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June 14, 2025 37 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
To night. Michael Brown joins me here, the former FEMA
director of talk.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (00:04):
Brownie, No Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job
the Weekend with Michael Brown.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Broadcasting Life from Denver, Colorado. You've tuned into the Weekend
with Michael Brown. Glad to have you joining the program today.
And I'm a little irritated because I have to come
in and do the program because if you know, but
for that, and but for the fact that everybody bitch
and moan if I wasn't here because you all can't
live without me, I know, I know that's true. I'd
be at the we Don't do King's protest? Is that

(00:30):
where you're going? I mean, I expect the ratings to
drop significantly, precipitously today because most of you are going
to be going to the No Kings protests. In fact,
for the four of you that are still listening all
across the country, thanks for staying here and not going
to the protest. But wouldn't you like to go though?

(00:51):
Wouldn't you really like to go? For example, now, if
you don't know what we're talking about, then you must
be living under a rock. Uh, there is now at
least in Colorado. I don't know whether there's time to
be the same all across the country or not, because well, frankly,
I don't give a damn, but I just don't know.

(01:11):
But if you shouldn't even say, I'm not going to
send you to the website. But there's a website and
it describes what all these protests are. And just like
you can go to Michael says, go here dot com,
hit the how to listen tab and find all of
our affiliates all across the country. Well, they have an
interactive map like that too, and you can find all

(01:32):
of the protests going on all across the country. So
yesterday during the Weekday program I was, I was on,
we were on air talking about it, and my producer
for the Weekday actually my phil In producer A Rod,
and I started looking through the map and we were
flabbergasted by one the number of protests that are scheduled.

(01:55):
Now that doesn't mean that I mean, you know, I
suppose if one person shows up, then the organization can
lay claim that, yeah, we had we had a protest
in uh and let me just think Beaver, Oklahoma or Hooker, Oklahoma.
I happen to know those two little places. And there
are two little places named exactly that, Beaver and Oklahoma

(02:19):
and Hooker. So if you if you want either one,
you can go to the Oklahoma Banandle and you can
find one of those places. But you look on the map.
And for example, my dad grew up in a little
town called Swatch, Colorado. It's an Indian name s A
g u a c h I think is the way
you spell it. And it's down in southern Colorado, in

(02:41):
the middle of the San Luis Valley and it's surrounded
by mountains. It's it's a gorgeous I mean, it's God's country.
It's gorgeous. But I would guess that the population. Let me,
let me just see if I can find the population.
Do do do do? Just hang on. They're searching it,
searching five hundred thirty one. So yeah, I was pretty close.

(03:05):
I was guessing a couple one hundred, maybe five hundred,
five hundred and thirty one, with a projected decline of
about zero point three eight percent annually. Now I'm not
making fun of to watch because I love to watch Colorado.
It's the county seat is to watch County Colorado. Anyway,
it's a gorgeous little place, and we're on the interactive
map yesterday and we discovered that in so Watch Colorado,

(03:27):
population five hundred thirty one, they're going to have a
no King's protest. Now I should have told Premier, I
should have called my program director and said, I just
can't do the show today because I've got to drive
to to Watch, which is several hours away, and interview.
Even if one person shows up, I want to know,

(03:47):
who are you? What are you doing here? Do you
know what you're Maybe the right question it should be
let me think like a lawyer for a moment, just
ask them why are you here? And can you explain
to me what you're doing? Can you explain to me
what the no Kings protests are about? Because I'd love

(04:09):
to know. And so then we start looking around, and
you can do the same thing for your state wherever
you are, and you can find I mean, they're all,
They're everywhere. And when you look at the map, you
know how you can see the nighttime maps, the satellite
photos that showed the night lights, and so you can
see all the urban areas and of course flyover country

(04:30):
is pretty empty except you'll see maybe Omaha a little bit,
you know, not to break too much about Omaha, but
you see a little bit of Omaha. But when you
get over into Colorado, you'll see the entire front range.
So all the way from the Wyoming border down through Denver,
down through Colorado Springs and Pueblo, all down through the
twenty five you will see the lights. Well that's what

