Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Breaking through the rise of the new world order, it's tomorrow's news tonight with your host, Chase Geiser. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser, your host of Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
So many incredible things going on. | ||
It's just unbelievable the news that is breaking. | ||
I will be taking your calls during this transmission. | ||
We are live from 9 p.m. Central Time until 11 p.m. Central Time on weeknights. | ||
It's been an absolute blast launching this show. | ||
Thank you so much for your support, sharing the clips. | ||
We have been met with an abundance of love and appreciation, and I'm very grateful for the crew who has really stepped up to basically live here now. | ||
But Prince Andrew is now cleared for international travel as Trump's FBI closes his investigation with Epstein. | ||
Prince Andrew, of course, we know, is very famous for being an Epstein client, even though he's not on the list because the list, of course, doesn't exist. | ||
And we've got witnesses and testimonies of victims, and we've even got his insiders saying that they later found out that he was engaged with sexual interactions with underage girls on the island. | ||
And he was just constantly sweating in the interviews. | ||
And he was, what was the claim that he made? | ||
I don't sweat. | ||
I've got a condition where I don't sweat or I do sweat. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Something about the sweating. | ||
It was like when Trump used to make fun of Marco Rubio. | ||
He's always sweating all the time. | ||
He's got the water. | ||
Can you imagine him negotiating with Putin? | ||
He's not exactly a poker face, a famous iconic Trump moment, but that's one of just the latest developments. | ||
Then we've got these massive raids happening right now, these ICE raids, and the leftists are freaking out, calling it the neo-Gestapo. | ||
And they're epic. | ||
I mean, they landed a Blackhawk. | ||
I'm going to show you some of these clips. | ||
They're landing in fields in California like it's the Vietnam War. | ||
And you've got these people scattering away as these ICE raids are taking place. | ||
And unfortunately, today, we had this instance where one of the protesters apparently fired at an ICE agent. | ||
And this comes just days after massive reports that even Democratic leaders were concerned about the level to which there were calls to violence from their own political base. | ||
As if they're surprised. | ||
We know that the left is abundantly violent. | ||
I mean, even the right-wing extremists haven't ever done anything, including Hitler. | ||
Even if you buy all the official numbers about how many people Hitler killed, not even close to what the left did. | ||
So the claim is, what, 6 million Jews died in the Holocaust, plus another 5 million people who weren't Jewish, also killed in the Holocaust. | ||
That's 11 million people. | ||
What is that, like 20% of the number of people who died during the Great Leap Forward between 1958 and 1962? | ||
I mean, the extreme far right doesn't even hold a candle to what the left is capable of, but suddenly these leftists are acting like, oh, we're so surprised that our base is calling for violence. | ||
It's inherently violent. | ||
It's a philosophy based off of the redistribution of private property. | ||
Do you think that can ever be accomplished in any time in history without violence? | ||
It's an entire political philosophy that endorses the notion of abusing children for the sake of developing blackmail for intelligence operations. | ||
It's just mind-blowing, folks. | ||
But we're coming up on a short break while radio stations pick us up. | ||
And on the other side of this break, I'm going to be getting into everything from this amazing video that I saw. | ||
I can't wait to show you on the other side because I was laughing with the crew about it before we got the show started. | ||
In this six-minute video, this woman, this landlord, walks through this house. | ||
And it's very obvious what kind of people live there. | ||
And every single moment of this video is a metaphor for everything that is wrong with the left. | ||
And there are details that we're going to point out that will just blow your mind how disgusting this is. | ||
It's the manifestation. | ||
It's the living situation metaphor representation of the inside of the leftist mind. | ||
I almost had PTSD looking at it because it was like reminding me of girls that I used to date in college before I knew what the hell was going on. | ||
But folks, we're coming up on a break. | ||
We do have an incredible sale happening right now at thealixjonesestore.com. | ||
And it's incredibly important that if you want this show to continue to operate, you show your support by going to thealixjonesstore.com right now. | ||
We've got this incredible power plant supplement. | ||
It's a plant-based energy supplement developed by Rex Jones, created by Big Lee, distributed exclusively for the InfoWars audience by thealiestjonesstore.com. | ||
Check it out right now. | ||
If you buy it, you can get 50% off either the Seamos gummies or the Shilojic gummies. | ||
stay tuned for more news on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
you you you you you you you Thank you. | |
How do I explain to people that my tongue is blue? | ||
unidentified
|
Because I love this stuff, methylene blue. | |
I'm able to work like 18-hour days sometimes. | ||
This stuff is like rocket fuel. | ||
I didn't know you were going to plug this. | ||
You even ordered it yourself, I later learned. | ||
What has the effect of our metal grade methylene blue been on you, Roger? | ||
unidentified
|
Incredible, both physical and mental energy and focus. | |
I mean, it really is like rocket fuel. | ||
I used to like Brainforce back when I did the show with Owen Schroyer, the original, the real War Room. | ||
I was a big aficionado of Brainforce and Brainport 4 Plus. | ||
This is even a greater product. | ||
I cannot recommend it highly enough. | ||
Well, I've not had any since Friday. | ||
I only take it every couple of days. | ||
So I'm going to take my dose of Eplenblue Mitopotchi Cove. | ||
It is amazing. | ||
And people ask me, what does it do? | ||
It cleans out your mitochondria. | ||
It skips the oxidization process in the cell. | ||
It's like iodine at the next level. | ||
It is such a game changer. | ||
Roger Stone, thanks so much for being with us. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I bless you. | ||
unidentified
|
The enemy never sleeps, so neither does he. | |
You're listening to Chase Geiser on Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host, Weeknights from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. Central Time. | ||
It's about time Infowars had a nighttime show. | ||
I always admired Art Bell so much. | ||
You know, they aired his show, Coast to Coast, apparently from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. | ||
And I'm not somebody who's interested in things like astrology or, you know, what's your horoscope and what time of day were you born? | ||
What day of the week? | ||
But I do believe there is something different about being active at night. | ||
There's something special about knowing that the whole world is winding down and asleep. | ||
It's like when the world is quiet, finally you can realize the things that have been sitting in the back of your mind that you've just been too distracted to get to. | ||
And there's another level of creativity. | ||
And one of the reasons I wanted to do this show from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. on weeknights is because I love the late night calls. | ||
That's what Art Bell is famous for. | ||
It's less pressure. | ||
There's no news that's really breaking that we have to frantically look for, but there is news that's broken between 6 and 9 p.m. | ||
So there's stuff that we can give you on the weeknights that normally we would have to wait until the next morning in order to air for you. | ||
So this has just been an incredible blast, but I want to show you clip 64 here and just walk through this home, this apartment, whatever it is with this landlord who's had to evict whoever these animals were that lived in this house. | ||
This is just amazing. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
I've done so many move-out queens, but this is a first. | |
so they got the rainbow stairs Oh, man. | ||
Imagine getting evicted and just leaving all that stuff there. | ||
Rainbow flags on the floor. | ||
The kitchen labeled. | ||
Mushroom posters everywhere. | ||
Obviously, a lot of drugs being done in this place. | ||
Doors painted weird colors. | ||
There's just kitty litter everywhere that's not been cleaned up. | ||
So, you know, they got toxoplasmosis, hammer and sickle hanging on the wall or the ceiling. | ||
Yeah, this is like PTSD. | ||
This is the inside of a leftist mind. | ||
They didn't even take their fish. | ||
unidentified
|
They left the fish. | |
*crying* | ||
Just end racism on the window. | ||
Oh, yeah, the satanic star right there, the pentagram with the mockery of, was it Da Vinci's form of man. | ||
I mean, every moment, every inch of this living situation tells you everything that you need to know about what's wrong with the left. | ||
And look, I'm just as disappointed as the next guy about what's happened with the Epstein thing. | ||
In fact, the Epstein stuff this week that developed with the Trump administration was the most disheartening thing that I've experienced in a long time. | ||
I don't normally care about bad news. | ||
Oh, genocide? | ||
Okay, next. | ||
I'm so used to it. | ||
I'm callous. | ||
We see terrible things happen every day. | ||
I'm interested in American issues, and there's all this stuff terrible happening all over the world all the time. | ||
Of course, it's so easy to dismiss, but this was a toss and turn situation this week with the Epstein developments or lack thereof. | ||
I'm troubled by it. | ||
But then I see a video like this and I realize that we've got tremendous problems in addition to the heartbreaking issue of the lack of justice in this country. | ||
And these ICE raids that have been taking place are absolutely mind-blowing. | ||
We did have a situation where a man apparently fired at ICE agents. | ||
These raids are taking place all over California where Blackhawk helicopters now are descending into fields. | ||
And, you know, the left is going to come out and they're going to talk about how, oh, the farmers and they make our food and we're going to have a shortage and there's going to be starvation. | ||
As if convenience is a justification for a totally unsustainable policy. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
Like, oh, we've got these 30 million people here that were never supposed to be here. | ||
And we know it's more than that. | ||
So now our economy is dependent on them. | ||
So I guess we should just always let them be here and never solve this problem and just double down on terrible policy. | ||
That's what the left solution is for this. | ||
And Chuck Schumer himself admitted that the reason we need to allow all these migrants into the United States of America is because we aren't having enough children. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
The birth rate in the United States is now down to 1.6 children per woman. | ||
It has to be at least 2.1 in order for a civilization to sustain itself. | ||
It has not been at self-sustaining levels for at least eight years. | ||
And this is end of civilization level stuff. | ||
We're going to begin to see the economic and demographic ramifications of this policy, of this population crisis that we have in the next 10, 20, 30, and certainly 50 years. | ||
And it's going to be very sad and very tragic because we're all going to be old and there's not going to be anyone young to take care of us. | ||
You know, in the Bible, it says in one of the Ten Commandments that you're supposed to honor your mother and father. | ||
And, you know, it's one of those things that your parents use when you're a kid. | ||
They say, hey, it says, God said in one of those 10 commandments, honor your mother and father when you're being disrespectful. | ||
And I'm sure that it applies to that as well. | ||
But you understand that the Ten Commandments and the laws and the rules that God gives us are about much more than the surface level basic stuff. | ||
Reason is, if you have a civilization or a culture that believes in honoring your mother and father, then you ensure that the elderly people and your culture are going to be taken care of without being a burden or an issue on the general community. | ||
So what's happening is nobody had any kids. | ||
Therefore, there's not anyone they can trust or that they're related to who can take care of them as they begin to get older. | ||
So they have to go to these nursing homes and rely on the government and the state and they lose their minds. | ||
And there's all sorts of elder abuse that takes place that we don't even really talk about like we should. | ||
And it's because nobody's having children. | ||
And if they do have children, their children are indoctrinated in the public education system and told to totally abandon their parents or any relatives if they vote for Trump or if they have populist ideals. | ||
I mean, we even had people this week coming out and mocking the fact that Christian children died in these floods because, after all, it was only the death of future fascists. | ||
That's what they said. | ||
There was a woman who came out and pointed out this camp, this mystic camp. | ||
Is it called Camp Mystic or Mystic Camp? | ||
I think it's called Camp Mystic. | ||
They were going on their website and pointing out how racist the camp was because they didn't even have the manners to have a token Asian or a token Latino or a token black kid at their camp. | ||
These small town camps, there's not a whole lot of people other than white people in small towns. | ||
I don't even think I met a black person until I was in Mrs. Jones class in sixth grade. | ||
And Dartavian Miles came to school and he sat next to me. | ||
That was the first black kid I ever met. | ||
I grew up in a town in Bloomington, Illinois. | ||
