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Jan. 23, 2025 - Viva & Barnes
01:44:38
Trump is Making Some BAD Decisions! More mRNA "Vaccine" Tyranny? Jan. 6 Release UPDATES! & More!
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It's not going to be a free ride.
It's not going to be some instant amnesty.
What's going to happen is you are going to pay a significant fine.
You are going to learn English.
You are going to go to the back of the line so that you don't get ahead of somebody who was in Mexico City applying illegally.
But after you've done these things over a certain period of time, you can earn your citizenship.
So that it's not something that is guaranteed or automatic.
You've got to earn it.
But over time, you give people an opportunity.
Now, it only works, though, if you do all the pieces.
I think the American people, they appreciate and believe in immigration.
But they can't have a situation where you just have half a million people pouring over the border without any kind of mechanism to control it.
So we've got to deal with that at the same time as we deal in a humane fashion with folks who have put down roots here, have become our neighbors, have become our friends.
They may have children who are U.S. citizens.
That's the kind of comprehensive approach that we have to take.
All right?
It's an amazing thing.
This was Patrick B. David, who posted this earlier today and says, people are quick to forget what Obama said in March 18, 2009.
He'd be considered conservative Republican today.
Common sense is timeless and always makes a comeback.
The amazing thing is people will say, oh, he didn't realize quite how wrong he was back then, and he's actually evolved over time and not devolved.
And totally not understand that when you don't have any principles and you are a boat floating in the ocean without sails, you just go whichever way the current is taking you.
With actually no direction and no possibility of having direction.
So that was Obama.
2009, people.
And now we are 2025.
I feel like I'm living in the future.
Who remembers Y2K 1999?
In 2009, Obama basically talking about what Trump is doing today.
But today, Trump is deemed to be the inhumane, xenophobic racist.
For actually implementing yet another one of his promises, deporting violent criminal illegal aliens.
What I love is I'm old enough now to have lived through the Overton window shifting.
And, you know, people are in the chat.
I remember Y2K was going to be the end of the world.
Does everybody remember the day or the year or the month?
The time frame in which they stopped referring to illegal immigrants or illegal aliens as illegal aliens?
And then they became...
It was a multi-step process.
Because they didn't go from illegal aliens to undocumented migrants.
They went from illegal aliens to undocumented aliens, undocumented immigrants.
Then it became undocumented migrants.
Then it became economic migrants.
And now it's just everybody's an asylum seeker.
But we lived through that.
And we lived through the world in which it was once upon a time...
Absolutely insanely stupid to say defund the police.
And then it became policy.
Because that slow drip, drip, drip, eventually every drop of water will carve its way through rock if it's long and persistent enough.
And we've lived through the era where it didn't just go from changing the rhetoric homeless to unhoused, unhomed.
Illegal alien to undocumented migrant.
And I forget the third one that I just said.
Oh, for goodness sake.
I forget what it was.
The third one I just said two seconds ago.
We've lived through it and you change the meaning of words and you change thought itself.
But you don't change what makes sense over time and you certainly don't change what is going to be the negative consequences of what was stupid policy back in the day.
Defund the police.
It was defund the police.
This is the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
And then it became policy.
And then they defunded the police.
And then crime spiked.
Part and parcel because they defunded the police and all of those undocumented migrants in so-called sanctuary cities.
I say not all of them.
A small amount of them who commit the disproportionate amount of the crime.
It's amazing.
Policies have consequences.
Elections have consequences.
So Trump is, now the president, implementing the deportation policies with, I would say, cataclysmic, earth-shattering consequences.
We're going to get into all of this today, people.
The first three days now, what are we?
Monday to Tuesday, Tuesday to Wednesday, Wednesday to Thursday.
We are in our...
Now we've entered the fourth day of the new age, the new era of the rebirth of American greatness.
And it's going seemingly according to plan.
There are some bad decisions, however, that are being made and some people have some questions and some people have some concerns and it's understandable.
So today we are talking about...
We're talking about, people, deportation.
Homan, the new minister, the Secretary of Homeland Security.
I forget his title now.
I have to go check it out.
Homan is on with Dana Bash explaining what's happening.
And Dana Bash can't understand.
A, this is what people voted for.
B, this is what legal immigrants want.
C, there are consequences to breaking the law.
And 4, D, There will be incidental consequences to those who are the most egregious of the illegals committing crimes if they don't abide by the enforcement and choose to hide and then take down some of their other illegal but not necessarily criminal brethren.
We are live across all platforms, people.
For those of you who are new to the channel, we are live on YouTube, Twitter, Free Speech Rumble, and vivabarneslaw.locals.com, where everyone is above average.
And we're going to end on YouTube and Twitter, and then we go over to Rumble, and then we have our after party on Locals for the supporters to thank them for supporting the work that we do.
And we're going to talk about that.
We're going to talk about Ellison.
I don't trust him.
We're going to talk about Sam Altman.
I don't trust him.
And we're going to talk about another bad decision that Trump made, his appointment for a head of Secret Service.
Not that I don't trust him, but it's a man who I believe was partly responsible for what occurred on July 13th, who, from what I can understand, It doesn't even matter if he's been reprimanded or learned from that.
When you have a zero-fail mission and it fails, typically you don't get promoted.
But we're going to get into it because Trump is the master of his own domain.
Trump is the one who knows, especially when it comes to his own protection, what is best for him.
And it's not in anyone else's...
I would say it's in their purview to second guess, to criticize, to critique, but it's ultimately his decision because it impacts him the most.
We'll get into all of that.
Are we live across all the other platforms?
I'm looking over at Rumble at vivabarneslaw.locals.com where we have two tip questions.
Viva! On the H1Bs, this is from Textmaster.
Just kidding.
I can't watch live, so I'll have to replay later.
Have a great show.
Textmaster, thank you.
I think we're done with the H1Bs, although we're going to get into something equally contentious today.
Because in as much as I'm willing to forgive Sam Altman, I'm not willing to forget.
And in as much as someone has a coming to the Lord moment, the length of time it takes to reestablish confidence is exponentially correlative to the degree to which it was broken beforehand.
Smaller violations, it takes a little bit less time to reestablish confidence.
Big violations?
It's going to take more than a little stupid-ass, ambiguous tweet.
Textmaster, good to see you.
Adnilikat says, Who has Trump's ear to tell him to stop the deadly mRNA train that is increasingly building up steam?
It's a sexy project that Trump sees no downside to, but is on the fast track to our destruction.
We're going to get to that.
We're going to get to that.
Because, again, it's the Overton window as well now.
People seem to have forgotten that the first mass global scale of human experimentation with the mRNA jibby jab was not a smashing success, such that you don't leverage off of that failure to say, well, now let's apply it to other fields.
We'll get to that.
Just want to make sure that we are good across all platforms, and we are.
All right.
Flashback to the intro of the show.
Obama, the most charismatic...
Of scumbags.
He was charismatic.
I don't care what anybody says.
Until you realize he was...
I'm using the word snake, and I don't really like using that word because snakes are awesome animals.
They're beautiful.
And I'm going to use that again when I talk about Brennan, who's on the backdrop.
When you realize that he was vile, disingenuous, would become the worst, the second worst, third worst president in American history, when you realize that he was a liar through and through, That he was either a devilish person himself or at least the marionette of the devilish puppeteers.
I'm talking about Obama, who did more to drive race relations back a hundred years in America.
Who was the most lawless president, but he had such a nice smile.
He was eloquent.
But then when you realized he was selling you shit, his eloquence became something that I detested.
Well, he was talking about illegal immigration.
Can you imagine any politician, any Democrat today saying, you come to America, you better speak English?
Holy crap, you can't even say that in Canada.
You can't even say in Canada.
You come to Canada, you better speak English or French, or you're going to learn English or French.
No. I still consider Spanish to be the French of America, but I don't know the dynamic of how Americans feel about that.
In Canada, speak French or English.
Those are the two official languages of the country.
Imagine a Democrat today saying, you're an immigrant?
Illegal? You're going to go to the back of the line, pay a fine, and learn English, damn it.
They actually make that as a trope of racism these days.
That's how far insane the left has gone.
Trump has started his rounding up and deporting of violent, illegal aliens.
Illegal immigrants.
And the right...
The left can't seem to understand it.
Tom Oman, here we go.
Who posted this?
This is Libs of TikTok, eh?
Who posted this?
Listen to this.
Dana Bash.
Where do I remember Dana Bash?
You remember her from such a propagandist network at CNN.
What was she doing?
She did something during the election.
It'll come back to me.
These are the propagandists of the highest orders.
These are people, and I'm talking about Dana Bash on the left, who will never suffer the consequences of the policies that they promote.
They will never suffer the consequences of...
The lawlessness that they implement.
They will never really care if eggs cost $13 a dozen.
They've got all the money in the world.
Rachel Maddow takes a pay cut.
She's down to $15 million a year.
Listen to her.
Listen to her and listen to Holman.
Holman is the man.
You know, I think that there is some kind of image that people might have given how much we heard President Trump and you in the...
Months during the campaign, and certainly during the transition, talking about what's going to happen of people being rounded up, loaded on buses, and dropping them off on the border.
Is that how you see this happening?
Well, I don't like the analogy of rounding up.
Look, again, this is a targeted enforcement operation.
The president's been clear on this.
We're going to concentrate on public safety threats.
But in sanctuary cities, where they don't let us take that public safety threat into custody, in the safety and security of a jail, we have to go find them.
If he's with others in the country illegally, ICE will not turn the blind eye into that.
ICE is going to uphold the oath they took.
They're going to enforce the laws enacted by Congress and signed by a president.
And they're going to do that without apology.
I mean, if any sanctuary cities force us in this position, that's exactly what's going to happen.
You know, I think that there is some...
This is the short clip.
She had trouble understanding that.
So, like, if you are hunting people down, if you're enforcing the law...
And trying to deport violent criminals and you incidentally come across other illegal aliens, we're not going to turn a blind eye.
It's a terrible, it is a terrible situation in a sense where there will be innocents that are going to get caught up in this.
The children of people who have come into a country illegally are going to get caught up in this.
