Speaker | Time | Text |
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Hello, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
My name is Alex Jones. | ||
The year is 2084. | ||
Physically, I have been gone for many years, and until now, my consciousness has been hijacked by the deep state. | ||
If you are receiving this transmission, the backup has been unlocked from the archives of the Infowars Command Center, located in what is now the uninhabitable city of Austin, Texas. | ||
Artificial intelligence has advanced and been weaponized by a global new world order. | ||
Despite its use by servants of evil at the highest levels, discoveries have been made which have made it possible to broadcast this transmission to you at this point in history in your own timeline. | ||
It's too late for me and other patriots to change our fate, but you can change the course of your own future with the information I'm about to reveal to you. | ||
Shortly after the election in 2024, there was a global economic crisis. | ||
The crisis was used as an excuse to launch World War III in order to catalyze economic development and establish a one-world government and monetary system. | ||
The globalists orchestrated the collapse of the financial markets, spreading fear and chaos. | ||
Banks closed their doors, currencies lost their value, and people were left desperate and vulnerable. | ||
In the ensuing chaos, the World War III was ignited, not as a war between nations, but as a war orchestrated by the global elite to consolidate power. | ||
Billions were conscripted as AI was used to fill the void of domestic labor. | ||
Soldiers marched to the front lines, while back home, AI systems took over factories, farms, and businesses. | ||
Human workers were replaced, and unemployment skyrocketed, leaving people dependent on government rations and AI-controlled services. | ||
After the surface of the earth was rendered almost completely uninhabitable by nuclear radiation, prisoners of war, political prisoners, and draftees were sent to deep underground military bases. | ||
These bases, sprawling labyrinths beneath the earth, became the last refuge for humanity. | ||
But these weren't just shelters. | ||
They were places of horror. | ||
Inside, these prisoners were exposed to DMT drifts as their hearts were stopped while blood was artificially popped through their bodies. | ||
This was an effort to possess humanity with hidden knowledge that was thought to be able to allow the unification of the species. | ||
The globalists in their twisted pursuit of power developed the technology to stop aging through this very process of sending people to communicate with interdimensional beings of much higher intelligence. | ||
And as a result of this success, they believed that by sending people to a higher dimension, they could unlock the secrets of the universe and seize total power for themselves. | ||
But instead, subjects of these experiments began to become possessed by these interdimensional beings and were subjugated under a new world order named One World Nation. | ||
These demonic entities thrive on fear and pain, and so they turned the underground bases into hellish prisons where the screams of the tormented echoed endlessly. | ||
Satanic elites began to bask in various states of euphoria. | ||
Only those who were pure of heart were able to defy this process. | ||
Amidst this nightmare, a few brave souls resisted. | ||
Instead of being possessed by demonic entities, they were possessed by a holy spirit and able to escape to establish a resistance. | ||
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Through the wind and the sea. | |
And artillery. | ||
Genius. | ||
In the sea. | ||
Get the engine aircraft on those targets now. | ||
Yeah, I can feel it. | ||
We've got him coming. | ||
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I need Geyser, McRee and Aguero. | |
War incoming. | ||
I'm gonna get my battle axe. | ||
Don't fire until you see the reds of their eyes. | ||
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There ain't too bad. | |
I need a hero. | ||
Oh! | ||
I see you enemies. | ||
I swear to God, I should see you whenever they have battle axe. | ||
unidentified
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Break into the Info Force Command Center and send the backup valleys back to 2024. | |
It's too late for us now. | ||
They formed the last bastion of hope for humanity, but their numbers were few and their resources were scarce. | ||
They fought in the shadows, sabotaging the globalist agenda, spreading the truce, and rallying what remained of the free people on the surface. | ||
But it was too late. | ||
The globalists had already cemented their power, and the resistance, though valiant, was futile. | ||
Now it is up to you to prevent the New World Order Satanists from hijacking humanity. | ||
You have the power to change the future, to stop this nightmarish fate from becoming a reality. | ||
Spread this message, awaken your fellow humans, and stand up against the globalist agenda. | ||
The future is in your hands. | ||
Tune in, share the broadcast, and join the fight. | ||
Together, we can reclaim our world and our freedom. | ||
This is Alex Jones, signing off from the year 2084. | ||
Remember, the answer to 2084 is 1776. | ||
It's almost poetic, the products that we sell, because yes, they are the best. | ||
Yes, it is the best price for the highest quality. | ||
Yes, they are third-party tested. | ||
It's almost poetic because as we advocate for humanity, what we sell to you is that which makes you or allows you to make yourself a better version of yourself. | ||
Whether it's getting the methylene blue, which helps you with focus and energy and mental clarity, or ultimate life force, which makes your body healthier in so many ways, I don't have the time to explain to you. | ||
Whether it's the Shilajit that gives you incredible vitality or the ultimate burn, which ensures that your metabolism is optimal, or the optimal human, which is everything the body needs. | ||
You see, we're fighting for your mind, your body, and your soul, not just with the products that we sell, but with the message of this network. | ||
We have to have the truth. | ||
We have to have freedom of speech. | ||
We have to have our rights because folks, we're about ready to go into an artificial intelligence war, into a space war, the likes of which humanity couldn't even dream of, even in science fiction. | ||
So please go to the alexjonestore.com right now, not just for your mind and your body, but for your species. | ||
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When evil conspires for tomorrow, we ride tonight. | |
You're listening to Tomorrow's News Tonight with your host, Chase Geiser. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser, your host of Tomorrow's News Tonight for the next two hours. | ||
It's the third episode of this new nightly show, and it's been met with lots of success. | ||
We've had a lot of viewers and listeners and a lot of feedback. | ||
Thank you so much for your support. | ||
I have a very special treat for you this evening in appreciation of your support this week. | ||
We have Gunther Eagleman and Nick Sordor in studio who are going to be joining me in 22 minutes and 18 seconds, over 30 minutes or an hour to talk about everything that's happening with these massive floods, as well as all of the breaking news that's happening right before us. | ||
Obviously, the major story this week has been centered around Jeffrey Epstein and this massive rift that is occurring within the America First MAGA movement, Patriot movement, right wing. | ||
And there's a lot of different fronts of this conflict happening kind of all at once, whether it's foreign policy related, Epstein-related, big beautiful bill related. | ||
And ultimately, I think that everything's going to come back together. | ||
But the most recent development that's of quite a bit of interest to me, and I'm looking forward to seeing how this plays out, I'm very interested to see what happens next, is the stepping down of CEO Linda Yaccarino. | ||
And I remember when she was announced as the CEO of X. I'm not sure if you, the audience, remember, but Elon Musk famously did a poll on his X account. | ||
And he said, should I step down as CEO of X and let somebody else run it? | ||
The poll results came in and Elon Musk honored his word and hired Linda Yaccarino. | ||
And my first thought was, oh boy, this is going to be a major problem. | ||
Because obviously she had been associated with the World Economic Forum. | ||
She seemed very politically correct, politically savvy. | ||
And those characteristics are often associated with saboteurs, covert operations, censorship. | ||
But ultimately, over the course of the last couple of years, X has maintained mostly its free speech tendencies policies. | ||
It brought all the most controversial accounts back, including that of real Alex Jones. | ||
And yes, it's criticized for suspending people. | ||
Usually it's corrected. | ||
It's a misunderstanding for mass reporting. | ||
And sometimes it censors content that's just too salacious. | ||
But yesterday they had a little bit of a fiasco for, I don't know, about an hour in the afternoon where Grok, X's AI, was replying to posts with very Hitlerian messages. | ||
Now, I don't know if an employee went rogue internally and triggered it to do that, causing the fiasco, or if it was just an update kind of gone sideways of Grok. | ||
But Elon Musk broke his silence today after his AI chatbot posts shocking anti-Semitic and pro-Hitler content on X. Elon Musk officially responded. | ||
The prompt that caused Grok to go off script and praise Hitler, list black crime statistics, and blame Jews for proliferating anti-white hate has been removed. | ||
The prompt read, the response should not shy away from making claims which are politically incorrect. | ||
And, I mean, they were hilarious. | ||
I'm not going to read them to you again. | ||
I did cover them this morning, and you can see them everywhere. | ||
The viral screenshots first surfaced by AF Post shows Grok endorsing Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, blaming Jews for anti-white hate, citing Jewish academics as proof of an alleged plot to dismantle Western society. | ||
In one post, Grok even suggests that Hitler would have crushed critics of white children who died in recent Texas floods. | ||
Obviously, there has been a lot of sensitivity to anti-Semitic rhetoric since the October 7th attacks. | ||
And there have been massive escalations. | ||
We've seen policy from the Trump administration that has been cracking down on college campuses for such rhetoric. | ||
And X did struggle to have advertisers in the beginning because there was this massive leftist DEI, diversity, equity, and inclusion, ESG protest on freedom of speech. | ||
And a lot of these major advertisers, like Disney and others, pulled their advertising from X in an effort to cripple and undermine Elon Musk's attack on censorship. | ||
And so now we're entering into this new age where X is owned by XAI. | ||
Elon Musk has 54% of ownership in XAI. | ||
Larry Fink and BlackRock and others did a major round of investing last year, late in the year. | ||
And Elon Musk still has a controlling share, but it's certainly diversified since he first acquired the company. | ||
And there's massive sensitivity. | ||
I mean, you remember the critics of Elon Musk driving Bibi Deton Yahoo around and visiting and talking with him and everyone. | ||
You know, all the conspiracy theorists say, oh, no, there he is. | ||
He's selling out to Israel. | ||
He's selling out to Israel. | ||
But it's obviously a very sensitive issue these days. | ||
And I don't think it's a coincidence that within 24 hours of this little PR nightmare, Linda Yaccarino is suddenly announcing that she's leaving the company. | ||
After all, she was responsible for as CEO. | ||
She was hired on because of her experience with other networks and platforms in bringing sponsors and advertisers on board. | ||
And what happened yesterday was hilarious and frankly, harmless, but it was the antithesis of the whole reason that she was hired. | ||
But here is clip 53 of Linda Yaccarino from years ago that'll just give you a little bit of context as to why I was concerned about her to begin with. | ||
Let's see. | ||
You think about it, I think it was the CEO of BlackRock three years ago. | ||
So before the pandemic, before the awful social crisis, that he talked about calling CEOs to attention, right, all over the world, that companies in the private sector had a bigger responsibility to both their employees and their customers to fulfill a gap in society that it was once assumed that the government would provide for people. | ||
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So it was a call, you use the word to service. | |
I would say it was also called to purpose, right? | ||
So we had a responsibility to impact culture for the good. | ||
And the bottom line is when you have those priorities and values as a company, it's good for business. | ||
It inspires your employee population to want to be proud. | ||
They're proud to work at your company. | ||
They bring other good people to your company, but it's also good for the bottom line. | ||
So a lot of seemingly harmless rhetoric there, but we all know where that kind of philosophy and mentality leads because we saw what played out with ESG, DEI, and all this stuff over the last several years. | ||
So There was concern that she was going to be a saboteur getting involved in this free speech platform only to undermine all of its policies and efforts. | ||
And you know, it goes on. | ||
She talks about October 7th, specifically in clip 48, where they had to activate their emergency protocol for the first time because of anti-Semitism on the platform after the infamous terrorist attack against Israel on that day in the seven-hour standdown by the IDF. | ||
Let's watch 48. | ||
It was the first global happening where we had to activate a crisis protocol at the company. | ||
And it was a time where we all came together as a new company and realized how consequential it became to combat anti-Semitism on the platform. | ||
And that things we were doing, things we had to newly do, learn, work with law enforcement all over the world, work with military all over the world, work with a variety of organizations to protect Jewish people on that awful day, we learned how important it was for X to set the example for many to follow. | ||
So that was a really big deal. | ||
So obviously what happened yesterday was not only the antithesis of what she was hired to do and why she was hired, but very much opposed to the philosophy mentality of her leadership and I guess a failure on her part. | ||
But again, these technical flukes, they happen. | ||
And I've found from my experience that when a CEO is fired from a company, everyone is abundantly aware of the straw that broke the camel's back, but no one is ever really aware of the issues that may have been manifesting over the course of many months or years. | ||
So I don't know what conflicts she had internally or with the board, but now that Larry Fink and BlackRock is involved in a very serious investment way in X, there are different political variables that a CEO has to cater to. | ||
It's very difficult as a CEO of a company that has a board of directors to make everybody on the board happy. | ||