There were 100,000 people in Bloomington, but I lived in Downs, Illinois. | ||
It was a village of population 2,700. | ||
I went to, my graduating class had 80 people in it. | ||
I went to school with the same 80 people from kindergarten all the way through high school. | ||
Same people every single day for like 17 years, 12 years. | ||
Yeah, and it was Dartavian Miles. | ||
And then Dusty Smith. | ||
He was the second one. | ||
It's no problem. | ||
So my point is this camp, this Christian camp, it's not because they're racist, that there isn't any black kids. | ||
There's some communities who just don't have a lot of black people around. | ||
I'm sure that they would be more than happy to allow black children to go there, but they're using this as an excuse. | ||
And they're just hijacking this tragedy and trying to curve it into this thing like, oh, well, these floods happen. | ||
And it would have been way better if Trump hadn't defunded USAID or defunded the emergency response in the country. | ||
There weren't even alerts or warnings that went out. | ||
And we found out that's not true. | ||
I had Nick Sorter and Gunther Eagleman in here last night for an hour talking about their hands-on approach to helping these people getting Starlink access, flying around in helicopters with the governor to try to figure out what happened. | ||
Search and rescue was going on. | ||
They said that the first responders were placed and ready to respond in much of the areas of the state a day before the disaster even happened. | ||
So you want to talk about the Biden administration and their reactive response to things like Maui fires or East Palestine or all the tragedies that we experienced in the United States of America during that presidency. | ||
They're showing up late. | ||
They don't have enough resources. | ||
It's totally disorganized. | ||
They're advocating for helping people of color first because resources are limited. | ||
So this is an opportunity to engage in reparations and social justice so that white people can wait a little bit longer for the supplies and resources while we engage with these most vulnerable communities first. | ||
That was the Biden administration, but then you have the Rosie O'Donnell's coming out, swinging her big dick, saying that, oh, Trump, this is terrible what happened. | ||
Meanwhile, people that actually went there and looked at what happened instead of running away to Europe for God knows what reason. | ||
I mean, can you imagine thinking that, you know, as a member of the LGBTQIA plus community, you have to leave the United States because it's become too bigoted and dangerous for your people. | ||
And you decide to move to Europe, which has been invaded by Muslims. | ||
But she comes out. | ||
She says that, yeah, yeah, it was way worse than it had to be because Trump defunded the emergency response and there just weren't personnel and there weren't alerts and warnings that went out. | ||
And I'm sitting next to Gunther Eagleman and Nick Sorter last night. | ||
They're like, no, no, no. | ||
We went there and the first responders were there before the floods even happened, before the event even escalated because they knew it was going to happen and they got out ahead of it. | ||
I mean, it's just absolutely unbelievable to me, the cognitive dissonance that's taking place right now. | ||
But, you know, as a matter of fact, it's not. | ||
I guess it's all we've ever seen. | ||
You can't really ever trust anybody that when they smile, you see their bottom teeth and their top teeth. | ||
Brian Stelter does the same thing. | ||
If you put up a Rosie O'Donnell next to a Brian Stelter, that grimace from the famous Alex Jones clip, you are my enemy. | ||
They're like the same exact person. | ||
In fact, I think that Brian Stelter is Rosie O'Donnell's clitoris. | ||
I've said it before, and I'm not trying to be inappropriate here, but it's, you know, it's a night show. | ||
We like to be respectful for family audiences. | ||
But we've got this massive development that it seems like almost no one's talking about with the new Grok that was deployed. | ||
I think as of today, Elon Musk and XAI have officially taken the lead in the artificial intelligence race going on. | ||
You've got major players like Microsoft. | ||
You've got major players like Google, obviously OpenAI. | ||
And ChatGPT came out and it blew everybody's mind and they made updates to it and all that stuff. | ||
And it's all great and also impressive. | ||
And it could do incredible things. | ||
There's all sorts of tools now that can do incredible things. | ||
But Grok4 came out and I experimented with it. | ||
And for the first time, we have it acing SAT, ACT scores, IQ tests. | ||
It's doing better in physics than physics PhDs. | ||
They're even having a hard time testing these models because they're running out of questions in their pool of questions that could potentially trick the AI and inform them on what modifications to make. | ||
Because the issue with artificial intelligence before is that these large language models are based off of probability. | ||
So what they do is they train the model by taking all of the data on the internet. | ||
So it understands patterns, conversations, transcripts, every piece of information that's digitized, written, published on the internet. | ||
It scans it. | ||
And so when you prompt it, it doesn't actually understand what you're asking. | ||
It just understands the specific pattern of which letters are after which, and so it can therefore determine the probability of which letters should come after which letters in the response. | ||
So, there's not actually a consciousness going on here. | ||
It doesn't know the answer to the question that it's answering, but it gives you the correct answer based on a, hey, all right, a binary, like, all right, this, this is most likely the response with 99.9% of certainty. | ||
So it seems to us like it's communicating and interacting with us, but really it's just a probability thing spitting out the right answer every time without understanding the answer. | ||
You understand? | ||
It's intelligence without a soul. | ||
It's not experiencing anything. | ||
And so people would come out and say, oh, these large language models, well, they're pretty cool, but they're not actually smart because if you ask them math questions, they can't solve the problems because the probabilities are different. | ||
And so they had to use third-party tools and merge them in. | ||
And now with Grok4, I mean, this thing is doing very complicated theoretical physics with actual reasoning integrated with the large language model component. | ||
And so based off of this massive development this morning with Elon Musk and XAI, I think all signs indicate with increased certainty that we're within 12 months of AGI. | ||
They probably already have it, but they haven't figured out the user interface of how to get it deployed to the public. | ||
But it's game over, man. | ||
It's a done deal. | ||
AGI has effectively been established, been created, and it's just a matter of time. | ||
And so the next step, of course, is that we have to win this race against the CCP. | ||
We have to build these facilities and we have to power them. | ||
And that's what Trump wanted to accomplish with this big, beautiful bill. | ||
And there's problems with the Big Beautiful Bill. | ||
And everybody wanted to come out and talk about the moratorium on state level regulations on artificial intelligence. | ||
And I understand it came off very bizarre and alarming that they would pass legislation saying that there's no liability whatsoever for artificial intelligence and no state can pass any regulation whatsoever regarding artificial intelligence for the next 10 years. | ||
But you know why they did that, right? | ||
A couple reasons. | ||
First reason is you don't want these major corporations lobbying states for increased regulations to ensure that no competitors can rise up against them. | ||
We've seen this in other industries time and time again. | ||
That's one reason. | ||
Second reason is 90% of the artificial intelligence that's being developed is being developed in San Francisco. | ||
So if the state of California decides that it wants to hyper-regulate the development of artificial intelligence or how it can be deployed or used, then that means the federal government is at the behest of the state of California in terms of what policies are going to pace us in the artificial intelligence arms race that we're in with the CCP. | ||
That's why they did that. | ||
I'm not advocating for it necessarily. | ||
I think there's probably a better, safer solution to accomplish the same thing. | ||
There's other ways to solve this problem. | ||
I'm glad that they nixed it, but it's not some massive conspiracy by Palantir to protect its liability or these other artificial intelligence entities. | ||
But here's Elon Musk. | ||
I'm going to show clip 13 on Grok 4, which launched today. | ||
I've been experimenting with Grok 4 Heavy, saying that this is the smartest AI in the world. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
This is the smartest AI in the world. | ||
We're going to show you exactly how and why. | ||
And it really is remarkable to see the advancement of artificial intelligence, how quickly it is evolving. | ||
I sometimes compare it to the growth of a human and how fast a human learns and gains conscious awareness and understanding. | ||
And AI is advancing just vastly faster than any human. | ||
I mean, we're going to take you through a bunch of benchmarks that Grok4 is able to achieve incredible numbers on. | ||
But it's actually worth noting that Grok4, if given the SAT, would get perfect SATs every time, even if it's never seen the questions before. | ||
And even going beyond that to say graduate student exams like the GRE, it will get near perfect results in every discipline of education. | ||
So from the humanities to languages, math, physics, engineering, pick anything. | ||
And we're talking about questions that it's never seen before. | ||
These are not on the internet. | ||
And GROC4 is smarter than almost all graduate students in all disciplines simultaneously. | ||
Like it's actually just important to appreciate the like that's really something. | ||
And the reasoning capabilities of Grok are incredible. | ||
So there's some people out there who think AI can't reason. | ||
And look, it can reason at superhuman levels. | ||
So yeah, and frankly, it only gets better from here. | ||
So we'll take you through the Grok4 release. | ||
I want to just emphasize this point. | ||
With respect to academic questions, Grok4 is better than PhD level in every subject, no exceptions. | ||
You know, at times it may lack common sense, and it has not yet invented new technologies or discovered new physics, but that is just a matter of time. | ||
I think it may discover new technologies as soon as later this year. | ||
And I would be shocked if it has not done so next year. | ||
So I would expect Grok to, yeah, literally discover new technologies that are actually useful no later than next year and maybe end of this year. | ||
And it might discover new physics next year. | ||
And within two years, I'd say almost certainly. | ||
Absolutely unbelievable. | ||
So just let that sink in. | ||
You know, it's funny. | ||
I'm a big fan of Eric Weinstein. | ||
He's a Physics guy, and he's got this alternative theory about physics. | ||
And he's been complaining for years about how political physics is and academia is, and how we're going down the wrong rabbit holes because it's so political, nobody wants to come out with controversial ideas, and we're going in the wrong direction and not making any progress in physics whatsoever. | ||
Well, now with artificial intelligence, I think that it's all moot. | ||
All the politics is moot. | ||
This is the ring of power. | ||
It's either going to empower us to finally conquer some of our vices and problems and struggles as a species on the face of the earth, or it's going to just become a weapon that we wield against each other to the point where we are totally destroyed by it. | ||
And this AI race that we're in, this AI war that we're in, is so prescient that we're info wars. | ||
Because this information war really heavily started during the Red Scare, after World War II, into the Cold War. | ||
And then when the internet came out, it escalated. | ||
We realized that we were in the age of information. | ||
And then social media came out. | ||
And there was this massive freedom of expression, creativity, total industries and businesses built around it. | ||
And then there was rampant censorship that came down. | ||
And then now we're compensating for that censorship by seeing some of the freedom of speech coming back. | ||
But this artificial intelligence is going to change everything in the information war. | ||
And we have not even yet begun to fight. | ||
If you thought we've been in an information war over the course of the last 80 years, just wait until you see what happens over the course of the next 10 years. | ||
Because this AI is going to be a weapon that we can wield against the globalists. | ||
And it's going to be a weapon wielded by the globalists. | ||
It's going to be AI versus AI operating as agents on behalf of people, individuals, and institutions. | ||
And that is incredibly liberating and dangerous, existentially dangerous at the same exact time, which is why we need your support more now than ever. | ||
Please, for the love of God and for the love of humanity and for the love of America, go to thealiestjonesstore.com because first and foremost, one of our purposes in life, I believe this is the way that we worship God because he created us. | ||
And so by respecting that and appreciating that, that's how we ensure that we honor him as our father. | ||
The best way to worship God is to reach or endeavor to reach self-actualization. | ||
That is the manifestation of becoming and reaching all of your potential. | ||
And that's why these supplements are incredible because they're incredible for your mind and your body while saving humanity from the lies and the information more. | ||
So please go to thealysonstore.com right now. | ||
Get PowerPlant, which is an incredible energy formula. | ||
