Exposed: Pfizer, FDA and Tyson See Humans As Test Subjects
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I have been in a 28-year marathon battle with the globalist.
I have come from nowhere.
The very height of politics in America.
We are engaging the globalists at point blank range in the information war, but I don't deserve the credit.
Yes, I've persevered, but the listeners and viewers who support InfoWars are the real reason we've had this success.
We're having now the greatest victories in the fight against the new world order we've ever had.
We are now entering the final mile of the marathon.
And that's why today it's more important than ever to realize how important you've been in this fight and to continue in the efforts you've been carrying out and to intensify them.
God bless you all.
I salute you.
I thank you.
And I beg you to intensify what you're doing now because we are over the target and this greeting is happening.
The fight is my fight.
It's your fight.
It's our fight.
God bless you all.
All right, guys.
Are you going to sing Taylor Swift on your way out?
Calm the nerves.
Hey, you got to close that door like a man, bro.
Yes.
I don't know what to do with my arms.
Okay, Ron Burgundy.
So, yeah, you were going to start with Taylor Swift, right?
Taylor Swift?
Yes.
What song are you going to sing for us today?
Oh, none.
I can't sing.
No.
I can't sing.
No, I avoid karaoke like the plague.
Yeah, me too.
But do you have a go-to song?
Anything Kit-Cuddy, yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Interesting.
And I think that's probably K-Cuddy and then a system of a Down.
Damn, I think I would really enjoy karaoke now that I think about the songs that I can actually pick.
Some Lincoln Park.
Oh, I love Lincoln Park.
Derek, you got to go karaoke, Lincoln Park, Derek.
We got to do it.
What song would you karaoke?
I don't karaoke.
You don't, but what would you?
If I could karaoke, what song would I pick?
Probably something like Whitney Houston or something.
Whitney Houston.
Yeah.
Hey, can you get that devil off our screen, please?
No devils, no devils allowed.
Yeah, yeah.
I got scared there for a second.
So Lexi, Lexis Anderson, you are the future of America's lawyer system, I believe.
I hope so.
Yeah, yeah.
You've worked on some big cases.
You've got thrown to the wolves to learn.
Not in a bad way.
I'm not trying to make it seem like you've had a bad experience.
You've had a great experience with some great leaders, and you've made a huge splash in this, how could I say, this fight for America, honestly.
Thank you.
I hope so.
I think that's the best way to figure it out, though, is just to try it, see if you can sink or swim.
That's what they do to us here at InfoWars, and I love it.
Yeah.
I love it.
It's the best.
Barnes is the best at that.
Of just being like, why don't you give this a shot and seeing how you do and letting you test the waters is great.
So what would you consider yourself?
What kind of, I mean, you're a lawyer for sure.
What kind of lawyer would you consider yourself?
I usually call myself a civil rights and constitutional lawyer.
That sort of sums it up the best.
I do a lot of COVID litigation in particular and kind of getting into some food freedom cases.
And yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
We actually, we have a lot to uncover, talk about today and cover because you've worked on a lot of the biggest cases in the, what they would call the far-right legal system when it's just average Americans in the middle trying to make a living.
Exactly.
Exactly.
It's just people who want to protect their own religious freedoms, protect their own bodily autonomy, and yeah, not be penalized for following their personal beliefs in the workplace.
So from what I can remember, you've worked on cases against Pfizer.
You've worked on cases against the FDA, right?
Yes.
You've worked on cases against Twitter.
You've worked on cases against Tyson Foods, 3M, Meta, United.
Yeah, yeah.
We've sue a lot of big corporations.
What happened?
You want me to change the source?
No, that thing's flashing.
Oh, a mute?
Yeah.
That's all right.
Oh, come on.
Okay.
It's killing you?
Here, let me see.
Here we see.
I got you.
I'll fix it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Thanks for still switching.
See, this is what's great about this.
It's all part of the show.
Yeah, you have a wrong remote, dude.
What's not here with this?
This one right here.
I have all the power.
Just turn the volume to zero.
Yeah, no, that's what I'm going to do.
Jeez, I have such great producers.
No, I really do have the best production crew.
I work with the best production crew at Infowars, and then I have some of them carry over to help us here.
And yeah, I love them to death.
So back to you.
The last week was Tyson as well.
So let's start from the beginning because I met you probably about four or five years ago now, three, four.
It was three, maybe.
Yeah.
This year before because we had the Stop the Steel March.
Yes.
That's right.
And then I met you maybe a little bit before that when we had the New Year's event.
Yeah.
So that was New Year's going into 2021.
Okay.
So then Stop the Steel was in 2020.
It was in January.
Oh, no, no, November.
November, December, January.
I was at all of them.
Yeah, yeah.
So you went from, you know, you were a fan, you followed Stop to Steel, you went to DC.
Like, I even remember after we started, you know, we hung out and we became friends that it's like, oh, shit, I saw you in this footage.
Like, I don't even think I had met you yet.
And you were in the Million MAGA March footage.
And I just randomly was trying to make an ad and I was like, oh, shit, hey, there's this.
There she is.
I was front row at everything that weekend.
What was crazy is I had just found Infowars right before the 2020 election.
Probably, I think I started watching religiously maybe in October.
And that was what was wild.
I was a very new audience member.
I didn't really know what you guys were all about, but I got sucked in very quickly.
And so, yeah, so you guys launched the Stop the Steal.
I had to be there.
Yeah, I started out as a fan.
And it was only because of you guys that I saw Robert Barnes and ended up with the job I have now.
Yeah, and that's, that's, to me, that's mind-blowing on how the universe works and how we all, you know, when you're on the same wavelength and we have just a common goal to put, what are y'all showing?
What is this?
Y'all are killing me.
What is this?
Yeah, y'all trying to get me with some, uh, I'm trying to bring in more toxicity into this area.
So, you know, our conversations kind of been minus the crew.
So I like to give them a hard time trying to bring, you know, more...
A little more flavor, as you would say.
But it's great to...
It opens so many doors.
So you're telling our fans right now is you started following, you saw an opportunity and you took advantage and you just applied all your stuff and all your energy to it.
And what happened?
Oh yeah, I weaseled my way in there, really.
Yeah, so I, so Robert Barnes, I obviously being a law student, I was in my second year of law school when the 2020 election was stolen.
So I was following all of that.
And obviously COVID kind of was my red pill moment.
COVID was a really awakening year for me.
And so I was watching the show religiously.
And Robert Barnes is one of the only attorneys I saw out there calling this out.
None of my classmates, none of my professors, none of the lawyers in Maine where I was living at the time were talking about COVID.
And we all knew the mandates were coming.
And so I was about to graduate in 2020.
Well, let's see.
Yeah, 2021.
And decided that, you know, I didn't want to be in Maine anymore.
And you know, when you feel just like drawn towards a cause and you know, you're like, okay, I have the skill set.
Yeah.
I was not interested in constitutional law.
I didn't take a lot of classes in law school about that or civil rights law.
And so it was a huge switch for me.
But you do.
You're like, okay, I have a skill set.
There's a problem and I can do something about it.
And so I decided to just give it a shot and honestly emailed Robert on a whim right before I was about to graduate.
I moved to Texas without a job and emailed him and ended up clerking for him that summer.
And there was no promise of a job either.
It was like, okay, you can intern for us if you want for a few months and see if you like it, see if it's a good fit.
And started working for them or for the firm permanently that fall.
That's amazing.
So, and that time, what do you, how long was that timeframe, you think, that you went from applying to, you know, actually making progress and actually working for him?
What was that timeframe like, what, three, four months?
Yeah.
I, so I, I moved to Texas April, I remember April 1st and emailed him a few weeks later.
And honestly, it was just asking, do you know of any attorneys in Texas who would want somebody to help?
I was like, these are the cases I want to do.
I want to work on the vaccine mandate cases.
He was one of the only attorneys I knew talking about taking on Tyson was, I think, the big story at the time because they were just so cruel.
He was willing to take on Tyson.
And I was like, do you know of any attorneys here doing the same work you are that could use a brand new lawyer who does not know anything about the subject matter whatsoever?
Except I'm just very, very passionate.
And I did name drop you guys.
I was like, well, I saw you on Infowars, which I think says a lot about somebody.
That is Infowars.
Sets the bar, you know, like, okay, at least she knows this much right now.
And that's definitely a good starting point.
Yeah.
So I emailed him and he immediately wrote back and said, well, you can work here if you want.
And so I graduated law school, studied for the bar and took that in July and then started working as a clerk a couple weeks later.
And the very first assignment I got was drafting a brief in our case against the FDA.
And talk about a way to cut your teeth.
It was one, very intimidating and two, like very flattering to have a shot at a project like that.
And yeah, I just got sucked into it.
I loved it so much.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it was great.
So you got it.
I mean, ladies and gentlemen, like you have to understand that you put your mind to it and you can do it like right away.
You focus that energy.
You have the power in your brain to manifest anything and everything you want in life.
You just can't be afraid to go after and do it.
And that's what a lot of people, I feel, don't understand is how powerful the passion, you follow your heart, you follow passion and you use your brain to actually, you know, make these things, make these things happen for you.
It's very, very feasible.
It's very, very feasible for a lot of people.
And I mean, kudos to you and being able to do that in such a timely, timely fashion because most people can't wrap their mind around doing it at all and then doing it so quickly.
Thank you.
Well, it definitely lights a fire if you don't have another job and you're like, well, I have to be employed somehow.
Yeah, no.
And I think, especially in this space, there's such a void, right?
And at that time, there was so much opportunity to get involved.
And this is something you wanted to tackle anywhere in the freedom movement.
There are voids everywhere.
And especially for me, it's just starting out.