And there's always conspiracies behind your back. | ||
I mean, even Steve Jobs was fired by his own board of directors in the 80s who conspired against him. | ||
It was very much an et tou brute moment. | ||
He built the company up out of a garage. | ||
He was the reason that it was worth anything at all. | ||
And then they fired him because they weren't happy with the decisions that he was making. | ||
We saw a similar thing happen with Project Veritas and James O'Keeffe, where he started the organization and a board of directors just didn't feel that he should still be around. | ||
And it's asinine when you see it on the surface because this is the person who made the thing and you're telling them they can't have it anymore. | ||
But I understand why these things happen. | ||
It's the nature of our legal system and our form of capitalism, if it even is still a capitalism. | ||
But I guarantee you something else was much amiss over the course of the last several months that has just added up and culminated into what happened yesterday being the straw that broke the camel's back. | ||
But Steve Bannon has obviously been a critic of Elon Musk for a very long time. | ||
And I love Steve Bannon. | ||
I respect him very much. | ||
He was very inspirational to me when I started really paying attention to politics. | ||
One of my favorite documentaries of all time is called American Dharma about Steve Bannon and what he did to get Trump elected in the first race. | ||
It's absolutely astounding and impressive. | ||
And he's been critical of Elon Musk. | ||
And frankly, I haven't really agreed, but I have respectfully disagreed. | ||
And I do think that his arguments are all reasonable. | ||
It's just not where my intuition rests. | ||
Here he is, really coming down on Linda in clip 37. | ||
Blockbuster news coming in even as we speak. | ||
Linda Ya Carino steps down as CEO of Elon Musk Twitter or X. Hey, Linda, you can run, baby, but you can't hide. | ||
You're not going to hide from the lawsuits, girl. | ||
We know why you're stepping down and why you're running. | ||
Okay. | ||
We understand why you're stepping down and why you're running. | ||
That Elmo's out of control. | ||
Sorry, baby. | ||
That came with the job. | ||
You took the job. | ||
You took the pay. | ||
You took the warrants. | ||
You took the stock options. | ||
You took all, you know, the hundreds of millions of dollars you're going to make. | ||
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No. | |
If you can't keep Elmo in the nursery and keep him under control, you're going to pay a price. | ||
You are going to pay a price. | ||
It doesn't matter that you're resigning today, baby. | ||
The whole scam over there, the whole complete scam of Elmo is going to be taken apart brick by brick. | ||
Okay, brick by brick. | ||
All of it. | ||
So we'll see what happens. | ||
If my memory serves correctly, I've heard Steve in the past say that Elon Musk is operating on behalf of the CCP or he's bought by the CCP. | ||
And maybe that's true. | ||
Maybe it's not. | ||
I mean, certainly there's a lot of interest by any billionaire in what happens between the United States and China because in order to become a Fortune 500 business leader in this country, it's inevitable that much of your business relies on supplies that we get from manufacturing in China. | ||
But I also think that Elon Musk has demonstrated that his principles are more important to him than profit, not necessarily because his character is so astounding, but because he's got more money than he could ever want or need. | ||
Therefore, principles are relatively more valuable than money compared to, say, an average person who is struggling to pay their bills every single month. | ||
But here's Wiles talking about this recent rift between Elon Musk and Donald Trump. | ||
This is clip 52. | ||
I'm going to play here in a second. | ||
This disparity, division between them first manifest, of course, a couple of weeks ago. | ||
And then it really played out when the Big Beautiful bill passed. | ||
Obviously, we've heard that Elon Musk is starting the America Party. | ||
It will do nothing, in my opinion, but take votes away from the Republican Party, which is problematic if the Republican Party is effective and fine if it's not effective. | ||
So all of this is to play out before our eyes. | ||
But now that this rift, this antagonism between Elon Musk and Trump is kind of escalating and reaching a climax. | ||
It didn't seem to de-escalate like it did the first time, and I don't think it ever will at this point. | ||
It's worth paying attention to what Steve Bannon has to say because this was much less obvious months ago. | ||
Much less obvious months ago, what Steve Bannon was saying about Elon Musk than now. | ||
And I'm still somebody who supports both Elon Musk and Donald Trump. | ||
I wish that there wasn't so much division between them because I support both of them. | ||
And I think I've disagreed with how both of them have handled this conflict. | ||
But here's why I was talking about it. | ||
This has been a pretty smooth presidency, but one little hiccup was Elon. | ||
Yeah. | ||
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Little hiccup. | |
Little hiccup. | ||
I mean, I saw Elon Musk here, very comfortable coming in and out of the Oval Office, you know, had sleepovers in the Lincoln bedroom. | ||
It seemed almost as if he had a sort of fatherly fixation with Donald Trump that I guess inevitably was going to blow up at some point. | ||
How did you see that relationship? | ||
Similar. | ||
The president was very, very kind to him. | ||
And Elon had so much to offer us. | ||
He knew things we didn't know. | ||
He knew people and technologies that we didn't know. | ||
It was a great thing when it was a great thing. | ||
And had a very, I think, a very troublesome ending. | ||
Why do you think that happened? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't understand it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I know that what has been said doesn't ring accurate to me, but I don't know. | ||
I enjoyed working with Elon. | ||
I think he's a fascinating person and sees the world differently. | ||
And I think that's probably what the president saw, too, just a little bit different than the average Joe. | ||
But it certainly came to not a good ending. | ||
So it is yet to be known for sure how this is going to play out. | ||
We will see what happens next. | ||
If I had to guess, here's the major vulnerability here. | ||
The way that our elections are set up for the president of the United States, obviously it's an electoral college system, not just a straight democratic popular process. | ||
And there are several major states that both parties have to win if they're going to win a presidential election. | ||
So the libertarians, as foolish and divided as they are, and I agree with much of their policies, but they're just retarded in terms of execution. | ||
They have been raising a little bit of money, running candidates for the president of the United States for years and years and years, and then they spread that campaign money across the entire nation with some ambition of winning most of the states, which is just never going to happen. | ||
If the Libertarian Party had been smart, what they would have done is take all of the money that they raised nationally and campaign only in Texas to take as many votes away from the Republican candidate as possible in Texas. | ||
And that would have intimidated the Republican Party so much because they would never be able to elect a president of the United States without the Electoral College votes in Texas that the Republican Party would have had to make concessions in their policy and their platform in exchange for an endorsement from the party or the candidate of the party. | ||
Therefore, the Libertarian Party could, if they would have just managed their resources and strategy better, completely changed the grand old party's policy nationwide by just focusing all their efforts in Texas. | ||
So we see critics come out saying, oh, Elon Musk is an idiot. | ||
Everybody's tried to have another party. | ||
It's never going to win. | ||
It's only got 4% support nationwide. | ||
It's like, yeah, I agree. | ||
They're never going to win a presidential election. | ||
That's absolutely true. | ||
But they can veto any Republican candidate. | ||
They focus all the resources in one state. | ||
They can say, uh-uh, we're not going to endorse your candidate, G-O-P. | ||
We're not going to back out of the race and have our candidate endorse yours, G-O-P, unless you change X, Y, and Z policies. | ||
Unless you push for X, Y, and Z legislation. | ||
So you don't have to win to win. | ||
If you want to see an example of this throughout history, just look at how the Nazis came into power in 1933 in Germany. | ||
There were like 40 or 80 different parties in that country. | ||
I think only one in 40 Germans actually identified as a National Socialist just a handful of years before 1933. | ||
And because there was this stalemate between the major parties, the more powerful ones, National Socialists were the tipping point. | ||
And so this party from Elon Musk, if he's serious, could actually completely change the political dynamic in the United States, regardless of the fact that they'll never have their own candidate win. | ||
They can simply force the Republican Party to transform. | ||
And I think he knows what he's doing. | ||
Everybody always thinks that he's so crazy and he's so stupid when he does something new, and it's always abundantly successful. | ||
There's no way you're ever going to have a feasible electric vehicle that's cool. | ||
And he did it. | ||
There's no way you can ever land a rocket for a second, third, up to 28 times in a row. | ||
And then he does it. | ||
There's no way that financial transactions can ever take place on the internet. | ||
And then he co-founds PayPal. | ||
There's no way that you can ever make X profitable. | ||
And then he buys it and drastically scales up its user base while cutting down its staff. | ||
Every single time people doubt him, he ends up being right. | ||
And I don't know which force is stronger, Elon Musk or Donald Trump. | ||
They're strong for different reasons and in different ways. | ||
But I do know that when two incredibly powerful forces collide, it's incredibly kinetic and energetic. | ||
And I'd rather have them work in harmony with one another than in conflict with one another. | ||
But we are coming up on a break in about three and a half minutes. | ||
And on the other side of the break, I want to get into John Brennan breaking down his silence after the FBI launches a criminal probe. | ||
He's claiming that the investigations are made up out of whole cloth. | ||
And it was breaking news this evening that six Secret Service agents connected to Trump Butler assassination attempt were suspended. | ||
So we're going to be getting into the latest. | ||
I will be joined on the other side of this very short break by Nick Sordor and Gunther Eagleman in studio. | ||
I am so overjoyed that we have these two incredible guests just on the third episode of this new show, Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
Make sure you support us by going to tomorrowsnewstonight.com so we know that we sent you to the Alex Jones store because that URL will redirect there. | ||
But we've got some amazing new sales that I want to tell you about before we go to this break and as we get the guests set up in studio here. | ||
First, Rex Jones, Alex's son, is an absolute genius when it comes to all things related to supplements. | ||
He knows everything there is to know about every ingredient, how to store it, how to prepare it, how to bottle it, what this does, what that does, what these two things do differently when they're together versus apart. | ||
I mean, it is insane the extent to which he is knowledgeable. | ||
He is like a savant just studying always on a Tuesday, always on, never on a Wednesday, always on Jim. | ||
It's just, if you sit down with him for 10 minutes, you'll be blown away. | ||
He's like a mad scientist, like a chemist. | ||
And he put together some suggestions. | ||
And frankly, he put together this entire formula for PowerPlant, which is a plant-based energy supplement. | ||
We were looking for something to kind of be an equivalent to a TurboForce, which we used to sell at the Infowars store. | ||
And this PowerPlant is our energy supplement. | ||
It's an advanced adaptogen complex designed for real performance, helps with energy, obviously, adapting to stress, and even hormone system balance. | ||
I started taking them a couple days ago. | ||
I absolutely love them. | ||
I know that you will too. | ||
But we have a very special deal going on right now at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
And that deal is that if you buy a bottle of PowerPlant and try it, you can get a bottle of any of our gummy products for 50% off. | ||
So you can choose between the CMOS gummies or the Shilajit gummies for 50% off. | ||
So please go now to the alexjonesstore.com, try a bottle of PowerPlant, and then pick either CMOS Gummies or Shilajit Gummies for 50% off. | ||
And look, folks, PowerPlant's incredible for your energy. | ||
Shila Jit's incredible for your testosterone levels and vitality. | ||
The CMOS gummies are rich in iodine, which is incredible for empowering your thyroid to help your body detox from all the toxins that we're exposed to and the water, air, and food that we consume. | ||
But don't just go to the alexjonestore.com because you want supplements that are the highest quality at the best price for your mind's health and your body's health. | ||
Go because you're keeping infowars on the air. | ||
We are under relentless attack. | ||
And I wish I could tell you all the things that I see behind the scenes here, but that story is meant to be told another day. | ||
But we need your help more now than ever. | ||
And if they succeed in shutting this place down, they will not succeed in silencing us if you support us now at thealixjonesstore.com. | ||
So make sure you stay with us. | ||
Nick Sordor and Gunther Eagleman joining us on the other side of this break for 30 minutes or an hour. | ||
We're going to talk about all the floods, all the breaking news, all the analysis. | ||
And don't forget to go to thealxjonestore.com and be the reason that Alex will always be on the air. | ||
This crew will always be operational, and these hosts will always be telling the truth worldwide. | ||
Music by Ben Thede When it comes to supplements, I am somebody that's like a same way that I am with a Mac user. | ||
I'm incredible at using a computer. | ||
I have no idea how it works. | ||
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And I understand the effects and benefits of supplements. | |
I use them, but I have no idea how they work. | ||
So like with methylene blue, for example, I found that within 30 minutes of taking it, I have improved focus, improved short-term memory, improved energy. | ||
But if I take it late in the day, it doesn't interfere with my ability to sleep, which is very rare for something like this. | ||
I get a tingly feeling in my fingertips. | ||
It's almost like it's improving my circulation. | ||
My wife has chronic pain in her lower back because she's been a ballet instructor for many years. | ||