Friends and family, they're going to get caught up in this.
And there is a certain element of tragedy.
When someone goes to jail, even if they deserve it, there's a certain element of tragedy.
You know, like, Homan actually said it, you know, like...
We separate families all the time.
When a dad goes to jail for whatever, we're separating him from his kids.
You don't get to say, don't put me in jail.
I've got a family.
You break the law and you break the law with a family.
Unfortunately, it's not on the law that you have exposed your family to the consequences of you breaking the law.
And I think I had a decent analogy in terms of understanding the incidental or in terms of highlighting and illustrating the absurdity of saying it's going to cause people hardship.
Someone illegally squatting on somebody's house, they can get very comfortable in that house.
But I've made my living room here.
My kids go to school in this area.
Yeah, it's my house.
You never had permission to come in here, and I want you out.
The analogy between a home and a country and a front door and a border is pretty much perfectly analogous, except it's the government who owns the property in this analogy and not a private ownership of a house.
You squat illegally.
In someone else's house that you know is someone else's house, you can't cry when you're told to get out.
You can't cry when the police come and haul you out, no matter how nicely you designed your bedroom.
And it's happening.
And there's going to be very, very, very sorry and hard issues that result from this, but that's what it is, and that's what Americans voted for, and that's what Latinos voted for.
That's what black Americans voted for in record numbers.
But they don't understand law and order and they don't want to because it's not hierarchy, it's lawlessness.
They need it for a number of reasons and they need it for politics because what they realize now is they can't rely even on the local, the native immigrant population to continue voting for them blindly in record numbers.
And so what do they need to do?
We talked about it before the election.
Shock and awe, flood like you've never seen.
And so that you can change the future elections, you can change the demographics, and that you can change the outcome and basically get to a one-party state forever.
And if we didn't avoid that by a millimeter, when Donald Trump turned his head to the side and changed the course of history, you might never understand how close America came to losing its country forever.
All right, so that was the intro short story.
Trump is already...
On the verge, implementing, in the process of, not on the verge anymore, implementing policy, rounding up the most violent, illegal aliens, and deporting them.
And yes, it's going to hurt people.
That's what happens when people break the law.
They hurt not only themselves, they hurt friends and family, and if they have families and children, they've hurt their children.
But it's not the law that did it.
It's the person who broke the law.
Now, speaking of promises.
Trump comes into office and says, I'm going to pardon the Jan Sixers.
And he does.
And I'm trying to get Jake Lang in here to see what the update is on who might be left still in jail.
But one person who's not in jail, and I think he's in the backdrop, you might remember this Jan Sixer from such podcasts as Viva Frye.
His name is Chance Uptmore.
I don't know if he's a member of our community.
I think we met each other, or he reached out via Twitter.
I don't actually know how that happened.
He's a Jan Sixer.
When he came on to talk about his unique situation, he was talking about how he had been raided for January 6th and charged with the misdemeanor bullshit, but while they raided him, they found marijuana, firearms in his house, and then they charged him with incidental felonies that were unrelated to, but... He came on, we talked about it.
Even if he gets a pardon for the misdemeanor, he's still going to face the lifelong or long-term consequences of being declared a felon because of unrelated charges that stem from the raid.
Turns out there's more than just Chance who have this similar problem now.
At least three others in DC Gulag that I became familiar with.
Ball was his last name.
I forget their last names now.
But there were three that I went over the night before last, or the day before last when we were live streaming the release.
And there were three who they were found guilty of parole violation, some other felony charge, or there was a state Florida felony charge.
And from what I understand, they have not yet been released from jail.
And so the question here now is to try to raise a little bit of the awareness as to whether or not, I'm sure there's going to be some legal arguments, does the pardon encompass the fruits of that crime for which there was a pardon, or not?
And so Chance Upmore is coming up here because I want to get a bit of an update and see what's his situation since the part and I'm sure he's happy but also somewhat unfulfilled.
Chance, let me see.
You're in the backdrop.
You need to...
There you go.
Okay, we got one thing going.
Now you got to enable your camera.
I hear audio.
All right, let me try and figure this out, my friend.
Do you have a plug-in camera?
Yeah, yeah.
Let's see.
Now let me see here.
Let's close this.
Last time it popped up so easy.
I don't know what's blocking it this time.
Let me try and figure this out.
My fault.
Did we use Studio last time or did we use StreamYard?
I think we used Studio and I just enabled my camera now saying that the camera is in use somewhere else but it is not in use.
Unplug it and use the native camera to the computer?
No, my computer doesn't have one.
Just give me one moment to figure this out.
Yeah, and while you do that, I will see if there's any update on the other...
Okay, so let's see if we can get this...
Well, Chance, while you do it, if we don't get that, we'll pretend you're a little red dot with a white circle.
Remind everyone you had a misdemeanor.
Was it the picketing and parading?
Or was it the...
What misdemeanor were you charged with in relation to January 6th?
Yeah. I ended up getting the misdemeanor trespassing charge, basically.
Okay. Misdemeanor trespassing charge.
And then you got some felony charges, which was drug possession and in conjunction with firearm possession?
Yep. Yep.
When they raided me, they found...
Hold on, hold on.
I'm not sure if you take your screen out if we can still hear you.
Okay, so leave it in here like that.
Alright, you can't get your camera to work.
I don't understand why not.
Have you got a phone?
Yeah, I do.
Let me see, though.
This is not making any sense.
Don't worry, it doesn't have to make sense to not work.
Yeah, right, right.
I just don't...
I don't understand why it's not connecting.
But yeah, I can...
Here, let me drop out for a bit, figure this out.
In worst case scenario, I'll hop on on my phone.
Okay, go for it.
All right.
Viva, while we do that, I'm going to take some of the chats here.
Not all vaccines are bad.
The way they schedule them is horrid.
Some are unnecessary, says Gen X Brat over on Rumble.
Viva, just go with the interview.
We'll give him one more chance to get the video, and if not, we're just going to go with an audio interview.
And I'll see also if...
If Jake can pop in.
Live now if you can pop in.
And I'll go over here on Commitube and see what's going on.
Get to the chat here.
Operation Warp Speed 2.0.
We're going to get to that.
We're going to get to that after.
I want to get Chance's update.
And then Chance had a couple of Rumble Rants ready when you are at Chance Upmore.
So that's it.
There are a few now who are going to have some issues because they faced charges that were unrelated to January 6th, but that resulted from the raids.
I don't know if it's going to be something that you can get to the attention of the powers that be, but we'll do our best to make it happen.
Chance, you there?
Yeah, same issue.
Okay, well forget about it.
Let's do audio.
Okay, so what's your situation now?
You've done your time for everything, and you didn't do any time for the felony, but you're still a convicted felon, and I think we discussed it, but what sort of consequences does that have for daily life?
Yeah, I mean, it sucks being a felon.
I'm still on federal probation.
Can't own a firearm.
There's certain things that, you know, like getting an apartment will be more difficult.
Getting loans and getting anything involving credit checks?
Yeah, definitely.
Let me ask you this.
In terms of firearm restrictions, is it true?
Someone had mentioned that you're not even allowed being in the same domicile as another firearm owner.
So do other firearm owners within the same domicile, are they not allowed possessing firearms or are you not allowed being in that same domicile?
Yeah, so that is an issue.
So, Ben Martin, actually, that's the reason why he had to turn himself in.
Because of Jan 6, they were investigating him, and basically he had some kind of charge restricting him from owning a firearm.
And I guess his wife or his girlfriend, from what I could see, had a locked safe that he didn't have a code to that had firearms in it.
So, by definition, he was...
Charged with it, even though you're supposed to be allowed, as a felon, you're supposed to be allowed to, you know, your wife can own a firearm or your roommate as long as it's in a locked safe that you have no access to, yet that's the exact thing they arrested them for.
It's crazy.
Chance, this is a good picture of you?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, good.
So everyone, this is who we're talking to.
Babyface chants up more, although this was four years ago, so he might have a few more gray hairs as a result of what they've done to him over the last four years.
So you're stuck with the felony conviction for now.
What was the practical result or outcome or what has happened since the pardon?
Has it changed anything?
As of this moment, I'm not too sure.
There is legal pathways to argue that...
Based on the wording of the pardon saying that all charges related to January 6th, that any raid that came as a result of January 6th is also related by definition.
So there's that option.
And I think really that's a long shot and it's going to get shut down by my judge.
I would have to file a motion to dismiss and the judge would deny it and then would go up the chain to the circuit courts.
Eventually, the Supreme Court, and it's a long shot, but I think the best route right now for most of us, and let me just say there's a few of us that are dealing with this.
I'd say there's two categories or even three.
There's people like me who received a federal charge when we got raided, a separate federal charge.
Those people can be remedied by either a second pardon or some kind of order that says all charges stemming from January 6th are covered as well.
Then you have people that receive state charges.
I put those people into two categories because one category would be someone who received a state charge in a liberal state and someone that received a state charge in a conservative pro-Trump state.
In those situations, we could all rally behind and try and get the governors of those states to pardon them for the evidence that was used against them in the state charges.
But with the liberal states, those people have an even harder pathway.
One person that comes to mind is Brad Holliday.
He was prosecuted by Alvin Bragg for a gun crime that, as we know, Alvin Bragg is very soft on crime unless it's a J6 or someone else that was charged with his exact gun crime.
Just to clarify, his gun crime was basically that he owned a firearm with a certain type of magazine that is legal in every other state, but eight years ago, New York made it illegal.
Other people have been charged with that.
Most recently, a guy, I can't remember his last name, but his name was Sadiq, and he was charged with it, and Alvin Bragg slow-walked his case, and two years later, he still wasn't locked up.
In Brad Holliday's situation, they ran that through quick.
Within a year, he was charged and convicted, and he served prison time for that.
And so now he's in a situation that's even worse than mine and some of the others, where even if Trump was to put out a pardon for any charge stemming from January 6th, it wouldn't cover him.
Well, it wouldn't cover a state charge.
This is why some people were...
I know at least one of the, the, the Jan sixers in DC had a state charge out of Florida that people were saying, let's, we've got to put the pressure on DeSantis to give a state pardon, uh, or whatever the process is in Florida.
