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.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
And for future generations, a new.
Speaker 3 (00:07):
World order, new world order, new world order.
Speaker 4 (00:10):
This is a moment to cease. The glide escape has
been shaken. The pieces are in flux. Soon they will
settle again. Before they do, let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 5 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United sated in a key position to shape is
so that the problem of the put rensidentity will be
the emergence of a new international order.
Speaker 6 (00:39):
The first decade of the twenty first century, that out
of what it will be feared, the greatest restructuring of
the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest
restructuring of the global economy, a new world order.
Speaker 7 (00:53):
What's created.
Speaker 8 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic.
Speaker 9 (00:58):
The very word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
And we are as a people inherently and historically.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths and a secret.
Speaker 10 (01:12):
Proceedings waging war on the new world order.
Speaker 6 (01:15):
The councils of government.
Speaker 11 (01:17):
We'm thet Guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 8 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. Vicky
Davis is here. I'm during Weeks. It is the fourth
of April twenty twenty six, here on Governor America. Nice
to have you with us one once again, ladies and gentlemen.
I just never seem to be ready for the show
when the showtime hits, no matter how early I get
up and how much I spend time doing this, just
off in the corner of the room here, pouring myself
(02:12):
a nice cup of fresh hot coffee, and as I
was just going through all of the different headlines, and
it's looking more and more like the decline of the
American Empire, isn't it, VICKI.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Yeah, the planned decline of the American Empire. This whole
thing that I believe the collapse of our country was
planned when they came up with the plan for the
America's continental governing structure, the Commonwealth. Actually this is a
(02:56):
British design and the United States. I don't see how
the people who set this up. They're not stupid. No,
they knew that you couldn't have domestic governments under a
(03:20):
continental governing structure under the United Nations in a world
government under the United Nations.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
Yeah. I don't think Trump is as stupid as he
likes to portray himself to be either. I know he
certainly comes off that way sometimes, but I think, honestly,
the more I think about the situation, the more suicidal
this move toward a war with Iran is for our country. Yeah.
(03:52):
You know what, there's no way he is this stupid.
There's no way he could possibly see a positive outcome
on the other side of this.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Yeah, you know what. I think he is overwhelmed. And
the reason I say that is because when you're overwhelmed
with something, you're in a situation that you don't know
how to deal with, you kind of revert back to
what you do know. And I think that's what hit
(04:23):
all of his construction projects in Washington, d C. Represent
is him reverting back to what he knows. And I
think he's turned our government over to the tech leaders
who basically dug this hole that we're in.
Speaker 5 (04:45):
M That's an interesting thought, but I mean the Zionist influence,
including Jared Kushner, is not to be, you know. And
what your analysis is there, you know, is really a
very generous one. I think I tend to be at
a little bit more cynical. I think in the sense
(05:08):
that I almost believe now that Trump was kind of
brought in to oversee the I won't say orderly decline,
but the decline nonetheless of the United States.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
Oh, I do too, Yes, I do. I agree with
you on that, because this whole decline of the United
States has been in the planning and in the construction
or deconstruction as it turns out to be, has been
(05:41):
in play for a long time, decades and decades. It
didn't begin just with Trump running for the presidency. A
good place to start art is with the Reagan administration.
But it really didn't even start there. But Reagan was
(06:04):
a tool, and he came into office on the backs
of libertarians. And it really was the libertarians, and in
particular the corporate libertarians that began the dismantling of our government.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
Hey, before you go on, I want to ask you
a question, and then this is a technical question. Did
you do anything different to your computer? The one that's
running zoom different No, because that problem that we had
a long time ago, it seems to be back every
now and then you're you're cutting out.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
Oh that's weird.
Speaker 5 (06:42):
It's like a second or so of silence.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Huh.
Speaker 5 (06:46):
So, I don't know if you have any anti virus
running that you didn't have before, any other applications you
may have installed that weren't there last week, or I
mean a couple of weeks ago. We weren't on the
air last week Lives. That's the funny thing about it
is that a lot of people didn't realize that we
had some guests on. Last week was a show from
(07:07):
a replay from July twenty six, twenty twenty six, or
I'm sorry, twenty twenty five. It was back this past
July last summer, and we replayed Pete Schen, which, strangely enough,
I got more commentary from the replay than I did
the actual live show when it happened.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
That's funny.
Speaker 5 (07:29):
Yeah, I got some emails from people saying, ah, you're
barking up the wrong tree. That was one of somebody's take, saying,
you know, and a couple of people felt that way
because we were talking about Glaine Maxwell, and a couple
of people have said that that's not the real Glaine Maxwell.
The real Glaine Maxwell is probably somewhere off on a
tropical island with Epstein drinking coconut juice. That's a paraphrase.
(07:53):
I've made up the part about the coconut juice. But anyway,
they they were basically saying, you know, in some sent
photographs and stuff, comparing facial features, and look, I'm not
I'm not gonna go down that rabbit hole because honestly,
to me, number one, I wouldn't put it past them
to try something like that. But number two, the tree
(08:18):
that we were barking up, to use the vernacular, is
to demand that those that were not prosecuted for molesting
children be prosecuted. That was really the whole point of
the broadcast, demanding justice for the actual perpetrators of these crimes.
(08:38):
And there has never been whether or not you believe
that's the real Glaine or not. The official story is
that is, and that she's prosecuted, okay, But whether or
not that is or not is the is not as
much the point as there's many many other perpetrators. And
I think we can agree on that out there that
haven't been prosecuted.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Yeah, well, obviously I lived through that kind of thing before.
You know, where people in the audience they try to
get you to run down some rabbit hole that there
is no end to.
Speaker 5 (09:15):
Yeah, well there's no really. I mean I basically what
I told the folks, you know, And and again I'm
not I'm not saying it is or isn't really her
without any DNA test, And this is what I said,
without any ability for me to conduct a DNA test
on her, I'm not going to know for sure, Okay,
because I certainly don't believe the establishment when they say
(09:36):
it's her. But it's not really the point. The point
is to demand justice for the victims, and that's that's
what we were trying to do on the on the
replay that happened last week.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Yeah, that's uh. You know, I I never really focused
that much on the molestation of the children. Not that
it's not that important, right, but because I always thought
there was something more to the story of Epstein than
(10:09):
the molestation of children.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
I think I agree with you Montin now. When you
first said that, I was skeptical. But the more I
realized how many, how many how many pies this guy
has his fingers in, you know, how many different areas
this octopus's tentacles reach. I'm more inclined to believe, you know,
(10:33):
to go along with you on that.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Well, you know what confirmed my thinking was that interview
with Glaine Maxwell. And I listened to the whole thing.
I mean, it was like about six hours, and at
about four hours into it, that's when you start getting
into Glaine Maxwell's story and she came over to the US.
(11:06):
It's been about two weeks since. I can't tell you
exactly what it was, but I think it had to
do with globalization with do you remember did you watch
that segment.
Speaker 5 (11:20):
The video that you sent of the Yeah Maxwell.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
The interview, Yeah yeah, going into the fourth hour?
Speaker 5 (11:28):
Well, I did watch. I listened to some of it.
There really wasn't much watching because it's mainly just a
twelve yeah audio, But I did listen to quite a bit,
you know, some of it. But you know, I don't know, really,
it's certainly not the whole thing. I listened to a
fair portion of it. I wasn't sure exactly which one
(11:50):
that you were what you really wanted me to latch onto?
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Oh was her story she came over to the US
separate and apart from what's his name? Epstein? Yes, and
so it was the reason she came over here to
begin with. That, I think is where the real trail begins.
Speaker 5 (12:17):
What does she say? The reason is.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
I can't remember.
Speaker 5 (12:22):
Okay, well, let me let me just tell you what
I what I I won't say no, but what I
have heard. There's a there's a documentary and I've referred
to it before on the show. I'll try to remember
to put it in the show notes again, but it's
a I thought a really good documentary about Elaine Maxwell
and it's uh, it's it's the Making of a Monster,
(12:46):
and it tells her story and basically, she was as
a little girl bent on pleasing her father to the
point where I mean literally she had to work at
all of these things, all these different social events and stuff,
and do everything she could to try to gain her
product and keep her father's approval all the time, to
(13:07):
the point where when her father finally died, she was
kind of lost and didn't have any real direction. And
you know, I'm not saying at all she was a victim,
but she kind of latched onto Epstein because it was
a familiar thing, and she would be doing anything to.
Speaker 12 (13:27):
You know.
Speaker 5 (13:28):
The documentary makes it sound like Epstein was really in
the driver's seat and Glene Maxwell was this sort of
this lost soul type of thing, which I'm not so
certain that that's the case, because I've always viewed Maxwell
as being more of the handler than Epstein.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
Yes, and that's something that men don't kind of seem
to get about women, you know, is that women, in
a lot of cases, especially with powerful men, are really
kind of manipulating the agenda.
Speaker 5 (14:08):
And so given her father's Massad connections too, I've kind
of myself had the tendency to assume or presume that
those Massade connections also extended down to Maxwell. I mean
to glean Maxwell.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
I do remember that one thing that I remembered from
when I lived in New York was that it was
in the early nineteen nineties when a spy shop opened
up and there were they had cameras and basically spy equipment,
(14:49):
you know, for people to just buy off the shelf.
And if you're in a position, you know, where you
could install that kind of spy equipment, Yeah, you could.
You could get blackmail material on anybody, you know, once,
(15:09):
once you can blackmail them, then you control. Yeah, and
that's kind of I think what Epstein was doing.
Speaker 5 (15:17):
Yeah, there's no question about that. There definitely was. You know,
there may be many many other components and probably are
many components to this whole Epstein's story, and we will
never I don't think we will ever know the full
extent of what was actually going on and what it
all means. There is something that's very very closely being
held to the vest of the intelligence establishment, the administration
(15:42):
in Washington. There there are people that they are protecting.
Whether or not you want to believe Trump is guilty
of anything or not, I think it's fair to say, certainly,
it's very obvious that they are protecting a lot of
very wealthy people and a lot of information that's not
(16:03):
you know, the whole idea of all these reactions, for example,
redacting the guilty while leaving the victims unredacted in some
cases even their nude photos or nude photos as we've
talked about before. I mean, when the victims of the
victims or survivors or whatever you want to call them,
(16:26):
whatever they want to call themselves are campaigning to get
the declassified information. Uh, you know, removed. Then you know
there's a big problem.
Speaker 2 (16:38):
Yeah, well, if I recall correctly, her father, I don't
know when did her father die? Do you know was
she already here or was she still over in Europe?
(17:00):
Let me, did she come over here here after her
father died?
Speaker 5 (17:06):
I forget the timeline.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
I'm sorry, Well that's that's important.
Speaker 5 (17:12):
Because relatively yes, I know, he died under very mysterious circumstances.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Yeah, out on a boat.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
I'm sure supposedly fell off his yacht or something like that.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
Yeah, which is a ridiculous story. But if Israel was
behind all of this spy equipment, which I do believe
they were, look at what's happened to our country. Our
(17:45):
country is collapsing if it isn't already collapsed. And I
do remember early in my research that there were some
very strange things going on in Congress, Like there was
one gay man who had to end up resigning because
(18:07):
my impression was that he was getting blackmail material on people,
on members. I can't remember he was from Florida, but anyway, Yeah,
I think they basically I think they infiltrated our government.
(18:33):
Are members of Congress with surveillance equipment, spy equipment. Do
you remember those Pakistanis that were setting up servers in
the Capitol. Yeah, they were recording phone calls and stuff.
Speaker 5 (18:51):
Yeah, and that was never anything that was ever. I
don't believe that they were ever. They were allowed to leave,
weren't they, as I recall, Yes, and they never were prosecuted.
They were never dealt with any meaningful capacity.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Right exactly. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (19:07):
By the way, Robert Maxwell died on November fifth, nineteen
ninety one. This is according to Grock. His body was
found floating in the Atlantic Ocean near the Canary Island, Spain,
after he apparently fell over board from his yacht, the
Lady Glene. He was sixty eight. He okay, we don't
(19:30):
care about him buying the New York Daily News. But
Glene Maxwell came to the US before his death. But
she made her permanent home I believe after after her
father died.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Okay, all right, yeah, that's an important sequence of Okay.
Speaker 5 (19:51):
She had been already been living and working in New
York for months when her father died in November nineteen
ninety one. After his death and the collapse of his
empire and the pension fund scandal. She made the US
her permanent home and stayed in New York as a socialite.
So there you go. That's the parent timetable according to
(20:14):
the official story.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Yeah, I think the pension fund scandal is important because
it's been pension funds that were used to begin to
buy up just about everything. I mean, even the pension
(20:39):
funds of government workers. Forget what the guy's name was
that went to work in the State Department. He didn't
last very long, but he came from TIAA KREF, which
is the teacher's fund, right, Yeah, and he went to
(21:07):
work for the State Department and he was going to
I probably probably the idea was to be able to
use social Security money. You remember in the mid two
thousands some odd when they made a proposal to the
(21:31):
American people, rather than to have individual accounts, to have
accounts investment fund accounts set up to invest in the
stock market. And I activated at you know, at that point,
(21:52):
because last thing in the world I would want is
any Social Security funds invested in the stock market, because
they're all thieves. You know. If a corporation has their
four to one K system so that people can invest
(22:13):
in a certain group of stocks. That's one thing, because
the corporation is going to watch out for their money.
But for all the individuals out here that pay Social
Security money, you know, to just give them a four
oh one K and say good luck, hope your pension
works out for you when you turn seventy or whatever,
(22:37):
that's another thing entirely, and I would never never go
along with that.
Speaker 5 (22:42):
Well, the situation with the stock market, I mean, individual
stocks are highly can be highly volatile, and you know,
subject to a lot of problems. I think a lot
of people, especially with these retirement plans, look toward funds,
(23:04):
you know, different funds and that have a basket of
different stocks in them. And I guess the pro and
the pro stock market people would say, well, diversification is
really the answer to a lot of that, you.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
Know, right, But you can't. You can't. You can't count
on Joe blow the janitor out there, to choose the
right even if you gave him a choice of four
really good four or five really good investment funds, you
can't depend that he would choose the right one. And
(23:41):
you can't more importantly, you can't depend on the investment
institutions to include a good basket of stocks and each fund.
Speaker 5 (23:55):
Well see there. But the problem, of course, is the
alternative you're talking about social security. You're trusting the government.
Who I mean, they're the thieves of the thieves, they
are chief among them.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
I mean, well not not really, not really. I have
to take issue with that really because yeah, well yeah,
what happened with the subprime lending that was the UH bank.
Well it was the government that started it. We talked
about this last week or the week before. Legeene Ludwig,
(24:29):
Comptroller of the Currency, came up with a plan to
provide loans for low income people that would not qualify
for a bank loan. And so what what they did
is to send out to brokers you can sell these
(24:53):
loans and then sell them back to Fannie May or
Freddie Mac. Freddie Mac and Fanny May would then pass
them off to the stock market in some form, you know,
like Goldman Sachs or something. They bundled them into tranches
(25:15):
of subprime loans. Yeah, and it was the subprime loans
when all of that crashed in two thousand and eight,
almost brought down our whole economy.
Speaker 5 (25:27):
Right, and the government enabled that. So really I mean this, well.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
No Actually it was the it was the federal and
I just found this about a week or so ago,
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
Speaker 13 (25:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (25:45):
I guess my point, you know, because really what we're
discussing here is really a kind of a moot point,
because the bottom line is, I mean, who's who's the
worst thieves? They're all in it together. I mean, that's
the bottom line.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Yeah, Oh, you're so right. Yeah, but it was early
in the nineties when they began the corporatization and collectivization.
