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April 26, 2025 176 mins
"Kill Chain" 

Hosts: Darren Weeks, Vicky Davis 

Website for the show: https://governamerica.com 

Vicky's website: https://thetechnocratictyranny.com 

COMPLETE SHOW NOTES AND CREDITS AT: https://governamerica.com/radio/radio-archives/22615-govern-america-april-26-2025-kill-chain 

Listen LIVE every Saturday at 11AM Eastern or 8AM Pacific at http://governamerica.net or on your favorite app. 

Port explosion in Iran one day after Trump says he might make a deal with them. Klaus Schwab resigns from the World Economic Forum after corruption investigation is opened. Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre dies — allegedly of "suicide". CEOs of major retailers warn of empty store shelves. War on food as 30 million chickens culled due to Bird Flu so far in 2025. UK approves geoengineering "experiment" to dim the sun to combat "global warming", as media pretends like weather manipulation and aerial spraying is a new concept. Utilities in Michigan keep raising rates due to goofy Gretchen's "green energy" policies. Dam removals and building codes that threaten to raise housing prices in a market that is already out of reach for many young people. Also, Denver Airport, transportation hubs, unmanned bulldozers and AI killer drones. Palantir spreads its tentacles ever deeper into your life — whether you know it, or not. Phone calls throughout the show.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Order, new world order, new world order.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
This is a moment to cease. The clidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Us re order this world around.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.

Speaker 5 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United States is in a key position to shape
this so that the problem of the rensidentity will be
the emergence of a new international order.

Speaker 6 (00:39):
The first decade of the twenty first century. But out
of what is will be feel the greatest restructuring of
the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest
restructuring of the global economy.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
A new world order was.

Speaker 7 (00:53):
Created, documenting the graces of our rebelty.

Speaker 8 (00:58):
The very word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society.
And we are as a people inherently and historically opposed
to secret societies, the secret oaths and a secret.

Speaker 7 (01:12):
Proceedings waging war on the new world order.

Speaker 9 (01:15):
The councils of government we must guard again the acquisition
of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military
industrial conflict.

Speaker 7 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 10 (01:41):
From Femal Regions five to ten. This is Governed America.
I'm during Wicks. Vicky Davis is here as well. It
is the twenty sixth of April now twenty twenty five.
Nice to have you with us once again. We are
monitoring a story that just broke overnight. It's a very
interesting something just exploded. I guess it was a port
in Iran overnight. A very interesting points.

Speaker 11 (02:03):
Some breaking news for you now coming from Iran. There's
been a massive explosion at a major port in the
south of the country. State media says at least four
hundred and six people have been injured. These are some
of the latest images coming from the scene of that explosion.
A plume of smoke, as you can see, has been
rising over the Rajai Port that's in the city of

(02:26):
Banda Abbaskas was reportedly shattered within several kilometers of the blast,
an indication of the size and scale of it. Firefighters
and the Red Crescent are at the site. Authorities are
still investigating the cause of that blast. Well, of course
monos loosed developments with the time being. That's kind of
tot Asadi, who joins this live from Tehran Toiet. Any

(02:46):
more details on what's happened.

Speaker 12 (02:48):
Well, actually, about three hours ago, there was a massive
explosion that took place in Shahidreja Port in Hormos Gang
Province near Bandara bas city of i On the let's say,
it was really massive, so strong that the let's say,
explosion sound was heard kilometers away from the scene. And

(03:10):
right now they add the live footage by the State
TV indicates that the fire is still active and the
smoke is coming out of the scene. If you just
look at the statements coming from Iranian officials. The cause
is not clear yet.

Speaker 13 (03:26):
It is reportedly.

Speaker 12 (03:27):
Said by the State TV that a explosion by a
container or let's say, a tank containing inflamable material has
caused it, but there's still investigations. Further scrutiny is underway.
According to different Iranian officials, the initial report by Farce
News agency was forty six people injured, but two hours

(03:52):
after that it increased by ten times and now the
latest lines coming that we've got more than four hundred
people injured and looking at the scene, the casualties are
still greatly feared with respect to the intensity of the
underactive fire there and there are footages of nearby buildings

(04:15):
and cars showing huge destruction. And we've got this statement's
latest line from the oil companies of the country saying
that the infrastructures related to the oil refinery is not touched.
It continues its operation. It's not related to oil infrastructures

(04:35):
of the country. So far, this is what we have,
but it still we are waiting for further updates as
it's an active scene and as the fire continues.

Speaker 11 (04:45):
As you say, Tody, it is an active scene. If
you do hear any more information, do let us know,
just repeat or we are reporting.

Speaker 10 (04:53):
I don't think we need to repeat it. Yeah, there
was an explosion in Iran at a port and we
don't know what the cause of this is. But I
find it kind of interesting. Trump was just talking about
making peace with them. I don't know if this is
some kind of an Israeli thing to try to prevent
that from happening.

Speaker 14 (05:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (05:12):
I don't want to be a conspiracy theorist or anything,
but I just find it very interesting how these things
just seemed to happen.

Speaker 15 (05:19):
Well, it's kind of coincidental that a couple of weeks
before this, the US was formed bombing a port in Yemen,
oil oil port.

Speaker 10 (05:34):
Well, nobody's saying it was bombed. Just to be clear.
It was an explosion I guess of a cargo container.

Speaker 15 (05:42):
No, the article says that the US strikes Yemen.

Speaker 10 (05:46):
No, no, no, I'm talking about though, this is this one. Yeah, okay,
this was a cargo container that evidently exploded. But you know,
who knows the background and why the explosives were there
and what you know? Did somebody ship them at bomb
into their port? That's my question.

Speaker 15 (06:07):
That's a good question, I'd say.

Speaker 10 (06:09):
Yeah, Well, you know, we'll see what they come up
with in the coming days in terms of their investigation
into this incident. But apparently a lot of people hurt
by that.

Speaker 15 (06:21):
It looks very bad for the United States regardless.

Speaker 10 (06:25):
You know, well, you know we should be cozying up
to Israel. We you know again, you know, we were
warned by George Washington to avoid foreign entanglements. You know,
we shouldn't be having allegiances to certain countries, and you know,

(06:45):
a state of enmity with others, a permanent state of enmity.
It's one thing if you have, like if you go
to war out of necessity reasons. We know, of course
war is today and none of them really are for
the stated purposes that you know they were started for.

(07:05):
So there's that problem. But if we did have an
honest war where we had to go to war with
the country, even after that war was settled, we shouldn't
have a permanent state of enmity with another country and
allegiances to others. I mean, we should be neutral whenever possible.

(07:26):
That's the point.

Speaker 15 (07:28):
Yeah, Well, our country was started by the British building
their maritime empire, the British and the Dutch, and so
you know, the idea of global commerce, free trade, all

(07:50):
of that. So they've made alliances with some countries, but
more often than not that the alliance is based on
the idea of extraction of resources from the country.

Speaker 10 (08:08):
Yeah, the small acts in the chat room saying so
when does Iran retaliate against Israel for this recent attack.
I to be clear, I'm not saying that Israel attacked Iran.
I'm not saying that that's what this is. That was
speculation on my part. I don't know what the this

(08:29):
just happened, so we have to wait for the investigation
to play out and find out. But you know, it's
interesting to me. Clearly something's blown up here, and the
timing is very strange. I guess that's the thing that
really makes me suspicious about the whole situation is, you know,
Trump said something and I don't remember what it was.

(08:50):
He said something recently about having peace talks with Iran
or something, and I'll find something on that.

Speaker 15 (08:59):
But it just looks and what I was saying, it
just looks bad for the US because they bombed a
port in Yemen, an oil port in Yemen, and that's
all over the news. The US admits to it, so
it looks bad, you know.

Speaker 10 (09:21):
Yeah, so yeah. Former President Donald Trump has recently made
several statements about peace talks and negotiations with Iran, and
an interviews published on April twenty fifth, Trump confirmed that
the US is engaged in direct, high level talks with
Iran regarding its nuclear program, and he expressed optimism about
reaching a diplomatic agreement. Trump stated I think we're going

(09:43):
to make a deal with Iran and indicated he is
open to meeting with Iran's supreme leader or president if
it would help advance negotiations. So that was just yesterday,
these reports were published, and now all of a sudden,
you got this explosion today. Hmm. Now you know again,

(10:04):
I don't want to be a conspiracy theory theorist or anything.
Far be it from me. You know, of course I'm
about as far from conspiracy theory world as you can
possibly get tongue in cheek. But uh yeah, that smells
a little bit. It could just be an accident, you know,

(10:25):
the explode every day at ports, right, uh huh.

Speaker 15 (10:29):
Just coincidentally, I went back and listened to the hearing
you know, where they were talking about this alleged security breach,
you know with the uh the call of the national
security people that had a reporter on the line. Oh yeah,

(10:52):
and and the hearing. Yeah, and it's it seemed to
me as I was listening to it, that that was
a dialectic and intended to open up the conversation with
the American people to begin to explain the chaos in

(11:14):
our country, and the chaos in our country is due
of course to globalization, yeah, you know, which is global communications.
So you know hook up the whole world in a
global communications network. I don't think it occurred to the

(11:36):
leaders of this country, which at the time were Bill
Clinton and Al Gore. I don't think it crossed their
minds that they were opening the door to chaos, because
people in the US always seem to think that, well,
we can just have a conversation with them and arrive

(12:01):
at a conclusion. But I've been, you know, watching these
videos that are talking about how people think very differently,
and we can't put our Western mindset into an Eastern mindset.

(12:23):
You know, their whole foundation of thinking is based in
their Eastern tradition, whatever it is. Our whole way of
thinking is in our Western tradition, and it is completely different.

Speaker 10 (12:41):
Yeah. Well, I think they're going to do everything they
can to converge the two. That's what they've been working
on for many, many decades.

Speaker 15 (12:50):
Not too successfully.

Speaker 10 (12:53):
Well, I don't know. Yeah, I guess you're right. The
world views are pretty different. But that's why you have
to have regions. I guess you know, you'll have the
US with.

Speaker 15 (13:05):
The global communications network. It kind of you know, even
if you define the geographical territories as a region, you've
still got this international system to deal with. And who's
at the top of the international organization u UNS run

(13:30):
by a communist Well, it really is. I researched him
when he was.

Speaker 10 (13:37):
The Oh I believe that.

Speaker 15 (13:40):
Yeah, human U n HDR human rights organization.

Speaker 10 (13:48):
Yeah, before we get too far away though from and
we'll circle back to the UN and circle back to globalism.
But we were talking about conspiracy theories and things, things
that could be considered a conspiracy. Virginia Jeffrey, you remember her,
She was get her.

Speaker 15 (14:08):
Up this morning. Yeah, so I remember now.

Speaker 10 (14:12):
Well they're saying now that she died as a result
of suicide.

Speaker 16 (14:17):
When the scope of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes finally came to light,
Virginia Geoffrey was the woman at the center of the story,
publicly sharing painful details of her own experience. In a
statement to NBC News tonight, her family announcing the forty
one year old mother of three took her own life,
writing she lost her life to suicide after being a
lifelong victim of sexual abuse. Jeffrey said she was recruited

(14:40):
by Epstein's girlfriend, Gallaine Maxwell when she was just fourteen
years old. According to Jeffrey, it was the start of
years of sexual abuse by Epstein, Maxwell and their friends.

Speaker 17 (14:50):
It was that constant we own the police. You can't run,
you can't tell. Anybody will never be held accountable for this.

Speaker 16 (15:02):
At age seventeen, Jeffrey said Maxwell and Epstein directed her
to have sex multiple times with Prince Andrew, an allegation
the Prince denied. Geoffrey sued, and she settled with the
Prince in twenty twenty two, receiving an undisclosed amount of money.
Epstein and Maxwell were both charged with sex trafficking. Epstein
took his own life in federal prison before standing trial. Allegedly,

(15:24):
Maxwell was convicted and given a twenty year sentence. In
one of her last social media posts earlier this month,
Jeffrey said she was hospitalized after a car accident and
was gravely injured, posting a disturbing photo, but days later
she was released Tonight. The family says they are heartbroken,
writing Geoffrey was heroic and will always be remembered for

(15:45):
her incredible courage and loving spirit.

Speaker 10 (15:48):
Now that's interesting, isn't it. I mean, here, she just
has a car accident and now supposedly she commits suicide.
I'm not saying she didn't commit I don't.

Speaker 15 (15:57):
Know, getting a big settlement, So she had plenty of
money to have just probably a fantastic life. Well she had,
Well that would make you depressed enough to kill yourself.

Speaker 10 (16:08):
Well, I don't know. Maybe if she was in pain
enough from the accident, that could have done it. But
I'm not saying she did or didn't. But it's just
another one of those things that there's going to be
a lot of people that are going to be suspicious
of this one.

Speaker 15 (16:23):
Yeah, I'm not well, I'm just not buying the suicide
story at all.

Speaker 10 (16:28):
Yeah, well, that's very convenient for all of these people
that want to you know, she's and there were a
lot of high profile people. They mentioned Prince Andrew there,
but there were a lot of others as well.

Speaker 15 (16:41):
They should release the names of.

Speaker 10 (16:44):
Yeah, why why can't we know this stuff? Why isn't
this being released with all the fanfare and all the
hollering about it and all the speculation, you know, and
then we've got the Justice Department controlled by the Trump
administration now and still there doesn't seem to be anything

(17:04):
new on that front. Isn't that interesting?

Speaker 15 (17:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (17:09):
Well, another thing that I found interesting is speaking of perversion.
Claus Schwab, did you hear about this.

Speaker 15 (17:21):
That I haven't heard anything.

Speaker 10 (17:22):
Well, he's resigned the World Economic Form effectively immediately.

Speaker 15 (17:27):
Oh, I think I did hear that. I was not
surprised about that because he's so old.

Speaker 18 (17:33):
You know.

Speaker 10 (17:35):
Yeah, well, I think it's a little more involved than that.
He was kind of caught up in a in room
massage investigation at the World Economic Form. Now, to be clear,
he's denying any wrongdoing. I think one day this is
zero Hedge. One day after it was reported that the

(17:56):
World Economic Form Claus Schwab, Yeah, he's eighty eight years old,
resigned after chairman of being chairman there of fifty five years,
The Wall Street Journal reported that Schwab is under investigation
by the organization he created after a whistleblower alleged financial
and ethical misconduct by mister eat the Bugs and his wife.

(18:21):
In an anonymous letter sent from the board of directors
by current and former Forum employees, Schwab and his wife
are accused of co mingling their personal affairs with World
Economic Forum resources without proper oversight and much more. Imagine
that this guy corrupt. I thought he was the bastion

(18:41):
of morality. Among the most serious charges were that Schwab
asked junior employees to withdraw thousands of dollars from ATMs
on his behalf, and used Forum funds to pay for
private in room massages at hotels His wife, Hilda, a
former Forum employees, scheduled quote unquote token Forum funded meetings

(19:06):
in order to justify luxury holiday travel at the organization's expense.
The letter also raises concerns about how Claus Schwab treated
female employees and how his leadership over decades allegedly allowed
instances of sexual harassment another discriminatory behavior to go unchecked
in the workplace. Now, isn't it interesting that all these

(19:27):
billionaires are all all in on the DEI stuff, all
in on the social justice, you know stuff, But when
it comes to practicing, you know, treating people fairly in
their own personal lives, he conflict, you know, their little
pseudo memorial they're they're the the facade of their morality
kind of disappears, doesn't it when it comes to really
practicing this stuff.

