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August 9, 2025 176 mins
"I Think in Dominance" 

Hosts: Darren Weeks, Vicky Davis 

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

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

COMPLETE SHOW NOTES AND CREDITS AT: https://governamerica.com/radio/radio-archives/22629-govern-america-august-9-2025-i-think-in-dominance 

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

Palantir is taking over Washington D.C. and the world. Nestle is thirsty — very thirsty! Also, the United Nations Global Compact. Regionalism: Pacific Northwest Economic Region, Great Lakes Compact morphs into the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors & Premiers. Head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics becomes a labor statistic. Trump promotes guest worker program for farm workers, and more.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:07):
World order, new world order, new world order.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
This is a moment disease. The clidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us re order this world around us.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
A new world order, a world where the.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of
its founders.

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

Speaker 6 (00:40):
First decade of the twenty first century.

Speaker 7 (00:42):
But out of what is will be feared the greatest
restructuring of the global economies, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new world order.

Speaker 6 (00:53):
What's created.

Speaker 8 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic.

Speaker 9 (00:58):
The very word secretion is repugnant in a free and
open society. And we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret os and a secret.

Speaker 8 (01:12):
Proceedings waging war on the new world order.

Speaker 10 (01:15):
The councils of government.

Speaker 11 (01:17):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought by the military industrial conflicts.

Speaker 8 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky.

Speaker 12 (01:31):
Davis from FEMA Regions five and ten. This is governed
America that you give us this year. I'm during Weeks.
It is the ninth of August twenty five. Nice to
have you with us once again, ladies and gentlemen. As
we were back here after a time off last week.

(01:53):
I'm sorry that we had to replay. Sometimes these things
are necessary as we do have a life outside of
govern America. And this approbate thing I've been talking about
is still going on, and it is a grueling process
literally all the entire you know, they say there's no
estate tax in Michigan. They did away with that, but

(02:15):
guess what, they just didn't really do away with it
at all. They just renamed it. So you have to
take it. Yeah, they have to take an entire inventory
of everything in the estate and you have to get
a value on it. And that's what we've been doing
so every free moment of our time. And we have

(02:35):
a deadline which has been set by the court. So
this is why part of the reason why I was
not here last week. We've been spending a lot of
time doing that, and that's what I'm going to be
doing after the show today. We're going to be going back.

Speaker 13 (02:52):
When my dad died, they tried to get the attorney
tried to get my brother and I to do an
inventory of everything, you know, in my dad's house, and
we wouldn't do it, you know, because there was no
problems between the two of us. We knew it was
how it was to be divided, so we just told

(03:15):
the attorney forget about it.

Speaker 12 (03:18):
Well, I wish I could do that here, because what
the inventory here is about is basically the state getting
what they view as their cut of the you know,
so it's some kind of percentage that they get that
they take, but it's all got to go through the process.
And yeah, they say, they say they're the only thing

(03:42):
certain in this life is death and taxes. But taxes
on your death is also a certainty.

Speaker 13 (03:51):
That is just so disgusting. You know, if you have
an estate that's maybe bigger than five million dollars, yeah,
go ahead and do an inventory. But if it's under that, yeah.

Speaker 12 (04:05):
I don't think they should be taking any of them.
They shouldn't be taking any of it. They don't have
a right to take any of it, but they do.
They assert, they assert their sovereignty over you. And that's
government of the people, by the people, and for the people. Now,
I know the socialist slash communists out there would be
very quick to point, you know, see there you go,

(04:26):
that that's the capitalist system. I don't really know how
that would be capitalism, actually, because that would be more
in line I think with a socialist, communist, Marxist type
of system. And you know, the American system is a
lot more preferable to a communist system where the government

(04:46):
owns everything. And so that's.

Speaker 13 (04:49):
Where we're going anyway.

Speaker 12 (04:52):
That's where we're headed. Does seem that way, doesn't it.
So you were telling me before the show that you
know somebody up north here in Michigan that is having
water problems. You were asking me about my well. Yeah,
you want to rehash that conversation a little bit.

Speaker 13 (05:10):
Yeah, I do a show with her on Monday mornings,
and she was telling me before the show that her
well is dry. They you know, she she lives on
kind of a farm. I don't know, she's got about
forty acres. I think, and all of a sudden her

(05:33):
well went dry, and she's trying to figure out what
the hell, you know, And I told her that the
same thing happened here in Idaho in Twin Falls and
in Idaho Falls when I was over there, just you know,
and Idaho has loads of water, yeah, because we're at

(05:57):
the northern edge of the Great Basin Desert at the
foot of a whole big mountain range, you know, in
the northwest. So so the southern Idaho just has loads
of water underground. And what happened in Twin is that

(06:23):
they're their city wells went dried. Well after researching it
and you know, trying to figure out what was going on.
There's a big company, Nestley that that's now a Swiss company.

Speaker 12 (06:44):
They are They.

Speaker 13 (06:47):
Actually come and just take water. Our water is a mineral.
And so when they started privatizing our government government functions,
they also George Herbert Walker Bush also issued an executive

(07:11):
order to sell off everything, privatize everything, and one of
the things that they sold off was water rights.

Speaker 12 (07:22):
Well, I know that, I remember. I guess I wasn't
aware that Nesley was up north pumping water out of
the ground in a massive way. I know years ago,
Melody Hallett. You might remember Melody, she used to have
a talk show herself in Colorado where she lives, and

(07:48):
she was telling us that they were Nestley was pumping
a lot of water out of the ground there. And
I know years ago Governor Jennifer Granhome here in Michigan,
they were pumping the lakes so much and selling it
overseas to the point where the lake water had gone
down precipitously. I mean, it was unbelievable the levels, the

(08:12):
low levels of the lakes, and they were just they
were cashing in on it. I mean it was you know,
I don't even know that the people of the state
of Michigan were really benefiting that much from any of it.
We certainly never got a reduction on any of our taxes,
I can tell you that much.

Speaker 14 (08:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (08:27):
No, you never benefit the people, never benefit on anything.
This country runs for the benefit of multinational and global corporations.

Speaker 12 (08:37):
I think they were shipping our water over to China.
As I recall, yes, many many years ago, you would
think that with sustainable development, those that are promoting it
all that that would not be an efficient use of resources.
Shipping water overseas well.

Speaker 13 (08:54):
That's that's the expose of the fraud of sustainable development.
There were five big corporations. I think it was a
public citizen that did a lot of research on that,
and there were five big corporations. They called them the

(09:16):
water barons. And come to find out that those five
corporations they joined the UN Compact. Let's see what what
is it called the UN Global Compact. And I have
a document here it's called the CEO Water Mandate, and

(09:43):
it's a call to action to come up with a
global plan to provide water to the countries that don't
have water. Now, China has a lot of water, but
it's not really.

Speaker 15 (10:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (10:02):
Well yeah, they add so dangerous chemicals to their water.

Speaker 13 (10:07):
Yeah, the China is an environmental disaster.

Speaker 12 (10:11):
And they yeah, it really is. They raise fish and
raw sewage and then they ship it over here to
the United States for people to eat.

Speaker 13 (10:20):
Yeah, isn't that great?

Speaker 12 (10:21):
Yeah, so don't don't you know you better? I strongly
urge people if you're if if you're not careful, you
should be careful whenever you're eating seafood, really any kind
of food, to know where it's raised.

Speaker 16 (10:36):
Uh.

Speaker 12 (10:37):
And here's where I sound like one of these greeny
weenies when I say eat local, because that's the best
way to go. You know, Michelle and I we buy
most of our meat from the local meat market here,
and I think other people are catching on to that
as well, because every time now we go there, it's packed.

(10:57):
I mean, they have better meat. You know, it's local grown,
locally raised, and it's it's fantastic. But you go to
the grocery store and you buy it there. Yeah, you
have no idea where it's raised. It could be raised
in Mexico. You know. They used to have at least
some whatever happened to that country of origin labeling program.

Speaker 13 (11:20):
They got rid of that.

Speaker 12 (11:22):
Okay, that's what I thought.

Speaker 13 (11:23):
Because people were actually reading the labels.

Speaker 12 (11:25):
Yeah, well, I can't have that. Well, I don't think
the labels were very useful anyway. Many of these, many
of these labels with the country of origin it said
product of North America or something. I remember you remember
seeing that on there.

Speaker 13 (11:42):
I don't specifically remember, but I do remember that when
I was researching this, they were importing beef from Argentina,
and Argentina was genetically engineering their cattle.

Speaker 12 (12:00):
YEP.

Speaker 13 (12:00):
So I'm not as careful as I used to be,
because you know, I at my age, you know, what
the hell?

Speaker 8 (12:09):
But what the hell?

Speaker 13 (12:13):
Yeah, food is a real problem. They took off the
country of origin because obviously I would never buy any
fish or anything if it came from anywhere in Asia.
You know, I don't care at Vietnam or China or

(12:34):
Thailand or anywhere.

Speaker 12 (12:36):
That would be very careful about any fish that's raised
in the Pacific as well, you know. And since they
had that whole geyser down there with all the correct
sit you remember the correct sit in the Gulf of America.
It's called Gulf of America now, but you remember the
correct it. Yeah, there was a geyser, Yeah, and they

(12:58):
poured all that correct correct on it to sink it
to the bottom. So, you know, out of sight, out
of mind, I guess after that, I thought, you know,
I don't think anybody wants to be eating this stuff
if there's food raised in that seafood and what have you.
And then and then of course Fukushima polluted the Pacific,
so we can eat radioactive fish, I guess, and whatever

(13:23):
crab and we can all blow afterwards. I suppose.

Speaker 13 (13:29):
Anyway, this un Global Compact. You know, for multinational corporations.
It's for the realization of the millennium development goals.

Speaker 12 (13:40):
Ah, yes, the yeah.

Speaker 13 (13:45):
But anyway, Donna's well went dry just all of a sudden,
and it's Nestle's pumping water again. Wow, which is the
same thing that happened here in Twin Falls and over
in Idahop paulse when I was over there, all of
a sudden, your wells go dry. And I don't know,

(14:08):
there's got to be some kind of extortion racket or
something going on behind the scenes.

Speaker 12 (14:15):
Yeah, I don't know what. I'll have to look into
that because I haven't. I hadn't, Like I said, I
hadn't heard that. I know Flint's had more than their
share of water problems with the city water. They had
some years ago at Detroit Emergency Management, you know Governor
Rick Snyder. I used to call him Red Rick. He
pretended to be a Republican, but he was actually a

(14:36):
Democrat masquerading as a Republican. And he had did this
program called the emergency Management. Basically they could they got
to where they could point a point an emergency manager
for a city and basically overthrow the elections in that city,
whoever was the city leader, the mayor, they could just

(14:59):
come in and takeover. So we called it emergency martial
law for.

Speaker 13 (15:03):
Oh, you mean like the COVID Yeah, emergency.

Speaker 12 (15:07):
No, no, not like it was basically if a city
got into the into a position where like Detroit, for instance,
or Flint, they did it, I think in Detroit and Flint.
But they if they got into financial mismanagement, which what

(15:28):
city doesn't if they are of any size, but they
could come in. The governor could and unilaterally appoint somebody
to take over.

Speaker 13 (15:39):
Oh oh, that's like what happened in New York City
nineteen seventy five when oh, gosh, what's that guy's name?
The same thing happened in New York City around nineteen
seventy five.

Speaker 12 (15:57):
Yeah, they did that. The manager takeover, and the emergency
manager switched in order to save money, switched the source
of Flint's water supply from from from I think I
forget which rivers it was, but he switched it from
one river to the other and the.

Speaker 13 (16:16):
Yeah, but it was coming in as just raw river water.

Speaker 12 (16:20):
Well, it was coming in to the point where it
was causing the lead and the pipes because of the
toxicity of the river or the erosion. You know, something
different about the water was causing the pipes, the lead
and the existing infrastructure to leach into the water. And
this went on for several months and became a national story,

(16:42):
and consequently people, lots of lots of people today have
lead poisoning as a result of that permanent damage. And
there were lawsuits and they were actually he was put
on trial, the governor, former governor was, but they never
did anything to him. You know, I can't remember. I'd
have to go back and read again. It's been so

(17:04):
many years. It's exactly what the outcome of that whole thing.
Whether I think a couple of people were prosecuted from
inside his administration, you know, they always have people that
they throw under the bus, but really I think Rick
Snyder should have been properly thrown under the bus. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (17:22):
Well, he was working very closely with communist Chinese too.

Speaker 12 (17:26):
Oh, absolutely he was. Yeah, that's another reason why we
called him red Brick. Absolutely, but you know, it's part
for the course. These people the empower of the corporations,
and we had the Jennifer Granholm gave us, we had
the Council of Great Lakes Governors and the Great Lakes Compact,

(17:46):
this international regional body, and this international regional agreement which
was cross border management of the Great Lakes. So we
like to talk a lot on this broadcast about regionalism,
and that's a perfect example of regionalism.

Speaker 13 (18:08):
I think, you know, I think with the way things
are going, I think they're getting ready to break up
the United States. I've been expecting it for a long
time after I found the Pacific Northwest Economic Region, which

(18:29):
includes Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana, plus the I don't
know three or four Canadian provinces in a regional organization,
and Alberta is one of those provinces, by the way,

(18:51):
and I don't know if you've been following what's going
on in Alberta, but they announced they're breaking away from Canada,
and so I think there, I think everything is in
position for the big breakup of the United States, well,
certainly into economic regions.

Speaker 12 (19:11):
That is definitely a part of the plan as I
see it. You know, we've talked before repeatedly on this
broadcast about Curtis Jarvin, and that is one of the
things that he strongly advocates for, and we know that
the present administration in Washington, d C. Is very closely
aligned and very closely friendly to Curtis Jarvin. And of

(19:35):
course Peter Teel is good friends with Curtis Jarvin, and
he is funding a lot of the activities of the
present administration. So there's synergistic I guess, continuity between those

(19:58):
who are pushing that plan and the people who are
actually supposedly elected to run the show. And I say
supposedly because we know a lot of the they're really
the money runs the show no matter who you elect.
The money runs the show.

Speaker 13 (20:12):
Right well, and globalization has concentrated all the wealth in
just a few companies. We've got Amazon and Google and
Microsoft and you know a few others.

Speaker 12 (20:34):
By the way, just to clarify something I could, I
was trying to find the Council of Great Lakes Governors
because I was going to check out their website while
we were on the air. Apparently they have changed morphed
into the Conference of Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence Governors

(20:55):
and Premiers.

Speaker 13 (20:56):
Okay, oh, I have to look for that because.

Speaker 12 (20:59):
As twenty twenty five, so this is something new.

Speaker 13 (21:02):
Yeap. When when I was doing research on the economic
regions that were being built. I collected information on the
Great Lakes Organization because that was going to be one
of the economic regions, and so I'll have to I'll

(21:26):
have to look at that. What was the name of it.