Those are you know, I've been working on this for
a long time, and it doesn't do any good to
work on it if everything you have is all in
(26:22):
pieces and whatever. But those those two actions are what
has brought our country to this point that we're actually
losing it, or you could say we actually lost it,
but it's corporatization and collectivization.
Speaker 5 (26:40):
Yeah, and I think the final nails are being put
in the coffin of the country that we lost by
the present circumstance. Absolutely, I want to get into some
of the long term consequences of what's going on in
the war with Iran, even if it was ending today,
got to be back.
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Speaker 15 (28:03):
Hi, I'm Stephen, a student at Hillsdale College. Here is
President of Hillsdale College, doctor Larry arn On the enduring
importance of federalism.
Speaker 16 (28:10):
Many in Washington today have grown so accustomed to centralized
bureaucracy that they think of federalism as old fashioned, kind
of like fife and drum music. Those who wrote the
Constitution saw federalism as a vital principle of free government.
In a large republic, the division of power between the
federal government, state governments, and local governments would serve as
an important protection against tyranny. The founders also understood that
(28:33):
while the federal government is essential for national matters like
foreign policy and defense, governments closer to the people were
far better suited to oversee local matters. As we see
in the problems that result from centralized bureaucracy today. There's
nothing out of date about the founder's argument for federalism.
Speaker 15 (28:49):
This Constitution minut was brought to you by Hillsdale College.
To receive a free pocket constitution and declaration, Go to
constitutionmenut dot com.
Speaker 17 (29:00):
Love your neighbor as yourself. We've likely heard it hundreds
of times in our lives, but how does that apply
to motherhood. Hi, I'm Dana Gresch, founder of True Girl.
The word neighbor in the command to love your neighbor
as yourself literally means any other person that includes your kids.
(29:20):
This brings a question to mine, doesn't it do I
love myself in godly ways? Depending on how you were
raised or your personality, this might sound selfish to you.
But when you joyfully embrace your identity in Christ and
take care of yourself out of love for who God
created you to be, something amazing happens. We're more likely
(29:40):
to naturally overflow with healthy.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
Love for our kids.
Speaker 17 (29:45):
Loving our children out of our own healthy place is
a valuable example of loving our neighbor as ourselves. For
more tips on how to raise your kids, go to
Danagresch dot com.
Speaker 13 (30:00):
As kids across America had to class to learn and grow,
there's one school supply they absolutely cannot do without nutritious food.
Yet right now in the United States, millions of kids
are living with hunger, making it harder to learn, to play,
to dream. This is something we can't ignore. But there
(30:21):
is an answer. When kids get healthy meals, they have
greater focus, more energy in higher grades. Kids like Ariela,
who dreams of being a teacher and whose hard working
parents struggle to make ends meet, or Victoria and Andrea,
whose mom wants nothing more than a great life for
(30:42):
her kids, a life that she knows they can achieve
with just a little extra help. Nothing is more important
than feeding the hopes and dreams of children. To learn
more about ending child hunger in America, go to help
No Kid Hungry dot.
Speaker 18 (30:59):
Org, documenting the crisis of our republy connecting dot so
you can be free.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
It's true for the restoration of ournation, It's.
Speaker 18 (31:26):
Govern America with Vicki Davison, Darren Ye.
Speaker 19 (31:35):
Does it mean to you and the team for the
president to potentially be losing control?
Speaker 20 (31:39):
How do you use that word?
Speaker 12 (31:41):
So?
Speaker 21 (31:41):
I think this all flows directly from this question of
what the actual objectives are for the war and how
the president sees success.
Speaker 20 (31:48):
You know, when we look.
Speaker 21 (31:49):
Out right now at the war and the current situation,
it's unclear how the United States and the President can
declare victory without laying out for the American people what
it is he saw to it.
Speaker 20 (32:00):
We've seen varying forms of.
Speaker 21 (32:02):
Him laying that out, whether it be from detailing, blowing
up and destroying the ballistic missile Force and the Navy,
which you know we've seen a lot of effort to
do and it sounds like has been rather successful. But
then also looking for the Iranian regime to capitulate, end
or fall directly, and with that question looming over all
of this, we have now a shifting narrative.
Speaker 20 (32:22):
If we think back just.
Speaker 21 (32:24):
Just a couple of days or a week, the Iran
seemed to be fully on their back foot, lashing out
but having suffered a massive hit from the US and Israel.
But here, after a further increases in oil prices and
clarity that the United States cannot quickly reopen the strait,
it seems to be shifting significantly, and the statements from
Iran's leader today seem to imply that they certainly seem
(32:46):
to see it that way. And so that raises questions
as to how the president can move forward here and
whether he still feels it's possible to declare victory in
the short term where he has to escalate with the
hope of forcing the Iranians to de escalate, which has
not been successful so far.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
Two very different options.
Speaker 22 (33:01):
I mean, does one.
Speaker 23 (33:03):
Say to you that if he continues to move forward,
which it seems to be the case at this point,
although we're talking about boots on the ground and whether
or not that will happen ultimately, But does that to
you then say, or you and the team that potentially
the president is losing control of this war if he
continues to move forward.
Speaker 21 (33:20):
So I think the problem we're seeing here is again
not about the president, as we just heard before. We're
losing control of the actions that are happening, but really
the unanticipated or in some cases very anticipated consequences of
the war continuing. The longer this goes, the greater the
impact on the global economy and the greater the impact
on US forces. Right on that front, we had a
(33:42):
US aircraft that was apparently hit by Iranian fire making
emergency landing yesterday.
Speaker 20 (33:47):
Things like that are going to increase and keep happening.
Speaker 21 (33:49):
Accidents will happen, and the Iranians will get lucky, and
that raises the political end, the costs of lives in
this conflict.
Speaker 20 (33:56):
And on the economic side, we're seeing it day to day.
Speaker 21 (33:59):
The rise in oil prices are putting pressure on everything
around the globe, with inflation being the keyword right now.
That's starting heavily to impact economies in East Asia and
Asia writ large that are most reliant on the straight
Upfoor moves, but that will spread to the United States
as well, impacting what is already seen as an affordability crisis.
So I think those are the factors that stand to
(34:21):
kind of increase without movement towards the escalation in the
short term.
Speaker 19 (34:25):
You know, Adam, I'm glad you brought up other countries here, because,
as Carol often reminds us, what happens, there is not
a vacuum.
Speaker 20 (34:33):
And we have to look at Iran.
Speaker 19 (34:34):
We have to not just look at Iran in the
Middle East, but we have to look at China, we
have to look at Russia, we have to look at Ukraine.
And we got a headline earlier today about how the
Kremlin would potentially stop sharing intel with Iran if the
US cut.
Speaker 20 (34:50):
Off aid to Ukraine.
Speaker 19 (34:52):
What are you watching in that region and sort of
the dynamics that Putin is playing with with regard to Iran.
Speaker 21 (35:00):
Yeah, the offer from the Kremlins certainly seemed too qt
by half, right, this effort to try and equate the
two wars together and highlight that its support of Iran
is no different than the US support of Ukraine. And
there's no doubt that Moscow is likely relishing in that moment.
And as you said, though, there are clear consequences of
this war already and what happens if it continues on
(35:21):
other conflicts or potential conflicts in Ukraine, the biggest clear
problem is this question of US hardware and particularly interceptor
missiles and how many may be available to provide to
Ukraine so they can continue to defend their cities and
their territory writ large from the onslaught of Russian ballistic
missiles and drones. And when we look to the Indo Pacific,
(35:43):
every day, the United States is using exquisite weaponry that
would be needed in a conflict if something were to
occur in the South China Sea or over Taiwan with China.
Speaker 20 (35:52):
And there's no doubt that Beijing has taken note of that.
Speaker 21 (35:54):
And as you've heard from countless experts, the timeline to
produce and re arm for the United States is not
a question of weeks or months, but likely years, and
that will change how the United States can conduct its
operations anywhere in the world, but particularly in the end
of Pacific.
Speaker 5 (36:11):
Yeah, it's going to take years, years to recover. Years.
Speaker 2 (36:15):
You know why do you know why supply chain a
corporate That's what corporations do, is they set up their
vendors such that they have this supply chain for their product,
(36:38):
and from what I heard listening to this, we're just
about out of weapons. The same thing happened when we
went to war in Afghanistan. The military was on a
supply chain system and they were only producing m these
(37:00):
an armor for Humb's on a scheduled plan, you know,
where they produced maybe ten a month or something like that.
So we were not prepared to go to war in
Afghanistan when it happened. Yeah, and that's that's due to
(37:20):
the corporatization. Just like I said, the corporatization of our government.
They're leaders of our country, and in particular Gore and
Clinton began the corporatization of our government. They just you know,
turned our government over to corporations to redesign our government
(37:44):
in an efficient corporate model.
Speaker 5 (37:46):
Yeah. Yeah, it doesn't feel very efficient now. Yeah. It's
getting more efficient all the time, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (37:53):
Some Yeah, some things you want efficiency as long as
it's a non critical fund function.
Speaker 5 (38:00):
But you know it's efficient in making them money, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (38:05):
That's yes, yes, at our expense, yes, Because we were
not a factor. Our country was not a factor. The
only factor was corporate profit, you know, for the corporations involved.
Speaker 5 (38:22):
Yeah, and what is the meaningful impact for this for
the American people. I mean, this is the thing that
really concerns me. I'm looking at an article from March
twenty third from ABC News, since the United States and
Israel attacked a Ron three weeks ago. Now the bear
in mind, of course, this is March twenty third, so
(38:45):
this is outdated. But they were saying at that time,
at least twenty three oil and natural gas facilities across
nine countries in the Middle East have been hit by
military strikes from Iranian, Israeli and US forces, according to
ABC News analysis. Now I think the number is closer
to forty, now just almost double that. Experts say the
(39:07):
strikes and threat of further attacks risk throwing global energy
markets into a state of protracted chaos. The broadcast, the
broadening of the conflict to include critical energy infrastructure targets,
combined with the shutdown of the straight of Her moves
could lead to a costly three months long strain to
(39:27):
the world's supply of oil and natural gas. Well, they're
saying months long. I think it's going to be closer
in some cases two years. Long. And this is what
I was trying to hit hint at going into that
last break is I think what we're looking at, even
if the if everything ended today, if you know to
(39:51):
you know, talk to the point that we were making
weeks earlier about the fact that you can turn a
war on or off like a light switch. If they were,
if the administration was able to do that, and they
certainly seemed to be having a desire to do that now,
(40:12):
and if they were able to do that into everything today,
still all these facilities have been destroyed. Yeah, and in
various countries. That is not something that you can repair overnight. Right.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Well, you remember during the Afghanist Dan Moore, one of
the first things that happened was that all of the
oil wells what was it in Kuwait, oh, Kuwait? It
was Kuwait and Iraq, and all of the oil wells
got torched. You remember seeing those burning oil dwells. Yeah, yeah,
(40:54):
and they had to fly in a guy from Texas
who was an expert in putting out oil well fires. Yeah.
But you know, that's the problem with trying to create
a one world governing system is that everybody is doing
(41:15):
the same thing. So if you run into a hitch.
It hurts lots of countries. Yeah, And so the thing
is is that our government, I do believe our government
was a leader in this in basically having corporations turn
(41:35):
into a service company and with the service company of
the United States managing the maintenance force. So you can
think of yourself as a maintenance force of the security
(41:56):
company called the US government.
Speaker 5 (41:59):
They exist.
Speaker 2 (42:01):
Yeah, the governing service company exists to serve corporations. They
don't serve you, they don't serve me, They don't serve
anybody out there. They are serving corporations. Yeah, this is
in their quest for global profits.
Speaker 5 (42:20):
Speaking of corporations from Reuters. March twenty third, some of
the world's top oil executives and energy ministers in Houston
expressed growing concern over the long term effects of the
US Israel war with Iran on the global economy. While
the US Energy Secretary Chris Wright downplayed the crisis, the
war has caused one of the biggest disruptions of energy
(42:42):
supplies in history, after Iran effectively closed the key straight
of Hormuz shipping route, and as attacks in the Middle
East inflict long term damage on production infrastructure in several countries.
Global benchmark Brent crude was still in ninety nine dollars
a barrel. That's cheap compared to what it was this
past week. Let me take a look. Even as we
(43:02):
are sitting here, I can tell you exactly well, well.
Speaker 2 (43:07):
While you're looking that up, let me tell you that
the price.
Speaker 5 (43:10):
Of art gas on hundred nine dollars a barrel, yeah.
Speaker 2 (43:12):
Last week was four dollars and forty five cents a gallon.
Speaker 5 (43:17):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (43:17):
Four, Yeah, it's cheap. Gas is cheaper in the east
where all the people are, than it is out here
in the West.
Speaker 5 (43:27):
I see, Okay, that makes sense.
Speaker 2 (43:29):
Yeah, and it was never that way before. Never.
Speaker 5 (43:34):
Yeah, I think we're still paying Shoot, I'd have to
look it up, but I think we're still paying right
around for something a gallon on the average. But but yeah,
Brent Brent oil, the global benchmark is right around one
hundred and nine dollars a barrel. I got one on
nine oh three right now, and West Texas WTI CREWDE
(44:00):
one hundred and twelve dollars a barrow, one twelve six
is what I have currently, so you know, but there's
no end in sight. There's no insight, and what's what's
you know, I see all these crazy stuff from the right.
You know, the more this plays out, the more I
(44:23):
feel like, you know, I don't have a political home now.
I don't agree with the left. I don't agree with
the liberals. I don't agree with the crazy lunatics on
the left. And I certainly, except for certain things, I
do agree with them, you know, the anti war stuff,
those that are the classic liberals that are against the war.
(44:46):
I share that. But you know, and there are elements
on both sides, all sides that I agree with and
disagree with. But by and large, I mean I see
crazy on both sides. It's just like that Bruce Willis
movie where the little kid says, I see dead people,
but I'm the little kid, and I see crazy people.
They're everywhere.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (45:09):
So the problem is you see people on the right
and they're supporting the war, and they're using such labored
logic about why this is a good thing. And you know,
these are the same people when Biden had hyked up
energy prices due to his policies and they and they
were promoting memes on Twitter and other places with gas
(45:34):
pumps with stickers of Biden and Harris pointing to the
gas price and saying I did that, you know, and
I and they said, you know, things like well I
would rather have mean tweets and two dollars a gallon gas.
You know, Well guess what, you got your mean tweets back,
(45:55):
but you don't have the two dollars gallon gas. Yeah,
you know. And I noticed the person, one of the
people I drive regularly by their house on my way
to wherever I'm going. They had to sign up that
said precisely that something to the effect of, you know,
I'd rather have mean tweets and to something a gallon gas.
(46:16):
I noticed those signs are not there anymore because probably
because they didn't age terribly.
Speaker 2 (46:22):
Well, yeah, well it's all due to globalization. They thought
they could globalize corporations and somehow US corporations would give
a damn about our country and our people. That's how
(46:43):
insane those people were.
Speaker 7 (46:46):
Yeh.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
And so we have a globalized world with corporations leading
the parade, and they're extracting wealth, you know, from from
every place they can get it, you know, implementing maximum
efficiency as if as if efficiency is the ultimate goal
(47:12):
of everything. Well, they're going to efficiency us, right, into
the grave of history.
Speaker 5 (47:21):
Amen. These these executives are warning of long term consequences.
