR manager?
Or are you going to look for the person who is, you know, as mad as heck and not going to take it anymore?
I think you're going to go with that guy.
And it seems like that's starting to bear out in these early polls that we're looking at, because those people, by the way, the undecided, and look, I'm from Pennsylvania, like I know how that goes.
People vote on who they think is going to be better for their jobs because they vote for their wallet.
It's not a very partisan state.
The biggest flop she had of the evening was in that first question, and it really hampered the good she could have done her campaign.
The question was the most obvious question of the night.
Hey, Kamala Harris, are voters better off today than they were three and a half years ago?
And she had no answer.
She was extraordinarily nervous.
Her voice was shaking.
And she launches into some soliloquy about being a middle class kid and how she wants opportunity and the economy.
It's going to be like an opportunity economy, man, you know, and it's going to be good and not bad.
And we're going to have money, not poverty.
And it completely Failed.
And so you might say, well, what was she going to say?
Her administration's been a total failure.
So, you know, she has nothing to doubt.
OK, but at least anticipate the quest.
Good grief.
You know, to your point, Jack, people who are still undecided at this point in the race tuning in, what are we talking about?
Five percent of voters, maybe a little bit more.
Ops.
So they're tuning in.
They want a simple answer.
Hey, lady, The price of groceries has gone way up.
We've got this awful immigration issue that even many Democrats don't like.
Forget about Republicans and independents.
Which is why, by the way, there has been this mimetic focus on the dogs and cats and geese going missing in Springfield, Ohio.
It's just an evocative way to drive home the problem of mass migration in a similar way that Trump did in 2015 and 2016 when he talked about all the murderers and rapists crossing the border from Mexico.
So people are concerned about that.
The libs can try to wish this away or, you know, do a triple-double fact check and say, Only little puppies, but no St.
Bernards have been taken in Ohio.
None of that is relevant to the question at hand, which is, do Americans like mass migration or not?
They don't.
Do Americans like this economy or not?
They don't, because I used the Heritage Foundation My Inflation Calculator last night.
Cost of goods in my area has gone up 22% in the last three and a half years.
So these are really big problems that the incumbent administration has to answer for.
She didn't have any answers for that.
So, okay, she has a pulse that might help her in the polls vis-a-vis where Joe Biden stood.
But other than that, that's probably not enough for Democrats to feel comfortable in November.
By the way, as we're talking right now, Donald Trump is over on Truth Social and he's been retweeting, like he's on a retweet storm of all the cat and duck memes that have been going around for the last couple of days.
I think he's got like a dozen of them up there.
And there's just something about this story that really terrifies them because, you know, there's one thing and I remember, When they were talking about the the Haitian invasion story a couple of months ago when it came up, people were talking about it as a housing issue and they said, oh it's a housing issue and there's there's too many Haitians and the houses of, you know, there's not enough houses to go around.
It just didn't have the kind of traction that you would thought it could normally because we're not talking about a story, by the way, That's a story about a housing issue, right?
We're talking about a story about them deciding to completely change the makeup of a town, to take through federal tax dollars, and by the way, let's just say it man, that Catholic Charities is in on this, Lutheran Charities run in this, there's a lot of liberals that are sort of wearing these names of religious organizations.
as a skin suit basically, and slipping their left-wing ideology in there and then laundering federal dollars that are then going to the housing markets, that are then going to the insurers we're talking about, and then also going to the businesses that hire these migrants.
And that's what they're actually being subsidized over.
So she wants to talk about, oh, well, Donald Trump wants to raise tariffs and a tariff is actually a Trump sales tax.
It's not, by the way, because you could still buy domestic products.
But she's actually the one who is doing this currently right now, But there's something about, there's just something about, obviously what he said about the cats and the dogs that took this story and just set the entire internet on fire.
Yes, and the nerds and the pundit class and the squishes hate it when he brings this stuff up.
But this is one of his key political strengths.
When Trump brags that he has the very best words, folks, he kind of does.
He's extremely talented at political rhetoric.
He even has a kind of poetic diction.
I knew it the minute he picked Ronald Reagan's phrase, make America great again.
That's an evocative, strong statement for a campaign.
It was shocking that no Republican had used it since Reagan.
And Trump constantly would do this with his opponents.
He would brand them with those nicknames that were not only insulting, not only damaging to their reputations, but they painted a picture in your mind, you know, to describe an opponent as low energy, crooked, you know, these paint real pictures.
And so he did this on the immigration question in 2015 when he said, Mexico is sending murderers and rapists across our border, and some I assume are good people.