Speaker 12 (21:28):
Again, The the Great Lakes Saint Lawrence Governor's and Premiers. Okay,
the Great Lakes Saint Lawrence Governor's and Premiers. Boy, you
talk about a crappy name. Well, you know it's crappy
because they don't want you to know about it. See,
if they wanted you to talk about it, they would

(21:49):
have a catchy name. They would have a name that
would catch on and be, you know, kind of a
household night name kind of thing. They don't want you
to know about this. They don't want you to think
about it. They don't want you to do any research
on it. They want you to be quiet about it.
But this thing, the Great Lakes Saint Lawrence Governors and Premiers,
also known as GSGP, unites the chief executives from Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,

(22:16):
New York, Ohio, Ontario, Ontario, that is, Pennsylvania, Quebec, and Wisconsin.
So they've expanded it. They've expanded it the governors and
premiers work as equal partners. There's that term again, partners
to grow the region's nearly eight trillion dollar economy and

(22:37):
protect the world's largest system of surface fresh water. How's
that working out for your friend up there in Flint?

Speaker 13 (22:46):
Not very well? Yeah, when Nesley comes around, you got
to organize and fight him back.

Speaker 12 (22:55):
Oh and guess who's the chair of this whole outfit?
Who the queen herself? Governor Gretchen Whitmer.

Speaker 13 (23:07):
Oh it figures.

Speaker 12 (23:09):
Yeah, yeah, she's the chair of the Great Lakes Saint
Lawrence Governors and Premiers. I have to do more research.

Speaker 13 (23:16):
That's trouble.

Speaker 12 (23:18):
Yeah, yeah, she's trouble from the on the word go anyway,
That's that's the fun there. We'll have to do some
more reading on that, because they say the original Great
Lakes Council of Great Lakes Governors was formed in nineteen
eighty three as a regional body for US Great Lakes governors,
primarily to facilitate environmentally responsible economic development. Again, how is

(23:43):
that working out for the people whose wells are going dry?

Speaker 13 (23:46):
And that doesn't surprise me because it was during the
Reagan administration when they began to blur our borders with
Mexico and Canada. In nineteen eighty three, Reagan signed the
treaty with Mexico, creating an international zone on the border,

(24:08):
and then he signed the Free Trade Agreement with Canada,
you know, to which was the beginning of building a
common market modeled after what they did over in Europe.

Speaker 12 (24:24):
Yeah. Well, so anyway, the Council of Great Lakes Governors
is something that needs to be researched more. And you know,
apparently it's growing like a cancer. And probably whatever regions
that you folks are living in are too, I would imagine,

(24:47):
you know, because everybody lives in multiple simultaneous overlapping regions,
it seems. And we don't know who these all these
people are. I know, Nixon, by executive order, divided the
country into ten federal regions. But today we have these
international regions that are oversaw, you know, and some of

(25:11):
them we can know like this when we can read
about on the on the website. But how many others exist,
you know, and they exist at the local level as well,
in your city's towns, you know, through revenue sharing and
everything else. They are merging pieces of government government into others,
you know, taking away local control.

Speaker 13 (25:32):
Trump wants grew Greenland. Yeah, you know, so that it
will be part of the continent of the Americas.

Speaker 12 (25:43):
Yep. And that you're exactly right, and that is another
extension of this regionalism. We're almost up to the or
down to the bottom of the hour, and speaking of Trump,
I have some things to discuss about him. The expansion
of pallanteer. You sent that documentary over which I really

(26:03):
got into us, a short documentary from Epic Philosophy, and
I got some clips from that because I think it's
this is really the issue that everybody, I think needs
to be talking about the expansion of the surveillance state
within the federal government. It's swallowing every agency and it

(26:26):
is expanding very much like these regional bodies that we
were just talking about. This is uh yeah, and I.

Speaker 13 (26:33):
Think polunteers at the center of it.

Speaker 12 (26:37):
It has become now, It certainly is now. So we'll
get into that a little bit. You know. Also, Trump
is promoting migrant worker programs.

Speaker 13 (26:48):
Oh surprise, surprise.

Speaker 12 (26:51):
Another bait and switch. We'll be back here in a moment, folks,
stay with us. Governor America continues in a moment.

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Speaker 8 (30:59):
Two eighty one with a spoof. Go to find out
what's really going on. This is govern America.

Speaker 12 (31:23):
I hear you clearly. You're saying that people who have
been here for years and who have been even paying taxes,
you're going to look at them very differently, and maybe
they belong here in the workforce.

Speaker 23 (31:32):
I want to work with them, and in some cases
we're sending them back to their country with a pass
back in legally, and we're doing things that are that
are very difficult to do and very complex, but it
works really well. We're sending them back and then they're schooling,
they're learning, they're coming in, they're coming in legally. We
have a lot of that going on. But we're taking
care of our farmers. We can't let our farmers not

(31:55):
have anybody. You know, these are these people that they're
You can't replace them very easily. You know, people that
live in the inner city are not doing that work.
They're just not doing that work. And they've tried, We've tried,
everybody tried. They don't do it. These people do it naturally, naturally.
I said, what happens if they get it to a

(32:16):
farmer the other day, what happens if they get a
bad back? He said, they don't get a bad back, sir,
because if they get a bad back, they die. I said,
that's interesting, is that, you know, these are very present
in many ways. They are very very special people.

Speaker 12 (32:32):
Very special people. Yeah, and they're just here to do
the jobs that Americans won't do, right, Isn't that what
Robert Reisch said, former Labor Department Secretary Eder Clinton.

Speaker 13 (32:46):
Except that when I was young, I worked on the
combine in the potato harvest every year, so did my brother.

Speaker 12 (32:56):
Yeah, it's the same argument.

Speaker 13 (32:57):
Bucking hay all of that to earn money.

Speaker 12 (33:01):
Yeah, it's the same argument that they were using before.
Nothing's really changed except instead of a d after the name.
It's now an R. But Trump is now promoting the
same philosophy that Robert Reisch was promoting. They're just here
to do the jobs that Americans won't do except for
one thing. You can make that argument about any industry,

(33:23):
any industry.

Speaker 13 (33:24):
That's the fraud of our political system from administration to administration.
They just changed the names of the programs, and people
seem to be fooled by that.

Speaker 12 (33:39):
Yeah, I got this letter from Sivad. I guess Savada?
I guess is what is his or her name was Sivada.
I've never heard of this from this person before that
I know of, but this just came in yesterday, Good afternoon, Darren,

(34:01):
and the beginning I supported DJT. It took me only
three months to realize this guy was a phony piece
of crap, which reminded me to never vote again. Well,
I would just pause for a moment and say, you
shouldn't let somebody who's at the top of the ticket
stop you from voting from everybody else that's down down

(34:21):
the ticket. Okay, you got all your local stuff, so
that's still the local stuff is worth showing up for,
even if you don't vote for a candidate for president
of the United States. There's many other things on the ballot.
There are proposals on the ballot. There are levees from
your local school district, from your county. I mean, there

(34:44):
are people that are trying to take property tax money
from you in these millages all the time. That's reason
enough to show up and vote. I vote against every
single one of those. I don't care what they are,
just out of principle, but that's reason enough to show
up and vote. So I would caution you to not
give up on voting just because you don't want to

(35:06):
vote for a presidential candidate. But anyway, they say, I
recently started thinking, what if Kamala Harris I never liked,
won the selection and was in charge, what Americans put
up with the kind of crap that DJT is currently pulling. Well,

(35:27):
they said absolutely not. This leads me to believe that
the powers that be had deliberately put her and Tim
Waltz up against DJT instead of old Bernie. They knew
damn well by putting her up against DJT, there would
be no competition and that jackass would win again hands down. Well,
that may very well be, And you know what, I

(35:48):
wouldn't be a bit surprised. That may very well have
been what happened. I don't know. I know that there's
a lot more synergistically, I believe spect that there's a
lot more synergistic uh cooperation between the parties than I think.
It's tag Team Tyranny. We know behind the scenes, there

(36:11):
are many things that keep going on, keep going forward.
The main agenda keeps moving forward regardless of who's in office. Now,
there are some I will say.

Speaker 13 (36:20):
That's a good title, by the way, tag team and tyranny.

Speaker 12 (36:23):
Well, we've used that one before.

Speaker 13 (36:25):
Oh yeah, so uh okay.

Speaker 12 (36:29):
Yeah, if you go back in the show note or
in this show archive there, we did use that one before. Anyway,
But there there are things that Donald Trump has done. Well,
let me let me continue with the letter says during
Sleepy Joe's term, the sheep, Oh, we're getting very restless,

(36:49):
and they desperately needed to lull the sheep go back
to sleep again for another four years. It should be
pretty obvious that that JIBBRONI in office today is nothing
more than a Trojan Horace who was specifically selected allowing
them to easily push their evil agenda forward. And it worked.
This may sound crazy, and I may be wrong, but

(37:10):
now I wish that dim wit Kamala Harris had won
the presidency. Your thoughts, we wouldn't have to put up
with this treason us BS with her? Okay, well, no,
you would have to put up with other treason us BS.
That's the thing, you know. The problem is there's just

(37:32):
enough difference between these candidates and these parties to enliven
the base and keep them focused on their support. You know, arguably,
there are a lot of good things that Donald Trump
has done. The problem is is that the.

Speaker 13 (37:54):
Bad stuff I know that he's done them.

Speaker 12 (37:58):
Okay, but hold on, let me give you some examples
just off the top of my head. He pardoned the Hammonds,
he pardoned the J Sixers. That wouldn't have happened, und
Kamala Harris.

Speaker 10 (38:09):
Uh.

Speaker 12 (38:09):
He secured the border. I mean, regardless of what anybody says,
the border difference today is much different than when it
was when Biden Harris were in charge and they were
literally I think at some points we had like five
thousand a day coming in and that's just come down

(38:32):
to a complete trickle. I mean, if that, I mean,
it's it's for all intents and purposes. Just by saying
you're going to enforce the border and and exerting any
kind of effort to do that, people believe that you
mean business. They're going to quit coming. And that that

(38:52):
shows how easy it was for Biden to enforce the
border if he had wanted to. But he didn't want to.
And and it could very well be that he was
setting the stage for a Trump take, you know, presidency,
a Trump return. That could very well be the game
that they were playing. And and and but you know,

(39:13):
partnering the James January six ers. I think it's very
important because that whole thing was a fraud. Securing the
border Roe versus Wade was overturned directly because of the
justices that UH Trump appointed, as was the Chevron deference
that was overturned. Huge. The Chevron deference reversal was massive.

(39:40):
The administration has been engaging in an all out war
on DEI at all these left wing institutions that are
publicly funded. That's important with regard to the culture war.
Uh he killed the Biden ev mandates extremely important to me.
I don't want to drive an electric car, so you know,
and then there's other things. Maybe we'll get to you

(40:01):
later on. I was looking at this morning where he's
rescinding the rules that block logging in national forests. So
it's inarguable that there are some things that good that
come out of a Trump presidency or maybe even a
general Republican presidency when they're really trying to convince conservatives

(40:23):
to follow them. That being said, we know that behind
the scenes, the overall plan and push for world government continues,
and certainly the expansion of the police state panopticon, the
electronic panopticon that they're building, hasn't slowed down at all.
It's gone just the exact opposite, and.

Speaker 13 (40:45):
Trump is facilitating it by accommodating. I forget how many
of these big data centers are going to be built.

Speaker 12 (40:56):
I don't know how many data centers are being built,
but I know that there are. Pallenteer is getting billions
from the federal government now, and Peter teelbankrolled the Republican's
campaigns and now he's getting a massive return on that investment.
And uh, Pallentteer is something that is a company that

(41:19):
needs to In fact, here's a CNBC article Palenteer lands
ten billion dollar Army software and data contract This just
came out earlier this month, about a week ago August First.
It says Palenteer has inked a contract with the US
Army worth up to ten billion dollars to meet growing
warfare demands over the next decade. As part of the deal,

(41:42):
Pallenteer will help the military streamline efficiencies while preparing for threats,
consolidating seventy five total contracts into one enterprise deal. And
what's a threat? Anything they say is a threat, and
it could be you. You could be a threat. The
agreement creates quote, a comprehensive framework for the Army's future

(42:02):
and software and data needs that provides government with purchasing
flexibility and removes contract related fees and procurement timelines. According
to a press release, the deal further cements the company's
role in the US government's clamp down on cost efficiencies
by using artificial intelligence tools. In President Donald Trump's administration,

(42:25):
Trump's Department of Government Efficiency has cut jobs and programs
in an effort to curb spending. Well, at least that's
the overt reason for them doing that. I would argue,
when you consider the cost of DOGE, the program itself,
that kind of begins to fade away as a real

(42:48):
motive for the DOGE program because it costs almost as
much for DOGE as they actually saved from my understanding
of the situation, but they say Palenteer co founder.

Speaker 13 (43:02):
Under programmers have never been cheap, and so anything that
is system oriented, it's going to be more money. It's
going to cost you more money. But the thing is
is that they're talking about national system which means that
the cost of it falls on your back one way

(43:24):
or another.

Speaker 12 (43:25):
H Yeah. So Palenteer co founder CEO Alex Karp has
been a vocal proponent of protecting US interests and joining
forces on AI to fend off adversaries. And again, who's
an adversary? Anybody they want to be an adversary? Shares
of the Denver based artificial intelligence software company have more

(43:46):
than doubled year to date. Earlier this year, Palenteer delivered
its first two AI powered systems and it's one hundred
and seventy eight million dollar contract with the US Army.
In May, the Department of Defense boosted it's Maven Smart
Systems contract to beef up AI capabilities by seven hundred
ninety five million dollars. So that's the article there Now,

(44:07):
the Washington Post says, in Trump's Washington, Pallenteer is winning big.
Elon Mosk has left government, but another Silicon Valley player
is making us mark in President Trump's Washington. Pallunteer, the
software and data analytics company has garnered at least three
hundred million dollars in new and expanded business since Trump

(44:28):
took office for his second term, helping to make it
the SNP's top performing stock of twenty twenty five. That
includes contracts for the FAA, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, as well as Fanny May. According to federal records.
Beyond that, the company's potentially set to earn an order
of magnitude more in federal funds. In May, Pentagon leaders

(44:51):
allocated up to seven hundred ninety five million dollars more
to the military's core artificial intelligence software program. The Palanteer
built Maven smart system to expand its deployment to all
US forces around the world, and late Thursday, the Army
issued pallentnteers a Pollunteer, the company's biggest contract, an agreement

(45:13):
to consolidate the military's software procurement over the next decade
at a cost of up to ten billion dollars. At
the State Department, a Pollunteer designed AI system is now
helping to write some diplomatic cables in a new pilot program,
according to an internal State Department email obtained by The

(45:33):
Washington Post. At the Department of Homeland Security, immigration officials
reversed earlier plans to ditch some of the company's services
when their supervisors awarded Palentteer a thirty million dollar contract
this spring to track immigration enforcement and the Internal Revenue Service.
An official with Musk's US Doage service tapped Palentteer to

(45:55):
expand an internal project to modernize the agency's data. The
contracts were confirmed by five people familiar with processes at
the federal agencies, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
to avoid retaliation. Government work was always core to Volunteer's identity.
Investor Peter Teel, along with CEO Alex Karp, co founded

(46:19):
the company with an explicitly patriotic mission. Yeah, okay, in
the wake of nine to eleven. Well, nothing's patriotic about
nine to eleven. And that's the whole point. If they
were really an intelligence company, really had a lot of
important data and were able to decipher through the data,
then they would know that nine to eleven was a

(46:40):
bogus us shadow government coup on the American people. That's
what it was. I state that dogmatically, and I can
prove it to anybody who's willing to shut up, sit down,
and listen, and read.