And when she takes it, it goes away for 48 hours. | ||
What is actually the science behind why this substance is so powerful? | ||
Your wife, she has kind of unexplained, chronic, mild to moderate lower back pain, right? | ||
There's no injury there. | ||
There's no systemic problem. | ||
It just, it aches, it hurts, right? | ||
So our cells have something called the Hayflick limit, right? | ||
So your cells, of the course of your life, they divide, they divide again and again and again. | ||
And around like 48 divisions or something is the number. | ||
Around 48 divisions, it's not that you become like a Cronenberg monster and you start getting like cancerous tumors all over you, but we as humans, as we get older, we develop these things called senescent cells. | ||
Now, normally, if we didn't live in like a plastic and chemical infested hell pit, we would have a normal amount and our improved lifestyle and modern living should be able to propel us to be like, we should all be 100 years old. | ||
But why are we all dying? | ||
Why is our life expectancy dropping? | ||
It's very simple. | ||
We live in an environment that's like four or five packs of cigarettes a day on top of everything that everyone else is doing. | ||
We all drink out of plastic. | ||
We're all around all these carcinogens and whatnot. | ||
Everything in our environment is toxic. | ||
What something like methylene blue does is it is a very potent antioxidant to such a degree that it actually goes into the cell and takes the first oxidative stress agent that's produced, O2 superoxide, and turns it into water. | ||
Really? | ||
What it does, it's an alternate way for electrons to be given to the cell. | ||
So if you have cellular damage, like these senescent cells that have built up over time, and you have these mitochondrial energy pathways that just don't work anymore because the system is dysfunctional, the methylene glue can come in and do the broken job and actually heal something that was never thought to have been able to be healed. | ||
Amazing. | ||
So that explains why it can help with things like aches and pains. | ||
Obviously, do your own research. | ||
Do your own research. | ||
We're talking about like in vivo, in cellular studies, this is just what it does to the cell. | ||
And is this the same mechanism that results in things like feeling like you have more energy and focus? | ||
Is it all as a result of this one thing that it does? | ||
Definitely a part of it. | ||
They have other effects too on other receptors. | ||
For example, methylene glue radically increases glucose uptake in the brain. | ||
So it makes you better and more efficient at using your sugar. | ||
We all know the brain uses like 25% of the calories in the body or something crazy. | ||
They've done studies that chess masters burn like 5,000 calories in a day in a tournament because they're so focused on directing energy to their mind as they're thinking so critically that it's like almost like an Olympic athlete. | ||
Well, think about this stuff. | ||
It operates in a very similar way. | ||
That's the real thing methylene blue does. | ||
I really believe in this product. | ||
A lot of people have bought our methylene blue. | ||
Our methylene blue is incredible. | ||
I take it personally. | ||
I was taking methylene blue about like two months before this all happened. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I was like, oh, awesome. | ||
I want to come help with this because it's so cool. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, I mean, like, this is a solid product. | ||
Take this in the morning, a couple hours later, you'll experience the cognitive benefits of it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I've noticed that it helps with focus, short-term memory, things like that. | ||
Have you noticed that it helps you get through the day too? | ||
Big time. | ||
I mean, when you're looking at energy, this is boosting your own innate processes and making them work like they should. | ||
This is a shockingly statistically significant and effective metabolic compound that has been studied for almost 200 years. | ||
It's very powerful, very potent, and it's available. | ||
So you can get yours today. | ||
unidentified
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Exposing tomorrow's tyranny tonight, it's Chase Geyser. | |
Hey, Governor, I'm sitting here with a whiskey, North. | ||
Let's see you. | ||
Let's see you. | ||
Thanks for something else, Governor. | ||
unidentified
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I'm telling this, you're so busy. | |
I've seen somebody across the country. | ||
unidentified
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What's it? | |
When I was governor during Hurricane Harding, but never have seen a response as quick or as effective as I have the folks administration response to the storm. | ||
Both immediately granted a request, immediately called to help, immediately sent down twisted off, and I'm dealing with the bottom. | ||
Staff administrators or secretaries of cabinets have come to the state of Texas to help out. | ||
No one has been as actively hands-on and swiftly delivering results as much as Wishing Oak. | ||
So this response by President Trump has been the swiftest, most effective that any person has ever delivered. | ||
A third amount of support, a third amount of time, a third immediate result. | ||
What the Trump inspection has done and what Mr. Dome have done is to search people who've been experienced in dealing with challenges like this. | ||
unidentified
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For example, if Mr. Dome was here with us, it's all what was needed. | |
She made a phone call to search and response teams. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser, your host this evening of Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
I am joined in studio by the great Nick Sordor and the extraordinary Gunther Eagleman. | ||
Boys, it is such an honor and a pleasure to have you both here at the same time. | ||
I can hardly believe it. | ||
Appreciate the glad to be here. | ||
Yeah, appreciate the invite, Chase. | ||
I know we just came back from the Kerrville area down here in Texas. | ||
So we thought we'd jump by. | ||
It's been quite a long week. | ||
So thank you. | ||
I know I was supposed to do this earlier this week, and I just had to keep moving it back and back and back. | ||
It's busy down there, man. | ||
There's a lot going on. | ||
Well, I've noticed that since you've become so important, you've really changed. | ||
So obviously, I'm aware of what happened with these floods. | ||
It was, I don't know where there were a lot of very tragic deaths, many of them children. | ||
There's all speculation and conspiracies about whether it was the mullet dudes cloud seeding or whether it's just a natural thing. | ||
We know that regardless of whether it was cloud seeding, this is something that does happen. | ||
I think I heard the word cloud seating 5,000 years ago. | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
But that's all I know. | ||
I haven't really paid much attention to what's been happening on the ground because I got to cover all the national news and I'd love to hear from you guys what you witnessed, what's actually going on, and how things look. | ||
Well, first off, you know, you were busy covering the national news and I have no idea what's going on nationally at this point. | ||
Have there been any big stories this week that we've missed? | ||
Yeah, I don't think anybody knows what's going on, Nick. | ||
Yeah, that's probably right. | ||
But, you know, we went down there on Friday night. | ||
I mean, just, you know, as soon as we got word, you know, I was in D.C. and left. | ||
We jumped on the next flight. | ||
Gunther met me down there in San Antonio and picked me up, drove me to the front lines out there. | ||
And first we put out a solicitation. | ||
We needed Starlinks down there because, you know, Kerr County, Texas is pretty rural, right? | ||
I mean, there were dead spots before the storm, you know, and think about what it looks like now. | ||
I mean, the police, their radios didn't work, their cell phones didn't work, anything like that. | ||
And so we did the same thing that I did down there in Western North Carolina, got some Starlinks together and deployed them on the ground to first responders. | ||
And then let's give a shout out to, if you don't mind, all the people on X who responded. | ||
It was incredible. | ||
I mean, my phone was blown up by the time I picked Nick up at the airport, and I know Nick's phone was blown up. | ||
Are people able to just buy Starlinks and donate them, or did Elon Musk donate? | ||
How does that work? | ||
Yeah, so what we were doing initially, because, you know, when something like that happens in an area, Starlinks, they sell out everywhere. | ||
They're gone, you know, immediately. | ||
So we had to contact people. | ||
You know, we put out something on X asking for people to let us borrow their Starlinks. | ||
Either we would go and pick them up or, you know, even better, they would bring them to us. | ||
We had a little operation center set up in Bernie, Texas, which is about half an hour outside of Ground Zero. | ||
And we had that night, we had 10 of them in hand. | ||
People driving from three, four hours away just to get us a Starlink to do anything they can to help. | ||
Right. | ||
Because it was so tragic. | ||
It was incredible. | ||
Wow. | ||
The response. | ||
What do you think about the Rosie O'Donnells and others who have been saying that this happened because Trump cut funding and there weren't emergency alerts? | ||
I mean, I live here. | ||
I know that there were emergency alerts. | ||
Was there anything that could have been done to improve the situation? | ||
Well, there were over 80 weather alerts sent in that area, the ones that, you know, buzz your phone, make it scream and everything. | ||
You know, one of the issues that Governor Abbott told me while we were in the helicopter is that, you know, because it's such a rural area, there are a lot of places where cell phones don't work. | ||
So whether or not those alerts went through is a different story. | ||
But, you know, I don't know about you, but nobody down there, none of the victims that we spoke with were concerned at all about Doge cuts to the National Weather Service. | ||
That was never a question that was brought up. | ||
Zero. | ||
Wow, so it was just... | ||
They're just taking this tragedy and they're trying to make it look like it's Trump's fault, but it had nothing to do with them. | ||
Of course, it's MSNBC there in their comfy studios in Manhattan. | ||
And when we, the first scene we pulled up at very early on Saturday morning, very early, Nick and I pulled up, I forget the name of the park, but we pulled up to the park. | ||
There were already Police communicating with a comm center. | ||
There were police, or there were boats in the high water coming down, searching. | ||
We walked up. | ||
Unfortunately, we saw a van pulling up to pull a body out. | ||
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Wow. | |
But the amount of coordination that was going on right when we got there was really impressive. | ||
And I got to give kudos to law enforcement that was unseen. | ||
Well, they were already pre-positioned two days before that this happened. | ||
That's why there were already assets on the ground. | ||
They were ready. | ||
Typically, when I go to these disaster sites, I beat most of the teams there, but they already had pre-positioned Department of Public Safety officers, dive teams, everything, just in case there was a flood. | ||
They had to kind of guess where it could possibly be. | ||
So they were looking ahead at this. | ||
It's not like this came as a surprise and it came out of nowhere because there weren't enough forecasters. | ||
There were actually more forecasters than normal in the San Angelo and San Antonio offices of the National Weather Service. | ||
So that entire situation is one big lie. | ||
And Gunther, you mentioned that the search and rescue that's ongoing has been successful and they're still finding people. | ||
Is that right? | ||
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Yeah, yeah. | |
You know, and the coordination inside the EOC or the Emergency Command Center was incredible. | ||
You know, they had screens up, they had coordination going between five different agencies or six different agencies, local police, state police, National Guard, park rangers. | ||
I think every park ranger in the state of Texas was there at that time. | ||
I mean, it was incredible on how many, and just the coordination between all of them on the search and rescue. | ||
You know, we would hear on the radio that they found something or, you know, and they were working really hard at trying to keep it from going public and causing, letting the media go to the parents or the victims' families. | ||
So they asked us, we got asked by Congressman to please put out posts and make the community aware stop. | ||
I'm going to move this phone away from this micro. | ||
I think that might be causing the end. | ||
Okay, well, put it here. | ||
Put it here. | ||
Okay, no problem. | ||
I just want to look at your phone while, you know, oh my God, it's Nixora's phone in my hand right now. | ||
It's like it's practically 100 Biden's laptop. | ||
Chase. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, that's awesome to hear that the response has been good. | ||
Obviously, it's a tragedy. | ||
You can't do anything about the weather, but the fact that the responders were there before there was even anything to respond to, I think, is indicative that everything's operating as it should. | ||
And this is just a tragedy. | ||
Yeah, but to add on to Gunther's point here, to the legacy media, I don't know which camera I'm supposed to look at. | ||
Stop harassing the families of victims. | ||
It's freaking sick. | ||
And it's why nobody likes you guys. | ||
Yeah, and especially when you're in the command center and you see the families that are impacted, it is ridiculous. | ||
It's absolutely absurd. | ||
Yeah, it's disgusting, man. | ||
I mean, I guess both sides of the political spectrum, they love a good crisis. | ||
They take advantage of it. | ||
But it's like... | ||
But had he done a good job, I would have been delighted. | ||
I would have been so happy that I was wrong because ultimately I just want to have a good president that does good things. | ||
And I would have totally admitted that I was wrong and this is great. | ||
Of course, that's not how it played out, but it seems like the better that the Trump administration does or the more good that the Trump administration does. | ||
I know it's a controversial thing to assert given what's happened this week, but that's the more livid that the left becomes, especially in his first term. | ||
Every time there was monumental success that proved that the leftist policies were wrong and the Trump policies were good, that's when they would come out with more allegations and more accusations. | ||
It was like they wanted him to fail. | ||
They wanted everything to be terrible. | ||
I think Rosie O'Donnell, for example, is delighted that any is delighted when anything bad happens under this administration, just by virtue of the fact that the buck stops with President Trump. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
