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February 20, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I want to dare touch my phone while I was
driving out here, but you've got me oh so overwhelmed
by the national days to celebrate that, I'm going to
try and pick two. I'll go with women in jeans
and muffins. They kind of go together, you know.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Driving The great thing about this audience is they're just
as immature as we are. Totally totally that they're.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Just men and women because they're basically bad.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Yeah, oh good? Agree? Why do I spend and in
order amount of time talking about things like energy and
the Constitution? For example, yesterday we had uh probably an
hour and a half of a con law class about
the unitary executive and how the Supreme Court as an

(00:54):
opportunity to to deliver a a kill shot to the
administrative state. Or why do I spend as much time
as I am today on energy? Because those two things
together give us the life that we have today. Now

(01:16):
I know this, this life isn't perfect, but we don't
live in a utopia. But compared to the rest of
the world, they look at us as a utopia. They
look at our standard of living. They look and I
know that we're big, we're bold, we're brash, we're obnoxious

(01:37):
at times, we are obnoxious Americans, but we've earned it,
we've worked for it, and we've shown the world the way. Now.
I just I would say all the way back to
last June, or maybe before that. I think was wasn't

(02:00):
it June when we had the first debate between Biden
and and Trump. It was so depressing because it was like,
good grief, this this old fart cannot win again. And
I'm referring to the Biden old fart, not to Trump
old fart. And then you you listen to Trump, and

(02:21):
you and you think about Trump one point oh. And
while there were a lot of good things about Trump
one point oh, there were a lot of bad things
about Trump one point oh too. But then we have
an election that's that is an amazing election in terms
of the Electoral college, in terms of the popular vote,
and then Trump two point oh shows up and it's like,

(02:42):
holy cow, we're really upsetting the apple cart, which is
what we wanted in which which is what we're getting.
And so now after just you know, the four years
of a well, go all the way back to go
all the way back to Bush forty one, from Bush

(03:05):
forty one, all the way up to including Trump to
one point. Oh, although there were some good things in
there wasn't anything good in the Obama administration. There was
anything good in the Clinton administration. There wasn't really anything
good in the George HW. Bush administration. There really was
anything good. Then there were some things good in the
Trump one point, oh, in terms of like deregulation. And

(03:27):
the world was at peace for those four years. But
then we had COVID and we trolled, and Trump, you know,
listening to Burk's and FUCI, totally f that up, and
then E fed it up, and then Biden comes along
and makes it even worse. And the world, I shouldn't
say that, well, the world, but in particular because I
care more about this country than I do the world.

(03:49):
This country was going down the toilet and suddenly the
flushing stopped. And now you have people like Chris Wright
who is preaching the gospel here, not trying to be blasphemous,
but he truly is preaching the gospel about when it
comes to energy. And you couple that with a new

(04:09):
found belief in oh, this constitutional republic and these bill
of rights really do coupled with clean abundant you know, energy,
cheap energy gives us this lifestyle that we have, the
freedoms that we have, the liberty that we have, and
now we're back to trying to get that back. Now

(04:31):
it's not all easy, it's not all going to work.
There's going to be some setbacks. I want to get
ready for it. But when I find someone like Chris
Wright who is just spilling the truth about where the
path we've been on and the path we need to

(04:52):
get back onto, you need to hear every single word
of it. So the host of this seminar was just
asking about net zero. Now I want you to hear
what Chris Wright has to say about net zero. And
remember we just heard over at CNN Bill we are

(05:17):
complaining about, well, the beast cut in front of the
electric pace car and just you know, took away from
all of the showcasing of the electric vehicles at NASCAR
at the Daytona five hundred, and it was just awful.
And then you heard the little dweeb talking about how
you know, NASCAR is on the front end of proving
that we can get net zero and we can do

(05:38):
all well.

Speaker 4 (05:39):
Really in this part of the world, in Europe and
the United Kingdom, of course, everyone talks about net zero,
now you talk about energy reality. What's the difference between
the two. What kind of target is the US i'ming for?

Speaker 5 (05:51):
Oh, a totally different focus. And one is to explicitly
call out and I will right now net zero twenty
fifty is a sinister goal.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
A sinister goal.