Speaker 13 (46:57):
To establish the Department of Home Scams Security, and Home
Scam Security really is the center of the where the
IT systems in government are combined maintained. You know, it's

(47:20):
been a while since I've looked at that, but it's
really the Department of Home Scam Security that is the
center of the technocratic tyranny.

Speaker 12 (47:30):
Here's what's interesting about this. Peter til supposed to be
this libertarian type, right, he supports the quote unquote conservative right. Okay,
but Karb his CEO, is a progressive lefty who largely
supports Democrats. So that just proves right there that these

(47:54):
people are party agnostic. Okay. They cover both sides and
it doesn't matter. They will they will wheel and deal
with either side of the equation. They are the classic
uh chamellions, political chameleons that will morph into whatever they need.

(48:15):
They're shape shifters. I'm not talking in the literal sense sense,
but they're shape shifters in the political sense because their
their ideology doesn't matter when it comes to you know,
the things that are important to you aren't important to them.
And increasingly the things that are important to the American

(48:35):
people are survival. You know. Uh, if nothing else, we
can unite around the fact that we're getting poorer and
certainly there are cracks forming in the uh in the economy.
Supposed that we were we were promised all of these
things during the last campaign. Weren't we that, Yeah, there

(48:55):
was going to be lower inflation.

Speaker 13 (48:57):
Corporations are like bloodsucker, you know, they just suck all
the blood out of your body.

Speaker 12 (49:04):
They were going to get rid of inflation, they were
going to everything was going to come down. The price
of gasoline was going to come down, the price of
goods at the store were going to come down. None
of this has happened, because now it seems to be
completely baked in and now we're seeing signs of cracks
in the economy. Trump just fired the Department of Labor

(49:26):
Statistics director just this week because they came out with
a jobs report. Now, you know, supposedly this person was
appointed by you know what, was a Democrat and was
I guess appointed by the previous administration. So the accusation
was that they were manipulating the labor statistics, which honestly,

(49:50):
I wouldn't put it past them to do to make
Trump look bad. But that being said, this does not
have good optics. It's the United States equivalent to when
what the what the Communists used to do. Whenever they
come out with somebody who with a report that's not favorable,

(50:12):
they take them out and shoot them. Well, he didn't
directly shoot them, but he certainly shot their job remove
them from their position.

Speaker 13 (50:20):
Well, I actually have to defend him a little bit.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has been producing bogus statistics
for a very long time.

Speaker 12 (50:33):
That's very true. But let's just get rid of the
department altogether. Then why do we why do we have
the government tracking these things in the first place if
we can't depend upon the numbers. I remember that during
the Obama administration, they were always putting out fraudulent numbers,
and then they would put out one number, and then

(50:55):
after the media jumped at that number, then they would
quietly adjust to the number. Yeah, so the whole thing
was bogus, and they don't count all of it, you know, No, And.

Speaker 13 (51:11):
That's one thing, one little project that I did around
two thousand and eight. I got sick and tired of
hearing how great the economy was doing, just booming and
all of that. So what I did is I went
to the Social Security Administration website and there is one

(51:32):
report that where they report the actual numbers of Social
Security with holdings. Now, that should be an actual number
because those numbers are due quarterly from the employers. You know,

(51:52):
if you owe the government money, they want that money
right now. And so but what I found was that
in those Social Security reports is that they were using
models for those statistics when they should have been actual numbers.

(52:12):
So right there, and then you know, I think I
looked at the years between two thousand and two thousand
and four something like that, and they were using models.
So I at that point I realized that our government

(52:35):
statistics are peer garbage.

Speaker 12 (52:37):
That's interesting, well, they say, even as Musk has decamped
for his own business enterprises in Texas, a technology friendly
attitude and a newfound openness toward AI experimentation still permeate
the administration. This approach, along with Pallanteer's long history of
working with the government and its web of informal connections

(52:58):
to the administration and DOGE, places the software company in
a sweet spot. According to people familiar, they were positioned
in the right way at the right time, and they
had already built the technology and they have the capability
to do what the administration is trying to do, said
Matt Pearl, who is the director of Strategic Technologies Program
at the Center for Strategic and International Studieslike the unlike

(53:23):
other Silicon Valley companies in Trump's orbit, Pallunteer never issued
government business. The firm has always been awarded nearly three
billion dollars in federal funds since two thousand and eight,
amounting to over three which which proves again, you know,
destroying America is a bipartisan effort. Okay, it has been
awarded nearly three billion dollars in federal funds since two

(53:45):
thousand and eight. Well, who was in office in two
thousand and eight, who was in office after? You know
it was it was Obama? Obama and then Biden. So
Trump takes over and Pallenteer is very much in vogue

(54:06):
in fact displacing other companies that were in that were
either pulled out in some respects like Google or supplanting
other companies that were involved, like Accenture and others.

Speaker 16 (54:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (54:25):
That yeah center that used to be Arthur Anderson, but
after the fall of en Run, they had to leave
the country for a while and when they came back
instead of Arthur Anderson, they came back as Accenture.

Speaker 12 (54:43):
Yeah. They say that the company has boosted its connections
to the Trump administration. This year. It hired Ballad Partners
and Miller Strategies, who to Trump connected lobbying firms. Co
founder Teel is a longtime mentor to Vice President j. D. Vance.
Vance is every call Vance used to work for him.
One of Doge's early strategies was another co founder, Joe Lonsdale,

(55:07):
a friend of Musk who is long championed the private
sector as an efficient antidote to government excess, and who
recruited Doge staff from Pallenteers alumni network. One of the
company's senior counselors is a former Trump official with close
ties to the White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller,
who leads a think take project that seeks to dismantle

(55:31):
the administrative state and replace its functions with automation technology. Now,
all of us want to dismantle the administrative state, but
we don't want to be replacing it with automation, right,
because that is even worse. I mean, you talk about
out of the frying pan into the fire.

Speaker 13 (55:51):
Listeners, Well, they would tell you that technology is neutral.
That's not really true. There are programmers that write the.

Speaker 12 (56:02):
Code, oh absolutely, and the code's very biased, you know. Yeah,
Bill Bias played with chat GPT. You know that, because
there are certain things that just will not let you
talk about. All Right, we're out of this hour already.
We got the top of the hour break and we'll
continue into the next hour or into the next part
of the show in hour number two. Stay with us,

(56:24):
ladies and gentlemen, as Governed America continues. Vicky Davis is here.
I'm Darren Weeks on this ninth of August twenty twenty five,
and we'll be back in a moment.

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Speaker 8 (58:44):
Two fist signs. This is American Family News. I'm Robert Thornton.

Speaker 24 (59:05):
A split appeals court panel tossed out a judge's contempt
finding against President Donald Trump's administration in a case over
deportations to an l Salvador prison. The decision comes after
planes carrying Venezuela and illegal aliens landed at the prison,
even though US District Judge James Boseburg had ordered them
to return to the US. Boseburg found probable calls to

(59:26):
hold the Trump administration and criminal contempt of court. The
ruling marked a dramatic battle between the judicial and executive
branches of government. Israel's decision to take over Guyzas City
dominated at least part of Vice President JD Vance's meeting
with officials in the UK. Foxy Jessica Rosenthal has more.

Speaker 25 (59:44):
Ahead of a family vacation in the UK, Vice President
JD Vance met with British Foreign Secretary David Lammy. While
the two had lingering terror related matters to discuss, much
of the conversation focused on the Middle East. After Israel's
security cabinet decided to extend IDF presence in Gaza. The
UK is among the countries calling for recognition of a
Palestinian state. Vance said their shared goals remain.

Speaker 26 (01:00:06):
We want to make it so that Hamas cannot attack
innocent Israeli civilians ever again, and we think that has
to come through the eradication of Hamas. Second, the President
has been very moved by these terrible images of the
humanitarian crisis in Gaza, so we want to make sure
that we solve that problem.

Speaker 6 (01:00:22):
No.

Speaker 25 (01:00:22):
Vance said the US has no plan to recognize a
Palestinian state. Jessica Rosenthal, Fox News.

Speaker 24 (01:00:29):
JP Morgan predicts the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates
at its September meeting. Charles Paying a Fox business.

Speaker 27 (01:00:35):
If you look day to day, there are more stocks
down and up in the most you know, in the
last few training sessions, it's a handful of names that
keep carrying the day, you know. So it's really just
about what's the difference maker right now, anticipation that you'll
have what they call in a combinat of fed JP.

Speaker 24 (01:00:50):
Morgan said that for fed share Pal, the risk management
considerations at the next meeting may go beyond balancing employment
and inflation risks. Texas State Democrats are still on the
run as the state House met again but did not
have a quorum due to the Democrats' absence over a
GOP redistricting plan. The House failed to make a quorum

(01:01:11):
on Tuesday. Texas Attorney General Ken pax And began a
formal investigation into Texas Majority Pack, which is financed by
the wealthy leftist George Soros, for its alleged role and
potentially unlawful financial coordination and bribery of Democrat legislators who fled.
The Attorney General of Florida wants to protect miners from

(01:01:31):
sexual predators wanting to become parents.

Speaker 8 (01:01:34):
AFN's Chris Woodward reports in.

Speaker 28 (01:01:36):
A video posted on x Florida Attorney General James Fmeyer
said that his goal was to make Florida the safest
state to raise a family.

Speaker 29 (01:01:44):
As a father of three little ones, my wife Jeane
and I know that there is no greater blessing from
God than to have children. There's also no greater responsibility
than to bring up good citizens.

Speaker 12 (01:01:57):
Well.

Speaker 28 (01:01:57):
He understands that there are many couples out there there
that are unable to have kids, and that many are
turning to technology in various resources in the hopes of
aiding their quest for parenthood, surrogacy being one of those options.
Ethmeyer said that Floridians in office have a responsibility as
leaders to protect families, and.

Speaker 29 (01:02:15):
We've seen situations lately where surrogacy has exposed kids to
dangerous harm. In Pennsylvania, we recently saw a homosexual couple,
including a registered sex offender, celebrate bringing home a newborn.
In other states, we've seen situations where parents have obtained

(01:02:36):
children through surrogacy or adoption, only to then subject them
to repeated sexual abuse. This cannot and will not happen
in Florida.

Speaker 28 (01:02:48):
Eth Meyers now proposing the Protecting Kids from Predators Pursuing
Parenthood Act, a bill he hopes to work on with
the legislature to ensure that registered sex offenders, people that
have preyed upon kids, or no way eligible to obtain
children through surregacy, adoption or foster care.

Speaker 29 (01:03:05):
We cannot endanger our kids.

Speaker 28 (01:03:08):
I'm Chris wood Word.

Speaker 24 (01:03:10):
Parts of Los Angeles County were evacuated in the early
morning hours after a fast moving wildfire called the Canyon
Fire crossed over from Ventura County. The fire's burdatle under
five thousand acres. You can find more news at AFM
dot net.

Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new.

Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
World order, new world or that new world order.

Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
This is a moment to season. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 30 (01:03:50):
Us, a new world order, a world where.

Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 5 (01:03:57):
Nevertheless, United States to make keep it, to shape this
so that the problem of the Bush presidentity will be
the emergence of a new international order.

Speaker 6 (01:04:09):
Investigate of the twenty first century.

Speaker 7 (01:04:12):
But out of what is will be seen as the
greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new
world order was created.

Speaker 8 (01:04:26):
Documenting the crisis of our republic.

Speaker 9 (01:04:28):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society. And we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed a secret societies, the secret oaths and the
secret proceedings.

Speaker 8 (01:04:43):
Weading war on the new world order.

Speaker 10 (01:04:45):
The councils of government.

Speaker 11 (01:04:47):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 8 (01:04:57):
This is govern America and.

Speaker 12 (01:05:00):
Vicky Davis from Female Regions five to ten. This is
the second hour of Governor America. Vickey Davis is here.
I'm Darren Weeks, and it continues to be the ninth
of August twenty twenty five. As we get right back
into the show here talking about the incestuous relationship going
on inside the administration between Big Tech Company pall Andeer,

(01:05:21):
Big Intel Company and the administration officials and all of
the stuff that's going on with regard to Elon Musk
and what he was doing with the Doge program and
the expansion of the surveillance state inside the federal government.
This is really very alarming, and I think this is
something that conservatives need to be paying attention to. They

(01:05:41):
need to wake up and realize what's really going on here.
None of these people are really your friends. You really
don't have a party. Yeah, you know they're having a party.
You get to pay for it twenty years.

Speaker 13 (01:05:54):
That's the whole driving force behind the work that I
do and have done, is because it's a system's.

Speaker 12 (01:06:04):
Takeover, right. Yeah, and.

Speaker 13 (01:06:09):
You've heard me talk about the global systems. The G
seven agreed to a set of global systems. Well, all
of the government systems fall under one or more of
the categories of global systems.

Speaker 6 (01:06:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:06:31):
At least six people, according to The Washington Post, who
worked with Doge, our former pallanteerians two Gregory Barbeksia and
Clark Minor, are now chief information officers at the White
House and the Department of Health and Human Services, respectively.

Speaker 13 (01:06:53):
Yeah, so you could say Donald Trump is really facilitating
the technocraty technocratic global.

Speaker 12 (01:07:02):
Takeover exactly exactly. Palentteer chief technology officer Chayam Sankar was
named a lieutenant colonel in the US Army Reserve, along
side three other technic leaders whose firms have more recently
embraced the defense defense sector. The appointment was granted the

(01:07:25):
day of Trump's June military Parade, which is just a
debacle in and of itself, of which Palateer was a
corporate sponsor. Quote. We are proud to support the US government,
especially our warfighters, and our growth reflects growing government AI
adoption unquote. Company spokesperson Lisa Gordon said. She noted that

(01:07:47):
Palentteer's government business has been steadily growing for six consecutive quarters,
not just since Trump retook the White House, and that
it still lacks significantly behind our commercial business. Well, why
wouldn't they be happy to support the Trump administration because

(01:08:08):
in the twenty sixteen election cycle, Peter Tail donated approximately
one and a quarter million dollars to support Trump.

Speaker 13 (01:08:17):
Yeah, and that's that's petty cash to him.