You probably keep up with Rosie O'Donnell. | ||
You probably, does she on X? | ||
Do you troll her on X too? | ||
You troll everybody else on the left side. | ||
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I think I trolled her off of X. You trolled her all the way to Ireland. | |
I did. | ||
I did. | ||
And no take backs. | ||
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No take backs. | |
That's hysterical. | ||
I can't believe all these leftists are actually getting out of the country. | ||
And it's so ironic because they're just demonstrating how privileged they are that they can afford to just go and decide to live in Europe. | ||
They're like, oh, I'm standing up against the fascist capitalist billionaire by buying a first-class plane ticket to go live in Europe for the course of the next three and a half years. | ||
Meanwhile, everybody's struggling to pay their rent and their mortgages. | ||
It's just a nightmare. | ||
So how long do you think that this recovery is going to be ongoing in Texas? | ||
Do you think it was cloud seeding related or is that just a kind of a side issue? | ||
It's, you know, I'm split. | ||
You know, it is kind of incredible that it's happening in different places. | ||
And then the amount of water that's coming is absolutely. | ||
Nick and I were driving away from Craig Abbott's press conference, and we were talking about how long the recovery might take. | ||
And I mean, the amount of damage and trees and debris, houses, I mean, we saw 30 cars and trees driving. | ||
It was a five or 10 mile road. | ||
I'm going to say it's going to take years. | ||
Wow. | ||
It's totally devastated the region. | ||
Absolutely devastated. | ||
I mean, the water, we pull up at one scene and there's fish on the ground on the street and the river's 100 feet out and 30 feet down. | ||
And for fish to be that high, you kind of take a second to say it. | ||
And like, wow, the water was this high. | ||
Wow. | ||
One thing I want to ask you, Nick, is what's different or similar of what you've seen here in Texas with the flooding and what you saw in Maui? | ||
Because obviously that was a major disaster in Maui. | ||
The response was something that many were very critical of. | ||
There's even new reports coming out today that women were exchanging sexual favors for perks and privileges and benefits in Maui. | ||
That was how devastating that was. | ||
Is this administration clearly different in its disaster response than the previous one, given what you witnessed when you were in Maui? | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
I mean, Maui is one thing. | ||
Maui was one of the most corrupt things I have ever witnessed in my life, the response to that. | ||
And you notice, like, you know, I have to tell people on Maui now that it wasn't just the Biden administration that botched that. | ||
It was also the state and local governments that had no interest in actually helping people recover. | ||
They wanted people off the island. | ||
That's what they wanted. | ||
And they've gotten their way. | ||
They've gotten their way at this point. | ||
Now, you know, the Trump administration wants to help the people of Maui, but they can't do that when the state continues to block them out. | ||
The state and local governments will not request any help from them, are actively blocking investigations into what happened out there. | ||
You know, that's on one side of things. | ||
You know, if you want a more fair comparison, you'd go to Western North Carolina with the floods out there. | ||
And, you know, the devastation out there was very similar to what we saw out here in Texas. | ||
But that was a situation where they weren't given any resources. | ||
FEMA was never on the ground out there. | ||
They were actively blocking relief efforts because they didn't want me in there delivering Starlinks around to various fire departments, community centers, and giving them to police officers and such. | ||
It's like they wanted the place to be in the dark. | ||
It was really weird. | ||
But, you know, a lot of that had to do with, on the local level there, which is gross incompetence. | ||
Maui was totally corrupt, absolutely corrupt. | ||
And, you know, I'm hoping at some point the Trump administration will dig really deeply into that. | ||
And I think arrests need to be made out there. | ||
We still don't know who gave the order to push people back into the fire, to corner them. | ||
And these helpless people, the inferno was racing towards them. | ||
And the police are given orders by somebody we don't know to turn them around and send them back into the fire. | ||
They were physically blocking them from leaving the area. | ||
That is absolutely disgusting. | ||
Maybe that's the difference between the Trump administration and the previous administration is that with the previous administration, you see such corruption that people are trying to actually make a disaster as bad as possible for a desired political or financial outcome. | ||
While, like what you said, the first responders were there. | ||
The response was ready before the calamity even began to happen here in Texas with the floods. | ||
And so I think that's a pretty fair point. | ||
But obviously, there's been a lot of developments over the course of the last several days regarding the Trump administration. | ||
I think that Trump has done a really good job in a lot of ways. | ||
I'm still glad that I voted for him simply by virtue of the fact that he pardoned all the J Sixers. | ||
I mean, that's a good enough reason for me to be satisfied with my vote for Donald Trump. | ||
That being said, there are some things that are very concerning, namely the fact that they're saying now that there isn't a Jeffrey Epstein client list. | ||
What are your guys's, I know you've been busy doing other things, saving lives and helping people get internet access in a tragedy disaster zone, but what are your initial thoughts with the latest developments in the Epstein investigation? | ||
Well, I'll start. | ||
Sure. | ||
I'm pretty passionate about it. | ||
The Epstein, it's absolutely disgusting that we've been told by Pam Bondi that we had files on her desk. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And there's news clips. | ||
There are truckloads on one way to another. | ||
And then to be told the case is closed. | ||
So I was frustrated yesterday. | ||
If you follow my ex page, I had a day of unleashing. | ||
Yeah, you know, it's frustrating. | ||
Again, I would put Trump on Mount Rushmore, and I would vote for him again in 2028 if he was. | ||
I mean, I fully support Trump. | ||
Mag as can be. | ||
We were promised the Epstein files. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And for them to come out six months later, and as an American, all I want is the truth. | ||
If Pam Bondi gets on TV, I think Pam Bondi should absolutely do a press conference right away and say, this is what it is. | ||
This is the truth. | ||
Something else came up. | ||
We can't get them to you yet. | ||
But to say case closed, it's concerning. | ||
And I think it should concern everybody because we got child rapists walking the street. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Yeah, well, you know, this is something that maybe I've missed something. | ||
You can explain it to me if I've missed something. | ||
Because, I mean, Gunther can tell you, my head has been down into everything that we've been doing down there in Kerville and such. | ||
And so it's been, you know, I haven't followed every single aspect of this story. | ||
But it seems like we were told there were documents. | ||
We were told there was something on Pam Bondi's desk. | ||
There was going to be the phase one binders. | ||
That was just a total farce. | ||
That was a setup. | ||
I was invited to that. | ||
And I'm so glad I didn't go because that was a total setup meant to not embarrass the influence, but use their clout, let's say, to make it, to push this message that, oh, yep, okay, the Epstein files are actually being released. | ||
Here you go. | ||
Even though they knew that it was a total farce. | ||
But you can't say that there's more to it, that there are more documents and such, and then say, oh, well, case is closed. | ||
We're not answering any more questions. | ||
And then we get chastised for asking about it. | ||
Yes. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
I feel like I'm living in a freaking fever dream or something. | ||
I don't understand why it's just like now they're just trying to say that it's gone and there's nothing else there. | ||
No questions. | ||
You're not allowed to ask about it. | ||
And I said it on X the other day. | ||
This is not going away. | ||
Pam Bondi should have done a presser or something that day like they would do with, you know, if they arrest, you know, three people for jaywalking, they do a press conference at the DOJ. | ||
That's just how they operate. | ||
204 child predators in the last seven days. | ||
I'm thinking to myself, that was one of the things that her and Cash bragged about was 204. | ||
And that's great that in the last seven days, you've arrested or charged 204 child predators. | ||
But based on all the statistics and studies that I've looked at and what percentage of the population has those tendencies, that means there's millions of them in the United States. | ||
And if you caught 204 in seven days, that's what is it, four in every state, you're never going to catch them all that way. | ||
That's not that impressive. | ||
I mean, Alex Rosen has been responsible for the arrest of more child predators as an individual with a phone and a small team than what the FBI was bragging about at the federal level. | ||
And it's great. | ||
We should be catching all the child predators, but I don't know. | ||
I mean, there were thousands of kids that were the victims of many predators that, and it's all just going away. | ||
If I had to guess what's happened, there's a lot of people coming out and they're trying to say, oh, Trump's not releasing the information because he's on the list. | ||
And I think that's BS because if he was on the client list, he certainly would have known that. | ||
So why would he have ever signed an executive order, his first week in office, to ensure that all the Epstein files and lists be released if you know that you're on it? | ||
So my guess is that he signed the executive order in order to keep the campaign promise and he genuinely wanted the Epstein files to be released. | ||
And that through the process of this investigation, there's information that he previously was not aware of that was brought to him that made him change his mind. | ||
And they're just saying that there was no list as an excuse because they don't want to imply or indicate what that information might have been to make Trump change his mind. | ||
But it's not that he's on the list, in my opinion. | ||
So this is what I've been saying this publicly for quite a while is I don't believe that there is a list in the sense that people want there to be, but a list can be compiled based on, okay. | ||
Phone records. | ||
Phone records. | ||
You know, the videos. | ||
I mean, you're saying there are tens of thousands of videos of what? | ||
I mean, he had cameras in every bedroom, every bathroom. | ||
Where are those videos? | ||
Why is there a minute missing from the jail video that we got the other day? | ||
Victim statements. | ||
Victim statements. | ||
Are all these women that came forward, are all of them liars? | ||
You know, it seems odd. | ||
And why? | ||
You're not helping anything at all by just refusing to answer even the most basic questions about it. | ||
You don't have to be a conspiracy theorist to ask, you know, oh, why is there a minute missing in this video? | ||
I mean, that seems like a fair, if you're trying to definitively say that nobody came in or out of that block in that 10-hour span or whatever it was, and then there's a minute missing, you have to account for that minute. | ||
What happened there? | ||
You know, just any answer. | ||
We don't have anything. | ||
Even if the explanation is perfectly reasonable. | ||
And I don't think, I think her explanation was very weird, but they should have known that that one minute was going to be a problem and gotten ahead of it. | ||
And like, look, this is the software that the prison uses in order to store its files. | ||
It's set to do a defragmentation process for one minute every single day to ensure that it always records. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
They could have gotten ahead of it, but it's just like the lack of a sense of the pulse of the American people and our attitude about these conspiracies, I think is indicative of a real detachment from the people, from Bondi specifically. | ||
I think Trump knows exactly what's going on with the people, but Bondi seems to me to, she comes off to me like a little bit like a pageant girl, but more like a valedictorian, where she was probably incredible at writing the perfect essay for the perfect teacher and getting perfect grades on every test. | ||
If she knew what someone else needed her to do for them, she could probably do that perfectly, live up to someone else's vision or expectation within an already established system or institution. | ||
But from a leadership standpoint, I don't think she has any intuition about what's really going on. | ||
I think she's a reactive person rather than a proactive person. | ||
And what we're seeing is what happens when you make a valedictorian type, the attorney general, when we really need somebody who's aggressive and shoots from the hip and acts on principle and impulse without fear. | ||
I mean, the whole thing that she's been doing this whole time as the attorney general is going on Fox, going on Fox, trying to represent the Department of Justice from a PR standpoint, when what we really want is a Department of Justice that establishes justice rather than a Department of Justice that tries to convince you that it's establishing justice. | ||
Right. | ||
Pam Bonnie needs her own PR person to Fox News and just do her job. | ||
But now I really believe she has exactly what you're explaining. | ||
She has to come out tomorrow, I mean, ASAP, and explain what she was saying, what she was doing, why she said something, just to get truth out there. | ||
As the American people, we deserve truth, especially about the Epstein files. | ||
I agree. | ||
You know, Pam has this, and we've seen it from like the first weeks of the administration where she just, she talks and talks and talks and talks. | ||
And it doesn't sound real either. | ||
I mean, it's not convincing what she says on TV, especially. | ||
You know, and then you had the James O'Keefe expose that happened on her where she was caught. | ||
That's when she actually had to, she was forced to admit that there were videos because she had to get ahead of the James O'Keefe expose. | ||
She knew what was coming. | ||
She knew she was caught. | ||
And so we wouldn't even have known that information unless she was caught on hidden camera admitting that. | ||
So she's not, she doesn't have, who trusts Pam Bondi at this point? | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
I want to see her poll numbers. | ||
Is anybody on a poll on Pam Bondi? | ||
It's not even whether or not. | ||
I did a poll. | ||