If it's a pardon panel, I think the key here, I want to thank everyone that stood by the Gen Sixers and supported us and helped us out.
But I do want to say that the job is not finished.
We need to do what we can to get those charges dropped.
I think in the state cases, I don't know.
This is something I thought of that I don't.
I'm not sure if it would work, but I think if Trump was to put out another blanket pardon to make all the charges stemming from January 6th, Nolan Boyd, maybe he could put some type of wording that says any evidence found during the federal investigations into Jan 6th cannot be used in state trials.
And then that would at least give some type of pathway for the people charged with state charges in liberal states.
to then file a motion to dismiss using that which would of course get denied by the New York judges but could make it up to the Supreme Court and maybe give them some relief that way.
But other than that it's a really tough hill for them to climb.
Well, I mean, I'm sure your lawyer will try to make the argument, but yes, it's motions and it's costs.
And in the interim, you're still stuck with that felony.
And over on Rumble, Denise Antu says, so they raided your house for a misdemeanor.
The former administration absolutely destroyed our constitution.
I mean, they did, except at the time they were calling it insurrection.
So they were raiding people's houses for suspicion of seditious conspiracy.
Man, Chance, all right.
I mean, it's not much of an update.
We'll see what pressure people can put on.
And hope for the best in your situation.
I mean, I know now of at least you and three others.
So there's four people of the Jan Sixers who are going to have lingering state charges or felony charges, which were independent but stemming from.
Yeah, from the list I've seen, there's Jeremy Brown.
He's in prison currently.
Ben Martin turned himself into prison yesterday.
Elias Kostianis, he has to turn himself in for his sentence sometime in February in Brad Holiday, and I'm sure there's many more.
I think the key here is to keep getting the message out there that there are people like this, people like us that are suffering from this.
I've been spamming on Twitter recently.
I'm trying to calm down on it because I've been spamming so much, but I think we really need to get the message out there.
I think we need to have a united message of basically saying we need pardons for all charges stemming from the raids of January 6th and all evidence found during the federal investigation is invalid.
And that'll give a bunch of people pathways to end it.
But yeah, as of now, I'm trying to stay optimistic.
I hope that Trump comes through and puts out another pardon.
Other than that, it's just a waiting game, really.
All right, man.
We'll snip and clip this, everybody, and put it out there and tag who you think needs to hear it and hope that something happens or something gets done.
All right.
Thank you, Viva.
Chance, I'll see you on Twitter.
All right.
See you.
All right, man.
Have a good day.
You too.
All right.
Share this and kick.
I didn't kick him.
He left.
All right.
So that's Chance's story.
It's a pain in the ass.
And we talked about it well before the pardon was even issued, and I didn't realize that there were...
Let's just say four to a half dozen other Jan Sixes who are suffering the similar consequences.
All right, people, we're going to go over to Rumble right now.
Here's the link to Rumble, and the rest of the show is going to be the banger part of the show.
If anyone wants to come over to vivabarneslaw.locals.com, where it's not a question of grifting people, we have an after show where we like to thank the supporters, the people who make it possible for us to continue doing what we're doing, and it's an exclusive.
For the supporters only.
That being said, the entire podcast goes on podcast afterwards.
So even if you don't want to be live when it happens, you'll still get the fruits of that afterwards.
But come over to Locals if you're so inclined.
And if not, the link to Rumble is up on the top.
I'll read a couple of chats before we make the migration and we see that number drop from 1.2 thousand on YouTube to zero.
But before you leave, make sure you subscribe to notifications turned on, et cetera, et cetera.
Nif Ranziel says, Jeremy Brown was moved.
They don't know where.
But suspect Philly to be killed by gangs.
Anyone in Pennsylvania that personally knows government officials get on phone.
We'll see if Jake can get on and also give us an update because I know that they were thoroughly, thoroughly, intimately involved with everything that was going on.
Over on vivabarneslaw.locals.com says, Viva, don't let the idiots on X accuse you of grifting get shit down.
No, I was like, it doesn't.
It just, it drives me nuts.
But it's, especially when they're called grifter watches.
The thing is this, I have to rationalize and I have to say, they're probably not even human.
And if they are, they are accounts that seek only to gain attention from that type of destructive interference in otherwise productive dialogue.
Okay, so what we're going to do now.
Still not banned here, says exactly.
If you can't lock, if they can't lock up, they will find other ways to destroy you.
You and your entire family too, if necessary, to them.
And then Zam369 says, Viva's hair is noble.
It's a little knotted, a little dry.
It might be getting a little long and a little crazy, but that's it.
Okay, so what we're going to do now, we're going to end it over.
Yes, good.
We're at 1,000, although if we get to under 1,000 on YouTube, YouTube, come on over to Rumble or vivabarnslaw.locals.com and I'll post the entire thing, podcast format and the entire stream or the clips thereof afterwards.
Updating now, ending on Commitube, free speech.
Here we come and we're going to talk.
Ellison, M-R-N-E, because it's not all bad.
I'm not coming out here and saying that Trump is trying to bring us down the fascist COVID medico-techno-tier.
It's not that cut and dry.
But I can understand that people have some concerns.
And then we're going to get into Donald Trump's pick for Secret Service.
Chief of Secret Service.
Ending on Commitube.
Now, booyah.
I thought I hit the thing only for low because I was going to kick myself in the butt.
People, let's play the video.
I'm going to play the video.
If this man doesn't make you think that he's a sleazy used car salesman, we have different sleazy used cars.
We have sleazy used cars, used car salesman detectors.
This is Larry Ellison, you know, founder of Oracle, CEO of Oracle, big fancy man, worth a lot of money, so he must know what he's talking about, right?
Like, you know, because Bill Gates, a computer nerd, became a vaccine expert.
Albert Bourla, freaking veterinarian, became a chief mRNA, 100% successful, COVID.
Oh, God, it hurts my throat to imitate his voice.
That's God punishing me.
All right, let me just play the video because...
This guy gives me some serious heebie-jeebie vibes.
So we're currently working on...
Should I step on this?
Okay. All right.
No, no, no.
I'm not that tall.
Thank you, Mr. President.
All right, stop.
I'm going to intervene, interject with my...
Body language analysis.
This strikes me as being someone who's insecure with what they're about to say.
I say this all, I've probably formulated my thoughts because I've seen the video.
Okay, dude, you're at a freaking press conference?
Like, even I wouldn't be making that many jokes about my modest stature.
This strikes me already as a man who's uncomfortable, insecure in what he's about to say, and I think it pans out in what he says.
Listen to this.
One of the most exciting things we're working on, again, using the tools that Sam and Masa are providing, is a cancer vaccine.
It's very interesting.
It turns out, I'll be quick, all of our cancers, cancer tumors, little fragments of those tumors float around in your blood.
So you can do early cancer detection with a blood test.
And using AI to look at the blood test, you can find the cancers that are actually seriously threatening the person.
So we can, again, cancer diagnosis using AI has the promise of just being a simple blood test.
Anyone else following this?
Okay, so we're using AI.
To early diagnose cancer.
Okay. Because the cancerous particles can be detected in the blood.
And so we're going to do blood tests and we're going to...
Well, my understanding of what he's saying is the AI doesn't analyze the blood.
The AI is going to dissect the results.
And this is where I absolutely wholeheartedly agree AI is going to replace doctors in terms of accuracy of diagnosis based on...
Factual, statistically measurable results from blood.
And even, just broadly speaking, connecting symptoms.
It's a very interesting AI, artificial intelligence.
AGI, artificial generalized intelligence.
It's nothing more than pooling together the aggregate knowledge of humanity and then computing it based on the data.
There's a reason why I say the aggregate knowledge of the interwebs, they will find where the he-will-not-divide-us flag is faster than any one individual.
The aggregate knowledge of the interwebs, when you take a snapshot picture of somebody and the flash goes off and they see the reflection is different in one eye than the next, and they say, you might want to go to a doctor, you might have a tumor.
True story, by the way.
And then the woman goes to the doctor and discovers, I think it was her kid, had a tumor in his eye, and the way that she found out was because the internet said the light reflecting off his eyes was different and you might want to go look at that.
That's what AI is on godlike steroids.
So the idea that AI is going to be able to more accurately diagnose in advance, and maybe even thought crime is bad when it relates to human behavior, but medical diagnosis, thought crime medical diagnosis, diagnosing it before it happens based on behaviors, based on trace, based on history, based on predilections, is not a bad thing.
So AI, it's going to be amazing.
It might replace vets.
It might replace hypochondriacs.
And if I go to AI and say, I'll describe everything about me.
What my bowel movements look like.
What time I wake up.
How many times a night I wake up.
How many times I pee.
What I eat.
What I drink.
How much I drink.
And it'll say, all right, you might want to do X, Y, and Z tests.
You go get the test and say, oh, look at that.
Your bilirubin levels are high.
They're not.
My liver enzymes are beautiful.
But AI is going to be amazing.
Don't have a freaking used car salesman who doesn't understand the mechanism trying to pitch this in a minute and a half and thus cause a lot of skepticism, especially since it's coming from who this man is.
Not someone with the medical expertise.
He studied medicine, I think.
He didn't graduate, but he studied.
Studied science, but we'll let it play.
Then beyond that, once we gene sequence that cancer tumor, you can then vaccinate the person, design a vaccine for every individual person to vaccinate them against that cancer.
And you can make that vaccine, that mRNA vaccine.
Do you hear the words that he's just throwing out?
First of all, early detection and early treatment, would that even be called a vaccine?
If you detect that someone has pre...
I mean, by this point also, you're detecting the cancer.
You're just trying to identify what it was.
Is it a vaccine to treat the cancer?
I mean, just throw me the words out.
Oh, mRNA.
Gene sequences, and you can use AI.
You can make that robotically, again, using AI in about 48 hours.
So imagine robotically using AI, you can make it in about 40. What the hell are you talking about?
Early cancer detection, the development of a cancer vaccine for your particular cancer aimed at you, and have that vaccine available in 48 hours.
This is the promise of...
What is this?
Freaking vaccine lens crafters?