Speaker 15 (19:48):
Well, I think it's very coincidental that with everything that
has been going on, it always seems to involve sexual
misc But he's run that organization for fifty five years.
If he was corrupt, he should have been caught a

(20:09):
long time ago, because you just don't go from being
a moral person to being an immoral person overnight.

Speaker 10 (20:17):
He's been a douchebag since his whole life, and it's.

Speaker 15 (20:21):
Just being a douchebag is a little different than being
a sexual predator.

Speaker 10 (20:29):
Well that's a pretty good definition of a douchebag in
my opinion.

Speaker 15 (20:34):
Well, well yeah, I mean, you know, but douchebags include
all kinds of other things too.

Speaker 10 (20:39):
Well, these douchebags are functional items. These people aren't. But
other allegations include Schwab's family use of a Villa Mundy,
a luxury property bought before the pandemic by the Forum
located next to the organization's Geneva headquarters, which the whistle
blower late the whistleblower letter, And that's really why you're
hearing about it, Vicky, is this whistleblower. The whistleblower letter

(21:04):
maintained that Hilde Schwab maintains tight control over this property
and which the Forum paid thirty million dollars to purchase
in another twenty million dollars to renovate. Also overseen by Hilde.
In recent days, Schwab is said to have railed against
an investigation, telling board members that he denied the allegations

(21:25):
and would challenge them in a lawsuit. According to the report, instead,
the board launches or the board launched a probe during
an emergency meeting on Easter Sunday, and response, Schwab resigned
immediately as chairman, versus staying on for an extended transition
period as previously planned. A spokesman for the Schwabs told

(21:46):
the journal that they deny every allegation in the whistleblower
complaint and that clause will file a lawsuit against whoever's
behind it and quote anybody who spreads these mistruths unquote.
So Furthermore, Schwab said he paid the WEF back for

(22:06):
said in room massages. Well that's interesting now, if he
didn't take the money to begin with, how we'd have
paid him back hmm. And he denied the allegations about
luxury travel and withdrawing funds. I wonder how many carbon
emissions with this luxury travel would have emitted into the atmosphere.

Speaker 15 (22:27):
Oh, come on, you know that cutting down on carbon
is only for the little people.

Speaker 10 (22:34):
Mmm, okay, yeah, I just seem to keep forgetting I
apologize about that. So, according to the WEF, it's board
unanimously supported the decision to launch an independent investigation following
a whistleblower letter containing allegations against former chairman Clause Schwab.
This decision was made after consultation with external legal counsel.

(22:54):
We feel compelled to share a comprehensive account of systemic
governance failures and abuses of power that have taken place
over for many years under the unchecked authority of Claus Schwab,
reads the letter, which states it was from current and
former Forum employees. The organizer of the annual De Davos

(23:14):
conference has been shaking up its leadership in recent weeks
in response to a previous board probe into its workplace culture.
In a recent memo, Borga Brende, the Forum CEO, said
the Forum would take steps to address leadership issues identified
by the prior probe and that the investigation didn't substantiate

(23:38):
the allegations against its founder. A few weeks ago, Schwab
eighty seven, said he'd step down as non executive chairman
of the Forum's board, and the Forum said that the
succession process would be completed. In January of twenty twenty seven.
The whistleblower letter blew up that timeline. Behind the scenes,

(24:01):
a high stakes boardroom drama unfolded, pitting Schwab against the
global power players on the Forum's board. The board includes
celebrities like cellist Yo Yo Ma Yo Yo Ma. No,
I've never heard of Yo Yo Ma.

Speaker 15 (24:18):
Oh, he's very very famous.

Speaker 10 (24:21):
Wow, how did I miss Yo Yo Ma? It sounds
like a rap artist. Okay, I guess I'm not really into.

Speaker 15 (24:31):
I lived in New York City, so then he played
at the Met Okay I believe it was the Met.

Speaker 10 (24:40):
So Yo Yo Ma and politicians like Al Gore. It
is also somebody I wish I hadn't heard of. It
also has business leaders like AXA Group AXA Group, a
XA CEO Thomas bou Burrow and X Center CEO Julie
He's Julie sweet. As such, it's no surprise that Schwab's

(25:03):
relationship with the board had been deteriorating over the past year,
according to the report. So anyway, I found.

Speaker 15 (25:09):
The Sentia accentia being involved in that. That's interesting because
you remember accentia used to be Arthur Anderson. They're an
accounting firm.

Speaker 10 (25:19):
Okay, yep. So anyway, that that was pretty interesting, the
whole situation with the World Economic Forum, and I guess
the interim chair I believe I read that the former
Hershey's CEO. Gosh, what is his name? Now, see who

(25:41):
is cheering the board at the World Economic Forum. I
believe it was uh, I forget his name though, it was, uh,
Peter ray beck Let meth.

Speaker 15 (26:02):
I ever heard of him.

Speaker 10 (26:04):
He's serving as the interim chairman of the World Economic
Forms Board of Trustees following the immediate resignation of Claus Schwab. Yeah,
and I think he uh anyway, sound like Biden now
stopping in the middle of my sentence and saying anyway anyway,
So uh, anyway, that's the situation there with the World
Economic for him, It'll be interesting to see who how

(26:27):
it's framed in the future and uh who's leading it.
But it's going to be just as evil at all
as it always has been.

Speaker 19 (26:34):
Anyway, I don't think.

Speaker 15 (26:36):
I don't think taking out a CEO or chairman of
the board is that uncommon. No, it's just not doesn't
normally appear in the newspapers.

Speaker 10 (26:48):
All right, we got the bottom of the hour break.
We're gonna go ahead and hit the ground running when
we come back. Stay with us, ladies and gentlemen, as
governed America continues here in just a few minutes.

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Two one with a spoof. Go to find out what's
really going on. This is govern America.

Speaker 10 (31:24):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. The
website for the show is Governamerica dot com. That's Governamerica
dot com. My email address is radio at Governamerica dot com. Vicky,
you want to give your information out?

Speaker 15 (31:39):
Yeah, My website is the Technocratic Tyranny dot com. The
older website is Channelingreality dot com. And my email address
is on both websites.

Speaker 10 (31:51):
All right, very good. So we're talking about a variety
of different things that happened this week. By the way,
for those that don't know, we did have a live
show last week. RBN took the weekend off, but if
you wanted to hear our show from last week, you
can go into the archives at governamerica dot com. We
talked about Oklahoma City and explored some of the things

(32:11):
that happened way back then, since it was a thirty
year anniversary of Oklahoma City, so and Waco. It was
the anniversary also of Waco, the massacre there that happened there.
So anyway, you can go back and listen to that
if you choose to. That's at government America dot com
last week. In the meantime, there's a number of different

(32:36):
Agenda twenty one stories the United Nations Blueprint for sustainable development.
They're calling it Agenda twenty thirty now, but it's still
the same same plan for global governance. They're implementing it everywhere.
Ladies and gentlemen, we've talked about it for I hate
to even say it decades now, and here it is

(32:57):
still going on. Look coming into view the world Economic
Forum implementing it in a major way as they attempted
to get people to eat bugs and do away with
beef and talking about carbon emissions all the time. But now,
how many years have we been talking about geoengineering and
weather modification?

Speaker 15 (33:16):
Oh, since at least the early two thousands. There were
people already working on it. Yeah, and that was one
of my first introductions to stories that were considered to
be conspiracy theories. But all you had to do is
just step out your on your porch, look up and

(33:40):
you'd see the chemtrails. Yeah, and they were unnatural.

Speaker 10 (33:45):
Yeah. And keep in mind at weather dot sweet liberty
dot org, we have we have weather as a force multiplier,
owning the weather in twenty twenty five. What year is it?
Owning the weather in twenty twenty five? This is an
Air Force report on governmental manipulation of the weather as
a tool to enhance military operations force multiplier. And now

(34:10):
we see from the New York Post just two days
ago it says sixty six million dollar experiment to quote
dim the sun unquote to combat global warming. Gets okay,
but critics have called it quote barking mad. They say

(34:32):
it sounds like a bright idea. Well, I don't think
it sounds like a bright idea at all. Scientists.

Speaker 15 (34:38):
Well, and what happens when you dim the sun? Plants
don't grow exactly, I think, Well, and what is it.

Speaker 10 (34:46):
That we're breathing when they spray that crap in the sky.
But they're see they're making it sound like, oh, this
is something that just got the okay, and this is
just something that something new that's being done now in
the United Kingdom.

Speaker 15 (34:58):
I suppose probably IPCC or something.

Speaker 10 (35:04):
Well, that's that's the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Speaker 15 (35:09):
Well, which that's what global warming, global cooling, modification of
the weather. It's all in the same basket.

Speaker 10 (35:19):
But they say. Scientists have received approval to soon test
whether quote unquote dimming the light from the sun will
combat global warming, a strategy some critics have recently described
as barking mad. Geo engineers at the Advanced Research and
Invention Agency or RIIA area in the United Kingdom have

(35:42):
allocated over sixty six million dollars to inject ersolized particles
into the stratosphere to reflect the vital light the Sun
provides to the Earth in a bid to hedge global warming.
The Times of London reported, Now, folks, do we get
a vote on this? You know, we hear a lot
about oh oh democracy and all our democracy is threatened

(36:05):
now here in the US. We don't have a democracy,
but they keep shoving democracy down our throat, like we
have some sort of a vote. Where did we get
the vote on whether or not we breathe airsolized particles
and whether or a lot we have a dimmed down sun?

(36:26):
What right do these people have to steal your birthright,
your ability to enjoy the sky as it naturally is.

Speaker 15 (36:37):
You know what I'd like to know where all the
environmentalists are. Yeah, because if ever there was an issue,
you know, on the environment, that would be it.

Speaker 10 (36:51):
Amen. The experiment will send high flying planes to release
sulfate particles into the stratosphere of the lower atmosphere, which
would then prevent some of the Sun's rays from reaching
the ground by reflecting them towards space.

Speaker 15 (37:08):
Proponents of the you know what that reveals is that
the real issue is population reduction. Yeah, period, end of story.

Speaker 10 (37:19):
Yeah. Proponents of the project, they say, suggest that the
controversial process could be a cheap way to cool the
planet to combat the threat of global warming, which isn't
a thread at all, listeners. I mean, things keep getting
colder and colder, but no, it doesn't matter. And that
was the original threat, by the way, back in the
early seventies, I think it was they were saying that

(37:42):
things were going to freeze again, We're going to have
another ice age.

Speaker 15 (37:46):
Just first it was global warming, and then it was
global cooling.

Speaker 10 (37:50):
And then they flipped back to Okay, they flipped back
to global warming.

Speaker 15 (37:54):
If they control the if they control the vironment, they
control the population, the animals, they control everything. Yeah, right, yeah,
we live in the environment.

Speaker 10 (38:10):
That's the goal.

Speaker 15 (38:11):
Since the objective is population reduction. Sure it makes sense,
you know, go spray the atmosphere, block the sun because
the sun is what gives us life.

Speaker 10 (38:24):
Yeah, so in food and so many other things. Yes,
you know, it's just amazing to me that they're talking
about this like it's something new, that's a new concept.
You know, we've been talking about this for twenty years.
People at least there.

Speaker 15 (38:40):
Are a lot of a lot of young people now,
you know, we've been twenty years. There were some people
now that are just coming into the public arena that
we're just being born. Back then, so small they would
have no idea.

Speaker 10 (38:57):
Yeah, they'say. Small scale indoor testing could begin this within weeks,
with the plans architects claiming the controversial measures are necessary
to avoid a potential tipping point catastrophe in the future.
I'm sorry, he can't say that on the air.

Speaker 15 (39:16):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 10 (39:17):
The uncomfortable truth is that our current warming trajectory makes
a number of such tipping points distinctly possible over the
next century. Mark Simes, the project manager at AREA, the
Advanced Research and Invention Agency, told the Guarded, having spoken
to hundreds of researchers, we reached the conclusion that a

(39:38):
and who's funding these researchers, by the way, and there
you dig into who's funding these researchers, and then you
find out where the real money is coming from. And
I guarantee you Bill Gates is behind this as well.
We know Bill Gates has been working to do the
global dimming project, the geoengineering project, among other things, many

(39:59):
other nefarious things like genetically modifying mosquitoes to go bite
you and vaccinate you in the process. So, I mean
gates big.

Speaker 15 (40:11):
Father's mother was part of.

Speaker 10 (40:13):
The Yeah, the eugenicists, yeah too, you know, Yeah, he
has deep, deep roots in the eugenics movement, which you
know anyway, So uh, they say, Having spoken to hundreds
of researchers, we reached the conclusion that a critical missing

(40:34):
part of our understanding was real world physical data. These
would show us whether any of the potential approaches would
actually work and what their effects might be. Advocates, including
Dominic Cummings, the former longtime chief advisor to Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, even alleged farms could be aided by less light. Yeah, okay,

(40:59):
as crops would suffer less from heat stress.

Speaker 15 (41:02):
Oh it's imposs you know, it would be impossible for
me to come up with this much nonsense.

Speaker 10 (41:11):
There's too much photosynthesis going on out there, VICKI. Yeah,
we got to stop all that photosynthesis. Other geoengineering methods
that will be considered under the project's banner include marine
cloud brightening marine cloud crust. Say that ten times real
fast marine cloud brightening, which would spray sea salt into

(41:36):
the atmosphere to make clouds whiter. I reformed.

Speaker 15 (41:39):
That's great. Yeah, salt in the atmosphere and then you
poison all the land. Because if you there's even something
in the Bible about this salting the earth.

Speaker 10 (41:52):
Well, we don't want fresh water turned into salt water,
and at some point it's going.

Speaker 15 (41:57):
To rain down water, farmland salted.

Speaker 10 (41:59):
See these people, these people, they don't they're they're playing god.
You know. They do their little experimentations, they do their
little engineering making clouds wider. Why do we need to
do that? Why does what do clouds need to be
whiter reflect more solar radiation? This is insane. Another strategy

(42:25):
includes breaking up thin cirrus clouds, which act as heat
trapping blankets. The Times reported. However, many critics have expressed
concerns over the ambitious attempt at weather control, claiming that
dimming the sun will have unforeseen repercussions in weather patterns
and food production. The report set.

Speaker 15 (42:43):
Well, duh, yeah, no kidding.

Speaker 10 (42:46):
One reported critique offered by environmental scientists called it barking
mad and likened the plan to treating cancer with aspirin.
The Guardian reported last month, well that's cancer is something
that's real. Freaking global warming isn't okay. The Area geoengineering
program is a dangerous distraction from the work that needs

(43:07):
to be done to achieve net zero carbon dioxide emissions.
Professor Michael Mann. You know, the hockey stick guy, the
lunatic hockey stick.

Speaker 15 (43:17):
Guy, bringing him back around.