I think it's very easy to feel like there must be somebody more qualified than me to take this on.
There has to be somebody better that can do this job.
But you learn quickly that sometimes there isn't somebody else willing to step up.
I can't tell you how many times we even just try to find attorneys to help us in certain jurisdictions and they say, well, my firm won't let me take on a vaccine mandate case.
Even now, full-blown attorneys who've been doing this for 20 years are like, no, I'm not allowed to.
Sorry, it's too controversial, too political.
And so I've learned that, you know, yeah, there might be somebody out there who's more skilled than I am, has more experience, but are they willing to step up and do it?
Sometimes no.
And I think that's the case with a lot of things in this movement.
So I encourage people just not to feel like you have to have a certain level of skill or expertise to make a difference because, you know, just dive in.
Yeah, you just got to get into it.
And so I think we should start at the beginning for you.
It's probably going to be, you know, it's going to be a topic.
It is a topic that everybody really, really likes, you know, to conspiracize on.
And I have to, I just have to know.
So what school did you graduate from?
College, you mean?
Oh, yeah.
What college did you happen to graduate from?
Little liberal arts school in Connecticut called Yale.
You went to Yale, huh?
I did, yeah.
I'm not a fed, I promise.
Were you in Skull and Bones?
I was not.
I was not, but I lived near Skull and Bones, and I can tell you there were some weird sounds coming from Skull and Bones quite frequently, yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
Like what?
Like you would just hear screams on a random night or something.
Yeah.
And it was very hush-hush, though.
Like people, they weren't supposed to talk about it.
I didn't know anyone personally in Skull and Bones, but I knew of people who were who were in the society.
So, I mean, you're probably the closest that in my circle that I would know who has anything to even, you know, I mean, we went to Yale and is close, that close to other than Alex Jones going to Bohemian Grove, which is, you know, which is amazing.
That probably like puts him, you know, that puts him almost in the group infiltrating like that, which is wild to me.
But what, what, how, like, you said it was a weird vibe.
No one really talked about it.
Like, do you have any, any, any, any, any goods for our fans, maybe?
I, I don't really.
I really have no idea what went down other than like what I've researched after the fact, just out of curiosity.
I wasn't in a society at Yale, and so I wasn't really involved.
I didn't know at the time, though, that there were all these conspiracies and controversies.
Had I known, I would have been staked outside the stolen bones.
That would have been a whole other list.
Yeah, exactly.
I would have been trying to infiltrate and expose.
But yeah, no, I didn't know what was going on in there.
There was what's called the big three.
There was like three major societies on campus that had been around for forever, were known to be the top dogs on campus.
They were very exclusive.
And I know that each of them had some serious hazing rituals going into it.
So there's three.
So what are the other two?
It was lock and key, and I think wolf's head was the other one.
Yeah, wolf's head was the one you would hear howling coming from from the building.
Okay.
They all looked like very austere, very creepy outside.
And yeah.
They were all like Twilight.
They're actually wolves.
I don't know.
I don't know what they're cooking up in there.
Well, I mean, guys, y'all have another, that's a rabbit hole for you to go down for.
There's more than skull and bones going on at Yale.
Okay, so back to you and all your success so far.
What is I, if you can talk about some of your cases, I think we should get into the background of what you've worked on, you know, the big cases and what was brought forth and how y'all were able to win and how these things kind of laid out.
Because some of these are like monumental cases that a lot of our fans actually know about and kept updates on.
So what was your favorite and your biggest one to work on so far?
Let's see.
I mean, well, obviously, I think the case against Pfizer has been one of the most exciting.
Yeah.
So we represent Brooke Jackson, who worked for Ventavia and worked on the clinical trials here in Texas for the COVID vaccine back in the fall of 2020.
So she was actively working on the clinical trials at the time that were going to be sent into the FDA for the emergency use officer.
So she was working on the very, let's say like the first batch of the vaccines that were made.
Not necessarily the first batch, but it was the first test case where they actually used these vaccines on people.
Yeah, it was that final trial before the EUA was sought.
So Pfizer is one of the few companies that maybe actually tested on people before giving it out.
Because we know like Moderna, then, you know, there was other companies who didn't even test, they skipped the human trials and went straight to, they skipped animal and human trials and just gave them straight to people.
Right.
And Pfizer, actually, with their boosters, they've only tested it on mice.
Animals, right?
They haven't even bothered to do, probably because the first ones were such a failure.
They said, we can't do this again.
But yeah, she worked there for a couple weeks and was, she'd been doing this for 20 years too.
She was incredibly skilled at her job.
She'd been working in the pharmacy industry for a long time and had just started on this new project working on the COVID vaccine, was overseeing clinical trials.
And she witnessed so much fraud in just a few weeks of working there and FDA violations and our FDA regulation violations, clinical trial protocol violations, unblinding of patients, changing of data, unreporting or non-reporting of adverse reactions, not handling the vaccine properly before it was administered, all kinds of issues.
She reported it as she went, was really diligent about that, was ignored continuously, eventually went to Pfizer, eventually went to FDA, and then was fired.
She sold.
She was fired for doing her job, basically.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, she was fired for telling other people, you're not doing your job, and this is going to cause issues down the road.
And yeah, she was terminated.
And so everyone was alerted.
Everyone knew what was going on and they never fixed it.
So she wasn't even a whistleblower when she was working there and it happened.
Like she realized, like they could have used her as a cover your ass.
Like, oh, shit, okay, you notice all these things.
Okay, well, then let's fix this.
And like, they could have handled that so much better so then that this wouldn't have came out personally, right?
Exactly.
And they were easy fixes, too.
It was – because at first she just thought, well, we're overloaded, we're overworked, we have too many patients.
And that was really the crux of it is that Pfizer wanted this out as soon as possible.
They wanted to be able to go get the money from the DOD.
They wanted to push this out on people as fast as possible.
And so they forced the clinical trial sites to, you know, put the pedal to the metal and try to get as many patients as possible.
And they cut corners as a result.
Hey there.
Is he seed taken?
You work for Pfizer.
My question for you is: why does Pfizer want to hide from the public the fact that they're mutating the COVID viruses?
Is this real life?
I'm literally a liar.
I was trying to impress a person on a date.
What you're lying.
This is absurd.
Don't touch me.
Well, this is not.
Why the way someone is just working at a company to literally tell the public that you fed off?
You really did.
Please read the cost.
As soon as possible, very unsafe people.
Can you please unlock your door?
No, no, don't let them leave you.
Please unlock the door.
Why don't we start so stuck?
Please unlock the door.
Please unlock the door.
Please, unlock the door.
The door.
I can't wait.
We're trying to get unlock the door.
Unlock the door.
Spies are not wanting the public to know that you guys are doing directed evolution.
What's going on here?
That looks like an interview.
I know.
It's freaking me out.
These like flashbacks to that like same organization of like those conservative people who would like randomly go into organizations and then like befriend people who work in these organizations and then report them.
Which happens if people at Pfizer so it's like freaks me out when people start asking a lot of questions.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Why would that go to this company?
Because I just want to know the answer.
You're not about to be reporting me.
Oh my god.
Isn't that really affordable?
You better be running me or come right now.
*Pewds*
Hey there.
Is this seat taken?
Hi.
You work for Pfizer.
My question for you is why does Pfizer want to hide from the public the fact that they're mutating the COVID viruses?
Is this real life?
What is happening here?
What is going on here?
This is absurd.
Why does Pfizer want to hide from the public that they're mutating the COVID virus?
Oh my God.
You're on video.
You're on video.
I'm here.
I need to call the police right now.
And I know this is the virus, or I don't know what's going on.
I don't know what's going on either.
This is ridiculous.
So you're on video.
I'm a journalist.
First of all, I'm literally a liar.
He's on video.
You're saying we're exploring how the virus keeps mutating.
Yes.
One of the things we're exploring is why don't we mutate the virus?
So please do call the police.
Please do call the police.
Please do.
You can't do this here, guys.
You can't do this.
You're going to call the police.
He's going to call the police for asking him a question.
Please do call the police.
Please do.
He's on tape here talking about mutating the COVID virus.
Can I talk to you outside about that?
Absolutely not.
And you're not even going to have like this on this.
What is your name?
Because you fucked up.
You really did.
I'm about to sue you.
This is absurd.
Do you have someone mock me as if they're going on a date to record me?
You don't even know my position at this.
I was trying to impress a person on a date.
What are you lying?
I was literally trying.
I'm not even a scientist by background.
You know, but I came from a consulting firm that does business.
This is absurd.
Please don't touch me.
This is absurd.
Please do call the cops.
Please do.
Why would you call the cops if you have nothing to hide?
So he's obviously having one of the most outrageous reactions I've ever seen in the history of Project Veritas.
He's threatening to call the police.
Okay.
He grabbed the microphone.
The question is, why is he calling the police?
Guys, can you just respect my father's police?
Can I please?
Can I get a check for their belly?
Wait, no, do not give him a check.
No, don't let them leave.
Because I want the cost to know this.
Do you want to put me in jail for asking you a question?
Yes, sir.
What is the intention of calling the police?
They have like no one visitoring on.
We have several witnesses that they are mutated.
Can I talk to you please about this video?
Okay, so there are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, white sanctions.
Why would you bring race into this?
Please read the cost.
It looks very unsafe.
We have you on tape talking about mutating the COVID virus.
No one mutates a COVID virus that's very insane people.
May I show you the video?
No, I want to follow our police.
We have to leave.
Okay.
No, you cannot just leave.
Do you want me to leave?
You want the police to come here and steal him?
Because this guy's not going to be able to do it.
Can I ask you about this video?
You're lying to impress a date?
Here, just, just, was it true what you said?