Speaker 12 (01:08:20):
Yeah, petty cash to him. But he also gave in
twenty twenty two. He bankrolled JD Vance's twenty twenty two
Senate campaign giving him approximately fifteen million dollars. And also
I'm sure petty cash to him, but he's in the process,
and he said he wouldn't support anybody for twenty twenty four.

(01:08:43):
How do we know, you know, there's many ways to
support people without direct campaign finance.

Speaker 13 (01:08:53):
Yeah, well, or maybe because he doesn't have to anymore. Well,
it's probably a scrutiny in control.

Speaker 12 (01:09:01):
Yeah. Absolutely, And he's certainly getting huge dividends for what
he has already given, that's for sure. So I mentioned
earlier that you had sent out this link to this documentary, Vicky,
and I think this is very important. I'm not sure
if epic philosophy what this entity is, but they did

(01:09:22):
a very excellent documentary, a little mini documentary on Volunteer,
And as I said earlier, I think this is really
the most important issue of our time. It's the most
important issue facing this current generation, because this is going
to be this is going to be the defining issue

(01:09:45):
as to whether or not we're able to live and
future generations are able to live as free people. You know,
you and I. You know some of us are older
than others, but we're old enough. We've taken did the
uh we were able to drink from the cup of liberty,
so to speak. We know, we were able to breathe

(01:10:08):
the free air. But people coming up now, people growing
up now, people just being born now, will never really
know what it's like to be free. And and this
is more so as time goes on, as these algorithms
are interwoven into all of the government agencies, and as

(01:10:33):
these databases and.

Speaker 13 (01:10:34):
Anybody does will be weighed and measured, and your opportunities
in life will depend on what your score is.

Speaker 12 (01:10:43):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, your algorithm, what the algorithm will allow
you to do, what the algorithm determines you are, what
your threat level is according to the algorithm, and the
in the consolidation of government database, that's the big thing.

Speaker 13 (01:11:04):
And that's what I think volunteer controls.

Speaker 12 (01:11:07):
Well, that's what they're putting into effect. They're in the
process right now of doing just that.

Speaker 13 (01:11:13):
Well, and I found them. I found it's I found
it accidentally when I went to I drove over to
our vital Statistics office over in Boise, Idaho. I needed
to get a birth certificate, and you used to just
be able to drive over there and get one. They'd

(01:11:36):
print it out for you. And you know, you pay
the money and a way you go. But they told
me I had to go online to order a birth certificate,
and so you know.

Speaker 6 (01:11:53):
I.

Speaker 13 (01:11:54):
Ran that one to ground and where I ended up
was over in the UK with a company called Lexus Nexus.
And as I was poking around, I did find palunteer
wow behind behind it.

Speaker 12 (01:12:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:12:15):
I didn't write about it because I wanted to devote
time on an article. But you know, as usual, I
get distracted and I go on to something else. But
seeing palunteer behind the system that linked to my vital

(01:12:38):
statistics record, my birth certificate, that told me all I
needed to know.

Speaker 12 (01:12:44):
It's your information, your information.

Speaker 13 (01:12:46):
It's my information. And what the hell is it doing
over in London for.

Speaker 12 (01:12:51):
Going out life? Good question? Well, you know, it's Peter
Thiele's world today. It's becoming Peter Thiele's company and country
and it's all helping to be facilitated by the present
Trump administration.

Speaker 13 (01:13:07):
Tended to become a monster or not he is a monster?

Speaker 12 (01:13:12):
Well, remember I think we played the audio where they
were trying to get him to say during an interview
that the human race should should survive. Let's see, I
think I got that clip here to do. Yeah, somewhere

(01:13:33):
here I got that clip. I will. I'll play it
as time progresses here. But this is a little clip
from the documentary.

Speaker 31 (01:13:40):
In May of twenty five, a New York Times article
highlighted the Trump administration's plan to create a centralized database
on every single American citizen, pallunteers set to lead the charge.
Little is known how this database will be constructed, but
technical data will exactly be used.

Speaker 12 (01:13:58):
Okay, technical data will be exactly used. That wasn't the
clip I intended to play, but they referenced a New
York Times article which will probably get to in a moment.
But this is the clip that I wanted to give
you a little background on this whole thing. And I
highly recommend this documentary played. I pulled clips from it,

(01:14:21):
but hearing the whole thing in context is excellent. It's
not that long of a documentary, but it's certainly rich
in information.

Speaker 31 (01:14:30):
You apply for a job, you can never hear back.
Your resume uniquely filtered not by a person, but by
a prediction algorithm fed by your uniquely private life, pass employment,
your social media, your race, your relationships. Then process to
make a decision whether you can afford to live. You

(01:14:53):
search for chest pain symptoms.

Speaker 12 (01:14:55):
At two am.

Speaker 31 (01:14:56):
The next day, an insurance company emails you about a
specif plan tailored to you. You get pulled aside at
an airport, no stated reason. You just matched a pattern.
They're reading your shadow, the data you've shed, the gestures
you've forgotten, and the correlations you didn't know existed. This
isn't fiction. This reality is being constructed right now, and

(01:15:20):
there's one group that's making this possible, a called Palenteer,
a group that has quietly operated behind the scenes for years.
And what they've built isn't a system of raw surveillance.
It's authorship, the ability to write your life before you
live it. Volunteer is a publicly traded corporation that specializes

(01:15:43):
in big data integration on the software level in Layman terminology.
Volunteer focuses on the orchestration, organization, and implementation of data
a ton of the information behind the scenes that products
and services need, with a focus on automating the decision
making processes with that existing data infrastructure. They do this

(01:16:06):
for corporate clientele such as JP Morgan Wendy's to public
entities such as Briton's NHSS, Norwegian Customs, Danish gool Intel
predictive policing all the way to ICE and the CIA.
In the United States, product lines such as Polunteer Gotham

(01:16:27):
allow police departments to predict potential crime with data of
citizens and a given community. They can even run probability
for whether someone might have a mental health crisis. For
militaries such as the IDF. Gotham can expand drone capability
to be completely autonomous, controlled, operated and executed by a

(01:16:49):
machine learning algorithm. Volunteer Foundry can automate logistics and make
predictive outcomes and healthcare and supply chains such as Britain NHS.
As we speak, Volunteer is experiencing an unprecedented rise and
market cap growing by twenty three times since twenty twenty three.

(01:17:10):
They were founded by Peter Teel, a billionaire venture capitalist
and mega donor of the Republican Party who wrote campaign
finance records by donating a whopping fifteen million dollars to
JD Vance's twenty twenty two Senate campaign. Teal is also
famous for pushing for fully private owned cities city states
entirely owned by corporation.

Speaker 12 (01:17:31):
Now we've talked about how jd Vance his friends with
Curtis Jarvin and how he's all in favor of the
same thing, privately owned cities that are heavily surveiled and
where you have no rights. And think about how sustainable development,
you know, is pushing sustainable walkable cities Stackem and Packham
where everybody is within a five mile radius of everything,

(01:17:55):
and how would these privately owned cities fit into that,
I think perfectly. So this is all a part of
the plan. This is all a part of the really
the UN system. As much as we hear about Donald
Trump pulling out of this, pulling us out of this organization,
for the UN pulling us out of the world, this

(01:18:15):
in the world that the agenda is moving forward for
the globalists, and it's perfectly dovetailing with the whole UN agenda.
So I would I would assertum, go ahead.

Speaker 13 (01:18:33):
The millennium Development goals are the future. That's the future
that they're bringing to people people of the world. I
can't even express to you the horror that I feel
for what I see, what I know is happening and

(01:18:54):
where we're going. It's a complete totalitarian police state. There'll
be no freedom anywhere. People are going to be like zombies.

Speaker 12 (01:19:06):
Well that's a perfect dovetail with with I found the
clip where Peter Teal was being interviewed where he hesitated,
and we've played this before on the show. They were
asked whether the human race should survive. He couldn't answer
the question with an emphatic yes. It took him a
long time, and finally he did say yes, but but

(01:19:28):
it was with a condition, you would prefer the human
race to endure? Right?

Speaker 8 (01:19:33):
Uh, you're hesitating? Well, yes, I don't know. I would,
I would.

Speaker 17 (01:19:40):
This is a long hesitations, so long hesitation, there's so
many questions.

Speaker 12 (01:19:45):
Shouldn't the human race survive?

Speaker 15 (01:19:47):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (01:19:48):
Okay, but but but see he's all in favor worthy
morphine people into machines. That's what really boils down to.
So when you say that they're going to be like zombies,
they're going to be like machines because that's what they

(01:20:09):
want to design them to be. It's transhumanism. Yeah, and
the whole trans movement, by the way, fits in perfectly
with it, because robots do not are not male or female, right,
they're trans there, they transcend a male or female gender,

(01:20:31):
so I would Yeah, well, I believe.

Speaker 13 (01:20:34):
Transans are humans are a problem to these people because
we have human emotions and independent minds for doing things,
and they want everybody to to basically be like a

(01:20:57):
like a stop on an assembly line, and you know
where you have one function, that's what you do, and
it's just so horrendous I can't even tell you.

Speaker 12 (01:21:10):
Yeah, well I can tell you that the horrendousness, you know,
And we'll get back to the documentary in a moment.
But the Military Embedded Systems, this publication, Military Embedded Systems
was talking about, uh, Pallenteer and neutralizing humans. Uh so
should humans survive? Well, they don't think so, because Pallenteer

(01:21:31):
and shield AI teamed up collaborated on a new effort
to use the letter's hive mind that shield AI's hive
mind technology. Doesn't that sound just warm and fuzzy hive mind,
your little worker bees out there, they don't want to

(01:21:52):
have you just this really dovetails perfectly with what you
were just saying, VICKI, about how they want everybody to comply.
They don't want independent thought. Hive mind. There's an in
your face name from shield AI a partner with Pallenteer,
the founders of which are funding the present administration. So

(01:22:16):
Pallenteer and shield Ai are collaborating on a new effort
to use the latter's hive Mind technology to allow drones
and other uncrued systems to autonomously detect and respond to
threats without direct human control, while also allowing operators to
oversee missions in real time and manage multiple vehicles from

(01:22:40):
a single platform. According to a shield Ai executive, Alex Burtness,
director of Product management at shield AI, said, the hive
mind system enables uncrude. I love how they changed unmanned
to uncrewed. Why because of DEI it's not unc rude

(01:23:00):
is not gender specific. See they're playing the game. Can't
say unmanned anymore, but anyway they say uncrude. Aerio systems
to perform tasks such as threat detection, targeting, and mission
adaptation without manual input. Quote. We can pass the data
directly back to where it matters, rather than passing it

(01:23:22):
through three intermediaries unquote. Burtness said. By automating threat to
identification and response, the goal is to reduce the burden
on human operators while increasing mission success. Rates and operational safety,
particularly in contested or hostile areas, a shield AI statement announced.

(01:23:42):
A company spokesperson added that while the goal is to
increase autonomy, there will always be a human tasking the
launch mission and making final decisions. Well, doesn't that make
you feel good? So if they're going to.

Speaker 13 (01:23:59):
Know, because I know that's a lie, that's going.

Speaker 12 (01:24:01):
To body you for now, there'll be a human to
make the final decision whether or not to drop the
bomb on your head. The integration will also allow for
multi vehicle coordination, enabling fleets of U A s's to

(01:24:22):
operate autonomously across contested environments. The company says Vollunteers interface
provides operators with command and control situational awareness, and data
driven decision making burtness set. It allows them to.

Speaker 13 (01:24:35):
See the driven decision making. That's the whole thing. Yep,
data driven decision making.

Speaker 12 (01:24:43):
M hm. So that's the future, you know, if these
monsters aren't stopped. Now back to the documentary, they get
into the Trump Administration's DOGE program, and really what a
fraud it really was. I mentioned I alluded to that earlier.
It didn't really save any meaningful money. It was actually

(01:25:04):
a facade for the real agenda, the acquisition of data
from government agencies.

Speaker 31 (01:25:10):
The second major player is the eccentric CEO Alex cart
an odd technology CEO who has remained in the shadows
until recently.

Speaker 4 (01:25:19):
To disrupt and make aren't the institutions We partner with
the very best in the world, and when it's necessary
to scare enemies and on occasion kill them.

Speaker 12 (01:25:29):
There you go, the scare enemies and on occasion kill them.
I'll tell you what. Unfortunately, the clock is killing us
today because we got to take another break here pretty soon.
But we'll get back to that in a moment on
the other side of the break, because I don't want
to interrupt what he's what he's about, what they're about
to say here about this Doge program. Conservatives are all in,

(01:25:55):
or we're all in on what Elon Musk was doing
in government. But this guy, he's never been a conservative.
He has benefited massively from government spending. So we're to
believe that this guy wants to go off and continues
to do so. By the way, these are.

Speaker 13 (01:26:13):
All systems to manage society. You've seen the diagram of
the smart city, right that the systems that control every
aspect of critical infrastructure, and what they have are computer

(01:26:33):
aided design systems that have layers. You know, they basically
do like a horizontal slice of a city. And at
every level there there is a system that keeps track
of whatever whatever asset it is that you're looking at.

Speaker 12 (01:26:54):
Okay, hold it right there, We got to take a break.
We'll be back. Stay with us.

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Speaker 32 (01:28:02):
Why do so many people break the Book of Genesis
into two ports, with the separation beginning in chapter twelve,
As you'll see on today's Creation Moment, no such division
is necessary. In fact, it can even separate people from
God and now our Creation Moment's host O Taylor.

Speaker 33 (01:28:17):
One of the most important books that I was given
in my teenage years was Henry Morris's commentary The Genesis Record.
At the time, the book was fairly new, perhaps just
three years since its publication in nineteen seventy six. It
seemed important to me to have a commentary on Genesis,
so my sister bought it for my eighteenth birthday. What
was special about the book and still is, is that

(01:28:40):
it covered the whole of the Book of Genesis and
did not stop at chapter eleven, as many creationist books
on Genesis do. My own included. Morris said in his introduction,
it is so important for people to sense that the
Genesis narrative is real and historical. People instinctively know that
Genesis twelve onward, referring to Abram, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph,

(01:29:02):
is relating historical narrative. In my opinion, it's no accident
that God inspired the accounts of Creation and the Flood
in the same book as the histories of these patriarchs,
in order to emphasize that the first eleven chapters also
are narrative history. More than forty years after the publication
of Morris's commentary, there are other commentaries whose authors have

(01:29:24):
determined that Genesis is mythological and is addressing allegorical truths
to an ancient people in a way that cannot be
understood today. I praise God for the testimony of Henry Morris,
who wrote the truth about the wonderful Book of Beginnings
in a manner that still makes sense today.

Speaker 32 (01:29:42):
Have you downloaded our free Creation Moments ap yet It's
available now for all Android and Apple mobile devices. Listen
to our archive a radio broadcast anytime you like. Download
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Speaker 8 (01:31:01):
Where the spoofs go to find out what's really going on.
This is.