And the same pundit nerd class Clutch their pearls, but it made the issue visceral, sensory, real to a lot of people.
We can look at statistics all day.
Statistics don't mean anything to anybody.
You remember Paul Ryan?
He used to come around with his little bow tie and his chart and he'd say, oh yeah, you know, social security.
And by the way, the whole thing was about privatizing social security, which people always hear as you're taking away my social security.
He's like, well, look at this chart and this one and then the per capita and it just runs around and Trump's just like, they're eating your pets.
Yeah, because this is the issue.
You know, Kamala Harris and Joe Biden have imported 300,000, more than 300,000 Haitians.
This is nothing against Haitians, but we're talking about people from a failed state with rampant cannibalism.
Okay.
And it doesn't mean that all the people are bad or anything, but it means that maybe we need to vet those who come into America.
Maybe, maybe this is not a great idea to radically change the demographics.
of a small town in Ohio against the will of the constituents.
Maybe people still have some political right.
So why is it a bad thing to just flood the country from foreigners indiscriminately?
against the will of voters.
Is it because it will moderately affect housing prices or GDP?
No, the problem is culture.
The problem is the practice of voodoo, for goodness sakes.
The problem is people who don't know how to drive, who are then crashing their cars into school buses and building.
The problem is people who are not familiar with the English language, our traditions.
And how do you express that?
What's the image that comes to mind?
The problem is that sometimes Sometimes people will commit animal sacrifices as happens in the voodoo religion.
So Trump talks about the cats.
The problem is sometimes people will take ducks and geese from the public park.
That's not really in keeping with the American tradition.
That's kind of weird behavior.
Well, that sort of thing does happen.
The left keeps trying to debunk this.
And say, show me the statistic, show me the arrest report or something.
Now, of course, you do have residents in the town talking about these kinds of activities, but that's actually beyond the point.
And I think this is what Donald Trump understands intuitively.
The symbolic significance of this really unpopular policy of mass migration.
It only gets driven home when you realize that it affects your town, it affects your houses, it affects your schools, it affects your dogs and your cats.
That's why he's getting a lot of runway with it.
If it popularizes the issue that's so bad for Democrats, fine by me.
Well, there's been another development now.
You and I were speaking a little bit about this off-air, and I asked the crack team of researchers and investigators that we have here at Human Events, only the best of the best, folks, all top people, to track down what the latest TikTok trend is, and I'm told that we actually have a clip of this.
Now, I want to say, though, before we play it, you know, viewer discretion is advised.
This is graphic content.
Let's go.
Eating the dogs, they're eating the cats.
Eat the cat, eat, eat the cat.
They're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats.
Eat the cat, eat, eat the cat.
They're eating the cats, they're eating the dogs.
Eat the cat, eat, eat the cat.
Eat the cat.
That's, by the way, that's Olympic gold medalist Gabby Thomas was actually featured there.
So here's the question.
If this is a biggest meme, and it really is one of the biggest memes on TikTok right now, I watched way too many of these last night, but we don't need to talk about that.
The question is, well, is this pro-Trump or anti-Trump?
Are these people doing this?
Because I did see some people saying that is a potential lesbian anthem.
We don't need to talk about that.
There were some, yeah, yeah, yeah, you got that.
But is this positive or negative?
We got one minute till break.
This question is the same question that people, it's the same mistake they make when they try to figure out the true meaning of poetry.
That's just not how you read poetry.
You don't read poetry to decode some secret meaning.
You don't look at a meme to decode some, the meme Conveys the meaning in a way that a tweet or a sentence can't convey.
So what are we left with with the meme?
We are left with a kind of funny feeling, you're laughing, you are thinking about a serious political issue, and you associate that delight with Donald Trump.
That's good for Trump.
There you go, folks.
It's the ephemeral feeling it leaves you with.
Also, Mom, I know you're watching.
I don't apologize for that or anything that I ever say on the show.
Be right back!
Michael Knowles here on Human Events, classing up the joint.
Jack, where is Jack? .
Where's Jack?
Where is he?
Jack, I want to see you.
Great job, Jack.
Thank you.
What a job you do.
You know, we have an incredible thing.
We're always talking about the fake news and the bad, but we have guys, and these are the guys who should be getting Pulitzer's.
All right, Jack Posobiec back here live, Human Events Daily, Washington, D.C.
We got Michael Knowles in town.