Speaker 10 (43:19):
Yeah, the Ponds thought, and here he is again, of
the University of Pennsylvania and Professor Raymond Pierre Humpart of
University of Oxford, collectively, I guess said government agency AREA
is considered to be the equivalent of the US Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency or DARPA, which is funded by

(43:42):
the United States government. Listeners, a secretive agency that funds
futuristic technology that has previously included armed drones, driverless cars, herbicides,
and the Internet.

Speaker 26 (43:55):
You know what, I.

Speaker 15 (43:56):
Found a panel discussion that I watch, and the idea
of a global environmental ethic was discussed, and at that
point in time they were really weren't using the term

(44:16):
climate change. But when you think about how you're going
to market an idea, climate change is a great marketing
tool because of course it covers the entire world, and
it sets us up for global governance because you know,

(44:38):
if you're going to capture the environment, the label of
climate change, it's innocuous enough to be deceptive, but allows
them to move ahead with all of the controls on
the environment to put us in I think what Joan

(44:58):
Beyond called a global state.

Speaker 10 (45:00):
Yeah, that's what her book was called. Absolutely. I'll tell
you what. Let's go to the phones and let's go
down to Georgia and take a call. Six ten six
hundred seventeen seventy six. That's six ten, six hundred seventeen
seventy six are toll free? Eight four four six four
six eight three seven six that's eight four four six
govern Hello, call you on the air guard please, right, Darren.

Speaker 26 (45:23):
Ricky, You know these people are complete and utter idiots.
Typical sixth grader, any typical sixth grader with two brain
cells to rub together, and especially any farmer knows that
if you reduce the amount of sunlight that a plant gets,
one of two things.

Speaker 18 (45:41):
Is going to happen.

Speaker 26 (45:42):
Either one, the plant is going to become extremely stunted,
will not grow and will not produce, or two it
will simply die.

Speaker 10 (45:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 26 (45:51):
So where these idiots think this is a good idea? Really? Seriously,
these are the people that are calling the shots.

Speaker 10 (45:59):
Well, they know what they're doing. And the point is
is that Vicky hit on it earlier, is when she
said it's about population control. They want you to die.
They want fit the plants to die, because there's been
a global war on food for many, many years, with
the consolidation of the farmers and ranchers. You know. I

(46:20):
remember back when I was growing up, back in the
nineteen eighties, you know, the Willie Nelson farm Aide and
all of that. The farmers were really taking it on
the chin back then. Well, since then, the situation's only
got much worse with all the consolidation going on in
Big Egg taking over everything now.

Speaker 15 (46:38):
Supply chain management, don't forget that, and all.

Speaker 10 (46:41):
The foreign countries buying up all the farmland and all
of the agricultural companies. You know. So this is you know,
and let's not get started on Monsanto, and now it's
called bear. I was just driving by a bunch of
fields just yesterday here in Michigan where there's all these
different all these different acres of bear science. I didn't

(47:08):
even know these things were there. I took a different
way through the country and there's all this bear crops
or these feels. I thought, are they building new bear
a bear plant here? And then I realized, now they're
experimenting with planting different things. Because Monsanto is now owned
by Beer, so I found it fascinating.

Speaker 15 (47:34):
Well, you know what, I live in a very small
town that has a community college and they have an
agricultural research a section of the school.

Speaker 10 (47:46):
Yeah, and I.

Speaker 15 (47:48):
Think that Monsanto might be involved in it. But you
know what's an interesting thing is that if young people
learn things in school, they take it as gospel. And
I know that because early on in my research, when

(48:11):
I was working on the H one B visa issue,
there was a guy who was working on his PhD
and and I was working on the h H one
bs and I explained to him what was happening and

(48:32):
he and he said to me, he said, so you're
saying they're lying to me. And I said, yes, they
are lying to you. And he was. He understood it.
He knew what I was saying was true, but he.

Speaker 10 (48:50):
Had a hard time, hard lied.

Speaker 15 (48:53):
To, hard time believing it because that's not what they
taught him in school. What it had to do with
free trade, That's what it was. Free trade.

Speaker 10 (49:02):
Yeah. Well, that's a lot like the people who are
at the hospital, you know, the doctors and nurses, how
brainwashed they are by their medical establishment. Rare is the
individual that can actually step back from the propaganda and
indoctrination and actually take a an independent look and think
for themselves.

Speaker 15 (49:22):
It's that person is very very rare, very rare.

Speaker 10 (49:26):
Yeah, indeed, Art, did you have anything else?

Speaker 26 (49:31):
Yeah, I wish there was some way, you know, I
really wish we could figure out some way of stopping
these people put the brakes on what they're doing, because
they really are enemies of humanity. They're not enemies of
the state, they're enemies to humanity itself. It literally does
sound to me like they want to wipe every man, woman,

(49:54):
and child off the face of the planet, because that's
exactly what's going to happen with what they're doing. And
you know, I can only think of one way to
stop them. Unfortunately, I can't voice that opinion because if
I do.

Speaker 10 (50:07):
Well, yeah, bad things start happening.

Speaker 26 (50:09):
They'd probably rain down hell on me, you know. But
there's got to be some way we can stop them.
I just wish I could think of what it would be.
But anyway, thanks guys, appreciate it. You'll have a great day.

Speaker 10 (50:21):
Yeah, you too, Thanks for the call. I appreciate it. Yeah,
I was just looking last night. They were thirty I
think thirty million was the number. I saw thirty million
chickens that were killed this year due to this supposed
bird flu outbreak. Thirty million. Now you think about that,

(50:42):
I mean, you talk about crimes. There's no way to
treat these birds. You know, they call the herd, they
call the chicken herd, the chicken flock, they call them
when there's a few there, even the surviving birds. If
the birds survive bird flu, they built up an immunity

(51:04):
against the thing. Why call them then? But no, they
call them all. That's well, I don't know what you
would call it, vicky. I would call that hannicide.

Speaker 15 (51:15):
Yeah, I would too. And I don't know why. Well
I do know why. The reporters don't go look back
in history. But I can tell you when I was
growing up, there were no mass chicken kills. You know.
It's it's just they're treating it as if it's anthrax

(51:38):
or something, and chicken anthrax and you've got to kill
them all?

Speaker 10 (51:43):
Why not just why not treat that's there's ways to
treat chickens. There's ways to solve these problems. And how
about separating the birds when you first noticed there's a problem,
taking some of the other birds away from the wine
that are infected.

Speaker 15 (52:03):
But you know, yeah, or how about breaking up the
food cartels.

Speaker 10 (52:09):
How about that.

Speaker 15 (52:09):
There's no reason why we only need to have like
we need to have maybe one or two locations where
the chickens for the mass market are grown.

Speaker 10 (52:20):
Yea, and having them having them packed in like sardines
into a chicken house, I've seen it, you know. I've
had relatives that actually have run chicken houses down in
northern Alabama where my relatives live there. They did that
for commercial purposes, and it's very controlled. The way that

(52:42):
they have to do it is very controlled. Whoever they're
growing the chickens for dictates exactly how the chickens have
to be raised, what conditions they're raised in, and and
and I had a cousin that was doing that, and
he was very very careful about it. He was because

(53:03):
they're very meticulous about that, and they can come out
and inspect at any time. And if you're not doing
things exactly the way that you know you're supposed to
be doing them, they'll take their their chickens out of there.
And they won't they won't let you do it anymore. So,
uh so it's not even really.

Speaker 15 (53:21):
That's what the supply chain cartel does. Yeah, that's how
they operate.

Speaker 10 (53:27):
But it makes more sense to me to not have
them crammed in there like sardines, so that if something does,
you know, number one, it stresses the chickens, you know,
and it makes it to the point where if something
does happen where they an, the illness breaks out, it
spreads like wildfire. So anyway, uh, let's go out to

(53:49):
Utah now and take a call there, a low collar.
You're on the air, Go ahead, please, gar Hi.

Speaker 27 (53:56):
The real is that whatever infects his chicken and infects
all the birds. So are they going to call all
the birds?

Speaker 10 (54:05):
Well, that's what they've been doing, absolutely what they're doing. Yep. Yeah,
it's an excuse. It's an excuse, I believe, to kill
a bunch of our food supply to drive up the
price of food eggs, get it astronomically priced, and make
it to the point where things are they're shortages ultimately,

(54:27):
you know. And so if you're able to.

Speaker 15 (54:31):
That's the objective of the supply chain cartel to drive
up the prices, I mean. And the easiest business to
look at for that is the pharmaceuticals business. You know,
they control the supply, the cartel support controls.

Speaker 10 (54:50):
The supply exactly. They go ahead, call her.

Speaker 27 (54:55):
Well, you don't really have to call the bird. It
just simply makes a public think you did, and then
you can jack the price. No matter what, you'll still
have your supply to sell.

Speaker 10 (55:06):
Yeah. Well, I don't know that they're you know, I
honestly believe they really are calling the herd, but I
have no evidence that they're just pretending to do so.
But the ultimate goal is to create shortages.

Speaker 15 (55:22):
The ultimate goal is is starves to death.

Speaker 10 (55:25):
Yeah, ultimate goal is to starvest to death. Exactly. Go ahead,
and the profit and the prophet in the meantime exactly. Yeah, yep,
absolutely no question about it. Hey, thanks for the call.
I appreciate it. Blessings all right, we're almost out of this. Yeah, yeah,

(55:50):
and we got a little more cheery stuff to talk
about on the other side of you know, Israel's uh
got unmanned bulldozers now in Gaza. Where do you think
those came from?

Speaker 15 (56:01):
Manned bulldozers?

Speaker 10 (56:03):
Yeah, they're bulldozing people's houses. Well, I don't know if
it's the houses they were doing the houses before. I
don't know if there's how much building, how much structure
is left in Gaza. To be honest with you, it's
got to be pretty much, pretty short supply by now. Anyway,
we've got to take the break is not much. Yeah,

(56:24):
let's take the break. We'll be back in a moment.
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Speaker 28 (58:35):
One two Fraston.

Speaker 29 (59:03):
American Family News. I'm Robert Thornton.

Speaker 30 (59:05):
The FBI has arrested a Wisconsin judge on charges that
she helped an illegal alien eade immigration agents. This news
follows a store involving the resignation of a New Mexico
judge for having an alleged MS thirteen gang member on
his property. Attorney General Pam Bondy had this to say
on Fox.

Speaker 31 (59:23):
No one is above the law in this country. And
if you are destroying evidence, if you are obstructing justice,
when you have victims sitting in a courtroom of domestic
violence and you're escorting a criminal defendant out a backdoor,
it will not be tolerated and it is a crime
in the United States of America.

Speaker 30 (59:44):
Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge Hannah Dugan is accused of
escorting a man and his lawyer out of the courtroom
through the jury door on April eighteenth, as a way
to help avert his arrest, according to an FBI affidavit
filed in court. Speaking on Fox, Tammy Nobles, whose daughter
killed by an MS thirteen gang members, says leftist judges
and lawmakers are putting criminals over Americans.

Speaker 32 (01:00:06):
Where were they when my daughter needs to be protected
and others from an open border.

Speaker 30 (01:00:14):
Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders recently signed legislation allowing gold
to be used as currency in the state. Kevin Freeman,
host of Pirate Money Radio on AFR stop by Jenna
Ellis in the morning. He said the legislation was based
on his book Pirate Money.

Speaker 33 (01:00:30):
We got to attend the signing ceremony and I got
the signing pen from Governor Sanders. This is monumental legislation
and it absolutely is being looked at in other states.
We've sent that book to twenty five states.

Speaker 34 (01:00:43):
He said. The goal is not to pay capital gains tax.

Speaker 33 (01:00:47):
It will give people a way to opt out of
the inflation system. A personal optional gold and silver standard
that's simple, as simple to use as a debit card
on the MasterCard financial rail. It operates commercially. It now,
it's proven technology, and now with the state legislation, it
can be gold and silver can be money again according

(01:01:07):
to Article one, section ten of the competition.

Speaker 30 (01:01:09):
He said, to encourage your state legislature and to learn
more about this, go to Transactionalgold dot com. A religious
freedom advocate is Scoffing it claims from the Montgomery County
school Board that exposing little children to sexually charge books
will not impact their religious beliefs. The Maryland school District
went before the Supreme Court this week to defend their
policy of not allowing parents to opt their kids out

(01:01:31):
from in class reading of such books. Off It's Bob
Kellogg has more.

Speaker 19 (01:01:36):
In My Mood versus Taylor. A coalition of Maryland parents
contend that requiring their children to participate in LGBTQ theme
that storybooks violates their religious beliefs. Michael O'Brien Beckett was
at the Supreme Court for the oral arguments.

Speaker 35 (01:01:53):
The justices also seem to be consitives to the parents
who have subjuctions in this case, sympathize with their very
reasonable and kind of and common sense concerns. So where
we're optimistic that the court will rule for the panthers.

Speaker 19 (01:02:09):
Well, Brian says that Montgomery County argues that such inappropriate
sexually based material will not interfere with young students religious
upbringing and beliefs.

Speaker 35 (01:02:19):
It also is in odds with the facts here. You know,
we know, and you know the Boiling Council admitted that
these books must be taught to yes children who are
extremely young and impressionable, and that the books are meant
to influence children.

Speaker 19 (01:02:33):
A decision in the case is expected by late June
or early July. I'm Bob Kellogg.

Speaker 30 (01:02:40):
Texas Scorecards as Texas Speaker of the House, Republican Dustin
Burroughs blocks and effort limiting a scholarship program to US citizens.
An amendment came during debate over a measure which creates
a teacher recruitment scholarship program. Nothing in the bill requires
recipients to be citizens. Democrat state Representative Armando Wallee argued
the amendment was not germane to the bill. Fox Weather

(01:03:03):
says next week, a weather system is to bring severe
weather from Tulsa and Oklahoma City northward to Minneapolis and Duluth.
Foxweather's Hailey Meyer.

Speaker 14 (01:03:10):
Pretty classic severe weather events expected to take hold, and
it's important if you live in these areas. You see
your area highlighted. You want to check in each and
every day to make sure you're up to date with
some of the latest changes.

Speaker 30 (01:03:21):
That's all our time for now. Find more news at
AFN dot new.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves.
And for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 2 (01:03:40):
Order, new world or a new world order.

Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
This is a moment to seeds. The clid escape has
been shaken. The pieces are in flux. Soon they will
settle again. Before they do, let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
Us, a new world order, a world where.

Speaker 4 (01:03:55):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
The less the United States is in a key position
to shape is so that the problem of the pot
prensidentity will be the invergence of a new international order the.

Speaker 6 (01:04:12):
First decade of the twenty first century. But out of
what is will be seen as the greatest restructuring of
the global economy, the greatest restructuring of the global economy,
the greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new world
order was created.

Speaker 7 (01:04:28):
Documenting the graces of our rebellic.

Speaker 8 (01:04:30):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies.

Speaker 25 (01:04:42):
The secret holds and the secret.

Speaker 7 (01:04:44):
Proceedings waiting war on the new world order, the Council's
of government.