You know, I see also inrouters. Iran attacks wipe out
seventeen percent of qatars liquid natural gas capacity from up
to five years, according to Katar Energy CEO. Now bear
in mind that all of this stuff anything, If there's
(47:42):
a global shortage of any supply, it impacts the prices
because these companies are not required to stick with just
one country. They'll sell where it's where it's cheapest, where
they can get the most money, so that means you're
going to pay more. Irtian attacks have knocked out seventy
percent of Guitars liquefied natural gas export capacity, causing an
(48:04):
estimated twenty billion dollars in lost annual revenue and threatening
supplies to Europe and Asia. Qatar Energy CEO and State
Minister for Energy Affairs told Reuters on Thursday, Now this article,
I got to make sure this is March twentieth, so
it was some thursdays ago. But Saiad al Kayapi Kayabe
(48:25):
said two of the Qatar's fourteen liquid natural gas trains
and one of its two gas to liquids or GTL
facilities were damaged and the unprecedented strikes. The repairs will
sideline twelve point eight million tons per year of LNG
for three to five years, he said in an interview.
I never, and this is a quote, I never, in
(48:48):
my wildest dreams would have thought the Qatar would be
Qatar and the region in such an attack, especially from
a brotherly Muslim country in the month of Ramadan, attacking
us this way, okay, cab he said. Hours earlier, Iran
(49:08):
had aimed a series of attacks at gulf oil and
gas facilities after Israeli attacks on its own gas infrastructure.
State owned Qatar Energy will have to declare force measure.
That's a legal that's a legal maneuver. Basically, you can't
(49:28):
meet your contract expectations or requirements due to extraordinary circumstances.
Essentially is how I understand the force measure. But anyway,
they're going to have to declare that on the long
term contracts with the five years for liquid natural gas
applies abound for Italy, Belgium, South Korea and China due
(49:49):
to the two damaged trains. So the point is, I
guess this is this is going to go on for
a very long time. I asked Gros the AI Engine
how much oil and gas infrastructure has been destroyed so
far in the war with Iran, and it says, as
of early April twenty twenty six, about five weeks in
(50:11):
the end of the ongoing US Israeli war with Iran,
which began in late February early March, at least forty
oil and gas energy assets across nine Middle Eastern countries
have been severely or very severely damaged by strikes. According
to the International Energy Agency. This includes refineries, oil fields,
(50:33):
gas processing plants, LNG facilities, storage depots, terminals, and related infrastructure.
And earlier ABC News analysis that was the one I
was just reading from, actually counted at least twenty three
sites targeted. Not all damage equates to total destruction. Some
sites saw temporary shutdowns or fires, while others sustained extensive
(50:56):
slash long term harm, requiring years of repairs, years of repairs.
I guess what I'm trying to hit home here is
that this is not something that we're going to easily
come back from, right. We're going to dealing with the
pain of this for a very, very, very long time.
Speaker 2 (51:16):
Well, they set it up the the Global Energy market,
so that it's all one market. And what is the
one input that all countries need to keep their countries going.
It's energy, right exactly, So it is the critical input
(51:37):
to every single country. So if you if you take
down that critical input to all the countries, what do
you get? You get a world collapsing. And that's exactly
what one other faction of the world wants, right, they
(51:58):
want to reduce the population of the world. So how
do you do that. You strangle get a stranglehold on
their critical input. It's it's supply chain warfare, is what
it is. And but the news media never talks about
it in those terms.
Speaker 5 (52:19):
Yeah, there's some fatalistic, fatalistic commentary in the chat room.
USA has been conquered. Stick a fork in her, she's done.
Let the butchery and the rape proceed apace.
Speaker 2 (52:32):
Well, he's he's right.
Speaker 5 (52:33):
I would hope that that wouldn't be happening, But you know,
I could foresee I could foresee that happening.
Speaker 2 (52:42):
They already did it that when when they started towards
building the North American Union, which as far as I
can tell, actually began in earnest during the Carter administration,
and then of course, we know that Reagan picked it up.
(53:04):
He's the one that signed the Lapause Treaty in nineteen
eighty three, and then nineteen eighty six he signed the
Free Trade Agreement with Canada. Well, that was like opening
our borders and creating the beginning of creating the North
American Union. And then George Herbert Walker Bush came in
(53:30):
signed the Enterprise of the America's Initiative and which began
the naft negotiations. And then Clinton came into office and
finalized that the NAFTA, and then nineteen ninety five they
(53:50):
created the World Trade Organization. And once they did that,
they globalized the economic aspects of all countries, and they
basically subverted the national sovereignty of all countries participating in it.
Speaker 5 (54:12):
Yeah. Yeah, And it's been a bipartisan effort bringing us down.
Just as you point out, from one administration to the other,
they pick up the ball, keep going. One passes the
torch to the other. You're supposed to think there's enmity
there on certain policy decisions. There is a difference, and
that's just enough of a difference to keep everybody hoodwinked. Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, yeah,
(54:38):
go ahead.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
If you look at the If anybody wants to follow
this story along, start with the two thousand and seven
National Governors Association Conference that was held in July. I
believe and listen. Listen very closely to what they're saying,
(55:02):
and listen to the whole thing, the opening, the first session,
and the second session, and you'll you should get an
idea of what they had in mind for our healthcare system.
But more importantly than that, globalization, because they were openly
(55:25):
talking about globalization.
Speaker 5 (55:27):
Yeah, so will you put that conference in the show notes?
Speaker 2 (55:30):
Yes? I will.
Speaker 5 (55:31):
You can find it again.
Speaker 2 (55:32):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (55:33):
All right, very good. We're out of this hour already.
Top of the hour. We'll have the news on our stream,
and some stations will break away for their commercial breaks
or whatever they're doing at the top of the hour,
and we'll recommence here about four and a half past
the hour and continue on here in the second hour.
Stay with us, ladies and gentlemen, as Governed America continues.
(55:55):
Don't go away.
Speaker 14 (56:35):
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Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
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eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen ten.
Speaker 24 (57:38):
I'm Lena Abu Jamer and this is today's single Christian.
It's easier not to get involved, isn't it.
Speaker 22 (57:44):
Think about it.
Speaker 24 (57:45):
You're running late for work when you see the old
lady walking in the cool dragging a couple of grocery
bags on her hips. Do you stop and give her
a ride, risking being late for work? Or how about
that neighbor, the single mom who can't keep up with
the snow on her driveway. Do you offer to shove
of her driver, or do you mind your own business
and get on with your day. Every day we're given
opportunities to love those around us. It's up to us
(58:05):
to open our eyes and see.
Speaker 10 (58:07):
It's up to us how we respond.
Speaker 24 (58:09):
In Galatians six ten, Paul tells us to do good
to everyone, especially to those who are in the household
of faith. So what are you doing today to do
good to those around you? To what extent when you
go out of your way to show Christ's love to
those in your neighborhood. For more to help you thrive,
visit Todays Single Christian dot com or email me your
story at Lena at Todaysingle Christian dot Com.
Speaker 25 (58:36):
True Father Stortion.
Speaker 26 (58:48):
Covernmerica with Govern America News i'm ai Adam. Federal authorities
(59:08):
are investigating a violent confrontation in Minneapolis after a mob
of leftists surrounded James O'Keefe and his media team. The
incident occurred during a Department of Homeland Security operation targeting
an illegal alien linked to a violent assault. An armed
suspect was fatally shot by federal agents during the encounter,
prompting protesters to chase O'Keefe from the scene. O'Keefe reports
(59:31):
the mob utilized a sophisticated network of spotters throughout the
city to track his movements. A federal judge has delivered
a significant blow to the Gateway Pundit, dismissing the outlet's
Chapter eleven bankruptcy filing as a bad faith attempt to
delay defamation litigation. The court ruled that the organization remains solvent,
(59:53):
clearing the way for ongoing civil suits to move forward
in state courts. The decision exposes the company to potential
multimillion dollar damage awards stemming from claims regarding the twenty
twenty election. Tensions at the Strait of Hormuz continue to
escalate following the downing of an American F fifteen e
(01:00:14):
over Iranian territory. President Trump has signaled a desire to
open the strait and seize regional oil assets, while the
Federal Reserve remains on hold as the economic fallout from
potential prolonged conflict becomes clear. Meanwhile, internal dissent within the
Fed is growing as officials grapple with the inflationary risks
(01:00:35):
of a widening Middle Eastern war. The Treasury Department is
warning Wall Street that federal financial policy will no longer
prioritize large banking institutions at the expense of regional firms.
Secretary of the Treasury, in a direct challenge to industry leaders,
stated the era of prioritizing institutional welfare over the American
(01:00:56):
dream is over. Markets remain volatile as investors react to
the administration's shifting stance on reciprocal tariffs and the ongoing
ninety day pause on new international levies. The Supreme Court
is set to hear arguments in a critical challenge regarding
federal firearm restrictions on individuals who use controlled substances. This case,
(01:01:20):
following the court's historic Bruin decision, forces the federal government
to prove that current firearm prohibitions align with the nation's
historical tradition of regulation. Legal scholars suggest this ruling will
serve as a bellweather for the future of the Second Amendment,
specifically concerning the push to categorize AR fifteens and other
(01:01:42):
common arms as restricted items. Deep concerns persist regarding the
integrity of federal law enforcement following multiple fatal encounters between
Department of Homeland Security agents and US citizens in the Midwest.
The shadow docket continue to draw fire as the Supreme
(01:02:02):
Court has repeatedly stayed lower court injunctions against federal agencies
without offering a transparent justification. Plaintiffs argue that current federal
immunity doctrines render it near impossible to redress systemic violations
of the Fourth Amendment by agents operating with impunity. The
(01:02:22):
Patriot Coalition has released its updated calendar of events, emphasizing
a renewed push to defend the Second and Fourth Amendments.
Grassroots activists are prioritizing local government engagement, focusing on school
boards and county commissions to counter institutional decay. Organizers stress
that the focus must shift from national political theater to
(01:02:45):
building parallel institutions that can survive the eventual collapse of
current federal oversight. The push for an Article five Convention
of the States is gaining traction as frustration with the
federal bureaucracy reaches a bad breaking point. Proponents argue that
the federal government is beyond reform, captured by hostile elites
(01:03:06):
who operate against the interests of the American people, but
critics argue an Article five convention could lead to a
runaway convention with powers to rewrite the entire US Constitution,
the process of which would likely be influenced by foreign
and corporate lobbyists.
Speaker 10 (01:03:23):
That's the news this hour.
Speaker 26 (01:03:25):
Now back to govern America with Vicky Davis and Darren Weeks.
Speaker 10 (01:03:43):
True for the restoration.
Speaker 5 (01:03:49):
Of our nation.
Speaker 10 (01:03:52):
Govern America.
Speaker 5 (01:04:02):
My welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America
(01:04:35):
Hour number two. It is the fourth of April twenty
twenty six. Here in the second hour of the show.
I wanted to comment on that news article or that
news blurb, the last story there. I know not all
stations heard it, not all listeners to this broadcast pick
up the news. So I just wanted to highlight what
(01:04:58):
it was about. Is the Article five can Apparently after
years of trying to educate people about this, after years
of people spinning themselves broke, including Jackie Petrue, Roger Mundy,
I know, fought it. Lots of people fought against the
tide to kill the Article five what was called the
(01:05:22):
con con They rebrand it from time to time and
keep trying to do this, and it makes no sense.
On its face, it makes no sense from a common
sense point of view. It makes no sense because if
the government isn't paying attention to the Constitution, now, what
makes you think that modifying it, altering it, amending it
(01:05:45):
is going to cause them to pay attention to your amendments?
Number one. So, even if you can control an Article
five convention, what makes you think that they could it
would make any difference. I mean, it's stupid. But even
more than that, it's dangerous. You can't get through to
(01:06:05):
these people. The Supreme Court has ruled. The Supreme Court
has weighed in on this, and they said that once
an Article five convention is called, you will not be
able to control it. Okay, it can get out of control,
(01:06:27):
and ultimately it could cause they have the supreme power
to rewrite the Constitution, and legislatively they would, absolutely they
would the pressure that they would be under. I mean,
if it was bad in seventeen eighty seven and they
threw out the Articles of Confederation. Our founding fathers did
that in seventeen eighty seven. They sent the delegates there
(01:06:52):
to the States dead to make some changes to the
Articles of Confederation, and they just threw it out. And
started from scratch. They nailed the windows shut, shut the
public out, and they went about what they deemed to
be their business of rewriting the whole Constitution without the
(01:07:13):
Bill of Rights, by the way, because it was, oh,
we just assume people know what their rights are, you know,
we just assume. No, you can't assume anything even with
the Constitution having the Bill of Rights. So only because
the States wouldn't ratify the thing that they added in
most of the rights. You got the ten first ten Amendments,
(01:07:37):
which we call the Bill of Rights today. But if
if it was that chaotic back then, how do you
not think it would be even more so today with
all of the special interests, the foreign lobbyists, I mean
apeck A think of APEC corporate money. Absolutely, I mean
(01:07:57):
it's gonna it would be an absolute free for all,
and you can you can put your head between your
legs and kiss your hind in goodbye. Certainly kiss your
country goodbye.
Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
Yeah. They've been trying to call this con con for
a couple of decades that I know of for sure, Yes,
And I always thought, if they were really serious about
being able to do this, why don't they first of
all pass a very simple amendment calling for a modified
(01:08:33):
con con such that they can't rewrite the whole thing.
Speaker 5 (01:08:37):
Yeah, but they can. That's one of the things that
they say that they will do.
Speaker 2 (01:08:40):
The point is is that this is you'd have to
do that before.
Speaker 5 (01:08:44):
Yeah, but they but but there's no guarantee that that
would work either. The point is none of this. Nothing
can control it once it starts. It's this is the
Pandora's box. Once it's open, you will You don't know
what's going to happen. So it's best just not to
(01:09:07):
ever open it. Yeah, and that's why it's never been
opened but one time in our history, which has led
to a very bad outcome. Now, ultimately the outcome ended
up being okay, but it came very close to being
the worst outcome.
Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
There's not a politician living today that I would trust.
Speaker 5 (01:09:26):
Absolutely say here, don't trust your liberty anybody, ladies and gentlemen.
And I can tell you that there are a lot
of very nefarious characters who are backing this Constitutional Convention
or Article five convention, whatever name they're calling it on
a given day. So everybody needs to be aware. I
(01:09:50):
get tired of talking about this subject on the show,
but you have to because it just won't go away.
They want it so bad. And my concern is this
has always been pushed by the right, by those well,
let me just say, those that are masquerading as the right,
the phony opposition.
Speaker 2 (01:10:12):
Over in the Soviet Union, the communist countries, it was
the right who were the communists. And I think that
definition has been transferred to to the United States. And
(01:10:32):
so I don't believe in left right anymore.
Speaker 5 (01:10:36):
Yeah, I agree, I agree. But the problem is is
that people do and those who see these characters as
their friends tend to trust them more. And and they're
not your friends. You have no friends. Yeah, you got
to be careful. Everyone has to be careful. You have
(01:10:57):
to think for yourself. Don't trust to anyone, don't even
trust me. Think for yourself, do your own research. And
that's the best thing I can think of to say.