Speaker 12 (01:31:22):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America halfway
point of the broadcast. As we continue on here talking
about Pallunteer and the incestuous relationship between Peter Teel and
those inside the government, those currently running the administration, and
how many other states are employing pollunteer technology, that is
the question.

Speaker 13 (01:31:42):
We know New Orleans, all of them, all of them, Darren.

Speaker 12 (01:31:45):
Yeah, I'm sure that's the case. I know New Orleans.
They kept a city council in the dark I read
years ago. In fact, we shared it on the show
where they were actually spying on the citizens of that city.
You know.

Speaker 13 (01:31:59):
Oh yeah, it's all a bit police state. It is
a total police state.

Speaker 12 (01:32:03):
So this is something that everybody needs to be concerned about.
What direction are we headed here in America, supposedly the
land of the free. But this documentary that Vicki found
about Pallanteers is very important, needs attention because this issue
needs attention. Nothing is more important than seeing the police

(01:32:24):
state being formed around us. And it is a technocratic
rule by experts, so to speak. But it's an algorithm
driven police state where you won't even have an option.
It's like the do not fly list, which, interestingly enough,
since Tulca Gabbard now is Director of National Intelligence, have

(01:32:45):
we heard anything at all about the do not fly list?
You know, she was put on a do not fly list,
and yet has there been any effort to try to
get the Do not Fly List to make it disappear.
Has there been any effort to put into place at

(01:33:07):
least an appeals process or some sort of due process
that you can say, hey, I'm not a terrorist, I
shouldn't be added onto this list. But there's no way.
In fact, many people who are added you don't even
know you're added until you go to try to fly,
and then there's no way to get off of it.

(01:33:30):
You know, you don't know if you're being flagged for
extra scrutiny. And I would suggest to you, ladies and gentlemen,
I think what we're saying here today is that this
model of the Do not Fly List is pretty much
the model for everything across the board, not just travel,
but everything your ability to participate and buy goods at

(01:33:51):
the store. Oh you're exaggerating, No, Just look over at
what's going on in China with this social credit score
system that is the model for the world.

Speaker 13 (01:34:02):
It's the same system, Darren. It is because these systems
that I'm talking about, and that Palunteer controls, they are
global systems.

Speaker 8 (01:34:16):
Global.

Speaker 12 (01:34:17):
Yeah, exactly. So, as I was saying before the break,
this they this documentary got into the subject of Elon
Musk's DOGE program and what they were doing. What they
were really doing, not cutting government waste. That was the facade,

(01:34:37):
that was the the guys that they were doing this
stuff under. The reality is it was about the information
and it was about consolidating government databasing across all the agencies, not.

Speaker 34 (01:34:51):
A President Trump and Elon Musk latest moves to re
shape the federal government. The top social scurity official stepped
down after must team requested access to sensitive personal data
about millions of Americans. Senior political course Mounertracius Scott is
tracking it from Marl lagu.

Speaker 31 (01:35:04):
After the twenty twenty five presidential election, the Trump administration
announced the creation of DOGE, the Department of Government Efficiency
with the official aim to cut quote, fraud, waste and
abuse in the public sector, headed by Elon Musk and
with ex employees of Palenteer, Musk made an official goal

(01:35:25):
of cutting two trillion dollars in what he claimed was
identifiable waste in actuality. The final sum expected to be
cut is one hundred and sixty billion, with official estimates
showing that doge's total operational cost to be around one
hundred and thirty billion itself, and according to a report
from Yale's The Budget Lab, the measures to cut various

(01:35:49):
government agencies is expected to create a net loss of
three hundred to five hundred billion over the next decade.
And despite this, this has been the Trump administ stration's
greatest success. That's because DOGE is a lie. The point
was never to cut fraud, waste, and abuse. It's a
facade for an ambition much greater and far more consequential.

(01:36:14):
In February of twenty twenty five, members of DOGE gained
root access to a plethora of government IT systems, such
as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the US
Agency for International Development. But the real crucial one is
the Social Security Administration, harboring one of the most sensitive

(01:36:37):
databases in the United States, the birth dates, historical addresses,
employment history, financial records of every single American. It doesn't
take a genius to understand what is going on here,
but what sells the terrifying endgame is the transparent, illegal
nature of this. Federal courts have blocked DOGE from entering

(01:36:58):
these databases after it was already done, but that's the point.
The repercussions do not matter. Even if courts find Doge
and the Trump administration and judicial contempt for illegally accessing
federal databases, the data has already been siphoned. In April
of twenty twenty five, Judge Ellen Hollander denied Doge access

(01:37:21):
due to concerns around privacy and the Fourth Amendment, along
with the Fair Privacy Act, a nineteen seventy four law
that requires explicit protection of personal data unless there is
immediate urgency and law enforcement functions, which, as the courts reflected,
there clearly is zero urgency to combat crime that would

(01:37:43):
necessitate unfettered access to the Social Security Administration's database. Yet,
in June of twenty twenty five, in an absolutely contradictory
and wild ruling, the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump
administration had authority to executatively access federal databases at will.
The only three liberal judges dissented. A concerning question here remains.

(01:38:08):
Is this naive hubris of the Trump administration, a lack
of concern due to Trump's evasion of legal repercussions, or
is this done with a strategic plan of assurance that
the law will not be applied to them after the fact.
That the few democratic judicial procedures in the US will

(01:38:28):
be noll and void by the time justice could ever
be served. We don't know the answer. What we do
know is that all our collective sensitive data is now
out in the wild.

Speaker 12 (01:38:40):
There you go. What do you think so far, VICKI.

Speaker 13 (01:38:45):
Sick to my stomach. Yeah, because it's all you know.
When I say control grid, I mean total control, absolute,
total information, awareness, and total management of the society is
just hidden. You've got to be able to see it

(01:39:07):
in your mind. How this is the octopus, you know,
the the UH control grid, and there will be no
more freedom in the world, no more freedom. They will
control everything.

Speaker 12 (01:39:27):
Yep, that's exactly right.

Speaker 13 (01:39:29):
And I have to say I'm I'm glad, I'm old,
and I'm not gonna well. I've lived long enough to
see UH the conversion point, the beginning of the conversion point.
And that's what the Trump administration is. It's the beginning
of the of the conversion point, the takeover the AI

(01:39:55):
control grid.

Speaker 12 (01:39:57):
The only reason that I feel that we should still
be doing the show is because I still have confidence
in the in the people to be able to figure
it out. But we have to get away from Party College.

Speaker 13 (01:40:11):
I did, Darren, I wish I did.

Speaker 12 (01:40:13):
People have come along with it.

Speaker 13 (01:40:15):
I bet there aren't more than twenty or thirty thousand
people in the whole across the whole country. They don't
understand what's being done.

Speaker 12 (01:40:26):
Yeah, we got to get people away from the Party
of College people.

Speaker 13 (01:40:29):
Are it systems? People like myself?

Speaker 12 (01:40:33):
Yeah, tell you what. Let's go to the phones. You're
welcome to call in, folks if you want 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 three seven six. That's eight four four
six govern that's eight four four six governed. I do
have a couple of more clips from that documentary which

(01:40:55):
we'll get to you over time, and a little bit
more on volunteer. But you welcome the way in. What
do you think of all of this? You know, and
more importantly probably than anything, how do we reach the
American people with the truth and get them to quit
buying into all of these scams, these agendas that are

(01:41:20):
being put forward on all of us to kind of
distract you know, I mean, they're not that certain things
aren't important, not that certain issues that come out from
day to day aren't important, because they are a lot.
You know, there's a big talk about jerry mandering right

(01:41:42):
now in Texas, and the media has been focused a
lot on the fact that the Texas legislators have fled
the state and Trump's sending the FBI after them, and
that whole drama is playing out. That to me, is
this like a huge distraction because jerry mandering is unfortunately

(01:42:02):
a part of the political landscape. It happens now the
Democrats are going to jerry mander, and they've been jerrymandering.
We got congressional districts in Michigan here that look crazy,
absolutely whacked out, but that's what they do. But the
point is is that in the overall scheme of things,
it doesn't matter which party is in charge. That's the

(01:42:25):
big lie to the whole thing. So anyway, let's go
to the phones right now, let's go to California. Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Hi, can you
hear me? Yep? Loud and clear? Go ahead?

Speaker 35 (01:42:38):
Oh good, And well, we need to flip the script
on them. They've introduced the concept that the government can
pull back money that has been distanced. So let's talk about, Hey,
there's been unconstitutional spending that created a lot of debt,
and the debt, of course is a national security risk.

(01:42:59):
So many people on the left are unhappy that we're
funding Israel. Well, that is unconstitutional spending because there isn't
any enumeration that allows the federal government to fund another country.
So let's get the left to agitate for a DOGE

(01:43:20):
version that audits, That gets the state legislatures to audit
the federal spending for unconstcial spending and demand that they
pull that money back. Many times it's structured as a loan,
and there will be wealthy people behind those loans that
have assets. We need to demand that money come back. Yeah,

(01:43:43):
and there's a lot of other unconstitual spending, but I
think choosing that one to get the left to get
the ball rolling would be useful.

Speaker 12 (01:43:51):
Yeah, I think we should cut off spending to all countries.
But you know, you mentioned Israel. Interesting. I did a
little search during one of the breaks, and you know
Pallanteer is being used in Israel in Gaza, specifically through
the provision of advanced data analytics and artificial intelligence platforms
who do you think funds all of that? We do,

(01:44:13):
I'm sure through our tax dollars and through just like
you said, foreign foreign direct investment or whatever they want
to call it. Uh, we support Israel's military operations. But yeah,
they're they're very active in Israel right now. And and
and Gaza is one of the most surveiled places, which

(01:44:36):
sets the lie to the attack that allegedly took place
in October uh where they are using as they used
as a springboard to start the current war against the
Palestinian people. Anew you know, this massive incursion and now
there's a massive starvation going on over there, and even

(01:44:58):
some of the most are and supporters of Israel now
are starting to turn against him because of it. Because
this is nothing short of genocide that's taking place here.
And if anybody doesn't see it that way, that I'm
sorry you're seeing it wrong. I don't know how you
wouldn't see it. You're not paying attention, or you're believing
the Western media. But this is the case. And yes,

(01:45:20):
we need to cut off spending completely and totally, and
I think we need to. I hate to refer anyone
to an international court or tribunal, but if anybody deserves that,
that's Benjamin and Yahoo. Because this guy is a total
then the demon go ahead. I'm sorry.

Speaker 35 (01:45:45):
I think they've gone there and done that. He has
a restaurant out for him, but it wasn't recognize in
the United States because I don't think we've fined any
agreement with that. By the way, that's another issue is
that people are looking at, oh, Trump, pull us out
of this organization. But Trump can't pull us out of

(01:46:07):
an organization. The Senate has.

Speaker 12 (01:46:09):
To do it right.

Speaker 35 (01:46:11):
You have to don the rules. And if a president
does something that they're not allowed to do, well the
next president can just do something else that they don't
have to do. And he's doing his tariff thing, but
the Congress is supposed to send the tariffs, not the president.
So he who are losing court if they take that
argument there.

Speaker 13 (01:46:32):
Well, when they joined the WTO though it really uh,
the Congress basically ceded their authority to the presidency when
they can started with these trade agreements.

Speaker 12 (01:46:52):
Well, the it's you know, it's.

Speaker 13 (01:46:54):
The USTR that negotiates the trade agreements, and that is
a function of Executive branch.

Speaker 12 (01:47:02):
Well, there's a there's a couple of things going on here.
First of all, the wt OH. A lot of the
trade agreements that are being done right now are not
really a part of the wt O. They're they're outside
of the wt O. Like my understanding of from from
reading about this is that, like for instance, NAFTA, they

(01:47:23):
the Uruguay round of negotiations stalled and so they decided
to do multilateral trade agreements outside of the wt O.
So you have a number of things going on here.
But yes, the constitutionally, any agreement with a foreign country
is a treaty that that should be ratified by the Senate.

(01:47:45):
The the executive branch should not be able to form
agreements that are binding, and I would argue that they
aren't binding if they're not properly ratified by the Senate.
But see that they're not following the rules these days.
They just do what they want when they want well.

Speaker 13 (01:48:02):
And that tells you how far along they are in
the agenda. We're really at the end game, yeah, of
this whole global takeover by systems. People global systems.

Speaker 12 (01:48:16):
They go ahead.

Speaker 35 (01:48:16):
Color you've heard of the ratification debate. The ratification debate
right when the Saints were asked, okay to approve his constitution.
There were debates held. These were official proceedings. They were recorded,
and they explained what each provision meant and they clarified it,

(01:48:41):
and so those debates are official proceedings. They are the
founding documents for our constitution, but most law schools never
taught them. Instead, the banksters pushed the federal's papers at
them and said, oh, these are our founding documents. But
these are These are actually editorials that were written and

(01:49:03):
then were widely distributed because the international banksters had a
lot of money to do so, whereas the ratification dates
were hidden and most scholars have never heard of them.
So if you go to the ratification debate, you find
out that Virginia was told, oh, sure you can the
scene if you want to. That's perfectly acceptable. However, a

(01:49:27):
president called Abraham Lincoln decided to ignore those if he
even knew about them, and proceeded to go after another
country without the approval of the Senate. He had declared war,
but he didn't have. The Senate never declared war, and
we waged a war and constitutionally on another country told Virginia,

(01:49:51):
it goes on and on. Lincoln actually gave out land
to railroad interests to wealthy people who own railroads and
goals out of our treasury, and none of that was constitutional.
And with a doage like effort we could actually pull
all that back. It would see an enormous effort, and

(01:50:13):
we need to get the state legislatures to start demanding
an audit of constitutional spending and say that, Well, the
purpose of AI is to be able to pull together
all of those documents and knowledge and information so we
know who is responsible for paying back assets that they

(01:50:33):
unconstitutionally received.

Speaker 13 (01:50:36):
Yeah. I'm just going to be straight with you. I
don't mean to be rude, but none of that will help,
none of it. So anybody that's engaged in trying to
go back to the constitution pre constitution and you know,
lawsuits and stuff like that, you will be a slave

(01:50:59):
under the global systems before you can even well, we
get started on something like that.

Speaker 12 (01:51:08):
We we we need to have. The Constitution is the
roadmap of where we need to be.

Speaker 13 (01:51:13):
Yeah, you need to understand it, but to mobilize and
try to do something about it.

Speaker 12 (01:51:18):
Okay, but but but I don't want to leave the
audience with a system of paralysis. VICKI, I mean, we
got to be able to do something about some of this,
So what do we do about it? Then there's there's
there's got to be something that we can do. I
think the American go.

Speaker 13 (01:51:33):
Ahead, if I had a if I had my way,
I would want a number of spokespeople too in each
state talking about these global systems and giving people heads up.
You know, you're well funding your own slavery.

Speaker 12 (01:51:56):
Certainly, action in the in the in the realm of
waying people up as extremely important, but we also have action,
have to have action somehow to unravel these things because
it is very advanced and they have the money. That's
the problem. They have the money.