Speaker 9 (01:04:49):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 7 (01:05:00):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 10 (01:05:12):
From famer Regions five and ten. This is the second
hour of Governor America. Vicky Davis is here. I'm during
Weeks and it continues to be the twenty sixth of
April twenty twenty five. As we get back into the show,
I'll get to the pallenteer stuff here. In just a moment,
I got a little ahead of myself. I wanted to
cover this. Uh you know here in Michigan we were
talking about climate change earlier. We have an insane lunatic.

(01:05:35):
I don't know what this caller other than just an
absolute nutcase. Governor here? Where is that? Yeah, Yeah, Gretchen Whitmer,
who has aspirations to run for president. I don't know
if that's happened, is if that's gonna happen now, because
there's a lot of Democrats that are angry at her
now because she went to the White House and met

(01:05:56):
with President Trump and was trying to hide her face.
Did you see that picture where she was actually holding
a notebook or something in front of her in front
of her face so that they wouldn't take her picture
at the White House.

Speaker 30 (01:06:12):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (01:06:12):
I I don't recall seeing it, no, but I think
I recall hearing about it.

Speaker 10 (01:06:19):
Yeah she Uh Anyway, a lot of the Democrats now
are upset with her over that whole White House tobacco
and but you know, this is a governor and Trump
praised her at that particular meeting and said that she
was doing a great job and that she was a
good person. What are you thinking. This is the same

(01:06:41):
woman who shut who made it illegal to garden in Michigan.
She actually made it to the point where we couldn't
buy garden supplies during the twenty twenty lockdown. She made
it to the point where we couldn't buy garden supplies
at the store. The garden sections at the grocery store

(01:07:02):
had to be closed. Now what Meyer did to try
to get around it. They closed their garden section to
be in compliance, But then they took a few plants
from the garden section and sold them in the main
part of the store. So I think they were like
a little bit taking a chance by doing that. But look,
people were at home. It was you know, it would

(01:07:25):
be nice for people to be able to grow their
own food, to get outside in the sunshine, because sunshine
kills you know, pathogens, it kills virus. You know, sunshine
is a disinfectant. So it would make sense for people
who were able to get outside in the sunshine, it

(01:07:46):
would be healthy for them. But no, she shut down
the garden sections at the grocery store because that's not needed,
that's not essential. This is the nutcase, lunatic thing that
Whitmer did. And all of her rules were ad hoc,

(01:08:11):
you know, and almost like she was making it up
as she went along.

Speaker 15 (01:08:16):
Oh, I'm sure she was. I mean, because that doesn't
even make logical sense, you know, I logic checked everything.
You know, if you've confined people to home, what would
be a better activity than gardening, building a garden exactly.

Speaker 10 (01:08:36):
Well that's what everybody was saying at the time, but
yet that's not what she did. So anyway, this was
something that was very stressful for everybody, and they made
it much much worse. And they made the whole scenario
much much worse by shutting everything down. And if it
weren't for you know, people standing up to her, and

(01:09:00):
there were a lot of people I remember getting the
emails from the from Dana Nessel's office, she's the attorney
general in the state. She went after so many businesses.
We're talking thousands and thousands of dollars that they find
business owners for either being open or even after they
were allowed to open up, people somebody behind the counter,

(01:09:24):
not wearing a mask, you know, not having some kind
of compliance plan in place to comply with their little decrees. So,
you know, I think we should never ever, ever forget
with these criminals, and that's what they are have done

(01:09:46):
to the people, because honestly, I think we're still paying
the price for it. Socially. The schism that was created
back then is still haunting us today. There's no reason
for you know, people are ruder today than they were
before the so called pandemic. They're more anti social than

(01:10:09):
they were back then. Children Have they ever really caught
up on their education? Have they ever really caught up
on their academics?

Speaker 15 (01:10:21):
Probably?

Speaker 21 (01:10:22):
Not.

Speaker 15 (01:10:23):
That's the nature of asymmetric warfare. All of these national events,
if you think them through, they don't make any sense logically.
And so, you know, and whenever anything doesn't make sense
to me logically, I look for the real reason, you know,

(01:10:44):
what's going on here? Because this doesn't make sense, and
there's nothing that in our country that makes any sense.
As a matter of fact, I was thinking about it today,
maybe writing an article called a nation of chaos, because
that's what we're living through, is chaos.

Speaker 10 (01:11:08):
Yeah. So I see an m Live the publication that
features local newspapers here that weeks or even days after
getting permission to increase electric rates for millions of Michiganders,
the state's two largest power companies are starting the process

(01:11:30):
all over again. Now why do you think they're doing this.
They just won the ability by the state's regulatory commission
to raise rates, and there's a process they have to
go through to raise the rates. They're starting all over again.
As soon as they win one rate increase, they're starting

(01:11:51):
all over to go after another rate increase. It's because
of this administrations, and I'm talking about Michigan now Whitmer administration.
It's their energy policy. They've gone to war against any
type of energy that they deem to be unclean, and

(01:12:12):
as a result in the.

Speaker 15 (01:12:14):
War and energy, they're shutting down dams. There is no
power cleaner than electricity generated by a dam.

Speaker 10 (01:12:24):
Yeah, funny that you mentioned that I got a damn
story right here. We had all kinds of damn stories anyway,
so they say we you know. So, both DTE Energy
and Consumers Energy have filed required paperwork announcing intentions to
pursue rate hikes that can increase power bills in the
coming months, and they're taking flak from the Michigan Attorney General,

(01:12:47):
Dana Nestil. Yeah, oh yeah, Dana Nessil doesn't like it.
It's Dana Nessil. It's the Whitmer administration's policies that have
caused this. Ah. But Nessl's saying, by allowing Consumer Energy
and DTE to file a new rhike every twelve months,
the state is allowing these billion dollar businesses to ask
for more and more before anyone could even gauge the

(01:13:11):
impact of the previous rate hike, meaning that they're back
asking for more money before anybody knows if their proposed
investments made any difference in reliability or affordability for customers.
It has nothing to do with reliability or affordability. Why
I suppose it does, because they're having to buy all

(01:13:31):
this farmland to put up stupid idiotic solar panels everywhere
and win turbines everywhere to try to comply with this
idiotic moron governor's green energy aspirations when they shut down
all the coal fire power plants.

Speaker 15 (01:13:51):
Yeah, you know what, I just happened to have done
a lot of research on our electric utility companies because well,
my interest initially was because I had worked for a
utility company. And the way that the utility rates used

(01:14:14):
to work, because they're controlled monopoly, they were a controlled monopoly,
was that rates were set based on the cost of
maintenance of the infrastructure plus the costs of you know,
building a new utility facility or you know, new utilities

(01:14:37):
being installed, plus a fixed profit margin, and that that's
what the rates would be set on. What happened in
California in nineteen seventy two around there, the Environmental Defense
Fund made a deal with Pacific Gas and Electric that

(01:15:05):
if they introduced efficiencies into their utility system, they could
raise the price based on the reduction of facilities. So
it's kind of an inverse algorithm, you know, and there
probably were a lot of savings achieved through that method.

(01:15:29):
But they've continued it up until this very day, to
the point where the utility companies when they squeeze you
for electricity in whatever way it is, they can raise
the price for the deprivation. Yes, yes, you understand what

(01:15:53):
I'm saying.

Speaker 10 (01:15:53):
Yeah, yeah, Well it's an inverse.

Speaker 15 (01:15:57):
It's an inverse and perverse incentive for the utility companies
to deprive us of electric power.

Speaker 10 (01:16:06):
But I don't blame the utility companies for this. I
think the it's the government in particular this state government.
But this is going on, I'm sure all over the country.
You know Obama years ago when he was president, or
actually when he was campaigning for to be president, he said,
under my plan for cap and trade or something like that,

(01:16:30):
electric energy, you know, energy prices would necessarily skyrocket. I
played the audio on the show add nauseum here right
over and.

Speaker 15 (01:16:39):
Over again because of shutting down power plants. Yes, they're
getting paid. I remember when the Bundy thing was going
on Bundy Ranch. When I started to look at it,
it was just about over. So I started to look
at what else was going on in that era. And

(01:17:01):
there was a coal fired power plant that was on
an Indian reservation and Warren Buffett bought that power plant,
And I'm thinking, what the hell is this about? You know,
buying a coal fired power plant when they're being shut down.
That's like buying a dead horse. So why is he

(01:17:23):
doing that? Well, that's when I discovered there's a whole
sub economy going on, a hidden economy going on, where
our government is paying for Well, a person that buys

(01:17:44):
a plant that's being shut down, they earn renewable energy credits,
and then our government buys those renewable energy credits.

Speaker 10 (01:17:55):
Yeah, here's here's the audio I was just talking about.

Speaker 36 (01:17:58):
VICKI and climate change is a great example.

Speaker 10 (01:18:02):
You know, when I was.

Speaker 36 (01:18:03):
Asked earlier about uh, the issue of coal. Uh, you know,
under my plan of a cap and trade system for electricity,
rates would necessarily skyrocket even Yeah, regardless of what I

(01:18:23):
say about whether coal is good or bad, because I'm
capping greenhouse gases, coal power plants, you know, natural gat
you name, whatever the plants were, whatever the industry was,
they would have to uh retrofit their operations. That will
cost money. They will pass that money on to consumers.

Speaker 15 (01:18:43):
There you go, Yeah, he bet bet he was lying there.
Retro fit. They're not gonna They've already retro fitted all
of the coal.

Speaker 10 (01:18:55):
Well what they're what what he's talking about they're going
to have to build infrastructure, they're going to have he
doesn't know the process. He's he's an idiot. He's a
community organizer, VICKI, Yeah, I know. He doesn't know anything
about real world science or technology. He's he's a community organizer.
The only thing he knows how to do is manipulate people,

(01:19:16):
and he is pretty good at that.

Speaker 15 (01:19:18):
He is good.

Speaker 10 (01:19:19):
But what he's talking about there is infrastructure would have
to be built to replace coal fire power plants, coal
fired power plants. And that's exactly what's going on here
in Michigan right now. We are living with this promise.
And at least Obama was honest there. You said he
was lying. He wasn't lying. He was honest. He was

(01:19:41):
telling the truth. We're going to raise your electricity bill
to push this agenda through. You're gonna pay for it,
and these and these clowns still voted for the moron.
That's the amazing thing to me.

Speaker 15 (01:19:54):
Yeah. Well, our entire utility structure has been perverted to
incentivize reduction.

Speaker 10 (01:20:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:20:06):
And you you know, electricity is the first input to
any business, to any activity all across the country, The
first input Okay, so if you make the price prohibited
for any kind of activity other than maybe an office

(01:20:27):
light switch, you're killing your economy.

Speaker 10 (01:20:34):
Yeah. Well, this article from m Live says this is
the sixth Hold on a second, I'm sorry, I got
caught into doing something. Okay, that's what I want to
make sure I didn't forget to post that into the
show notes. But see, we work during the show, we're

(01:20:55):
doing multiple things at the same time. Ladies and gentlemen,
they're saying that this is this year will be the
sixth in a row, the sixth in a row that
consumers energy has sought to raise power rates while DTE
marks four consecutive years seeking to do so again because
they're having to buy all this land for all these

(01:21:17):
wind I won't call them wind farms because they're not farms.
They're there. What they are are solar panel arrays. That's
the best way to define them. Some people are calling
them solar panel farms, but they're not farms. They don't
produce it.

Speaker 15 (01:21:36):
I think you're confusing the windmills, which are different than
the solar panel arrays.

Speaker 10 (01:21:42):
They're having to buy land to do both. Yeah, they're both.

Speaker 15 (01:21:46):
Yeah, they chew up good farmland.

Speaker 10 (01:21:48):
Yes, actually here.

Speaker 15 (01:21:49):
In Idaho they wanted They were trying to implement a
couple of big wind farms after they'd already shut down
that were generating electricity. So it makes no sense. This
is another one of those things that logically it makes
no sense. So what's the real agenda. The real agenda

(01:22:14):
is to starve us in our economy of electric power,
the first input to any activity, any activity.

Speaker 10 (01:22:25):
They say. An m Live analysis of state data in
twenty twenty four showed a slight acceleration and how frequently
the utilities do so talking about go after rate increases
compared to a decade ago. But the hikes are a
sore spot for some customers. Well, and what's wrong with
the other customers. Regulators approved a two hundred and seventeen

(01:22:45):
million dollar increase for DTE power customers in January, and
consumers got the green light to raise rates one hundred
and fifty four million dollars in March, each equated to
less than five dollars a month more for the typical
residential customer. Yeah, okay, so quit complaining. It's only five bucks, right,

(01:23:08):
five bucks here and five bucks there, and here are
five they're a five everywhere a five five, and pretty
soon you got no money left. Yeah, by a law.

Speaker 15 (01:23:17):
You know, after the whole en Run debacle, I was
living in Boise and my electric bill was about forty
five dollars a month something like that. But after the
n Run deal, my power bill double.

Speaker 10 (01:23:33):
Well, I don't buy this, it's only five dollars a
month anyway. I think that that's total crap because everything's
gone up and it's it's astronomical. That's the whole purpose. See,
you can't measure it because he's smart meters. They you know,
if you had an old meter, you could scientifically measure it.
But they're changing things all around to the point where

(01:23:58):
they're charging different rates different hours, so they really squeeze
you at certain hours and other times that they don't
as bad as prime time would be considered, you know,
in the evening or whatever. So I mean, how do
you measure? How do you say it's only five dollars
a month more than last last time around?

Speaker 15 (01:24:20):
She was just lying to people. By law, it seemed
not so bad.

Speaker 10 (01:24:25):
You know. The big for profit utilities are permitted to
ask regulators for an increase, not more frequently than once
every year. A consumer's filing submitted seven days after its
last rate increase was approved indicates it may do so
as early as the first business day it is legally permitted.
This year June second, DTE may wait just under a

(01:24:48):
year and a month between asks, filing an application as
soon as April twenty third, per its announcement. Both utilities
pushed back on criticism leveled by Dana Nessel, who, again,
ladies and gentlemen, she likes to get out there. You know,
here's the thing. Dana Nessel also has aspirations politically. Okay,

(01:25:10):
she knows good and well that it's the Whitmer administration.
It's the policies here in this state by the government,
by the Democrats in this state who control the executive
and did control both chambers of the state legislature because
Conservatives got pissed off and decided to stay home in

(01:25:32):
that election. You know, So why I won't say elections
are everything, listeners, You still have to show up, because
that's what happens. You put these scumbags in power when
you don't show up. Oh, they give us all these
bad candidates. Okay, well, then be a precinct delegate. And
get some good candidates. But the point is is that

(01:25:55):
it's too high of a stakes to not show up.
That you're guaranteeing there's sc there went. You're not going
to fix everything by elections, but you sure can lose
everything by them.

Speaker 33 (01:26:07):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (01:26:08):
But Nessel has aspirations to be governor of the state.
That's the point I'm trying to make here. So she's
getting out there playing the political game, yelling about consumers
energies and DTEs rate increases when she knows good and
well that it's the Whitmer administration of what she is
a part of, that is responsible for these rate increases,

(01:26:32):
and ultimately it's the push for Agenda twenty one. And
this is something that while I'm talking about the state
of Michigan here, it's your state too, listeners. It's every
state and it's every country. That's what this is about.
This is a war on you, a war on humanity.
They don't want you to be able to live until

(01:26:54):
you're living in a mud hut.