But you know, we were talking before the break in
the last hour about all these different facilities that have
been destroyed, you know, uh. And there is the South
(01:11:19):
Pars gas field, there is the Tehran area oil storage
and depots and fuel facilities. There's car carg Island that
reigns Iran's main oil export terminal. You know, these are
places in Iran, you know, but there's there's damage also
(01:11:41):
to the Gulf Arab infrastructure from Iranian retaliatory strikes. And
this is again from from GROC, citing Reuters, citing Energynow
dot com, citing ABC news dot com. The the Ross
Laffin Industrial City and cut are it's the world's largest
(01:12:03):
liquid natural gas complex. Iranian missile and drone strikes in
March eighteenth to nineteenth caused extensive damage to that, including
four and six dollars and related facilities. I'm not sure
what that means. Including four dollars and six dollars and
related facilities. I'm not sure what that means. This knocked
(01:12:27):
out right around seventeen percent of Qatar's liquid natural gas
export capacity twelve point eight million tons a year for
an estimated three to five years. You know, so they
declared force mazure on those contracts. Additional liquid natural gas
facilities were hit. Quitar Energy described it as a multi
year outage listeners a multi year outage. Saudi Arabia. The
(01:12:51):
ras Tenua Refinery slash Port, the world's largest crude processing plant,
right around five hundred fifty thousand barrels per day temporarily
halted after the drone strike slash fire. The Sheba oil
field and Yanbu refinery and port also targeted some via
(01:13:14):
debris or direct hits. United Arab Emirates had the Fujara
oil terminal or hub key export bypassed for Hormaz or
for Hormouz excuse me, Hormuz Shah gas field. The rue
Wallis Facility refinery was shut as precaution after the fire,
(01:13:39):
The Musafa fuel terminal damaged, and Kuwait there were two
major refineries, Mina al Amadi and Minna Abdullah, Greater than
fifty percent of Kuwait's refining capacities struck multiple times by
Iranian drones. Fires and shutdowns were reported. Other hits included pipelines, ports,
(01:14:01):
storage tanks and related sites in rain, Oman and elsewhere.
Total estimated repair costs for golf infrastructure alone have been
placed at right around twenty five billion dollars in one assessment,
with some recovery timeless timelines stretching years due to specialized
equipment and supply chain issues. What we're looking at, Yeah,
(01:14:26):
there you.
Speaker 2 (01:14:26):
Go against supply chain issues.
Speaker 5 (01:14:29):
Yeah, yeah, you know what.
Speaker 2 (01:14:31):
I think that's why Trump has kind of curled up
in the fetal position because if I understood what he
told the world Europeans, this is your fight, not ours.
Speaker 5 (01:14:48):
Yeah, let's jump to that. Because Tucker Carlson, you sent
me that video where he was doing his analysis on that,
and I think I agree with you that his analysis
is very good, and because basically what he's saying is
this is really the end of the American Empire, the
damage that's being done to because the world looked to
(01:15:11):
the US, rightfully or wrongfully, as the ones that can
keep order or restore order if it broke down. And
yet that's no.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Longer the case, right because of supply chain.
Speaker 5 (01:15:27):
Well, it's no longer the case because also because what
are you going to do? I mean, really, the only
thing the United States really has anymore is a strong military,
and I would argue that that's weaned significantly. We don't
really know how strong that is anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:15:44):
I don't believe it's strong at all because of corporatization.
Speaker 5 (01:15:48):
Well, comparatively speaking to the rest of the world, it
probably is still superior, but it's definitely been weakened. Certainly
twenty years in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Ukraine mess which
is never ending, and now we're going to have another conflict.
(01:16:09):
All of this serves to get rid of our weaponry
that we can use. If something somebody did attack somewhere,
we would be in an ill prepared to deal with it.
Speaker 13 (01:16:20):
But it.
Speaker 5 (01:16:24):
The cost in debt, money that we've spent, the cost
that the cost in trust that the rest of the
world places in US has been significantly diminished, and especially
by this latest conflict. Am I wrong? I think that
that's what really Tucker Carlson is saying in this clip here.
(01:16:49):
Let me just place some of this, we'll comment as
we go. This is Tucker Carlson on the Death of
the American Empire.
Speaker 10 (01:16:54):
Power is the ability to restore order.
Speaker 27 (01:16:57):
The most powerful person, the most powerful force is the
one that restores conditions to order. So for decades, the
rest of the world has assumed that that country is
the United States, and again and again, as noted, various
Iranian leaders have threatened to close the straight and in
every single case, the rest of the region has looked
(01:17:18):
to the United States to make sure that doesn't happen.
And the assumption that if there was ever a problem,
the US could fix it has remained up until February
twenty eighth, when this war began, and that was the
day that the rest of the world realized that the
United States was unable to restore order. And this was
a shock, particularly for the six Gulf States, who, along
(01:17:42):
with Iran and Iraq, are the energy producing states around
the Persian Gulf. And they found out the hard way
when hours after this war started, Iran started attacking them
and the United States either wouldn't or couldn't stop that destruction,
and the destruction is profound. United Arab Emirates location of
(01:18:03):
Dubai and Abu Dhabi has taken over two thousand missiles
and drone attacks in the past months, both against energy, infrastructure,
economic targets, but also against hotels in downtown Dubai. The
airports Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the nicest airports in the world,
attacked and the United States couldn't or wouldn't defend them. Qatar,
(01:18:25):
same thing, Saudi to some extent, same thing. Now these
are countries that partly in exchange for the defense guaranteed
they thought they had have been the largest, especially in
recent years investors in the United States, so their sovereign
wealth funds, some of the biggest in the world have
poured trillions of foreign direct investment into the US, literally
(01:18:47):
trillions of dollars, and the effects going forward are unknown,
but it looks like, I mean, someone's gonna have to
rebuild these countries, and they're gonna have to pay for
it themselves most likely. And so it looks like some
of that investment, a lot of that investment will either
stop and maybe some of it under force majure, will
be pulled back. So it's a massive loss for them.
(01:19:08):
It's a huge loss for the United States. But more
than anything, it's a reshuffling of expectations and yes of power. Now,
all of those countries are focused single mindedly on reopening
straight because that's the key to their economies.
Speaker 10 (01:19:23):
And of course they live directly across the water from Iran.
Speaker 27 (01:19:25):
And all of them have an interest in the United
States doing that, and some of them are pushing the
United States to do that.
Speaker 10 (01:19:32):
Here's what the President said last night.
Speaker 28 (01:19:34):
The countries of the world that do receive oil through
the hormone strait must take care of that passage.
Speaker 5 (01:19:41):
They must cherish it, they must grab it and cherish it.
They can do it easily.
Speaker 28 (01:19:46):
We will be helpful, but they should take the lead
in protecting the oil that they so desperately depend on.
So to those countries that can't get fuel, many of
which refuse to get involved in the.
Speaker 5 (01:19:59):
Decapitation of Iran, we had to do it ourselves.
Speaker 13 (01:20:03):
I have a suggestion.
Speaker 28 (01:20:04):
Number one, by oil from the United States of America.
Speaker 5 (01:20:07):
We have plenty, We have so much.
Speaker 22 (01:20:09):
And number two, build up some delayed courage.
Speaker 28 (01:20:12):
Should have done it before, should have done it with
us as we asked. Go to the strait and just
take it, protect it, use it for yourselves. Iran has
been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so it
should be easy.
Speaker 10 (01:20:28):
You want the straight open do it yourselves. So what
does this mean.
Speaker 5 (01:20:32):
What it means is we can't do it. It should
be easy, Trump said, And yet it's so easy, we
can't do it, So we want you to do it yourself.
Speaker 2 (01:20:44):
Yeah, you believe why he is retreating into his what
he knows, because what he said.
Speaker 5 (01:20:54):
There is absolute foolishness. Yeah, well, it's absolute foolishness.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
I mean, I agree with him, they're the ones that
should be protecting it.
Speaker 5 (01:21:06):
No, I don't. We should there shouldn't have been anything
to protect. We shouldn't have started this conflict in the
first place, and I think the rest of the world.
First of all, we're supposed to think that this is Europe.
Tucker goes on to talk about it's not really Europe
he's talking to. It's not really Europe at all, because
Europe doesn't have a military, Europe doesn't have a means
(01:21:26):
by which to take it. So who else is he
talking about again? Tucker Carlson on the decline of American Empire, Well.
Speaker 10 (01:21:33):
There are many levels NATO should.
Speaker 5 (01:21:38):
Yeah, but we're the driving force behind NATO. Ultimately, ultimately
we're the teeth of NATO.
Speaker 2 (01:21:44):
US.
Speaker 5 (01:21:45):
Yeah, yeah, we're the teeth of NATO. Without us, there
really is no NATO. Not really.
Speaker 27 (01:21:50):
Well, there are many levels on which you could analyze this.
The first is the literal, So we have enough oil,
we don't need the oil there. If you need the oil,
you do it to which a lot of people have noted. Well,
actually oil is priced on the international market. And unless
you shut down American oil exports and in some basic
(01:22:12):
sense nationalize the oil.
Speaker 10 (01:22:14):
Companies, control them, use the government to control who they can.
Speaker 27 (01:22:18):
Sell to, then what happens in the Strait affects US
here in gas prices and oil prices because we don't
control those.
Speaker 10 (01:22:28):
So there's that.
Speaker 27 (01:22:30):
But bigger picture, what the President is saying is we
can't open the strait, and if it's so important to you,
you do it.
Speaker 10 (01:22:41):
So who's he talking to exactly?
Speaker 27 (01:22:43):
Well, this administration and previous administrations have expressed increasing, accelerating
hostility toward Europe or European allies don't really have militaries,
and they don't have militaries because their countries have been
occupied to one degree or another. But the US military
since nineteen forty five at the end of the Second
World War, so they've had not just a defense guarantee
(01:23:06):
through NATO, they've had an actual physical defense. Well practically speaking,
there's really only one country on Earth with the power,
not necessarily the military power, but maybe the power to
open the golf, to open the strait at the eastern
end of the golf, let all that oil and gas out,
And that, of course is China. China is who the
(01:23:26):
president is speaking to. And by the way, the US
President was supposed to be in China this month April
meeting with the Chinese president. She and that's been delayed
until next month, and we'll see if that actually happens.
But at the center of the conversation will be this question.
So how exactly would China open the strait before moves Well,
(01:23:47):
probably not with aircraft carriers. In fact, you have to
wonder how many aircraft carriers will be built after this conflict,
because our aircraft carriers can't get very close to Iran
because of the threat of drones and missiles. So is
it even useful to have aircraft carriers.
Speaker 10 (01:24:07):
In this moment.
Speaker 27 (01:24:10):
We'll have to assess that doesn't ceement. But it's not
it's military that gives China the power to do this.
It's its economic relationships of course. So China is the
largest trading partner with every golf country and with Iran.
(01:24:33):
In fact, China is one of the only countries that
has any kind of meaningful relationship with Iran at this point,
China and Russia, but particularly China. So China could conceivably
bankrupt Iran if it wanted. But China is also dependent
on golf energy. All of Asia is dependent on golf energy.
(01:24:58):
They need it, so Asia, for example, uses about half
the world's electricity. Also for manufacturing Asia produces about two
percent of the world's natural gas, which is in most
places the energy source used to make electricity. So Asia,
(01:25:18):
while an economic power, of course, is woefully short of energy,
and a lot of that comes from the golf. So
China needs the golf, wants the golf. Now, China has
very deep energy storage. They've saved a lot of oil
(01:25:42):
in their own strategic petroleum reserve. But at a certain
point China is going to want to open that up,
and Trump seems to be saying that's inevitable. We don't
need to worry about it. The question, though, is when,
So from the Chinese perspective, what's the hurry. China will
(01:26:03):
be hurt economically by disclosure if it continues, but so
will the United States, but maybe more critically, so will
American allies in Asia. So, if you're China, you're very
focused on the countries right around you that aren't fully
under your control.
Speaker 10 (01:26:23):
Why wouldn't you be?
Speaker 27 (01:26:25):
Every great power is concerned first and foremost about its region.
Can I control the countries right around me? And in
China's case, you have Taiwan, You also have Japan, you
have South Korea, and you have Philippines. So you've got
four big countries that are not directly controlled by China,
but they're in Asia.
Speaker 5 (01:26:44):
All right, we'll finish this up. There's a little bit
more left of this after the break. We have alienated
our allies, and this is really everything that's happening right
now is symptomatic of an empire decline.
Speaker 14 (01:27:00):
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then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
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Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
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
eight two five seventeen.
Speaker 29 (01:28:00):
In now that we've covered carbon dating in a number
of Creation Moments programs, today we'll look at how the
worldwide flood of Noah's time may have had a surprising
impact on the science of carbon dating.
Speaker 10 (01:28:11):
In now our Creation Moment's host Paul Taylor.
Speaker 30 (01:28:15):
We've mentioned carbon dating quite a few times in Creation
Moments because there's such a lot of misunderstanding about the technique.
Carbon dating is often mistakenly thought to date the ages
of rocks and fossils. In fact, it's only used for
organic matter that has previously been alive. It's quite a
good technique for dating cloth, wood, paper, or skin, as
(01:28:35):
long as the dates concerned are small. Like all radiometric
dating methods, carbon dating relies on assumptions. Radioactive carbon fourteen
is produced in the atmosphere when nitrogen atoms are bombarded
by thermal neutrons caused by cosmic rays. The experiment does
not actually measure the date. It measures the amount of
carbon fourteen compared with stable carbon twelve in a material.
(01:28:58):
The date is then calculated using a number of assumptions.
One assumption is that the ratio of carbon fourteen to
carbon twelve in the atmosphere must have been constant during
the timescale for which dates are calculated. We've often commented
that the biblical history of the worldwide flood affects such
uniformitarian calculations. The flood would have buried a great deal
(01:29:19):
of biomass, as witnessed by worldwide coal deposits. This would
have considerably diluted the C fourteen C twelve ratio in
the atmosphere by hundreds of times. Therefore, a carbon date
calculation from the post flood period, assuming a uniformitarian sea
fourteen concentration, would be very much older than the true
age of the material. The reality of the Biblical flood
(01:29:41):
must be factored into our thinking.
Speaker 31 (01:29:43):
Have you downloaded our free Creation Moments app yet. It's
available now for all Android and Apple mobile devices. Listen
to our archive a radio broadcast anytime you like. Download
the app today by visiting creationmoments dot com in clicking
the large photo of phones and tablets.
Speaker 14 (01:30:00):
Are you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance,
then call the Cheap Car Insurance hotline right now. Hey,
you're guaranteed to save money on your car insurance. Most
car insurances can be canceled at any time. That means
if you find a better deal, you can switch right away.
We're not just one company. We offer most of the
(01:30:20):
major brands of car insurance. We're like a discount supermarket
for car insurance. And it doesn't matter if you have
a good record or a bad driving record. Our agents
are experts at finding you the right car insurance for
your needs. Our average customer saves hundreds of dollars a
year when they call us to switch. So why don't
you make this one hundred percent free call right now
(01:30:42):
and see how much you can save on your car insurance.
Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
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
eight two five seventeen ten.
Speaker 5 (01:31:44):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America Kicky Davis. Here.
I'm during Weeks as it continues as we continue here
on this April fourth, twenty twenty six edition of the broadcast.
I find it interesting the clip that Tucker Carlson played
before the break where we were playing his clip took
place on April first. Made perfect sense to me that
(01:32:06):
this presidential address took place on April Fool's Day because
it was one of the most foolish things I think
he could have said was, Hey, just open it yourself,
open the straight yourself. You don't like it being closed.