(04:51):
this map looks like. And the surprising thing to me
was these protests are scheduled all over the country places
you'd know ever expect. So you look at it. You
look at a state like Colorado, and you see all
these little towns like uh, you know, out on the
eastern plains, we have just small rural communities. They're they're

(05:11):
the backbone of America, and there are protests planned in
those areas. Now, I would warn you if you're an urbanite,
you live in a major metropolitan area, you live in
Los Angeles, you live in New York, Chicago, Denver, Dallas,
Fort Worth, and you go to some of these little towns,
I'd be careful because people in these small rural areas

(05:36):
don't put up with the bull craft that you're probably spreading.
In fact, there you're probably the antithesis of what those
little towns stand for, so be careful. But I'm not
trying to discourage you to go because, eh, you know what,
I'd like to see how I'd just like to see
how you, as a protester handle Bubba uh when you

(05:57):
try to block Bubba from driving US pickup down main Street. Yeah,
I want to watch that, because you know, we had
Governor DeSantis down in Florida. I think Texas has done
the same thing. Of course, Colorado never will because we've
we're completely out of our minds in Colorado. But in Florida,
if your car gets mobbed by a bunch of protesters

(06:19):
or rioters, well you can just keep driving and driving
them over. And the same is true in Texas. I
think Oklahoma's passed that law too. I think that should
be I think there should be a federal law. You're
in your car, I don't care whether you're by yourself
or you got your spouse, your partner, your husband, your boyfriend,
your dogs, your family, your kids. I don't care. But

(06:40):
a mob. When a mob surrounds a car, you don't
have to be a complete idiot to know that they're
either going to try to as set your car on fire.
They're going to try to pull you out of the car.
Aka Rodney keying kind of thing, any kind of any
number of things. We've seen it happen over and over
and over again. And yet you know that if if

(07:00):
you tried to, you know, keep driving. I watched. I
forget where it was. I think I think it was
one of the riots in LA where one of the
cars was trying one of the ICE Immigrations and Customs
and Enforcement cars was trying to get out of one
of the detention facilities and go down some street. And
one of these idiots, and I mean idiot in the

(07:22):
worst possible way, kept running along, trying to throw rocks,
trying to push things, and kept jumping in front of
the car, and finally he tripped and fell in the
car almost ran over. H Well, I think are you ready?
I think you should just be able to keep driving.
I know you complained to Premiere, complain whatever you want to.

(07:42):
But if you're threatening me and you're trying to prevent
me on a public street from going to point A
to point B, and you deliberately try to stop and
impede traffic, sucks to be you, but you shouldn't. You
shouldn't do that. And I also think we should have
a rule that says, like you do now in Florida,

(08:03):
Texas and Oklahoma, as long as you have a reasonable
fear for your life, which a mob surrounding your car does.
In I would say ninety nine point ninety nine percent
of all circumstances create a reasonable fear for your life,
and you just keep moving and you run over somebody,
and whether that causes serious bodily injury or perhaps even death,

(08:26):
I think you should be protected from civil liability. I
don't think that you should be able to be charged criminally.
As long as you do it in a reasonable person's
self defense, you should not face criminal charges, nor should
you face a wrongful death lawsuit from the family of

(08:46):
the dumbbell that got in front of your car. Because
if you're dumb enough to get in front of a
moving car and trying to block it and the car
keeps moving, while the laws of physics say you're probably
gonna get hurt, injured, or killed, think families ought to
be able to sue simply trying to colleck insurance money.
So there's my pet peeve for the day. But let

(09:08):
me get back. Let's dive into what's really going on
with these no King protests. Now, you know, if you
want to send me a text message, it's real easy that.
On whatever message app you use, the number is three
three one zero three three three one zero three, use
the keyword Mike or Michael. I'll be right back. Hey,

(09:33):
So the Weekend with Michael Brown. I'm glad to have
you with me. I want to remind everybody because I
had a text message earlier about somebody that had moved
to Florida, and somehow I had screwed up the Weekend
show because I can't find it. Let me just remind
everybody that if you're looking for the Weekend with Michael Brown,
all you have to do is go to the the