Speaker 15 (01:26:55):
Bottom line right there, you just said that they do
not want you.

Speaker 10 (01:26:59):
We'll be back.

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Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
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Speaker 37 (01:28:01):
Have you ever noticed that some music makes you feel
sad while other music makes you feel other emotions.

Speaker 22 (01:28:07):
That's what today's Creation Moment is all about.

Speaker 37 (01:28:09):
Music the universal language, and now our Creation Moment's host
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Speaker 38 (01:28:15):
It has often been said that music is the universal
language that now appears to be a scientific fact. The
MafA farmers of Cameroon are almost completely insulated from Western culture,
and that's fine with them. They don't know the beatles
from Beethoven, so scientists from the Max Planck Institute for
Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany, thought that

(01:28:40):
they would be perfect for their study of music. Scientists
played select pieces of Western music to MafA volunteers. The volunteers,
who had never heard the music before, were asked to
identify what they thought the mood of the music was.
Most of them identified as sad passages those that were
intended to be sad. Faster music was understood to be happy,

(01:29:04):
and even passages intended to be understood as fearful were
correctly understood by the volunteers. They also correctly interpreted the
meaning of pieces written in major and minor keys. Likewise,
Matha music was played for Western volunteers, they correctly identified
the mood being conveyed by the music. The math of

(01:29:25):
people typically produced joyful flute music for their rituals. Apparently,
music really is of the universal language and music is
natural to man. Genesis tells us that by the third
generation of humans, musical instruments were already being fashioned.

Speaker 37 (01:29:43):
Have you downloaded or free Creation Moments ab yet? It's
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(01:30:56):
That's eight hundred four to one seven zero eight fifty one.

Speaker 7 (01:31:01):
With a spoof. Go to find out what's really going on.

Speaker 2 (01:31:05):
This is going to marry time.

Speaker 10 (01:31:21):
Those Target Home Depot and lows sent a very blunt
message to the President during a meeting in the Oval Office.

Speaker 39 (01:31:29):
This is a warning. If you've gotta need anything made
in China, I would buy it now while you still can.
Many companies have already decided it no longer makes any
economic sense to import Chinese made products into the United
States because tariff rates are so high. As a result,

(01:31:52):
there are certain things that will soon be no longer
available to US consumers now. When I posted video warn
about empty shelves in the months ahead, some people thought
that I was exaggerating, But of course the truth is
that I was not exaggerating at all. On Tuesday, the

(01:32:12):
CEOs of Walmart, Target Home Depot, and Lowe's specifically warned
President Trump that stores shelves all over the country could
soon be empty during a meeting at the White House.

Speaker 6 (01:32:27):
So what's the message that got through to the President.

Speaker 40 (01:32:29):
Well, if it's very interesting, we've all noticed the President's
change in tone over the last day or so. I'm
told it's the result of a meeting in the Oval
Office on Wednesday with those CEOs who were talking specifically
about the warning for the supply chain disruption, and they
said that the store shelves of some of the America's
biggest stores could be empty in a coming week.

Speaker 39 (01:32:51):
Those CEOs are not bluffing. Our biggest retailers normally import
massive amounts of goods from China and the easy, short
term way to replace that production. According to Axios, the
CEO's flat out told it the prices aren't going up.
They're steady right now, but they will go up. They

(01:33:13):
also told President Trump that shells will be empty if
current tariff levels persist.

Speaker 10 (01:33:20):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America Vicky
Davis's here. I'm during weeks more doom and gloom, unfortunately,
but that is a very real possibility that everybody does
need to prepare for. Listeners, Will there be nothing there
at the store? Well, we import an awful lot of
stuff from China, and I think we'll be okay, but

(01:33:45):
there will be shortages of certain things. Absolutely. Welcome back
to the show. I'll tell you what do you have
anything else you want to say before we go back
to the phones, VICKI, nope, all right, let's take Sherry
in Kansas. Now, Sherry, come on in there.

Speaker 41 (01:34:02):
Good morning.

Speaker 26 (01:34:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 41 (01:34:06):
You know, just in my adult life was after I
graduated high school and I started being concerned about buying
this stuff. And you know, the as far as uh,
I think there's more planned obsolescence in our uh what

(01:34:27):
consumer spy? And you know you used to used to
be able to fix stuff. Now I got to tell you, Uh,
I had a well I still have it. I need
to fix the switch again. But I had a a
crassing circular saw, you know, and went wrong was with

(01:34:55):
it was the switch. And I could get the switch.
I don't think I could. I can get another switch.

Speaker 10 (01:35:00):
Now, yeah, you go ahead.

Speaker 15 (01:35:05):
One of the things that Clinton Gore implemented was they
made corporations responsible for recycling. It's called total quality management,
and the idea was that if you manufactured it, you
are also responsible for recycling it. And I think that

(01:35:29):
has a lot to do with the product quality. Product
quality is way way down from what it was when
I was a kid. I've got some of my dad's
old tools, and those things were built to last, but

(01:35:51):
no longer. You know, everything is just cheap plastic crap
coming from China, right because you know.

Speaker 41 (01:36:03):
And I even saw it in nuts. You know, there's
nuts and bolts are graded for according to the job
they're supposed to do, and a lot of times the replacements.
Sometimes something can fail because of a nut or a bolt,
you know. Yeah, yeah, accident, uh huh.

Speaker 15 (01:36:27):
And another thing too that they did is that they
made they outlawed real glue and they came up with
water based glue. Well you know how stupid is that
water based glue that won't last? So yeah, they everything

(01:36:48):
possible to screw up. You know, it makes sense to
build quality, but the US doesn't do that. It's all disposed,
just like you say, Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:37:01):
It's planned, the planned obsolescence, you know. And light bulbs
are a good example of that. You know. I remember
working in television, we have a lot of equipment with
LED lights. Even before LEDs were commonly used to replace
incandescent bulbs, I remember, the LEDs lasted forever seemingly. I mean,

(01:37:24):
they just rarely ever had a problem, you know, burning out,
and and so when they transition to using them. As
far as everyday technology, it's amazing that they they they
don't even last a lot of times as long as
as a regular incandescent bulb, and the incandescent bulbs didn't

(01:37:47):
need to burn out like they did. I mean, there's
there's stories about light bulbs, like there's one in Livermore, California,
I guess, burning at a fire station there. They've had
that thing going continuously. In fact, I think it was
built somewhere around the turn of the century or something
like that. The I mean, the last century, I believe

(01:38:11):
it was. Well, let's see, here's a page on it.
The light bulb that lasted for decades is known as
the Centennial light. It is the world's longest lasting incandescent
light bulb, first lit in nineteen oh one and still
burning today over one hundred twenty years later. Yeah, it

(01:38:31):
is located at fire Station six in Livermore, California, where
it has been on public display for many years. I
even saw that they had a camera pointed at it. Now,
granted they did, I think cut the wattage down to
like four watts, so it lasts longer, you know, But
even so, the bulbs today would not last at the

(01:38:54):
effect you couldn't cut the wattage down that low. With that,
they wouldn't even work properly.

Speaker 41 (01:39:00):
Well, it wouldn't put out any light.

Speaker 10 (01:39:02):
Yeah, I wouldn't put out any light either. But the
point is is that in order things, like Vicki was saying,
they're just not built the last and that's by design.
It's all designed. You know. They talk a lot about
environmental stuff, lecturing us wagging the finger about how humans
are destroying the environment when they're the ones doing it.

(01:39:22):
What do you think fills up? The landfills so fast
when you throw away all this junk. They make everything
disposable that you can't fix it, you can't service it,
and you have to throw it away and buy new
ones all the time. All that stuff goes in the landfill.

Speaker 15 (01:39:37):
Which makes no sense whatsoever in terms. If the objective
is really to save the environment, you would want to
build absolute quality, you know. But that's not the way
this whole environmental program works. See, there's so many logical

(01:39:59):
things in all of it that I don't know why
anybody believes anything that, you know, comes out of the
mouths of our government people and industry.

Speaker 10 (01:40:16):
Yeah, well, I think fewer and fewer are believing it,
and that's the problem. You know, you hear more, you know,
like you and I listen to think tank lectures or conferences, discussions,
panels that take place, and more and more we hear
how do we re institute the trust? How do we

(01:40:36):
get the trust back in our institutions? Guess what, You're
never going to do that now, once that genie's out
of the bottle, You're never going to stuff that genie
back in the bottle. There's nothing. You know, You'll have
to stage a mass extinguishment event because that's the only

(01:40:57):
way you're going to do it. We're not going to
ever trust you again, and we're training our children to
never trust you again. You're not worthy of anyone's trust.
And we're not going to sit under your control as
long as there's breath in our lungs. That's for darn share.

(01:41:17):
You can try to do your technocratic you know, rule
by experts and algorithms all you want. We're not going
to submit. We will not, because we know what the
endgame is. Yeah, go ahead, Sherry.

Speaker 41 (01:41:33):
Sorry, Two things real quick. As far as the light bulbs, though,
the fluorescence not only were they they're a mercury component.
Discard them. But also it was it has been proven
that the fluorescent lights, particularly in schools, is where they

(01:41:55):
first noticed it and it puts so because of the
I think it's because of the step down in the
power deal then, you know, but it caught it's the
dirty electricity and it was causing hyperactivity in children. And
then also the LEDs they have, you know, there's a

(01:42:20):
problem with them too, because I think of the step
down in electricity that it puts more dirty electricity on
your circuit, you know, as far I.

Speaker 15 (01:42:31):
Don't, I don't know, I would kind of question that
because I went to grades, you know, all through my
going through school, grade school, middle school, and then high school,
the classrooms were always uh lit by fluorescence.

Speaker 10 (01:42:53):
The blue light comes out of those things improven uh.

Speaker 41 (01:42:59):
Dave's statzer uh he uh uh. He helped develop this
thing called Stetzers filters and when they plugged them in
to the you have to plug one or two into
each circuit, depending on there's a way. He's got a

(01:43:20):
meter that he'd tested. But it did cut down on
the kids being so you know, it doesn't affect all kids,
but it does affect enough of them that it causes
some agitation. Let us say, but I could there is
something to it. This doctor Ott did a lot on it.

(01:43:41):
Not true art, but this guy that's uh, you know
I remember reading it to the Mother Earth News talking
about this. But also you know, if these people with
the environmental organizations, if they really cared to out the
power plant, we would be running on water.

Speaker 10 (01:44:06):
Yep.

Speaker 41 (01:44:06):
It would get rid of a lot of electricy on
our cars. But because it's going to break some big fortunes,
especially big oil, yep, you know, it's never going to happen.
And this deal about hydrogen cars unless it's you know,
changing the water into the hydrogen, you know, on demand,

(01:44:32):
it's just going to cause more pollution because of all
the you're going to have to have a hydrogen cylinder
that you switch out somewhere, you know, you can have
it on demand. Yeah, we'll do that, because that would
make people too free.

Speaker 10 (01:44:45):
Yeah, we can't have free energy. Absolutely not Nope, that
absolutely on Nikola Tusla ways to have free energy, and
that was back then, would.

Speaker 41 (01:44:58):
Have been good myself. What's that running it through the ground, yeah,
you know, well.

Speaker 10 (01:45:06):
He was running it through the air.

Speaker 32 (01:45:08):
As I recall, Yeah, it's people are electrical beings.

Speaker 41 (01:45:16):
I don't think that's.

Speaker 10 (01:45:18):
You know, yeah, I guess the bigger part is that
there are real solutions to bypass a lot of these problems.
And I can tell you right now, I don't like
a lot of these new light bulbs because I think
they're dangerous.

Speaker 15 (01:45:31):
Well, they're They're not only dangerous, but they're expensive. I
remember the old incandescent light bulbs. They were you know,
when you could buy a package of them, a package
of four, for like fifty cents, and they and they
lasted a long time. Light bulbs were not an issue.

(01:45:53):
But at three dollars each today they are an issue.

Speaker 10 (01:45:59):
Yeah. I didn't even know what they're recycled.

Speaker 41 (01:46:02):
Just the cost of money.

Speaker 10 (01:46:04):
Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Speaker 15 (01:46:07):
Hey, thanks, that's also the cost of the new technology.
Don't don't dismiss that part of it.

Speaker 10 (01:46:14):
Well, the natural tendency pay.

Speaker 15 (01:46:16):
For everything that they call an innovation.

Speaker 10 (01:46:19):
Well, the natural tendency for prices is to come down,
not go up, as manufacturers find better ways to produce things.
You know, the cost is supposed to come down.

Speaker 15 (01:46:32):
But manufacturers don't work for the consumer market anymore.

Speaker 10 (01:46:36):
Well, no, they were speaking to your point about the
money supply. The inflation is the reason why the prices
aren't coming down. But hey, Sherry, thank you for the call.
I appreciate it.

Speaker 15 (01:46:49):
Converted everything is abverted.

Speaker 10 (01:46:51):
Blessings. All right, let's go now to We got calls
piling up here. Let's go to the Missouri and talk
to Sam. Sam. Welcome in.

Speaker 18 (01:47:01):
Yeah, you sparked a discussion here. One thing I wanted
to weigh in on. I may not be able to
see a light, but I do have a light probe.
It's a box that has a little oscillator in there.
That depends on the brightness of the light is how
the oscillator will sound. But one thing that I have
noticed is there's a totally different sound when it's in

(01:47:24):
front of an led bull or a fluorescent ball versus
when it's in front of an incandescent bulb. And you
can pick up the sixty cycle current is you can't
see it with your light, but the light probe that
I have can see it.

Speaker 15 (01:47:38):
Huh. That's interesting.

Speaker 18 (01:47:40):
That's a telltale Yeah, that's a telltale sign if there
ever was one. In fact, one of these days, for
those that are curious, I'm going to demonstrate it. I'll
probably have to do it and just play it back
on my own show, but I've got you know, I'll
probably record it one of these days. I can be
able to prove my point that way, but you may
not be able to see it, but this instrument can
see it. And so basically what I'm saying is that

(01:48:04):
we don't know what that's doing to the human body.
Even though you can't process it in your brain, your
eyes are still picking it up. The brain can't process
the oscillation, you know, because you have to understand sixty
cycle current. Instead of the current flowing one way, it's constantly,
you know, oscillating back and forth versus DC current, which

(01:48:25):
flows one way. And of course the difference between an
incandescent bulb versus an LED bulb. With an incandescent bulb,
you don't see that oscillation because it's just a hot film.
It It's like, you know, just a hot wire inside
of a class. It has a vacuum in it versus
an LED which is totally different technology. And so even

(01:48:45):
though your eyes can't pick it up, it is still
it's flashing at sixty cycles per second, you see it,
but it is flashing, Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:48:53):
I wonder if the oscillation. I wonder if the oscillation
is for the UH to be able to transmit data
over an electric line and a utility line, because that's
how they send.

Speaker 18 (01:49:14):
Yeah, just send the proper frequency through it. I don't
see why you couldn't, because I mean, sixty cycle current
is a frequency. It's a sixty cycles per second. Now
if you can increase that cycle, you know, to whatever
you want to put through it, I don't see any
reason why why you couldn't do it, and particularly with microwaves,
because microwaves in the gigahertz range don't really need much

(01:49:36):
of an intended to go anywhere, and so yeah, I
could see very easily where it could be done.