And if you buy PowerPlant today, you get 50% off of either Shila Jit or CMOS Gummies. | ||
Incredible for your vitality, testosterone, and body's ability to detox. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
I need support. | ||
We are maxed out and I can do so much more in offense, guaranteed beat them even faster in court. | ||
And got this other stuff going on. | ||
I'll leave it at that with the Justice Department, the good guys coming in, the task force on weaponization, that I need funds. | ||
So I need you to go to thealexshowstore.com, subscribe as your monthly donation for $30 a month as a VIP. | ||
And know you're doing that bare minimum of support. | ||
Cancel any time. | ||
Not a very hard commitment. | ||
You just do it month to month. | ||
You charge 30 bucks. | ||
You're a VIP. | ||
And when you want a t-shirt or you want a supplement, you get, because it'll just build up in your account. | ||
$40 to spend in the store. | ||
You spend 30, you get 40 automatic discounts on everything, special sales, special offers. | ||
I'm asking everyone to commit who's never supported the broadcast by buying anything to become a VIP today at thealexjonstore.com. | ||
And then you know you're doing the monthly support. | ||
Ever have an issue, don't want to do it, cancel. | ||
One click, it's your profile. | ||
But by being a VIP, you get massive discounts, special offers, and so much more at thealxjonstore.com. | ||
And it's a way to show your support. | ||
We need your backing. | ||
I am 100% dauntless. | ||
If anything, I get overheated because I've got so much energy and I'm so angry at these people and it bleeds off into my life. | ||
I need your backing. | ||
I'm backing you. | ||
Quite frankly, if you don't back me and my crew, what we're doing, you're nuts. | ||
And I'm not mad at you. | ||
I'm the same. | ||
You're crazy. | ||
Evil hates this transmission. | ||
We've got their number. | ||
And if you don't back, the organization's fighting with everything they've got for you, because we're all in this together. | ||
Well, you've rolled over. | ||
You've run up the line flag, quite frankly. | ||
And that's what this is. | ||
People ask, man, thanks for fighting. | ||
Thanks for never giving up. | ||
Wow, why does it break your spirit? | ||
It intensifies my spirit. | ||
To know we're up against pure evil and we're turning the tide and we're winning. | ||
And then to know that if we don't fight hard, they're going to win and commit humanity to a nightmare of evil? | ||
You think stuff's bad now? | ||
You ain't seen nothing yet. | ||
Thank me for fighting for my own future and yours collectively? | ||
There's not even a question of fighting these people. | ||
Look at them. | ||
They've got to be opposed. | ||
People tend to think being persecuted is, oh, you want to stay away from that? | ||
Oh, so you want to stay away from the fight? | ||
No, it's like John Paul Jones said when he got commissioned as the head of the U.S. Navy while he was starting and he was riding to the Continental Congress. | ||
He said, I only want the fastest ships. | ||
I only want to be sent into the main war zones of direct action. | ||
They said, here is our fastest ship. | ||
Go out. | ||
He immediately goes out and engages and takes over all these British ships, two or three times the size, just ramming straight into them. | ||
Well, that's what I want to do. | ||
I only want the fastest ships. | ||
I want to go directly into action. | ||
I want to go 24 hours a day. | ||
I want reporters all over the country. | ||
unidentified
|
I want to be 50 times stronger against the enemy. | |
I want 50 times the audience. | ||
I want victory. | ||
You think what we've done to the enemy's been effective so far? | ||
It's nothing. | ||
unidentified
|
I have not yet begun to fight. | |
So, support yourself. | ||
Support us. | ||
unidentified
|
Do it. | |
Or be conscious that you didn't fight when the time was right. | ||
You hesitated. | ||
You took this as another entertainment venue. | ||
Just some other show. | ||
Just more talk. | ||
This ain't talk. | ||
This is the targeting coordinates to take down the enemy. | ||
This is the Death Star plans. | ||
This is Sting, the Goblin Slayer. | ||
They hate this blade. | ||
This operation is a sword that is plunged politically, culturally, spiritually into the hearts of our enemies over and over and over again. | ||
They hate it. | ||
It's a standard of their defeat. | ||
It's a symbol of their weakness. | ||
That's what we're doing here. | ||
This is serious business. | ||
So I'm coming to you, asking you to continue to commission us in this fight. | ||
We've already delivered you more victories against the enemy than any other media operation in the world. | ||
And I'm asking you again for all of our collective futures to come to our aid now, Moore, and take your fight to the 110% level. | ||
Tell the truth. | ||
Be accurate. | ||
Stand against evil. | ||
Have courage. | ||
Until it's not even having courage. | ||
unidentified
|
what you are. | |
Defending tomorrow, tonight. | ||
It's your host, Chase Geyser. | ||
Bye. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser, your host of Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
I'm going to give out the phone number right now. | ||
It is 9.33 p.m. Central Time. | ||
We are live. | ||
This is not a rebroadcast. | ||
This is not me hosting one of the other shows and you're seeing it late at night. | ||
If you are watching at 9.33 p.m. Central Time, we are live. | ||
Call in 877-789-2539. | ||
That's 877-789-2539. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
The sooner you call, the more likely I am to be able to get to you. | ||
So call in and talk about whatever you want. | ||
I want to break down this amazing post I saw from Mike Benz. | ||
Just a little banger about the CIA throughout history. | ||
Let's watch clip 39 and then unpack it. | ||
And John Brennan used to do this Tuesday morning kill list. | ||
Did you hear about that? | ||
No. | ||
He would meet at the White House with CIA reps every Tuesday morning, and they would come up with a list of people to be killed that week. | ||
John Brennan had a Tuesday morning meeting to go through with CIA who they're going to kill that week? | ||
Yeah. | ||
What an interesting meeting. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The Tuesday morning kill list meeting. | ||
Seriously? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I think it was first reported in the Boston Globe. | ||
There it is. | ||
Yeah, there it is. | ||
Oh, okay, so the New York framework and government can decide who's torture. | ||
Brandon is the President Obama nominee director of General Intelligence. | ||
Last Sunday name came up on one two day. | ||
I didn't get it because he seemed so close to the torture program perpetrated while he was senior official CIA. | ||
Yeah, that's what our CIA does. | ||
They get together on Tuesday mornings for pancakes and hit lists. | ||
So they come up with a list of names. | ||
Obama would sign it. | ||
And then global resources and special activities would send their teams out, kill people, come home, wait for the next Tuesday meeting. | ||
It's pretty sick. | ||
Did you ever work with him? | ||
I worked in the same office, but we didn't do operations. | ||
Did you meet him? | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah. | ||
What was he like? | ||
Oh, Brennan? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I've known Brennan since 1990. | ||
What was he like? | ||
From the lowest in the 90s, where he didn't yet have a lot of power. | ||
Maybe he did. | ||
Okay, I'll tell you a story that I've never told publicly. | ||
Go for it. | ||
So when I got hired, John was a GS-14 nobody. | ||
He was the deputy director of the Arab-Israeli analysis group. | ||
And he worked for a woman who was really one of the great minds, the great thinkers on Syria. | ||
And they didn't get along. | ||
He had been sort of imposed on her. | ||
And so he went to her one day and said, I think I'm ready for promotion. | ||
I'm ready for the senior intelligence service, and I'd like your blessing. | ||
Her name was Martha Kessler. | ||
Martha, yeah, Kessler. | ||
So she said, not only are you not ready for the senior service, I don't even want you to work for me anymore. | ||
You're fired. | ||
Well, at the CIA, if you're fired, you're not really fired. | ||
You have six weeks to walk the halls and find another job. | ||
And if you can't find a job in six weeks, any job, then they escort you out, they take your badge, and you're actually fired. | ||
So this happened right around Christmas. | ||
There are no jobs open at Christmas. | ||
The job turnover is in the summer. | ||
So he's having a heck of a time finding a job. | ||
Finally, he goes to the PDB staff, the president's daily brief, and it just so happens that they have an opening for a briefer for the lowest ranking person on the National Security Council who's entitled to a PDB briefing. | ||
That is the Director of Intelligence Programs. | ||
That just happens to be at the time, George Tennant. | ||
So Brennan and Tennant immediately hit it off. | ||
They are both alpha dogs, you know, cigar-smoking, hard-drinking, pockmark-faced, you know, guys. | ||
Hit it off totally. | ||
And wouldn't you know, George gets promoted to become the deputy director of the CIA. | ||
He becomes the deputy director, and he names John the director of the Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Analysis, Martha's boss. | ||
He calls Martha into the office and he says, now you're fired. | ||
And she retired. | ||
The office was reorganized, and so John got squeezed out, but George made him station chief in Riyadh. | ||
Now, this is a guy who has not had five seconds of operational experience in his life, who's now the station chief. | ||
And it's just unbelievable. | ||
I mean, this is the nepotism and the politics and the internal corruption that results in people like James Comey and Brennan being leaders of the most powerful intelligence institutions on the face of the earth. | ||
And we wonder Why we have corruption issues? | ||
We wonder why we have massive human trafficking sex rings and gun rings and drug rings and over 300,000 children crossing the border and disappearing. | ||
Never to be seen or heard from again whatsoever, folks. | ||
Your calls are flying in. | ||
I'm going to start going to calls right now, actually. | ||
I want to hear from Johnny Freight Train. | ||
Johnny, what is on your mind? | ||
You're the first to call or you're the first on air? | ||
Hey, how you doing, man? | ||
Good. | ||
Thanks for calling. | ||
Hey, look, I wanted to just give you a little plug about how you're really fantastic at what you do and how you express yourself. | ||
I don't give a damn what anybody says. | ||
Don't you let nobody ever tell you any different, Chase. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
Well, look, I just got one thing to say. | ||
I think we need to have a town hall meeting, and we need to get Sean Hannity to run it, and we need to get a bunch of people in there that will talk about this mess going on with this sex guy that get killed in prison and need to get it all open with all kinds of people. | ||
Well, that's the crazy thing, Johnny. | ||
Everybody already knows. | ||
Everybody already knows that Jeffrey Epstein was an intelligence asset for Mossad and the CIA and MI6 for many years. | ||
It even came out today from some article from like 30 years ago. | ||
I think I might have printed it somewhere. | ||
It's laying around. | ||
That he used to say that he was CIA many years ago, and then he started denying it. | ||
So everybody knows that he was operating on behalf of intelligence. | ||
It was stated by attorneys that he belonged to intelligence when they came after him the first time. | ||
Everybody knows that Jeffrey Epstein was engaged in human trafficking and child sexual abuse. | ||
And not only that, but he had a major blackmail ring with some of the world's most powerful and influential people compromised by it. | ||
Everybody knows that the list exists. | ||
And frankly, we know who's on the list. | ||
Just follow like a Ryan Dawson or somebody like that. | ||
We at least know some, if not most, of the people on the list. | ||
But the crazy thing is, we live in a civilization, a nation on the face of the planet Earth, where it doesn't matter if everybody knows the truth of something unless certain entities admit that it's true. | ||
So the FBI knows, the CIA knows, Bongino knows, Cache Patel knows, Trump knows, Bondi knows, all of the American people have been paying any attention know. | ||
The Democrats know and the Republicans know. | ||
Everybody knows exactly what happened and they have a pretty good idea of who was compromised. | ||
We have the photographs, we have the phone records, we have the flight logs, we have the witness testimonies, and we have all the instances of people just dying, dying, dying, dying if they come out against what they witnessed or saw or happen. | ||
But it doesn't matter. | ||
Nothing's going to be done about it. | ||
There's no accountability whatsoever because we've got this false preference bias where as long as it's not admitted officially, then there's no accountability whatsoever. | ||
And that has to be changed. | ||
That's a systemic problem that you can't solve by putting a Boy Scout at the top of an institution that's corrupt. | ||
I mean, it's so evil that no Boy Scout is going to be able to navigate through that to correct it and reverse it. | ||
You have to be borderline, sociopathic, already to even come close to approaching the audacity or the mentality or the perspective to know how to untangle that web. | ||
I mean, this is absolutely astronomically asinine and totally untenable. | ||
And frankly, I'm starting to arrive at a point where I'm concerned as to whether or not the United States of America is even going to exist by 2125. | ||
If we don't fix this stuff in the next four years, we're not going to be here in the next hundred years. | ||
Not in the same way. | ||
We're going to be overrun by cartels and criminals in the CCP through the southern border. | ||
We're going to have massive Muslim migration and breeding. | ||
We're going to have an average of seven, eight, nine kids when we're having like half a kid per white woman. | ||