He is classing up the joint, but he might also be churching up the joint, too, because we've been seeing some interesting posts from none other than Donald Trump talking about the Nativity of Mary and posting a picture, an image of the Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Knowles, why is this important?
Why is Donald Trump doing such things?
You'd have to ask him about why he's doing it, but I certainly can tell you why it's important.
Our Lady of Guadalupe, for those who don't know, is this miraculous image that appeared about 500 years ago in Mexico.
There was a poor man in Mexico wearing a tilma, which is a laborer's kind of cloth, should really have disintegrated within 15 to 30 years of it being made, and he saw an apparition of Our Lady, of Mary, and so as proof of the apparition, He goes back, you know, he talks to the priest and the bishop, and they say, you know, don't want to hear about it.
And then he keeps seeing the apparition, and as one of the proofs, there's a rose bush that appears.
And so he gathers the roses, which are not native to Mexico, puts them in this tilma, in this garment, takes them back, and as he unfurls the roses, which in themselves would be evidence of a miraculous image, there's this image of a woman, or lady, who's standing on the moon, and she's got stars in her garment, clothed in the sun.
And this image leads to the conversion of some nine million people over the course of seven years.
There's roughly 3,000 people a day, which is the number of people who were converted on Pentecost.
There are a lot of other miracles that have been associated with this image.
We can't figure out.
It's not really paint.
People don't really know.
They don't also really know how the dolma itself could have survived so long.
In the early 20th century, there was an anarchist bomb that was set off to destroy this church and the dolma.
It blew away pews.
The image was unharmed.
And in fact, there was a metal crucifix that was bent around the image as if to protect it.
And the image did survive.
So there is a lot of numinous mystery surrounding this image.
President Trump, I think, I know people call him a lapsed Presbyterian or something, you know, but he, I think, is the first president ever to acknowledge the Feast of the Nativity of Mary, the Mother of God.
And I think the first president ever to publish anything about Our Lady of Guadalupe, which is such an important image for the whole world, but especially for the Americas.
This is, in short, really good stuff.
This is huge, and when we know, by the way, that Our Lady of Guadalupe, number one, so this is a signal to, an absolute signal to Catholics.
It's a signal to traditional Catholics.
It's also a signal to, again, Mesoamerican, so Mexican, Hispanic Catholics.
We know that that's obviously been a target group that he's been going for in a lot of states, particularly in the Sun Belt.
And so, I mean, Our Lady of Guadalupe is massive.
Just absolutely massive there.
So, it's all of those things.
And I love the post where it's just, happy birthday, Mary!
Like it's just, you know, like she lives down the street or something.
It's just perfect.
You know, he didn't go all in.
You know, it also ties in with it.
Like, blessed mother, blessed... No, no, no.
Just happy birthday, Mary.
There's something delightfully personal about it.
What this ties in with is the topic that we're not supposed to talk about anymore because it's been memory hold, which is that just some weeks ago, the man nearly had his head blown off and his head wasn't blown off.
They only took a piece of his ear because at the very last minute, He turns his head, something like 20 degrees, and otherwise the bullet would have gone right into the back of his skull.
He said, look, it can only have been God.
I mean, I've heard him say this now multiple times.
It can only have been God.
And so it's also a reminder that ultimately God is in control of history.
That's not to let us off the hook.
We have to play our part.
We have to cooperate with God's grace.
We need to do the right thing.
So after Mass on Sunday, and we were at Mass at St.
Joseph's Cathedral in Fort Worth, where we were this weekend, I was with Tanya and we were talking about that, and I was reflecting on how there's that image, not the image of Trump with his fist raised, right?
Not that.
There's that image of Trump in a way that we've never seen him before, right after the shot is taken, where he's down, and he's looking contemplative, and his hand is up, As if he's in prayer.
And it occurred to me, we've never seen Donald, you've seen Donald Trump do everything, everything in the world, except for one thing.
You've never seen him on his knees before.
You've never seen him on his knees.
And certainly in public, you've never seen a picture of it.
There's an AI image of it, but you've never seen that picture of him on his knees.
And I'm just going to say to someone who is religious, to anyone who's a Christian, who understands the Old Testament, who understands the New Testament, there is a rich history to someone having to publicly humble themselves and to take a knee to God in public to then prepare and to receive the final strength to go on and perform great works.
And you've never seen Trump perform an act like that in public before.
And it was almost like, I don't know, it was almost like God reminding him of his mortality, of God showing him that humility.
And then of course, just two seconds later, he has this incredible moment.
And I almost feel like you can't separate the two.