Speaker 6 (06:04):
Why it's a terrible goal.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
It's going unachievable, like in practice unachievable. It's unachievable, it believes, but.

Speaker 6 (06:15):
The aggressive pursuit of it.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
And you're sitting in a country that has aggressively pursued
this goal has not delivered any benefits, but it's delivered
tremendous costs. If you make energy more expensive and less reliable,
as the United Kingdom has done over the last couple
of decades, you lower the standard of living of your population,
shrink their opportunity set, and you simply export your industry.

(06:41):
No one's going to make an energy intensive product in
the United Kingdom anymore.

Speaker 6 (06:45):
It's just been displaced somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
Now. I want you to think about that in terms
of what's going on in Europe right now. We also
spent considerable time yesterday talking about what was going well
and earlier this week about the death now that's going
on in Europe. One of the things that I did
not mention in that whole discussion about Europe is their

(07:09):
de industrialization. Other than you know, BMW's and Mercedes and
maybe a few other things, what does Germany now produce?
What does Germany manufacture? They have de industrialized their country.
It just has Chris Wright points out, So as the
United Kingdom, most of Europe has de industrialized. Why what

(07:32):
was the cause of that? Oh, the pursuit of net zero.
Because when you start shutting down your nuclear power plants,
when you don't have reliable, abundant, cheap energy, in order
to produce the products that people want to consume, they
have to be manufactured somewhere else. So your manufacturing runs

(07:53):
to the place where they have cheap, abundant energy and
some cheap labor too to throw on top of it.
Sometimes in um cheap labor. I'm talking to looking at
you China, I'm looking at you Mexico. I'm looking at
you Vietnam. Where they all are, India and they all
run over there. So we have we have ourselves by
listening to these greeny weenies caused and created this d industrialization. Now,

(08:19):
I know, you can look at other little points like
you can look at NAFTA, you can look at the
North America Free Trade Agreement or whatever the current iteration
of it is. I forget what it's called. Don't care.
But not only do those agreements cause us to de industrialize,
but our energy policies force us to the industrialize. And

(08:42):
then we think that we can somehow turn our countries
and I'm looking at not just Europe right now, I'm
looking at this country too, that we can turn ourselves
into some sort of socialist utopia. It cannot do that.
It's gee, I want to use the s word here.
It'll turn our countries into shole countries, will become craphole countries.

(09:07):
We'll become the exact opposite of what the Marxists and
the communists tell us that we can achieve. If we'll
just create all these social programs, and if we'll just
you know, get to net zero and start relying all
these renewable sources, we can create this utopia that is
bull crap, utter bull crap, where.

Speaker 5 (09:28):
It's going to be made in a cold powered factory
in China, loaded on a diesel powered ship, to get
down the river on a bigger diesel powered ship to
be unloaded to the docks in London. This is not
energy transition. This is lunacy. This is impoverishing your own
citizens in a delusion that this is somehow going to

(09:48):
make the.

Speaker 6 (09:48):
Rule dependent place.

Speaker 5 (09:49):
It's not. So.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
What were you site of the Europeans and you know
colleagues Leonited Kingdom and Diusenus Australia, who's saying that what
you're doing and the path that you're putting the world
on will destroy it.

Speaker 6 (10:01):
Look at the data, is what I would say. Look
at the data.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
You know, we're scaring children all the time about stories
with extreme weather, and extreme weather is terrifying. Deaths from
extreme weather have plummeted for one hundred years, they're continuing
to decline, and the majority of the remaining desks are
low income.

Speaker 6 (10:21):
For the energized countries because they can't.

Speaker 5 (10:23):
Have the robustness to survive whatever the natural world brings
at us next zero. The focus on it has been
at just a colossal failure. Trill millions of dollars of investment,
most of it at wind, solar batteries and expanding transmission
delivered less than three percent of global energy last year,

(10:45):
less than three percent.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
At a cost of trillions of dollars, and you get
three percent of the energy output. Remember that first point
he made fifty years ago, eighty five percent of the
global energy came from hydrocarbons. Fast forward to twenty twenty three,

(11:08):
the last four year, full year of data. Oh, it's
still at eighty five percent. You invest trillions of dollars.
Think about what we could have done with that trillions
of dollars. We could have rebuilt our armed forces. We
could have rebuilt our infrastructure. We could have improved airports, bridges, roads, highways.