Speaker 13 (01:52:14):
They have money, and they have the control systems, and
they are on the edge of flipping the switch.

Speaker 12 (01:52:20):
But we do have a burgeoning grassroots system of media,
and yes, they've co opted that to a large extent,
and I think that that's why they're flooding the zone.
In terms of podcasts, there's a lot of podcasting has
taken off in a massive way. There's so many people

(01:52:43):
now that have access to microphones and are distributing among
on platforms now that they don't know, you know, really,
in many respects, the mainstream media has become pretty irrelevant,
and so now they're trying to flood the zone on
the podcas cast platforms. But that that that's in a testament,

(01:53:04):
a testimony, I think, to grassroots people's efforts at getting
the information out, but we can't let them morph our
message into what they want it to be.

Speaker 35 (01:53:16):
How about constitutional compliance committees?

Speaker 12 (01:53:20):
M I like the sound of that.

Speaker 13 (01:53:23):
Well, that's kind of what Ammon Bundy tried over and
mal her.

Speaker 10 (01:53:30):
He was trying to.

Speaker 13 (01:53:33):
What did they call it, committees of safety or something
like that. They were trying to to model the the
process that occurred, you know, during the debates of the
Constitution early in the republic. It is safe.

Speaker 12 (01:53:56):
Here's where it really comes down to grassroots activism and
and this is the thing I think is the only
area where I really feel like we have a big
possibility at having some muscle. You got to get you
got to get control of your local effort, your local government.
That's got to be number one in your states if

(01:54:18):
you go and educate your state legislators, your state people.
In fact, this could very well be the reason why
they've pushed term limits to the extent that they have,
because once you educate them, then they go they're term
limited out.

Speaker 16 (01:54:31):
You know.

Speaker 12 (01:54:32):
So this this is really where they say that term
limits are a way to stop the corruption. I disagree,
because you could make a big difference if you get
a good legislator in there and you're able to educate
them about these issues, they can go a long way,
except that they're term limited out then and you have
to start the whole process over with somebody new we've had.

Speaker 13 (01:54:53):
I don't know about other states, but I can tell
you that the Idaho legislature is totally bought and paid for.

Speaker 12 (01:55:01):
Yeah, well, there's a lot of them here in Michigan
that are like that, but we do have a few
good ones. You know. Gary Glenn comes to mind. I
thought a lot of Gary Glenn, but he was term
limited out. He was the one that had the bill
against Consumers Energy and Detroit Edison to get people the
choice to not have smart meters on their houses. And yeah,

(01:55:26):
Gary Glenn was pushing that, and he was again he
confronted the electricity companies and said leave the people alone.
You know, for whatever reason they don't want these things,
why don't you just let it go? And so finally,
you know, people like me, I had the ability to
leave the meter at my house. But you know, and

(01:55:46):
they're still charging me every month to read it even
though they don't read it every month. I don't know
how that works anyway. Hey, thank you call. I appreciate
your insight in your your opinions, and absolutely we need
a return under the constitutional principles that founded this country
and we need to enforce it. Hold the legislator's feet
to the fire because nothing else is going to matter

(01:56:10):
if this situation continues to devolve and spiral downward.

Speaker 13 (01:56:16):
Yeah, what happened to me here in Idaho is that
when they were trying to to be quit amart meter
on my house, I complained to one of the legislators.
So what did he do? He talked to Idaho Power
and then are joined. We've got the brank one of
their nonprofit We'll be back.

Speaker 12 (01:56:34):
Folks. Stay with us.

Speaker 17 (01:56:35):
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Speaker 18 (01:57:19):
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Speaker 36 (01:58:46):
Rest near compemy news Almost deep and several of the
black attackers who beat up a group of white people

(01:59:07):
in Cincinnati will be facing a grand jury. This as
a woman who was nearly killed during the attack talked
to Fox about it.

Speaker 20 (01:59:14):
Mike Tobin has more.

Speaker 37 (01:59:16):
We could see more of the suspects. So it's at
least four of the six suspects in this brawler beat
down gone viral who will go before the grand jury
in Hamilton County, Ohio if indt of their legal process
gets underway. Holly spoke on the Ingram angle. She said
she got involved because one man in particular was on
the ground, crying for help, and no one was doing
anything other than recording video on their phones.

Speaker 38 (01:59:38):
I want to say at least a solid fifteen to
twenty minutes this was going on. I mean, the videos
that you see are little short blurbs, but this was
going on for so long it was ridiculous.

Speaker 37 (01:59:50):
Now, when the police arrived and she showed obvious signs
of injuries, Holly says they did not treat the aftermath
like an emergency.

Speaker 36 (01:59:57):
President Trump's DW tariffs have gone into effect against countries
that have not yet negotiated new trade deals with the US.
Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds says she and other farmers have
confidence in the President's ability to negotiate new deals, adding
he has already done so much to help US agriculture.

Speaker 39 (02:00:13):
And when President Trump took office, agriculture was at a
fifty billion dollar deficit. When it came to train in
first quarter, it was a twenty billion dollar deficit. And
so you know, we're seeing those trade negotiations come in.
We're optimistic about that. It's just going to take a
little bit of time. And I think our farmers understand that.

Speaker 36 (02:00:29):
A school system in Virginia is investigating one of its
high schools.

Speaker 8 (02:00:33):
Chris Woodward tells us why.

Speaker 28 (02:00:35):
The Fairfax County Public School System is looking into accusations
that staff members at Centerville High School arranged abortions for students.
Parents were not notified, and according to local news outlet WJLA,
this occurred in twenty twenty one. At least one of
the two students was seventeen years old. Olivia Turner of
Virginia Society for Human Life this.

Speaker 16 (02:00:57):
Is a very alarming story.

Speaker 40 (02:00:59):
Now, Virginia law does currently require parental consent unless the
teenager is an abusive or dangerous situation, and she then
can appeal for a judicial bypath.

Speaker 28 (02:01:09):
Details are unclear at this time, so there.

Speaker 40 (02:01:11):
Are some question marks connected to the story. However, what
is alarming, regardless of what all the factors may be
in these stories, is that it appears again in Fairfax County.
As in some other countries in Northern Virginia, there seems
to be an attitude from the school board and the
school system that parents don't have appropriate or necessary roles

(02:01:36):
to pay in these important decisions. If any of this
wears out to be true, it is very, very troubling
and parents of whatever persuasion, whether they are ProLife or not,
should be deeply, deeply concerned that this may or may
not have been happening in any of our schools in Virginia.

Speaker 28 (02:01:54):
I'm Chris, what word.

Speaker 36 (02:01:55):
A new US policy says male athletes on women's sports
teams will not be allowed to enter the US to
compete against women.

Speaker 20 (02:02:02):
Bronson Woodruff has more.

Speaker 41 (02:02:04):
US Citizenship and Immigration Services updated its policy, saying that
now trends identifying male athletes in other countries will not
be allowed to travel through the US to compete in
women's sports. Pennyman's is president and CEO of Concerned Women
for America.

Speaker 15 (02:02:17):
Well, we're very grateful for President Trump taking a stand
on behalf of women. You know, it's very simple to
do this testing. It's hard to opt you skates, impossible
to opt you skate your actual genetics.

Speaker 41 (02:02:29):
You said, these athletes are already tested for things before competitions, and.

Speaker 15 (02:02:33):
All of these athletes are already tested for doping, So
it's just a matter of adding more to their blood
test to make sure that they are actually women.

Speaker 41 (02:02:43):
The US Olympic Committee has also said men will not
compete against women here in the US. She also shared some.

Speaker 31 (02:02:48):
Numbers concern them.

Speaker 15 (02:02:49):
For America recently did some research and discovered that about
two thousand women have been denied gold medals. Now that's
not silver, that's not bronze, just gold medals.

Speaker 41 (02:03:01):
NaN's explained that was over ten thousand events. She also
added that women lost about half a million dollars in
prize money.

Speaker 15 (02:03:08):
So there is a real cost to the fact that
we have allowed men to filtrate women's sports, take away
their trophies, take away their records, take away their medals,
and it needs to end.

Speaker 41 (02:03:19):
I'm Brauns and Woodruff.

Speaker 36 (02:03:21):
More news online at AFN dot net and on the
AFN mobile app almost bepe.

Speaker 1 (02:03:30):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 2 (02:03:37):
Order, new world or that new world order.

Speaker 3 (02:03:40):
This is a moment to seize. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 12 (02:03:50):
Us, a new world order, a world where.

Speaker 4 (02:03:52):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 5 (02:03:57):
Nevertheless, the United States to make key poticions to shape
this so that the problem of the bush prensidentity will
be the emergence of a new international.

Speaker 6 (02:04:08):
Order the first decade of the twenty first century.

Speaker 7 (02:04:12):
But out of what is will be seen as the
greatest restructuring of the global economies, greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new
world order was created.

Speaker 8 (02:04:26):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic.

Speaker 9 (02:04:28):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths and the
secret proceedings.

Speaker 8 (02:04:43):
Weading war on the new world order.

Speaker 10 (02:04:45):
The councils of government.

Speaker 11 (02:04:46):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 8 (02:04:57):
This is govern America and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 12 (02:05:08):
From FEMA Regions five and ten. This is the third
and final hour of Governor America. Vicky Davis is here.
I'm during weeks and it continues to be the ninth
of August twenty twenty five. Here as we move through
the final stages of summer. Believe it or not, I
can't believe. It seems like just yesterday that it was
the beginning of summer, and it's almost over. Before you
know it, we'll have the fall and then and then

(02:05:32):
the end of the year. This has been one heck
of a year. Not a good one for me.

Speaker 13 (02:05:36):
I think we're going to have an early winter because
spiders have started coming into the house.

Speaker 12 (02:05:43):
Oh really, yeah, spiders.

Speaker 13 (02:05:46):
Come in winters on the way.

Speaker 12 (02:05:48):
Interesting, Well, I could use a little cooler weather, I
can tell you that because it has been hot here. Anyway,
let's go back to the phones. Go down to Sam
and Missouri. I think is on the line. Hey, Sam,
been a while since we talked.

Speaker 42 (02:06:01):
Yeah, yeah, just a lot of things going on at
the time. This show's going on, and so we don't
always get a chance to check in.

Speaker 12 (02:06:08):
But I'm going to bring up a radical idea here, Okay.

Speaker 13 (02:06:11):
That.

Speaker 42 (02:06:13):
Is at the root of a lot of this that
we're putting up with. And I'm just going to go
to the root of the problems. Say, as long as
we have forced taxation, nothing will ever change. And the
reason I say that is because what do they have
to fear your hostage, you don't pay the taxes, you're screwed.
Same olds true with property taxes, same olds true. In Missouri,

(02:06:35):
we have well personal and real estate taxes here. So
you don't pay your yearly extortion fee to the government,
you can be kicked that up out of a house
that you've already paid for. If you don't pay your
income taxes, then they come after you and steal everything
you got or throw you in jail over that. And
I'm basically saying here, in fact, I'm going to go

(02:06:57):
so far as to start getting sweatshirts made up with
on them and start wearing them around town. One of
them is going to say, as long as we have
forest taxation, nothing will ever change. The second one I'm
going to have is everything government touches turns to crab.
And the third one that I'm going to have made
up is as long as you have to pay property taxes,
you don't own your property. Yeah, are wearing those around town.

Speaker 12 (02:07:20):
And on that third point, I can tell you that
there is an effort here in Michigan. It's called ax
my Tax. The my is m I for Michigan axmytax
dot Org for anybody that lives in Michigan. There is
an effort to try to get rid of property taxes
here in the state. This is a ballot initiative, Michelle

(02:07:40):
and I just signed it the other day where it's
Carla Wagner is spearheading the whole thing. But I guess
there's a number of different states now that are pushing
to end property taxes, and I say, bravo. I can't
really think of a downside to it, honestly, and I've tried.

Speaker 13 (02:07:58):
Well, I'll tell you what. What their solution to taxation
is is privatization. And there will be a sales tax
or call it a consumption tax, on every every dollar
you spend.

Speaker 12 (02:08:15):
Yeah, it's force taxation the I R S.

Speaker 13 (02:08:18):
But you won't you won't escape taxes.

Speaker 12 (02:08:22):
They're going to tax you some way. I can tell
you that. But you're right there. They see they see
it on everything that you have as theirs.

Speaker 13 (02:08:32):
Yes, it's just on loan to you.

Speaker 42 (02:08:35):
Yeah, until we get rid of that, until we get
enough people to understand this problem, it ain't going to change.
What incentive do they have to change anything?

Speaker 12 (02:08:43):
Well, my look, I look at from the standpoint of
the two most oppressive taxes are the property tax, as
you mentioned, and the income tax. Because if they can
really the poorest of the poor, the only thing they
have to sell to make money, is their labor. And
when you are using your labor, you're using your time,

(02:09:06):
which is your life, time in your life, which you
can never get back. That's the most valuable asset that
you have, is your time on earth, your life, which
is given to you by God. It's not given to
you by government. But they're they're taking forcefully a cut
of the substance that you get from your labor and

(02:09:29):
your time and h and so that makes you a slave.
I mean, when they think that they can take that
from you, they are asserting that you are their slave.
And as far as property is concerned, if your property
they get a cut that you just like you said,

(02:09:49):
if they you have to pay an extortion tax every
year to keep supposedly keep what supposedly is yours, supposedly
you own quote unquote, then you don't don't really own it.
And we don't. No one really owns any land, you know.
I guess if you give it to the nature.

Speaker 13 (02:10:07):
Conservatives Louisiana, Louisiana doesn't have property taxes.

Speaker 12 (02:10:12):
I guess. If you turn your land into a cemetery,
then you're not You don't have land taxes on it. Yeah,
if you're.

Speaker 42 (02:10:19):
Dead and buried, absolutely.

Speaker 16 (02:10:22):
See.

Speaker 42 (02:10:22):
This is a discussion came up just recently on a
local show that we do here, you know, my my
Off the Cup show that I do on Sunday nights.
We had the mayor of this of our city on
the broadcast and and we were talking about a water
bond issue here, and then he got off on parks
and recreation. And I've long since said that, even on

(02:10:43):
a local basis, that when times are tough, you tighten
your belt, and cities don't want to do that. They
want to keep spending money on things like parks and
different things like that. And I've been trying to get
across to the public. I said, I blame the public
as much as I blame anybody, because the public expects
all these things that government, and we're going to have
to make a decision as to what things we want

(02:11:05):
government to do and what we don't want them to do.
And if we're going to have government do anything on
a local level, for crying out loud, let's limit it
to essential infrastructure, streets, sidewalks, that kind of stuff. You know,
if we didn't have all these other fou fou and
fifi projects, we wouldn't have so much problem affording to
get the basic infrastructure straightened out. And that's the point

(02:11:27):
I've been making for years, but trying to get that
across the people. I mean, I guarantee you. In fact,
I talked to somebody the other day. I said, if
I if somehow I mysteriously became mayor of the town
in which I live. If I became mayor and I
decided to spin off the park system into a private
entity or something, the hounds of how would be so
loud you wouldn't be able to hear yourself talk. And

(02:11:49):
that's got to change.