And there's going to be white flight. | ||
We're going to go to our little corners and our little neighborhoods and we're going to act like everything's fine until it's too late to reverse the problem. | ||
Until it's too late to slow the spread and we all might as well just be dead. | ||
Jake in Ohio. | ||
Jake in Ohio, you are the second to call. | ||
You are live on the air. | ||
What's up, man? | ||
Hey, I know magic ain't like your favorite topic, but do you believe in it? | ||
I'm back at it at 9.43 p.m., dude. | ||
I'm good for it. | ||
Do you believe in it? | ||
Do you think it's real? | ||
Well, it depends on what you mean by magic. | ||
If you want a yes or no answer, I would say yes. | ||
Okay, good. | ||
Because why do you think these chicks are also in love with Diddy? | ||
Why do you think they're also in love with Epstein? | ||
Why do you think they're like walking up to the Secret Service and going, hey, I want to meet with Trump and I have guns in my car? | ||
Because do you ever seen the movie Donnie Darko? | ||
Oh, yeah, a million times. | ||
That was a warning. | ||
That's them saying we can do this with our pedophilia-powered magic. | ||
If you reduce it, even in the Compendium Maleficarum, the second chapter, it says that I quote, magic is a gift from God given to Adam by peopleing the for whom by people in the planet passed it down through posterity. | ||
I swear to God, Pope Honoris had a grimorum of his own. | ||
It is bonkertown. | ||
Like, this is all I've done for a year, man. | ||
Deshaune Ma, that book, Deshaune Ma, the Iranian poets, whatever's, yeah, yeah, whatever's flying around in that book is what they were hiding from and daring to you. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I believe that there have been inexplicable discoveries of power and manipulation that transcend the dimension that we exist in in our five senses, and that we have figured out as a species how to engage, manipulate, work with, and cooperate with, and conspire with interdimensional beings 100%. | ||
And if you're the type of person that figures out how to do that, you get your buddies together and you keep it secret. | ||
You do mystery religions, you establish cults, you make it as esoteric, as hidden as possible, because you understand that if everybody has access to this information, then that eliminates your competitive advantage. | ||
Just like companies that patent their technology developments and keep their intellectual property secrets as secret as possible. | ||
Corporate espionage is a major thing. | ||
So is this type of thing. | ||
And the thing that's Crazy is, if magic is real and it is true, then the implication is those who have access to this technology or this power or these means, these modes, and methods, they would disproportionately be represented in all the halls of power because they would use the magic to achieve power. | ||
The Epsteins, like you see from the Eyes Wide Shuts and the bizarre spirit cooking stuff with the Podestas and the Clintons. | ||
I mean, the more we dig into this, the more obvious it becomes that our political leaders aren't just people like us with a little more ambition. | ||
They were once people like us who exchanged all that was ever good about them, if there was anything ever good about them, for power. | ||
They sold their souls to the devil. | ||
It's a tale as old as time. | ||
Chris in East Texas. | ||
Chris, what is on your mind? | ||
Hey, man. | ||
Can you hear me all right? | ||
You sound great. | ||
All right, man. | ||
I'm calling because some really disturbing kind of snooping I've been doing with everything going on with Israel and Trump. | ||
I just happened to look through some old articles, and there was one from March from the Jewish Post, I believe. | ||
And it's saying, they're saying in detail, step by step, using, you know, dropping names and references about Trump converting to Judaism. | ||
Yeah, that's bullshit. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it reads like a complete like a caricature. | ||
You know, it reads like a spook. | ||
Look, here's the thing. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
Israel is a major problem, but people always take something that's true and they just drive it so far. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, okay, if Israel's a massive problem and Mossad is engaged in blackmailing and manipulation, then it's really easy to take two steps in a hop and just land on all the Jews are evil. | ||
It's what Hitler did. | ||
It's what so many different nations have done over time. | ||
And what happens is, it's very simple. | ||
What happens is civilizations establish themselves and then they rise to their prime. | ||
And then once they reach their prime and they start to decline, they never really get back to their prime. | ||
They might have a decline for a little while and then a little positive bump, right? | ||
So Rome, for example, started to kind of decline after they lost their whole republic or senate or whatever, the representation when they became a dictatorship. | ||
And then you have a Marcus Aurelius who becomes Caesar, and he's really good at it. | ||
So things seem for 20, 30 years like they're getting a little bit better. | ||
But the overall trend is decline. | ||
And what happens is as things begin to decline, the people become more hedonistic and decadent. | ||
They're less concerned about the future. | ||
They're more concerned about getting theirs now. | ||
They engage in things like orgies and superficial things like we do now with Hollywood and celebrities and all these things. | ||
I mean, even in ancient Rome, it began to be a status thing if you had certain famous chefs serve you at your home in ancient Rome. | ||
They had chefs that were famous just like we do, just like we have restaurants that are famous for their cuisine and their chefs. | ||
People go and they want to have this chef's meal, this chef's food, and it's all just fancy trash. | ||
I mean, frankly, I've been to the French Laundry, that famous restaurant that Gavin Newsom went to while he locked up his entire state and didn't wear a mask. | ||
And he went to this bougie restaurant. | ||
I don't know, it's like $1,000 a plate, maybe more than that. | ||
And it was really good, but I'd rather have a steak queso burrito from Chipotle any day of the week for $13. | ||
And my point is, as we decline, the people become less moral, less faithful, more hedonistic. | ||
It becomes about wine and orgies and decadence. | ||
And then the next phase of the decline is a real level of suffering. | ||
And whenever a civilization or a culture or a people reaches a very serious level of suffering, they begin looking for who to blame. | ||
And they always blame whoever the minority or outsider is for the issue. | ||
I mean, we see it here in the United States of America where there was a time where if you were Irish in New York, there was all sorts of discrimination against you. | ||
The Irish not welcome, Irish not welcome here, there. | ||
I mean, it's not something that just happens to one group or the other. | ||
It's just whoever the minority is. | ||
And so since the Jewish people have been a scattered people across the world, they've very often been the minority in nation after nation after nation. | ||
So all these nations, these empires, civilizations, they reach this point of decline and everybody's like, it must be the Jews. | ||
It's a lot easier to face a minority. | ||
And so I think what we're experiencing here in the United States is very similar to what was happening in Germany in the 1920s, where there's this massive decadence and there's the alcohol and there's the pornography and the prostitution and even the transgender experimentation. | ||
There's the fear of communism. | ||
And their civilization was so vulnerable and so crippled by the Treaty of Versailles and the unfair treatment of the German people after World War I. And Germany was totally blamed for the fact that World War I even took place and it really wasn't their fault. | ||
And then when things got really bad after the stock market crashed in 1929, when the Depression really set in and had the global impact that it had, the German people, having suffered incessantly since the end of World War I, were looking around at who to blame. | ||
And they blamed the Jewish people because they were involved in the media and they were involved in the banking and in politics and they were a minority. | ||
So even though a lot of Jewish people were responsible for a lot of the corruptions and the ills And the suffering that the German people faced between World War I and the establishment of Nazi power, they took it too far and they just blamed all Jews. | ||
And we're seeing that start to happen here. | ||
As things get worse, you're going to see this anti-Semitism rise. | ||
Let me tell you something. | ||
They're going to try to stomp it out with policies on college campuses. | ||
They're going to try to stomp it out with regulations and rules and cooperation with social media platforms to get them to really come down. | ||
They're going to try to stomp it out by debanking people and crippling them. | ||
And that's only going to make it worse. | ||
That's only going to make it worse. | ||
I'm telling you, man, that's the reason that these Epstein files have not come out. | ||
Trump signed that executive order to release the Epstein files. | ||
Something he certainly would not have done had he believed that he was in the Epstein files. | ||
He's not in the Epstein files. | ||
Otherwise, he never would have signed the EO. | ||
He signed it, and then when they found out what was really in the Epstein files, Trump goes, this is my opinion. | ||
This is my speculation. | ||
Oh, shit. | ||
We can't release that. | ||
In fact, I'm going to play Clip 46 in a second. | ||
We can't release that. | ||
We're trying to combat anti-Semitism and ensure that we have a solid footing in the Middle East because things are escalating between Iran and China. | ||
And if we release this, the American people are going to hate the Israelis. | ||
Never want us to do anything for them again. | ||
And we have to have a strategic ally in the Middle East, even though this ally has been absolutely rotten to us. | ||
Because if we can't protect the petrodollar, then our entire currency collapses. | ||
And if our currency collapses, either the globalists come in with the CBDC or the CCP comes in with a BRICS digital currency that's like a digital yen. | ||
And that's the end of the United States of America as a superpower forever. | ||
So Trump, I believe, had to make a decision. | ||
Do I do what I say I was going to do and release the Sepstein information and leave it up to the people to decide what to do? | ||
And risk the United States having any power into the 21st century whatsoever? | ||
Do I just lie and say there isn't a clients list? | ||
Here's clip, 46. | ||
Been made. | ||
Listening to the theorizing around it has been fascinating. | ||
Just this morning, I was listening to Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert and also just very bright social commentator. | ||
And he was saying, let's just say without evidence, he was very open, but this is just a theory. | ||
Let's just say that there is some Israel connection with Epstein. | ||
Like he was an agent, something, collecting compromise on various people. | ||
And he went to Trump and said, you got to make this go away. | ||
And Trump went to Bongino and Patel and Bondi and said, for the sake of peace in the Middle East, we're moving on. | ||
There's nothing to see here. | ||
And that's what I want you to say. | ||
Would I consider that a lie I couldn't forgive? | ||
That's a Scott Adams still. | ||
No, I wouldn't, he said. | ||
And I mean, the president, this is total speculation, but the president going to those three and saying, it's over. | ||
I don't care what you say, but you have to make it go away. | ||
We're moving on, would explain the way all three have behaved over the past couple of weeks. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Again, if they're telling the truth and they really believe that the right thing for the world is to say, there's nothing to see here, didn't commit suicide, wasn't murdered, didn't have a list, nothing more to disclose that would be good for the public to know, then they're doing a crap job explaining why. | ||
They're doing a crap job giving us confidence. | ||
There needs to be long interviews, long press conferences, not just a statement and not just short disclosure. | ||
And they need to walk through it all. | ||
Pam Bondi yesterday says, well, there's a minute gap every day. | ||
Maybe, but minute gap is something that is not going to go away without a really clear explanation. | ||
She dropped that like it was a nothing. | ||
unidentified
|
Everybody was like, wait, they're just trying to make it go away. | |
I think Trump earnestly wanted to release the FC files until he saw what was in them. | ||
Until he realized, oh, man, if I would have known. | ||
And I honestly don't think that he knew. | ||
I think he probably heard the rumors, maybe. | ||
But you know, it's bizarre how aware and informed Trump is on certain things and then totally oblivious and ignorant on other things. | ||
Like he seems to just totally get it in the most meaningful way on issues like the border and what's really going on with the NGOs and the lawfare and the weaponization of intelligence on the American people. | ||
But then he does things like double down on mRNA vaccines. | ||
So it wouldn't surprise me one bit if he had no idea what we've been talking about about Epstein for years was true. | ||
And he was massad. | ||
Folks, we're coming up on a break. | ||
I am going to be taking your calls for the remainder of the transmission today. | ||
I see Nikki, Melania, DBA 1955, Penny Patriot, Randy, Rick, Len, my favorite, DB, Andrea, and George all on the board. | ||
I will get to your calls. | ||
Keep calling in and make sure you go to thealexjonstore.com. | ||
Our products are absolutely amazing. | ||
This power plant is what has made it possible for me to broadcast tomorrow's news tonight from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. Central Time on weeknights. | ||
And if you buy a bottle of it, you can get a bottle of Shila Jit Gummies or Seamos Gummies for 50% off. | ||