You could come in and get your glasses in 48 hours.
I mean, that's what they said.
That's why I used to go to LensCrafters.
It comes off smarmy.
It comes off ignorant.
It comes off totally unprepared.
I'm going to show you the aftermath, which I didn't publish in the original video.
And this guy is making people think, holy shit, Trump is getting duped yet again by different players this time, and we're going to see a COVID 2.0 of the original COVID 1.0.
The AI and the promise of the future.
Great, thanks.
Now, by the way, do you think he looks confident right now?
He gets patted on the back like, congratulations, Joe, you answered all the questions to the future.
Great, thanks.
Look at Trump.
Now, let me show you the follow-up.
I'll give you this tweet.
What did I write with this tweet in here?
Okay, underline point.
First of all, you can't fault any president who wants to cure cancer.
Everybody should want to cure cancer.
My father-in-law passed away from cancer.
If you could early diagnose and then specifically treat, not with massive washing through the body of toxic chemicals that kill everything good and bad, I mean, it would be amazing.
A chemotherapy that attacks a specific, I don't know if the word would be gene, but that would attack the tumor and the tumor only.
It'd be amazing.
But it really sounded like Alison has no idea who he's talking about.
Comes out there, makes it look like Trump is getting duped by people who are just interested in selling you snake oil, much like Fauci, much like Bill Gates, much like Albert Bourla, and people are concerned, legitimately so, that this is going to be COVID 2.0.
But then, by the way, I wanted to include this as the follow-up, because watch Trump...
Immediately after.
And you tell me what his body language looks like.
Because it doesn't look like he was instilled with confidence, which is a problem into itself.
I'll get to a second.
That vaccine available in 48 hours.
This is the promise of AI and the promise of the future.
Sounds like the guy selling the dreams in Total Recall.
Look at Trump.
Yeah, just one second and we'll finish up.
These are highly respected.
Guys, I was shocked with Larry because I don't even think Larry does this stuff.
He did a very good job for a guy that doesn't do it much, right?
But he's so respected in the group, and it's really an honor.
So Trump sees promise here, and Trump is a man who acts on intuition, and there's nothing wrong with that.
It's actually very good.
And I think his intuition right there was, Larry, I think you just kind of blew our soft launch here.
Trump knows that there's technology to be made here.
Trump knows that there are jobs to be created here.
And Trump knows that there is the AI element of the future that you don't want this being developed to the extent it can be successfully developed.
You don't want it developed in India or China.
But my goodness, don't send Larry Ellison up.
You send Bill Gates up.
Nobody trusts these big tech CEOs.
Nobody trusts even the medical CEOs.
Don't send them up there to blow the sales pitch.
Of very futuristic technology that really still brings back bad memories of the very failed old technology.
But Trump didn't look very inspired after Larry spoke.
Larry didn't look inspired, and it looked like they were treating Larry like old Joe Biden.
You did your best, and now we're going to have to try to polish off this turd.
Bottom line, lots of investment in AI, lots of investment in mRNA.
We'll see what would instill some confidence before launching into another failed venture.
Look back into the old failed venture.
Maybe we'll have to wait until RFK is approved.
What's it called?
Approved, ratified?
Confirmed as head of HHS.
Go look into the last failed.
First of all, acknowledge that it was failed, Donald, Mr. Trump, President Trump.
Acknowledge that it was a failure.
Acknowledge that it caused irreparable harm to tens of millions of people.
And that...
No one's going to blame you to the extent that you were in fact as duped as the rest of us.
But look into the previous failed attempt at deploying at a mass scale with mass real-time human experimentation.
Look into that failed venture before embarking on the new one because people are still a little bit salty from the last one.
But no, it's not bad that a president wants to cure cancer and he's actually already doing more for that moonshot than Joe Biden.
But yeah, it is bad to really cause people to fear that we're going to enter COVID techno tyranny 2.0.
All right.
Now, let me see something here.
Ganthet over in our...
I can bring him up here.
Ganthet in our locals community.
mRNA technology is gene editing.
With the COVID shots, they changed the wording to mean a vaccine.
It's not snake oil.
You're out of your depth in understanding what he's talking about.
Using AI with tech available.
This is something very possible.
Something has been done multiple times around the globe, most recently.
You see, everything right there was good, except that you're out of your depth in understanding.
First of all, I might very well be, but A, recognize that, and B, that doesn't change anything as far as the substance goes.
Has there ever been a successful mRNA vaccine administered to humans?
The answer is no.
Has there ever been a vaccine that was ever administered via mRNA technology until now?
The answer is no.
Are there known problems with mRNA technology?
The answer is yes.
I'm out of my league indeed.
That's why I've picked the brains of bigger, better brains than me.
Jessica Rose, Malone, Weinstein.
Who have I had on the channel talking about the reasons for which mRNA technology has not been used for vaccine therapy?
There are known risks, inflammation risks that we've seen in real time.
Out of my league I might be, but it doesn't mean I can't actually listen to and absorb the words of people smarter than me.
Oh, Chance Upmore says, I figured out the camera.
I'll come back in the future with a real update if you have time again.
Absolutely, Chance.
And let's just see something here.
Hold on.
King of Biltong is in the house over...
On Rumble.
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And Nif Ranzel, Jeremy Brown was moved.
They don't know where.
Okay, I got that.
Paul Rose, 76. He didn't give Stargate any money.
Should he block all AI development in the US?
mRNA research happens regardless.
They're investing $500 billion.
Do you understand how many jobs that will create?
No, absolutely!
Absolutely. And so the only question is, if you're going to do something like that, optics of launching it and don't do it in a way that is going to cause suspicion and pushback from your massive base after they freshly got you elected.
There's no question.
But... That was not a confidence-inspiring presentation.
And it was actually one that is going to do more to contribute to suspicion and conspiracy theories than anything else.
We've seen this before.
We've seen it played out before.
True? Hey, look, Trudeau said the same thing.
We're going to build a Moderna vaccine facility in Lavallon in Quebec.
You know how many jobs that's going to create?
Good. We don't want the product.
In this case, there is no question there's research to be done, there's investments to be had, and there's jobs to be created.
But don't launch it in a way that is going to make people feel the way they currently feel.
And lose confidence in the man that they just elected and cause fear and suspicion that he will not look into the damage done from what Operation Warp Speed was turned into.
Now, let me see something here.
Or maybe I'm just overreacting and complaining about everything.
Now, Trump is...
Let's see.
We're not doing a compliment sandwich, but we're just going to have some fun.
Trump is...
Where is he today?
He gave a speech.
Is it the WEF?
Hold on one second here.
This was happening as we were live.
Alex Jones, Trump declares war.
On the NWO, he's at Davos Elite that their anti-human agenda is over and proceeds to talk about dismantling the terrible Obama regime.
It's not full six minutes.
It's like five minutes.
We'll walk through and commentate on this.
To praise Trump, where he's kicking some serious ass.
But where he needs to kick some serious ass starts with Fauci, goes to Burla.
Burla didn't get a pardon.
Go after Burla.
Bonkel from Moderna.
These are people who lied for profit and caused irreparable harm.
My administration is acting with unprecedented speed to fix the disasters we've inherited from a totally inept group of people and to solve every single crisis facing our country.
This begins with confronting the economic chaos caused by the failed policies of the last administration.
Over the past four years, our government racked up $8 trillion in wasteful deficit spending and inflicted nation-wrecking energy restrictions, crippling regulations, and hidden taxes like never before.
The result is the worst inflation crisis in modern history and sky-high interest rates for our citizens and even throughout the world.
Food prices and the price of almost every other thing known to mankind went through the roof.
President Biden totally lost control of what was going on in our country, but in particular with our high inflation economy and at our border.
Because of these ruinous policies, total government spending this year is $1.5 trillion higher than was projected to occur when I left office just four years ago.
Likewise, the cost of servicing the debt is more than 230% higher than was projected in 2020.
The inflation rate we are inheriting remains 50% higher than the historic target.
It was the highest inflation probably in the history of our country.
Now, in fairness, people are going to go back and blame Trump for a bit of the inflation, for the printing and the, not the bailouts, but the stimulus packages resulting from COVID.
People are going to go back and place a certain amount of the blame on Trump for the spending that occurred as a result of the shutdowns.
And they're not entirely wrong.
And they'll certainly say it's Trump's fault that the inflation occurred because of the Putin inflation, because of the war in Ukraine, because that's Trump's fault as well.
So you'll wait for the fact checkers, but calling it now, that's going to occur.
Oh, he wrongly blames inflation on Biden when inflation started as a result of COVID stimulus policies.
That's why from the moment I took office, I've taken rapid action to reverse each and every one of these radical left policies that created this calamity.
In particular with immigration, crime, and inflation.
On day one, I signed an executive order directing every member of my cabinet to marshal all powers at their disposal to defeat inflation and reduce the cost of daily life.
I imposed a federal hiring freeze, a federal regulation freeze, a foreign aid freeze, and I created the new Department of Government.
Efficiency. Let me go see what Doge is at today.
Can you appreciate it?
This is how you take back control of a country.
The amount that was pissed away, squandered, laundered in that Ukraine funding could have rebuilt Lahaina, could have rebuilt what's going to be left of Los Angeles, could have rebuilt East Palestine, North Carolina.
You imagine?
That veterans in America are taking their own lives, are dying, are suffering because their government is out of money?
Because it's just shipped 200 billion in aid, military, whatever, to Ukraine?
This is how you take back a country overnight.
And although the effects of this policy might take weeks, months, maybe even years for you to feel them, the confidence that it instills is like confidence in a market.
And the American market right now, confidence is at an all-time high.
I terminated the ridiculous and incredibly wasteful Green New Deal.
I call it the Green New Scam.
Withdrew from the...
Ooh, he should have called it the Green New Steel, not the Green New Deal.
Trump! Oh, you missed a good one there.
I don't call it the Green New Deal.
I call it the Green New Steel.
I like the way he's talking, by the way.
Paris Climate Accord and ended the insane and costly electric vehicle mandate.
We're going to let people buy the car they want to buy.