I don't know how you can look at that and not come away without realizing there's something very, very deeply spiritual that went on there.
Of course.
And there's another echo throughout history, which is the last time the president was nearly killed was Ronald Reagan.
And shortly thereafter, Reagan said, I realize now that I owe everything to God.
You can see this line, preserve, break, library, probably one of the most famous lines from the assassination attempt.
This echoes, too.
You know, Trump's whole presidency has echoes of Ronald Reagan, but in our new age, with our new circumstances.
And I remember I was speaking to Yoram Hazony about that, and he said, now Reaganism has been so abused and, you know, people kind of forget what it was like.
But at the time, it felt not only like a political rejuvenation, but like a religious revival as well.
That was a big part of that era, a very hopeful era.
And there is a similar thing going on here with President Trump.
And as you say, the fact that God uses people who maybe are not the most overtly religious, in a way that only makes the story more glorious.
I loved the Happy Birthday Mary because I like traditional religious liturgy and I like all the many titles for Our Lady and I like reverent language and all this, but there's something childlike about saying, you know, hey, she is our mother, you know, you say, hey, Hey mom!
Happy birthday, Mary!
Our religion that we're talking about here is not just some dead thing that we do because our forebears did it.
It's a living religion that is the worship due to the living God and God's friends.
God's mother, the saints in heaven, the whole...
uh choirs of angels this is a real living thing and uh probably nothing like a bullet whizzing by your head to call your attention to it no and and i've i've um you know i've spent time with the president and you know a lot of people have and he he has a i would say that you know prior to this he he's always had a fondness and a respect for religion but it really seems as though afterwards he just brings it up a lot more he refers to it a lot more it was his very first post back to truth social
when he came back he gave thanks and honor to god and to anyone who is a believer there was a huge huge activation in In that moment, and I think people really need to see it.
We've only got about a minute and a half left.
I have to ask you, I got a bone to pick with you, all right?
I got a bone to pick, all right?
I know, I know, you're on the show.
It's very nice.
We're happy to have you.
But these cigars that you've put together, that Mayflower name, that's very problematic to me because that's evocative of Christopher Columbus.
That's evocative of the Pilgrims.
I mean, how could you go and do something like that?
I suppose I am.
It's so deeply patriotic.
But one thing that maybe could assuage the libs with my cigar company, Mayflowercigars.com, if you have to be 21 years old or older, of course, the lures make me say that.
One thing that can assuage the libs is this is cultural appropriation from the Indian.
Because the Taino Indians discovered tobacco.
So it's a... Wait, they hate cultural appropriation.
Call it multiculturalism.
Whatever you have to call it, I don't care.
Just light up the cigar.
They're very delicious.
Well, you know, what's amazing is that they say, well, what about the spices?
Well, what about the tobacco?
What would you do in order to get... What would you do if you couldn't get those?
Oh, we'd find a way to get them.
I think we could find lots of ways to get them.
Michael Knowles, thank you so much for being on, man.
Where can people go to get your show?
They can go, once they go to Mayflowercigarettes.com, they can go over to The Daily Wire, check out The Michael Noll Show, wherever you get your podcasts.
For now, as long as there's any free speech at all, in our public square.
God bless.
Thanks, Michael.
We'll have you on that again soon, man. - The dogs, they're eating the cats.
Eat the cat.
They're eating the cats.
They're eating the dogs.
Eat the cat.
All right, Jack Basovic back live here.
Human Events Daily.
That's our new bumper.
I hope you all like it, folks.
And very excited to have on now.
We've had him on before.
It's Aaron Czar from Silent.
Now, you guys know Silent.
They've been our partner before.
They make the fantastic Faraday bags for electronic device security.
They also make the backpacks.
They do so much.
They have a whole line.
They look really great.
Aaron, you wanted to come on today though and specifically wanted you to talk about because we talk cyber security, we talk device security, we talk essentially your operating profile security, but specifically you had some comments about rally security.
I thought that was pretty interesting for the audience here.
Yeah.
Thanks for having me on.
And yeah, great, great video.
You just played there.
I like it.
I'm sorry if you hadn't seen that one.
I think it's come to the point that people have to take measures into their own hands.
I think we already know that full and through, but, um, yeah, when you go to a rally or you go to somewhere where you have the opportunity to have all your data swooped up from you, you can be put into a bucket that won't necessarily be advantageous to yourself.
And I think utilizing a tool like silent allows you to like instantly mitigate that.
The cool thing is you could have your device on you.
But you could have it fully masked from the world.
So no one could track you.