Go to the AlexJonesStore.com right now and stay with us. | ||
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
|
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. | ||
So if you get an oxygen molecule, it's got four, five, one, it's a reactive oxygen, which we call free radicals. | ||
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. | ||
And 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. | ||
This is amazing. | ||
And you want to know what I'm on? | ||
I receive my trilogy. | ||
This right here, look at that. | ||
unidentified
|
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
|
Leading a frontal assault on the lies of the New World Order. | |
It's Alex Jones. | ||
It's Alex Jones. | ||
Just recently, Bill Gates announced that he will be spending $200 billion over the next 20 years on Gates Foundation grants. | ||
So $200 billion. | ||
So the Gates Foundation is basically stepping up to become the new big daddy USAID for all these issues. | ||
And the Gates Foundation funds a huge amount of this censorship work. | ||
All that stuff about COVID censorship, all that is a huge threat to Gavi and to all the pharmaceutical companies that Bill Gates owns or has huge equity investments in. | ||
And so the Gates Foundation is sort of becoming now this big floating USAID. | ||
I mean, $200 billion is just a huge amount to think about. | ||
Unfathomable. | ||
USAID is a $44 billion annual budget, which is a huge amount of money. | ||
But the Gates Foundation is now going to have $200 billion. | ||
Now, that's over 20 years, but that's $20 billion a year. | ||
And that was just announced last month. | ||
But at least now they'll have to pay for it. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Yeah. | ||
Him and Elon were going at it because Elon caught a bunch of his funding with Doge, right? | ||
And in fact, one of the first things that my organization did was an analysis of the 26 NGO threat letter that was sent to Elon Musk right after he announced the acquisition of X, in between acquisition and closing. | ||
You may remember he got this mysterious threat letter that if you go through with your stated intended threats to cut the trust and safety team to roll back content moderation, say goodbye to your advertising. | ||
We're going to work with the global advertisers, the GARM and the World Economic Forum and the National Advertisers Associations and all the major brands to bankrupt Twitter, as it still was at the time. | ||
12 of those 26 NGOs were funded by Bill Gates. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
So that war was brewing. | |
It was a proxy war. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that was behind the scenes going on for a little bit. | |
Damn, that's crazy. | ||
All that 26. | ||
unidentified
|
So Bill Gates is really at the head of the snake with this stuff, huh? | |
He wrote a whole book about how we need to censor the internet. | ||
At the height of COVID, he wrote a whole book about misinformation as an attack on democracy. | ||
I mean, he's using the same verbiage that the CIA and the State Department and USAID do about democracy, democracy, and public health institutions are vital to the health of our democracy, just as they're vital to public health. | ||
But yeah, Gates is all over this for a number of reasons. | ||
Obviously, it's the public health stuff that he's financially overinvested in. | ||
But then also Microsoft itself. | ||
Microsoft is absolutely huge in international markets. | ||
Microsoft is what it is because it's not just the U.S. standard. | ||
Apple, they're the global standard. | ||
And not only that, they're one of the most overexposed companies to China. | ||
Microsoft is deep, deep, deep, deep, deep in China. | ||
And Trump's trade war with China hurts Microsoft. | ||
Trump's hawkish views on China hurt Microsoft. | ||
Trump's diplomatic altercations with China hurts the standing of Microsoft with the CCP. | ||
And so Microsoft has been going around funding censorship directly, not just the Bill Melinda Gates Foundation. | ||
Microsoft works with CIA cutouts like the National Endowment for Democracy. | ||
They sponsored NewsGuard, the information integrity rating system that called anyone who questioned the COVID vaccines or anyone who believed that there may have been fraud in 2020. | ||
They went after Breitbart, One America's Voice, Real America's News, a gateway pun, basically anybody who was pro-Trump. | ||
They worked directly with the advertisers to kill their advertising revenue. | ||
And they were literally like a seed of Microsoft. | ||
They were before they released their first commercial product, they were incubated in Microsoft's Protecting Democracy program. | ||
Wow. | ||
Microsoft doesn't give a flying fig about democracy. | ||
They care about profits, and they want an international, neoliberal economic program. | ||
That's exactly it. | ||
One minute from now, back to your call. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
How do I explain to people that my tongue is blue? | ||
unidentified
|
Because I love this stuff, methylene blue. | |
I'm able to work like 18-hour days sometimes. | ||
This stuff is like rocket fuel. | ||
I didn't know you were going to buy this. | ||
You even ordered it yourself, I'm later learned. | ||
What has the effect of our methylene blue been on you, Roger? | ||
unidentified
|
Incredible, both physical and mental energy and focus. | |
I mean, it really is like rocket fuel. | ||
You don't like brain forks? | ||
Back when I did the show with Owen Schwarzer, the original, the real War Room, I was a big brain fork and Brainport 40 Plus. | ||
This is even a greater product. | ||
I cannot recommend it highly enough. | ||
Well, I've not had any since Friday. | ||
I only take it every couple of days. | ||
So I'm going to take my dose. | ||
I'm going to put it on Tuachico. | ||
It is amazing. | ||
And people ask me, what does it do? | ||
It cleans out your mitochondria. | ||
It skips the oxidization process in the cell. | ||
It's like I am at the next level. | ||
It is such a game changer. | ||
Roger Stone. | ||
Thanks so much for being with us. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless you. | |
If you want to shine like the sun, you've got to burn like it. | ||
You're listening to Tomorrow's News Tonight with your host, Chase Geiser. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. on weeknights, where we take calls and break balls and tell you all that's happening next. | ||
Let's go to DBA 1955. | ||
You've been waiting on the air for 31 minutes, sir. | ||
You are live. | ||
Hello. | ||
Hello. | ||
unidentified
|
Can you hear me? | |
I can hear you. | ||
Can you hear me? | ||
I'm a little bit hard of hearing, and he asked me to turn off my speakerphone. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm the busting file at InfoWars called Stand Silent People. | |
It's very hard to do, as you probably do. | ||
Second, I am a CMOS and Blue user. | ||
I just subscribed to Blue a couple days ago. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Thank you for supporting us. | ||
My question is, when will our president realize that his Secret Service is not his friend? | ||
When the sun rises in the West and sets in the East, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Our president's a good dude. | ||
But the problem is that it doesn't matter how good the people are at the top of these organizations when the problem is the foundation of these organizations. | ||
You can't fix the foundation of a home or a building by giving it a new roof. | ||
And we're quickly discovering that no matter who you put at the top of these institutions, there's just no fixing them. | ||
They have to be abolished and then something else has to be reformed to accomplish or pursue the mission that these institutions were originally designed to do. | ||
But I'm so grateful for your call and your support at the alexjonstore.com. | ||
It means the world to us. | ||
And I hope that you experience all the benefits of these supplements that I have, this crew has, and so many of our other listeners have too. | ||
Penned Patriot, Vegas, Nevada. | ||
Penned Patriot, you are live on the air. | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
I believe it, Chase. | ||
I want to say congratulations on the new transmission, boss. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, and VIP member X2X3. | ||
Do you guys get to get the X3 again? | ||
You're going to do it again? | ||
You know, I don't know what the deal is with that. | ||
So here's the situation. | ||
Let me just explain this real quickly and then Pendle, I'll let you get to your points. | ||
We used to sell all of our products at InfowarsStore.com and we still do. | ||
And you should still go to InfowarsStore.com and purchase our products because you will absolutely 100% get them. | ||
And once this place is shut down, it won't be possible to get those products again. | ||
We'll make versions of them and we'll replace them and we'll, you know, take care of the audience. | ||
But now could be, you could be in the final weeks of being able to get any of the products that you love from InfowarsStore.com. | ||
What happened was there was a fake auction for InfoWars and the Onion claimed for weeks that it owned InfoWars when it didn't. | ||
And as a result of that, all of the sales evaporated on the InfowarsStore.com. | ||
And the InfoWars store was already struggling because in order to get any products or inventory for that store, we had to get approval from the court-appointed trustees or CROs that were sent into this company for the very purpose, in my opinion, of sabotaging it. | ||
So it's like if I had to go to Klaus Schwab and ask for permission to buy inventory for a store that would fund me going on the air and speaking poorly about Klaus Schwab. | ||
That was the conflict of interest that we have been operating under for the course of several years. | ||
So what I did was reach out to the Bigley guys and got them together with Alex Jones to build the AlexJonesStore.com, which is technically owned by Bigley, not by Infowars, not by Alex Jones. | ||
And we worked out a deal that has kept us on the air. | ||
So when they tried to kill us and they would have killed us if it wasn't for Bigley and the Alex Jones store, by the way, when they tried to kill us and they claimed that they owned us when they didn't, and all of our sales evaporate on the InfoWar store, if we didn't have this other store, we would have been shut down. | ||
I mean, that was the death blow that they thought they had in the bag. | ||
They did not anticipate that we would have the prudence or the foresight to establish backup plans. | ||
And the AlexJones store.com has been abundantly successful, much more successful than the InfoWars store in recent years. | ||
InfoWars store was a dynamo before we were under all these attacks. | ||
And it saved Infowars and it's kept us on the air. | ||
So please support us there. | ||
That's what's really going on. | ||
That explains why some of our legacy products, like TurboForce and stuff, are hard to find because we can't get approval to get inventory for them. | ||
Go ahead, Penn Patriot. | ||
Maybe Rex can read brand them. | ||
Ultramethylene Blue, so get that out as well. | ||
So I'm going over to the topics there. | ||
Trump's compartmentalization. | ||
Maybe that's what it is. | ||
And I'm thinking this. | ||
Maybe Pam Bondi's the roadblock. | ||
And she's smarter than she looks. | ||
Everybody knows it thinks she's the dumb. | ||
Oh, come on. | ||
And so this is how I know. | ||
And she's wrenching. | ||
And what we called that in the past is when you're walking around with a damn wrench in your hand. | ||
And you look busy. | ||
You know? | ||
That's a smart thing to do. | ||
That's how you get to the top. | ||
You're smart. | ||
You're wrenching. | ||
So, anyhow, if you look at that, and you can pull up that video, there's a couple telling things in that body language. | ||
Her eye contact was truck. | ||
It's almost like, oh, I got busted when that question was asked. | ||
And then everybody else at the desk was nice and tidy in front of her. | ||
Hers was a freaking mess. | ||
And she took some notes, too. | ||
I wonder what she wrote down. | ||
And anyhow. | ||
Working no play, Mace. | ||
Jack and no play over and over again. | ||
Yeah, no kidding. | ||
I think what she was really doing was they told Trump, hey, it's all over. | ||
No one's going to talk about it again. | ||
And then someone brought it up. | ||
And then at that time, it wasn't necessarily the timing. | ||
Another thing, I don't know if you're necessarily familiar, but you know, Space Force is involved with Ingersoll Lockwood. | ||
And Ingersoll Lockwood is involved with those books that were written back in 1883, three of them. | ||
In fact, Last President was the last one he wrote. | ||
But anyhow, Space Force is hiring, and you just go to IngersollLockwood.com and apply for a job to Space Force. | ||
They're working on propulsion, gravity, propulsion. | ||
A bunch of information. | ||
Yeah, and I don't know if many people knew that. | ||
And if anybody didn't, they might want to get that book and then do a little thing. | ||
Isn't it crazy how much you can figure out just by looking? | ||
Yeah, I mean, just a little dive. | ||
Well, that's how it goes. | ||
That's pretty much all I had to say. | ||
Another thing, too, the shoes thing. | ||
Welcome to the Golden Age, buddy. | ||
Oh, with the TSA? | ||
Welcome to the Golden Age. | ||
Now you can wear your shoes while they grab your balls. | ||
Yeah, hear me out. | ||
So, yeah, then Trump got to experience it, and that's why we did, too. | ||
So on stage, when Trump gets shot at, he wants his shoes. | ||
He wants them back on. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's a metaphor. | ||
A year anniversary, here we are. | ||
unidentified
|
We get to keep our shoes on. | |
Welcome to the Golden Age, everybody. | ||
That's hysterical. | ||
I love it, man. | ||
Thanks for your call and your support of the stores. | ||
I appreciate it, man. | ||
All right, Randy in Dallas, Texas. | ||
Randy, what's on your mind, dude? | ||