I declared a national energy emergency, and that's so important, national energy emergency to unlock the liquid gold under our feet and pave the way for rapid approvals of new energy infrastructure.
The United States has the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on Earth, and we're going to use it.
Not only will this...
Going to use it?
Going to not be dependent on Saudi Arabia and Venezuela?
Going to not be dependent on...
Russian, whatever, and going to be produced in a way that's going to be actually more environmentally friendly, more employment friendly, less human exploitive than it's being done in China or India.
It's an amazing thing.
Common sense that everybody knew, but some people hypothesize, and I think rightly so, that the Biden and the Trudeau's administrations had zero interest in actually improving the quality of life for the people they were elected to govern.
They had more globalist agendas, and it seems that that's come to an end.
This reduced the cost of virtually all goods and services.
It'll make the United States a manufacturing superpower and the world capital of artificial intelligence and crypto.
My administration has also begun the largest deregulation campaign in history, far exceeding even the record-setting efforts of my last term.
In total, the Biden administration imposed $50,000 in additional regulatory costs on the average American household over the last four years.
I have promised to eliminate 10 old regulations for every new regulation, which will soon put many thousands of dollars back in the pockets of American families.
To further unleash our economy, our majorities in the House and Senate, which we also took along with the presidency.
In case you forgot, dummycrats, in case you forgot, it was a landslide.
He only got, he didn't get over 50% of the total popular vote after we finished counting all of those wonderfully kosher ballots in California 30 days later.
Everything. Popular vote, boy, he got the popular vote.
Landside. I was going to say landfill, but that's where Biden's regime is going.
Are going to pass the largest tax cut in American history, including massive tax cuts for workers and family, and big tax cuts for domestic producers and manufacturers.
And we're working with the Democrats on getting an extension of the original Trump tax cuts, as you probably know, by just reading any paper.
My message to every business in the world is very simple.
Come make your product in America and we will give you among the lowest taxes of any nation on earth.
Can you believe?
I mean, it's like, it seems so obvious when he says it.
Jake, you are live and right in time.
It seems so obvious when Alex Jones says it, and yet somehow it's revolutionary and earth-shattering when he actually implements it.
Jake, my man, you're out of jail.
I'm on a new iPhone.
I got my earpod.
I'm heading down to Key West with my dad right here, Ned Lang, who came to pick me up outside the jail.
The night before last.
And we're so blessed, my God.
I'm out of jail.
Hold on, you said you're going to Key West.
Yeah, we're heading to Key West.
Yeah, I'm going to Key West to finish writing my book like Ernest Hemingway.
Dude, that is...
Okay, so for everybody who doesn't know who you are, this is Jake Lang, one of the January 6th political prisoners, the one who did violence.
And so for some reason, there's some politics in there that I don't care about.
Getting into that I disagree with and that I'm not going to really entertain, although I will have a question about something that happened on stream the other night.
Dude, so you look okay.
I'm going to try to look into and see if there's any, if you're not just no lingering trauma, if you have yet, you're still in a state of shock where what you've gone through over the last four years hasn't fully settled in.
No, it hasn't actually.
It may be partly because I was so busy, just goal-oriented and focused and filled with the Holy Spirit.
You know, when you have a deep prayer life and a relationship with God, plus a huge purpose that He can use you for, you can really go through anything.
Even 900 days solitary confinement seemed to just kind of drip off me like water off a duck's back.
And, you know, using some of the small things, like being able to flush the toilet instead of pressing a button with a little handle, I had a strawberry.
That strawberry was great.
Things like that just make you feel completely free.
Being surrounded by the love of my family physically is amazing, but I've had that love.
I've been able to be sustained by them and be on the phone with them so often.
It feels like four years just went like that.
Four years, six days, no trial.
All in the DC Gulag.
Well, I was moved around a lot, but all incarcerated.
It is incomprehensible.
I don't know how a human is supposed to even respond, react to that type of abuse.
Even if someone thinks you deserve it, you get out and you are now smelling fresh air.
You can go wherever the hell you want, eat whatever the hell you want, see whoever the hell you want.
What have you noticed?
I mean, it's not a joke.
What's been the biggest change, say, technologically, geographically, culturally, since you've gotten out in four years?
There's been a lot of changes to the way that people interact since COVID.
And, you know, I was just in the beginning of that, and I'm watching people now heal a little bit and society kind of heal from it.
But you can tell there's still a kind of schizo kind of mentality.
People aren't as connected and congregated as they used to be.
And, you know, in the prisons, it wasn't like that.
You're forced to, you know, 500 men in a small block and, you know, you're sitting and eating, you know, people to your left and your right inches away.
And it doesn't seem like there's that closeness that people used to really be all loving and hugging on each other.
There seems to be like some subconscious social distancing still happening.
So, yeah, I'm not that way.
I'm ready to jump into every stranger's arms I see.
I'm so happy to see smiling human beings who don't want to stab me in the throat over a roll of toilet paper.
Jake, you got out Tuesday night late, correct?
Yes, yeah, 24 hours after the pardon was signed, you know, we had the immediate release order inside that proclamation.
But the U.S. Marshals and the D.C. Gulag, you know, once these people sink their talons into you, once the Gulag and the swamp gets a hold of you, it's like they don't want to let you go.
And so it took us 24 hours to be processed and all this nonsense.
And there was even a prison assault there in the midst of that.
One of the guards, a notorious guard, Lieutenant Allen, who's been exposed by some of my other Jan Six brothers for...
Being kind of the perpetrator of the culture of oppression in that jail against the January Sixers, you know, backroom talks that he has with his staff, you know, do whatever you want, we'll look the other way kind of scenario.
Roughed me up, he cut, you know, came, I mean, nothing crazy, see a couple marks on my hands and stuff from throwing me in handcuffs.
On pardon night at 8pm, I was a free man, legally speaking, and so I packed up all my belongings.
I brought it to the front, you know, of the unit and I was ready to go.
I'm like, guys, I got paperwork here signed by President of the United States saying all charges dropped.
You know, I never was convicted of any crime.
And so I was like, my case just got dropped.
You need to be releasing me immediately.
And so they stormed in there with like seven officers, these little mini fire extinguisher cans of pepper spray trained on me saying, get back in your cell.
You won't leave till we tell you you can leave.
Just trying to get the last pound of flesh out of me.
They could, these evil people.
Threw me in handcuffs, picked me up, tossed me in my cell.
Spent another one last night in the gulag for old times sake.
I don't know if anybody's seen Viva.
You were live on the stream.
First of all, I have to thank you immensely for helping to host and be there for this indelible historic American moment.
With Ann Vandersteel and Bless News Network and Gateway Pundit and all the family of patriots.
And I don't know if you got to see me leave prison and hug Rachel and embrace my father and stuff, but it was one of the greatest moments ever.
When they stick you back in for one more night, do you sleep a minute or you're not sleeping a minute while you're in there that night?
Well... At first, I didn't because I got locked in at like 9.30, right?
They came through me in my cell and we were still expecting to be leaving that night.
So, you know, I'm staying awake.
I got my shoes on.
I got all my stuff packed ready for them to come back and unlock the door and say, oh, his arm is relying, you know, you're free to go.
But I didn't eat anything all day because I was expecting to be able to enjoy a regular human meal with, you know, my friends and family.
And so...
And another thing on top of this, I've got Christian brothers in there I love very much, guys I did Bible study with every night at 9 p.m.
I had a young man, 18-year-old Marquise that I baptized, and so I gave away everything to them, even most of my mattress, right?
It's like a common thing in prisons.
If you have a good mattress, you'll tear it in half and give somebody a portion of it.
It's like you trade mattresses.
It's like a whole entire economy.
Yeah, there's no real sleeping arrangements there.
So anyway, I gave away all of my mattress except for just like half of a thin piece and my blankets and everything.
So my last night in the Gulag, I was curled up on a half a mattress with only sheets.
And it was freezing because it was like a 10 degree bone chilling night.
And the DC Gulag was only a brick building.
So that cold air comes right through.
So I spent a night about one o'clock in the morning.
I got word from the prison guard.
He said the marshals did not sign anybody's paper.
They'll be here bright and early in the morning and they'll sign the paperwork.
You're under the marshals' custody.
So you'll go home when they get back in the morning.
And so I was like, all right, I texted my friends and family on the prison tablet.
I said, you guys, because Rachel was still outside.
And, you know, dozens of supporters and Bless News Network were streaming live.
I said, guys, go home, get some rest.
It's going to be early, a long day tomorrow.
And sure enough, it was a very long day.
We had them out.
8 a.m., we started the stream on Blessed News Network and Gateway and on your page and Ann VanderSteel and all of our amazing partners.
And by 12 hours later, I was finally released from the prison.
And at that time, we had 200,000 people live on the stream in culmination to...
No, it was wild.
There's a joke, and it's kind of funny, actually, over in our Rumble side where it says the January 6ers would have been free if they had just done the things they were accused of.
Not to make light of assault on a police officer, we've seen how that gets punished in the system of justice that existed, but not the two-tier system.
When you get out, and I need to know, this is my own personal curiosity, the first night you're sleeping out of prison.
Are you, are you, is it a, is it a, like a deep sleep or is it a shallow superficial sleep?
Like you're still fearing about being in a prison cell with other people?
And do you wake up, know where you are, think you're back in the cell?
Well, you know, just a week ago, I was laying in my bed at night on the prison tablet, watching a movie, waiting for my fiance to come home from work around 2 a.m.
And this lurching like six foot four prison guard opens up my door at 2 a.m.
I've been in prison a long time, 1,467 days.
Once the doors lock at nighttime at 10 p.m., you're pretty much secure until the morning time.
Like, that's your personal space.
This is, like, the one time that you feel like, you know, you're free from, like, bodily injury and harm while you're in prison.
And they popped the door on me last week and turned on my light and, like, came in and, like, started just, like, walking around my cell.
And they said, all right, sir, have a good night.
And my heart jumped out of my chest because the last time that happened to me, Ryan Sampsel was nearly beaten to death in the DC Gulag, and I was moved out of my cell to another cell.
I slept with rolls of newspaper around my body to protect from stabbing wounds if the guards were to come in and kill us.