Speaker 16 (02:11:52):
Well.

Speaker 13 (02:11:52):
I remember when I was a kid, we moved into
a new housing development and all of the well a
lot of the men got together and they built a
Little League baseball diamond for the kids. But it was
the fathers that did that. It wasn't the city, wasn't
the school, wasn't anything. It was the fathers that did it.

Speaker 12 (02:12:17):
Mhmm. Yeah. I think a lot of these city leaders
do a lot of this stuff because it makes it. Honestly,
I think a lot of it it's ego driven. I
think they like to, uh, look at look at my legacy,
Look at what I did. You know, it's just like bad.

Speaker 13 (02:12:34):
Well, they like to get re elected.

Speaker 12 (02:12:36):
Ballparks, you know, stadiums, that kind of thing. I mean,
they saddled future generations with these massive amounts of debt
for what so that they can have a legacy. Look
back at what I did, Look what I did in
the city. It's a lasting, uh legacy for me. It's ego,

(02:12:57):
ego driven.

Speaker 42 (02:12:57):
Right, yeah, no, you're actly right. We've got another issue
here right now here in Missouri where the tax assessors
were summed up to jeff City and were informed by
the governor that they need to be charging us one
hundred and ten percent of our home value, and he
wants to take those taxes and fund the ball teams

(02:13:18):
in both Kansas City and Saint Louis.

Speaker 13 (02:13:23):
Jeez, but that that's a lot of nerve.

Speaker 6 (02:13:28):
Yeah, but if those if.

Speaker 13 (02:13:30):
Those can't afford to build their own stadiums, then the
hell with them.

Speaker 42 (02:13:39):
That's my thought. Well, there is a lawsuit by some
of the people in the legislature as well as as
well as an organization here Missouri called the Article three Institute.
They're they're involved in a lawsuit against this, and so
I'm going to have a gentleman on tomorrow night talking
about this issue, because I mean, it's going to be

(02:14:03):
interesting to see what our property taxes are come this fall,
how it's going to shake out. Because I didn't even
when I call their tax assessor's office, they didn't even
level with me. They just they just sent me over
to this Senate Bill III, which had so much contradictory
language in it that by the time you were done,

(02:14:23):
you knew less than you did before you went there.
So this is this is kind of crap. We're fighting
even here in the state of Missouri. And the problem
is when you bring this up to most people, they
want to gripe and moan and complain around restaurant tables
and stuff like that, but they don't really want to
do it, stand up and do anything about it.

Speaker 12 (02:14:41):
Yeah, that's a sad situation, you know, And you know,
I get it. People are busy. I'm busy. You know.
It's it's hard to be able to invest the time
necessary to actually make a difference. But if nobody does it,
then nothing And this is why things don't get done. Hey,
you referenced you your show tomorrow night. You want to
go ahead and plug that for the listeners.

Speaker 42 (02:15:03):
Yeah, it's called Off the Cuff Radio. It is on
from six pm Central Time to nine pm Central Time,
and it's heard over at Molibertyradio US. That's Molibertyradio US.
And tomorrow night we're going to have one of our
state senators in the first hour, and then the second

(02:15:24):
hour we're going to have a gentleman on who's with
the Article three Institute talking about this lawsuit?

Speaker 12 (02:15:31):
All right, very good. Yeah, I'll have to tune into that.
I have been recording your show. I got an automated
app that does that, and I think ran last week's
on the stream here, not live, but I did it
later on in the delay. So yeah, good stuff. Thank
you very much for your work and your efforts there.

(02:15:53):
As you continue on.

Speaker 42 (02:15:54):
Hey, I'll let you guys go, but good to talk
to you.

Speaker 12 (02:15:57):
Hey, blessings to you, good hearing from you. God bless YouTube.
Bye bye. All right there he is Sam Britton um
Oliberty Radio dot US. That's m Oliberty Radio dot US. Yeah. Uh,
that's that's what it's going to take, folks. It's going
to take people working together, uh, clinging together and rolling

(02:16:18):
up their sleeves and actually doing the work. But we
can make a difference. You're not going to change everything,
but change something and you'd be surprised at the difference
we can make if you put forth a little effort.
I don't know.

Speaker 13 (02:16:36):
Yeah, I agree with that.

Speaker 12 (02:16:38):
And the precinct delegate thing, it's a small area. It's
a little bit of effort, Believe me. I dread getting
those calls to convention and believe me, but when you
do it, you go. And I have seen through our
efforts we have gotten some good candidates on the ballot.

(02:16:59):
We have managed to squeeze out some of the money powers,
not all because the money talks, but I can tell
you that there were some that were really had a
lot of money and they were but they were outnumbered
by precinct delegates who were in there for the right reason.
So there, this is the bottom line. We have to

(02:17:21):
flood the zone. And when you flood the zone, you
can make a difference. And that's the positive note that
I would bring, because it's easy to be negative all
the time. Believe me, when we see things like Washington
or or actually the New York Times, Trump taps pallunteer
to compile data on Americans that it is very easy

(02:17:44):
to be negative when we see things like this. In March,
he signed an executive order calling for the federal government
to share data across agencies, raising questions over whether he
might compile a master list of personal information on Americans
that could give him untold surveillance power. Well, we're not

(02:18:06):
talking about giving him untold surveillance power. We're talking about
giving the federal government and whoever is behind that because
the next administration comes.

Speaker 13 (02:18:14):
In, plunteer is behind it.

Speaker 12 (02:18:16):
Yeah, they're behind it too.

Speaker 13 (02:18:19):
What I think Pallunteer really is is the main portal
to the global information systems. It's you know, they I
read something about a common entry point to the global
to the data of the global systems, and I think

(02:18:42):
that's what polunteer is. And I think that's what Peter
Thiel's conflict is. Yeah, because because he knows, he understands
what they've built.

Speaker 12 (02:18:58):
Yeah, this is what they're conflicted. They're working on everybody
having their database, and the databases that you have, the
database that you have in the federal government would all
be merged into one right now. And historically we've had

(02:19:19):
government agencies each with their own database. That is changing
they're working on taking it all into one database and
having it all accessible interagency, and yes, that is a
terrifying prospect. So earlier we were playing.

Speaker 13 (02:19:36):
And actually they did that with as many systems as
they can on the One of the articles that I
wrote was about a piece of legislation called S ten
sixty seven, and what it was is the Health and

(02:19:58):
Welfare agency in your government has access to a federal
information database that contains all the information that they have
collected about you. And what the purpose of it was
supposedly was to be able to track down fathers that

(02:20:23):
haven't been paying their child support so they could find
them anywhere in the country.

Speaker 12 (02:20:30):
Wow. And what the.

Speaker 13 (02:20:33):
Obama administration did was basically extort our states to participate
in an international system run out of the Hague on
international child support cases. And this if the state didn't

(02:20:58):
pass this legislation, which was the Uniform Family I don't know,
Uniform Family something or other. I have it on my website.
I'll put it in the show notes. But if the
state didn't participate in that past that legislation, then they
would have lost access to this federal information database, so

(02:21:23):
they would no longer be able to track down errant fathers.

Speaker 12 (02:21:28):
Well, I think fathers if you you know, if you
contribute to a child being born, you should support it.
And that's the bise.

Speaker 13 (02:21:38):
Well, that's a different issue though. We're talking about information
system yes, I know, and collectives.

Speaker 12 (02:21:45):
I'm not arguing in favor of these databases. It's just
like everything, here's the bottom line. Everything is done with
supposed good intentions in mind. They're not going to put
a database in effect and say, you know, say it's
to track you or to trace you, or to do
anything nefarious. It's always with good intentions, Vicki. It's just

(02:22:10):
like the Do not Fly list is to stop terrorists
from blowing planes up, Yet for some reason, it didn't
stop the underwear bomber from lighting his pants on fire. Okay,
it didn't stop that sharp dressed man from escorting this
guy onto the airplane. You know, they let him on

(02:22:31):
without a passport. Yet the do not Fly List, all
of these things that came out after nine to eleven
supposedly to deal with terrorism, and yet they somehow can't
stop this guy from blowing his pants off, you know,
and thankfully he didn't kill anybody on the plane, but
it could have went differently, you know, but everything is

(02:22:55):
supposedly with good intentions. The uh, what was the thing
I was talking to my daughter about recently? Was this
the the list that people get on when they do
sex crimes? You know, if you commit a rape, you
commit some sort of any kind of thing that, oh,

(02:23:19):
the sexual predator list, you know what I'm talking about,
where you can't live near a school. But there's a
number of things. I mean, if you like, if men
have to go to the bathroom and they're in they're
in public, and they go hide behind a building somewhere
and relieve themselves. Here comes the cop and they show
themselves and it's like, oh, you're you're an aiding in public.

(02:23:40):
So now you're on the sex offender list, and there's
no due process, there's no way of getting off of it,
you know. And now are there people that really are
genuinely sexually predator sexual predators? Yes, But they also put
people who have squabbles with their spouse on there if
there was some sort of interaction between them that but

(02:24:06):
they weren't necessarily a threat to the public. They just
did something to their spouse that wasn't right. Okay. The
list that the things that people I'm being kind of
vague on this because I didn't really want to go
into this deeply, but there are things that people do
to get on lists, and the more lists that are involved,

(02:24:30):
the more you lose control of individuality and individual circumstances.
You know. Locally, when I worked for the commercial media outlets,
the commercial news stations, they would publicly shame quote unquote
deadbeat dads, and I had a real problem with this,

(02:24:52):
even though I'm not a deadbeat dad. I have lived
with my wife ever since we conceived children together, and
I have supported my children, and I believe in that.
I believe it's critical to have good fathers and strong
fathers in a strong, secure home, and I believe that

(02:25:13):
that is the backbone of the of the nation. We
we have a problem here, unfortunately, there is are we
still on the air?

Speaker 13 (02:25:28):
Hey, hi, hi, I uh my machine, this went crazy?

Speaker 12 (02:25:34):
Okay can you are you able to call into the
show on the phone? Yeah, okay, this is okay, six ten,
six hundred seventeen seventy six, This is live radio. Folks. Actually,
do you need the toll free number?

Speaker 6 (02:25:51):
Uh?

Speaker 13 (02:25:51):
Yeah, Well it doesn't matter. Six ten, six hundred and
seventeen seventy six.

Speaker 12 (02:25:55):
Yeah, all right, yeah, call me on the phone. All right,
I was I thought it got awful quiet. So I
guess we're still on the air, and we're almost at
the brake anyway, So I'll tell you what. Let's go
ahead and take the break and then we'll bring Vicky up. Well,
we were talking about the uh, the dead beat Dad database.

(02:26:17):
They were publicly shaming dead beat dads on the commercial stations,
and I had a real problem with that, even though
I'm not a dead beat dad, because people's circumstances are different.
Everyone has a different circumstance, and there might be a

(02:26:38):
reason why somebody might be a dead beat dad, you know,
might fall behind on their child support, and you get
them on the news, and nobody wants to hire you
after your name has been and face has been on
the news shaming you for being behind on your child support.
It's just it's not fair, it's wrong. All right, we'll
be back in a moment. Don't go away.

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Speaker 8 (02:31:00):
Where the spoofs go to find out what's really going on.
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Speaker 38 (02:31:08):
A right.

Speaker 12 (02:31:08):
When the home stretch of the broadcast one more half
hour Togo and we sun set another one. Here, Vicky
is back on the line and I got this notification
on my phone just a moment ago. Vicky, this is
a bright Bart article. Trump DOJ defends work permits for
spouses of H one B migrants. How do you like that?

Speaker 16 (02:31:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (02:31:33):
President Donald Trump's deputies told the US Supreme Court on
Friday that the Attorney General can give work permits to
migrants even though Congress explicitly bars the hiring of illegal migrants.
So the H one B program just another example outsourcing
jobs to foreign countries, foreign invaders, and welcoming amen to

(02:31:54):
take the jobs. It's disgusting, right, you know, I have been.

Speaker 13 (02:32:01):
Going back to the articles that I wrote when we
figured out that the communist Chinese were coming into Idaho
and that our governor and our legislators were taking trips
over to communist China.

Speaker 38 (02:32:24):
And the.

Speaker 13 (02:32:28):
Concept of importing foreign labor started a long time ago,
and it was based on shortages. There never was a
shortage of anything in the United States, but they said
there was because the H one b's were brought in

(02:32:49):
to develop the system that were the beginning of the
control grid, and that control grid started with our transferation system.

Speaker 10 (02:33:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (02:33:02):
Well, you got people like ram A Slimey who seems
to think that the American people aren't smart enough to
do the jobs, and so we need H and B
workers to come in here and do it for.

Speaker 13 (02:33:14):
Them, right, And what that really is is to deprive
American young people of jobs in it because they would
have figured out that the control systems that were being
built that were part of the global transportation system were

(02:33:38):
really surveillance systems. Yeah, you know, and one of the
earliest systems that I documented, of course, was the Intelligent
Vehicle Highway System and the Global Freight Tracking system, you know,

(02:33:59):
where our tax dollars paid to build a global freight
tracking system, you know, to keep track of freight shipments
coming from China down up through Mexico into the United
States and then arriving at the Kansas City Smartport, and

(02:34:22):
then from the Kansas City Smartport going out on the Interstate,
because the Interstate became basically an international highway system because
it goes from Mexico cleric to Canada and then through

(02:34:44):
Canada on the Pacific side and then on the Atlantic side.
So that was the what I would say was one
of the earliest designed systems global systems. The other one
is the Nationalized Medical Records Database.

Speaker 10 (02:35:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (02:35:09):
Yeah, And so it's really a web that we're all
being entangled in, isn't it.

Speaker 16 (02:35:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (02:35:17):
You know. In fact, that's what I think a lot
of this is. That's the reason why they called it
the World Wide Web. And the first place in my
in my thinking is because this was a whole the
whole thing was designed with the Internet to entrap and ensnare.
Now we've been able to use it a lot to
educate people, and I don't at all, uh, you know,

(02:35:39):
I think it would would have we would have been
remissed if we didn't use it to educate people and
continue to do so, because the value in that is
I think priceless in so many ways. I mean, they
want they wanted to operate under cover cover of darkness.
They wanted to operate under a shroud of secrecy, and

(02:36:00):
freedom loving people were able to exploit the technology and
utilize it for our benefit. And this is why we
saw around twenty sixteen then the desire, the effort, the
full scale war on free speech and the pushing of
massive amounts of censorship, which continues to this day. By

(02:36:22):
the way, people think Elon Musk restored X to its
former glory, but that's not true. X is not a
free platform. I just encountered a situation the other day
where I was trying to I forget what the subject was.
I was trying to put something on there, and the

(02:36:42):
algorithm blatantly would not let me do it. It accused
me of being a bot. I tried to post the
message and it wouldn't let me post it. I tried
and tried to. I was about Operation Mockingbird because Tulsey
Gabbard came out and said the Operation mocking Bird is continuing.