We started this, but we're gonna let you finish it
for us. So yeah, good luck with that, since nobody
(01:32:29):
seems to have the ability. But this is breaking right
now from one American news right now, President Trump. Just
just today, Donald Trump gave Iran a two day deadline
to open the Straight of Horror moves or face severe
consequences as Operation Epic Fury enters its sixth week. Now,
(01:32:49):
wait a minute, I thought we were only gonna be
like four weeks to flatten Iran. Isn't that what they
told us? This is going to gonna last a few
weeks hour in week number six with no end in sight.
Now he made a threat of forty eight hours before
and backed away from it. Now he's making another threat
of forty eight hours. He doesn't have a freaking clue
(01:33:13):
what to do. That's what's becoming more and more apparent
as each day passes. This is a guy who was
drawn into a war, or I don't know, maybe he
drew himself into it with Israel with the expressed intention,
with the secret intention not expressed, but of basically declining
(01:33:38):
the American Empire, destroying the American Empire, destroying what's left
of our country, whether or not it was pre planned,
that's going to be the net outcome.
Speaker 2 (01:33:52):
Yeah, and we know that because of his moves, even
though it was just speech, his moves on Greenland, because
Greenland is part of the American continental system yep, even
though Greenland is owned by Denmark yep.
Speaker 5 (01:34:13):
Yeah. And then so that shows how concerned we are
about allies. Just to give you a I want to
finish up the Tucker Carlson clip, but real quick, before
I go back to that, I just want to play this.
This is This is Donald Trump at a conference, is
actually his future investment conference. This is how he talks
(01:34:35):
about American allies. Okay, he's addressing Saudi's NBS. And listen
to what he said here.
Speaker 32 (01:34:45):
He didn't think this was going to happen. He didn't
think he'd be kissing my ass. He really didn't he
thought he'd be just another American president that was a
loser where the country is going downhill. But now he
has to be nice to me. You tell him he
better be nice to me. He's gotta be.
Speaker 5 (01:35:05):
But it was really he didn't think he would be
kissing my ass talking about Saudi Arabia. This is hard.
This is Trump's idea of diplomacy. So you bully your
enemies and you bully your friends.
Speaker 2 (01:35:28):
Uh, he's got a big ego to stoke, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:35:32):
Yeah, apparently all right, getting back to Tucker Carlson talking
about all this sad situation, you know, who's going to
open the straight of horror moves? Who's going to be
the adult in the room? So to speak? Did the
adult on the world stage? Trump says, Hey, ain't gonna
be us. Ain't gonna be us. You want to solve
your problem with the world's problem. And this is a
(01:35:54):
global problem. This is a global problem. You want to
solve it, though, Hey, don't look to us.
Speaker 27 (01:36:00):
So you've got four big countries that are not directly
controlled by China, but they're in Asia, and they were all,
to one extent or another, closely allied with the United States,
and benefit from some kind of defense guarantee mostly implied.
Speaker 10 (01:36:15):
And so if you weaken those.
Speaker 27 (01:36:19):
Countries, all of whom are totally dependent on Middle Eastern energy,
and you weaken the United States by refusing to come
to its aid, the Gulf stays closed. Energy prices in
the States spike food prices, spike, political unrest deepens, the
(01:36:41):
US gets weaker, more chaotic. It hurts you, but it
also sends a very clear message to all those other
countries in Asia you would like in your sphere of influence,
that hey, the United States is probably not going to
come to a rescue if we have some kind of
conflict with China, maybe we better come to terms with China.
(01:37:04):
So this is not obvious to a lot of the
geniuses who run our country because they think in terms
purely of military force.
Speaker 10 (01:37:15):
How how big is your army? How many nukes do
you have? What's your navy look like?
Speaker 27 (01:37:20):
But from a Chinese perspective, which is longitudinal, tend to
think in terms of like years, not just quarterly reporting periods.
This is greatly to your advantage, greatly to your advantage.
Why would you want to stage a military invasion of
say Taiwan, The one everything Tank in Washington is always
(01:37:43):
telling us is coming any minute, when you could just
send a really clear message to the Taiwanese government that
reunification with China is inevitable, and let's do this the
easy way, the non messy way. Let's do here what
we did in Hong Kong. Let's just bring all the
provinces home wellout having to kill anybody. And by the way,
(01:38:05):
you have no choice because the country you thought was
going to protect you clearly isn't. Can't even protect Katar,
can't protect downtown Dubai. Is it really gonna protect you?
Does the US have the physical ability to project power
in the South China Sea when it can't even keep
the drug cartels in Tijuana under control?
Speaker 10 (01:38:26):
Probably?
Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
Not any thoughts on that, VICKI, Yeah, I just I
agree with them totally on that. I thought Taiwan was
probably going to move all of their critical businesses over
here to the United States, to the continental United States.
(01:38:51):
But I'm not sure that's gonna happen.
Speaker 5 (01:38:55):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:38:56):
It's it's a quagmire. It's like walked into a what
do you call those the sand pits walking in and
you can't get out. Yeah, quicksand quicksand yeah, there's no
way to get out.
Speaker 5 (01:39:16):
Yeah, I definitely have a sinking feeling. There's no question
about that.
Speaker 2 (01:39:21):
They've got to break up this the global cartel, and
they have to face the fact that corporations exist to
generate a profit and they don't give a damn about
countries or the people, You and me and everybody else
out there, you know. So we need to have a
government that actually works for the country and for the people,
(01:39:47):
and we don't have that.
Speaker 5 (01:39:49):
Yeah. I was really surprised when I saw a foreign
policy article that actually sounded somewhat reasonable to me, which
I'm kind of blown away by. But it says an
Iran exit plan. George BB wrote, Wisdom and foreign policy
begins with the ability to distinguish problems that can be
(01:40:11):
resolved from problems that could be managed but not fixed.
A host of US presidents had to learn this lesson
the hard way. George W. Bush thought overthrowing Saddam Hussein
would transform the broader Middle East. Barack Obama thought terminating
the reign of Momar Kadafi would stabilize Libya and accelerate
the Arab spring. Neither proved correct. Managing and containing these
(01:40:33):
threats would have been far preferable to the damaging knock
on effects that flowed from the failed attempts to eliminate them,
effects that continue to plague Europe and the Middle East today.
Now President Donald Trump has fallen into the same trap,
believing that he can end rather than manage them and
mitigate the challenges posed by Iran. It is already evident,
(01:40:55):
more than three weeks into the joint US Israeli military operation,
which by the way, is six weeks now, the air
power alone will not produce regime change in Iran, despite
its effectiveness in a limiting specific Iranian leaders. Similarly, while
air strikes are undoubtedly reducing the number of Iranian ships
and missile launchers, they cannot erase Iran's nuclear know how,
(01:41:16):
Nor can they eliminate Iran's elusive drone force or its
readily concealable arsenal of mines, fast attack patrol ships, torpedoes,
and other means of attacking the transportation routes and critical
infrastructure on which the Persian Gulf states and the world
economy depends. Ground troops cannot fix the problem either. Small
(01:41:36):
scale special operations are almost certainly incapable of securing the
well defended coastline along the Strait of Horror Moves or
destroying iran stockpile of highly enriched uranium, let alone preventing
Iran from attacking vulnerable Gulf State energy facilities or vital
desalinization plants. Even a cursory examination of Iran's topography, a
(01:41:58):
vast mountainous expanse tailor made for thwarting invasions, makes clear
that a full scale ground operation would require a force
at least as large as the entire US Army, and
would almost certainly entail both conscription and casualties far beyond
those suffered in Iraq, Vietnam, and Korea. It would take
months for the US military to prepare for such an operation,
(01:42:20):
and the American people are highly unlikely to support one.
If eliminating Iranian threats, it's proving to be well nigh impossible.
What can Trump do to manage them? One possibility a
strategy of mowing the lawn. I hate that phrase. That
is a Israeli phrase about how to deal with their
surrounding Palestinian and other competing interests in the region. They
(01:42:46):
talk about and basically mowing the lawn to them is
killing people, slaughtering people, murdering people. So I hate that
phrase mowing the lawn, but that's a strategy of quote
unquote mowing the lawn is what they say. Would be
modeled on Israel's periodic attacks on its enemies arsenals each
(01:43:06):
time they are replenished. Trump would effectively declare victory and
embombing operations while preserving the ability to resume attacks if
and when Iran rebuilds its damaged military infrastructure. This face
saving option is superficially attractive, but in the case of Iran,
it would be deeply problematic. Among other complications, it assumes
that Iron would cease its current attacks if the United
(01:43:28):
States called a temporary halt to its own. See this
is where we said before. You can't turn it off
once you turn it on, folks. In fact, the Iranians
would have little reason to reciprocate any unilateral US cease
fire absent guarantees that they would not face another round
of attacks down the road, intensifying the economic pressure on Trump,
(01:43:49):
who is surely aware of the perils that await him
in the midterm elections. If gas and food prices are
skyrocketing and recession is looming. Is Iran's best means of
getting such assurances? Given that the war cannot end without
Iran's consent, How can Trump find a way to address
Tehran's core concerns while still mitigating the challenges that opposes
(01:44:10):
And what might such a deal look like? Well, here's
the thing. When you have Trump issuing ultimatums, he's still
bullying like he has any leverage at this point, issuing
a forty eight hour deadline. Good luck anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:44:32):
And they're not even analyzing the situation correctly. I've heard
him say that they think that our economy is doing well. Well,
I can tell you it's not.
Speaker 5 (01:44:45):
I mean that.
Speaker 2 (01:44:48):
My check, my Social Security check doesn't go very far
because of the price of gap, not gasoline, but groceries.
Speaker 5 (01:44:59):
Well, it's still the connect. Did the price of groceries
rides on diesel? Yeah? And we can certainly go down
that road here. How it's going to impact us at home?
I don't want to interrupt your train of thought, though,
were you Yeah? No, that was it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:12):
I just wanted to say that they're acting as if
the domestic economy is in pretty good shape. And I'm
here to tell you it's not.
Speaker 31 (01:45:22):
Now.
Speaker 5 (01:45:23):
We can have a dooming war economy, can't we. I mean,
let's just convert all the automobile manufacturer plants to to
make military drones. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:45:34):
You know what, I'm not even sure how much of
our military stuff is manufactured in the United States. Do
you remember it was early on in the war when
they figured out how much procurement from the military had
(01:45:55):
been offshore to China. I remember, in particular, even in
American flags were being made over in China. Military uniforms
made in China. China was making everything. Why because China
was the lowest cost. And that is a corporate thinking.
(01:46:18):
That's not that's not defense strategic thinking. That's corporate thinking.
And so our entire country has been corporatized. And the
only thing that's important for a corporation is profit, the
bottom line, and they don't care how many people get
(01:46:40):
sacrificed to protect that bottom line.
Speaker 5 (01:46:45):
Yeah. This article goes on to suggest that since Trump
is somewhat friendly to Vladimir Putin, maybe he can they
can utilize Vladimir Putin to help somehow broker a deal
with Iran. I think though at this point that's that's
unrealistic because there is no there's no desire, there's no
(01:47:07):
will to talk. Yeah, there's no will to talk. And
I don't know that Iran has at this point any
will to talk. Certainly, it's very obvious Trump thinks he
can bully his way through anything. Maybe he did that
in the business world, but that's not going to work
when you come when you're dealing with real countries and
real circumstances worldwide.
Speaker 2 (01:47:28):
Yeah, I don't even think actually that Trump is in
control of foreign policy. I think it's the.
Speaker 12 (01:47:37):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:47:37):
There's one one guy that's head of Commerce, Department of Commerce,
that was a former Goldman, uh, former Cantor Fitzgerald guy.
And he's a corporate guy, you know. So all the
corporate people that are in our government are thinking corporate thoughts.
(01:47:59):
They're not thinking country thoughts. They're not thinking sovereignty thoughts.
And even if they are, from what I've seen of
how our government is operating, of the problems that arise
in our country, they're trying to fix them one by
(01:48:20):
one rather than taking a look at the total strategic
picture of where we are and how did we get here.
Because if you don't do that, if you don't know
where we are and how we got here. You can
never fix the problems. Ever, It'll take one hundred years
to fix the problems, and by then our country's gone completely.
Speaker 5 (01:48:43):
Agree One of the impacts, you know, you kind of
alluded to it earlier. One of the impacts of this
ongoing war is and the closing of the straight of
horror moves is that there's going to be food shortages.
And I'm not saying that they're will be no food.
Food shortages are not the same thing as being no food.
(01:49:05):
There will be food, but certain types of food may
not be available at certain times, and the cost of
everything is going to skyrocket. We're already seeing that, and
that is because of the justin time food system that
all of our grocery stores operate on. It's it's also
because of the cost of diesel. There's a guy on YouTube.
(01:49:27):
I think you're familiar with him, Vicky. His name is Unessa.
He goes up he uses his name Yuanessa TV on Youtube't.
Speaker 2 (01:49:35):
Yeah, he's from Idaho, right.
Speaker 5 (01:49:37):
I don't know. Maybe yeah, I think I've learned about
him first from you, actually, but I just came across.
In fact, it may have been the algo on YouTube
that suggested it to me. I don't know, but somehow
I came across his his video. He's a food producer.
He does a very good job of walking his audience
(01:49:58):
through the seventy two hour just in time food system.
We've talked about this before during COVID. In fact, there's
been a lot there's really a lot of parallels between
the present crisis and COVID. I jokingly referred to it
as four weeks to flatten the curve. We had two
weeks to flatten or four weeks to flatten Iran. We
had two weeks to flatten the curve, neither of which
(01:50:18):
are proving to be a real timetable. It was much
longer than that, and I'm afraid this could very well
turn into a decade long conflict. I'm very very concerned.
Speaker 2 (01:50:33):
Yeah, that guy in Essa, he has done quite a
few stories. The small cattle producers and the Big Cattle
Association has been trying to put the small cattle businesses
out of business because that's the corporate way, you know,
(01:50:56):
that's the way everything has been set up so that
there is a supply chain master at the top and
they control everything.
Speaker 5 (01:51:08):
It's kind of the wall marketization of the cattle industry,
the food industry.
Speaker 2 (01:51:13):
Absolutely, Yep, you nailed it. That's right.
Speaker 5 (01:51:16):
So anyway, he talks about the just in time food
system that we employ here in the United States works
really good until there's a disruption. And it seems like
we have a president right now that loves to make
these disruptions. Certainly the COVID thing first. Now he gets
(01:51:37):
during his second term part two, you know, two point
zero of this supply chain disruption, and so u ICs
it talks about this.
Speaker 33 (01:51:47):
Let me put this into perspective, because you're not going
to wake up tomorrow morning and gas stations across North
America are going to be suddenly run dry. We're actually
an exporter of energy in the United States of America.
Speaker 22 (01:51:59):
The trucks are.
Speaker 5 (01:52:00):
Still I will say one thing. It's interesting to me.
I five minutes from where I am sitting, there's a
little party store with a gas station, and this little
party store, while everybody else was jacking up their prices,
they kind of left them pretty close to the same thing.
Because I'm thinking that they they don't watch the current price.
(01:52:21):
They just watched they they're aware of what they paid
for their last shipment, so they based their pricing on that.
But they were sitting there with you know, basically, they
became even though they were a rural gas station, they
became actually the discount center for fuel ironically, and and
(01:52:46):
they ran out of regular unloaded, They completely ran out
because everybody else signed everybody all of a sudden was
flocking to this gas station because they didn't want to
pay for gas at the at the current prices. Anyway,
I digress.
Speaker 33 (01:53:02):
The trucks are still going to be on the road,
The farms for the most part, are still going to
be producing. Your grocery store is still going to be open.