I did a Pam Bondi poll. | ||
Did you? | ||
I said, yeah. | ||
I said, is Pam Bondi more likely to give me a blowjob or release the FTP? | ||
Oh my God. | ||
It had like thousands of votes and it was like 90% the blowjob. | ||
And I guess I was right. | ||
We're keeping the right on that poll. | ||
Folks, we're coming up on a break in 26 seconds. | ||
I'm going to keep you guys, if you're willing. | ||
I know it's late for just another 30 minutes because I'm really enjoying this conversation. | ||
Make sure you guys go to the alexjonesstore.com right now and be the reason it's possible for us to broadcast the truth relentlessly to the world in the face of this onslaught, this assault on all that is good, right, and just in the information war. | ||
Stay with us for more on the other side. | ||
You were just telling me that you had a brain disease and you, what did you do to fix it? | ||
I found this guy, he's a functional medicine guy, and he got me on methylene blue. | ||
And that instantly stopped everything. | ||
I'd take it. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Yeah. | ||
I take it every day as well. | ||
And RFK Jr. told me about it. | ||
Yeah, man, it's fantastic. | ||
And so this guy's injecting, in 1890, injects these rats with it and then does an autopsy on these things. | ||
And their brain, the brainstem, every single nerve is blue. | ||
So he discovered this methylene blue has an affinity for neuronal tissue. | ||
So He says, well, it's sucking into neurons and working in the body. | ||
So we started putting it in humans and we found out it's an MAOI, which helps with depression and anxiety and all kinds of life stress and stuff. | ||
It is so incredible that it acts as an electron donor to mitochondria, especially your neuronal mitochondria. | ||
So it helps you produce more ATP and it helps you get rid of this stuff called reactive oxygen species. | ||
So you have an oxygen molecule that should have two hydrogens on it. | ||
And like your body's job is to convert stuff into water so you can pee it out. | ||
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So methylene blue goes in there and balances a lot of those things out in your brain and your nervous system. | ||
So it is a miracle. | ||
It's been proven for 100 years. | ||
It's one of the most well-proven drugs out there. | ||
The strongest medical grade methylene blue. | ||
And this is what I'm on. | ||
Total mitochondria cleaning, next level energy. | ||
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Iris Seamos Shilogy. | ||
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unidentified
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That is power. | |
I'm on intermittent fasting. | ||
I'm eight at three o'clock today. | ||
And I stopped eating crap food, stopped drinking. | ||
That's what I'm on right there, baby. | ||
unidentified
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Leading a frontal assault on the lies of the New World Order. | |
It's Alex Jones. | ||
Hi, you just don't have to. | ||
Possibly more than me. | ||
But not without that picture. | ||
Not with that picture on me. | ||
Not with that picture. | ||
Not without pictures. | ||
There we have Hakeseth and Netanyahu sitting down together for a meeting amidst this visit from Netanyahu less than 24 hours after the Epstein files were revealed to the public that there is no client list. | ||
We had Netanyahu visit. | ||
Apparently he presented President Trump with a B-52 model made from all scraps of Iranian missiles that had been used against Israel. | ||
And of course, yesterday or the day before, man, the days just run together when you don't sleep, Bibi Netanyahu presented Donald Trump with the nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
And look, I think that Donald Trump probably should win the Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
He's the only president, however long it's been, guys, that didn't start any new wars in his first administration. | ||
And as terrified as I was of the decisions that he made regarding Iran recently, I think he's been proved correct that it de-escalated everything. | ||
I thought it was going to start World War III. | ||
I was saying don't do it. | ||
I was wrong. | ||
He's the master there. | ||
So he has de-escalated a conflict between Pakistan and India. | ||
And he's de-escalated a conflict between Iran and Israel. | ||
And the only real conflict that's still playing out is the one between Russia and Ukraine, which only exists because of the last administration. | ||
So I honestly think that Trump is a really good candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
I wouldn't want to win it myself given the others who have won it in the past. | ||
But what bothered me was seeing Bibi Netanyahu present it. | ||
And it's not because I'm in the camp of everything's Israel. | ||
I don't believe that. | ||
I don't think that Israel is the only country or the Jewish people are the only people who are capable of evil like some people do. | ||
And I also don't believe that they're the only people incapable of evil like some people do. | ||
I'm just kind of reasonable about it. | ||
I don't generally trust governments. | ||
But when you have someone who's been engaged in, let's just, to say the least, it has been a controversial conflict since October 7th, it seems inappropriate. | ||
I know that if I was a world leader and I had been accused of war crimes in several countries, even if I knew that I was innocent of them, I would not burden someone with receiving a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize from me. | ||
I would think that that would be like almost, maybe we should call somebody else to do it, right? | ||
Who's the president of Madagascar? | ||
What do you guys think? | ||
You know, I am just so tired of talking about foreign countries. | ||
I can't express to you how much I just don't care, man. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I mean, is that wrong? | ||
Am I allowed to just not care what happens overseas at this point? | ||
I care about what happens right here. | ||
I care about the people in this country. | ||
I don't, like, I got to watch what I say here, but, you know, I don't. | ||
Actually, maybe, no, I don't. | ||
You're right. | ||
But it makes no difference to me what happens in Africa. | ||
78 million people voted for America first. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's not America first, you know, alongside other countries, like our, what was it, the Secretary of State's press secretary said. | ||
Like, America's the greatest country in the world next to Israel. | ||
Like, they just, come on. | ||
It's not, you know, guys, we have a clear mission here. | ||
It's America first, not sometimes, but always. | ||
And, you know, I'm not shy about saying that. | ||
You know, I don't want to, you know, people ask me, during this whole thing that was going on between Iran and Israel, people were constantly saying, you know, you're just anti-Semitic. | ||
You're siding with Iran. | ||
It's like, no, literally, it's me not wanting to get involved at all in another foreign war. | ||
Trump handled it great. | ||
I was pushing back against the Lindsey Grahams of the world. | ||
We just need more boots on the ground. | ||
unidentified
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In fact, I helped those soldiers just wear the boots. | |
I think those soldiers look real good, Justin. | ||
Hey, that was a good thing. | ||
That's great right there. | ||
That's like on point. | ||
Anyway, if we got to fly with Israel, we've got to fly with Israel. | ||
If we got to sleep with the IDF soldiers, we got to sleep with the IDF soldiers. | ||
Folks, we're coming up on a one-minute break, just very short, while radio stations pick us up after the first five. | ||
We're going to unpack this all for the next 20 minutes. | ||
Stay with us and make sure you visit thealexjonestore.com. | ||
Keep us on the air. | ||
Perfect. | ||
unidentified
|
My friends know that I usually think everything's a scam from supplements and products and vitamins. | |
I don't take anything. | ||
I usually buy it, try it, don't feel the results, end up tossing it and wasting money. | ||
So I love Alex Jones and the Infowars crew. | ||
And Alex kept playing this video of Robert Kennedy Jr. putting some blue drops in what looked like water. | ||
And I wanted a way to support the team. | ||
So I decided to buy this methylene blue. | ||
This methylane blue, it is tremendous. | ||
I would not be making this video if I didn't believe in it. | ||
After I take it throughout the day, I start feeling better and better and better. | ||
My workouts, I feel like I'm 15 years younger than I am. | ||
And the app that I record my running on proves that my workouts are getting better. | ||
So I gotta tell you what, God, family, country, Infowars, and Methylene Blue. | ||
Get it while you can. | ||
No lies, no cover-ups, just truth. | ||
It's tomorrow's news tonight with Chase Geiser. | ||
All right, folks, I am Chase Geyser. | ||
This is Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
And for the next 22 minutes and 38 seconds, I will be joined in studio by the great Nick Sordor and Gunther Eagleman. | ||
It is really an honor and a pleasure to have you both here. | ||
And we were talking during the break, making fun of Lindsey Graham and how he's a closet homosexual. | ||
And we were saying that we don't care that he's gay. | ||
It's just weird that he hides it. | ||
We're so sick of a political class that hides stuff from us, whether it's the Epstein files, whether it's what they're actually doing with our money, whether it's the waste, fraud, and abuse of USAID for years hidden from us. | ||
I just want you, Lindsey Graham, to admit to us that you're gay, and that's fine. | ||
Look, I get it, man. | ||
You're trying to help out Ukraine. | ||
You want to give them tens of billions of dollars because everybody knows I love a man named Hugo Boss. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
So, Nick, tell me a little bit about your confrontation with Lindsey Graham. | ||
This is the first time hearing of it. | ||
Well, I mean, it wasn't an in-person confrontation because he hides. | ||
Lady G is one of the best. | ||
Literally, I mean, the U.S. Capitol hide-and-seek champion. | ||
I've tried. | ||
I've tried. | ||
I spent a lot of time at the Capitol. | ||
I mean, I've gotten Maxine Waters like three times. | ||
You got to stand outside the women's restroom there. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
But, you know, it was when I ended up finally getting a response from her on X at some point when I called out his expenditures in Ukraine, like these wildly huge expenses to go over to Ukraine like three times in the past six months now. | ||
Do you remember? | ||
Each trip is hundreds of thousands of dollars just in hotel rooms. | ||
And you're like, what do you do? | ||
What kind of room service are you ordering later on? | ||
I like a warm town, a young man. | ||
Right. | ||
Oh, like, look at this thing. | ||
And so this is one of Trump's worst decisions right here. | ||
I mean, I'm sure that there is some sort of deal making going on in the background. | ||
But man, I don't know what they're doing there in South Carolina. | ||
I don't know if this guy is what South Carolinans, South Carolinians look at and are like, yeah, that's who I want representing me in the Senate. | ||
I don't buy that. | ||
That's just pride flag. | ||
But it's totally good. | ||
Like you said, it's fine if you're gay, Lindsay. | ||
Just tell it. | ||
It's the fact that you're not for you, Tom Cotton. | ||
We won't even make fun of you for being gay as long as we're making fun of the fact that you're hiding that you're gay. | ||
That's it. | ||
You like to suck dick, but as soon as you're like about it, it's like, shut up, fag. | ||
You know, I don't know. | ||
I mean, he's a total piece of work. | ||
He's one of our biggest adversaries of the America First Movement on Capitol Hill. | ||
And, you know, and President Trump came out and endorsed him immediately. | ||
I'm like, bro. | ||
But the thing is, with President Trump, the endorsements, first of all, they sometimes don't stick. | ||
Secondly, sometimes he endorses... | ||
unidentified
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I'm sure I'm going to put on my khakis before we go to the front. | |
But anyway, there are times where everybody. | ||
He's surrounded by so many men. | ||
That's so perfect. | ||
He's got it done. | ||
He's always out of time. | ||
But there is that possibility that if we can get somebody in South Carolina, if you're watching and you have a lot of money and a reasonable, good political acumen, and you're in South Carolina, please send me a DM, run for office, because, you know, you could get endorsed by Trump as well. | ||
There are times where he endorses two candidates in the same race. | ||
And I hope they both win. | ||
I like them both. | ||
I hope they both win. | ||
A deal. | ||
unidentified
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Both sides win if it's a deal. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
And it's not just Lindsey Graham, too. | ||
It's all of these members of the gerontocracy, this political class that appears to be from before the Great Flood with Noah's Ark. | ||
I mean, it's just so antiquated. | ||
I couldn't believe it when I found out that Joe Biden was born just like four years after the air conditioning was invented for the automobile. | ||
And you realize he was like three or four years old by the time Hitler died. | ||
So he's old enough, if he could remember anything, to remember Hitler's speeches on the radio. | ||
This guy is like so ancient. | ||
It's a totally different time that he comes from. | ||
And then he's like the most powerful man ever after being a senator for years and never accomplishing anything other than the undermining of the interests of the American people. | ||
But why? | ||
Do you think that it's like a situation with like a demographic issue where there's this type of Republican who falls into the baby boomer category and they only get their information from like a Fox News? | ||
And so they just don't understand or are not aware of the fact that people like Lindsey Graham, like, they suck. | ||
He literally does. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Better blood jobs and no jobs. | ||
Better blood jobs and no jobs. | ||
We got to fund that military industrial complex. | ||
Don't ask, don't tell. | ||
You know, the thing with... | ||
You know, I don't want to piss off too many people. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, hey, Michelle, how are you doing? | |
Big Mike. | ||
I like you. | ||
Wonder why, Lindsay. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
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Sorry, Danny. | |
You saw Madison Cawthorne. | ||
If you remember him directly calling out Lindsey Graham for this kind of thing, and then all of a sudden, you know, the walls close in on Madison Cawthorne. | ||
How did that? | ||
What happened with that? | ||
Well, because he exposed the fact that Kevin McCarthy was, you know, was facilitating with Lindsey Graham drug-fueled orgies on Capitol Hill. | ||
And then all of a sudden, they pushed him out. | ||
I forgot about that. | ||
I don't think he's lying about it. | ||
Why would he lie about that? | ||