The question that should be asked is, isn't it amazing how much you can learn just by tuning in to you guys? | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I know I do. | ||
No, my point, really kind of an accumulation of everything. | ||
I just, I guess today maybe just felt overwhelmed with everything about, you know, you have the ambush in Alvarez about the ICE detention facility. | ||
You got the Epstein going on. | ||
You got the Texas floods. | ||
And then you have the Clinton Foundation volunteers trying to be on the ground. | ||
You always have the Israel-Iran stuff going on. | ||
And then here Elon is with Grok4, which I'm not for or against AI. | ||
I've never really used it. | ||
I have used like chatbot GPT a couple of times, just, I guess, asking questions or whatever. | ||
But my question is, do you ever, would you have ever even thought when you were a kid growing up? | ||
Because I'm 39. | ||
I'll be 40 in a couple of months. | ||
I would have never even thought 20 years ago that I would be living in a world where literally people they have their like girlfriends as AI. | ||
I never would have thought that. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's a real problem. | ||
And hey, by the way, this is just the beginning of all that. | ||
It's going to get way worse because the AI is going to be better. | ||
And it's not going to be just sending little typed messages to the AI. | ||
It's going to be to the point where you open up your phone and you FaceTime the AI and it looks like you're talking to a real woman and she's designed by the AI based off of the pornography that you looked at in the past to look like somebody that you're attracted to. | ||
And she's got the voice of somebody that you would be attracted to. | ||
She's got all of your data and everything. | ||
And then she says all the right things because she perfectly understands your personality and your psychological profile. | ||
So we are definitely going to get to a place where it's going to be not just a few people in relationships with AI that we kind of, oh, that's weird in my way. | ||
It's going to be, we're going to reach a point where it's going to be difficult for all of us not to feel like we're having meaningful relationships with artificial intelligence powered by some of the most questionable organizations in the history of corporations and governments. | ||
100%. | ||
I never would have dreamed that it would have happened this quickly, but I think 20 years ago, if you would have asked me when I was a 14-year-old kind of shithead kid, I would have said, yeah, I bet you before I die, it'll happen. | ||
But it turns out it's happening now. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's game over, man. | ||
Game over. | ||
It will be okay, but it's going to be ugly. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
We're going to win in the end, but the info war is going to really suck. | ||
You know, it's going to be a brutal, painful war. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm glad that I have you with me, Randy. | ||
Always, always. | ||
I'm your biggest supporter, your biggest fan. | ||
I'll always be with you guys. | ||
I love you, man. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
I mean that, too. | ||
Rick in Mississippi. | ||
Rick, what are you doing? | ||
Snapping necks and cashing checks? | ||
Man, I'm just wondering, if Epstein really killed himself, then why isn't Gizlaine under the same security protocol that he was under? | ||
Yeah, and if there's no client list, why is she still in prison? | ||
Why is she still in prison? | ||
And then the other thing I'm wondering is Trump and Elon, they were all besties living together at Mar-a-Lago, having the best time. | ||
And all of a sudden, they had this huge fight. | ||
All Trump can say is he was against the EV mandates. | ||
But then Elon's like, I don't give a crap about the EV mandates. | ||
And then at the same time that this whole Maxwell or Epstein thing happens, Grock 4 comes out all Hitlerian, talking about the G. Like, there's just, there's just so many things going on at one time. | ||
It's hard to wrap your head around it. | ||
And then you want to go, all right, is he really playing 5D chess? | ||
Is Epstein really still alive? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So here's my opinion on the Trump 5D chess thing. | ||
Sometimes, you know the famous clip of Alex Jones? | ||
I'm going to be honest with you, I'm kind of retarded. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
Joe Rogan, famous clip. | ||
Anyway, with Trump, sometimes he's playing 5D chess. | ||
And sometimes he's just retarded. | ||
And we're all like that. | ||
I'm like that, too. | ||
Once a week, I do something or accomplish something at work that I'm just so proud of. | ||
Oh, I'm so glad I thought of that. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
And all the time, I just do retarded shit, for lack of a better term. | ||
That's the way everybody is. | ||
The problem is we have so much hope invested in Donald Trump that in our minds, we've unfairly categorized him, even if we don't admit it, we've categorized him as like a messianic figure. | ||
And so when he doesn't live up to messianic standards, because no human can, then we like lose all hope immediately when the really prudent perspective is to say, all right, this is not going to be perfect, but is it going to be good enough? | ||
And that's to be determined. | ||
But one thing I do like about Donald Trump is that I firmly believe that even if he winds up being a terrible president, which I doubt, but if he winds up being an atrocious president of the United States, it won't be because he wasn't trying his best. | ||
It won't be because he was intentionally selling us out. | ||
It'll be for another reason. | ||
And that, in and of itself, to me, is a breath of fresh air because we have come from a long line of political leaders who were so terrible and exploitative of us, not because they were incompetent, but because they were intentionally engaged in selling us out every chance they could get. | ||
The Bidens are a prime example of this. | ||
And there's so many other political dynasties and families and entities and cliques that are just as bad as the Bidens. | ||
We just know about the Bidens because of the Hunter laptop and the other details that made it so obvious. | ||
That's just one little glimpse into the hellhole that is the political class in the United States of America. | ||
Len in Ohio. | ||
Len, how are you this evening, sir? | ||
Well, Chase rules on Rumble. | ||
I don't even read the Rumble chat. | ||
I don't have time for that, man. | ||
I got to read the news. | ||
But, you know, you gave us a sign that when you said do our own conspiracy. | ||
Yeah, we have to conspire against them. | ||
Right. | ||
And so I'm thinking it's time we hire the bounty hunters. | ||
Do you still have baby Grok, by the way? | ||
Are you still a whale? | ||
Boy, Elon put the, hey, put the kibosh on that. | ||
I think you called in one time and you said, I have a billion baby Grok. | ||
I am a whale. | ||
I was like, how much is that in U.S. dollars? | ||
You're like, $50. | ||
You remember that? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yes, I do. | ||
Yeah, I still got it. | ||
I'm hoping. | ||
I'm hoping. | ||
But here's what really happened. | ||
Okay. | ||
Trump has been using that space-time continuum. | ||
And Elon Musk did when he was interviewed by Alex. | ||
He told his son, get busy with that. | ||
And up in Mar-a-Lago, they were tripping and not leaving the plantation. | ||
And so he saw what had to be done, that Musk had to exit, start a political party, and then so that he could inform Grok about this space-time continuum so that he could get to Mars. | ||
I don't know what to say to you, Len. | ||
I just love you so much. | ||
I don't even know what to say, man. | ||
Like, I almost just need to go to the next call. | ||
I like to call it the Chase Time Continuum. | ||
And that's the part of the show where I say I love you, Len, and I'm going to go to DB in Idaho. | ||
DB in Idaho, you are live on the air. | ||
How you doing, Chase? | ||
Good. | ||
Excellente. | ||
First of all, I want to say awesome supporter. | ||
I love you. | ||
I love what you're doing. | ||
Everything's awesome. | ||
I've got immune support, survival shield X2, brain force, and buccus, gut cleanse, bodies, ultimate, or what is it, next devil energy short release max. | ||
I've got methylene blue. | ||
unidentified
|
I've got whatever else it's called. | |
What is this called? | ||
The super green stuff. | ||
Yeah, Optimal Human. | ||
90 plus ingredients, everything the body needs. | ||
That's awesome, man. | ||
It's been awesome. | ||
I've got about 20 t-shirts. | ||
I've got four or five sweatshirts. | ||
I've got all the coins. | ||
Been a great supporter. | ||
I love what you guys are doing. | ||
Thank you so much for your support. | ||
I hope you win one of the giveaways. | ||
You deserve it. | ||
Well, been trying. | ||
I have been trying. | ||
Anyway, man, my thing for you is the hope that we have in Christ, man. | ||
It's the blessed hope in Titus 2.13, which is talking about us awaiting the return of Christ, which is bringing up the church. | ||
The church is getting out of here before the tribulation comes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Because, Barry. | ||
Because the wrath of God was poured out upon his son on the cross. | ||
And if we receive him, his wrath has already been poured out. | ||
It's not on us. | ||
It was poured out on his son. | ||
So God's going to take us out of here. | ||
And it talks about that in 2 Thessalonians 2, 7, and 8. | ||
1 Corinthians 15, 50 through 51 talks about getting out of here in a twinkling of an eye. | ||
And there's also a 70 weeks of Daniel, which is all about Israel. | ||
And after the 69th week, there was a pause. | ||
And that's when Christ died on the cross. | ||
And there has been a 2,000-year pause. | ||
And that was the church age. | ||
And in Revelation 3, 10, it talks about the church that is going to be blocked from the hour of trial, which is coming upon the whole earth because we believed in his word. | ||
And then, once the church is taken out of here, the 70th week is going to continue, which is the tribulation period. | ||
And that period is going to be that whole garbage area, which the church is not a part of because we're not subject to wrath. | ||
The unbelieving world is. | ||
Well, I'll tell you what, I'll tell you what, DB. | ||
I am by no means an expert on Revelation. | ||
I read the Bible a couple of times. | ||
I used to study it a lot more intensely than I have recently just because I've been so busy. | ||
I should probably get back into it. | ||
But there's a couple of things. | ||
First thing is, I try to focus my time on worrying about what I can do today rather than trying to figure out what some of these cryptic messages mean about tomorrow. | ||
And I don't blame you for doing what you're doing. | ||
I'm not being critical of you at all. | ||
I totally understand the intrigue, and I think it's valuable. | ||
It's just not for me. | ||
It's not my role. | ||
My calling is to be on the air live now, now, now, now. | ||
Helping infowars now, doing what I can for humanity now, being in the present, being effective as possible. | ||
I can think all day about what's going to happen in the next 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 years, or thousands of years. | ||
I don't care if Jesus Christ comes back tomorrow or if he comes back in 5,000 years. | ||
But I will say that wrath of God that was poured out on his son, I'd like to find some of that wrath of God. | ||
I would like to harness some of that wrath of God while the globalists and the elites engage in these black magic, adrenochrome rituals where they allegedly torture children to build up the adrenaline in their blood and then drink their literal life force. | ||
I mean, you have companies that are coming out in Silicon Valley and other places saying, oh, here are all the benefits of getting a blood transfusion from somebody who's 12 years old. | ||
You got fathers having their blood replaced by their kids. | ||
I mean, can you imagine draining your blood so your father could feel more youthful, how like perverted and upside down that is? | ||
The only blood that we're supposed to be drinking, folks, is the blood of Christ. | ||
Not the blood of children, right? | ||
And if we are drinking the blood of Christ, and when he spilled his blood, it was the wrath of God, then we are consuming the wrath of God. | ||
It empowers us, like the leftists and the globalists and the satanic cabal, try to harness the power and the energy of the most innocent children ever, all that is good and just rip it up. | ||
No, no, we are embodied with the wrath of God. | ||
And everything in the Bible is about the word, the word, the word, the word. | ||
You go to John, it's the word, and everything in the beginning was the word of God. | ||
And it's even a fact that we don't know God's actual name because the Jews never wrote it down because you couldn't take his name in vain. | ||
So his name is forgotten and it's ineffable altogether. | ||
We have forgotten God's name. | ||
The spoken word is the power. | ||
Truth is the power. | ||
Jesus himself said, I am the way and the truth and the light. | ||
Well, what is the truth if not conveyed via speech? | ||
That's why we have to have freedom of speech. | ||
It's the only path to Christ, to righteousness, to God. | ||
This is the human condition. | ||
This is where the war takes place between good and evil. | ||
It's in ideas, in speech, in truth. | ||
Good and evil battle on a metaphysical plane. | ||
We don't sense it, but it plays out in the physical world with death and famine and genocide. | ||
And I'm telling you folks, while we're arming Ukraine and arming Israel, and they're taking your money and forcing it from you in order to do it, and they're conscripting people and throwing them into vans all over the world, and there's just rape and murder and bombs all the time, crime after crime after crime against humanity, while you're forced to fund those wars, then you must compensate by volunteering to fund the InfoWar. | ||
It is the only war worth funding. | ||
Consume the wrath of God that was spilled out and wield that wrath of God with the word of God, with the word of truth. | ||