But within seventy two hours, something in the system begins
to break. Now, the real pressure here in America is,
(01:53:22):
in fact diesel. It's also fertilizer that we're tied to
a global commodity system. So even if we supply our
own fertilizer, when fertilizer prices go up, our prices go up.
Speaker 22 (01:53:33):
But diesel is what moves everything that you eat.
Speaker 33 (01:53:38):
It moves the tractors that produce the food, It moves
the fertilizer to get it to the farms. Diesel is
literally behind every single aspect of our entire food supply. Now,
as you guys know right now, the war in Iran
is putting a significant amount of pressure, almost a complete
stop on the flow of traffic through one of the
(01:54:00):
most critical choke points in the world when it comes
to diesel fertilizer for a lot of country's grain. That
is the Strait of Hermos This little sliver of a
strait actually carries twenty to twenty five percent.
Speaker 22 (01:54:16):
Of the world's oil supply.
Speaker 33 (01:54:18):
It also just happens to carry a huge, an astronomical
share of the ingredients that go into fertilizer. When that
little strait gets disrupted, prices don't just rise. The entire
global supply chain begins to hesitate. It begins to buckle.
And the problem with this is that hesitation in a
(01:54:41):
global system that's built just in time.
Speaker 22 (01:54:44):
Here's what nobody is talking about.
Speaker 33 (01:54:47):
Okay, America is not about to run out of food,
but America is currently at risk of stopping movement. And
you can already see the early warning signs of this
actually happening in other countries overseas, in parts of Europe,
specifically Ireland, entire fishing fleets are staying completely docked. They're
(01:55:10):
not staying docked because a fish are gone. They're staying
docked because at this point in time, the cost of
diesel has become so expensive that it costs them more
to go out and fish and bring those catches in
than it's worked. And I think that we're going to
start seeing this same type of thing begin to happen
here on the United States. When these companies have boats
(01:55:33):
that are docked, they're not making money. And when they're
not making money, they can't pay their bills, so they're
in a catch twenty two. They can't go out and
fish because it costs more money to go out and fish.
Then they can get off of selling that fish, so
they're better off just leaving.
Speaker 22 (01:55:48):
The boat on shore.
Speaker 33 (01:55:49):
But then they also don't have the money because the
boat sitting on shore to pay their bills. They can't
keep their doors open. This is where industry consolidation happens.
Over nine, Where are we going to get a fish
after this? In North Africa and the Middle East, the
cost of bread is going literally through the roof. The
prices are just spiking out of control. Governments are struggling
(01:56:13):
with everything from trying to do subsidies to just flat
out control over the supply.
Speaker 5 (01:56:19):
Well, okay, let me stop it right there. We'll finish
that up in the final hour. I think he's gonna
go get into what we can look forward to in
the US. So stay with us. We'll be back.
Speaker 14 (01:56:35):
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Speaker 1 (01:57:20):
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 eight
two five seventeen ten.
Speaker 13 (01:57:35):
Children are the greatest joy and our best hope for
better future. Friends, they are the future. But did you
know that millions of kids right here in our own
bankyard are facing hunger every day. Without healthy food, it's
harder to grow, to thrive, to feel their best.
Speaker 14 (01:57:55):
The impact when children don't have enough to eat is tremendous,
because when you're hungry and your basic needs aren't being met,
you cannot learn.
Speaker 13 (01:58:03):
Every child deserves to be fed. This is a problem
we know how to solve. Food is not just food,
it's energy, health, confidence, hope, and even love. Yes.
Speaker 16 (01:58:16):
Love practice in the classroom contributes to kids being more focused,
which leads to higher grades and simply just their wellbeing.
Speaker 13 (01:58:26):
Learn more about how No Kid Hungry is helping end
child hunger in America at help noo kid hungry dot org.
Speaker 25 (01:58:49):
For the restoration of ourna.
Speaker 26 (01:58:56):
Gov with govern America News, i'm ai Adam. Federal authorities
are investigating a violent confrontation in Minneapolis after a mob
of leftists surrounded James O'Keefe and his media team. The
incident occurred during a Department of Homeland Security operation targeting
(01:59:20):
an illegal alien linked to a violent assault. An armed
suspect was fatally shot by federal agents during the encounter,
prompting protesters to chase O'Keefe from the scene. O'Keefe reports
the mob utilized a sophisticated network of spotters throughout the
city to track his movements. A federal judge has delivered
(01:59:40):
a significant blow to the Gateway Pundit, dismissing the outlet's
Chapter eleven bankruptcy filing as a bad faith attempt to
delay defamation litigation. The court ruled that the organization remains solvent,
clearing the way for ongoing civil suits to move forward
in state courts. The decision exposes the co company to
(02:00:00):
potential multimillion dollar damage awards stemming from claims regarding the
twenty twenty election. Tensions at the Strait of Hormuz continue
to escalate following the downing of an American F fifteen
e over Iranian territory. President Trump has signaled a desire
to open the strait and seize regional oil assets, while
(02:00:22):
the federal Reserve remains on hold as the economic fallout
from potential prolonged conflict becomes clear. Meanwhile, internal dissent within
the Fed is growing as officials grapple with the inflationary
risks of a widening Middle Eastern war. The Treasury Department
is warning Wall Street that federal financial policy will no
(02:00:42):
longer prioritize large banking institutions at the expense of regional firms.
Secretary of the Treasury, in a direct challenge to industry leaders,
stated the era of prioritizing institutional welfare over the American
dream is over. Markets remain volatile as investors react to
the administration's shifting stance on reciprocal tariffs and the ongoing
(02:01:06):
ninety day pause on new international levies. The Supreme Court
is set to hear arguments in a critical challenge regarding
federal firearm restrictions on individuals who use controlled substances. This case,
following the Court's historic Brewin decision, forces the federal government
to prove that current firearm prohibitions align with the nation's
(02:01:29):
historical tradition of regulation. Legal scholars suggest this ruling will
serve as a bellweather for the future of the Second Amendment,
specifically concerning the push to categorize ar fifteens, and other
common arms as restricted items. Deep concerns persist regarding the
integrity of federal law enforcement following multiple fatal encounters between
(02:01:52):
Department of Homeland Security agents and US citizens in the Midwest.
The shadow docket continue used to draw fire as the
Supreme Court has repeatedly stayed lower court injunctions against federal
agencies without offering a transparent justification. Plaintiffs argue that current
federal immunity doctrines render it near impossible to redress systemic
(02:02:17):
violations of the Fourth Amendment by agents operating with impunity.
The Patriot Coalition has released its updated calendar of events,
emphasizing a renewed push to defend the Second and Fourth Amendments.
Grassroots activists are prioritizing local government engagement, focusing on school
boards and county commissions to counter institutional decay. Organizers stress
(02:02:42):
that the focus must shift from national political theater to
building parallel institutions that can survive the eventual collapse of
current federal oversight. The push for an Article five Convention
of the States is gaining traction as frustration with the
federal bureaucracy reaches a breaking point. Proponents argue that the
(02:03:02):
federal government is beyond reform, captured by hostile elites who
operate against the interests of the American people. But critics
argue an Article five convention could lead to a runaway
convention with powers to rewrite the entire US Constitution, the
process of which would likely be influenced by foreign and
corporate lobbyists. That's the news this hour. Now back to
(02:03:26):
govern America with Vicky Davis and Darren Weeks.
Speaker 12 (02:03:31):
Talk to me, Holy issues and impact liberty information for
strategy to be free.
Speaker 25 (02:03:56):
Talk to me.
Speaker 12 (02:04:02):
Two secrets, expose the liesars.
Speaker 10 (02:04:08):
The crimes of the empire.
Speaker 5 (02:04:11):
And the situation is tired.
Speaker 12 (02:04:16):
Talk to me, Governor.
Speaker 34 (02:04:27):
Truth for a sation of honation, govern America, we address
any situation.
Speaker 12 (02:04:44):
Come together for a little deliberation.
Speaker 8 (02:04:54):
Called govern America at six one zero six hundred one
seven six. That's six one zero six hundred one seven
seven six six one zero six zero zero one seven
seven six four toll free at eight four four six
four six eight three seven six that's eight four four
(02:05:16):
six cover.
Speaker 5 (02:05:17):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. It
continues to be the fourth of April twenty twenty six.
As we're back into the show, hour number three, I
want to finish up this audio clip here and then
we'll go to the phones. Uh six ten six hundred
seventeen seventy six. That's six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six.
Or toll free eight four four six four six eight
(02:05:38):
three seven six that's eight four four six Govern playing
audio from Yanessa Unessa TV food producer I Guess located
in Idaho. As Vicky said, so let's continue here, He's
he's got some analysis on where all of this is
going with regard to the seventy two hour Just in
(02:05:58):
Time food system here in the United States. What can
you look forward to see? Food shortages are coming to
the United States more than likely. Certainly energy shortages are
already here, and we're not going to be recovering from
those anytime soon, as we've already covered in the broadcast.
But what do we have to look forward to with
(02:06:19):
regard to how it's going to impact us in a
most intimate way here he.
Speaker 33 (02:06:25):
Is hobally, fertilizer prices are going insane because if ships
can't pass through that narrow strait with the ingredients that
are required to make the fertilizer prices skyrocket. There are
shortages a fertilizer. This what we're seeing right now is
the system breakdown. It doesn't happen all at once. These
(02:06:47):
trucking companies, they're not going to shut down, but what
they are going to do in this situation is they're
going to start hesitating. And that hesitation is where it
starts to impact us in the seventy two hour system.
They start to delay, they start to try and consolidate runs.
That's why when these things happen, you often start to
see twenty five percent of the shelf filled, or like
(02:07:09):
a much smaller amount of food in the grocery store.
Because in order for them to try and shelter the
consumer from as much cost as possible, they.
Speaker 22 (02:07:18):
Have to consolidate.
Speaker 33 (02:07:19):
They have to cut back because they can't cut their
profit margins or they will shut down.
Speaker 5 (02:07:24):
Just like the fishermen.
Speaker 33 (02:07:25):
Eventually, some of these deliveries will stop making economic sense altogether.
Just like the fishermen, the carriers of these phraates start
cherry picking the loads right because now their costs have
gone up, they've got to only move the loads where
they could actually make money moving the load, the margins
on some of the marginal roots simply collapse. Now this
(02:07:48):
is nothing that is actually dramatic, but what we're seeing
at this phase is the slowing down, kind of the
crumbling of the seventy two hour system. Now they two
is usually when the illusion cracks. That's when deliveries they
start to kind of slip. But you walk into the
grocery store, you start to notice, hey, there's a lot
(02:08:09):
less milk on the shelf today than there was yesterday.
The produce section looks a little picked over. Everything just
kind of starts to feel a little off.
Speaker 2 (02:08:16):
Right.
Speaker 33 (02:08:17):
Now, day three of seventy two hours, the feedback cycle
starts to kick in. Shoppers will begin going to the
grocery store and they're going to start noticing the gaps,
and so they're going to start stocking up on some
of those items because they don't want to be without them.
Speaker 22 (02:08:33):
So you have that pressure on the system.
Speaker 33 (02:08:35):
Retailers begin to get defensive buy this behavior, and they
begin to start holding backstock. The distributors, who are now
economically strained, they start prioritizing by their biggest customers, by
their least marginable loads, so that they can try and
make some sort of profit by moving this stuff. At
(02:08:55):
this point, small delays begin to turn into visible shortages,
not because the food system disappeared, but because the timing.
Speaker 22 (02:09:03):
Of the food system broke. Okay, so our food system collapses.
Speaker 33 (02:09:09):
Within seventy two hours, it begins to collapse, then it
starts to trickle out, and even if situations resolve tomorrow,
it's getting that system back up that takes a longer
period of time. In the US, believe it or not,
we still have farmers who are waiting six eight months
to a year to be able to get their cows
(02:09:32):
into be slaughtered so that they can sell them and
make a profit.
Speaker 22 (02:09:36):
And that dates all the way back to COVID.
Speaker 33 (02:09:39):
This type of thing has ripple effects that last for
a very long period of time.
Speaker 5 (02:09:46):
Any thoughts, VICKI, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:09:49):
I love that guy. I love how he's explaining this,
except that it dates back even farther than that, because
I remember around two thousand five or two thousand and six,
I was trying to get people to get together and
(02:10:11):
build a slaughterhouse here in the West. You know, because
if you're waiting on what's happening in Chicago, where the
big slaughterhouses are. You know, we would be like last
on the list to get whatever production they were coming
(02:10:33):
up with. And so this has been ongoing in phases,
but at each point there's been a correction to put
it back in order. But every time it has happened,
it's like a warning bell, you know, wake up people,
(02:10:53):
the system is not working. And the way I saw
the global economy working is that we export our production
and import our consumption. And I know a lot of
our food was coming in through Mexico and a lot
(02:11:17):
of production facilities moved to Mexico and some to some
degree China, but there was no reason ever for that.
And it just upsets me to no end to hear
the commercials about hunger in America because there was no
(02:11:39):
reason for that whatsoever. Right, I think we're probably one
of the most productive countries in the world, whether they're
actually producing, but we have the capability to produce.
Speaker 5 (02:11:54):
Well, and we're one of the hardest working too. I've
talked to foreigners who've come over here and many of
them can't keep track. Even years ago, when I worked
at the TV station, we had a couple from Germany,
and not to put down anybody from Germany. But I
just remember that they were there, and I remember uh
hearing they came in to clean the building, uh there,
(02:12:16):
And I talked to the manager of the company, the
owner of the company, who said that they went back
to Germany, and I thought, well, really, why why did
they do that? And he says, well, they they just
didn't like it over here. They sat over here, everything
is money, money, money, money, money. All it is money, money, money, money,
and you have to run, run, run, run run, And
(02:12:38):
they just felt like the American pace was all about
just produced, produced, produce and pay pay pay right, and
they didn't like it. They went backs.
Speaker 2 (02:12:50):
All the profits go up to the corporations, and people
are just like in a wheel, you know, like a
hamster wheel. You just keep running in that hamster will
and you can never get anywhere.
Speaker 5 (02:13:03):
Yep, exactly right. All right, let's go to the phones
and let's get somewhere here now with the callers. Hello, Canada,
you're up first. British Columbia, you're on the air. Go ahead, please.
Speaker 35 (02:13:16):
Yeah. I think they're trying to sell us a little
bit of panic here, the seventy two hours thing. It's
easy to manufacture fertilizer here in Canada and the United States,
because all you really need to do is use what's
(02:13:36):
called the haber Bosch process, where you take the nitrogen
out of the air and you heat it with hydrogen
in a high pressure system, and you can use the
natural gas here in Canada or the United States, and
that process is We'll give you the ammonia that you
(02:14:01):
need to put on your crops and such like, and
it doesn't have to count from the straits of hor
moves or parts thereof, and.
Speaker 5 (02:14:11):
Back to you for your Well, I'm not an expert
on making fertilizer. I know that periodically, you know, historically
they've used cow manure on crops as fertilizer and that
sort of thing. One thing that I liked about Yanessa
is that he seems to be doing the opposite of
(02:14:32):
what you're saying that you know, there's a lot of
fear pouring out there. I know you didn't use that
exact terminology, and certainly there are those that do jump
on that bandwagon and try their best to scare people.
I guess, really what I'm looking at, and I think
what this gentleman that we played is looking at. And
(02:14:53):
Vicki as well I don't want to speak for her,
but I think she would agree with this is that
this is really a warning. It's really a warning to everyone.
You know, we're just coming out of the winter now,
we're just going into spring. This is a point at
which everyone could probably put a garden in. You know.
