Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
So we were talking about the eleven pillars of society
that the globalists have targeted for destruction or collapse in
order to usher in a new world order. And these
came to you in a download back in twenty twenty four.
But why call them pillars? When I think of pillars,
I think of like even if just a few of
(00:25):
them fall, that could be catastrophic.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Yeah, well, the pillar was like the thing that I
just had this sense of, like, these things are holding
up society, and so I almost had this image of
like one of those old those Greek buildings you see,
you know, with all those pillars that are kind of
close together in the architecture, and so yeah, just kind
(00:51):
of like these pillars cracking, you know. And that's actually
one of the images in the book. You know. The
book also has dozens of graphics that are that are
just you know, black and white images, and that's one
of them. But yeah, it's just the sense that these
things are holding up society and you need all of them,
(01:13):
but they're all being worked on to bring them down.
Pillars the best word I can I can think of
that just describes that that these things are vital and
their preserving society.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
All Right, we discussed borders, we discussed banking and finance
a little bit. Didn't even skim the surface really, But
when we move on, I want to talk about privacy
because this, to me is kind of a generational thing.
And when you talk to people of a certain vintage,
obviously they covered their privacy. In fact, I think, you know,
(01:47):
as I get older, I want to go back to
a flip phone. I want to I really, you know,
I treasure privacy. You know, you talk to younger people,
people in university, it doesn't even register. I mean, what
do you mean privacy? What do you mean? Yeah, you
(02:08):
know we're being surveilled, yes, so what so what? They
don't seem to care.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Yeah, I think I think they don't get it because
they haven't been around long enough to see how how
governments can abuse that privilege, you know, invade their privacy.
I mean the framers of the Constitution, you know, put
it right in there, you know, the right not to
have unreasonable search and seizure, you know, and yet here
(02:37):
we are, you know, our emails being read by technology
every day. You know, we got cameras on every corner
tracking us, you know, have facial recognition all over the
place getting worse and worse. And it's you know, the
right to be left alone by your government, the right
not to have this intrusion, not to have this kind
(02:58):
of big brother kind of leering over us, so to speak.
You know, that's a valuable thing, and it's it's valuable
if you if you understand that governments have abused that
privacy for you know, for centuries, and we've been lucky
enough to live in a society where we haven't felt
the impact of that. But like in the UK, they're
(03:22):
already feeling the impact of it. I mean it's like
I said, these plans are going on all over the
free world, but in the UK. I just had a
podcast with Catherine Edwards from the UK and she describes
people being arrested for their Facebook posts, literally arrested for
their Facebook posts. And these aren't even mean posts. I mean,
(03:45):
these are posts that we would consider pretty normal. But
like if if the government determines that what you're saying
is causing someone distress, that's enough for them to come
and arrestue. And people have been arrested, I think I
read that roughly twelve percent of the government inquiries have
(04:06):
resulted in arrest for for what we would call free
speech here in America.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
But we're sold this line that we have to give
up some privacy in order to maintain security safety.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
How do you respond to that, I say, BS, I
think that is way overdone. I mean, it was abused
by you know, George Bush with the that you know
September eleventh, two thousand and one, became the excuse to
unleash this you know private this you know privacy, I know,
(04:49):
just be just being raided out of the excuse that
there's foreigners who want to destroy us and therefore we
have to intercept all these communications. And then that just
became an excuse for the government to start surveiling its
own citizens. I mean, love them or hate them. I mean,
the fact is the Trump organization, before he became president
(05:12):
the first time, was surveiled, you know, way beyond what
would be legal, and not just him, but all kinds
of members of his team. And it turned out it
was all nothing. It was all just government abuse. There
was no there there. But you know, they they were
(05:32):
capturing everything for all kinds of people in his circle,
because the way the laws are written, if we can
get if we can get the excuse that we think
you're doing something with a foreign power, the whole Russia
Russia Russia hoax thing, then that gives us the excuse
to surveil you and everyone in your orbit. And that's
(05:53):
exactly what they did. So the point is it can
be abused. That's the danger of it, that it becomes
an excuse to just dig and dig and you know,
like like they used to say in the Soviet Union,
show me the man and I'll find the crime. Yeah,
it's it's that kind of thing. That's the danger, right.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
But I just wanted to bring it back to privacy
for a moment because in many respects, haven't we done
this to ourselves? I mean we with social media, we
post everything about ourselves on Facebook and Instagram. Uh, it's
it's all out there. We did this to ourselves, didn't we?