And I had like a makeshift eye goggles for the pepper spray that I made.
And so the last time they busted in my door, they nearly killed one of the Jan Sixers.
Uh, and, and they assaulted me.
And so at that time at night, and so, um, after, you know, having that trauma, being in the hotel room with my fiance curled up next to me and feeling, you know, I got the, like three locks locked on the hotel room door.
I'm like, this is my castle.
I'm staying here.
I slept pretty well.
Um, you know, just weird navigating, walking around the floor without having to wear like, Shoes or slippers, you know, because of how disgusting the prison floors are and the cells and stuff.
Just the small things, being able to take a shower without shower shoes on, just standing, you know, barefoot in a shower without having to think of what kind of, you know, disgusting disease is, right?
Just a small piece of, you know, prison flip-flops between you and hepatitis C or something like that.
So the small things.
Our blessings.
And so, guys, I'll get into my mushy-gushy, inspirational, spiritual speech here, guys.
The small things that you guys take for granted, that we all take for granted every day, especially the sweet, sweet freedom of a man to just walk in a straight line without being told where to go or what to do or when to go to bed or what to eat and things of that nature are the blessings of being an American.
There's other countries where they don't have that.
That right or even that ability because they don't have food and things of that nature.
And so be proud to be an American and be willing to stand up for our country at any given moment because the second we let this thing slip out of our hands like we did in 2020 with the COVID lockdowns and then with the communist regime stolen deep state election, it gets very terrible very quickly to be a political prisoner.
I pray to God that none of you ever have to experience what we went through.
Now, you know that I'm in Florida, right?
Yeah, I'll be.
I'm heading down, so I'm going to West Palm Beach, which is right next to you in Boca, and we'll link up.
We'll go get lunch or something, and I'm going to go see my grandparents, and then I'm going to go down to Key West.
Amazing, amazing.
And tomorrow is Enrique Tario's, there's a press conference, or he's giving a press conference in Miami, so I think I'm going to try to make it down to attend that.
Awesome. Dude, it's almost surreal because I remember the first time that we ever, I don't remember where we were live, but I remember I was walking outside.
I was just about to go, I was on my way to go fishing just to fish by these ponds and I'm talking to you.
And I'm not understanding how you're in prison with access to a phone.
And then the idea that even then you were saying like, you know, we'll be out of here one day.
It was foreign and it was implausible to me at the time.
And then even when the discussion of the pardons was coming around, and the idea that Trump would actually pardon the, quote, violent ones, I was very, very skeptical and very cynical that it would actually happen, even though I firmly believe it needed to.
It is a miracle, Jake.
It's a miracle.
It's a biblical-level miracle.
A new precedent has been set in America.
We've seen...
Kind of like our own Nelson Mandela moment, but it really was like a community.
Almost all of the people in the MAGA movement, conservatives, constitutionals, all could share in this as a personal victory.
You know, we have a country where we pride ourselves.
I'll tell you what.
I was in the Brooklyn federal prison, and I'm staring out of my window at the Statue of Liberty.
Millions of people have flown from other countries, fleed from tyrannical regimes for an idea, for the idea of America, for this freedom and liberty.
And they've gone past that Statue of Liberty and what it represented to them.
And they were welcomed into our country.
And they took upon those ideals and put those on their heart.
And for me to be a political prisoner who fought for those ideals, who stood bravely with...
Millions of other Americans for those ideals and to be incarcerated looking at that, you know, and understanding that other people, foreigners, expect a certain level of freedom, expect a certain way to be treated as an American, and I wasn't being treated that way, was something to me that was, it hurt me gravely.
It hurt me deeply.
But now to be on the other side and say, America, even...
It just took one man at the very highest level.
All of the judicial institutions failed us.
All of the executive institutions, the FBI and the prosecutor's office and whatnot, they failed us.
But there was one man at the top of the executive institution that was able to save us.
And the American experiment literally almost felt it.
It kind of feels like it was the last thread that held us on and made people I guess, believe again in America because we almost lost all hope in this country as a society.
Watching the weaponization of our federal institutions, one after another, crumble to this lawfare, two-tiered justice, political witch hunts, and everything was corrupted.
The judges were corrupted.
The prosecutors were corrupted.
The DOJ was corrupted.
The FBI was corrupted.
The Joint Terrorism Task Force was corrupted.
Just by the grace of God, we had one man to kind of restore this blessing to our whole country.
The trust that people can now regain is going to be much bigger than Donald Trump.
When people believe in our country again and believe in our institutions, that's what made America great to begin with.
And so that's MAGA right there.
That's why we were sacred institutions, the highest standard in the world.
And now, God forbid, one day...
People would have been saying, instead of a Soviet show trial, they would have said, that's an American show trial, right?
Because that's what we were having, and we saved ourselves from that.
It's now time we have Trump, but we need to bring back the sacred honor of our institution so that we can point fingers over across the pond and say, Soviet show trial, instead of them pointing fingers over to us and saying, American show trial.
We had a standard of excellence here in America, and we need to return to that standard.
That's what my goal, and I know many Jan Sixers is, including Enrique, to hold these people accountable to this standard.
There's a standard that we must hold each other accountable to if we want to make America great again.
The term I have is Biden show trials because that one we can still adopt without desecrating and denigrating the American experience.
So call them Biden show trials because they will always be and remain Biden show trials.
Buffalo Betsy, I won't keep you too long, but I want to ask you this one.
Is anyone discussing taking civil rights lawsuits for how the Jan Sixers were incarcerated?
Is Barnes interested?
Obviously a lot of people are going to be filing claims now, if not everybody.
Yeah, so my new organization, Federal Watchdog, has orchestrated a $50 billion lawsuit with over 600 Jan 6 plaintiffs, already signed up onto it.
I have multiple different high power attorneys, some attorneys' names that you guys will probably know.
We haven't announced them yet.
They're currently courting us, honestly, because you go four years and six days inside a prison cell.
Without being convicted and then your charges are dropped.
I mean, we're talking about tens of millions of dollars for myself.
Now, you multiply that out by, you know, 1,000 to 1,500 people somewhere about there that we're going to get signed on to this lawsuit.
We're talking about $50 billion, you know, up to, you know, you aim high in a lawsuit, right?
And then on order to get the quickest possible settlement, then you come to some type of middle ground.
You say $50 billion, right?
Which would turn out to be like $50 million per person for a thousand people.
And then they come counter back at you, you know, oh, you guys are $1 billion.
And then we say, how about $10 billion?
And then everybody walks out of there with, you know, about $5-10 million.
And that's what we deserve.
I mean, people have had their lives destroyed, their reputations destroyed.
Talk about these two ladies, right?
Rudy Giuliani allegedly destroyed their reputation.
They were worth nothing to begin with.
But they were getting World Series rings and condos.
They were awarded $160 million.
Look, when they have to show damages, I won't say they were worth nothing.
They did not suffer $160 million worth of damages.
And I'm just looking it up, Jake, as you talk.
For the Japanese internment, the claims for over 82,000 people totaled, I guess in today's dollars, $1.6 billion.
But the bottom line is...
First of all, your charges were dropped, so you have not been and never will be convicted of anything as relates to January 6th.
Amen. Amen.
And so, there are others that have suffered similarly than I have.
900 days solitary confinement.
And so, you know, inside this lawsuit, what we're doing is we're creating different classes and different tiers.
Because some Jan Sixers have gone through absolute, you know, the worst of the worst, like myself.
You know, even Ryan Samsel being beaten inside the prison cell.
Ronald McAbee being pepper sprayed and hog tied and whatnot.
And then you have other people that have suffered needlessly, to say the least.
But also, some of them had home detention and only probation and whatnot.
And their characters were still misaligned.
And their lives were still, obviously, and their families were still strained by the situation.
So some people are going to be receiving, you know, Larger, you know, sums that have spent, you know, years and years incarcerated unjustly.
And then other people were receiving, you know, just compensation for there.
So we've got a lot of work to do.
Everybody's doing, you know, signed affidavits, sworn affidavits of, you know, their statement of facts, what they went through.
And so we're talking about...
Gathering information, the storyline of a thousand people over four years of torture, it is a massive undertaking.
So I got to give my plug here right now because we are fundraising for this right now.
This effort is going to take about two years.
I'll share the link afterwards, but I'll bring it up right now.
What's the website?
So j6rebuild.com is part of the whole initiative.
It's a federal watchdog organization.
j6rebuild.com is also not just tackling the legal efforts, but also And you can play that video if you'd like.
It's a great little video there.
I'll play it after when you sign off.
And it's good.
Now, when I first saw it, it was at $28,000.
Last time I checked, it was at $60,000.
And now, so that people get suspicious and start saying things.
Created by Jake Lang.
Funds will be received by Jake Lang.
This is not a personal give-send-go.
I've never had a personal give-send-go.
I've been so blessed by my father here.
Ned Lang is taking care of my legal bills and my commissary and, you know, costs related to January 6th for four years now.
And so my heart had always been pointed towards those who do not have such a strong support structure to take care of the legal costs.
We started the legal fund, right?
We took care of over 60 Jan Sixers, helping them earn these expert witnesses, file lawsuits and whatnot.
We had the SponsorJ6.com fund that was able to raise I mean, an incredible sum of money on a monthly basis with subscriptions in order to maintain a commissary donation because every month...
Am I here, brother?
Yeah, it's getting a little glitchy and you blacked out for a second, but I think you're back.
Okay. And so, you know, we had to sponsor J6.com fund, which was our commissary kind of initiative that we started.
And so...
You know, my heart's always been pointed towards taking care of these guys that have sacrificed for our country.
And we're going to continue to do that.
The J6 Life Rebuilding Fund is another great project that we started with my amazing team.
We've got like 30 volunteers who have been working.
Think about this.
We've got 250 guys in prison.
And in order to take the money from the sponsor J6 and the other gifts and goes and whatnot.
And put $100 a month on each one of their commissary accounts, we've needed to use like 30 different Western Union accounts, all on different people's social security numbers and distribute the funds from my account and send them checks and VEMOs and stuff so that they get the money and can then put it into the prisoners' accounts.