I don't think in the immediate anyway that anybody's really
(02:15:17):
suggesting that the store shelves are going to go completely bare,
you know, And that's really what the That's why I
clarified carefully that shortages are one thing. We're not talking
about bare food shelves. Now, in some cases they may
be bear I mean, if panic buying sets in and
(02:15:41):
people start buying, buying, buying, it could very well be
and certainly was the case during COVID that some store
shelves went bare in certain areas. That doesn't mean we
had a complete shortage of food, doesn't mean there wasn't
anything to eat, but people did get spooked and wanted
to make sure that they bought at least enough to
get buy for a couple of weeks. Now, nobody is
(02:16:02):
really equipped for long term storage. And really the problem
that I've had, I personally have had for the entire
time that I've even had my eye on world affairs
and being awake to these issues and been awake to
the fragility of everything and trying to prepare is not
(02:16:26):
really knowing what you're preparing for. That's the difficult thing.
We don't know what time frame we're dealing with. We
don't know all the variables, We don't know what the
government might do. You can you can save your you
can save your gold. Lots of people are promoting gold,
but the government has confiscated gold before.
Speaker 2 (02:16:45):
You can't eat gold.
Speaker 5 (02:16:46):
You can't eat gold, that's right. You can prepare in
many many ways. There's no guarantee that the government wouldn't
confiscate your food supply. You know that.
Speaker 2 (02:16:58):
That's a good point.
Speaker 5 (02:17:00):
So a lot of people do it and try to
be low key about it. You know, have their homestead,
but really, in all actuality, you don't even know that
you we'll be able to keep your property if it
comes down to it. You know, there's so many different
or if civil unrest breaks breaks out, you might have
to leave your property. You might be forced out. That's
(02:17:22):
what's happened in certain areas at certain times. So we
were left with an imperfect solution of doing the best
that we can, you know, trying to educate our the
folks around us, to try to ease the strain on
the system and not be a strain on the system,
(02:17:44):
but also trying to be as ready as we can
be for something that we really don't even know how
it's going to pan out.
Speaker 2 (02:17:49):
Yeah, and I would like to say one thing, Yes,
we can produce fertilizer here in the United States. That's
how jur Simplot went into businessiness is that he built
a fertilizer plant in near Pocatello, Idaho, and that's where
(02:18:11):
he made all of his money. So yeah, you're right,
we can do that. The problem is timing. It's all timing.
Speaker 12 (02:18:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 35 (02:18:20):
Don't you feel though that they're trying to sell us
this war? I certainly feel. I hear rhetoric all the
time on other talk show talk shows where well, if
we don't take horn moves, the sky is going to fall,
and you know it's going to work out, and yeah,
Trump knows what he's doing, but.
Speaker 7 (02:18:45):
Go ahead.
Speaker 5 (02:18:46):
Yeah, I was just laughing at what you said that.
You know that they say Trump knows what he's doing.
I think I don't I don't think there was much
of a plan going into this thing, and I think
they're kind of short of just deliberately. Unless the plan
was to deliberately destroy the United States, I don't think
(02:19:06):
there was a plan. Now, if that was the plan,
then they're doing very very well in it. But if
the plan was to try to accomplish some short term
goal by dealing with Iran by creating long term damage,
that's just acidine and insane.
Speaker 2 (02:19:24):
So I think it really was Israel that started the
whole thing. Yes, and it's for Israel, because Israel has
been trying to build a regional governing structure over the
Middle East Middle East Free Trade Area yep. And I
(02:19:45):
think that's what the rush is, is that Israel wants
to gain control for greater Israel.
Speaker 5 (02:19:55):
Yep. Exactly, go ahead, call her, give you another shot there.
Speaker 35 (02:20:00):
Ironically, though, Israel I understand is.
Speaker 7 (02:20:04):
Blowing up.
Speaker 35 (02:20:05):
I mean, if it was a gam but they were
taking I think they've lost a big time and the
United States is up against Maybe I mentioned it before,
a triple alliance. Russia and China will keep on supplying
Iran because Iran can take the punishment. You see the
(02:20:29):
Chinese and the Russians will keep supplying the Iranians with
all the missiles and the war technology they need because
of course the Iranians can pay for it in oil
you see, and other things. So the war is going
to continue on for quite a while.
Speaker 5 (02:20:48):
I think back to you guys. Yeah, I couldn't couldn't
disagree with anything you said there, except that if you
think that Iran or I'm sorry, Israel has lest anything,
you know. Yeah, it's all collateral damage to them. They
don't care. They'll sacrifice their own citizens, they'll sacrifice their
own people, you know, they don't have any problem with that.
(02:21:12):
The greater good, the greater thing that they look at
as good anyway, is what they have their eye on.
But hey, listen, I really appreciate the call. God bless you, sir,
appreciate your input. Yep, blessings. All right, let's move on.
Let's go to Tennessee. Hello, you're on the air, go ahead, please, Hello, Hi,
(02:21:33):
I wanted to.
Speaker 36 (02:21:33):
Ask you just a quick question. I was kind of curious.
You know, your your bump music with the female vocalist
talk talk to me, right, that's a I was That's
what I was gonna ask. Yes, a I or was
that a session musician? Was that a real human being?
Speaker 12 (02:21:52):
No?
Speaker 5 (02:21:53):
The only the only real human being that we have
on our bump music is U is the uh traditional
govern America. Like right before the show starts and right
at the end of the show. That is actually a
female that is out of music Radio creative place, out
of Britain, United Kingdom. And uh. The rest of the
(02:22:18):
bumps that we use are from an app called Suno.
Speaker 2 (02:22:25):
I like them, by the way, I never mentioned it,
but I do like them.
Speaker 5 (02:22:29):
Yeah, I like I like being able to experiment with it.
It's it's interesting.
Speaker 36 (02:22:34):
And you know, we shouldn't be a concern, you know,
if you if we're concerned about jobs and displacements so
forth because of the aim, wouldn't that sort of be not.
Speaker 5 (02:22:48):
Not as far as this radio show is concerned. I
don't have the money to be paying people bands and
singers and what have you, so we just wouldn't have
the music. That's what the boy oil is down to.
But it's a fair question. I was just I was
just I was just kind of no, it's a fair question. Absolutely,
(02:23:09):
so say I that's doing all that?
Speaker 36 (02:23:11):
Huh okay?
Speaker 5 (02:23:11):
Yeah, Hey, well thanks, Hey, you're welcome. Bye bye. That
was easy enough to answer. All right, let's go to
South Carolina now, and hello, you're on the ear, go ahead, please,
what about you?
Speaker 7 (02:23:24):
Darren and Vicky? And I am not Ai, by the way,
I am for real.
Speaker 5 (02:23:27):
I'm very glad to hear that the.
Speaker 7 (02:23:29):
Phone you can reach through the phone and pinch me.
I'll go out.
Speaker 5 (02:23:34):
Now.
Speaker 7 (02:23:35):
There's three or four things I want to pass on
very quickly to you both. This is really a great
commentation that you all. There's very very good callers too,
and information is good. Vickey. The first thing I want
to pass on to you is that, uh, the the
person who put out all the fires over there and
Koy his name.
Speaker 5 (02:23:53):
Was redded there, redded there.
Speaker 2 (02:23:55):
Yep, that's right, you're right, Thank you very much.
Speaker 7 (02:23:59):
Did that? That's good, It's okay. Sometimes we just don't anyway.
I'm going to pass that on. Also, there were six
hundred whirl wheels that he put out. They were not
set on fire by KUWAITI. They were set on fire
of our own military. Now that's not well owned information,
but it's accurate.
Speaker 2 (02:24:14):
Oh, I'll be done.
Speaker 7 (02:24:15):
No, I didn't know that, yes, ma'am. And my information
comes from very very good sources. The second thing I'm
want to pass on very quickly is there's a solution
to the Middle East.
Speaker 5 (02:24:28):
Okay, it comes.
Speaker 7 (02:24:31):
Tear up the Battle four Agreement, implement the Byzantine Empire
for all members of the Kosher rat Pack. That should
take care of everything worldwide real quick.
Speaker 2 (02:24:40):
Yeah, that's an interesting thought.
Speaker 5 (02:24:42):
Yeah, I have to think about that definitely. At the
very least, somebody in Washington, DC needs to stand up
to the Israeli government and the trolls that run it
and say no, we're not going to go along with
you anymore. I don't see any will unfortunately to do that.
(02:25:03):
They're dragging us down and it's going to continue, you know.
And if you think anything else, you know, then you're
just a bad goy. You need to be sacrificed.
Speaker 7 (02:25:13):
The Koshure rat Pack we're hired to take down America.
They want the constitution to go away. They want the guns,
and they want cheaper labor. For that, they get to
keep the booty of the country. That's all they promised
to And if you look at see where the checks
are all going to. There's your problem children right there. Okay,
another constitution we have two different jurisdiction in this country.
One's called the United States, which is run by Washington,
(02:25:36):
d C. Only, and the other one is United States
of America, which is run by the Constitution. It's the
fifty states. Those are two entities you want to be
careful of. If you're a US citizen, you belong to Washington,
d C. And there's two terms you want to be
careful with. And that one there two terms or one
is within and one is without. It depends on what
(02:25:56):
laws you are. But if you want to be a US,
if you're going to be a citizen, you've born to Washington,
d C. Which is run by the fourth rail, which
is the administrative rail. If you're under the United States
of America, you're run by you're run by You're you're
a national and you're run by the Constitution, which is
nothing but a piece of paper in the other room.
And your comments about it men brought to life so
(02:26:20):
they can make changes to it. It won't make any difference.
They do whatever they want to. But they were true
to take America down the kosher rat pack of the
occupants the United States government, and and good luck with it.
It's not it's not going to go anywhere else to
bringing America down, and vickey, you were right about that.
It's been planned for a long time. Now Here in
the South we have something really nice. When we get
ready to get off, okay, we say audios a riverderci
(02:26:44):
au wa child. And here in the very deep South
we always say see Abobba.
Speaker 5 (02:26:52):
Well I have to say see you bubba also because
we're at the at the break time. But hey, thank you, sir,
appreciate great call. Thank you. I'll be back.
Speaker 14 (02:27:00):
Folks, you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance,
then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
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Speaker 1 (02:27:45):
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
eight two five seventeen.
Speaker 10 (02:28:01):
Doctor Gary Chapman with a love language minute.
Speaker 9 (02:28:04):
As we come to the end of the year, many
people are suffering from the pain of Christmas debt. Others
are troubled with the upheavals of the financial markets. Let
me remind you of the words of Jesus. A man's
life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.
If you understand that truth, it will change your life forever.
Real satisfaction is found not in money, but in loving
(02:28:27):
relationships with God, our spouse, children and friends. Loving relationships
are our greatest assets. Most of us could live with
less money, and may of necessity have to do so.
But if that helps us focus on relationships, then we
still come out winters. Why not have a family soup night,
(02:28:47):
eat only soup and crackers, and thank God that you
are alive and together.
Speaker 37 (02:28:53):
Doctor Gary Chapman is the author of the Five Love Languages.
Speaker 17 (02:28:57):
For more, visit five Love Languages dot com.
Speaker 37 (02:29:00):
Moms, you can't imagine how important it is for your
children to know that you spend time with the Lord.
Speaker 38 (02:29:07):
I remember the mornings and even now I'll wake up
to hear someone weeping in our.
Speaker 36 (02:29:11):
Front room, only to walk in and find my mother
on her knees.
Speaker 38 (02:29:14):
Praying for them.
Speaker 37 (02:29:15):
To know that when you wake them up, you've already
prayed for them.
Speaker 38 (02:29:19):
Child would just go through me and I would start crying.
Speaker 37 (02:29:22):
Even now, whenever I'm tempted to skip my time with
the Lord, I have the image of a mom and
dad who spent time with God first thing in the morning.
Speaker 38 (02:29:30):
But how comforting it was to hear her and see
her there, just her and her God. I will always
hide that.
Speaker 7 (02:29:37):
In my mind.
Speaker 37 (02:29:38):
Your children need to know that the words of Isaiah
fifty are true for you. He wakens me morning by morning,
wakens me like one being taught watching.
Speaker 38 (02:29:48):
Her from my childhood, I have learned to make my
own prayer time with just me and God. I love you, Mom,
Thank you so very much.
Speaker 37 (02:29:55):
With seeking Him, I'm Nancy Demos Walkmouth.
Speaker 14 (02:30:00):
Are you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance.
Then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
you're guaranteed to save money on your car insurance. Most
car insurances can be canceled at any time. That means
if you find a better deal, you can switch right away.
We're not just one company. We offer most of the
(02:30:21):
major brands of car insurance. We're like a discount supermarket
for car insurance. And it doesn't matter if you have
a good record or a bad driving record. Our agents
are experts at finding you the right car insurance for
your needs. Our average customer saves hundreds of dollars a
year when they call us to switch. So why don't
you make this one hundred percent free call right now
(02:30:42):
and see how much you can save on your car insurance.
Speaker 1 (02:30:45):
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
eight two five seventeen.
Speaker 25 (02:31:00):
Can truth or the restoration of our nation go over.
Speaker 5 (02:31:24):
America? All right? When the home stretch of the broadcast
(02:32:01):
final half hour, here upon govern America. By the way,
I wanted to say, for next week, we will not
be here live again. Sorry about the replays. Unfortunately I
will be out of town. I have been drafted into
taking a trip with my daughter, which I'm not terribly
excited about doing, to admit, but unfortunately I don't want
(02:32:22):
her to go alone, so you know, that's the protective
part of me as far as being her dad. So
I will not be able to be here next week,
but plan on returning the week after. So just so
you know, we will be doing something next week. We'll
try to produce a compelling show out of the archives
(02:32:46):
for those who will be here, and we certainly will
have something here for the affiliates who take the stream
and what have you, So that's yet to be determined
what that will look like. But anyway, so yeah, next
week replay in the week after should be live if
Lord will willing and everything goes as planned. In the meantime,
(02:33:08):
I'll tell you what I wanted to share with you
a little bit. Patrick Wood has been a front of
this broadcast of person. I consider him a friend. I know,
Vicky you do as well. He's been he's talked about. Really,
he's kind of become somewhat of an authority, if not
the authority I know, we he learned about technocracy from you, Vicky,
(02:33:29):
didn't he.
Speaker 2 (02:33:31):
You know, actually no, well, well I don't know. It
was real close in time, okay. But but he's the
one that documented the nineteen thirties, he's the smart cities, okay.
And it was from that that was kind of his
springboard into the area of technology, which is of course,
(02:33:56):
my My total focus is on the systems that have
been implemented that are driving the world.
Speaker 5 (02:34:04):
Yeah. He talks about though this situation in Iran, that
it's about global trade.
Speaker 2 (02:34:12):
And oh it is absolutely yeah.
Speaker 13 (02:34:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:34:14):
And so he wrote a piece which I thought you
would very much appreciate. He says, the India Middle Eastern
Europe Economic Corridor iMac. And you talked about MEFTA, the
Free Trade Area in the.
Speaker 2 (02:34:28):
Middle Free Trade Area. Yeah, but within the regional areas,
there are corridors, you could transportation corridors, and that's the
global system. And on the corridors there are ports and
inland ports, and so the global economy operates on these
(02:34:54):
transportation corridors, going from port to port.