(09:55):
Let me tell you the easiest way to do it.
On your iHeart app, you can just look for Freedom
ninety three point seven in Denver. Freedom ninety three seven
call letters are KDFD KDFD and you can listen live
from it's noon to three eastern ten to one Mountain time,

(10:15):
and you can listen to it live there, and of
course you can always download the podcast. The other way,
you can always find the program is as I said earlier,
by going to Michael says go here dot com. Michael
says go here dot com. When you get to that
landing page, there's a tab that says how to listen,
and there's an interactive map all the three hundred plus
three hundred and fifty affiliates all over the country, and

(10:38):
they're listed in alphabetical order, and you can find the
affiliate when the air or re air the program. Some
do it, you know, some some play it over and
re air it. So it's really easy to find the program.
So don't tell me you can't find it, because you
can find it. Even if you're in the middle of nowhere.
You can always listen on the iHeart yuh. And in fact,

(11:01):
I actually prefer that you do it that way. And
if you're going to do it that way, you can
find Freedom ninety three point seven, which is my home
studio on the weekend in Denver. Now, before we again,
before we get back to No Kings, another text message
Guber number fifty eight forty eight. This is the non

(11:23):
legal advice legal advice advice that I'm now going to give.
So I'm only giving this advice simply because I happen
to have a law degree. But I'm not giving you
legal advice, so you cannot follow it. Got it, bingo.
So that the message is pertaining to your topic of
people blocking traffic, please share your thoughts. Well, that's it.
I'm not giving legal advice. I'm just sharing my thoughts.

(11:46):
If a driver was to use something like a non
lethal option such as a burma, a burna to remove
the obstructed protesters, you know, the people are blocking the
streets and keeping you from you know, taking your grandmother
to the hospital because she's having a heart attack. Yeah,
you can use a burner, you can use a baseball bat,
you can use whatever you want to. In my opinion,

(12:09):
here are the consequences. I think even if you are right,
I think even if the cops come to you, do
the investigation and say, yeah, you were acting purely in
self defense, even though you broke his arm, or even
though you broke his leg, or even though you shot
him in the face with the burner, and you know
you put an eye out, whatever it is, I think

(12:30):
you would be in your legal rights. But and even
if the cops say you're in your legal rights, that
does not prevent and this is something I told clients
all the time. People will call me and or sit
down with me and say, I'm thinking about doing this.
Can I get sued? And my answer was always yes,
I don't care what you do. You fart in the elevator,
you can get sued. Because anybody can sue anybody for anything.

(12:54):
They really need a lawyer. I mean, we've made it
so easy to sue anybody. You can go on law
and you can find the forms, you can go to
the courthouse. They'll they'll even help you fill out the
forms and you just have to pay the filing fee.
And you've got somebody sued, and now you get them served,
pay somebody to serve the summons to them. Anybody can

(13:16):
sue anything for anybody. The question is not can I
be sued for something? The question is am I liable
for something? Because even if they sue you for something,
even if you're in the right, you still have to
hire a lawyer. Or if you want to defend yourself
and be foolish, you can do that, but you're going
to expend time, resources, and energy defending the lawsuit. Which

(13:39):
is why I say things like in Florida, where I
may be wrong about this, but I thought that Ron
DeSantis said that in Florida, they are also protecting you
from civil liability, which means you cannot be sued if
you are acting lawfully by running somebody over trying to

(14:00):
flash mom. So you know, your Miley's made vary depending
upon the state you're in, and of course we'll very
depending depending upon the circumstances. But this is kind of
the point that we've got in this country where simply
trying to you know, so somebody's on the five in California,
or they're on the one oh one or wherever they

(14:22):
are in California, or you're an I twenty five in Denver,
you're an I forty, you know, trying to get through Albuquerque,
in trying to head out you know east somewhere. Doesn't
make any difference where you are when we allow people
to block streets, roads, highways, bridges and keep you from
going to point A to point B, whether you're hauling