Empower the truth by going to the alexjonstore.com right now. | ||
And for God's sake, call 877-789-2539 and tell me on the other side of this break what you think. | ||
unidentified
|
Because we have to share the word and the truth. | |
It is our purpose. | ||
When RFK Jr. mixes something into his drink, people pay attention. | ||
Plenty of folks are wondering what was in that little bottle he uncorked during a flight. | ||
What is Bobby Kennedy Jr. dropping into that glass of water? | ||
Methylene blue. | ||
unidentified
|
Mel Gibson also praised methylene blue on Joe Rogan recently. | |
This stuff works, man. | ||
A stimulant stimulates cells themselves to turn the cell up. | ||
This turns the energy up. | ||
That's why there's no letdown. | ||
That's why you can take this and go to sleep, too. | ||
But you sleep better on it, my experience. | ||
No, I really like it. | ||
I'm going to have to get on this stuff. | ||
Here's Shower Kennedy taking it. | ||
Kennedy literally gobbles it. | ||
He must be doing something right. | ||
That ripped bod is 73 years old. | ||
Our methylene blue, medical grade, made in Florida, is incredible. | ||
Cleans out your mitochondria. | ||
Clarity, focus, energy. | ||
You've seen the rave reviews of every guest we've had on. | ||
It's game-changing. | ||
I feel like, wow, there's power in coalescing all your thoughts. | ||
Did you hear our last guest, what she said happened to her? | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
She said brain fog just lifted. | ||
That's what it feels like. | ||
I feel lighter. | ||
It's really interesting. | ||
I almost like feel smarter. | ||
This stuff kicked in and it like instantly I just felt like this weird meditative energy. | ||
I don't know how to explain it. | ||
I don't feel jittery. | ||
I just felt like instantly like I went from five hours of sleep like I got last night to like 10 hours. | ||
I don't know how to explain it. | ||
The stuff's new to me, but I like it. | ||
Methylene blue works for me. | ||
I just kind of feel like I'm sitting up straight more. | ||
I'm thinking more. | ||
The thoughts are coming in easier. | ||
I'm making decisions faster. | ||
And it really does. | ||
It gives you clean energy. | ||
When I'm talking, it seems like it's not really me talking. | ||
I can hear my talking and going, wow, you're... | ||
It's almost like an out-of-body experience. | ||
It's like you're behind yourself. | ||
That is what it feels like. | ||
But my brain's going really fast. | ||
unidentified
|
It clears the brain fog where you're actually able to focus more clearly. | |
For me, it's like a fog lifted, but it was like a veil lifted off, you know? | ||
Incredible. | ||
Best product that I've purchased so far. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah! | |
I feel more energetic. | ||
I feel more alive. | ||
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. | ||
I felt tingling fingers. | ||
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. | ||
Yeah, I mean, like, it's a solid product. | ||
Take this in the morning, a couple hours later, you'll experience the cognitive benefits of it. | ||
I mean, it's so good. | ||
It's scary. | ||
It's just amazing. | ||
So it really does work. | ||
It varies person to person, but it's amazing. | ||
unidentified
|
About 15 minutes ago, I took 10 drops of the ultimate methylene blue. | |
I must say that it does a damn good job. | ||
99% of people that take it have between moderate to just insanely good effects. | ||
So good for your whole body. | ||
unidentified
|
Definitely noticed my focus. | |
I've missed an increase good energy right now. | ||
I'm a practicing dentist, so I have more patience going up. | ||
So I'm always looking for that afternoon boot without with this. | ||
It's like in your head where you're like, you can feel it. | ||
Your body's a little tingly, but you're just more aware of what's going on. | ||
unidentified
|
I would definitely recommend. | |
Alex Jones, Methylene Blue here. | ||
It's great stuff. | ||
So thank you, Alex. | ||
Keep it coming. | ||
Powered by Methylene Blue. | ||
Ultramethylene blue at the Alchil store.com. | ||
unidentified
|
While other shows lie to you about what's happening now, Tomorrow's News Tonight tells you the truth about what's happening next. | |
With your host, Chase Geiser. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, there are 27 minutes left of this transmission. | ||
I'm going to go to George in the colony of Texas. | ||
You've been waiting on hold patiently for 45 minutes and 49 seconds. | ||
You are live on the air on Tomorrow's News Tonight. | ||
What's on your mind? | ||
Oh, George, tell me you're there. | ||
Don't leave me hanging. | ||
No, no, no, no, bro. | ||
Man, this is Alex Jones show. | ||
No way. | ||
Man, I love Alex. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Look, dude, I'm going to gush for like a couple seconds. | ||
Man, I lived in Southern California for 30 years. | ||
unidentified
|
I went through the garbage. | |
I understand no cussing, and I will not cuss. | ||
I went through the garbage of Southern California trying to get best for my family. | ||
I moved to Washington State. | ||
I thought it was a safe refuge. | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
I lived there for 16 years. | ||
I've only been in the state of Texas for three years. | ||
And the only other than God himself was Alex Jones that got me here. | ||
And my wife just says, if you can get on the show, please tell him that Alex Jones got us to Texas. | ||
Wow. | ||
I was sitting there. | ||
Oh, my God, brother. | ||
I was sitting there for 16 years in Washington State. | ||
The five years was fine. | ||
You know, I did my best. | ||
I worked my way up. | ||
I was. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
I was a grandskeeper, a greenskeeper. | ||
And it was, and after five years of being there, I've been there for 16. | ||
After five years, I said, oh, my God, this is not my people. | ||
These are not my people. | ||
Yeah, and it's weird when you finally move somewhere and you meet your people. | ||
It's like, where have I been? | ||
Why did I wait so long to do this? | ||
Yes. | ||
That was miraculous. | ||
And I'm like, oh, my God, what is this man? | ||
Who's this man? | ||
Alex Jones. | ||
I don't know him. | ||
He's just talking the truth. | ||
And I start feeling better. | ||
I'm like, where is this man from? | ||
Have you ever Googled him? | ||
No, no, no, brother. | ||
I have not. | ||
And I thought to myself, oh, my God, this lovely man sounds like my grandfather. | ||
This is Alex Johnson. | ||
I'm like, oh, my God, I want to hear him. | ||
And the last five years in Washington, I've been listening to him. | ||
And I'm like, oh, my God, I'm very inquisitive. | ||
Where is he from? | ||
I'm from Austin, Texas. | ||
I'm like, oh, my God. | ||
Jennifer, my dear, my wife. | ||
I said, we're moving to Texas. | ||
Alex Jones says he's in Austin, Texas, and you just decided to move to Texas? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Wow. | ||
That's a bold move, Cotton. | ||
No, the man, the man, Alex Jones, the man, it was like he pierced my heart. | ||
And I'm like, I look at my wife. | ||
She came home from work, and I'm like, I'm done. | ||
We're moving to Texas. | ||
And she goes, you are absolutely crazy. | ||
I said, I am crazy. | ||
I said, but this man, you must listen to him. | ||
So does she follow you? | ||
And she was cool with it? | ||
She, no. | ||
Well, at first, she was very hesitant. | ||
Dude, this story sounds like a tragedy. | ||
Tell me there's a happy ending. | ||
Oh, my God, brother. | ||
It is a happy ending. | ||
It's a very happy ending. | ||
But I'm like, I said, just listen to this man. | ||
His name is Alex Jones. | ||
And he's from Texas. | ||
I just found this out. | ||
Because I researched. | ||
Where's Alex Jones from? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And you found out he's from Texas. | ||
He decided to move here. | ||
And I found out it was Texas. | ||
Well, listen, I'm glad that you're here. | ||
I am really glad that you're here. | ||
And I'm really glad that you got an opportunity to be on the air. | ||
But I really, I really need to get to other callers because, after all, it is tomorrow's news tonight, and I love hearing the story of you coming to Texas. | ||
I have a very similar story, actually, and I'll tell you about it another time. | ||
But Nikki and George, you've been waiting for a long time. | ||
Nikki, what's on your mind, dear? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, Chase, thank you so much for taking my call. | ||
It's a super pleasure to talk to you. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
Nikki, for calling. | ||
Totally. | ||
Thank you for the text message letting me know about your show tonight. | ||
Like, two points real quick. | ||
Like, first thing, well, second thing, really, Microsoft totally continues to exist because it serves as a huge gaming platform. | ||
I just wanted to throw that out there. | ||
But I really agree with your first statement of the night that we are under a total constitutional crisis. | ||
And as much as I hate to disagree with you, I really think that Donald Trump has shown himself as a traitor to the MAGA movement and to America. | ||
And I say that because, you know, the art of the deal and all that stuff, all the things that Donald Trump has ever talked about, he says you want to know what motivates the person that you're dealing with. | ||
Trump has always talked about being motivated by that Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
That Nobel Peace Prize, that's been like a huge thorn in his back. | ||
He's right, forgotten about that. | ||
He'd mentioned that for many years. | ||
Nobel Prize would be nice. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And so what's going on? | ||
Like, why is he turning on the country? | ||
Why is he still supporting Israel with all of this? | ||
DB's really just trying to play him like a fiddle, huh? | ||
Dude, they totally did play him like a fiddle. | ||
And it's like, we're looking at it because I'm a huge supporter of the Constitution. | ||
That's the whole reason that I followed Trump in the first place. | ||
Let's get constitutional. | ||
I love America. | ||
Everybody loves America. | ||
That's why everybody flocks here. | ||
But we have all of these unconstitutional things going on and we have a DOJ, an FBI, a CIA go on and on and on with the alphabet suit. | ||
None of these people are following the Constitution and nobody's calling them out on the rug on it. | ||
And it's so disappointing. | ||
And we should have a constitutional convention. | ||
We're about to celebrate the 250th birthday of America and nobody's talking about holding a constitutional convention. | ||
What's the easiest way that we can get people to stop illegal immigration? | ||
Let's make a constitutional amendment. | ||
Here's the thing, though, man. | ||
I lost faith in constitutional conventions when I learned that they had to ratify and amend the Constitution in order to legalize income tax at the federal level. | ||
Because Abraham Lincoln had instituted some federal income taxes during the Civil War. | ||
They went to the Supreme Court. | ||
The Supreme Court, I believe in the late 19th century, ruled that a income tax at the federal level was unconstitutional. | ||
So they established the Federal Reserve Bank and they get two-thirds of the state to ratify the amendment to legalize an income tax. | ||
And I'm thinking to myself, if half the country would have an income tax abolished now, given how much more conservative the United States of America was culturally, politically, | ||
112 years ago, there is no way in hell that two-thirds of the states, 50 years after the end of the Civil War, when the South is still bitter about the Union and the federal government, were able to ratify an amendment to the Constitution that allowed the federal government to take a percentage of your income. | ||
So if they were throwing amendments and amending and changes to the Constitution 112 years ago, and we've gone 100 years with just increased erosion of the integrity of our institutions, increased power of our federal government, which exacerbates the degree to which the corruption saturates our entire population, politically, culturally, in every facet. | ||
I don't think we're voting our way out of this one. | ||
And I'm not trying to be blackpilled. | ||
Maybe we can, but we're not really a democracy. | ||
But if you just use the term colloquially, since we have democratic processes, we're like the oldest democracy in the world because they never last more than 300 years. | ||
I mean, democracy sucks. | ||
There's a reason that democracy, the word democracy is not mentioned in the Constitution once. | ||
Because the Founding Fathers understood that if you have a direct democracy, then the people will vote to steal from each other with policies, redistribution of wealth and property, things like that. | ||
The majority will enslave the minority, which is why we're a constitutional republic to guarantee individual rights, despite what most people might think. | ||
Most people might want to just take all of Elon Musk's wealth and redistribute it because he's so rich and we're all struggling, but he's got individual rights because we're a constitutional republic and not a straight democracy. | ||
And honestly, I don't think that this country, the United States of America as it stands, I don't think it's got much time left in the entire context of written human history. | ||
I bet you we got 100 years max before there's a whole new government. | ||
I'm really starting to get to that place because we accomplished a miracle by electing Donald Trump after everything that he went through. | ||
He's got his first term. | ||
They tried to impeach him twice, which historically would have just been the end of any politician's reputation, regardless of whether the charges were legitimate or not. | ||
They tried to censor him off of the internet. | ||
They almost succeeded. | ||
Then they tried to assassinate him. | ||
Then they tried to imprison him. | ||
Every way they could get him. | ||
They tried to get him. | ||
And He still won the election after a bullet grazed his ear. | ||