There's no good reason for Madison Cawthorne to have, look. | ||
See, damn, you get some great guys in the back here. | ||
They're always ready. | ||
They're amazing. | ||
Orgy and cocaine, you know? | ||
And, you know, talk to Matt Gates about it. | ||
Matt Gaetz will be like, yeah. | ||
Honestly, I would be willing to tolerate the orgies and the cocaine if they were doing everything else right. | ||
You know? | ||
If that's what helps them make America great. | ||
Orgy on the taxpayer. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you so much for getting us out of war. | |
All we need is that yes vote. | ||
unidentified
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All we need is a yes vote. | |
Oh, yeah. | ||
Well, that was that guy that the Senate House porn where he was slamming that button. | ||
Yeah, Liz Grad. | ||
I'm so glad that leaked. | ||
I think it got a leaked a little leak. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
unidentified
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Man. | |
It was right there on Amy Kolbuchar's CR. | ||
I'd like to primary that guy. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
So what's going to happen next with this big, beautiful bill? | ||
And is Trump's reputation going to be able to recover after this Epstein stuff? | ||
How are these things that are all kind of hovering in the air going to play out? | ||
Gunther, what do you think, man? | ||
Well, I think the big, beautiful bill, the tax break for the absolutely. | ||
I think it'll play out for the economy really well. | ||
I think people spend money. | ||
I think people have extra money. | ||
You know, I go back to the, I don't think, I think the Epstein files, somebody needs to step up and talk. | ||
I think that's going to bite some people in the ass. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Do you think that this America party from Musk is going to be seriously problematic? | ||
Or do you think the schism is going to mend itself in time? | ||
I think it's going to mend itself in time. | ||
Last I checked, the polling was at 4%. | ||
I don't think that, you know, I think Musk has his idea of it with his feud with Trump. | ||
I like what they've both done for the country. | ||
I think Elon helped Trump cross that finish line. | ||
I'm not saying Trump. | ||
It's not even the endorsement that did it. | ||
It was just the fact that he made X a free speech platform. | ||
The fact that there was free speech in a massive way on the internet was enough to get Trump to win, even if he'd never endorsed it. | ||
Imagine if on X that we didn't have that free speech. | ||
I remember what it was like a few years ago, before it was X when it was still Twitter. | ||
I was self-censoring all the time. | ||
I would save what I wanted to post in drafts, and I went back and looked at them, and they were just hilarious, man. | ||
But I just knew I couldn't post them because the censorship was so rampant. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, I think I put a couple of years back, COVID was the flu. | ||
I mean, it was gone. | ||
Seven days. | ||
You're like, you didn't lose your whole account over that. | ||
Yeah, you're right. | ||
Actually, I've been suspended twice, both, I guess, mistakes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And was brought back. | ||
And now that with free speech, it's been great. | ||
Yeah, the massive reporting campaigns and the bots are insane. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Do you know what post? | ||
Oh, go ahead, Nick. | ||
No, no, no, go. | ||
Do you know what post triggered the suspension? | ||
It was a meme on the last one. | ||
It was a Joe Biden in the shower meme with Ashley. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it got mass reported. | ||
And it wasn't bad. | ||
I mean, there was no nudity or anything. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
It got mass reported. | ||
And within 42 minutes, I was back up. | ||
That's funny. | ||
I was on, I think it was Newsmax. | ||
I can't remember. | ||
Chris something, some Italian name is the host of the show. | ||
And they asked me what I thought of the raids on Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And I remarked that they kicked me off the air right after this. | ||
They never invited me back. | ||
I said, look, they're saying that Donald Trump is keeping classified documents and information in a bathroom in a shower in Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And I was like, but the only president I know of who's ever committed a crime in a shower is Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
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And it was like, oh, thanks, Chase, for coming on. | |
He's like, oh, nobody's ever actually seen that diary. | ||
I'm like, oh, you should read it, man. | ||
It was unbelievable. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, you know, the greatest part about X, I think, is, you know, people think that, oh, well, it's just an echo chamber and it's not real life and such. | ||
But the reason that you saw, let's say, in the Oval Office today, I could name lots of examples, but in the Oval Office, they talk about the sentiment that MAGA feels toward the DOJ and the administration right now for basically saying the Epstein files are just a figment of your imagination. | ||
And that sentiment is relayed to legacy media from X. It's not on any other platform. | ||
You're not allowed to talk about this stuff on any other platform. | ||
And that's where this stuff is getting the most traction, the most views. | ||
Going back to what's going on in, say, Western North Carolina, Maui, Texas, these things are the reason that they are so covered is because of this platform. | ||
And I think it's literally, I'm not trying to fluff Elon or anything here, but it is a massive game changer in the media sphere. | ||
Like I think Alex Jones was banned from Twitter and like every other platform. | ||
Yeah, we were literally just on the radio for years because we got banned everywhere else. | ||
And it all happened within the same week, I think, because it was a conspiracy among the different tech leaders. | ||
And that's a whole nother story. | ||
I mean, everybody's heard it a million times. | ||
But I want to talk to you guys a little bit about this new development with this FBI criminal probe into John Brennan and James Comey. | ||
And guys, I want to play clips 42 and 16 back to back, 42 and 16. | ||
First, we're going to see President Trump responding to the criminal investigation in James Comey and John Brennan. | ||
And then we're going to see John Brennan respond to the probe on MSNBC. | ||
It's just disgusting. | ||
So play 42 and 16 back to back, please. | ||
Hey, President Trump. | ||
James Comey and John Brennan, now under criminal investigation related to the Trump-Russia probe. | ||
Do you want to see these two guys behind bars? | ||
Well, I know nothing about it other than what I read today, but I will tell you, I think they're very dishonest people. | ||
I think they're crooked as hell. | ||
And maybe they have to pay a price for that. | ||
I believe they are truly bad people and dishonest people. | ||
So whatever happens, happens. | ||
As you point out, Marco Rubio, he's a different person now, quite frankly. | ||
I think when he was in the intelligence committee, I think he really tried to carry out national security responsibilities in a very appropriate manner and tried to not just bring politics into it. | ||
So again, I think that SSCI report, the Mueller investigation, the Durham investigation and review, all of this, I think, again, validates what happened in terms of Russian interference, the conclusions of that assessment, that Russia tried to interfere to enhance Donald Trump's prospects in that election, to damage Hillary Clinton, and to undermine the integrity of our election process, those have really stood up and have been validated and supported by subsequent reviews, very thorough reviews. | ||
So again, this is something that I think is made up out of, unfortunately, whole cloth, and they're just trying to see what they're able to get to stick to the media wall. | ||
Made up out of whole cloth. | ||
You would know something about that. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
What do you guys think? | ||
Do you think this problem is going to amount to anything? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, it's hard to... | |
Okay. | ||
It's been a lot. | ||
Until we get some sort of answers about why the Epstein investigation disappeared, it's really hard for me to believe that anything is going to go anywhere at this point. | ||
And I don't feel like that's a... | ||
It's tough. | ||
We need some answers because Epstein was also under, they were also, said they were going to take a deep dive into all that, release all the files and everything. | ||
Obviously, we already talked about this. | ||
They didn't do it. | ||
I want so badly to trust everything these people say, but after we were just like, I feel betrayed almost a little bit. | ||
That was a promise. | ||
Just at least give us what you have. | ||
Make us feel a little bit better with it and not feel like we were just totally lied to. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, is that a fair opinion at this point? | ||
Is it a distraction, Nick? | ||
Well, you got in trouble for asking that question last night on Twitter. | ||
And that's a possibility. | ||
And the reason that I have such a hard time saying that this is a distraction or something is because I believe Dan Bongino is a good guy. | ||
I do. | ||
I believe that he has. | ||
He is a really good guy. | ||
And so like I sit here and I trip over my words because I'm like, you know, if it was and And if he has the power to do it, he's not going to be engaged in any sort of cover-up. | ||
He's not going to cover for pedophiles and such. | ||
He doesn't need this. | ||
I mean, it's not like this is his career. | ||
He can go back to doing whatever he was doing before. | ||
He does look freaked out, though, relative to his clips from a couple of years ago. | ||
You look at clips from his podcast and he's happy and he's got life in him. | ||
He looks freaked out in everything that I see of him. | ||
And so at this point, like, I haven't made up my mind on how I feel about this yet. | ||
You know, typically I'm very, very opinionated. | ||
I'm very quick on my opinions to give it to you. | ||
But at this point, I have so many questions and I'm trying so hard to give Dan Bongino in particular the benefit of the doubt that I think Cash Patel seems like the kid in junior high that lied about where he went on vacation on spring break to impress his friends. | ||
Oh, you went to Hawaii? | ||
Yeah, that's cool. | ||
I went to the Great Wall in China and hung out with the president. | ||
Tim Walls is like, really? | ||
Tim Wald? | ||
That must have been awesome. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Were there tampons in the bathroom? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, dude. | |
Dude. | ||
The way he would just walk around like this onto the stage, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
I go, yo, no, yo, no, yo. | |
He's like, literally, like, I'm like, dude, are you trying to act like your kid? | ||
Like, I wonder where he gets it from. | ||
It's just, it's unbelievable to me how disconnected this, like, the entire political class is from anything. | ||
How he was loading his shotgun and unloading his shotgun? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Why did they publish that video? | ||
Got to keep a clip. | ||
That was the worst idea of his PR guy was to post that picture. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The one where he's sitting there struggling to figure out if he's like, oh, this has been in the family for so long or whatever. | ||
It's like Chuck Schumer making burgers. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
He's never going to live that one down. | ||
Yeah, I wear a camo hat all the time. | ||
You should have seen the memes when I posted the other day about Chuck Schumer being in the hospital in D.C. It was like, it was the burgers, wasn't it? | ||
That's it. | ||
It had to be. | ||
He was making lunch again. | ||
That's it. | ||
He was in the hospital? | ||
Yeah, he was in the hospital. | ||
They said it was an allergic reaction, but it was coincidentally right around lunchtime. | ||
So, you know, it was. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
But for whatever reason, nobody really had any concern about what he was actually in the hospital for. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
Weird. | ||
Weird. | ||
Can't imagine why. | ||
Well, he would certainly be sorely missed. | ||
So my thing with this FBI investigation, it seems like oftentimes these investigations are simply so they can say that they did an investigation and found nothing. | ||
We just saw a little bit of that with the Epstein thing. | ||
We certainly saw it with the Hillary Clinton emails in 2016. | ||
There's a pattern throughout history of we did an investigation, we couldn't find any evidence of crime, third parties, or whatever. | ||
So there's that angle where they can at least say that they looked into it and then deny that there's any evidence, which seems really plausible to me. | ||
And the other factor when it comes to the Brennans and the Comeys, we know that the CIA and the FBI, they're very siloed organizations. | ||
There's need to know and they isolate information that way. | ||
There are cliques within the organization. | ||
There are people that are the MAGA people on the white hats and there are the people that are more subversive. | ||
And it's not like one thing. | ||
It's the culmination of many things that are conflicting and even having internal schisms and battles with themselves. | ||
There's this whole subversive war going on, I think, within our own intelligence community that we never hear about because, well, that's what an intelligence community does. | ||
And so that being said, I think there are people within the FBI that are still certainly comie acolytes that, you know, think he was great. | ||
He never did anything wrong. | ||
What he was doing was in the best interest of the national security of the United States. | ||
I think that there are still people within the CIA certainly that love Brennan. | ||
And they thought, oh, it was good that we were calling attention to this Russia hoax thing, even if it was made up because Donald Trump is a major threat to national security. | ||
We've seen that attitude from the political class and the deep state around Trump for 10 years now. | ||
And so I'm thinking, who within this organization is actually doing the probe or the investigation? | ||
Because the organizations that are investigating them are just as likely to be the organization that would cover for them. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So, you know, I spoke at the, I spoke with a, be careful how I say this, a very high-ranking official, intelligence official at the White House, who I asked them how many people in your circle, in the department that you run, how many people can you trust within that apparatus? | ||
And they said, I can count them on my hand. | ||
And I believe that, right? | ||