What is this?
No.
I literally was on a third date with a guy and like normal men, you lie to impress a date.
Mutating viruses?
Do you not work for Pfizer?
This guy!
I thought he was a dish.
Sir, do you not work for Pfizer?
Do you work for Pizza?
What the fuck are you doing?
Do you currently work for Pfizer?
Yes or no?
Do you currently work for Pfizer?
Yes or no?
What are you talking about here?
Please, I want a cop speaker.
So you don't work for Pfizer.
This is absurd.
He doesn't want me to leave, ma'am.
I want to talk to her now.
He wants the cops here.
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You really need to get vaccinated.
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And the more people who get them, the better we're going to be able to help stop the spread of COVID.
She documented all of this.
And yeah, she was horrified, horrified by what she saw.
She's like, I have never witnessed this in my 20 years of working in the pharmaceutical industry.
And she's done deep dive.
She's very active online and she's done deep dives in all of the FDA FOIA documents that come out and they all confirm the exact same thing that she knew about back in fall of 2020 before a single shot was given out to the public.
So not only could have Pfizer avoided hurting millions of people, they could have avoided exposing themselves at the same time.
Right?
Because they could have, I mean, honestly, if I think about it as working for Pfizer and my employee comes up to me, hey, these are all these problems that are coming about.
I'm like, I'm not going to not address that.
Whether it's making that employee think that I fixed the problems or actually fixing the problems.
Like that, that in itself kind of describes the type of people that we're working with because they don't give a fuck.
They don't care about you as an individual, as a person, as a human being at all.
No.
No, they didn't.
And they just ignored her at every turn.
You would think if somebody came to you and was like, I've just found 10 violations in the way they were doing this clinical trial, they would have at least pretended to fix it, right?
At least at least sent an email back, oh, thanks for the update.
You know, we'll work on that.
Instead, they just, you know, they were like, well, we're too overloaded.
And, you know, we're trying to get these patients processed.
And yeah.
And a lot of it they just kind of lied about and changed the data behind the scenes.
A lot of lying.
Yeah.
But that's the phrase.
Pfizer lied.
People died, right?
They lied to the government.
They lied in their EUA documentation.
More stuff has come out about the way that they process the vaccines and produced it.
It's causing all kinds of immune problems.
So, you know, the more that comes out, the more validated the people were at the beginning who saw the red flags.
Yeah.
I mean, they even came out in totals.
The crazy part is that the FDA came out with the Cover Your Ass project or bulletin before they even had administered vaccines.
It said like FDA is like, these are going to be the immune responses.
There's going to be the side effects from it.
But they didn't publish that publicly.
They put it out in a document and it's like, here, this is give it to the government.
Oh, all this good stuff comes from it, but they give you that one little thing.
And there's so many things on that list that are Guillain-Barret syndrome, heart attacks, strokes, death.
Yeah, there it is right there.
Pregnancy birth outcomes.
It's just all of this stuff.
And they knew that this was going to happen.
And not only did they, this is only the beginning, like honestly, because this is only, to me, is a handful of things that could come out that people have come out with from just taking a vaccine.
Oh, exactly.
Do you remember at the very beginning?
I think it was something you guys published, actually.
It was a report written and submitted by EU doctors talking about fertility.
They were concerned about the vaccine in terms of fertility.
And that was one of the first publications I had ever seen about it.
And what's crazy is I remember sharing this with a lot of my friends at the time saying, listen, this is what people are talking about.
Everyone's warning about this.
You should be aware.
Please don't get it yet.
Just wait, just wait.
And a lot of people didn't.
And what's sad is I was talking to someone who I went to school with who's my age.
And she was like, well, I know so many people our age who are having fertility problems or had miscarriages or their babies are being born.
Something's wrong.
And it's just the more time that passes, the more we realize the depth of what the crimes that they've committed here.
And it all ties back to those original lies that were told to our government, that our government told to us.
And so far, they're just covering their asses left and right.
They're protecting each other.
And the dam has to break at some point, though.
Adomino is going to fall.
There's going to be some sort of such a public expose that they can't avoid liability anymore.
And that's what we're trying to do.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, if as an American or as any, as a human being, you look at everything that's already out there, I mean, it kind of already spills the beans.
Like, we don't, we shouldn't be having to continuously prove these things are going on for them to take action from it.
Even all the way.
And I think that's what, you know, I'm one that has, I was a big supporter of Trump for a long time, or not for a long time, since, you know, going through the persecution leading up to 2020.
So probably about 20, I became a fan in 2016 when he was, you know, fighting against Hillary, which was great.
You know what I'm saying?
And he did a lot.
But after that, after 2018, you know, there's a lot of things that started happening that were weird.
You know, he was all the people who was appointing.
And you can tell, like, when you said they were all covering, they're all covering for each other.
Trump appointing all these people and then turning on him kind of makes you see all the people that were part of that system that have been covering up for the entire government this entire time.
So he appoints Barr, Ray, and then you have these unelected people like Newland and, you know, who have just been running this country, perpetuating wars, keeping us in these wars, and, you know, just taxing the American people out of their asses to where they can't afford anything nowadays.
And I think to me personally, it goes back all the way to where, I mean, Fauci's like this next administration is going to face a, you know, a virus of some sort.
Exactly.
Bad disease.
Basically.
And it's like, okay, this is the same guy who was in charge of the AIDS epidemic in the 80s.
It's like, I don't understand how we as America has let this get so bad when they were all part of this problem from the very beginning.
It's like we have no memory.
You know, it's like people have no recollection.
People have no recollection that this is not the first time that Americans have experienced this poor.
It's not the first time we've seen this in the world.
They do, they test.
I mean, how many times has Gates gone over and tested polio vaccines on poor children in underprivileged communities, right?
We let it happen.
We do.
We let it happen.
And you watch the fallout from that, but we're not paying attention.
And people still, well, I think people did have a blind faith in the FDA and our government when it came to medical decisions.
I think that's changing.
I see a change.
I hope other people see a change in the way that people, the trust that people have in the FDA, how blindly they'd follow it.
I don't think, I'd like to believe if they rolled out another one that not enough people would fall for it to have the same outcome in 2020.
Just from my own sphere, watching people's doubt increase over the last three years has been really impressive.
I agree.
And I think it starts with the people having the knowledge about these organizations.
Because before, no one really cared about who the FDA was.
No one really cared about the vaccine companies.
You know what I mean?
No one really cared about these people who were actually in power who were making decisions for us.
But when it comes, and I think the big thing is technology is biting them in the ass.
That's my biggest, like, I, well, technology is kind of a love-hate, you know, situation because it's like anything that has power, when it's in the wrong hands, it can be used for the wrong measures.
But technology has advanced to the point, I mean, they've slow-rolled it, of course.
We are very behind, but it's getting to the point to where people don't kind of have to remember anymore.
They can go someplace to be reminded or, oh, shit, I forgot about this.
There's so much on social media.
There's so much.
So I think that's why in America, our social media gets watered down and muddied with stuff that doesn't matter.
Because then if you are actually functioning in a higher level of intellect, then you're not going to fall for a lot of the stuff that they're trying to push.
And like now, like FDA is like, you know, FDA kind of gets rid of all the products that are actually good for you.
And it's like, you tell that to somebody, you're like, wait, what do you mean?
It's like, well, the FDA cleared them lying to you about something being organic or not.
And they're like, what do you mean?
I was like, simple search is an FDA organic label.
And it'll tell you, yeah, they don't have to tell you the truth on the label anymore.
No, it's a complete lie.
Yeah.
It has no legal meaning.
Nope, it really doesn't.
Organic, natural.
A lot of those terms mean absolutely nothing unless you know where the source is, unless you know where it's actually coming from.
But yeah, the FDA is traditionally a labeling agency, right?
The whole purpose was we want consumers to know exactly what's in the products they're buying.
And that sounds really great, right?
I mean, that sounds like, okay, yeah, I should know.
They shouldn't be allowed to put chemicals.
Right.
And then it's up to the consumer because I'm also one of those people that I believe in a free market.
I don't think just because something is bad for you, they should force people to stop selling it.
I don't consume seed oils.
I also don't think we should ban seed oils in America.
But when you combine having these markets on the pro or these products on the market with censoring information out there so that you don't have an informed consumer, you don't have informed consent, and people fall into the traps.
And then especially when you have the government come out and say, well, here's our fake food pyramid and here's what we suggest that you do and people just blindly follow, you don't have an informed population.
And that's why social media is important.
You find communities of people who think differently.
I remember when I first heard about Fluoride and the anti-vaccine movement.
That was from you guys.
But it was back.
My mom had a daycare for 20 years and some of the parents were very naturopathic and holistic.
And they'd bring in books and give them to my mom and have her read them.
But it was always very hush-hush.
And they would have to kind of vet you first to make sure that you weren't going to think they were crazy.
But that was where I first heard about this, but it was almost like a backdoor deal.
Like, oh, here's this book.
They wouldn't talk about it very much.
Now it's everywhere.
Now the anti-vax movement, the naturopath, like the natural healing and anti-big pharma is huge.
Yeah, it's bigger than ever.
And I mean, that's one thing that really gives me faith in humanity right now is the fact that a lot of people who were scared to talk about these things are not that scared anymore.
There's more people who are like, okay, it's like kind of a lot of people were closeted Trump supporters.
And it's like, oh, you know, it was like, especially being in a liberal city, like it's hard to, it's hard to go against the narrative when the majority is the narrative.
So I agree with you.
It's like the biggest we've ever seen for the push for raw milk, the push for raw eggs.
Like, you know, a lot of people are really, really starting to think about what they're eating now because they're finally noticing how they've been lied to on the quality of the products that they've been consuming.