I'm thinking to myself, this is divine providence. | ||
This is the way. | ||
Oh my God, a miracle occurred. | ||
This was our last chance to save the United States of America. | ||
And since it's playing out so miraculously, I was totally leaned in. | ||
And maybe it is this way. | ||
I'm not writing Trump off or anything like that, but now that he's in, and I've seen what's happened over the last six months, it's not even that I'm critical of Trump or what he's tried to do or his policies, but it's become abundantly obvious that no matter how competent, | ||
good, or well-intentioned the leaders may be of any of these institutions, whether it's the House of Representatives, Senate, Executive Branch, FBI, CIA, IRS, NSA, DNI, the institutions are so foul that no good person can produce anything good of them from them. | ||
And if that's the case, that inherently means that we can't vote our way out of the problem because whoever we vote in can't fix these institutions. | ||
So then the only solution is to abolish them. | ||
But how do you abolish them? | ||
Well, you can overthrow your government, which I don't advocate. | ||
Or you can wait for them to totally collapse, which they will eventually totally collapse because this whole thing is this Ponzi scheme with the dollar. | ||
It's all going to just fall in on itself like what happened with Rome over hundreds of years. | ||
It's sad to die so slowly as a civilization and to have no hope for generations to come. | ||
But when they collapse, the question is, what's next? | ||
And if they collapse, it'll be so different from when Rome collapsed because when Rome collapsed, it was kind of an agrarian civilization, a few different languages, a lot of rural communities, whatever. | ||
Still tragic, terrible, but you know, whatever. | ||
But if this collapse happens, the second Roman Empire collapse and manifests here in the United States, we're going to have things like nuclear weapons laying around, massive artificial intelligence, everybody personally armed. | ||
I mean, we are in for a real world of shit if we don't figure something out now. | ||
Nikki, thank you for your call. | ||
Melanie and Virginia, what's up? | ||
Hi, Chase. | ||
It's my first time ever actually being able to call in as say hi, and thank you for taking my call. | ||
I'm so glad you called. | ||
Thank you for calling. | ||
First off, I want to say I love methylene blue and optimal human. | ||
I actually started off with X-3 and Winter Sun and moved on up to Methylene Blue and that is making my days so much easier. | ||
But to the topic I wanted to bring up, actually, you started touching base on a little bit of the topic when you were talking to Lens and referencing the satanic blood rituals and the likes of such under that all falls under the child trafficking. | ||
I was wondering if you know or are familiar with a woman named Allison Carter, also known as Tori Outlaw. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Enlighten me. | ||
It's okay. | ||
Can you say... | ||
She's a victim, well a survivor of child sex trafficking. | ||
She was actually trafficked through Riverside County Child Protected Services in foster care. | ||
And that tested from three months old until 14 and a half was when she was officially when she started being trafficked to Diddy Party. | ||
Wow. | ||
And she has lots of affidavits, sworn affidavits, ledgers and everything involving her trafficking. | ||
And she even called out to Pam Bondi and begged that her ledgers be completely unredacted so that it could help in the cases for the Diddy trial as well as the Epstein trial. | ||
Yeah, and that's one of the interesting things about the Epstein situation. | ||
I was thinking about this earlier today. | ||
You know, we just went through years of the Me Too movement and everybody and their mother seemingly accused of sexual assault. | ||
Much of the instances erroneous, like the accusations against Donald Trump, for example, and so many others. | ||
And it's one of these things where if you have a lot of money or a lot of success or a lot of notoriety, you can pretty much throw a rock and hit a white person who's been falsely accused by sexual assault at some point in time by an ex or a college girlfriend or a hookup. | ||
Or if they're successful, it's happened 100 times and they have these hush-hush settlements. | ||
So what's interesting to me is we know that Epstein was literally and actually and truly engaged in child sex trafficking and direct abuse and pawning these people off to the most disgusting world leaders ever for the same abuse to the tune of thousands of children. | ||
I mean, Bondi even admitted it was thousands of videos. | ||
Thousands of children. | ||
And how many have come forward? | ||
I can think of off the top of my head, like three, two or three. | ||
Maybe there were actually two dozen that came forward. | ||
And so you have this culture that is so encouraging and forgiving and wanting and yearning for victims to come forward all the time. | ||
Believe all women. | ||
Hashtag me too. | ||
Hashtag time's up. | ||
I mean, everybody is just trying to come out and say that something happened to them. | ||
It's very popular, very trendy thing to do. | ||
No one will ever criticize you because it's social suicide to do so. | ||
It's just a great way to virtue signal and get a bunch of clout and pity and ruin the reputation of somebody that you might not like. | ||
But we have so few people coming out that were victims of Epstein when we know there were thousands of them, hundreds of them. | ||
And that's what's really alarming to me because why aren't they coming out? | ||
You say, well, Chase, they're not coming out because they don't want to relive that trauma. | ||
But women relive their trauma all the time, testifying in court about what happened to them. | ||
They were raped. | ||
They were abused. | ||
That's not an explanation for why so few have come out if there were so many victims. | ||
You see, they're not trying to avoid reliving their trauma in the past. | ||
They're trying to avoid what would happen next if they came out because they understand that regardless of whether Epstein is dead or alive and witness protection, they understand that Epstein was just the bagman for a much bigger machine. | ||
And they understand that that machine is alive and well. | ||
And if they threaten the integrity of that machine by coming out and revealing what was going on, what was happening, what they overheard in the way of phone calls, what they saw, that they're just as good as dead. | ||
That's what's going on there. | ||
Russell in North Mississippi, what's on your mind? | ||
Thank you for taking my call, Chase. | ||
Yes. | ||
And I first want to commend you and your assessment of the Epstein file cover-up was right on the mark and very astute analysis. | ||
Thank you. | ||
So great, great job. | ||
But what I want to talk about was something that Owen brought up earlier today about the decline in poll numbers and support for the MAC movement, the coalition, you know, basically Donald Trump after all this started with, you know, the bombing of the Iran nuclear facility and all the other things he spoke of. | ||
And what I wanted to suggest, what could, you know, revigorate the MACA movement, was two simple, quick wins. | ||
One being to abolish the TSA, and the second being to repeal the Patriot Act. | ||
And I wanted to get your thoughts on that. | ||
Well, the Patriot Act has already expired, largely. | ||
And the problem is there's no accountability for the entities that were empowered by the Patriot Act. | ||
So what happens is we legalize all the stuff that the deep state can do. | ||
The deep state begins doing it. | ||
And then when those policies, tactics become illegal again after it expires, the deep state just keeps doing it because there's no accountability. | ||
It's all secret, covert, and siloed. | ||
So there's nothing really to repeal. | ||
It's done. | ||
I think the last Patriot Act stipulation expired in 2021 or something like that. | ||
But they're still doing the same stuff because nobody holds them accountable. | ||
It's total disorder, rogue, coup-like stuff, government within government stuff, deep state stuff. | ||
As far as TSA is concerned, I don't really give a damn. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I just want to get on the plane quickly. | ||
unidentified
|
And frankly, dying in a plane crash, not that bad. | |
Die right away. | ||
I'd rather die in a plane crash because we didn't have a TSA than be forced to take a vaccine so that I have an artificially enlarged heart and AFib and all these other issues and my wiener doesn't work anymore and I'm just miserable. | ||
I mean, honestly, I'm at a point right now where the TSA is the last of my concerns. | ||
I don't like it when they are hyper-surveilling me. | ||
And I don't like how much of a pain in the butt it is. | ||
Take my laptop out and take my shoes off. | ||
And I don't like things like scanning my retina so that I can get through sooner, even though you don't really get through sooner and you're paying money. | ||
And then now the government has your retina. | ||
And I don't like how they take my picture when I'm being added to a database. | ||
But let me tell you something, folks. | ||
If the government wants your DNA, they can get it. | ||
Have you ever had your blood drawn? | ||
Do you take your trash out? | ||
If the government wants your retina information, they can get it. | ||
You ever looked at a phone? | ||
You know, your phone scans your face every 30 seconds with like infrared lasers. | ||
So that as your face gradually changes, it still magically works when it does the face unlock on your phone. | ||
So if you're growing a beard, it's scanning you every 30 seconds and updating its database on what you look like. | ||
If you're wearing glasses, if you're not, it works every time. | ||
Constantly. | ||
They've done the studies. | ||
They know everything about your face. | ||
You don't have to take a picture at the airport in order for them to know exactly what your facial profile is, in order for them to have facial recognition. | ||
We are reaching a level, I think we're already there, where the government is omniscient. | ||
It knows everything. | ||
The problem is for the government, they've had all this data and all this information, but they don't have the manpower to dig through this giant haystack and pull out meaningful information or what they're looking for. | ||
They've got all the data, but it's so vast that they might as well have none of the data at all. | ||
It's hidden. | ||
But with artificial intelligence, you see, they can weaponize that to engage in what's called informatics. | ||
Informatics is the art and science of pulling out the information you need from a vast swath of data that you don't need. | ||
It's finding the one fish in the ocean that you need. | ||
AI is going to be able to do that. | ||
So yeah, TSA is inconvenient. | ||
It's a pain in the butt, but it's too late to stop that train. | ||
And I'm not blackbilled. | ||
I think things are going to be okay, but it's not going to be pretty. | ||
I believe in God. | ||
I have faith in Christ. | ||
I believe in the Messiah. | ||
I believe in InfoWars. | ||
And I believe that even if things are absolutely terrible and we totally fail in every way, shape, and form, it's satisfying enough to know that I tried my best. | ||
And we're never going to give up, but we could give out, which is why we need your support more than ever at thealicejonestore.com. | ||
Please go check it out. | ||
The deals are incredible. | ||
The supplements are incredible. | ||
And look, if supplements aren't your bag, I get it. | ||
They weren't my bag until I started working here. | ||
Sign up as a VIP. | ||
It's $30 a month. | ||
You get $40 in store credit. | ||
You can cancel any time that you want. | ||
And at least you'll know that you gave us a dollar a day To keep the Satanists away. | ||
Even if you never use it, that's what I would do. | ||
So please go to thealxjonesstore.com. | ||
Thank you for tuning in to tomorrow's news tonight. | ||
Make sure to stay tuned for the live broadcasts on weeknights from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m., where we will take your calls, where we will do analysis, and let you know what's happening next. | ||
And don't just go to thealxjonesstore.com because these products are amazing for your mind. | ||
I mean, the methylene blue, I can't even believe that stuff's legal. | ||
It is too good to be true. | ||
It will light you up like a Christmas tree. | ||
You'll feel like you're plugged into the wall. | ||
So, do it. | ||
Keep us on the air. | ||
Be the reason Alex Jones is on the air. | ||
Be the reason the globalists and the Satanists have something to fear. | ||
So we had Stuart Rhodes, the founder of Oath Keepers, former J6 political prisoner, constitutional lawyer, so much more on Paratrooper. | ||
And he wanted to try methylene blue like so many other guests have done my air. | ||
I got so busy with all the Iran war stuff and the commies rioting. | ||
Do you ever get him to take it on air? | ||
All the guests, dozens of them that have taken it within 45 minutes of an hour have varying degrees from extreme energy, it feels really great, to fog lifting, to just over the top crying. | ||
It feels so good. | ||
Especially the first time you take it. | ||
Electrochemical, the mitochondria, cleans out the cells, just does incredible things. | ||
RFK Jr. loves it. | ||
We've got the strongest ultra methylene blue. | ||
But he's going on Owen in about 30 minutes because my show just ended and I forgot to do this. | ||
He's like, hey, we're doing methylene blue. | ||
So he's going to take it now. | ||
But guys, don't forget when he's on Owen. | ||
So maybe he forgets before he's going to go off to tell us what he felt. | ||
And if he doesn't feel it, we'll put that out. | ||
I've had like out of 300 plus people given it to, two people did not feel it. | ||
That means your mitochondria is in perfect shape. | ||
So stirring, take a half dropper or so. | ||
That's about a half dose. | ||
And then go ahead and shut that down. | ||
And then we're going to find out what happens to you. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll see. |