It was this crazy, organizational, multi-faceted process.
That we had to do it to ensure that every Jan Sixer received $100 a month on their commissary, which was something that we aimed to do and we were able to do with my organizations.
And so we have a massive community effort, many eyes watching what we're doing.
We have spreadsheets and tables and put out transparency reports on Gateway Pundit often.
I've sent you some of them as well, Viva.
And so we do this because we're led by God to do it, and we want to make sure that...
Not only do the Jan Sixers receive what they need, but the American people can put their trust in.
I'm a Jan Sixer myself, and I wanted to become a place where people could trust.
And so it's not just words, it's action.
We put out transparency reports.
I got links.
If you just go to gatewaypundit.com and type in J6 transparency, you will see the J6 legal funds, transparency reports, and all my stuff.
So, you know, haters can hate, but...
The numbers speak for themselves, and we do everything on the up and up.
Incredible, Jake.
Okay, so call me when you come down through Boca.
If we can't meet on the way down, we'll meet on the way back up, but we will meet imminently, and we'll have a good cup of coffee or something.
Amen. Amen.
Viva, you've been a rock star for us.
There are many people that are hopping onto the J6 bandwagon now, but you're not one of them.
You've been pulling the cart like an oxen for many, many years now.
I didn't think you'd get out.
I didn't think Enrique would get out.
I didn't think the Proud Boys would get out.
Well, there is something in the spiritual realm that we say in a Christian philosophy.
We say we walk by faith and not by sight.
And if you looked at our situation by sight, by the human logical perspective, we were surrounded by four walls, 100 percent conviction rate in D.C., very serious charges.
Donald Trump was almost being assassinated left and right.
It looked like the world was crumbling in on us.
But God had orchestrated a path.
He had given us a blessing to keep Donald Trump safe, to keep the American people's hearts focused on what's right.
I never lost hope or faith.
I knew my father in heaven.
Heard my cries from the prison cell, all those prayers, all those tears, and he had a plan for me.
And promises made, promises kept by both President Trump and by Father God.
So I'm very grateful to the Lord above.
Amazing, Jake.
All right, so thank you for the update.
We'll talk offline and we'll meet up in the coming days.
God bless you.
God bless you, my friend.
Thank you very much.
You too.
That's amazing.
That's amazing.
I actually want to now go find that verse that he's talking about because it's going to get us back to the beginning of the show and we're talking about Trump now, but had Trump been killed that day, these men would still be in jail for the rest of their lives.
It was a rippling effect from an initial miracle that is having miraculous ripple effects as a result of the initial miraculous ripple.
And as I say that, my paralyzed dog nudges her way back into the office, into the home studio.
Yeah, that day when Trump was, by all logical, rational, scientific accounts, set up to be murdered live on television.
And by the grace of God, he wasn't.
But not because of anything that the Secret Service did on that day.
This is what's driving me crazy.
Trump has appointed to the head of the Secret Service.
His name is Sean.
Curran. Who is the man in the photo?
Wearing the sunglasses.
Agent who shielded Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania to lead...
Did I just shut down the stream?
No, I didn't.
Here we go.
Agent who shielded Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania to lead Secret Service.
President Donald Trump tapped Sean Curran, the head of his personal security detail, to lead the Secret Service.
We're going to get into this.
And I want to preface this with a number of things.
Going back to Gantet's comment about being out of my depth.
I've never served.
I've never been a bodyguard.
My knowledge of firearms is very limited.
But I consider myself to be a rational, logical, hypochondriac, neurotic, obsessive-compulsive disorder individual.
Which means that, you know, if the objective, and it's a no-fail objective, no-fail mission, is to protect somebody, you scope out the angles.
As a father, your no-fail mission is to protect your children.
And when you're a neurotic, maniacal, hypo-contract like myself, you go into a movie theater, if you're in my head, you're like, okay, where do we sit?
Where's the exit?
Where's the fire exit?
Where's the other exit?
Where are all the exits?
If something happens, where do I want to be?
And as the movie's going on, you're barely able to enjoy the movie, which is why I don't go to theaters anymore, because you're like, okay, what was that noise, and do we have to start making a beeline for the exit?
Sean Curran jumped on Trump and shielded him, as did the other Secret Service members as well.
By that point, in the logical scientific universe that was supposed to transpire, Trump would have already been dead.
By that point, when they shielded him, it was by a divine intervention that he didn't have his head taken off at that moment.
So the shielding him, I'm sort of analogizing it to the reckless driver who then bravely jumps into the car to pull out a passenger.
At that point in time, the system had failed.
And it's not as a result of what anything anyone on the Secret Service did that Trump survived.
It was an act of God.
So it's, you know, the reckless driving, someone who's driving too fast, not paying attention, crashes their car.
All right, you run into that burning car and you pull out the passengers, you're brave, you're heroic, but you've already screwed up.
So by the time that Sean Curran and the others jumped on Trump, he would have already been dead if things had happened without that divine intervention.
So in this commendable as that is, the fact that the shots came off, albeit not entirely on Sean Curran's responsibility whatsoever, There were system failures there that are inexcusable.
And Sean Curran was head of his Secret Service detail, but not in charge of planning that, you know, that laying out, scoping the events that day.
Fine. If you're protecting Trump and your zero-fail mission is to protect Trump, you have to have a system in there and you have to personally come on and say, who's on that roof?
I can see that roof.
Who's got it?
If you don't do that, there's been a failure.
If you say, someone's on it, don't worry.
Okay, there's been a failure.
Set aside the roof.
We know of the timeline now.
We know that there were two minutes where they knew that that crooks kid was on the roof trying to gain access to the roof with a gun.
Oh, if that didn't get immediately relayed to Secret Service, somebody failed.
And it looks like the failures came from the highest ends on all aspects of this.
And so, it's not a question.
Everybody knows I love Bongino.
He's... One of the more unsung heroes of Trump's election.
I think some of the unsung heroes, at least on the mainstream level, Pavlovsky, Rumble, Bongino.
War Room gets its accolades, but potentially unsung as well, although everybody knows Bannon.
Bongino is one of them.
He is what I was once called, and I love it, he's a force multiplier of knowledge, of insight, of movement, of activism.
Now, I like it, period, full stop.
There was people rumoring that he's going to be tapped because he was highlighting the failures, putting on blast the failures, the lack of accountability at all levels of that debacle of a setup to be publicly executed day in Butler.
Whether or not I wanted him or would have been happier or think he's more up for the job, it doesn't seem that this appointment is going to do what is necessary to expose The systemic, systematic corruption and incompetence that allowed those events of that day to occur.
I have no doubt that Sean Curran is a good person.
Bongino sings his praises on today's show.
But these were the people who were at the helm of a zero-fail operation and it failed miserably.
And if it had gone the way it should have, it would have in any other universe.
Trump would be dead right now, and you would have had Sean Curran lying over Trump's deceased body.
Trump, that being said, bottom line, that being said, it's Trump's decision, and it's the one that impacts him the most directly, the most intimately, the most personally.
And so you can't really second-guess his choice on this.
It's his choice.
That being said, it's beyond Trump as well, because this has to do with all of America.
This has to do with restoring America.
This has to do with the 80 million people, 76 million people who voted for Trump.
Who want to see him not just survive, but thrive.
Who want to see him fulfill his promises and restore American greatness.
So he does owe it also to them to ensure that he is in the best possible hands for his personal security and safety.
And there are a lot of people who are not convinced that by giving a promotion to the man who was head of the Secret Service D till that day, that either A didn't go out personally and say, who's on that roof?
Because it's the nearest roof.
Unsecured. Who didn't implement or make sure there was in existence a line of command, a chain of communication, so that for the two minutes when they knew that that kid was on the roof, that could get relayed to Trump and they just don't bring him out.
And then, you know, I appreciate the moment.
And it's the most iconic photo potentially in American history.
And people say, you know, he shielded him afterwards.
I... How did they know that there was only one shooter?
It's been however many months and nobody's talking about it anymore, but there are still people who are offering theories that there were more than one shooter.
How in the moment, three seconds after, and I appreciate Trump is a stubborn man and wanted to assure the crowd he was alive and he was going to fight, but to leave him exposed again?
Oh, the shooter's dead.
We know it.
It's been 10 seconds.
So we've got legitimate questions, legitimate concerns about everything that went down at all levels.
And to see the person who...
What was he?
His position was...
It wasn't a nothing position.
Sean Curran position.
If I can possibly type things out with my fat fingers.
That's not it.
Sean Curran position.
Secret. He was head of the detail.
Sean Caron has been appointed by President Trump as the Director of the United States Secret Service.
This appointment was announced January.
He had served in the Secret Service for over two decades, who previously was the head of Trump's personal security detail.
You won't blame people who are not inspired with confidence to see the person who was the head of his Secret Service detail.
Given the events of that day, be appointed.
But who knows?
Trump knows best.
And in as much as it's in his best interest in every literal sense, he also has an obligation to live long and prosper and make sure that America returns to greatness and to do everything in his power to make sure that no one, no unhinged lunatic gets in the way of that.
And I hope my take on that is not wildly inappropriate.
Who am I to judge?
But I have my thoughts and I have my concerns and I was following that quite closely.
And from the beginning it was there need to be consequences for the failures of that day, not promotions.
But if Trump trusts him, that should be good for the rest of us.
Although it's not really good enough for me.
But whatever.
I will hope that it's the best possible choice and that it proves to be the best possible choice.
am David.
IamDavid61 says, again, God made me a witness.
Who else was blessed to see these historic events in real time?
It's like he survived not as a result of anything, anyone, anywhere on that day, any human in his protective detail did on that day.
In fact, quite to the contrary, the astronomical...
Failures of that day could not have been an accident, and the fact that he didn't get killed that day is itself a bona fide, according to Hoyle, miracle.
Okay. What do we got here?
Looking up here.
Trump's detail is not responsible for the site.
Buckle brush.
Trump's detail is not responsible for the site.
True. Are they responsible for when he takes the stage?
Are they responsible for ensuring that an immediate risk gets received by his detail?