(14:44):
your grandmother to the hospital or not, or you're just
simply trying to get you you're a single mom who
is completely dependent upon that low wage job in order
to feed your kids, to keep a roof over your head, whatever,
you're doing, and those yahoo's are blocking you. We have
given way too much credence and an exemption from any liability,

(15:05):
and law enforcement has utterly failed. Utterly failed. Now, if
you're a cop out there and you're gonna send me
a text message that says, well, that happened in our
town and you know we did everything to give them
off the street as quickly as we could, well, bravo
for you. In too many parts of the country, they
don't California Highway Patrol the LAPD. They wait forever to

(15:28):
clear the intersections. They wait forever to clear the highways.
You know why, hope, because they're scared of starting a riot.
They're scared of hurting somebody. We have so capitulated to
the criminals in this country that that's why they get
by with crap like this. Now, I don't know what's
going to happen today, have no clue. Now they've called

(15:50):
the one in Minnesota off. Should I say Minnesota, should
say Minneapolis? Let me look the one Minneapolis. The No
Kings event in northeast Minneapolis has been canceled because of
a shelter in place order following a politically motivated shooting
of two elected officials. If you haven't heard the breaking
news this morning is the speaker of the Minnesota House

(16:11):
of Representatives and her husband were assassinated by somebody pretending
to be a copy had they had flashing lights on
their car. They found a manifesto in the car. This
is all I know about it so far. Well, they've
canceled the one in northeast Minneapolis. The rest of the
country is going to continue. Now. Part of me says

(16:35):
that in a lot of areas this is going to
go k boot. It may amount to nothing. Maybe I'll
be pleasantly surprised, and it won't. Because there's a really
sick side of me that hopes that this group that
I'm going to describe to you in a minute is
actually able to get people out. Because anytime these people

(16:57):
come out and they protest and they shut down streets,
and they at some point agents provocateur cannot resist and
they'll somewhere somehow start burning cars. Will they break out
the window of a sandwich shop or a restaurant. Will
they'll break into an apple store and try to steal
all the iPhones and the iPads. They'll break into you know,

(17:17):
the best buy whatever they can They can't help themselves
because well because they're idiots. So their entire mantra is
this on the website. They've who's that. Wait a minute,
let me look around. Well I'm the only run in
the studio. But they've defied our courts, deported Americans, disappeared

(17:39):
people off the streets, attacked our civil rights, and slashed
our services. The corruption has gone too far. No thrones,
no crowns, no kings, okay whatever. I would challenge you
to show me one US citizen, one lawful US citizen
that's actually been deported. Yeah, I'll wait and I'll be
right back after this. And now I'll tell you who's

(18:01):
really behind this. It's the Weekend with Michael Brown. Text
the word Michael and Michael to three three ones zero three.
I'll be right back tonight. Michael Brown joins me here
the former FEMA.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Director talk show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (18:16):
Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job
The Weekend with Michael Brown.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
Hey, welcome back to the Weekend with Michael Brown. Glad
to have you tuning in, appreciate you listening. You know,
let me just remind you if you do like what
we do on the weekend. You really should listen during
the weekday, and again you can do that on the
iHeart app. On the iHeart app, all you have to
do is search for a station called six thirty khow.
Six thirty khow that's my home station during the weekday

(18:44):
out of Denver. Also, and I air from six to
ten Mountain time, so that would be what eight to
noon Eastern time. You can figure out your time zone.
So listen on the iHeart app look for six thirty
kh ow k how. So the no Kings protests are
going on. Our presidente King Donald Trump was asked about