(11:30):
We could have done all sorts of things with that
trillions of dollars. Instead, we've sent it down the crap
hole of renewable energy, and now we're paying the price
for it. What do you think Trump's trying to do
by appointing someone like Chris Right. He's trying to get
Chris Right to absolutely well, I should say, indirectly, reindustrialize

(11:57):
this country, bring these jobs back, because the truth is
jobs are not coming back to this country until we
have a manufacturing base. And you can't have a manufacturing
base unless you have abundant cheap energy. My god, I
just feel like I'm a broken record just preaching this

(12:17):
over and over and over. But it's the truth. It's
not the fantasy land of you know zero. I throw
up every time I hear that.

Speaker 6 (12:27):
And everywhere it had meaningful penetration.

Speaker 5 (12:30):
It made electricity more expensive and less reliable.

Speaker 6 (12:34):
And electricity is just one sector of energy.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
The most important and largest use of energy is manufacturing.

Speaker 6 (12:42):
To make materials and to make systems.

Speaker 5 (12:44):
How do you make cars and buildings and electricity grids?

Speaker 6 (12:47):
You need to make materials today.

Speaker 5 (12:50):
The biggest source of energy within that sector is high
temperature process heat does not come from electricity, comes from combustion.
Nuclear could provide more high temperature process heat.

Speaker 6 (13:02):
Let's be realistic. Let's be credible in our goals.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
Most of the climate obsessed people I've discussed with or debated,
I've seen no very little about the climate data. I
think the agenda might be different here than climate chain.
It's certainly been a powerful tool used to grow government power,
top down control, and shrink human freedom.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
This is sinister, Its sinister, and I think he's spot
on environmentalism. But look, I'm not for dirty water, dirty air.
I want clean air. I want clean water, I want
good productive soil, I want good farming and ranching practices.

(13:48):
I want all of those things. That's not what the
environmentalists want. You know that again, if you go watch
the Uncle Tom movies, you'll see that a lot of
the civil rights movement was captured by Marxists who were
trying to impose a Marxist fascist government in this country.

(14:11):
I argue the same thing is true with the so
called environmentalists. They don't care about the environment, they don't
care about it at all. What's their real goal. Their
real goal, just like Black Lives Matter, is not trying
to improve the lives of black people. Black lives matter,
just like the environmentalists, is what to impose a Marxist

(14:34):
government in this country, to destroy a constitutional republic. And
that's what's happening in the energy sector.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
So recently, JD Van skids in truth talking to the
leaders of Europe. So what you're telling the leaders of
Europe in the UK is that essentially there's a direct
correlation between they're not using fossil fuel anymore and the
collapse of their economies, their de industrialization. Is that what
you're telling about.

Speaker 5 (15:01):
The energy realism is critical if you want to have humanism,
and it isn't not using fossil fuels.

Speaker 6 (15:07):
As you said, Chris, Germany itself.

Speaker 5 (15:10):
Has been a half a trillion dollars in attempt to.

Speaker 6 (15:14):
Revolutionize or change their energy system.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
They went from eighty percent of their primary energy from
hydrocarbons to seventy four percent. They didn't switch away from hydrocarbons,
they just invested in a whole new energy system, added
tremendously to costs.

Speaker 6 (15:31):
They doubled more than doubled the.

Speaker 5 (15:34):
Capacity of their electrical grid and delivered twenty percent less electricity.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
You doubled the capacity of your grid and you delivered
half the power. And then you wonder why manufacturing is
running away as fast as that can from Germany or
the continent and the UK and this country too. Everything

(16:01):
that Chris Wright is saying about Europe is just as
applicable to this country. If if your state, Colorado, I'm
looking at you, if your state has or California or
Michigan auto manufacturers, if your states have this net zero
by twenty fifty sinister goal in place, you're not going

(16:25):
to bring jobs back. You're not going to bring manufacturing
jobs back, not at all. And if you don't bring
those jobs back, the economy's not going to grow at
a three or four percent rate of GDP growth year
after year after year. We're going to be stuck here,

(16:45):
you know, one percent. And at the same time that
our GDP remains low, all of our standard of living
and all of our infrastructure continues to deteriorate.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Howdy hop from a ball met twenty one below, North Dakota.