Exactly.
So that's actually another one of our big cases that's gotten a lot of attention right now.
And that's Amos Miller.
He's the Amish farmer in Pennsylvania.
Poor man.
And he's been going through hell.
For years now.
See, that's what people don't even understand.
It's been for years.
It hasn't been just his last year where it's been publicized.
No, since 2017, that's when the USDA started going after him.
And so he runs an organic farm, farms very traditionally, the way that his community and his ancestors have for a very, very long time.
Tried and true.
Yeah, it makes you kind of want to be Amish.
You know, I got to have dinner with Him and his family.
And I will say it was like one of the best meals I've ever had.
It was everything on the table was either grown or produced on their farm or handmade, the handmade ice cream and the butter.
I mean, it was, it was amazing.
The way we walked away, like, you're like, that's how food is supposed to taste.
Like, the food at the grocery store does not taste like that.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
And so they, they came in and they just could not stand.
So he, he grows food without any chemicals, no additives, no preservatives, nothing.
And the USDA takes a problem with that because, you know, they need to have complete control over the food supply.
And they require people to use certain chemicals a lot of times to treat, especially like poultry, meat and poultry.
And the truth is you don't need it.
They didn't use those for millennia and people were just fine.
And a lot of his customers need food grown the way that Amos does it because they have health conditions that prevent them from, they actually have issues if they buy store-bought meat and poultry and other products.
And so he has, and when people purchase from him, they literally sign a membership agreement saying, we understand that this is how you grow your food.
We consent to this and this is what we want.
Like they have to sign this contract before they can purchase anything.
And yeah, and they would not leave him alone.
So they ended up shutting down some of his meat and poultry production on his farm.
That was the USDA.
Now the PDA, the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, raided his farm without any notice, shut down all of his raw milk and raw dairy product production.
This was just in January, and has now sued him.
So he has two ongoing suits, one with the USDA, one with the PDA.
We're representing him in both of those and trying to preserve food freedom because I mean, that's the crux of the issue is people should be able to grow food, produce food how they want to and distribute it to their community.
And people want the food the way Amos produces it.
That's just the fact of the matter.
And the government control, they just can't, they can't let something exist without them having a hand in it.
Yeah, they can't.
If they can't get a hold of it, make money and corrupt it, then you can't survive at all.
Exactly.
So how does that work?
Like the first time you said they shut down part of his operation.
Like what parts did they shut down and how was he able to kind of stay afloat during that time?
Yeah, so they initially shut down some of his meat poultry.
So like beef, chickens, turkeys.
That was what they were initially going after.
They wanted him to process the meat with like citric acid or another type of chemical.
And he can't do that.
That's not what his customers want.
It's not what his community does.
That's not how he wanted to process his food.
And he'd been doing it very successfully up till that point.
And so they shut it down.
And he'd been able to was able to operate for a while and then eventually had to kind of get some partnerships with some other farms who were doing things.
Similar so that way he can still provide a product to a high quality product to his people.
Exactly.
And now the milk is being targeted, the raw milk.
So they're basically trying to pick off one thing at a time to shut his entire operation down.
And I mean, honestly, even though in the long run, it's they're wrong, but that's what they do.
They'll sue you Infinity, so it'll kind of break you down, to break you.
And then that way you can't even afford to do anything.
Oh, he's gotten fined into oblivion.
They are constantly raiding his property, constantly going through visits and shutting down certain, you know, freezing certain portions of his supply.
And then, you know, maybe they'll release it.
Maybe they won't.
And so, yeah, he's had to work around them for the last, what is it, six years, five, seven years now?
Yeah.
And so, and, you know, even though the USDA was the first one to lead the charge and file the lawsuit, it really, like, the PDA was behind it too.
They've been working in tandem pretty much this whole time to take him down.
And, you know, they're determined.
And a lot of farmers are looking to him to be that Boston of freedom.
They're relying on him because if he falls, there's a lot of other small farms that are going to be on the chopping block next.
Absolutely.
And I mean, it sucks to even have to kind of go this route to give these people this type of ideas.
But if we're going to have to, just how InfoWars has had to shift our ways of getting our content out from being censored, it's like, you know, that's what these farmers are going to have to do now.
Like, case in point, when you were telling me the story, it's like, okay, they wanted him to put citric acid on these things.
And then, like, as somebody who's not going to let them ruin my, everything I've built, I'm probably going to have something set up to where, oh yeah, this is where the citric acid goes into it.
And this is the chickens that, you know what I'm saying?
I'm going to have, I'm going to have to have something for show.
Like, we're going to have to learn to get around their censorship.
You know what I mean?
We're going to have to have to learn methods that make it seem like we're complying, even though we're not.
It's going to take a certain type of person to want to do that, to actually have that fight, make those decisions to do those things just to make sure that people actually get good food.
And I'm sure there's people out there who are doing those types of things.
I'm sure there's people out there who are ready for the FDA to come.
And I just need more of the people out there who are listening to actually take note of, guys, like they're coming for us.
And I mean, that brings into, we'll finish up with Amos here, but it brings us to a whole other thing that's happening in Australia, which I believe is, I mean, Australia, China, Canada, these are all test, these are all test subjects that they run stuff on before they get over here.
But now this is something that they're doing to an American farmer on American soil, and they're treating him like an actual traitor.
Like everybody who's going against Amish Miller should be tried for treason.
Like absolutely.
Like in my mind, anyways.
Yeah, they treat him like a criminal for just growing food the way that his community has always grown food.
There's nothing Different here.
And what's ironic is the terminology that they use, right?
Because they come in and they try to say, well, your food's adulterated.
That's what they say.
Because it doesn't conform to what their idea of what the food should look like and be processed with.
Oh, your food's adulterated.
When in reality, it's the exact opposite.
All of the other food that we get in the grocery store that is USDA compliant, most of it is adulterated because they have to conform to their licensing protocols and all of their regulations.
I mean, I might just be, I don't know, I'm kind of retarded sometimes, but adulterated.
I feel like that's a made-up word that they use to justify how something is going.
It's like non-conforming.
Well, you're non-conforming, so it's adulterated.
That's right.
Jeez.
I don't know.
I mean, like I said, people, this is just the beginning of what they're doing.
And this is how they're treating people who don't comply in America right now.
Well, right now, in New Zealand and Australia.
We'll start with Australia.
Australia, they're having basically you're going to have to vaccinate your livestock.
They're rolling that out.
They're rolling it out.
And it's been something for about probably going on a year and a half, two years now where they've trying to implement it.
And it's people who don't comply, of course, get the Alma Smiller treatment.
And the ones who do comply, they have elevated.
So it went from, you know, having a vex.
It's not something that's mandated, but it's, you know, they slow roll it and they try to give you some consequences and they see how you fare.
Oh, I don't care about the consequences.
All right.
Well, then, you know, obviously we can implement this.
So there's a lot of farmers who are fighting back.
But so like my biggest concern right now is stuff like this.
So we're having a meat shortage.
Like they're shutting down all of our stuff.
We're having problems with our manufacturers in America, which like Tyson, we're going to get to next for sure.
So in Australia right now, they have an abundance of, they actually have a record amount of lamb that they've produced over the past year.
And it's astronomical.
So that's why like right now, if you go to the store, like I've been to HEB and I've been to Sam's.
I know H-E-B gets stuff local.
Lamb is still cheaper than beef.
But if I, you know, you go to Sam's, Walmart doesn't really, like, I go to all the places to check with quality of meat, guys.
Like, I'll go.
Like, you know how we have to watch fake news for you?
Oh, I'll go.
I'll try these meats.
I'll go to these stores to see what kind of quality they have.
And I will say right now, for sure, at Walmart, do not eat any meat that is not on a black tray.
If it's not on a USDA black tray, do not eat that.
I thought you were going to stop and just say, do not eat any meat from Walmart.
No, no, not all of them are bad because the black tray is, it's actually USDA.
It's not FDA.
It's the actual USDA.
And I have a little bit of more faith in the USDA than I do of the FDA because USDA is basically, I mean, it's meats.
If I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, primarily meats.
So it's like not something that I feel like that's kind of like the Supreme Court for meat.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, at the end of the day, they have the end-of-say, y'all, and it's like, okay, this is way too fucked up.
We're not going to let this.
At least that's what I hope.
This is how I feel.
So at Walmart, 90% of their products are from overseas.
90%.
Not only is Walmart's ground beef not the cheapest, but it can also tend to be lower quality than the fresh stuff you get elsewhere.
All the meat sold at Walmart is what is known as case-ready.
This means that it is prepared and packaged at a meat packing plant rather than by an in-store butcher department.
While case-ready meat may have a longer shelf life than meat prepared on site, it owes this stability to treatments involving carbon dioxide and saline solution.
It doesn't sound so tasty.
And if that's not off-putting enough, the consumer reviews on Walmart's website tend to be pretty negative too.
One customer who purchased the five-pound roll of 80% lean beef found gristle and rubbery pieces in the meat, as well as a huge five-ounce chunk of fat the size of my palm.
Although they did give the beef a two-star rating because their dog enjoys it, which is at least something.
Another reviewer noted that the meat had so much gristle in it that it was hard to choke down.
Yet another said it was too fatty, leading her to suspect it was filled with water, or more likely, a saline solution, which, as you know, is often used in the preparation of cake-ready meat.
And it's not only the 80% lean beef that draws criticism.
The five-pound roll of 73% lean beef was said by one purchaser to contain an intact artery, along with an abnormal amount of white chunks.
But that isn't even the worst of it.
Another consumer reported finding chopped arteries and hard pieces that may have been bone fragments on more than one occasion and even found a piece of hay in it.
Rustic?