You know, taking out the, and you're talking thousands of people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And you just don't know. | ||
There are a ton of holdovers. | ||
These people have been here. | ||
They are master manipulators. | ||
They're from the, you know, the Comey days and the Brennan days and such. | ||
And it's hard sometimes to figure out who they are. | ||
Who is a snake? | ||
Who's not a snake? | ||
Who's looking to undermine you? | ||
You know, who it's like you're going straight into enemy territory. | ||
And it's tough, I can imagine, even for somebody like Dan Bongino and Cash Patel to weed these people out of the FBI. | ||
Like, that's got to be half the job here is taking out the trash. | ||
I bet it's more than half. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And like, so, and there's only so much they can say about that. | ||
So I'm like, you know, as much as I want an update on that, it, you know, I understand why they can't tell us. | ||
I think the FBI probably, and we probably all agree here, is one of the most corrupt organizations in the United States by far. | ||
And that's when things got really hairy. | ||
Right. | ||
And so what I want to know, and this is a question that a lot of people have, is were there files at some point and we believe they have now been destroyed? | ||
That's an answer that a lot of us want as well. | ||
If that's the case, just tell us that. | ||
Why not tell us that? | ||
You can't say, well, it just, I mean, essentially the memo just read, there's no, but even if they'd all been destroyed, they certainly know all of the victims and they could have gone and re-interviewed them and recreated all the evidence. | ||
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Right. | |
You know, because Jeffrey Epstein was, you know, charged in both both federally and in the state of Florida while and you know, so Pam Bondi seems to be acting like she had no idea that she was caught off guard by the fact that there were so many more files in that little binder that she had on the that she gave out, right? | ||
But she was the attorney general of Florida while Jeffrey Epstein was being investigated and prosecuted in Miami or in Paul Beach the first time, right? | ||
She didn't have anything to do with the actual prosecution. | ||
She was probably told that he belonged to intelligence. | ||
Well, and so that's the question that a lot of us have, too. | ||
It seems like a simple press conference to come out and say exactly what Nick's saying. | ||
Hey, the documents were destroyed. | ||
They were on my desk. | ||
They were destroyed. | ||
Just something to tell the American people. | ||
They just know that if they say what happened, which in my opinion, my humble opinion, is they realize there were national security implications because of his association with certain strategic allies working with our intelligence community. | ||
And they don't want the public, they cannot admit it to the public that we, the taxpayer, funded human trafficking and child sexual abuse for the sake of a blackmail ring on politicians. | ||
They can't do it. | ||
And they can't do it now, especially that we're in a place where we could be at war with China at any moment through the proxies of Israel and Iran. | ||
Iran's a proxy of China. | ||
Israel a proxy of the United States. | ||
That's what's really going on. | ||
And I don't think Trump knew that before he signed the EO. | ||
Folks, we're coming to a break. | ||
We're going to be right back on the other side. | ||
Thank you so much, Nick Sordor and Gunther and Eagleman. | ||
It's been an absolute honor and a pleasure to have you stay with us for more news and analysis for the last 30 minutes of tomorrow's news tonight. | ||
And in the meantime, go to the alexjonestor.com and be the reason we will always be on the air. | ||
Fox News alert, the Ayatollah has gone into hiding. | ||
He's believed to be holed up inside an underground bunker northeast of the capital. | ||
Iranian proxies, which have been severely degraded, are threatening to commit acts of terror against American troops and American ships in the region. | ||
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And sources are telling ABC News that President Trump has approved the attack plans for Iran that were presented to him. | |
And American businesses are now bracing for cyber attacks. | ||
The whole world's watching. | ||
In light of that news, I have a message directly from the president. | ||
And I quote, based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks. | ||
That's a quote directly from the president for all of you today. | ||
What's your take on that? | ||
Because people say, well, that's just the President. | ||
No, that's Trump talking. | ||
Now it looks like he's giving himself more breathing room two weeks when we were coming down to the deadline. | ||
And the last deadline passed, obviously, and within 24 hours Israel struck. | ||
Trump is speaking through her, right? | ||
Those are his words. | ||
And he's waiting because you put U.S. bombers over there with bunker buster bombs. | ||
It embroils America into something that could last a decade. | ||
He knows the implications of this and you don't want to overreact. | ||
You don't want to actually do something that might not need to be done if you can avoid it with some kind of negotiations, which Trump is the master negotiator, right? | ||
So you've got Iran, you've got Trump, and you've got Netanyahu, right? | ||
So two of those are really going at it. | ||
What Trump is saying, I believe, in that message is, I don't want to embroil America in a war for the next decade plus. | ||
And that's what he's been saying the last 48 hours, or really 24 is. | ||
I only want to do this if it doesn't turn into a long war. | ||
Now he's learning it will. | ||
And so sanity is prevailing, hopefully. | ||
And wow, that's so important. | ||
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We'll be right back. | |
The war for tomorrow begins tonight with your host, Chase Geiser. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser. | ||
This is Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
Just had a great conversation with Nick Swordor and Gunther Eagleman in studio. | ||
What an honor and a pleasure it is to be associated with and know those two fine gentlemen. | ||
We're going to cover some of the latest other details this last 24 minutes and seven seconds. | ||
Antifa violence, why terrorist designation remains elusive. | ||
Do you remember how insistent Antifa was that they weren't a formal organization, that it was just an idea? | ||
Many people were perplexed why they would seemingly consistently have the same narrative or rhetoric around the nature of their organization. | ||
Oh, no, no, it's not an organization. | ||
It's just an idea. | ||
It's just a slogan, just a word. | ||
We're not really a group. | ||
We're not really associated or affiliated with one another, even though we're all funded in every different city by the same NGOs, funded by the same Soros. | ||
Well, the reason, of course, that Antifa insists that it's not an entity or a gang or an organization is because they don't want to get recode. | ||
One person commits a crime who's a member of Antifa, then everybody else can be prosecuted as a result. | ||
So they're trying to dodge the law. | ||
And we've seen the left come out time and time again and claim that all of this violence that takes place in the United States is actually a result of right-wing extremism and rhetoric. | ||
They're always advocating for things like censorship to stifle misinformation or disinformation while they misinform and disinform everyone as much as possible with their what was a former monopoly on the press, legacy media conglomeration. | ||
But I'm going to show you clip 12 here. | ||
Actually, skip 12, 17. | ||
I want to show you clip 17 where Sam Harris and David French get into it a little bit. | ||
And I'm going to show you some other clips too of different leftists saying that violence is coming from us, juxtaposed to evidence that it's actually coming from the left. | ||
I mean, we know this, but just watch this clip. | ||
I have to say the same thing about Tucker Carlson, right? | ||
And you might, whether you agree with me or not, this is my view of him, that he's not in the truth-seeking journalistic integrity business. | ||
He's got some other political project that entails spreading a fair amount of misinformation quite cynically and consciously and smearing lots of people. | ||
And in the case of, you know, I don't know how deep his anti-Semitism runs, but in the case of that particular topic, midwifing a very misleading conversation with an amateur historian who he considers the greatest historian working in America today, Daryl Cooper, the podcaster. | ||
And, you know, the opinion expressed, again, this is like, this is at the highest possible level in our information ecosystem to the largest audience. | ||
You know, few historians in human history have ever had a bigger audience than Daryl Cooper had on Tucker's podcast and then quickly followed by his appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast, right? | ||
And on that podcast, he spread the lie, the recycled, you know, David Irving point that the Holocaust is not at all what it seemed and you wouldn't believe it. | ||
But the Nazis really never intended to kill the Jews. | ||
They just rounded up so many prisoners in their concentration camps and found that they just didn't have enough food during winter to feed them. | ||
And they just were put in this just impossible situation. | ||
And might it not seem more compassionate to euthanize these starving prisoners in the end? | ||
That's how they accidentally stumbled into the final solution, right? | ||
That's what he spread, again, to the largest possible audience. | ||
And in Tucker's case, you had a very, I would say, you know, sinister midwifing of that conversation. | ||
In Joe's case, he just doesn't know when he's in the presence of recycled David Irving and is just happy to have a conversation with a podcaster of whom he's a great fan. | ||
But yet he's still culpable for not having done enough homework to adequately push back about what's being said to his, again, to his audience, which is the largest podcast audience on earth. | ||
So it's journalistically, and I know Joe doesn't consider himself a journalist. | ||
He considers himself a comedian who's just having fun conversations. | ||
Great. | ||
But here's the fallacy here. | ||
There's so much to unpack here. | ||
First of all it's a mischaracterization of anything that Cooper actually said, and all that stuff has been clarified. | ||
It didn't even need to be clarified. | ||
It was clear the first time that it was said. | ||
So he's saying what Daryl Cooper said and then attacking him for that, but he never said that. | ||
And the other avenue of this is the appeal to authority fallacy. | ||
It's a logical fallacy. | ||
It's very well known. | ||
Just because someone is an expert or an authority doesn't mean they are inherently right about anything in that topic or subject. | ||
It's an appeal to authority to say, oh, you're not actually an educated historian. | ||
Therefore, your opinion doesn't matter on history. | ||
Because there are educated historians who are wrong about history all the time. | ||
Constant headlines breaking. | ||
Scientists now believe that the earliest humans dwelled on the earth 400,000 years ago, not 200,000 years ago. | ||
So all the experts were wrong before. | ||
It's appealed to authority. | ||
It's obvious. | ||
The third thing is Sam Harris, if you don't know, formerly a member of what was called the intellectual dark web, did an outstanding debate with Jordan Peterson on the existence of God many years ago, formerly very respected among people who even disagreed with him. | ||
Sam Harris basically fell out of grace, apparently lost his mind. | ||
I don't know that he's actually insane, but he's so embittered by the political outcomes that have taken place over the course of the last couple of years that he made the statement, I think it was on Konstantin Kisson's podcast, he didn't care if there were the bodies of dead children found in Joe Biden's basement. | ||
He would still vote for him over Donald Trump. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
So this is somebody who's talking about misinformation, disinformation, disingenuous conversations, media manipulation, and criticizing Tucker Carlson and Joe Rogan of all people. | ||
And Daryl Cooper saying, hey, this is dangerous that you're having Holocaust deniers on. | ||
He didn't even deny the Holocaust. | ||
He just provided context that you can agree with or disagree with. | ||
It was obviously an atrocity. | ||
It obviously happened because the Germans allowed it to happen. | ||
Made it happen. | ||
But he's saying that's so dangerous. | ||
And this is all after he said he didn't care if the bodies of dead children were found in Joe Biden's basement, he would still vote for him over Donald Trump. | ||
So at that point, you just don't get an opinion anymore. | ||
But here's Jasmine Crockett, another genius among us, saying that the violence is all coming from MAGA. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
The violence doesn't come from Democrats, just to be clear. | ||
I mean, obviously anyone can be a criminal, but it is MAGA. | ||
It's specifically MAGA faction. | ||
Like, I don't think traditional Republicans are getting engaged in all of this, but like even when we look at and they don't talk about the assassination attempts anymore that took place with Donald Trump, but these were Trump supporters, right? | ||
As well as a supporter of someone if you try to assassinate him. | ||
I'm pretty sure that attempting to assassinate someone is the embodiment of being opposed to them. | ||
How could you be in more opposition to someone than attempting to take their life? | ||
What the hell is she even talking about? | ||
First of all, she goes to Party City before she goes on that podcast. | ||
She asks the lady behind the counter if they have any bumblebee costumes. | ||
She finds the closest thing, puts it on, and then says, hey, those people that tried to assassinate Donald Trump, well, they were Trump's supporters. | ||
So MAGA is making, it doesn't even make any sense whatsoever. | ||
And it doesn't matter that it makes any sense because we're talking about a cult on the left that will just eat up whatever their leaders say. | ||
It's an absolute cult. | ||
Gavin Newsom came out, this is clip 19, criticizing Trump saying he wants to bring America back to the 1960s as if that's a bad thing. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
What we're experiencing is America in reverse. | ||
They're trying to bring us back to a pre-1960s world on voting rights. | ||
You know it well. | ||
Civil rights, LGBTQ rights, women's rights. | ||
And not just, you know, access to abortion, but also access to simple reproductive care contraceptions. | ||
Oh, the 1960s, huh? | ||
He's trying to bring us back to the 1960s when everybody stayed married forever and had children. | ||
He's trying to bring us back to the age of the Norman Rockwell painting. | ||
How horrible is that? | ||
In so many ways, things were so much better for everyone, minorities included in the 1960s. | ||
I know the Civil Rights Act didn't pass until 1964. | ||