(19:07):
several no Kings protests planned across the country on Saturday.
What are your thoughts on those? They got no King,
no Kings. I don't feel like a king.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
I have to go through hell to get STUPA A
king would.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
Say I'm not gonna get this.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
A king would have never had the California mandate even
be talking to him. He wouldn't have to call up
Mike Johnson and Thune and say, fellows, you got to
pull this off.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
In afty years, we get it done. No, No, we're
not a king. We're not a king at all. Thank you.
Very much. Yeah, no, not a king at all, but
that doesn't prevent them from still believing it. For example,
over at MSNBC join us.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
Now to discuss is Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, who
is the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee. Congressman Raskin,
thanks so much for being with us. We want to
start out today by playing something that Pete Haigsas said
today at a congressional hearing.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
Let's go with that.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Can you ensure the American people on two things. You
will respect any Supreme Court decision on this matter about
whether the Marines are constitutional, and you will respect the
district courts when.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
They rule before the Supreme Court rules.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
What I can say is we should not have local
judges determining foreign policy or national security policy.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
For the country. So you're not willing to say you
would respect those decisions.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
What I'm saying is local district judges shouldn't make foreign
policy for the United States. That exchange happened on Thursday
of this week. So, Congressman, when you have the Secretary
of Defense saying that yes, Marines might defy court orders,
are we at a constitutional crisis?

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Well, we clearly have too many do you I hires
in their Trump administration, starting with Secretary he except but.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Look, whoa, we have too many d UI hires. You
completely ignore or that he's a recovering alcoholic. But no,
let's make fun of him. Let's just go ahead and
make fun of him. What a dirt bag.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
The Constitution says that the constitution in federal law are supreme.
We have a supreme constitution. We don't have a supreme leader.
We have no dictators here. We have no kings. We
have no monarchs.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
This is we have no kings. We have no monarchs.
By the way, the cases they're referring to, which is
going on in Federal District Court in San Francisco, the
Ninth Circuit rapidly so a federal District court in San
Francisco ruled that the president, under Title ten cannot federalize

(21:40):
the National Guard. Now, presidents have been doing that for day,
well decades, for centuries, Democrats and Republicans. In fact, I
would say to the Democrats, you know it was Democrat
presidents and Republicans too that nationalize the National Guard in
order to enforce desegregation orders. It's well established law. So

(22:08):
this federal district court judge in California acted way beyond
his authority, and the liberal Ninth Circuit within hours overturned
him and said, no, no, you can't rule that way.
So you're right, we don't have kings. We have a
judicial system that, when it needs to and when it should,

(22:29):
should act rapidly and quickly to slap down these jahoos
at the federal district court level that are trying to
act like kings. As a matter of fact, so we
need to get over this idea about no kings, no kings.
I mean, it sounds good on its face, right, sounds noble.

(22:49):
You know, after all, have you thought about this. No,
King's Day should actually be every July fourth, because we
did declare our independence from king, right. But the historical
overtones here masks something that's more recent and I think
a lot less authentic, because for all the revolutionary rhetorics
that they want you to believe, this dumbass protest is

(23:13):
not some sort of spontaneous uprising of you know, civic
minded dissidents that want to remind us that, you know,
we are a constitutional republic. What is it? Well, it's
well coordinated, it's well funded, it's tightly staged, managed, and
it's backed by nearly two hundred two hundred far left

(23:34):
non government organizations NGOs, labor unis, and donor networks, almost
all of whom I can't say all of them, but
I would say, you know, ninety nine percent of them
are directly tied to the Democrat Party's infrastructure and the
Democrat Party power. It operates not from the street. It

(23:55):
operates from a spreadsheet. It operates from about sheet. It
operates from a checkbook, sometimes maybe a credit card. To
steal in the claim that the No King's protests are
paid AstroTurf operations designed to provide public cover for all
this coordinated far left agitation, you have to distinguish between

(24:20):
form and function, because on the surface, these protests resemble
some sort of decentralized, citizen led response to everything that
Trump's doing, acting like a monarch, acting like a king,
doing all these things. And you would think, and particularly
if you go to the website, because boy are they

(24:42):
good about about hiding who they are, you would think
this is just some grassroots effort. But you just barely
scratch the surface and suddenly it's collecting the Wizard of Oz.
Somebody pulls the curtain back, and suddenly you realize that, oh,
this is actually protests, and one in which the language