Speaker 15 (01:49:42):
Absolutely, That's that's really interesting.

Speaker 10 (01:49:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:49:48):
I never never would have occurred to me, but I
always wondered, you know, how are they camping on data
signals on an electric current? And that has to be
the way that they must be doing it.

Speaker 18 (01:50:06):
Yeah, you just didn't. You just didn't met it much
like what they do with well, I won't say exactly
like they do it, but you know, even fiber optic
data is transmitted over light. It's just different, different colors
and frequencies of white is all it is. Well, I
don't know why you couldn't do that. If you're already
sending six sixty cycles through the air via light, I

(01:50:28):
don't know why you couldn't send two point four gigaherts
or five gigahertz or just whatever frequency you wanted to
send and it would look normal to the human eye,
because if you can't see sixty cycles flashing before your
eyes at sixty cycles per second, you sure as hell
ain't going to be able to see two point four
gigaherts are higher, because that's the higher you go, the

(01:50:50):
faster the oscillation.

Speaker 10 (01:50:52):
Okay, this is a really far out there idea, But
is it a possibility that people could be being programmed?
You know, I'm talking about mind controlled remotely, potentially victims
of mind control by the light that's being sent into
the room with them. I know that's a far out

(01:51:13):
there idea.

Speaker 15 (01:51:15):
That there was a story Alan Alda demonstrated. Now this
is a long time ago, but my recollection of it
is is that they could do mind control by sending
I guess pulsing signals or something. I'll have to find

(01:51:38):
that story. Let me see if I can find it.

Speaker 10 (01:51:42):
Yeah, we've gotten really deep in here, but yeah, I know,
you know it's to try. Well. I know that the science,
you know, I know you listened to Steve Gibson and
Security Now and they're always talking about these researchers, secure
researchers who discover these crazy things that they can do,

(01:52:05):
you know, like the NSA could exploit it or something
to monitor people, you know, And it's just mind blowing
some of the things that they're able to do scientifically
just to monitor people or to get into their systems
or whatever. And so it stands to reason, we know
the CIA is mk ultra thing. That's all that stuff

(01:52:27):
is documented, and I think it's very naive to think
that people aren't being mind controlled today. So it just
dawned on me that you know, if the light can
flash at a certain level without you seeing it with
your naked eye to alter that it could be possible
to program the human brain with with a trigger word

(01:52:47):
later on to be revealed in the light pattern that's
in the room with you. I mean it, like I say,
I think it's sounds crazy, but knowing all the stuff
that they are capable of doing scientifically, I don't think
it's that far out there. I also don't want to
give them any ideas if they haven't thought of it.

(01:53:10):
What's that?

Speaker 18 (01:53:10):
Yeah, why couldn't you send written text? Why couldn't you
send written text through light? There's no reason you couldn't.
I mean, just like you send. Anybody that's a HAM
operator knows how Morris code is sent, you know, through
dots and dashes and that kind of thing, and that's
just basically keying an oscillator on and off if you
did it fast enough. Why couldn't you send the same

(01:53:31):
kind of text through some you know, some form of
It doesn't have to be Morris code. It could be
any number of technologies that are out there. But I mean,
Ham radio operators have been playing around with how to
send various forms of text through radio waves for a
long time. And of course now we have texting on
our cell phones, you know, right, why couldn't you do
that through light? I mean, if you can, if you

(01:53:53):
can send electrical frequencies through light, then all you have
to do is shift those frequencies and then have then
have it in such a way so that, you know,
maybe through something that was put in the vaccines or
something like that have that as a catalyst, by the way,

(01:54:15):
you know, by the way of being able to receiving
that and making a subject do whatever you want them
to do. I mean, there's so many crazy things that
the sky's a limit. Once you can send frequencies through
light bulbs, then there's no reason you can't send anything
through a light bulb as long as you do. In fact,
I don't even think how many people realize attrition I

(01:54:38):
used to have. We got rid of them because I
got tired of the things turning themselves on every time
I was feeling around for something. But we used to
have some touch lamps in here, and I got the
screwing around with one on them one day and I thought, now,
how does that thing know when I'm touching it? And
so I took an AM radio and I tuned it
down toward the low end of the dial. Discovered that
every time I would touch it, the the signal that

(01:55:02):
there was a small oscillator in that lamp. And every
time you touch that lamp, that oscillator would shift frequency
by a few killer herds. And then when you when
you put touching it, then it would shift back. So,
I mean, there's all kinds of crazy stuff. And I mean,
I don't I don't mean to get deep, but this
is stuff.

Speaker 42 (01:55:17):
That this is a whole world that that if you
ever study radio theory or anything, you could start to
pick up on this stuff real easy and start to
figure out that, well, hey, this guy's a limited If you.

Speaker 18 (01:55:29):
Can do this, you can do that. I mean, the
stuff I'm talking about is elementary. I mean, I mean,
look at how far we've come. But I won't take
many more of your time, but this.

Speaker 10 (01:55:39):
Is an interesting Yeah, it is an interesting discussion. And
one one more thing about the touch lamps. Your story
brought back to mind the fact that I remember years
ago when I worked at the NBC affiliate in Lancing, UH,
A bunch of us worked the late shift. We would come,
we would drive home. A lot of us lived down

(01:55:59):
in the jat Aaria, so we'd have a commute and
we would talk on the CBS on the single sideband,
which you may know, takes the carrier and one of
the sidebands and jams it into the other sideband and
you have to manually tune it. But you go a
lot farther that way. And I would tit my driveway

(01:56:20):
and talk to them on the single sideband, and I'd
watch the lights inside at night inside my house go
on and off. These were the touch lamps. So yeah,
even the CB was setting them off. Hey, we got
to go. We got the break. Thanks, Thanks Sam, appreciate it.

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Speaker 7 (01:58:45):
Two.

Speaker 29 (01:58:47):
restI American Family News.

Speaker 7 (01:59:04):
I'm Robert Thornton.

Speaker 30 (01:59:06):
The FBI has arrested a Wisconsin judge on charges that
she helped an illegal alien evade immigration agents. This news
follows a store involving the resignation of a New Mexico
judge for having an alleged MS thirteen gang member on
his property. Attorney General Pam Bondy had this to say
on Fox.

Speaker 31 (01:59:23):
No one is above the law in this country. And
if you are destroying evidence, if you are obstructing justice,
when you have victims sitting in a courtroom of domestic
violence and you're escorting a criminal defendant out of backdoor,
it will not be tolerated and it is a crime
in the United States of America.

Speaker 30 (01:59:44):
Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge Hannah Dugan is accused of
escorting a man and his lawyer out of the courtroom
through the jury door on April eighteenth, as a way
to help avert his arrest, according to an FBI affidavit
filed in court. Speaking on Fox, Tammy Nobles, who's daughter
was killed by an MS thirteen gang members, says leftist
judges and lawmakers are putting criminals over Americans.

Speaker 32 (02:00:06):
Where were they when my daughter needs to be protected
and others from an open border?

Speaker 30 (02:00:15):
Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders recently signed legislation allowing gold
to be used as currency in the state. Kevin Freeman,
host of Pirate Money Radio on AFR, stopped by Jenna
Ellis in the morning. He said the legislation was based
on his book Pirate Money.

Speaker 33 (02:00:30):
We got to attend the signing ceremony and I got
the signing pen from Governor Sanders. This is monumental legislation
and it absolutely is being looked at in other states.
We've sent that book to twenty five states.

Speaker 34 (02:00:44):
He said. The goal is not to pay capital gains tax.

Speaker 33 (02:00:47):
It will give people a way to opt out of
the inflation system. A personal optional gold and silver standard
that's simple as simply used as a debit card on
the MasterCard financial rail. It operates commercially. It now it's
proven technology and now with the state legislation, it can
be gold and silver can be money again, according to

(02:01:07):
Article one, section ten of the competition.

Speaker 30 (02:01:10):
He said, to encourage your state legislature and to learn
more about this, go to Transactionalgold dot com. A religious
freedom advocate is scoffing it claims from the Montgomery County
school Board that exposing little children to sexually charge books
will not impact their religious beliefs. The Maryland School District
went before the Supreme Court this week to defend their
policy of not allowing parents to opt their kids out

(02:01:32):
from in class reading of such books.

Speaker 34 (02:01:34):
Off It's Bob Kellogg has more.

Speaker 19 (02:01:36):
In my mood versus Taylor, a coalition of Maryland parents
contend that requiring their children to participate in LGBTQ themed
story books violates their religious beliefs. Michael O'Brien Beckett was
at the Supreme Court for the oral arguments.

Speaker 35 (02:01:53):
The justices also seem to be consitives to the parents
would have objections in this case, sympathize with their very
reasonable and kind of common sense concerns, where we're optimistic
that the court will rule for the panthers.

Speaker 23 (02:02:09):
Well.

Speaker 19 (02:02:09):
Brian says that Montgomery County argues that such inappropriate sexually
based material will not interfere with young students religious upbringing
and beliefs.

Speaker 35 (02:02:20):
It also is in odds with the facts here. You know,
we know, and you know the building Council admitted that
these books must be taught to yes children who are
extremely young and impressionable, and that the books are meant
to influence children.

Speaker 19 (02:02:33):
A decision in the case is expected by late June
or early July. I'm Bob Kellogg.

Speaker 30 (02:02:40):
Texas Scorecards as Texas Speaker of the House, Republican Dustin
Burroughs blocks and effort limiting a scholarship program to US citizens.
An amendment came during debate over a measure which creates
a teacher recruitment scholarship program. Nothing in the bill requires
recipients to be citizens. Democrat State Representative Armando Wally argued
that was not germane to the bill. Fox Weather says

(02:03:04):
next week, a weather system is to bring severe weather
from Tulsa and Oklahoma City northward to Minneapolis and Duluth.

Speaker 14 (02:03:09):
Foxweather's Hailey Meyer pretty classic severe weather events expected to
take hold, and it's important if you live in these areas.
You see your area highlighted. You want to check in
each and every day to make sure you're up to
date with some of the latest changes.

Speaker 30 (02:03:22):
That's all our time for now. Find more news at
AFN dot net.

Speaker 1 (02:03:31):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 2 (02:03:38):
Order, new world order, new world order.

Speaker 3 (02:03:41):
This is a moment to seize. The cleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle them again.
Before they do.

Speaker 25 (02:03:49):
Let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 4 (02:03:51):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.

Speaker 5 (02:03:58):
Nevertheless, the United States, if did make key position to
shape is so that the problem of the presidentity will
be the invergence of a new international order the.

Speaker 6 (02:04:10):
First decade of the twenty first century. But out of
what is will be seen as the greatest restructuring of
the global economies, greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest
restructuring of the global economy, a new world order was created.

Speaker 7 (02:04:27):
Documenting the graces of our republic.

Speaker 8 (02:04:29):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed the secret societies, the secret oaths, and the secret.

Speaker 7 (02:04:43):
Proceedings waiting war on the new world order.

Speaker 6 (02:04:46):
The Council's dis government.

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We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

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This is govern America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis,
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(02:05:18):
seven seven six. That's six one zero six hundred one
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Speaker 10 (02:05:36):
Govern welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America.
As we're taking your calls, and later on in this
hour we're going to get to the Pallanteer story that
I teased as well. It continues to be the twenty
sixth of April twenty twenty five. We had a light
bulb discussion here. We got it deeply, deeply into the
energy stuff. That's okay. Sometimes these shows take on a

(02:05:58):
life of their own, as we like to be interactive
with the listeners as well. Let's go back to the phones, though.
Let's go up to Flint now Flint, Michigan here and
welcome another caller. Hello, are you're on the air? Go
ahead please?

Speaker 43 (02:06:14):
Yes, John A, an investment banker Sarasota, Florida in the seventies.
I'm sure you can still access this data. He ultimately
proved that the the ubiquitous, insidious fluorescent light tubes in

(02:06:38):
all the classrooms were an abhorrent an abhorrent assault upon
brain functions. It definitely disrupted brain wave frequency. And what
he did is he replaced all of those with his

(02:06:59):
special designed sixty five hundred K daylight wavelength bulbs. And
within a matter of like what three four weeks, I
forgot exactly maybe six weeks, totally all of the learning
disabled children, or the vast majority of them because they're

(02:07:24):
you know, there still is the biowarvacs. There's been a
biowarvacs campaign last hundred year, so there are also variable
but we did conclusively prove that with the proper wavelength
frequency like the sixty five hundred K daylight and I
have the CFL sixty five hundred K and I bought

(02:07:48):
at fred Meyer. They had a close out on those
about five whatever it was, and I must have bought
forty of those bulbs for a buck of bulbs. They
originally were being told to like or bucks the ball.
I have had absolutely no folk qualms, no adverse effect.
And what I do notice is that in the summer,

(02:08:12):
because I live a very frugal lifestyle, I use central
error if and only if I must, and there's always
bugs that wind up in the house. And I noticed
these sixty five hundred k CFLs are a magnet for
all these bugs, and they are literally they're killed. It's

(02:08:37):
almost like an electrical grid. But whatever is going on
right up into that area with the CFL filament is
killing all these bugs. Okay, so I can say that's
an advantage. Now, a guy who caught earlier. Uh oh,

(02:09:00):
and I gotta tell you all right, uh gretsch grinch, Yes,
you know the grinch.

Speaker 10 (02:09:10):
Grets the lancing lunatic. How about that?

Speaker 43 (02:09:15):
This this don't don't relay any respect. Uh. It's an it.
It's not a it's a she it. Okay, it's from
another from another dimension.

Speaker 7 (02:09:32):
Okay.

Speaker 43 (02:09:32):
Man, if I if I look at her, it's photographed
for more than a minute, it's it's like an enema.
I either get an anima effect or I get a
vomit effect. Joke A guy, A guy aren't called earlier, Yeah, okay,

(02:09:56):
lamenting what he was lamenting. There is on bit shoot
an astonishingly enlightening, supercharged documentary entitled Club of Rome Climate

(02:10:18):
Change Depopulation. Club of Rome Climate Change Depopulation. It's about
thirty five minutes interview m I scientists, and it totally
totally vaporizes, eviscerates global warming climate change mythology with the

(02:10:44):
words from these these these asinine ass brain ass clowns,
pseudo intellectual junk scientists.

Speaker 10 (02:10:57):
Okay, and you forgot grants, but go ahead.

Speaker 5 (02:11:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 43 (02:11:03):
Well, in fact, I had no idea that the Volkswagen
Foundation in nineteen seventy began funding the Club of Rome.
It was the Club of Rome that went to MIT
and directly appealed to their top scientist, some guy in.

Speaker 15 (02:11:23):
The name of.

Speaker 26 (02:11:25):
Forester J.