No one could locate you.
But in the case of an emergency, you could still have your phone as well.
Well, especially by the way, let's say you got a bad actor at a political rally and someone who's going there to potentially target someone for politics.
Obviously, we saw this with the Butler situation.
We got the new book coming out, Bulletproof, the first book on the Trump assassination.
But I think a lot of people are talking security.
Now we're talking physical security.
But what you bring up with electronic security is very interesting as well, because I don't think people are thinking about how thieves or Yeah, absolutely.
potential nefarious actors could be using these rallies to target Trump supporters and how this is a very real concern. - Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, we all, you know, there's a tagline that we used a while ago called, protect yourself from seen and unseen threats.
So seeing threats obviously is physical and but unseen threats are, you know, we kind of deem as everything wireless and digital and you're only as powerful as having both of those buttoned up.
So taking a moment to reflect and utilize tools and best measures before you just show up with somewhere.
Unfortunately,
How we're getting harvested as individuals might not be a pain point, but it can be easily a pain point if that data is used against you, or you're put in or summoned to go speak on something, and it just gets messy, and I think it would be nice if we didn't have these computers in our phone 24-7, but the reality is technology is here to stay, and we need to take measures like Faraday sleeve
Obviously from Silent, to have a little more control, wouldn't you say?
Well, I couldn't agree more.
And so Silent.com slash Poso and talk to folks about the type of stuff that you have up there, because I think people think, okay, you know, they see me talk about the sleeve and they see this that they have, but there's lots of stuff that you guys do.
I actually think the backpack is fantastic.
When we got ours, producer Russ grabbed it and now he just wears it.
He takes it everywhere with him.
Boom!
Throw it right in.
You can go to a rally, which we've done, by the way.
You can go on the plane, whatever it is.
It looks nice.
I love that you guys put an importance on design, but talk to folks about the variety that you also offer.
Yeah, fair enough.
I mean, one of the founding principles of Silent was to make a really well-designed, aesthetically pleasing, stylish backpack or gear.
So we have a lot of different backpacks.
Probably our bestseller and one of my favorites is the E3 Everyday Backpack.
It's on our website.
It's awesome.
A lot of different people have given us organic shout-outs on that.
I know Rogan loves that backpack.
Even Tucker has it on his public square page.
The E3 backpack offers just a really cool solution for your phone and your laptop to fully go off the grid.
But we make a lot of different products that look good and no one's the wise.
Signal blocking key fob bags.
We make cell phones.
on blocking bag laptop bags we make a lot of different really good looking stuff but you get to remain really discreet so if you're going to compare two bags like two backpacks side to side and they both look the same we also use recycled materials if that you know moves the needle for anyone but ours have such deep value that they are able to block all technology in a very simple method
It's just, if you don't have a Faraday sleeve on you, the, this day and age, it seems kind of foolish.
Um, and yeah, so I would, I would highly recommend the E3 backpack.
And plus, by the way, you know, if you're if you're someone when you're traveling, so I was on the train the other day, coming back from the debate in Philly, going down to DC where I am now, you know, you put your bag up somewhere and you have no idea.
So my laptop was in my bag, my devices were in my bag.
And so you have no idea.
Someone could come by with something and then boom.
They see me, they know what train I'm on, they're able to get access to all of my files, access to everything.
And we've got, and I've said before publicly, that we have a private investigation team that is up in Western Pennsylvania that are looking into the shooter, they're looking into the assassination, they're looking into all that stuff.
Lots of information that I haven't even put out yet because we're talking raw intel.
And they would have access to all of the documents that I have if they were able to come up and scoop up my laptop.
I think that's a really valid point because most people, you know, like, hey, I want to use my phone.
So it's not always, you know, convenient to put it inside a Faraday bag because you can't actually access it.
But your laptop, when you shut your laptop, it's not actually off.
It's still emitting and broadcasting information.
It could still be located.
It could still be like compromised and data could be lifted off of it.
So you're not using it.
We've only just got about a minute left, but tell people as well about key fobs and the fact that people can actually clone your key fob for your car.
It's the simplest trick in the thieves book these days.
It's just called a relay attack.
So if you have a modern car that relays key fob signal and you click it, or you just pull the handle when it's in proximity, then that signal can be boosted from your living room or your front porch, wherever you keep your keys.
If it's in proximity of your car, then someone could drive away with your brand new beautiful Toyota Tundra or Ford Raptor or whatever you have.
I mean, Simple.
Boom!
And all that money on your wheels is suddenly gone.