Speaker 6 (17:05):
I hope you all have a great day.

Speaker 5 (17:08):
I was just gonna say, I like, how do you
hold a little bit better than that other one.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
I'll get back to Chris right just a minute, a little,
just a short inside baseball story. Yesterday, Dragon and I
walked into the studios and Ryan mister Cheerley, missus for you.
We walked in the studios and I sat down, and
Ryan had left his x account open over here on this.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
Not only was it still logged in, the page was open, the.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
Page was open. He was logged in.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
And I get being still logged in because it's you know,
difficult to remember at the time to actually just log
out of the accounts that you're all logged in on
a publicly shared computer.

Speaker 7 (17:56):
But amusing the page freaking open.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
I just found it. So we walked in and there
it was, and I wrote, So I decided, okay, I'm
gonna have some fun now, which is why I never
let anybody get this, why I would never use these
computers for anything, like my social media account.

Speaker 7 (18:21):
Right, You're not to use a public computer for.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Anything just on the off chant like Ryan, you forget
to log out. So I'm never gonna do that. There's
so many times I've walked in and like this computer
over here in the number three spot, will we'll have
someone's Gmail account open, and I just I just chuckle.
I'm like, stop it, people, stop it. So I walked
in and I see that Ryan's got his ex account

(18:46):
open and logged in, so I as Ryan, right, one
should not leave their EX account open on a company
computer because someone might side to post something inappropriate, good
thing that someone likes and respects, you know what I mean.

(19:07):
So I'm dragon just reminded me of it. So I
jump over onto X to see if Ryan has said anything,
and he writes he quote, tweets it and says hacked.
No one likes or respects me. I have proof.

Speaker 7 (19:26):
That's It's pretty accurate right there.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
Yeah. A couple of people replied, Rob wrote, what Kelly
got you? Ryan responds Now, she would have been meaner.
Sherry says, it's true, absolutely true, very true. And Sherry says,
knowing me, I liked whatever you posted, even if you
didn't post it. That's respect. Now let's go back to Uh,

(19:53):
go back to the post. Let's see where was I
hate it when you go back, uh, Now, he's the
only one that retweeted. Then he got two comments, but
six hundred, about fifteen hundred people saw the post. Ryan,
it was dragon. Yeah, it was dragging because I would

(20:14):
I would never ever do anything like that, right, I
did log him out, though, I did log him out.

Speaker 7 (20:21):
That is kind of you.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yes, after, but only after.

Speaker 7 (20:25):
After the post was posted.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Yes, after the post was posted. So, mister Shuling, if
you're awake, it was dragging. It wasn't me. So let's
go back to Chris. Right by the way, if is
this up on the website?

Speaker 7 (20:42):
Sure is? Oh so if you, says, go here dot com.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
So please share this with all your greeny weenie, greeny
weenie meanie friends. Now let's get to the point where
he starts talking about energy realism.

Speaker 6 (20:56):
At two to three times the call.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
This is a proud, great industrial nation in Germany. What
I would love to see is the return to sobriety.
And it's not just in Europe, we have plenty of
in the United States as well. If you're serious about
climate change, dig into the data, look at the trade offs,
and let's focus on humans again and their lives.

Speaker 4 (21:17):
And if you're serious about national security, we should be
serious about energy security, because you can't have one without
the other.

Speaker 5 (21:26):
Absolutely, Chris, energy enables everything we do, from national defense
to heating our houses to making our clothes. You cannot
have security without energy security. And again with the Russian
invasion of Ukraine and what we're seeing in Europe today,
I think this proud, tremendous region of our world, by

(21:48):
exporting its energy production outside and shrinking its capacity to
produce energy, has just shrunk the life opportunities of their citizens.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Such a great point, it's such a great way to
put it. And again with the Russian invasion of Ukraine
and what we're seeing in Europe today, I think this proud,
tremendous region of our world, by exporting its energy production outside,
is shrinking its capacity to produce energy, has just shrunk

(22:21):
the life opportunities of their citizens. What do you think
they've been doing to us in this country and doing
it in a most despicable way. Remember Mike john the Speaker,