(25:05):
of democracy is simply borrowed as a facade for premeditated
political theater. The clearest sign of this disconnect lies in
the funding, in the structure, and in the very behavior
of the protests themselves. So let's start with the funding.
The American Federation of Teachers. They have the AFT that's

(25:28):
one of the largest public sector unions in the entire country,
and it is a prim where does probably ninety well,
probably even greater than that. I was going to say,
just democrats, probably ninety nine percent of their political donations
go to Democrats. Randy Weingarten, the president, she has explicitly,

(25:53):
loudly and proudly endorsed the No King's protests. In fact,
she's gone so far as to direct her member organization
and their funds to support the demonstrations. So those teachers
who are teaching your kids are lying about how we
live in a monarchy, how we live under some sort

(26:16):
of tyranny of Donald Trump, and they're going to go
out and organize this protest, spend the tax dollars that
you that you give them to pay their salaries to
go out and lobby behalf on their special interests, and
that certainly does not, in my book, qualify as a

(26:37):
grassroots organization. There's also a movement supported by something called Indivisible.
Indivisible is a progressive organizing network that gets money from oh,
the Open Society foundations, you know, which were created, funded
by George Soros, Alex Soros, his entire family. Indivisible their

(26:59):
stated goal, their stated objective is to reshape in their
own image Americans institutions and the logistical backbone of this
organization protests. They even create toolkits, They take care of
the permitting, they'll provide the bail funds if you get arrested,

(27:23):
and they even train what I will call marshals to
give the appearance of some sort of oh, I don't know,
spontaneous civic action, but it's not spontaneous. It's actually very
carefully scripted out. So I'll give you an example. Morrise Pearl,

(27:45):
who's the former managing director of Blackrock, the gigantic hedge fund.
Now it's had to pardon me. Now heads a far
left advocacy group called Patriotic Millionaires may or may not
may or may not have heard of these yahoos, but
they they favorite tax increases, wealth redistribution, and class warfare.

(28:12):
So these these are truly, by the very definition, useful
idiots because they make billions off free markets and capitalism.
He's a former, remember he's a former managing director of
black Rock. Black Rock operates in not obviously a lot
of crony capitalism, but by buying and selling, buying up companies,

(28:35):
so they use capitalism and then they run off after
they make all of their millions and then organize something
called Patriotic Millionaires that says, if you're really patriotic, then
you would be for tax increases, you would you would
be for redistribution of wealth except ours because we already
have hours and of course class warfare. So what possible

(28:58):
alignment could exist between all the anarchist slogans that you're
going to hear about today and someone that has formally
belonged to the world's largest hedge fund because they both
are able to leverage chaos. So Morris Pearl and all

(29:21):
the idiots like him, they don't wear the black masks,
they don't throw the bricks. They pay for all of
those to go do that. They're the underwriters. They're the
ones that fund all of this, and of course they
also do something else. They choreograph the events. I'll explain

(29:43):
that next. It's the weekend with Michael Brown. Don't forget
the text line numbers three three, one zero three, use
the keyword Mike roor Michael. How do they choreograph? Hang tight? Hey,
so we came with Michael Brown. Glad to have you
with me. We're talking about no Kings. If you're at

(30:03):
the protest or any of the protests anywhere in the country,
send me a text message and tell me what you see,
tell me what's going on. So I said, we need
to think about the choreography of these So you know,
the funding is obviously when you have former members of
Black Rock, the largest hedge fund in the entire world,

(30:23):
who is now out advocating redistribution of wealth, higher taxes,
they're well, socialism, Marxism. I'm always fascinated, are you. Aren't
you always fascinating these people who make all of this
wealth and then suddenly they turn into these Marxists because
is it guilt? Hey, I made so damn much money.