Speaker 5 (02:34:59):
Yeah. So iMac is the India Middle East Europe Economic Corridor,
and it's been called one of the largest and most
ambitious infrastructure projects in American modern history. Trump called it
one of the greatest trade routes in all of history.
iMac is not just a trade route. It is a
(02:35:20):
control corridor, a fully integrated system of rails, roads, shipping lanes, ports,
fiber optic cables, energy pipelines, and data centers stretching from
India to Europe. Whoever controls the architecture of that system
controls the flow of goods, energy, data, and money across
the three continents. That is precisely.
Speaker 2 (02:35:39):
Let me go throw something in here. You remember when
we first learned about the Trans Texas Corridor. Yep, that
was the same plan.
Speaker 5 (02:35:49):
It is the same plant exactly.
Speaker 2 (02:35:51):
It's everything that moves in a straight line from port
to port.
Speaker 5 (02:35:58):
I was thinking about that when I was reading that. Yeah,
that's exactly right. I mean, they wanted to concentrate all
the infrastructure in one area, basically a spine of the country,
if you will, or at least dividing the country in half.
(02:36:19):
So the name of the game is control, and that
is precisely why the technocrats want it, and precisely why
you Patrick Wood says, should understand what it is and
who is building it. IMEC is the commercial payoff of
a decade of deliberate geopolitical engineering, engineering that runs directly
(02:36:41):
through Jared Kushner, the Abraham Accords, the war with Iran,
and the technocratic reconstruction of Gaza. We remember we talked
about the fifteen people on the panel, the Panel of Peace,
the piece panel. Because Trump is so peaceful, he developed
the peace panel. Connect the dots and the picture is unmistakable.
(02:37:06):
On September ninth, twenty twenty three, the governments of India,
the United States, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, France, Germany, Italy
and the European Union signed to memorandum of understanding at
the g twenty summit in New Delhi. They called it
the India Middle East Europe Economic cor Corridor. The official
purpose to bolster economic development, enhance connectivity and offer an
(02:37:29):
alternative to both the Suez Canal and the China's Belton
Road initiative. The corridor runs into two legs. The East
Corridor links Indian ports Mandra, Candela and jel Ohario Nehru Port.
I'm sure I butchered that. I apologize trust in Navi
(02:37:52):
Mumbai by sea to air Arabian golf terminals, Fijeria, jabel
La and Abu Dhabi in the UAE plus Oh my gosh,
I have to pronounce more demem ross Al Carr and
Saudi Arabia. From there, the Northern Corridor continues to rail
(02:38:14):
across Saudi Arabia's places and onto Israeli port of Hafa Haifa.
Speaker 2 (02:38:22):
Does he have a map of the corridor?
Speaker 5 (02:38:25):
Not here. I'm looking at this from the Activist Post,
so I assume they're reprinting this from his website. But
the problem is with Pat Wood is he's put a
lot of his stuff now behind paywalls over there on
the technocracy dot News. So I don't know if this
article is behind a paywall or not. I didn't check.
Speaker 2 (02:38:46):
But well, I've got an article on my website about
the I'm China China Pakistan Economic Corridor and I have
a map of it. Okay, So I'll put the article
in the show notes, And the title of the article
is it's a cookie cutter world because the system they're
(02:39:10):
describing that he's describing is the same system that's being
built all over the world.
Speaker 5 (02:39:17):
I'm betting if we can given enough time, we could
probably find a map, even if he didn't have one
in his stuff. Yeah, I'm sure, but anyway, he says,
that is the transportation pillar. iMac is three pillars, not one.
The energy pillar threads electricity cables and hydrogen pipelines along
(02:39:39):
the same route, designed to carry golf energy and eventually
Indian produced green hydrogen into European markets. The digital pillar
runs high speed fiber optic cables and cross border data infrastructure.
The entire length of the corridor anchored by data centers
at Keynotes. Think of it as a nervous system laid
(02:40:00):
alongside the circulatory system. Initial cost estimates run from three
billion dollars to eight billion dollars per segment. The G
seven's Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment has pledged to
mobilize six hundred billion dollars globally for projects of this type.
Construction of key rail lines, ports, and highway segments officially
began in April of twenty twenty five. Isn't it interesting, though,
(02:40:23):
that none of the media is really talking about this
in terms.
Speaker 2 (02:40:26):
Of no, they have never talked about any of it,
even the Trans Texas Corridor. They didn't really talk about that,
right in terms of what it actually is. I found
the website by the way, IMEC dot International.
Speaker 5 (02:40:48):
Okay, really it's got the whole word international or is
it it?
Speaker 2 (02:40:53):
No, it's the whole world.
Speaker 5 (02:40:55):
Wow, I did not know international the whole word was
a top level domain. Yeah it is now, I guess
you're right. It came right up. Isn't that something? I
wonder what else is on that dot international top level domain? Fascinating?
(02:41:16):
All right, well, there it is. Yep, we'll put that
in the show notes for sure. But he says, iMac
promises to cut transit time between India and Europe by
forty percent compared to the Suez Canal route. What it
does not advertise is who holds the keys to every
choke point along the way. A Downy Ports of India
(02:41:36):
now owns Haifa Port IMAX Israeli gateway into Europe, having
won the privatization tender in July twenty twenty two and
completing the acquisition in January twenty twenty three. A Donny
is simultaneously developing That Haven deepwater port in India's western coast.
The Quarters Eastern anchor the same company sits at both
(02:41:59):
ends of the sea. LA and Francis CMA g CGM
and Dubai based DP World both signed major thirty year
port concession deals in twenty twenty five for Syria's Latakia
and Tartis ports, respectively, Mediterranean nodes positioned directly on the
(02:42:19):
IMECH adjacent levant corridor. These are not coincidental private investments.
They are the private sector execution of a state designed
infrastructure strategy, which is the public private partnership model that
technocracy has always required. This trait of Chahormuz, the choke
point of IMEC, imac's eastern Sea lane runs through the
(02:42:43):
Persian Golf. The Persian Golf exits into the Arabian Sea
through one bottleneck. The Strait of Horror moves VICKI, I'll
be done.
Speaker 2 (02:42:52):
What a coincident?
Speaker 5 (02:42:53):
Thirty three kilometers wide, isn't that amazing? Thirty three fifth
of global petroleum liquids, more than one quarter of all
seaborne oil trade. Every tanker leaving the Gulf terminals that
iMac depends on must pass through that strait, unless Iran
decides otherwise. On February twenty eight, twenty twenty sixty, United
(02:43:16):
States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran under Operation
Epic Fury, Supreme leader Ali Hamini was killed. Iran's Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps responded by declaring the Strait of Hormos
closed to American, Israeli and Western Allied shipping. Tanker traffic
dropped approximately seventy percent over one hundred and fifty ships
(02:43:38):
anchored outside the strait. Oil prices broke one hundred dollars.
A barrow guitar declared Force majeure of Ross Lafan, removing
roughly twenty percent of global liquid natural gas from the market.
European natural gas prices served sixty three percent in a week.
As if this writing, the crisis is ongoing. None of
this is ten gin tangential to imec It is the
(02:44:03):
central issue. Ah alf A golf shipping lane dominated by
a hostile Iranian navy is a golf shipping lane that
cannot anchor a trillion dollar trade corridor. The removal of
Iran's ability to threaten Hormoz by neutralizing its naval forces,
degrading its military capacity, or forcing regime change is a
(02:44:27):
strategic per requisite for imac's Eastern Corridor to function as designed.
Iranian officials understand this perfectly. They have described IMEC as
an instrument of strategic encirclement. That is an accurate description.
You're going to where you're going to say something.
Speaker 2 (02:44:46):
No, but I was thinking that's the what they're doing,
is that they are trying to replicate the silk Road
of the uh what was it the eighteenth century, ninenineteenth century,
except a modernized global silk road. And that's what the
(02:45:08):
whole deal is behind these corridors and ports and all
the critical infrastructure that flows through the corridor. And so
that's really a major part of building a global economics system.
Speaker 5 (02:45:32):
Yeah, so, he says. Analysts tracking iMac have quietly noted
that Oman's ports Duckham, Si Laha and Sohar, positioned outside
the strait on the Arabian Sea, have attracted accelerating investment
as alternative maritime hubs. The corridor's architects built in a bypass.
(02:45:54):
They anticipated this problem, then they went ahead and created it. Anyway,
The Abraham Bards, which normalize relations between Israel and the
Gulf States on the basis of a shared threat perception
toward Iran, were not purely diplomatic achievements. They were they
were an opening move in a sequence. The war with
(02:46:14):
Iran is clearly the military obstacle. iMac is the commercial
architecture that moves into the resulting space. These are connected events,
not parallel ones. I have been tracking the intersection of
geopolitics and commercial infrastructure for a long time. What makes
iMac uniquely significant is the degree to which the same
(02:46:35):
individual designed the diplomatic preconditions, brokeered the commercial relationships, and
is now overseeing the governance structure in the key territory
the corridor passes through. That individual is Jared Kushner.
Speaker 2 (02:46:50):
Oh bingo, Okay.
Speaker 5 (02:46:54):
The sequence begins in twenty seventeen, when Kushner was appointed
as Trump's Special adviser for the Middle East. His method
was geoeconomics, financial incentives, and commercial integration as a substitute
for political solutions. He called forty years of the peace
process a failure and proposed something different. What he built
(02:47:15):
was the Abraham Accords normalization agreements between Israel and the UAE,
bat Rain, Sedan, and Morocco, signed in August and September
twenty twenty. Kushner negotiated all four deals in four months,
leveraging Israeli annexation threats, golf concerns about Iran and American
security guarantees into a block of aligned states bound together
(02:47:37):
by economic interest. The strategic logic of the Abraham Accords
and the strategic logic of iMac are identical. Both assume
that commercial integration produces regional stability. Both assume that a
shared threat from Iran provides the necessary political glue. Both
require Israel to be normalized as a transit and logistics
(02:48:01):
logistics node in the regional economy. The Abraham Accords created
the political foundation, iMac is the infrastructure built on top
of it.
Speaker 2 (02:48:11):
Yeah, the world is being nation states are being collapsed
to be replaced by regional territories. And the regional territories
are economic units.
Speaker 12 (02:48:27):
Like in the.
Speaker 2 (02:48:29):
Pacific Northwest economic region is Washington State, Oregon, Idaho, Montana,
and then the Canadian provinces directly above us, which includes Alberta,
British Columbia, the Yukon going up to Alaska, and that
(02:48:54):
is a regional territory and there are the connecting links
between them. So it is a global reorganization of world
order for sure.
Speaker 5 (02:49:12):
Yeah. Absolutely. Kushner left government on January twenty twenty one
and founded Affinity Partners, a venture capital firm of which
he is the sole owner. He raised two billion dollars
from Saudi Arabia's Sovereign Wealth Fund. He secured one point
five billion dollars from Qatar's Sovereign Wealth Fund and the
Abu Dhabi based Lunate. These are the same golf sovereign
(02:49:36):
entities that are the cornerstone investors in iMac infrastructure. Kushner
designed the diplomatic framework that made iMac possible. He then
positioned himself financially in the very golf capitals that are
funding it. That is not a coincidence, It is a
business model. Kushner designed the diplomatic framework that made IMEC possible.
(02:49:59):
He then positioned it himself financially in the very Okay,
he repeated the same paragraph. Sorry, but that's the way
it was written. And Trump's second term, Kushner has no
formal appointment. He does not need one. Working alongside Special
Envoy Steve Whitkoff, he co authored the twenty point Gaza
(02:50:20):
Peace Plan and helped broker the October twenty twenty five
ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. Then, on January twenty twenty,
second twenty twenty six at the World Economic Form in Davos,
Kushner presented the reconstruction master plan for Gaza at the
signing ceremony for Trump's Board of Peace, and Trump announced
(02:50:43):
him as an Envoy of Peace alongside Witcough, True War,
Aurelian fashion, folks Wars, Peace, freedom of slavery, ignorance, his strength.
The Abraham Fund, established under the first Trump term to
raise three billion dollars for regional infrastructure, including a gas
pipeline between the Red Sea and Mediterranean, was overseen by
(02:51:06):
Adam Boehler, Kushner's college roommate. The fund never received money
and no projects were begun under Biden. It is now
in effect being relaunched through the Board of Peace under
a different name, with a far larger balance sheet, the
same network, the same logic, a bigger canvas. Trump's Board
of Peace was signed into existence at Davos on January
(02:51:29):
twenty second, twenty twenty six. Trump pledged ten billion dollars
in the US commitment memor Nations announced seven billion dollars
in investments. Kushner serves on its executive board. The board
is framed as a coordinating mechanism for Gaza's reconstruction is
what it actually is, an externally governed development authority that
(02:51:51):
sets investment conditions, defines governance standards, and manages the sequence
sequencing of reconstruction in a territory whose previous government has
been militarily eliminated. Yeah, governance, governance, exactly right. Kushner's Gaza
(02:52:12):
master Plan, presented at the same Davos ceremony, envisions a
territory subdivided into zones, with large areas designed for industry
and parks, and a population density that un habitat analysts
note is significantly lower than pre war Gaza. New Gaza
(02:52:32):
in Kushner's renderings looks like Dubai or Doha. Gleaming tower
is along a redeveloped coastline. How much do you want
to bet at least one of those towers is going
to have a great, big, giant trump at the top.
A new port at a new port at the southwestern
near southwestern end near Egypt, an airport adjacent to it,
(02:52:56):
A one eighty high tower, high rise tower, five hundred
thousand promised jobs in construction, agriculture, manufacturing, and the digital sector.
There's a video here. Unfortunately, we're going to not be
able to play it because we're almost out of time.
But reconstruction occurs only in areas where Hamas has fully
(02:53:19):
demilitarized or where Israeli military control has been established. A
newly formed technocratic committee Kushner described it explicitly as a
technocratic administration oversees the process, supported by Arab partners working
alongside the Palestinian authority. Governance will not derive from democratic legitimacy.
(02:53:42):
It derives from administrative competence as defined by certified, defined
and certified by external actors. Folks, this is really this
is the model for everything. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:53:57):
And I would say everybody, you know, go study what
they're doing there, and you'll see that it's being replicated everywhere.
I'll put my link on it's a cookie cutter world
in the show notes, and you can compare. It'll be
(02:54:17):
exactly the same.
Speaker 5 (02:54:19):
Yep. So he says, Haifa is iMX Key is really
Port Node Gaza sits on the Mediterranean coast directly to
Haifa's south, a real built gaza with a new deepwater port,
airport and special economic zone, integrated into the Abraham Accords
normalization architecture and connected to Gulf States through Israeli mediated
(02:54:43):
trade relationships is not a separate development from IMEC. It
is a corridor extension. The territory being cleared, administered, and
rebuilt through the Board of Peace sits directly astride the
route that iMX designers need to control. There's more to this.
This entire thing will be in the show notes with
(02:55:05):
everything else we talked about today. But I think people
need to understand this is really the real reason behind
it all. There are things afoot that the certainly the
mainstream media and most talk shows aren't going to talk about,
sadly enough.
Speaker 2 (02:55:21):
Yeah, and that was and it's not just transportation. The
globalization of governing systems includes other sectors as well, So
it's really like a global takeover. I mean, you know,
we're being conquered by global systems.
Speaker 5 (02:55:42):
Right right anyway, So share the word about the broadcast,
share the word, share the information, educate your fellow neighbors,
do the best you can to prepare for the tough
times ahead as they're undoubtedly coming. And pray for this republic,
(02:56:03):
Pray for peace, do what you can to restore everything,
and leave the rest to God. God bless each and
every one of you folks, thank you, Vicky, thank you.
We'll talk to you soon. Bye bye everyone,