(22:42):
going to talk to Biden and then you know, bringing
up the executive voter that shut down the LNG ports
in Louisiana and in Massachusetts and all been down the coast,
And Biden said, no, I didn't do that, and Johnson
keeps going back and forth with him. Look, mister President,

(23:03):
I've got the documents. And the President looks at the
document and he's like, well, no, no, I just I
just created a study about it. This is the evil
that existed within the Biden administration. If you have to
start with the premise that Marxism, Fascism, communism, for that matter,

(23:30):
of socialism, the isms are all evil. They are in
many ways satanic in that they dehumanize people. They don't
believe in individuals, they don't believe in the sanctity of
the individual. Their collectivists. You're no longer a free agent,

(23:56):
you're no longer your own agent. You're simply a tool
of cog of the government. And that's what they want.
That's what they're pursuing. So we can, and we're going
to today we're going to have all sorts of conversations
about DOGE and employees being fired and then whining and
crying about it, and now we get this debate going on.

(24:18):
In fact, many of you have anticipated this by texting
me about, you know, should we get some of this
money back in or refund or whatever. Oh my gosh,
you know what, Let's focus on making this country energy independent,
getting these sources back of cheap, abundant energy, and let's

(24:40):
restore this economy. Let's bring you know, we won't bring
all manufacturing back, that's just simply impossible, but by you know,
just as we lured illegal aliens into this country by
offering you know, free staff, by telling them, hey, the
border's open and you can come here and you can

(25:00):
get you know, you can get a phone, in healthcare,
and transportation and housing, you can get all of this stuff. Well,
if you live in a craphole country, you're going to
do You're going to come here. Now, think about a capitalist,
someone who is manufacturing stuff, someone who's manufacturing widgets, and

(25:20):
they look at trying to produce a widget in this country,
and they can't do it because they can't afford. They
can't between the regulations and the cost of energy, they
can't do it. They still want to because that's their
dream of making widgets, So they go to a foreign
country where there's cheap, abundant energy and there's cheaper labor.
So of course they're going to manufacture overseas. Now if

(25:45):
you say to that same capitalist, hey, take a look
again at the United States of America. Uh, we're deregulating
so it will be easier for you to produce the widgets,
and we're unleashing energy so you will have cheap abundant
energy in order to produce your widget. You're doing the

(26:06):
same thing for a capitalist that you did for the
illegal aliens. And they'll have the same response. Oh well,
then rather than manufacturing this craphole country, I'll bring that
back to my own country. Now, not everybody's gonna do it,
I'm not that naive, but those who want to, and
those who can, and those where it shows that you

(26:28):
can actually have a good ROI you can actually make
some money by doing your manufacturing here, of course they'll
do it. They'll want to rebuild their own communities their
own cities, their towns. There's probably I mean, I'm not
gonna do that. I was gonna say, there's probably no
more important aspect of Trump two point zero than this,

(26:51):
But they're all equally important, and they all taken together,
represent a complete shift from the direction we've been on
for the past one hundred years into a different direction.
And I know, once again, I had a text conversation
with with a friend of mine last night and he's

(27:14):
mostly upset. I think I may be wrong about this.
He's mostly upset, you know, and I'm talking about you.
With Trump's foreign policy, particularly with respect to Ukraine. Well
I totally get that because I see both sides of
the of the argument on Ukraine. So not everything's going
to be perfect. But if you step back and just

(27:38):
have that out of body experience and realize that, oh,
we were going we were going east, and suddenly the
ship estate has moved and we're going west. But it's
kind of a bumpy road because after one hundred years
of going down the highway to hell as you you know,
cross the Median and to get back onto the correct path,

(28:02):
that's going to be a bumpy road. And it's not
all going to be perfect. You might even get a
flat tire along the way. You might, you know, kind
of nit your car a little bit. But I'm willing
to suffer from some DNS to get going back into
the correct direction. When we get back, Dragon, I'm gonna

(28:25):
take an early break here. When we get back, we'll
finish the last couple of minutes of Chris Wright. And
I just want you to think about of all the
things going on, upending the deep state, deregulating our society,
rebuilding the military, eliminating waste, fraud and abuse. Holy cow,

(28:47):
this is an amazing time to live in. And we're
gonna have disagreements because I've gotten a text message about
DOSEE and what they're doing. And you might be surprised
what I think about that. Next, I used.