Speaker 43 (02:11:27):
Wright Forrester and his successor whose name I don't recall,
but it's all there in that one documentary. Law I
tell you, man, aren't you put your eyes and ears
to that? On bit shoot the channel there is a
World Orders Review w or World Wars Review, Club of Rome,

(02:11:52):
Climate Change depopulation, okay, and for the edification of everyone,
end times. Watchman prominently features superstellar supercharged documentaries on the
same subject matter with DARPA. It's called Darper Mind Wars,

(02:12:16):
Slow Kill Vaxes, Arper Mind Wars Low Kill Vactors. And
that does that totally reveals the deep covered DARPA. In fact,
there's a dude on there, an honorable righteous Patriot, American

(02:12:38):
who authored a book entitled Department of Mad Scientists. He
is prominently featured in that documentary You hear the DARPA Scientists.
I mean, it's a frucking mind boggling. And then a
companion to that is hacking the human mind with DNA

(02:13:04):
slash irony, Hacking the human mind with DNA slash rony.
And one of the that starts off with a brief
interview with the Lorraine Day explaining why why the nose
job operation with the schwabi swabs, they were vigorously uh,

(02:13:30):
assaulting the nasal orifice because because the tips of those
schwabs were exceedingly and deliberately uh what's the word rough, rough,
or you know, kind.

Speaker 10 (02:13:50):
Of like a well, they also jammed them up people's
noses very aggressively.

Speaker 43 (02:13:54):
Sometimes they would locate it against the cribal form plate,
which is a thin piece of uh, you know, material,
and by doing so, whatever like nanoparticle crud embedded in
that swab would be directly infiltrating into the brain via

(02:14:19):
that cribiform play. That's why they were doing it. That's
why they kept saying, get tested and get the swab,
you know, that's the way to get tested.

Speaker 10 (02:14:30):
There's no question this is this was a biowarfare operation
on the people. Hey, I gotta I gotta scoot here.
But I appreciate the call. Thank you for all that information.
I took some notes here myself. I'll check out those
documentaries as well. Hey, appreciate it. Blessings to you. Yeah,
call back soon. All right. Uh, I wanted to get

(02:14:51):
to this pallenteer thing here this hour here, But first
this I mentioned earlier that there is a you know,
VICKI had referenced dam removal and here in Michigan that's
been going on as well. Hereon Clinton Metro Parks is
considering what to do with nearly a century old dam

(02:15:13):
it owns on the Huron River Huron River here in
Michigan flat rock, including potentially removing it. But a lot
of people know, you know, they put a pun in here.
The community's not willing to go with the flow. The
more than five hundred foot flat rock dam is built
was built in the late nineteen twenties by Henry Ford

(02:15:36):
for hydro power generation. Does this sound like a theme,
Vicky the war you were on electricity? It was built
by Henry Ford.

Speaker 15 (02:15:49):
Sure because more than electricities first input.

Speaker 10 (02:15:54):
Yeah. It was built in the late nineteen twenties. Henry
Ford built it for hydro power generation for his headlight
headlamp plant here and he you know, was operational. It
served the headlight plant for Henry Ford until nineteen fifty

(02:16:18):
then Ford Motor Company the following year in nineteen fifty
one sold the dam to Hereon Clinton Metro Parks Authority
for twenty five thousand dollars. The Southeast Michigan Parks Operator
acquired the dam to maintain the approximately two hundred and
fifty acre water empowerment behind it and adjoining natural areas
for recreational use. Generations have built a life around the impoundment.

(02:16:45):
Marcy Graywacks, the councilwoman for the city of Rockford, just
downriver from Flat Rock and from the dam, said this
is area residents heart throb their life. They have spent
their time fishing there at the parks, kayaking and canoeing.
Their life is based around the water, but the Flat

(02:17:06):
Rock Dam and the hot smaller Hrock Dam just below
it are the first significant barrier to what to fish
traveling upstream. Vicki from Lake Erie, though a fish ladder
was added at the dams in the late nineteen ninety.

(02:17:27):
In late nineteen ninety, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources
still has found that the dams restrict a fish passage
and limit reproduction for a number of prized sport fish species,
including lake sturgeon, walleye, and white bass. So now they're
talking about removing the dam and dam the community. That's

(02:17:55):
that seems to be the attitude. A letter from the
DNR Fisheries Division to the Metro Parks Authority shows DNR
officials encouraging the removal of the flat Rock Dam as
far back as November nineteen eighty four. In twenty twenty two,
Metro Parks, in partnership with the Michigan DNR, the Great
Lakes Fishery Commission, Huron River Watershed Council, and the City

(02:18:19):
of flat Rock, successfully submitted for a National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration Fisheries Regional Partnership grant through the congressionally appropriated Great
Lakes Restoration Initiative. The grant was used to conduct a
feasibility study and keep in mind listeners, whatever the grantee

(02:18:39):
pays for, the grantee gets and if they don't. You
don't get any more money. See this is how this works.
So the grant was used to conduct a feasibility study
for alternative options for the flat rock and here in
Heurock dams quote that would benefit the local community and
natural habitats unquote. A report by a public sector consultants

(02:19:03):
a contractor hired as part of the review states. The
draft feasibility study was released in February, with a local
public meeting then held in March. Alternatives considered include taking
no action on the dams, but insalling a new fishway,
partially removing the flat rock in heroic dams while maintaining
a similar reservoir level rock arch rapids. A gradual sloping

(02:19:27):
ramp made of rocks allowing fish to pass freely, would
be added at each dam. Full removal of both dams,
which would reduce impowerment water levels by about ten feet,
expose acres of currently submerged lands, and leave the impoundment
more like the river segment farther upstream. In this scenario,
either active or passive restoration of the river bottom lands

(02:19:50):
exposed would be a part of the plant. Well. Keep
in mind we've talked about this before on the show.
All of these dams that are removed, you have nothing
but mud and debris afterwards. It kills everything. You've seen
those pictures, haven't you, Vicky, Not.

Speaker 15 (02:20:11):
Of that particular one. But I don't know that. You
remember when that idiot from the EPA gave an order
to breach a blocked up mind and had dumped all
this mine water into the Animous River.

Speaker 10 (02:20:32):
Yeah, and well I was thinking that. I think I
was thinking of Klamath. Didn't they remove that dam and
turn everything into mud?

Speaker 15 (02:20:43):
I don't remember that in particular, but yeah, that would
not surprise me a bit.

Speaker 10 (02:20:49):
See that these things catch a lot of a sediment,
a lot of things, you know, and when you release it,
you just and they're like, well, you know, you got
It'll get back to normal eventually. Yeah, okay, but all
the communities flood. There's a reason why we built these things.
And to begin with, folks, you built you've got to be
able to control water flow, you know. And and hydro

(02:21:12):
electricity generation is clean energy. It's clean energy.

Speaker 15 (02:21:19):
They get a two for one in Idaho. Every dam,
the dams, uh, they let water flow into the canals,
which is what irrigates the farm farms. So if you
shut down the dam, you're shutting down the farming as well.

Speaker 10 (02:21:38):
Anyway, I'm not going to read this whole article, but
I just felt the need to put it on people's
radar once again because it's happening here, but it's going
to be happening in your place as well. If you
look around, start paying attention, you're going to find damn
removal is going on anywhere there's water. It's going on
all over the place. And again, for all the talk

(02:22:01):
about clean energy, that's clean energy and they're destroying it.
And another thing that's going on.

Speaker 15 (02:22:10):
Some environmentalism protection of the environment is if you die, Okay,
so think of it that way.

Speaker 10 (02:22:19):
That's exactly the way. I mean. They won't overtly tell
you that, maybe, but that's exactly what they're getting at.
Too many people, too much population, and the beat goes on.
Another thing that's happening here in Michigan. I don't mean
to focus so much on Michigan today, but there's a
lot of stories that illustrate perfectly what's going on on
the national scene here in Michigan. Michigan's poise to implement

(02:22:42):
building codes, new building codes requiring new homes to make
significant jumps in energy efficiency, because again, when you're warring
on the supply, at some point you got to war
on the demand too. Because there's less energy, everybody's got
to use less. So they're modernizing the rules that date

(02:23:02):
back a decade, they say, and the builders are threatening
to go to court. The new residential building and Energy
codes advanced automatically on Tuesday, April twenty second, after a
committee of lawmakers missed a deadline to intervene. But the
codes face one last hurdle as they near the finished line,
a bureaucratic adoption process that has already dragged on for

(02:23:26):
more than three years. Homeowners have pledged to sue the
state to block them before or home buildings builders I
should say, I don't think they affect existing homeowners, but
they will affect new builds on they're looking to block
them before they go into effect this summer, teeing up
the potential of even more delays. Why because they're going

(02:23:49):
to drive up the price of cost of building at
a time when inflation has already out, you know, sky high.
You've got limits on imports, which drive the cost of
building materials up. You know, we can debate the merits
of tariffs. I'm in favor of them as long as

(02:24:12):
they're done right. But if the reality is they are
going to in the short term drive the cost up
of things. So these are pressures that are happening, and
people already can't afford their homes. Uh, the next generation
is looking at possibly never even being able to have

(02:24:32):
a home, have a house, to be able to enjoy,
so they say. Proponents, including a coalition of environmental groups,
hail the new codes, of course, as a major win
for the climate that will save homeowners hundreds every year
on utility bills. Huh, it's not gonna you know, it's

(02:24:54):
going to save you hundreds. We've already covered the story
about the how the power companies are are doing rate increases.
They're requesting more and more rate increases. Yet jacking up
the cost of your home and your building materials is
going to save you hundreds on your energy bill.

Speaker 15 (02:25:11):
Okay, give you less and make you pay more, exactly,
that's the energy the electric utility model.

Speaker 10 (02:25:23):
So anyway, when we come back from the break, I
want to talk about Peter Teal because Peter Tile's company,
pall Andeer, is massively involved in the intelligence operation in
a huge way. Vicky. You sent me that video about

(02:25:44):
it was like a mini documentary, and I think it's
extremely important for people. I wanted to play a little
bit of it because it was produced by an outfit
calling themselves more Perfect Union. And I think you talked
about this last week, if I remember correctly, I think
I may have.

Speaker 15 (02:26:02):
Yeah, it's a subject that I've been looking at.

Speaker 10 (02:26:06):
Volunteer plans on being the US government's central operating system.
That's exactly how they put it. Yeah, and they have
been spreading their their octopus octopus like tentacles everywhere in everything,
including corporate America. They are a force to be reckoned

(02:26:30):
with and they're only getting worse.

Speaker 15 (02:26:31):
And Yeah, one thing that grabbed me about it is
that they started in Denver. And that's huge because that's
that was a location you remember when they were building
the Denver International Airport. Oh yeah, yeah, New World Order Airport.

Speaker 43 (02:26:51):
Right.

Speaker 15 (02:26:51):
Well, if you understand the whole technocratic.

Speaker 10 (02:26:56):
Okay, hang on, we go, we gotta we gotta take
the break, no go away from.

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Speaker 10 (02:31:35):
All right, welcome back to the broadcast. Sorry about the
delay there. I got involved in a conversation in the
other room there. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. Uh yeah,
Peter Teal is very well involved in the current administration
right now. And Peter Teal has been he has had
for some reason I can't talk today. He's had his

(02:31:57):
iron many irons in the fire, and uh PayPal and
uh a lot of other different ventures. But uh now
he's also funding presidential campaigns, you know, politicians, and he's
very very involved in the Trump administration, as we've talked

(02:32:19):
about previously, and so his technocratic aspirations are coming alive
where maybe with other administrations he couldn't get very far.
He's certainly getting pretty far with the Trump administration. But
this this, uh, this documentary that you sent me, Vicky, Uh,

(02:32:40):
it's something that everybody, I think needs to take a
look at. Now. I I clipped some of it. I
didn't clip all of it, but even so I had
a difficult time cutting anything out of it. So I
want to play a little bit of it and we
can kind of comment as as we go. Okay, okay,
sounds good to be all right. This is the documentary

(02:33:02):
produced by more Perfect Union on Palanteer. Hold On, I'm sorry,
let me do this, all right, we'll figure it out.

Speaker 44 (02:33:13):
It's one thing to criticize your former employer, it's taboo
to do that. But to criticize an employer that also
owns extremely lethal technologies and surveillance technologies that are highly
invasive and used in the war zones is something else.

Speaker 2 (02:33:28):
Entirely.

Speaker 13 (02:33:29):
It's twenty twenty five. We're all kind of used to
government surveillance. The idea that we're all being launched all
the time and don't own our own personal data has
become normalized. We're also used to the military spending vast
amounts of our money on just a few giant defense contractors. Well,
one tech company wants to change both of those things

(02:33:53):
and become the ultimate military contractor and the ultimate orbiter
of all of our data talent.

Speaker 45 (02:34:00):
Heer is here to disrupt and make our the institutions
we partner with the very best in the world, and
when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion kill.

Speaker 32 (02:34:11):
Check out Palenteer shares searching twenty two percent.

Speaker 46 (02:34:15):
After the company cited a boom and demand for its
AI software from the US government.

Speaker 13 (02:34:19):
We're doing a Palenteer, a tech company based here in Denver,
claims they can revolutionize government systems with their data analysis
software newly powered by artificial intelligence. They've been hired by
the Department Defense, the FBI, local police departments, and even
the IRS and Wendys to take in the information those

(02:34:41):
organizations collect even more information and use that data to
draw conclusions.

Speaker 44 (02:34:47):
It can be used to completely reconfigure organizations.

Speaker 7 (02:34:50):
Intology, it's reality.

Speaker 44 (02:34:52):
What systems matter, what information matters, what processes matter, how
they are structured, what biases are introduced at each other,
those stages.

Speaker 10 (02:35:00):
I think in domination.

Speaker 46 (02:35:02):
This is a company built for bad times. Bad times
meet strong finances internally. Bad times are very good for
Palenter because we build products that are robust, that are
built for danger.

Speaker 13 (02:35:12):
Palunteer's story starts with one of the most effective things
a company can have for sales, fear. After the September
eleventh attacks, the United States government began expanding surveillance, both
at home and abroad. This was, of course, a boon
for the defense industry at large. Simultaneously, the Silicon Valley

(02:35:32):
tech industry was growing fast and making people in a
once obscure industry very very rich, very very quickly, like
the founders and executives at PayPal, known as the PayPal mafia,
Elon Musk, Reed Hoffman, the LinkedIn Guy, and Peter Teal.

(02:35:52):
When PayPal was sold, Teal had millions of dollars burning
a hole in his pocket and an idea. PayPal had
developed systems for detected fraud and crimes on the platform.
What if they could use similar thinking to analyze the
world at large. So Teal pulled from his network to
build out a new company. One of the first hires
was Teal's Stanford law school roommate Alex Carp, who'd gone

(02:36:14):
on after Stanford to get a PhD in not business
or computer science or engineering, but neo classical social theory.
They needed the company Palenteer, after the Palenteery from J. R. R.
Tolkien's Lord of the Rings.

Speaker 44 (02:36:29):
In Lord of the Rings that Palenterstone is a magical
object that allows its users to predict the future or
to see what's going on in a remote location.

Speaker 47 (02:36:37):
What we do is we use what legal scholars call
predicate based a search. So we would look at you,
and then we would go out and say, oh, there's
lots of different things in your life that may be
indicative of someone involved in bad behavior.