Sure.
Delicious?
Not so much.
So in my mind, it's like, okay, what part of the meat is going to come from USA?
This is Walmart.
So, well, the only part that is proven to come from the United States is the USDA stuff.
Everything else on a white tray, a pink tray, a blue tray, we don't really know where it came from or they won't tell us.
And at the end of the day, we don't know.
So let's go back to Sam's.
Sam's has lamb for cheap right now.
I went and I bought, I bought, I was like, oh, shit, what is this?
I was like, oh, I'm going to get this and I'm going to get this.
And I'm on my way to the cash register.
And I'm just like, oh, shit, hold on.
It says Australian lamb.
So I'm like, okay, Australia, who has this big influx all of a sudden of me because they're just basically hoarding to sell it to other countries who have been shutting down their lamb, mixed in with the vaccine livestock mandates that's going into this.
It's like, okay, why wouldn't they sell that meat for cheaper?
Because they have so much of it and we have nothing.
You know, our supplies are dwindling slowly.
So it's like, it's this perfect setup To vaccinate a whole nation that didn't really want their vaccines without because why?
It's cheaper.
Because you have inflation out there as to where all you can afford is this cheaper meat that might come from a country that is vaccinating their livestock.
Right.
That's so sneaky.
That's so sneaky.
Because people wouldn't think to check.
No.
Right?
Most people aren't thinking.
Oh, gosh.
See, there's such a diversity in quality of meat products here in the United States anyways.
But when you start to throw in stuff that's imported like that, that could be vaccinated or likely is or is mandated to be vaccinated.
That's really risky.
Yeah.
And we don't know because they don't tell you.
Like, it goes back to lying on the labels.
They could tell you this.
They could have even put American slash Australian meat.
And people were like, oh, what?
Oh, it says American.
It's fine.
People don't even check.
People don't even check.
It's the problem.
Yeah.
So, I mean, that's just one beef that I have with the meat industry.
But, I mean, it's crazy the tactics that they're going to just to implement some of these things that we're not complying with.
And where does it stop?
How far does this go?
Like, no one really knows.
Which is why small farms and community herd shares and all of that must be protected at all costs.
So I try to buy like a quarter or half cow and stock a freezer.
And yeah, that's not easy.
It's not feasible for everyone.
But the hope is that like enough people can get, if you have enough small farmers and you promote that, then no matter what these big corporations do, no matter what our government says, no matter what meat they import, you have a backup source from someone in your community.
For sure.
And that's what we must protect at all costs because that's dying out.
In Texas, it's not too bad.
You know, it's like I live out in rural Texas.
There's cows literally everywhere.
So I think Texas is like a sanctuary right now.
It is.
At least Heb, the biggest grocery store here, actually goes through local farmers and they have their own farm.
So at the very least, we have one billion dollar company that's not totally for their agenda.
And I think that's like very important.
What you said about people stocking up.
And it might not be feasible for everybody, but buying a new car isn't feasible for a lot of people.
They go and do it anyways.
Making these lavish vacations isn't feasible for a lot of people, but they do it anyways.
People save all year for Christmas gifts for family members and kids.
And a lot of times you buy stuff for people who don't even care about you.
Imagine if you were just to put a little account away for six months, put this away, and then you go and you buy a certain amount of meat for it.
And it might last you six months because you bought it.
You know what I'm saying?
You can freeze that.
You do that twice a year, then you have enough for the next year, maybe.
Like a lot of people, and when it comes to these farmers, a lot of people don't understand how working on a farm really is, how much work it is and how much time you put into it.
You know, the amount of hours that actually goes into creating a successful farm.
It's like a lot of these people, like you have a trade, you can bring something to the table and they'll trade you for something.
You know, it could be work.
It could be, you know, maybe they're a meat farm.
You bring dairy or, you know, something.
Bring some type of trade to the table and they'll be like, oh, okay, yeah, we'll work with you for sure.
Yeah.
So that I have chickens, quite a few of them.
And that was part of the inspiration is like, okay, well, when I can eat the eggs, this is great.
When I finally got enough chickens where I could survive on eggs alone for a number of weeks, that was like, I felt so powerful after that.
Like, you know, I'm not going to starve.
But I'm getting bees this spring, mostly for the property tax reduction.
But also, but, but like you said, having something to barter with, having something that your neighbors don't have, whether that's a product or a skill that, you know, if shit hits the fan, you have something to offer and something to trade with.
So I hate to think that way.
I'm not a natural farmer, but, you know, you got to buy a lot of people.
Yeah, but you still got to build a lot of people.
You've learned a lot.
And you just started now.
Not only are you a lawyer now, I mean, I consider you a farmer now.
You got chickens.
That's it.
I just got a garden.
You got a garden that's.
I'm tearing.
Yeah.
Okay.
Sword.
I assured that's my favorite.
But you're still doing more than most.
You're doing a lot more than most.
You're trying.
And like you said, you already have enough chickens to be sustainable for a week.
So it's something that's the fan.
It's like, so a lot of people need to understand it's a lot easier to maintain and actually do.
You just actually have to put your mind and do it.
Right.
Yeah.
You got to have the will.
And it is expensive and time consuming and a lot of work, but it's worth it.
It's worth it.
And it's cool to have those skills.
Okay.
So let's get into Tyson.
Okay.
Tyson is one, if not the biggest processed meat distributor across the United States and probably further than that, I'm sure.
What happened with Tyson?
Yeah, Tyson was one of the worst corporations when it came to the vaccine mandates.
We've seen a lot of bad corporations, but Tyson was one of the worst.
They came down really hard on their employees.
And what was so egregious was when people came to them and requested exemptions, either religious or medical, you know, that's what everyone was pretty much offering.
That's what they're legally required to offer.
They would grant them, but they would immediately put the employee on unpaid leave for, well, indefinitely.
Indefinite unpaid leave.
You'd go on indefinite unpaid leave for submitting a request to not have to take a vaccine that you didn't believe in.
Exactly.
Jesus.
Exactly.
People would go and say, okay, well, you know, I don't want to inject myself with something that's made with aborted fetal cells.
That goes against my religion.
And they would say, okay, great.
We're not going to question that.
Grant the exemption, but you're technically still employed, but we're not going to pay you.
You'll lose all of your benefits.
And you can't go to unemployment because you're technically still employed with us.
So yeah, they were terrible.
And the more we dig into it, the more that there's like layers of discrimination where they would offer certain kind of like packages or offers to people associated with their unpaid leave and they would with others.
I mean, there is multiple layers there, but they were completely unforgiving.
It was only after all the lawsuits started to roll out that they tried to cover themselves and invite people back after a year.
I mean, how long were they planning on leaving people on unpaid leave?
You know, we have no idea.
But after a year, they started inviting people back.
But at that point, people were, they didn't want to go work for a company.
And a lot of these people had been working for them for decades.
I mean, 20, 25 years, were close to retirement, invested their whole careers into working at Tyson.
We're great at what they did.
And had been working.
This is the crazy part.
All of these rolled out in fall of 2021.
They'd been doing this since the beginning of 2020, no problem.
And then all of a sudden, Tyson, you know, and a lot of other companies changed, you know, completely changed course.
Jeez.
Yeah, they were one of the worst.
So when you say that there was basically levels of, I don't even know how to say that.
There was levels of discrimination within you submitting that request.
Yeah, so some people would, we've learned this recently, like some people would be allowed to keep their health insurance.
Some people wouldn't.
And they were still on unpaid leave?
Yeah, across the board, yeah.
Well, most people weren't.
Most people were either cut off completely.
Some people were told, oh, hey, you can keep your insurance, but you have to pay for it out of pocket.
Some people were allowed to keep it if they were in certain positions.
It really, like, it depended.
It's not clear exactly how they did it, but what people were allowed to keep once they were put on unpaid leave changed a little bit.
Some people were offered the same job back.
Some people offered a worse paying job back.
Like they'd worked their way up to day shift and now you can come back, but we'll give you night shift at a lower rate of pay.
They, yeah, no, they were horrible.
And this happened to hundreds of employees, hundreds, if not thousands of employees.
This was a really big issue.
But you know what's crazy is we have probably at least over a dozen Tyson lawsuits.
And most of them have multiple plaintiffs.
We brought a lawsuit in Arkansas, Springdale, Arkansas, which is where Tyson is headquartered.
Now we are unfortunately required to bring it in Springdale, Arkansas.
The judge there, this is one of the first lawsuits we filed.
So it was typical like religious discrimination, disability discrimination because of the medical exemptions.
And we brought a Nuremberg code claim, among some others.
Well, the judge, for the first time ever in all these Tyson cases, dismissed it outright, which is ridiculous anyways, because all the other religious discrimination claims in every other jurisdiction we brought had survived and moved into discovery.
Dismissed it outright and then threatened me with sanctions for even daring to bring a Nuremberg Code claim.
So you're talking about a company that had forced over 100,000 of its employees to inject themselves with an mRNA experimental product, but I couldn't sue them for violating the Nuremberg Code.
Jeez.
And he just, and I mean, it makes sense because I mean, I actually, I knew, I mean, I knew where this was going because, I mean, it's, it's, Tyson runs that city.
Exactly.
And we dug into the judge a little bit.
And he had previously worked for a law firm that had represented Tyson, was constantly getting gifts, like very close, like the partners at the firm are still very close with Tyson.
Execs would give, you know, big lavish vacations for him, go to people's weddings.
And I mean, they're all in bed with one another.
And so it wasn't surprising when it happened, but I think it was just so blatant.
Yeah.
Just in your face, just in the same way.
Their prejudice was so blatant.
Face against Tyson?
What are you crazy?
Like, just throw this out.