Speaker 8 (29:00):
To listen to Rush and Beck and Hannity, and on
the fringe there was this goober oakie named Brownie that
I liked as well. Then Handy became too full of himself,
Beck went off the deep end, but then I still
had Rush and Brownie. And now that Rush is gone,

(29:22):
what I've got is Brownie. But I love Brownie. Have
a good day.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
What is it with you?

Speaker 7 (29:31):
People? Get me stop it. See you killed him?

Speaker 2 (29:37):
You killed him now, yes, no one, that's a great compliment.
I won my elimination.

Speaker 7 (29:49):
You outlived him.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
Damn it, my d I agent doctor, I got called
doctor Grossman. I outlived them all. That's just proof, more
more proof that the good die young. Because I'm still here.
Oh the text messages are you guys are fantastic today.

(30:13):
Let me let me finish Chris Rye because I really do,
uh I I hope you understand how dramatic and significant
this kind of leadership is.

Speaker 8 (30:28):
Now.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
I know I got kind of a kind of a
man crush on Chris, right because you know, he talks
this this good old boy from the oil patch loves
to hear this kind of stuff. And it's not just
about oil. It's about natural gas, it's about frightening, it's
about nuclear energy, it's about all of this. Oh my gosh.

(30:49):
Once again, it's a little dramatic and over the top.
But two things, And I'm not I'm not trying to
take Christian Toto's place here, but you really do need
to go watch Uncle Tom's Cabin one and two. And
you need to go watch this video because someone says

(31:12):
on the text line. I don't have it right in
front of me this second, that it's their their underlying
goal is really not Marxism. It's more just of a
let's get as much money as we can't that it's
a grift. I completely agree that it's a grift. But
it's a grift at the same time. I mean, there's
typical Marxist it's a grift where they can make money

(31:36):
off the backs of taxpayers at the same time that
they implement their Marxist philosophy. It's both. It's one and
the same, and it's it's the civil rights movement, it's
Black Lives Matter, it's the green energy movement. All of
these things are Marxist policies designed to take down this republic.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
Too many great humans, too many large dreams. To keep
squelching them.

Speaker 5 (32:04):
We need to unleash freedom, opportunity, and energy, and ARC
has been a tremendous platform to spread this message and
to inspire people to a better future, not a scarier future.

Speaker 4 (32:15):
Now, look, I'm from Australia. I need to ask a
self interested question. You still rely for some of your
nuclear fuel on Russia for the supply chain. Australia Producers
has access to one third of the world's you run,
and we don't use it ourselves.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
We don't do any enrichment of it.

Speaker 4 (32:31):
Could you see Australia being an important part of a
nuclear supply chain where we enriched fuel. Would the United
States being prepared to work with Australia on that kind
of fuel cycle for the energy security of both nations.

Speaker 5 (32:45):
Absolutely, Look, Australia is a source of just tremendous natural resources.

Speaker 6 (32:50):
In great human spirit, I would.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
Love to see Australia get in the game of supplying uranium,
maybe going down that nuclear road themselves.

Speaker 6 (33:00):
Elves. I'm thrilled to see recent efforts in.

Speaker 5 (33:02):
The news recently of the development of shale gas in Australia.
That is a tremendous resource that could benefit the lives
of Australians and the export to South in East Asia,
the fastest growing regions in the world on an energy
consumption basis. I think Australia has a tremendous future, but
has some of the same.

Speaker 6 (33:22):
Struggles we have in the United States and even worse
in Europe, which is.

Speaker 5 (33:26):
This desire for top down control, for deciding what's virtuous
and what isn't.

Speaker 2 (33:31):
Top down control for deciding what is virtuous and what
is not. Marxism, fascism, that's the you know, I never
thought I would be in a position where that's the truth.
That is the enemy that we face. And it's disguised

(33:52):
as oh, clean renewable energy. Oh, it's civil rights, it's
trans rights, it's all of this stuff. Now it's just
Marxism at the same time that they're making money off.
Now Douge coming up next. What about show me the
money
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