(30:44):
I think I need to start advocating for the redistribution
of everybody else's wealth. You know, I feel guilty about
the money I made, so I want everybody else to
give up their wealth. I'll keep mine, but all of
you keep yours.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
Well.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
In that last segment, I casually mentioned the word marshals. Well,
think about a parade marshal, except in this, in these circumstances,
they're not really parade marshals. They're protest marshals. Now, I
want you to what you Well, you may or may
not see, it depends on what your local news coverage
is like. But they'll be wearing the yellow or you know,

(31:18):
orange or green safety vests, and you might see them
approaching an individual who might be speaking out a turn,
or they might approach somebody who's, you know, criticizing the
goals of the protest. Now, I thought, if you were grassroots,
you advocated for free speech. I mean, I'm just old

(31:39):
enough to kind of remember the sixties and a lot
of the seventies, and I thought free speech was what
all the hippies and everybody was protesting four. But here
in twenty twenty five, free speech is moderated by protest marshals,
and those marks are paid through those funds that get

(32:02):
routed through all those NGOs that I mentioned, and then
the illusion of safety that gets reinforced because they know,
without any help from the cops themselves, that they'll have
all these cops standing alongside the agitators. In fact, some

(32:23):
of those cops are reportedly paid by third party arrangements
to provide security services. So much like you might have,
you know, a large event that hires off duty cops,
but you know, we want you to show up in uniform,
and most police departments allow this. You can show up

(32:44):
in your uniform, but you're off duty, but you're providing
security to a private event. Well did you ever stop
and think that some of the cops that you see
standing around they're there to create an illusion. The goal
is not order, The goal is the optics. And then

(33:06):
if violence does erupt, as it usually does when Antifa
link groups you know, show up and start protesting, then
the people who are paying the protesters, who have paid
for all the organization, who have paid for all of
the infrastructure. I mean, you think about the website. If
you look, if you've looked at the No King's website,

(33:27):
somebody's a pretty damn good webmaster somebody was a really
good web designer, because after a minute's flashy, get your attention,
it's got all the well scout what it has, all
the information they want you to have. So all these
Antifa link groups, when all of this goes to hell

(33:47):
in a handbasket, they got plausible deniability. We took everything,
We did everything we could to ensure the piece it
wasn't US. Lawyers have a term for this, it's called
insol late. The real world word for it is cover.
We've got cover. But most telling about all of these protests,

(34:15):
like the ones in Colorado probably in your town too,
ten to two four hours, sometimes less ten to one
three hours, really brief, and then they're actually structured. No
King's protests are officially scheduled for only two hours according
to the website. Now, why would you have a nationwide

(34:38):
protest that you say you don't want going on all
day long? You only want to going on for two days?
Have you really thought that through? Because I want you
to think about that. If you, for example, we're organizing
a protest, you really want your protest to go on
as long as you can keep the crowd around. It's

(35:00):
when you have a political event and you're hoping for
a thousand people, so you rent a gymnasium, but then
you realize, uh, oh, I'm only gonna have two hundred
people show up. Suddenly you find an alternative venue because
you wanted to appear full. You don't want a gymnasium
that can hold a thousand people with only two hundred

(35:20):
people in it. The same is true about the length
of your protest. You don't want it to go on.
You'd like for it to go on forever, but you
wanted to go on only for one or two hours.
Because the media gets the notice. I got the notices.
You know, I'm on everybody's email list. I'm always getting

(35:42):
these notices. Hey, somebody's gonna give a have a rally
at such and such time. It'll be from noon to
one o'clock. Well that's to get me to show up
between noon and one, because what happens after that, Well,
the media show up, they get the media coverage they want.

(36:04):
Before the moderates or the people who are genuinely interested
in the issue disappear. They go home. It's layover. I'm hungry.
Let's go to Starbucks. Let's go to McDonald's and grab
something to eat, because then the agents provocateur, the aggressive,
useful idiots can then start doing their dirty deeds. It's

(36:28):
in the after hours, after the ten to one o'clock
or the ten to noon when I've read is it's
in those after hours that the dog whistles start, that
the pushing and shoving starts, that the brick throwing starts,
all of that's when that happens. And now you've got

(36:50):
a second event, a second event, and some of the
media disappears, and that gives you time to get really violent. Yeah,
so be ready. So weekend with Michael Brown, hang tight,
I'll give you some more about no Kings on the
other side of the news.
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