He hasn't ruled on it yet.
So I technically could still get sanctioned for this.
He puts you on, you're on leave right now.
Yeah, I'm on notice.
You're on unpaid leave right now.
You might get some insurance.
You know, it gets a little.
It'd be an honor.
It'd be a badge of honor, honestly, if I got sanctioned for that.
So what exactly happens if you get sanctioned for this?
What does that mean?
It could be, it's most likely a fine to the firm, but they could report me to the bar and try to get me to get my license suspended.
Hey, there's a lawyer who's trying to do their job.
We should probably sanction them.
It's insane.
And he could have just dismissed, too.
He could have just said, no, you can't go move forward with the lawsuit.
And he took the time to write out in his brief about why we were so horrible for bringing this claim.
That's even better.
That's even more vindication.
Yeah.
You could tell he was frustrated by this.
And he couldn't just basically disclaim.
He felt he was obligated to fight this because of his relationship with Tyson.
That's our theory.
He's like, you know what?
I can't just.
And this is their ego.
They're so egotistical that they can't just be like, oh yeah, just dismiss.
Case in point of the FDA, just like somebody brings, I mean, Pfizer, the Brooke Jackson case, someone brings something to your attention.
And instead of like, oh, you know what?
Oh, yeah, let's figure this out.
Let's just see what's going on.
He could have just been like, oh, you know what?
Yeah, it's under the rug.
It's not going to happen.
But no, he was like, oh, you want to come after my people?
Oh, I want to sanction you.
And I'm going to tell you why.
Like, that is, that is mad.
Crazy.
It's psychotic.
It is very psychotic.
It's compelling, right?
I mean, well, like Brooke Jackson, what they do, they fired her.
It's not like they even tried to cover their tracks.
They just were like, well, you can't work here if you're going to tell us that we're doing something illegal.
Doesn't that make it worse, though?
Like, did they not think these things through to be like, well, it's an admission.
It's an admission.
When you have to, it's like when you have to censor somebody, if you have to get rid of the person or punish them for what they're doing, unnecessarily so, for something that, as far as I know, no lawyer has ever been sanctioned for this ever.
I feel like that's almost an admission of guilt or complicity, right?
Like, because they're still, they're scared that you're going to come forward with something.
And I think that's why he said he's still sitting on it because he probably did that and thinking that was the right thing to do.
And then he's like, well, you know what?
Let me see if, let me run this by my people.
And they're like, bro, what are you doing?
Like, no, that makes us guilty.
I hope so.
You know, it's hilarious.
And I just stalled in.
Is Barnes talked about this?
He was livid.
Because obviously, you know, the firm would get fined if something happened.
He was livid.
He's like, this is ridiculous.
And opposing counsel, Tyson's counsel, decided to send the podcast where Barnes had discussed this to the judge.
Oh, of course.
He's like, oh, just wanted to let you know, judge, that, you know, they're talking about this and saying these things about you.
I wonder if this will be said to the judge out there in Arkansas.
But yeah, and honestly, I don't think that helps him or helps them at all.
But, you know, it's just ridiculous, like the games that they try to play.
Yeah, that is outrageous.
It's fun.
Yeah, I mean, at the end of the day, it really is because that means, you know, that means you're over the target.
Yeah.
I mean, you're doing something right.
And I mean, if you actually think about the actual evilness that has the demonic, the Satanism, the worst word you could use that have come out of Arkansas.
Hillary Clinton, the Clintons, you know, Tyson's there.
I can imagine what these judges and other politicians are like there.
It's not someplace that I would probably drive around if I could.
I've had to drive through Arkansas three times, and I can tell you it's terrible.
It really does kind of smell when you drive into Arkansas.
I'm not making this.
It smells like sulfur.
Yeah.
Like when you come from the east into Arkansas, it really does.
The paradigm of absolute control.
And that's why we're just out here doing simple things, pointing out that we're meant to be in nature and be natural.
And this is where we find the source that That God made to transcend the new world order.
And that's why they want to try to keep us out of it.
I'm angry.
I've had enough of these people.
Little bones of Christian murderous gone.
Now one giant death factor's keeping babies alive.
Instead of their body parts, what more do you need to know about these people?
I go out and face this scum.
They literally crawl out from under rocks.
They have green-looking skin.
And they run around screaming, we love Satan.
We wanna eat babies.
I have them on video.
Hillary's in the creepy weird six death man.
She sleeps in the same room with that creepy weird woman.
Whose mother wears her foot over her head.
That woman number one is ugly.
Imagine how bad she smells, man.
I'm told her and Obama just speak.
Obama and Hillary both smell like sulfur Beautiful man by the body gobblers hobbling round after us.
Spirit gets close to the people in the beautiful beautiful people.
Even though it is headed south, rising up against us Millions of poignant people of the very worst type And I'm so pissed We're gonna stab your daughter at the mall Oh, oh, oh We're gonna stab your wife, your son Oh, oh, oh, oh We're going to tab you with the wood tonight.
And then the bitch chief is gonna say, We love our smiley.
We love our muslins.
Oh, they're so good.
Oh, they're so sweet.
Me and Hillary are demons.
We smell like sulfur.
Ain't that something?
And I thought I made it up.
I thought in my head, I was like, yeah, no, maybe it's just a bad day.
You know, it's like flow tide type of deal.
And no, I drove through it the second time and it was just as bad.
So consistency doesn't allow that.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
But yeah, I remember people asking me, they're like, are you nervous?
You're going to get debarred or something?
And I was like, are disbarred?
And I was like, no, no.
I mean, if they do, that's the stupidest reason to lose my license or be suspended.
I have no regrets about that whatsoever.
And you probably have at least a case to plead for them sanctioning you for doing your job.
It's not like you singled them out.
It's not like you went after them.
It's not like you were like, you know what?
I hate this judge.
I hate these people.
I'm going to do everything I can.
It's like, no, hey, this is what's going on.
And this is what.
Yeah.
All he's done was file a lawsuit.
That's it.
That's it.
That he could have dismissed.
He did.
Yeah, he could have just left it there.
He just left it.
I mean, you said he dismissed it, but he twisted the knife a little bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we'll see what happens with that one.
Dang, okay.
So that's Tyson.
Okay.
So what has been, what is after that?
What else have you broken?
What are some of your prominent cases?
What else is on your plate here?
Yeah.
So for the vaccine mandate cases, we have like over 30. So we've got a bunch against 3M.
That's another one that was really horrible.
That's another one that a lot of people have swept under the rug.
3M is a company that made so much money going into COVID.
And I will say, people, I'm one who I understand how things are ran.
So I was one who was trying to take advantage of the stock market because of where we work.
We're so far ahead of the game.
Did you buy Pfizer stock?
I had stock in all three.
I had Pfizer, I had Moderna, I had a Johnson Johnson, and I had 3M.
And going in, I was like, okay.
And then I started thinking about it.
I was like, oh, man.
This is when I knew that we started talking about it, and spars was coming, and this.
I was just like, man, I couldn't.
Something was bothering me.
Did you feelicky after you did it?
You can't profit off of that.
You really can't.
It was a no-brainer business-wise to go ahead and get this.
I was like, yeah, definitely.
I'm doing this now.
So I went and I got it, and I got all four of those.
And then the next day or two, I was just like, bro, this doesn't feel right.
And then we started breaking the news to people, and people were having just everything got bigger.
And I was like, nah, I'm out.
I was like, I'm out.
And I sold everything but 3M because I was like, you know what?
And at that point, that's the one that made the biggest jump.
I think it went from like 100 to, I remember it topped out at 354.
And I was just like, shit, all right.
I was like, this is going to get big.
This is going to get crazy.
And then that feeling set in again.
And I was like, nah, I'm not.
It's one of those things.
How am I going to explain at the pearly gates to these angels that I made money, that I basically have blood money, that I was a part of blood money, just being a part of it.
And I just couldn't do it.
So I did sell it all before shit hit the fan.
And a lot of people in my family are mad at me for it.
It's funny.
Really?
Yeah.
They're like, what is wrong with you?
Why would you do that?
Do you not have much money?
I have principles.
That's exactly what I told them.
I was like, because I have a soul.
Right.
And they were just like, didn't know what to say after that.
I was like, yeah.
You would have had to give that money to the vaccine injured afterwards.
That's the only way to be vindicated at that point.
You couldn't do it.
And maybe I should have.
Maybe I should.
You know what I'm saying?
I didn't think of a bigger picture that way.
But no one knew how bad things would get.
No.
No one knew that this would be the situation.
Everyone was blindsided by it.
You know, all these employees were blindsided.
The craziest thing about 3M is that most people we represent were working from home.
So, I mean.
Really?
Holy cow.
Yeah.
Some people, that was their job.
They were never going to be invited back to work in person.
And they were still fired for it.
So, what is the case against 3M?
Because I know my beef with 3M and it goes further than just vaccines, I guess.
So, what is your beef with 3M?
I'm curious what other issues you have with them.
So, it's just the classic vaccine mandate cases.
So, religious discrimination, medical discrimination.
But what else?
Well, my beef with them is like earplugs.
Earplugs they supplied to the military.
Didn't work.
And a lot of people have a lot of injuries because of the earplugs not working.
And I think it goes to face masks as well.
I think.
I'm not as well versed with the face masks as I am with their earplugs.
But I think.
And there was one other thing.
It slipped my mind.
But they basically have been creating faulty equipment.
They're saying their equipment was able to handle a lot more than they really was.
And once all that actually came out, you know, it's just like kind of the gates are open.
And 3M is just getting sued to oblivion.
So, not only do they have it from the vaccine mandate aspect, they have it from other areas as well.
Good.
So, yeah.
That's who I am.