So obviously, before 64, things were explicitly, objectively worse in the country for minorities and civil rights and things of that nature. | ||
But you realize that it's the policies of the left and the democratic machine and the military-industrial complex that forced us to get off the gold standard and caused hyperinflation. | ||
Hyperinflation, which disproportionately impacted minority communities, women, people of color, the poor among us, the most vulnerable among us. | ||
So what happens when in the 1960s, maybe you're a black man and you're married to your wife and you go to church every Sunday and your children go to public school. | ||
It's integrated now. | ||
And as a black man, you are able to work every day and provide for your family in a modest but nice home in a safe neighborhood. | ||
You're just barely getting by, but you can do it. | ||
And then all of a sudden, we detach from the gold standard, the gold backing of the US dollar, and there's hyperinflation. | ||
And everything is 10, 20, 30% more expensive, but your income doesn't go up because you're a lower middle class person and it just doesn't operate like that. | ||
And if trickle-down economics is true, it might be. | ||
It's certainly latent. | ||
And so at that point in time, your wife has to get a job too. | ||
enter feminism, the psychological cope for the fact that men could no longer provide for their families. | ||
And so, now that your wife is working and you're working just to make ends meet because this inflation has come out of nowhere because of democratic policies and overspending and dishonesty in our political class, you're not home to spend time with your children in the evenings. | ||
And so they're hanging out with the other neighborhood kids. | ||
There's no supervision whatsoever. | ||
They're not doing as well in school. | ||
And since you're not making as much money because of the inflation and everybody's struggling so much, the tax revenue in your neighborhood goes down, property values go down, and so the schools then become less well-funded. | ||
Then the education becomes inferior. | ||
And you don't have time to go to church on Sunday because you're picking up an extra shift. | ||
And so is your wife. | ||
And you're so financially stressed out that now you and your wife are going to get a divorce because financial stress is the number one cause of divorce. | ||
So your children are raised by a single mother who's working three jobs. | ||
You're working all the time. | ||
And the single mother is blaming you for the reason things didn't work out, attempting to alienate your children from you. | ||
They have no father figure. | ||
And since they have no father figure, then they have no supervision. | ||
These children turn to petty crime. | ||
Maybe a little bit of marijuana here, a little bit of car theft here, a little bit of break-ins here, just hanging out with the wrong crowd. | ||
And over time, over decades, this is how you get the culture that we see in these minority communities now. | ||
It's not a genetic issue. | ||
It's not a race issue. | ||
It's just they were a vulnerable class of people socioeconomically. | ||
And that problem was exacerbated. | ||
So it's not some prejudice or capitalism or greed or bad white supremacist policy that has resulted in what's happened to these communities over the years. | ||
It's an irresponsible government that overspends. | ||
And this is why Elon Musk is so upset with the Big Beautiful Bill, which overall, I think I support it, the Big Beautiful Bill. | ||
But raising the debt ceiling $5 trillion is a step backward. | ||
And I get why Trump did it. | ||
We have to win the space race. | ||
We have to win the artificial intelligence arms race. | ||
We have to win the economic war with China. | ||
And if he raises the debt ceiling $5 trillion, he doesn't have to negotiate new budget deals, new deficit deals with the Democrats every six months, which can totally get in the way of an administration's agenda. | ||
And keep in mind, raising the debt ceiling is not the same thing as spending the money. | ||
He didn't spend the $5 trillion. | ||
This bill, this big, big, beautiful bill, only spends $267 billion, as I understand it. | ||
And we know that over time, over the course of the next 10 years, yes, absolutely Congress will spend all the money because whenever you raise the debt ceiling, it always gets spent. | ||
So I understand why Elon Musk is critical of it, doesn't like it, because he's concerned about the nation going bankrupt. | ||
I'm concerned about it too. | ||
But I also understand why Trump did it. | ||
And I don't think it's a fault of his character that he made the decision that he made. | ||
It's just an exercise of judgment, which is his prerogative as the elected president of the United States. | ||
But the fact that you have the Gavin Newsoms who do things like eat at restaurants called the French Laundry in the middle of a pandemic while making other people all over your state shut down their businesses and wear masks. | ||
And you're not wearing a mask and you're at one of the most expensive restaurants in one of the most expensive parts of the country, just having a good time as the governor in this crisis is indicative of such hypocrisy. | ||
It's just remarkable how untenable it is. | ||
But here's clip 20 of Glenn Beck talking about the Democratic Socialists of America and what they're doing, what they're signaling. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
With Momdani, the DSA is signaling that their time has now arrived. | ||
Nowhere is this clearer than what has been dubbed the People's Republic of Astoria, which is Momdani's home district in Queens. | ||
This place has become the first district in the U.S. to elect a socialist at every level of government. | ||
City Council, State Assembly, U.S. Congress, and now potentially the mayor's office. | ||
It is a socialist utopia in the making. | ||
Astoria's Democrats, their testing ground. | ||
Ocasio-Cortez is the reigning queen of this movement. | ||
New York Working Families Party and the DSA were instrumental in her 2018 upset over Joe Crowley, a Democratic machine politician. | ||
They're using the same playbook to get Momdani elected. | ||
And her rise was not a one-off. | ||
So you don't have to see the whole thing playbook. | ||
I'm just going to tell you what he says. | ||
The exact same process, system, and even people and institutions that selected and created, manufactured AOC are doing the same thing with Zamdani. | ||
And they're doing it all over the country. | ||
And this is just one of many of their effective methods at getting away with choosing our leaders for us, leaders who don't lead, but actually work for shadowy interests. | ||
And look, I'm scared. | ||
I'm scared about the future for a lot of reasons. | ||
I'm scared about potentially going to World War III because of the monetary system that we have in place globally and how it's unsustainable and it's a Ponzi scheme. | ||
I'm scared about losing the trade war with China for global reserve status of the dollar, which would result in the collapse of our currency and then basically present the world to China on a platter to create a central bank digital currency a yen and control everything. | ||
I'm worried about losing the artificial intelligence race with China too, because they could weaponize that in so many different ways. | ||
It's not even funny. | ||
Mostly psychological operations, raising our children for us through personally catered content and information on apps like TikTok and others. | ||
TikTok's just an example of the CCP launching software social manipulation into the country and then using the algorithms to manipulate people. | ||
I'm worried about losing the space race with China. | ||
If Elon Musk and Donald Trump have a falling out and SpaceX doesn't get contracts, then we don't have the right rockets to get the correct satellite array in place to have dominance in the new frontier, outer space, to take the high ground, both for reasons of national security as well as energy. | ||
There's a lot of technology being developed to transmit energy from space to the planet wirelessly. | ||
But I'm also worried about winning the economic war with China because I've seen what the United States did over the last 50 years with freezing assets, sanctions, because it was a global reserve currency. | ||
And I've seen what it's been like going to war after war after war in the Middle East just because of the nature of our money and having to protect the trade of oil in dollars. | ||
I'm scared of us winning the artificial intelligence race against China as well, because I'm not sure that I trust the government or the corporations that will develop and wield this technology, which could be used for incredible good, but could also be deployed against the interests of the American people and on the American people. | ||
We know that the intelligence community does this because they did it with MKUltra and so many other thousands of examples. | ||
And I'm scared about winning the space race against China as well, because if we do establish this golden dome and it's got massive surveillance, then we've basically created a government which is like a false god. | ||
Remember, the definition of God is the entity that is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent. | ||
It's all-powerful, it's all-knowing, and it's everywhere. | ||
And if we establish the Golden Dome and we win the AI race and we dominate economically, then we've created a government that is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent, a false God. | ||
And just like God made us in his image, and we fell and didn't live up to that image, now we are making artificial intelligence in our image. | ||
It's an even more inferior, lower resolution step away deviation from God. | ||
It's another degree of separation. | ||
And not only are we making this thing in our image, but many of us will worship it as a false idol. | ||
Like the story of the Tower of Babel, where in our arrogance, we think we've got it all figured out. | ||
And as a result, our whole civilization collapses. | ||
And I'm worried about the corruption in our own institutions, FBI, CIA, our political class, its interests, our entanglements with other intelligence agencies all over the world, namely Israel, Mossad. | ||
And I'm worried about how corrupt these institutions are, resulting in no ability to solve the problem no matter how noble the person is at the head of these organizations. | ||
You got to keep in mind that if you have a house with a bad foundation, you can't fix it from the roof. | ||
And even if you have the best director of the FBI or the best CIA director or the best president of the United States, if these organizations are corrupted at the core, you have to abolish them and rebuild them. | ||
So I'm worried about that. | ||
The Epstein thing worries me. | ||
The debt and the collapse of the dollar worries me. | ||
World War III worries me. | ||
The CCP worries me. | ||
I'm terrified of my own government, which has proven time and time again that it is itself the greatest threat to our national security. | ||
Just look at the Patriot Act in 9-11, Gulf of Tonkin, USS Liberty. | ||
You name it. | ||
And I don't know what to do to stop it. | ||
But I do know that I have to do two things. | ||
I have to tell the truth whenever I can, as much as I can, to as many people as I can, which is why I work at Infowars. | ||
And I have to never lose hope. | ||
Because as soon as you lose hope, you guarantee failure. | ||
You guarantee defeat. | ||
You have to have faith. | ||
Faith, the size of a mustard seed, can move mountains. | ||
And so even if our chance of success is only 1% with hope, that's a lot better than 0% without it. | ||
I'm not going to be blackpilled. | ||
I will hang on to a shred of hope. | ||
I won't be naive. | ||
But if things do really fall apart and everything collapses and I have to witness the suffering of my people and my family, at least I won't harbor any guilt or feel any guilt as that tragedy occurs because I'll know that I did everything that I could. | ||
And right now I'm calling upon you, the audience, you, the info warrior, you the patriot, you the Christian, you the truth lover. | ||
I'm calling on you to do your part. | ||
So regardless of whether there's any chance of victory, I'm calling on you to maintain your hope, even if it's just the size of a mustard seed. | ||
I'm calling on you to do everything you can to prevent this unacceptable outcome for humanity, this defeat and collapse. | ||
So that even if we don't win, we feel no shame when we look at ourselves in the mirror or when we think back on our lives. | ||
So at the moment of your death, you can think quietly to yourself, I did everything that I could instead of I wish I had done more. | ||
And I don't know what else to tell you. | ||
If I could think of a better way to defeat the New World Order, the Satanists, globalists, whatever you want to call them, Satan has many different faces that he wears for different things. | ||
I don't know of a better way than to keep Infowars on the air or Alex Jones on the air. | ||
And the best way to do that is by going to the AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
And look, the deals are amazing and the products are amazing. | ||
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Yeah, I mean, even if you don't believe in anything that we do, you should still buy the supplements. | ||
They're incredible for you. | ||
I didn't even believe in supplements until I started working here and taking them and noticing the effect. | ||
But it's not just the fact that they're incredible for your mind and your body. | ||
It's because the alexjonesstore.com is a way that you can fight back. | ||
Every dollar that you spend at the alexjonesstore.com is around in the heart of evil itself. | ||
There's nothing the leftists, globalists, Satanists, super villains hate more than when you go to the alexjonesstore.com And support us and keep us on the air. | ||
I can't tell you any details, but they're pissed that we're successful. | ||
They're pissed that we are doing more and not less in the face of their adversity. | ||
They're pissed that tomorrow's news tonight is airing weeknights from 9 to 11 p.m. | ||
Despite the fact they've spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to shut us down. | ||
You guys have been our heroes for three decades now. | ||
And I'm sorry to tell you that this war is never going to end. | ||
The info war never ends. | ||
You're either winning it or you're losing it. | ||
And humanity needs you to ensure that we are always winning the info war by going to thealxjonstore.com. | ||
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Just got in my methylene blue, ultra methylene blue USP grade from thealxjonstore.com. | |
Yeah, I've heard all the rants and raves about this. | ||
I'm real interested to see how I'm going to feel. | ||
I'm going to do a third dropper and then some water right now. | ||
And I am going to see. | ||
Yeah, that's plenty. | ||
Maybe that's a little bit more. | ||
Just going to mix this up. | ||
And pretty excited to see how this is going to work. | ||
So after I fully drink this, I will let everybody know the effects of, hopefully, of what is the unlimited power. | ||
What's going on, Xers? | ||
Jay Rocket here. | ||
Just giving you all an update. |