Speaker 3 (06:28):
We did, But they made it so convenient that it
was this slow roll of just utter convenience, you know
what I mean. You remember the the iPhones, you know,
used to have the thumb print thing, you know, so
we gave that away. Now we're giving away our facial recognition.
And like I said, you go on the turnpike here
(06:48):
in the States, and most of them it's just you know,
drive on through. If you don't have the if you
don't have the thing that you paid for, the electronic
gadget to transponder, Yeah, don't, don't worry about it. We'll
send you a bill. We'll read your license plate and
send you a bill. We know who you are. So yeah,
just a slow roll of convenience. And it's just tempting
(07:10):
to just, you know, the frog gets boiled a little
bit at a time, just keep turning the heat up.
That's kind of what it feels like in a way.
Speaker 4 (07:19):
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Speaker 5 (07:22):
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Speaker 4 (07:26):
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Speaker 5 (07:40):
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Speaker 4 (07:47):
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Speaker 1 (08:16):
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Speaker 1 (08:23):
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Speaker 3 (08:25):
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Speaker 2 (08:50):
All right, another of the eleven pillars. And again we're
discussing the globalist plan to collapse everything, sure in a
new world order. Obvious, obviously we have to get to
this one. This is so crucial food supply. What are
the what are the globalists doing specifically with the food supply?
Speaker 3 (09:10):
Yeah, no, this it really goes into this with the book,
and you can get into the q R codes. But
it's a parallel between the US and Europe, and it's
a combination of things. Number One, taking farm farms offline.
So just for example, the Netherlands is the number two
(09:30):
exporter of food in the world, and their their goal
is to take three thousand farms offline under the excuse
of climate change and global warming and you know carbon
and they've been taking them offline. There's been you can
get in the in the book, there's a QR code
(09:53):
to a video of the farmers basically rioting, driving their
tractors through the streets of these cities, you know, to
protest this. There was even one where one of the
you know, they were shot at by the police. And
but you know, in this country, Bill Gates is the
(10:13):
largest owner of farmland. I think he has farmland. I
think it was across eighteen states, if I remember correctly,
and a lot of the times this farmland is just
going offline. He doesn't buy it, apparently to con to,
you know, to get the farming out of it. He's
he's taken these these farms offline. And one of the
(10:35):
most alarming things I saw was the food fires at
at at different farms and and you know, especially chickens
process plants.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
Yeah, there was several years ago.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
Yes, yeah, And what I found was doing the research
in in twenty twenty one, there was fifteen fires, like
significant fires at these In the first half of twenty
twenty two there was ninety, so it went from an
average of less than about one a month to fifteen
(11:14):
a month. And the book goes through the stats on
these where there's hundreds of thousands of chickens being taken
off line, destroyed either through fires or through what I
call fake PCR tests where they crank up the sensitivity
the instrument and they test a chicken and said, yep,
(11:35):
that chicken has some kind of bird flu. Call the
entire herd or the entire flock, I guess you say,
with birds. But the Trump administration put an end to
that insanity, and that's why the you know, the egg
prices went from eight dollars a dozen back down to
the normal ranges because the supply came back after they
(11:58):
ended that policy. But you can see the and and
it's very similar across Europe, the US, and Australia, in
Canada and some in some cases too.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
What do they intend for us to eat if they
take all of these chickens offline crickets?
Speaker 3 (12:16):
Yeah, well they do have the bug factories cranking them up.
Bill Gates again, of course, no surprise. You know, he's
into the fake meat. They also have that he made
a statement that he would like to see all of
the First world move over to synthetic beef. In the
(12:37):
in the World Economic Forum, they're Agenda twenty thirty.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
You know.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
They they say you will eat much less meat and
an occasional treat, not not a normal, not a regular thing.
That's one of their statements that's been taken down now,
but it's in the book. That's one of the goals
of the World Economic Forum, which is basically you can
call it.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
The u N.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
They're hand in hand and these are high level goals
that they have for us. The thing is not. Most
people just won't take it seriously because we have this
resistance to things that sound out landish. But if the
people in power are saying that's the plan, you better
believe that's the plan. At least they want to they
want to make it happen. So we have to call normal.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
See bias normal Norman bias. So this is I think
where the digital currency may come in in terms of
controlling how much red meat you eat if you go
to the store. And again, I think that's where these
AI data centers will come in as well, because they've
got to figure out, you know, track people's movements, track
people's behaviors. You're going to need an incredible amount of
(13:45):
data in order to do that. So if you go
to the store and you've you've already surpassed your daily
monthly intake of red meat, your digital currency will be
shut off and you won't be able to pay for
that at the cash register.
Speaker 3 (14:00):
That's right, That's exactly how it works.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
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