Piling on.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Wow.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
No, they just.
They really expose themselves as just being a really terrible, terrible company with no morals whatsoever.
Yeah.
So, you know, those.
Those.
There's a ton of vaccine mandate cases.
Like I said, we have a bunch against United and a variety of different different companies.
We have this, you know, we haven't filed yet.
So, I can't get too many specifics.
So, we do have our first DEI case for employment discrimination that's going to get filed soon.
Yeah.
It's against a company that has been in the news about it at, you know, in the last year.
No.
Can I guess?
Yeah.
I'll tell you if you guess.
Yeah.
Okay.
DEI.
Damn, there's so many companies that are dealing with this.
And it's not Southwest.
Not Southwest.
Is it Disney?
No.
No.
Is it an airline?
No.
Okay.
All right.
I'm not going to keep guessing.
All right.
Okay.
But anyways.
Actually, I can tell you.
I can tell you.
It's not like.
It'll get filed.
It's against Red Hat.
Red Hat.
IBM Red Hat.
IBM.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
And James O'Keefe did an expose on Red Hat's DEI policies.
They hired a, you know, a chief executive officer of diversity and all this.
Um, yeah.
So we have our, our first case for, uh, racial discrimination.
I guess.
Yeah.
We're getting diverse.
Uh-huh.
Diversity and equity inclusion.
Yeah.
They were bad.
So, yeah.
So basically, I mean, they're targeting, you know, white conservative men in the workplace.
And so that's, we have that case coming up, which will be really exciting.
That is.
I'm glad to tackle that.
Because that's been such an issue.
And it's just.
It was crazy.
It's getting insane.
It really is.
It's getting insane.
They turned this orange man bad into white man bad now.
And like, there is a case for a lot of the globalists who are running the country because they're white.
But it's not, it's not a race thing.
That's a power thing.
That's somebody that, that's something that people in power are doing.
And just because they happen to be white doesn't mean the entire race is white.
So I think that that's one of the saddest storylines to me is on how they've weaponized the population against white men.
Like, it blows my mind.
Like, and I can, I'm going to make a prediction now.
So where it's going to, it's going to spread from white men to white women.
I mean, it's already at white children right now.
So like, it's, it's something that really, really is one of the biggest brainwashing MKUltra.
Every like bad thing.
CIA operation that they've put all together to get the mass populace against the people who built this country, basically.
Right.
Like, and it just blows my mind.
And it's happened so quickly.
You know, I was thinking about this as I was, you know, contemplating this case and thinking about how bad it's gotten with the diversity hires and diversity and affirmative action and colleges and all of this.
And we need to bring back a meritocracy.
That's what needs to happen.
It needs to be merit-based.
And I was thinking about like back in back in high school, this wasn't ever discussed.
Now, I grew up in a fairly small town in Maine.
This wasn't discussed.
Like the idea, like feminism wasn't discussed.
You know, racial inequalities wasn't a topic until I got to Yale.
And then I was like, wait, I'm not equal to a man under the law?
Like, is that what you're trying to tell me?
I couldn't even fathom.
I was like, what are you all still fighting for?
Like, we did it.
We did it.
You've never experienced this in real life until you get to these institutions.
I was never made to feel like at all less.
I mean, yeah, I was a girl.
They were guys, but like, we each had our own skill sets.
And I was never made to feel like I couldn't accomplish something.
Like, there was just never an issue that was raised until I got to Yale.
And it was like, we're still fighting.
And I was like, for what?
What do you want?
But yeah.
And then the, you know, they're like, oh, racial inequality.
And it's funny because I remember I, this is kind of an embarrassing admission, but I was part of a sorority for one year and then I quit.
There's nothing wrong with that.
It was a little, it was a little embarrassing.
But I do remember.
You had a picture with everybody like in front of a door on a staircase or something.
Oh, yeah.
I had a big, I had a little.
Do you know what our symbol was?
It was like this, this.
You got to do it, you got to do it.
Well, that was it.
I was doing it.
It was this and then this.
Oh, it wasn't like elaborative where they like.
No, well, that probably existed.
We just weren't.
No, I didn't memorize it.
Like I said, I was in for one year.
I remember it was the rise of Black Lives Matter on campus.
So they had like all the marches and all of this stuff.
And they had an event for the sorority.
Hold on, I got a question.
Yeah.
You had black live BLM marches at Yale.
How many black people were in these marches?
I never went to one.
I couldn't tell you.
Is that very diverse at Yale?
It was by the time I got there.
Yeah, fairly diverse.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, they were working on it.
And they still are.
Yeah.
Okay, consider.
But I remember in the sorority, they had, you know, all of the groups were being very cautious and, you know, trying to incorporate this into their, what they were talking about.
And they had a, so it was like a women of color event for the sorority.
And the white members were invited, but you were not allowed to speak.
You just have to sit there and listen to other people's stories.
And I did not attend this event because I remember thinking, you were all at Yale.
What are you complaining about?
Like, you're all going to be just fine.
And if you're not, that has to do more with you than, you know, your, your opportunities and experiences.
So yeah, I didn't go, but it just, it kind of blew my mind.
It blew because I just wasn't raised on that, you know?
And then it came out of nowhere.
And then all of a sudden it was everywhere.
And they have to make concessions and account for, you know, and reach certain percentages in the workplace.
I mean, where did this come from?
It's complete lunacy.
No, it really is.
And the crazy part about it is the fact that it's like, do they just not teach what happened from the 40s, the 50s, and the 60s?
Like, did people not know we've been through this and we've already accomplished that and none of this is really going on?
It's like them saying there's a white supremacist on every corner.
Like, as I'm, I'm mixed.
I don't consider myself, you know, a black American or I'm just an American.
You know, it blew my mind.
Oh, I'm African American.
I'm like, no, dude, have you ever been to Africa?
They're like, no.
Then how are you African?
It doesn't make any sense.
So as, and I even know a lot of people understand I identify as a white guy just for satire.
But as a mixed American, if you want to call me that, as a dark American, I have had one, maybe, like situation where people are being racist.
And I don't even think other people would classify at that.
I wouldn't even classify it at that.
So I just don't understand this complex of how they've been able to brainwash so many people into actually believing that this is really going on.
Right.
Like, how if, like, can you, do you have any idea of how they would be able to do this to so many people?
I don't know.
Unless people kind of enjoy the like exclusivity aspect of it.
You know what I mean?
We do kind of live in a victim economy.
You do get bolstered for it, you know?
And it's, I mean, it's no secret.
So I'm a quarter Filipino.
And I remember when I was applying for colleges, people are like, oh, you got to use that.
You know, that'll, that'll help you.
I was like, what are you talking about?
Why?
And, and, and so there is this idea that, you know, you do get a boost if you're something else or, or a minority of some sort.
But I don't know.
I don't know why I would be supremely offended if I thought that I was only hired for something that I have no control over.
Right.
You know, rather than my intellect or my skill set or anything else, but if they're like, oh, you're hired because if you're, you're a woman and, you know, you're this.
You have colored eyes, so you're perfect.
Yeah, exactly.
I would be so offended by that.
I'd be like, pass.
Thank you.
I don't, you know.
Unless it's like something that you're doing for like a physical appearance, like, oh, yeah, then I fit the bill.
This is what you're looking for.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's obvious.
But you're talking about them like Casey Point Southwest Airlines.
Oh, we're going to hire this black lady who's never been a pilot in her entire life, but we're going to hire her because she's black.
Oh, yeah, fly the plane.
Go right ahead.
Yeah, what is that?
I fly too much for like exit doors to be flying off of planes.
That's not.
I flew two days after that happened.
I was like, oh gosh, please let me land safely.
Please let me.
I didn't book the, I didn't sit in the I used to be that person, like, oh, yeah, I'm going to sit by the that's how you get a good window seat.
You know, I'm going to, I'm going to sit by the left, I'm going to sit at the exit, you get more legroom, and if shit hits the fan, I can be the hero.
Because 90% of the time, nothing's going to happen.
Right.
Was it good?
Now, did you hear that the people who were supposed to sit in the exit row missed their flight?
Am I wrong about this?
You might be right.
I remember hearing something about that to where they were just like, no, like there was somebody who was sitting like at the very far right, I believe, or like the two seats, but I don't think there was somebody sitting actually at the window.
That was a theory I heard out there.
And I kind of hoped it was true because it's like the burnt toast theory.
You know, you're like, they must be feeling so lucky for whatever happened that caused them to miss their flight.
That is wild.
I remember.
And then I think there was a kid that was really close to it too that like lost a shirt or some shoes or something because they were sitting so close and the suction was so powerful that.
That's scary.
That really is.
That's a perfect segue into everything that's going on right now.
And we're in 2024.
Yeah.
We had a great November, December, and January.
It was like, holy shit, things are turning around.
And then February comes along and we've already had, what, four or five mass shootings?
Like, we've had the Super Bowl controversy.
I think that's where the tale is for me.
I should have known shit was hitting the fan when it's like, oh, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey.
And then he's over here making Pfizer commercials.
That's when it shifted back into the focus of grabbing America's attention.
And I should have known that this was the beginning of the actual year.
Because even the fiscal year starts, right?
It starts in February.
It's not in January, right?
Does the fiscal year start?
It might start sooner.
I think it starts in December, maybe.
But anyways.
Yeah, the 15th.
Yeah.
So it's like midway through.
But it's the beginning.
It was just the beginning of 2024.
They kind of gave us the calm before the storm.
And like, look where we are now to the point to where they're killing American journalists in Ukraine, Gonzalo Lira.
But then this actual leftist, satanic, just filth dies in a Russia prison.
And now Joe Biden has something to say.