Speaker 13 (02:36:51):
Put simpler, they make software that makes it easier for
their customers to collect and analyze data and then act
on that analysis with and without AI. By twenty thirteen,
ten years after they're founding, Palatineer's client list included the FBI,
the CIA, the NSSAY, the Marines, the Air Force Special
Operations Command, and more.

Speaker 46 (02:37:12):
When you open the paper and look in the news,
there's a two thirds chance, depending on the country involved,
that somehow my company was involved.

Speaker 44 (02:37:20):
This entire message of like we are the most lethal,
we are the most able to surveil and process large
amounts of data.

Speaker 20 (02:37:28):
You have created the system which you call kill chain privately.

Speaker 46 (02:37:34):
Publicly, the lawyers have some innocuous sound like check for
the amelioration of unwanted blah blah blah.

Speaker 13 (02:37:43):
Kill chain isn't an original term created by Palenteer. It's
the more general military verbiage for the series of decisions
leading from identifying a target to taking their life.

Speaker 10 (02:37:54):
And you all are targets, make no mistake about that.

Speaker 13 (02:37:58):
Palenteer's contract added their software and artificial intelligence to the
kill chain.

Speaker 46 (02:38:04):
It's quicker and better and safer and more violent.

Speaker 13 (02:38:07):
It's tech that long helped market.

Speaker 44 (02:38:10):
It reduces the distance you have to the problem. But
when you're able to take a step back and really
see all the narratives and how they were shaped and
the actual application of these technologies, your whole world starts
falling apart, which is something that you know definitely happened
to me.

Speaker 13 (02:38:25):
Wendy's hired Palenteer to help if their supply chain. Palenteer
works with health insurance companies to build AI for denials
management to protect revenue.

Speaker 10 (02:38:36):
I wonder if this has anything to do the denials
with healthcare and healthcare insurance has got to be tied
in here. You know that the MANSIONI guy who assassinated
the CEO of United Healthcare. I wonder if they were
using Palenteer's technology United Healthcare. It not just popped in

(02:39:01):
my head when he was saying.

Speaker 15 (02:39:02):
That, Well, they have their own claims system, but I'm
sure that they that they claims systems access volunteer data. Yeah,
it's all tied together. It's one big network of systems.

Speaker 10 (02:39:22):
Well, it's aires. They just said, AI is.

Speaker 15 (02:39:25):
Just a computer program. They try to make it sound
like some magical things.

Speaker 10 (02:39:30):
Yeah, it's it's it's definitely computer algorithms and computer code.

Speaker 15 (02:39:35):
It's programmed to predictive program.

Speaker 10 (02:39:38):
It is programming, and it's programming very no, no, no,
I agree. It's not magic, and it's not really intelligent either,
but it's programmed.

Speaker 15 (02:39:47):
The computer program. Somebody wrote that code.

Speaker 10 (02:39:50):
It's programmed to appear intelligent and appear like it's thinking,
and it's programmed in such a way that they they
even make it say things like hmm, like it's thinking,
you know, the whole it's very clever the way they
did it, but it's deliberately designed to deceive people into

(02:40:11):
thinking that these things are actually sentient. I guess is
the word I was looking for.

Speaker 15 (02:40:17):
Exactly that's exactly right.

Speaker 10 (02:40:20):
But it is just computer programming. But it's still programmed
to deny claims or accept claims based upon a certain
set of criteria.

Speaker 15 (02:40:33):
Right. They look at your age, they look at your
other health condition, they look at all the other information
that they have access to about you, you know, like
how many times have you been stopped for drunk driving?
And you know what they're determining is your human value.

Speaker 10 (02:40:55):
Yes, family dependency, racial as well.

Speaker 15 (02:40:59):
Yeah, absolutely, they look at all of that stuff, and
I do believe that they are denying claims based on
that information that in a normal world, in the old world,
they wouldn't even have access to that.

Speaker 10 (02:41:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:41:20):
Well, it's really evil. I mean, it is.

Speaker 10 (02:41:22):
Absolutely to the core, especially when you consider where a
lot of this AI stuff is going. I think it
was on Steve Gibson's Security Now podcast again where he
was talking about how the military has weaponized drones now
that are going to be flying themselves and operating on AI,

(02:41:44):
and they're going to be flying around determining which the target,
which targets they're going to take out on the ground
based upon AI algorithms. Now If that doesn't scare the
living crap out of everybody, I don't know what would you.

Speaker 15 (02:41:59):
I don't know if you remember this or not, but
I was really focused on Thomas PM. Barnett, and he
did in two thousand and four, I think it was.
He did a presentation called Military in the twenty first Century,
and one of the things that really struck me was
that he was talking about how they now have the

(02:42:22):
ability to target one person anywhere in the globe. You know,
they can find that person, zero in on them and
kill them. And that's why I was so obsessed with
what Thomas Barnett said, because he said a lot of

(02:42:43):
things in there, but that was one particular thing that
I thought was really important. But you put that ability
in the context of the pallunteer systems and how they
had the data and the ability to process that data

(02:43:05):
and figure out your worth as a human in their estimation,
and they can target you and take you out if
they don't think you're worthy, or.

Speaker 10 (02:43:18):
Maybe if you say do you say the wrong things
or cause too many problems.

Speaker 15 (02:43:22):
Or be on the radio exposing uh oh, not that
I'm paranoid or anything.

Speaker 13 (02:43:31):
He continue in the area, do you want Palenteers AI
making decisions about what care has covered for you and
your loved ones. They also do business with for profit hospitals,
major investment banks, and even other defense contractors. In twenty
twenty four, Pollenteer brought in nearly two point nine billion
dollars in revenue, fifty five percent of which came from

(02:43:52):
government sources, with the vast majority being American. So let's
look at their pitch to the American government. Last year,
Palnenteer CT Sham Sankar put out a presentation and white
paper called the Defense Reformation. He cites the Last Supper,
which was a secretive nineteen ninety three meeting between defense
industry executives and the Deputy Secretary of Defense. Over a

(02:44:14):
dozen companies walked in and only a few walked out.
That dinner is often cited as the origin of our
consolidated military industrial complex.

Speaker 48 (02:44:24):
And to me, I think this was the definitive moment
that kicked off the financialization of defense. From that point forward,
it became all about buybacks and dividends and leverage ratios.

Speaker 13 (02:44:36):
The Defense Innovation Board, an advisory group within the Department's Defense,
cited Sankar's presentation multiple times in their twenty twenty four
report on why the DoD needs to divert more of
their budget to emerging technology that's giving money to Palenteer.
There's a reason Palenteer just replaced Ford Motors in the
S and P one hundred in the months after Trump

(02:44:58):
was elected. The Trumpet administration is an ideal customer for
what Palenteer is selling. First, there are many former Palenteer
employees sprinkled across the Trump administration, from inside DOGE to
foreign policy advisors to high level technology appointees, and Palenteer
co founder Peter Thiel, heavily invested in the company, is

(02:45:19):
also heavily invested in President Trump and Vice President Vance.
He was a major campaign donor to both. Then, the
stated goal of DOGE is to streamline and combine government data,
which is exactly what Palenteer does.

Speaker 12 (02:45:35):
The ways that the governor is defrauded is that the
computer systems don't talk to each other, and obviously Karp
is loving it.

Speaker 46 (02:45:41):
Disruption at the end of the day, exposed as things
that aren't working, There'll be ups and down.

Speaker 7 (02:45:45):
There's a revolution.

Speaker 45 (02:45:46):
Some people can get their heads cut off, like you know,
it's like we're we're expecting to see really unexpected things
and to win.

Speaker 13 (02:45:54):
And what is winning, According to Palenteer, this is CTO
Shan Sen Karr in twenty twenty one into government.

Speaker 48 (02:46:00):
We continue to advance our mission of becoming the US
government's central operating system. As we extend our footprint across defense, healthcare,
and civilian agencies.

Speaker 13 (02:46:09):
The government's operating system, they want everything to funnel through Palenteer.
Palenteer already has contracts with the IRS going through taxpayer
data to save auditors time by finding the easiest audits
to pursue. Now Wired reports Dooge will likely hire Palenteer
to create unified software for the entire IRS, a MEGAAPI

(02:46:30):
that would allow anyone with access to view and possibly
alter all IRS data in one place. That's all of
your financial information. And they have multiple contracts with the
Department of Health and Human Services, including nearly one hundred
million dollars to support HHS's core administrative data and applications

(02:46:51):
to manage, ingest and access data securely across business domains.
HHS's core responsibility is Medicare and Medicate. That's control over
millions of Americans health records and their access to healthcare.
So what does it mean for one contractor to have
all that power, data, and taxpayer money as profit, Especially

(02:47:15):
as AI gets involved, as we kind.

Speaker 44 (02:47:17):
Of increasingly live in a simulated world, we lose touch
with reality and the human decisions that matter, and we
move closer towards governance by algorithm, not only made by
decisions of automated artificial intelligence systems, which is a problem,
but more importantly subject to decisions made by the people

(02:47:38):
who are influencing these AI systems and creating them in
order to fill an agenda for whatever their profits seeking
or control seeking objectives are. And when I see Doge
kind of going into every agency and addressing the IT
department first, I see it as an opportunity to try
to change reality itself.

Speaker 13 (02:47:59):
So what why am I telling you all of this?
Talenteer has no problem being seen as big brother, as
all powerful, as lethal, even.

Speaker 44 (02:48:07):
We're at the brink of using these technologies potentially to
run our government, to run our battlefields and our personal lives,
using artificial intelligence as a sort of panasy a solution
across our federal departments, and especially when they're again wielded
by people with a very distinct agenda puts everyone at risk.

Speaker 10 (02:48:33):
Got any analysis there.

Speaker 15 (02:48:36):
That's exactly what it is. They are trying to take
over all of the decision making on everything. From a
government perspective, yeh. It operates the same way as these
large corporations, these global corporations. It's the computer systems that

(02:49:01):
allow a corporation to manage so many sites, so many facilities,
so many processes. Well, they are doing the same thing
with government, and the computer systems actually replace human decision
making because human decision making is fallible. From the point

(02:49:26):
of view of a technocratic system, you want to remove
as many human decisions as possible and let the computer
make the decision.

Speaker 10 (02:49:35):
Well, I can tell you that AI and algorithms, which
was what AI is, they are fallible. I have seen
AI engines give so many wrong answers. Now they've gotten better,
certain ones of them. But man, I've seen a lot
of wrong answers out of AIM.

Speaker 15 (02:49:55):
Well maybe that you think it's a wrong answer from
your point of view.

Speaker 10 (02:50:00):
No, factually it's wrong. There's a number of them that
were wrong. Now, like I say, they're honing them, they're
tuning them, they're making them better. But I mean I'm
not even talking about controversial stuff. I'm talking about like
ownership history for certain radio stations, for example, stuff that's
actually verifiable fact that they've gotten wrong.

Speaker 15 (02:50:26):
Well, I don't know what to say about that.

Speaker 10 (02:50:28):
Even modern ones, even.

Speaker 15 (02:50:30):
More volunteer systems. They were doing these systems for the
Department of Defense, and they don't hire the average off
the street computer programmer, and so you know, these were

(02:50:52):
systems developed at the very highest level of the profession.

Speaker 10 (02:50:57):
Yeah, the Gateway Pundit is saying the software giant Pallunteer
has bagged about a thirty million dollar contract from the
federal government to help the Trump administration track illegal aliens. See,
this is something that the conservatives will be all in on, right,
the MAGA crowd all in with tracking the illegal aliens.

(02:51:18):
That's for them, that's for them. But you never realize
the stuff that they are sicking on the illegal aliens today,
they will be sicking on you tomorrow.

Speaker 15 (02:51:32):
No, they already are. They were sicking it on you
before they ever started working on the ill Okay.

Speaker 10 (02:51:38):
Good point. Yeah, they're they're developing it for everybody, I guess,
is my point. They're going to say it's for the
illegal aliens, according to documents. Business Insider reviewed the documents.
The company will be responsible for developing new software tools
that will help track visa overstays and monitor self deportations

(02:52:00):
the city. But it's keep in mind Trump wanted to
get people back, you know, he said he's going to
bring back people who have been deported or self deported.
We talked about that last week. The system, known as
Immigration Lifestyle Cycle Operating System or Immigration OS, is designed

(02:52:23):
to help ICE more efficiently identify, track, and remove immigrants
in line with its enforcement priorities. The goal, according to
the contract, is to reduce the time and resource expenditure
involved in apprehending targeted individuals. And boy, isn't that I

(02:52:43):
love the term targeted individuals because that could be anybody. Again,
we're talking about illegal aliens today, but you're a targeted
individual listener, or you could be Yeah, well, if.

Speaker 15 (02:52:56):
You go to a protest, you know, maybe your governor's
mansion or something, that'll be recorded and they'll make a
determine is this a positive thing or is this a
negative thing from their point of view?

Speaker 10 (02:53:13):
Yep, exactly right, So got to check on the time here.
Palenteer was founded of course by Trump donor Peter Tail, who,
along with Elon Musk, is considered the most powerful conservative
in Silicon Valley. Is Ela Musk a conservative? Now?

Speaker 15 (02:53:30):
I doubt it? Pretending to be.

Speaker 10 (02:53:33):
Well, they're calling him that. I just thought that was
kind of interesting. Well, not long ago he was telling
Joe Ruggan that he wanted a climate tax. So now
all of a sudden he's got a metamorphosis and he's
conservative on everything, I guess. But anyway, I'll levet in
the show notes in the waning moments of the broadcast,

(02:53:54):
I think the topic go ahead.

Speaker 15 (02:53:55):
There is something I'd like to say about this volunteer
apparently started at Denver, and what they're probably working on
is the airport technology for the Denver Airport, the New
World Order airport. And why that is significant is because

(02:54:17):
the way that our country has been cut up is
via the transportation system, and at the transportation system hubs,
the intermodal commerce zones, that's where the international zones are,
the inland port hubs like Kansas and day Smartport, and

(02:54:42):
then also on the ocean you know, the real seaports,
and that's how the technology was brought through up through
our country. Is by the transportation system, and that legislation

(02:55:03):
was in nineteen ninety a new paradigm in transportation where
they are able to track freight and passengers and everything
else at airports, at internationals, at these international zones. Okay,
So if you understand, that's why I wrote a report

(02:55:25):
called how the US became a land bridge between two
bodies of water because of the Interstate Highway system effectively
being a shipping lane, you know, like an international shipping lane.
So when you add that technology there and you can

(02:55:47):
see where the technology comes from, you've got a domestic passengers,
international passengers, and you know where are they going? When
we went from national national information, if we got to
go a global information structure, that's how it all came together.

Speaker 10 (02:56:07):
Yep, sorry, yeah, that's okay, where we got to go.
We're out of time. Thank you, listeners, Thank you. Vicky
has always appreciated everything that you do. Pray for this republic,
do what you can to restore it. Joint us back
here next week, and hey, bring a friend and we
can depress them as well. God bless you.

Speaker 15 (02:56:25):
We have plenty of material.

Speaker 10 (02:56:27):
Knowledge is power, and we dispense with it every week.
God bless you folks, we'll talk to you soon. Bye
bye
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