(02:37:03):
It never ended, and I'm like, well, you know, why
don't you tell us something else that we couldn't figure
out on our own, you know, yeah, because okay, so
the program never formally ended. Well, all we have to
see is the revolving door between these network news anchors
and the intelligence establishment. You know, all the time, many
of these people that are on these network news agencies,

(02:37:26):
they have security clearances all over the place from beginning
to end. So you want to tell me that you know, oh, no,
all Operation mocking Birds still going on. Well, duh, I
mean the government.

Speaker 13 (02:37:39):
Yeah, the government partnered with the big important infrastructure companies
and of course the news media is infrastructure was in
nineteen ninety three, no, nineteen ninety five, after the bombing
of the Oklahoma City Building and that Clinton signed an

(02:38:03):
executive order PDD sixty three. I think it was, but
I could I could be wrong on that number. But
for the government to protect our critical infrastructure. And by
the way, one of the things that they did what's
wrong with our FBI is that they partnered with the

(02:38:28):
private sector also and formed an organization called infraguard I
N F R, A, G, A, R and D. And
so so you have the FBI colluding with the private
sector against all of the city.

Speaker 12 (02:38:47):
You know, the citizens by the way, You are not
wrong on pd D sixty three. That is the correct number.
It deals with infrastructure critical structure protection. Uh huh, so
the date on that was May eight.

Speaker 13 (02:39:07):
Every quote, terrorist event moves the agenda along. The IT
projects can only last about five years because people come
and go and you know, requirements change and so forth.
So you know it's about every They only plan IT

(02:39:28):
projects for about every five years and so and then
they you know, reorganize, rethink, and then push ahead starting
a new phase of the project. Oh and our election
system they finally you know, reached a stage was in

(02:39:53):
two thousand and one when that whole stupid thing in Florida,
you know about the hanging chads.

Speaker 12 (02:39:59):
Oh yeah, and all of that in two thousand elections.

Speaker 13 (02:40:02):
Yeah, yes, that was when they Then in two thousand
and two they passed the Help America Vote Actor, right,
and then I forget it was Jay Johnson who was the.

Speaker 12 (02:40:20):
Secretary Homeland Security. I believe it's the Homeland Security.

Speaker 13 (02:40:26):
Yeah, that could be when they what their plan was
was to basically take over and centralize control of our
election systems.

Speaker 12 (02:40:37):
Yep.

Speaker 13 (02:40:38):
Well they couldn't do that because it's very explicit even
in the constitution that the state control elections in their states.

Speaker 12 (02:40:49):
Well, there's a number of stupid ideas going forward in
the states. Sadly, they're trying to get on the ballot
here in Michigan ranked choice voting. You ever heard of
this nonsense?

Speaker 13 (02:41:01):
Oh yeah, yeah, that's the.

Speaker 12 (02:41:03):
Stupidest thing that I've ever heard of. And it's confusing
as all get out.

Speaker 13 (02:41:09):
And you can't audit it basically because and it takes
several weeks.

Speaker 12 (02:41:17):
So yeah, I guess they got that in place in
New York. Now, you know where that communist Ma'm Danny
or whatever his name is running.

Speaker 13 (02:41:28):
Yeah. Yeah, it's all about system everything they're doing. It's
all about systems of control.

Speaker 12 (02:41:36):
Yeah, this is ma'm Danny on private property.

Speaker 43 (02:41:39):
Incidentally, my platform is that every single person should have housed.
And I think, faced with these two options, the system,
the system has hundreds of thousands of people unhoused right
for what And if there was any system that could
guarantee each person housing, whether you call it the abolition

(02:41:59):
of private property or you call it, you know, just
a state wide housing guarantee, it is preferable to what
is going on right now. And I think that people
try and play like gotcha games about these kinds of things,
and it's like, look, I care more about whether somebody
has a home.

Speaker 12 (02:42:16):
Yeah, so he's all in favor of abolition of private property.

Speaker 13 (02:42:21):
Well, what they did was to give capital games benefits
to big corporations, and so when a developer builds a house,
he not only it's not just the value of the
material labor in the price, it's also the projected future value.

(02:42:44):
So they really take the benefit out of buying a
house so that they can put you in the stack
them and pack them.

Speaker 12 (02:42:52):
There you go. That's what the ultimate goal is and
that fits perfectly aligned with what the administration is doing
with regard to the corporate owned cities. Corporate owned cities,
Elon Musk has has a couple of them, but Peter
Thiel's a bit that big advocate for them, as is
Curtis Jarvin and by extension, I'm sure jd Vance, even

(02:43:13):
though he probably wouldn't. I don't know if he'd come
out and say it or has said it publicly, but
this is this is a real concern.

Speaker 6 (02:43:21):
You know.

Speaker 12 (02:43:21):
I got a couple of more I got a couple
more clips from that documentary. We were playing earlier because
we were talking about the consolidation of databases across federal agencies,
and that is a powerful weapon against the American people.

Speaker 31 (02:43:35):
But we do know Pollunteer representatives have been in contact
with two big American agencies, the Social Security Administration and
the Internal Revenue Service, who had the two most important
government databases in the country. It's important to note how
information systems work. One might argue that our data is
already in a specific state database, that the entirety of

(02:43:59):
our infra is already available to the state at large.
This framing is incorrect. It presupposes that the state is
a single entity able to executively access specific data at will.
Information systems are much more fragmented, and that's on purpose.
The Social Security Administration will not have access to the
same data as the Department of Health and Human Services.

(02:44:22):
It's the centralization that changes everything. And the horror of
this conundrum is twofold. The state now has unfettered access
a single executive database to pull from, and now it's
not just the state, a third party and private entity
Palenteer owns the keys.

Speaker 12 (02:44:43):
All of this was.

Speaker 31 (02:44:44):
Under the political banner of efficiency. Trump's administration wanted to
stop fraud, waste, and abuse by eliminating information silos through
the process of quote. Removing unnecessary barriers to federal employees
accessing government data, and promoting inner agency data sharing are

(02:45:05):
important steps or is eliminating bureaucratic implication and inefficiency while
enhancing the government's ability to detect overpayments and fraudam The
efficiency was made possible by tearing down the legal privacy
and data protections in place to protect American citizens from

(02:45:25):
third parties, and the Trump administration handed the keys of
our most sensitive data to one of the most sophisticated
data organizations in the world. But you may ask, for
those of us around the world, for those of us
who don't care about data integrity, what does this mean
for us? Well, it means everything because everything is at stake.

(02:45:46):
Information is a currency far greater than the dollar or
any tangible asset. It allows for the prediction of that
vary everything. And Alex Karp understands this.

Speaker 26 (02:45:58):
With them being the winner of the world, because if
they're winning, it means other people are losing.

Speaker 12 (02:46:05):
What do you think of that. I don't think in
win loves, I think in domination. I don't think of
win lose, I think of domination. That's Alex krp, CEO
of Pallanteer. I don't think anybody could have said it
any better, having that come from his own lips, hearing
that from his own mouth. Anyway, let's go to the phones.

(02:46:28):
I got a couple of calls here in the waning
moments of the broadcast. Let's go to Georgia. First, Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Hey, guys, I
got a question for you.

Speaker 16 (02:46:38):
You know you mentioned mom Dommy. I'm kind of curious,
you know. I God, this guy is like the worst ever. Yeah,
but let's just say for the sake of argument, he
does win and he starts to try to do the
things that he's talking about trying to do, like taxing

(02:46:59):
the billionaire and all of this. We know they're just
going to pack up and leave.

Speaker 12 (02:47:03):
We know that.

Speaker 16 (02:47:05):
Companies and corporations are going to pack up and leave.

Speaker 12 (02:47:07):
We know that.

Speaker 16 (02:47:09):
But what I'm curious about is if he does win,
and I think he's got a good chance at winning,
and he does try to put these policies in place
and make these things happen. New York is New York
City is our nation's financial capital. What do you think

(02:47:31):
or what do you foresee happening to Wall Street, the
New York Stock Exchange and such agencies or organizations as this.
How do you think his policies would affect them and
what do you think they do? You think they would
move to a new location in another state somewhere, or
what do you think would happen.

Speaker 12 (02:47:52):
That's a good question.

Speaker 44 (02:47:55):
The stock market is global, right, so they don't they're.

Speaker 13 (02:48:06):
Basically, like I would say, outside the jurisdiction of our country.
When they created the WTO, they created a World organization
for regulation of well, they said.

Speaker 16 (02:48:21):
Trade, but basically it's the.

Speaker 13 (02:48:25):
Corporations within a trade and one of the provisions in
NASCA was something called investor relations and multinational privileges. So
if they don't get what they if the multinational corporations

(02:48:45):
don't get what they want in our country, they can
sue our government and then a NAFTA tribunal or the
WTO they will make the decision as to what our
country has to do.

Speaker 12 (02:49:02):
Yeah, from my standpoint, and I agree with Vicky, but
I also would say that ma'am Downey will have a
very negative impact on everything going into in New York.
But he is only the would only be the mayor
if in fact he gets elected. And the Securities in
Exchange Commission is the regulatory agency that the markets answer to,

(02:49:27):
and so I do think he would have a very
limited impact, if any at all, on the financial markets,
but he certainly can run amok on all of the
businesses in that city and the people in that city.
And I guess what we really should be concerned about

(02:49:48):
is this normalization, though of socialist policies which have become
so commonplace in these big cities to the point where,
I mean, you control the big cities with commune, you
get communists over all the big cities. You've covered the
vast majority of the American people with communist policies.

Speaker 44 (02:50:10):
So you're right about that.

Speaker 13 (02:50:14):
It is the Socialist International. You remember grow Harlem Bruntland.
She did a report called Our Common Future, and I
think it was published in nineteen eighty seven.

Speaker 12 (02:50:31):
I remember the report.

Speaker 13 (02:50:33):
Yeah, she was an absolute socialist. And so it's been
the Socialist International that has been setting the policies, and
it's basically for a socialist world government.

Speaker 12 (02:50:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:50:51):
And these computer systems that can control everything that they're
socialist by definition.

Speaker 12 (02:51:00):
Yeah. Yeah, it was certainly programmed by socialists, that's for sure.
As unfortunately, these these tech people tend to lean very
hard to the left, if not outright communist progressives. Anyway, Art,
did you have anything else?

Speaker 16 (02:51:16):
That was it?

Speaker 7 (02:51:17):
All right?

Speaker 12 (02:51:18):
I appreciate the call, Thank you very much. I'll talk
to you soon. Let's go to Canada now. I think
this is Vancouver, BC. Hello, you're on the air. Go ahead, please?

Speaker 10 (02:51:29):
Yes.

Speaker 30 (02:51:29):
I would say that ma'am Danny is CIA supported and
that he will be embraced or is already embraced by
the Peter Thiels and the Sharps of the world.

Speaker 12 (02:51:41):
Yeah. The billionaire seems to love the total fascists, don't they.

Speaker 30 (02:51:47):
Well, yeah, because that controls the markets for them, and
then it keeps everybody under the wheel, as it were.
Whereas Curtis Sliwa wants to empower people, he wants to
tech the population. He's got the record of doing it
with the Guardian Angels. What they're going to do is
if they elect Mam Danny is they're going to destroy

(02:52:09):
New York once and for all. So uh, Fidel Castro
was also supported by the CIA as well, and I
believe he was always Cia. That's why they never really
got rid of him. He was put in Cuba in
order to have a great polarization and frustration for America.
So this is how these people operate on both sides.

Speaker 13 (02:52:32):
So yeah, yeah, you have You're right about that. They
have to have a foil to fightin. That's I think
that's that's why they don't want us to ever make
peace with Russia. Russia is the.

Speaker 10 (02:52:48):
Yes.

Speaker 30 (02:52:49):
And then you have the war going on in Ukraine
which will.

Speaker 6 (02:52:53):
Never be ended.

Speaker 30 (02:52:54):
And I am very sure that there's a tie with
the Vatican right there in Ukraine. And I wouldn't be
surprised if there's a tie with a Vatican in the
gods the situation as well, because this is how they
keep people under wraps, getting them suffering and then polarizing everybody.
So thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 12 (02:53:14):
Hey, thanks for calling, appreciate it. Good comments as always.
Thank you very much, God bless you.

Speaker 6 (02:53:18):
All.

Speaker 12 (02:53:19):
Right, we're almost up to the end of the show here.
It's time's gone by very quickly here. But you know what,
in the wanning moments of the broadcast, Yeah, you're going
to say something, VICKI.

Speaker 13 (02:53:30):
I was just going to say, there's a World Council
of Churches and the I have a picture of the
Pope meeting with a Muslim cleric. I forget what they're
calling them, but yeah, it's all bringing everything together under

(02:53:52):
a single system.

Speaker 12 (02:53:54):
Yeah. The in the in the winning moments of the
broad we brought you a lot of dark informations. I
want in the show on kind of a lighter note.
The View, you know, the daytime talk show hosts a
panel called The View where you watch it and you
get dumber as you go. Well, apparently they've just been

(02:54:15):
put on hiatus. Oh so I don't know if the
show is on its way to being canceled. But in
light of that, let's give a little tribute to the
hosts of The View.

Speaker 45 (02:54:28):
She stares at orange juice cartons because it says concentrate.
She puts lipstick on her forehead to make up her mind.
She once took a ruler to bed to see how
long she slept. She once climbed over a glass wall
to see what was on the other side. Her degree
in gender studies has not paid off. She got stuck

(02:54:48):
on an escalator during a power outage. She is unburdened
by what has been. She saw a sign that said airport.

Speaker 2 (02:54:57):
Left and she went home.

Speaker 45 (02:54:59):
She almost once because someone left a scratch and sniffsticker
at the bottom of a pool. She tried to return
a donuts because it had a hole in it. She
wrecked three McDonald's because the sign said drive through. She
once got a brain worm and it starved to death.
She got a tattoo of her name in case she
forgets it. She studied for a blood test and failed.

(02:55:23):
She thinks a quarterback is a refund. She put her
phone on airplane mode and threw it, expecting it to fly.
She thinks Taco Bell is a Mexican phone company. She
is the dumbest woman in the world. She's a host
on the View.

Speaker 12 (02:55:40):
So there you God's good. All right, folks, that's it
for this week. Thank you for being with us, Thank
you all for participating in the show, and join us
back here next week, same time, same mountlet and we'll
do it all over again. Spread the word, bring somebody
with you. God bless you folks, and we'll talk to

(02:56:02):
you soon. Thanks Vicky, thank you, Daron.

Speaker 46 (02:56:06):
All right, great weekend, anybody Bye bye, truthful rashe

Speaker 8 (02:56:25):
God RecA
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