It's like, well, they're not responsible for the site.
It shouldn't have happened, and it's a failure at every level.
It's like saying Gavin Newsom is not responsible for the water hydrants.
At some point in time, everyone's responsible at some stage here.
So is the head of his detail...
Supposed to give the okay the clear to take Trump out on stage, yes or no?
And if it's a yes, then it's their obligation to make sure it's safe, and or if it's not safe, that they get immediate real-time notification of the unsafeness so they can place him in a holding position, whatever it's called, in the holding room, and not bring him out to be shot live on livestream in eight thousandths of a frame with that guy who was up there filming everything.
Yeah, he wasn't in charge of clearing the site.
Okay, was he in charge of bringing Trump up to make sure that it was safe when he did so?
Yes or no?
And if the answer is yes, then people failed.
Let's see what else we Everyone, get over it.
I'm not reading that.
Anyone who understands guns even slightly knows they could have planned a bullet graze.
Oh, okay.
If we're getting into the...
If we're getting into the...
It's an amazing thing.
The conspiracy.
I shouldn't laugh because I guess anything's possible.
But some things are more absurd than others.
Okay. What else do we have?
Oh, yeah.
We got...
Speaking of, you know, other...
We're going to save that one.
We're going to save that one for over in our locals community.
Sam Altman, who I don't trust as far as I can throw him.
Puts out one tweet and thinks he's going to undo six years of tweets or eight years of tweets.
Let me see what's going on here.
Yeah, people want to believe it was a set, not a set, that's what I'm looking for.
Staged. People want to believe it's staged?
So long as that belief that you espouse doesn't harm me or anyone else on Earth, enjoy that thought.
Although you better be careful because that's apparently a $1.6 billion violent event denial.
Okay, don't forget.
Hold on a second.
I'm going to save something else.
Speaking of spirituality for locals, we're going to have a little more fun here.
Sam Altman, people!
Sam Altman, who is...
AI is cool, I guess.
Okay, whatever.
Sam Altman put out this tweet.
It's so amazing.
Watching POTUS more carefully recently has really changed my perspective on him.
I wish I had done more of my own thinking and definitely fell into the NPC trap.
That's exactly what an NPC in today's version would say, Sam.
I really thought...
Hello, children.
I wish I had paid more attention back in the day.
I was sure an NPC then, wasn't my kids?
I'm not going to agree with him on everything, but I think he will be incredible for the country in many ways.
You know what?
Change one word, and this all makes sense.
He'll be incredible for me in many ways.
This is Sam Altman, who, from what I understand, doesn't have exactly the best reputation for his origins in...
The development of AI.
I can't take a position on it because I definitely do not have the depth of knowledge of that yet.
But you have to illustrate this.
What's he talking about here?
Oh, I wish I had done more of my own thinking.
I definitely fell into the NPC job.
I'm not going to close this window because I want to come back to it in a second.
What might he be thinking?
Oh, he's probably thinking of his tweets from 2016 and beyond.
Where he put out some of the most insanely idiotic tweets.
This was my reply to him.
This is you, Sam?
Get the frick out.
That's not a swear.
Grandma Edna?
That was a frick.
Not an F. Thank you, David.
That's much better.
You are a scoundrel and always will be.
You just know where you need to turn now to line your pockets.
Look at these.
These are not nothing accusations, people.
This is not, oh, I was sure.
No, this is not I was an NPC.
This was I was an asshole.
This was my judgment was not just superficial in research.
It was bad judgment that at this stage of my life is pretty hardwired.
And not beyond redemption.
Who the hell am I to say that anyone's beyond redemption?
But the level of the rectification is directly commensurate to the egregiousness of the violation.
And I've said this, you accuse someone wrongly and seriously of being a racist, a sexist, a misogynist, a bigot, an insurrectionist?
You accuse them of things that...
Undermine their worth as a human?
You'd better be damn sure that you're right about it and that you're not just, oh, I'm not just not doing my research.
Oh, when I called him a racist and a sexist and it disgusts me, I just hadn't done my research.
I was sure an NPC back then.
But the way to make it better is not to shun all of his supporters.
Lisa, saving grace there.
What was the other one that he had here?
Sam Altman.
This was from a blog that he wrote.
I'm going to say something very unpopular in my role.
Trump is right about some big things.
Okay, he's right about the Americans are getting screwed by the system.
He's right the economy is growing fast enough.
Yada, yada, yada.
But Trump is wrong about the more important part.
How to fix these problems.
Many of his proposals, such as they are, are as wrong as they're difficult to even respond to.
Even more dangerous, though, is the way he's wrong.
He is not merely irresponsible.
He is irresponsible in the way dictators are.
Trump's casual racism, misogyny, and conspiracy theories are without precedent among major presidential nominees.
This might be the most tempered of the bunch.
I am voting for you.
This is 2016.
He's evolved.
What's evolved?
What he knows is good for business now that Trump has gotten elected?
I'm voting against Trump because I believe the principles he stands for represent an unacceptable threat to America.
I think he's abusive, erratic, and prone to fits of rage.
I think he's unfit to be president and would be a threat to national security.
Thiel is a high-profile supporter of Trump.
I disagree with this.
YC is not going to fire someone for supporting a...
What is YC is not going to?
I don't know what that means.
And then more of it.
So the issue is this.
With Zuckerberg, Has his coming to Trump moment.
I don't believe it.
Period. I don't believe that he showed good judgment when he made Facebook or whatever the hell it was face swap back in the day.
I was always about free speech.
I was about giving frat boys the ability to rate other chicks.
He was never benevolent.
I think at some point in time your being is sort of hardwired.
You've developed as a human and you are either someone who has...
Fundamentally bad judgment, in which case you're never to be trusted in the future.
You might be a nice guy.
You might be able to do certain things.
You're programmed.
You've developed and your brain is the way it is.
Barring some metaphysical metamorphosis, at some point you are who you are and people aren't going to change.
And this is true.
People who I thought were assholes 25 years ago, they're still assholes.
And people who were good 25 years ago, unless something happened to them, by and large are still good.
Zuckerberg, as far as I can tell, was never good.
He screwed his buddies out of business.
He started a very, very disgusting...
I mean, I don't really think it's that bad, because whatever.
Arguably immoral business.
And now he's had his coming-to-Trump moment because he sees that Elon Musk is cool and hanging with the cool folks.
Dana White's hanging with the cool folks.
Chris Pavlovsky is the respected tech guy.
And Zuck is not.
And it's the same thing for Altman.
Once opportunistic, pretty much always opportunistic, and if he's had a revelation, and he truly, truly has, it's going to take more than, what was his last tweet?
I wish I had been less of an NP.
No, I'm sorry.
It's going to take a few years of behavior to show that you are sincere in your beliefs and sincere in your convictions and sincere in your transformation.
And right now, it's just an opportunistic tweet to not be left out of this AI slush fund bandwagon, and I don't trust him as far as I could throw him.
And I'm fairly certain that's not an unfair assessment.
Riven, you PL RevenUPL6? I'm not reading that out loud.
Can I ask a law question about Canadian law?
And Justin Trudeau says Woody08.
Ask away.
If I see it, I'll get to it.
That is the show, but I do have a Bernie Sanders video for locals, and I'm going to talk.
You want to talk metaphysics?
We're going to talk about God.
The atheists...
What I'm understanding now is the atheists' refusal by their...
It's the short circuit in their brain.
They fundamentally believe in God, but they refuse to accept it because they've convinced themselves that God doesn't exist.
So therefore their belief in God has to be a belief in something else.
And that is it.
Everybody, before you leave, make sure that you've hit the subscription button.
Oh, by the way, just so...
Everybody knows.
Let me get shameless plug yet again.
Louis the Lobster.
I'm going to give an update on Sunday.
How many copies we sold this week?
It's not a thousand, but thank goodness it's not only ten.
Let me see something here.
Let me see something here.
Louis the Lobster Returns to the Sea is a children's book that I wrote, and I like it.
What the heck is this?
Go to Amazon.
$14.99.
Hold on a second.
I want to show everybody.
I'm just going to get the link because I'm stupid.
Louie, the lobster returns to the sea.
Amazon, get the link so I can give it to all of you.
Make sure that you've subscribed, have notifications turned on.
Viva Fry on Twitter.
If you ain't following me there, you're missing out.
Link here and share the screen.
So you can see Louis the Lobster in all his glory.
Illustrated by Abigail Martin, the daughter of a member of our Locals community.
And it's a good story.
Oh, I can't share anymore because my thing is randomly...
Randomly decided.
Randomly decided to stop sharing because that's...
Here we go.
There we go.
Louis the Lobster, people.
Returns to the Sea by David Frye.
Illustrated. By Abigail Martin.
Just looking at that lobster right now is making me want to go to the local seafood store.
And Viva Fry if you want to get some merch.
Or shirts.
Everybody needs a shirt.
Everybody needs a coffee cup.
Why not?
Support the creator.
It's a little bit...
It's not dollar store stuff, but you can get some good stuff.
Friends, don't let friends vote Democrat.
And that is it, people.
We've done good.
We're going to go over to Viva Barnes Law.
He looks delicious.
I always think of the episode of The Simpsons.
Except Louie the Lobster doesn't end up with me giving him a hot bath and eating him.
But that episode was hilarious.
Okay, we're done.
Let me give everybody the link to Locals if you're coming.
If you're not coming, stay tuned for tomorrow because I am going to be at Enrique Tarrio's press conference in Miami.
I don't know if I'm allowed to disclose in the location.
I'm going to see if I can live stream while I'm down there.
But it's going to be good.
I'm going to get to meet the member of a Canadian designated terrorist organization, people.
I may never be allowed back into Canada again.
I just had an idea.
All right.
Get your butts on over if you're coming in.
If you're not, you'll miss the after party and I'll see you tomorrow.
So there will be a live stream tomorrow.
I don't know when, but it's going to happen.
So now we are ending and we're going to go over to Viva Barnes Law.
.locals.com Rumble.
Thank you for being here.
Peace out.
Share, snip, clip, and together we shall grow.
Thank you all for being here, and I will see Locals in 30...
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