And then he comes out just like our president is literally dementia ridden, who can't put together two sentences to make sense if he's not all hopped up on whatever it is they put him on.
It's so pathetic.
It's so, my grandmother has dementia.
You know what I mean?
You recognize certain things and you're just, I don't know.
Let's just look at him now, not even talking about all the crimes he's committed throughout his entire life.
Yeah, let's take about all that.
How do you let somebody like that as a family member or as the government?
How do you let someone like that up on stage?
It doesn't make any sense to me.
It's wild.
It is wild.
And I feel like they're setting them up more and more lately because before they used to try to cover this, they used to try to do things.
And I don't know if you remember, they used to make a fake White House set in the first two years.
I do.
They made a fake White House set at the window, like it was a real thing.
And then it's like they forgot that they were doing that and they zoomed out too far.
And it's like, oh shit, it's a set.
And that was blown.
And they kept it on the reps for a while.
He was, you know, but now he's so far gone, you can't hide it.
And I feel like they're setting him up and they're going to throw him under the bus because like, why as a government would you want this touted as your leader?
It doesn't make any sense to me.
We're the laughingstock.
It's really sad, honestly, to watch, especially, okay, with like the Putin interview, just the comparison between a strong leader and then our leader.
It is.
And it, you know, in some ways, it's just really sums up and is indicative of everything happening.
Because I think to some extent, everything, all of this would be happening, even if it wasn't Joe Biden in the White House, if it was some other Democratic candidate.
I think the same things would be happening.
The same plan would be rolling out.
But doesn't it just sum it up perfectly to have a dementia-ridden elderly man who can't get through a speech without saying end of quote or quote?
Yeah, just forgetting where he is.
It's yeah.
It's sad.
It is.
It's really sad.
And I don't know if you saw his latest brain malfunction from yesterday.
Like he literally just was talking and just like stopped because he was like, uh, uh, like, uh, uh, uh, well, you don't really want to hear what I have to say.
And, like, he, it was, I just, that was probably the worst one for me.
And, you know, we've always, we did hit a point for a while.
I was like, oh, another gaff, another gaff.
But I don't know.
Maybe that was just the line for me.
Like, damn, like, this is, this is, like, actually still happening.
Yeah, it's not funny anymore.
No, it's not funny.
No, it's not funny anymore.
But the sad part is that people will still vote for him.
So the best way to get something done, if it holds near and dear to you, that you like to be able to.
Anyway.
Well, okay.
So let me.
Yeah, you're right because there's a lot of people who are going to vote for him out of spite.
Out of spite.
Yeah.
They won't even vote independent.
They'll still just vote for their party, even though they just can't come to realization of how bad their party really is.
Because then they have to admit, oh, I was duped or I was tricked or just admit that they are that bad too.
Right.
And a lot of people don't even realize how bad they are.
Like, if you are okay with Drag Queen Storytime, there's something wrong with you.
Like, you're a bad person.
Whether you think you're a good person because, oh, you know, this is how they feel.
Like, no, the road to hell is paved on good intentions.
This is not how it's supposed to be.
Exactly.
So a lot of people can't come to they can't come to admission of that.
Not at all.
But I feel like slowly more people are coming over.
Oh, I agree.
I agree.
I think the last three years has been such so eye-opening for people.
Whether it's just the economy or the social issues or, you know, the how much our government wants to get us into war, there's always something.
There's something that's going to hit home for all normal people.
So unless you're in that fringe minority who is just going to cling to the Democratic Party so hard that, you know, they're just never going to let go.
People are waking up.
And I think there's an issue that is going to strike the heart of hopefully most Americans.
I think so.
I think it's coming.
And I think that we've come so far knowledge-wise, or let me see, let me rephrase that.
America has woken up so much over the past four years with everything that's been going.
I mean, just how many people woke up during 2020 because they had the time to do research.
Right.
Like that changed a lot.
And now it's like these same people are like, well, they lied to us about this then.
Well, let me take a look into this and into this.
And they're now open to having conversations that we're even wanting to talk about at all now.
So that right there is a big step for America.
And so where do you see 24, 2024 landing when it comes close to election time?
Like, what do you think will happen on the way?
And how do you think the actual election is going to turn out?
Yeah, I, yeah, that, that's a tough one.
I think they're going to get so desperate leading up to 2024.
I think they're going to get really desperate.
I mean, look, okay, like Fannie Willis on stand yesterday.
I mean, these are the people.
And the problem is, is that.
You forgot about that.
That was a classic.
I mean, how many crimes did she admit to?
Yeah, no, that was.
As a lawyer, this is, I know, as a lawyer.
Oh, my God.
How many times did you, Coringer?
How many times did you notice that she just spilled the beans on there?
Several.
Several.
You're just, I'm sure her lawyer was like having a conniption.
Yeah, I think they pulled her off.
Like, she can't.
You can't go back out there.
But yeah, I mean, it's just such an embarrassment.
And so I think that, but these are the people that they like can't lose.
Otherwise, they all go down.
You know what I mean?
So I don't know.
I honestly, I'm, I, what's going to happen, I think if you, if we have an election and it's a fair election, Trump wins without a doubt.
I don't know how we could have anything different happen.
But there's that two, the two caveats before that, you know?
They released the electoral vote, what it would be like right now if it was election time.
And it's basically the map of what it should have been in 2020.
Really?
Yeah.
Without them stealing, you know, Michigan and stealing Georgia and what else?
Pennsylvania.
Yes, Pennsylvania.
It's like, so it's clear, and just by the sheer rally sizes, it's clear, but what is going to happen to get implemented?
Because if they're really using Joe Biden as a puppet, and they're going to try to get in as much as they can under this to even, you know, try to make him win next time.
And if not, oh, everything was Joe Biden's fault.
Right.
We try to do this all for him.
And this, you know, this was all his fault.
Right.
Perfect fall guy.
Yeah.
Really.
And what was he going to do to fight back?
He can't.
He has dementia.
Exactly.
How much longer is he even really going to live?
I'm shocked he's made it this far.
I think about that too.
In 2020, I was like, this guy is not going to make it in two years.
And I can't believe he's made it this far.
I know.
I mean, I'm sure it was it, like, 370-something days on vacation have helped.
Like, I'm sure that has helped.
What?
But imagine him.
Imagine him being under the stress that Trump was under during his administration.
He definitely would have croaked.
Definitely would have croaked.
He would not have been able to handle that pressure case after case after case after allegation after allegation.
There's no way he survived.
So I actually can't believe they're still running him for 2024.
Do you think they'll keep him until November?
Right now, that's their plan.
There's one year left.
What else are they going to try to pull out of Kamala, which that case in point is already in the bag?
Everybody's exposed that.
I mean, they haven't brought Newsom out in a while.
They haven't brought Michelle out.
So they're literally running out of town.
And I think you're right.
They're going to be a little desperado within the next six, seven months to figure out what really to do.
I don't know.
Yeah, I hear people throw out, you know, we're not going to have a 2024 election, which could be possible.
I mean, they could really try.
They could have another COVID situation.
Exactly.
But it's getting closer.
I mean, we're not, well, it was March of 2020 when everything locked out.
So let's try to get through the spring.
If we can make it to summer, maybe we'll be in the clear.
And then we might have to worry about a summer of rage.
Summer of rage, maybe a world war.
Yeah.
Maybe, you know, cyber attack EMP type deal.
I don't know.
I mean, the conspiracy brain goes in.
Exactly.
Well, we'll have to bring you back on when it comes to election time.
And I don't know.
You're going to be a resident lawyer here.
So if there's something we got to get to the bottom of, we might just call you on there and be like, hey, what is going on right now?
You know, we might just, we'll actually, we'll bring you back in here for sure plenty of times too because you are at the forefront of a lot of these issues that our Americans are actually facing.
And you're one of the few people who are actually fighting for them.
So I know a lot of people are going to appreciate and they're going to, I hope you gain so many followers after this.
And I hope you gain, like, I hope you get everything that you deserve because you're one of the few that's actually fighting for America.
And a lot of people need to need to understand that.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Well, honestly, I mean it wholeheartedly that if I hadn't stumbled across band video and info wars, I have no idea what I'd be doing right now.
Like I certainly would not have this job and I would not have ended up on this path.
So that's pretty remarkable.
Right.
Just and so you can like, I'm very excited to be here.
Yes.
You know, and see so people like exactly.
This is how far sharing a link goes.
Sharing, you know, Alex says this all the time.
You share Bandai video, Mad Max World, InfoWars, anything and everything we have.
You have no idea what how one link can change somebody's lives.
So, Lexi, can you want to tell people where they can find you, follow you?
Sure.
So, you can find me on Twitter at LexisE Anderson.
You can also follow freeamerica lawcenter.com, which is where we are going to post a lot of our updates on cases.
You can find our case filings, how to support us, fundraisers that we're having, and learn all about the work we're doing.
Yes, yes.
And also, Barnes, he does his own show, Biva Lo Barnes, and that is such a knowledge bomb every time that I'm able to tune in.
You know, I don't get to watch much content outside of InfoWars, but people like Barnes and Viva, Lexis, there's a lot of these lawyers out there who are actually letting you know what's going on and how you can fight it.
There might be some content for me coming on the Viva Barnes locals page.
Yes, there we go.
Stay tuned for that.
Yes, yes.
Well, thank you very much for joining, and I hope you've had a great time, and this was a great conversation.
I know a lot of people are going to get a lot from us.
Thank you so much for having me.
Of course, of course.
All right, everybody.
We'll see you on the next one.
Yeah.
That was fun.
That went by so fast.
Yeah, that was great.
That was fun.
Damn, I learned a lot, too.
Like, that was...
Did you?
Yeah.
Good.
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