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February 21, 2026 176 mins
"That Communist Math" 

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/22655-govern-america-february-21-2026-that-communist-math 

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

Trump stages for war with Iran as he meets his "Board of Peace". Afghan Taliban pass new law defining acceptable parameters of wife-beating. Protests in New York City as Communist Mayor Zohran Mamdani wants to hike property taxes. SCOTUS strikes down Trump tariffs, but he Trump quickly reinstates them. World Economic Forum panelist talks about adding nature to the balance sheet. Electric vehicles and per-mile taxes. Trump to declassify UFO / UAP documents? Waymo pops a gear. 
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

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

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

Speaker 4 (00:21):
New world order, a world where the.

Speaker 5 (00:22):
United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of
its founders.

Speaker 6 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United stated in a key position to shape is
so that the problem of the rensidentity will be the
invergence of a new international order.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
The first decade of the twenty first century. But out
of what is will be feared the greatest restructuring of
the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest
restructuring of the global economy, a new world order was created.

Speaker 7 (00:56):
Do you mean the p of our rebublic?

Speaker 8 (00:58):
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, to secret oaths and a
secret proceedings.

Speaker 7 (01:13):
Waiting war on the new world order.

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

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

Speaker 10 (01:40):
From feverer Regions five and ten. This is Governed America.
I'm during Weeks. Vicky Davis is here as well. It
is the twenty first of February twenty twenty six, and
it's good to have you with us once again, Ladies
and gentlemen. We are awaiting the with much concern about
the possibility of a flare up in the Middle eas East. Again,

(02:01):
it seems like this is a constant thing with every president,
no matter what the party affiliation. You know, we just
keep going and going and going. And this president has
campaigned promise the American people that if you vote for me,
I'll be different. I won't be doing nation building. Seems
to me like I remember George W. Bush doing the
same thing. He campaigned that he you know, against nation building,

(02:28):
and what did he do as soon as he got
in there, nine to eleven happened. Oh well, he couldn't
have possibly anticipated nine to eleven. Yeah, right, this is
why he's up to his eyeballs. We're up to our
eyeballs and evidence against him that he knew about it
and in fact planned the whole thing. And you need
to look no further than the project for the New

(02:49):
American Century, where all of his people were involved, including
his own brother Lewis, Lebby, Jeb Bush, all of them,
the whole bunch of them plan the whole thing in advance,
and say even said they needed a new pearl harbor
to pull it off.

Speaker 11 (03:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (03:03):
Well, and I realized something this last week. The when
when the United States UH decided to participate in the
global systems, which included which was a decision of the

(03:27):
G seven no Gang of seven, Germany came up with
a list of pilot projects for global systems. One of
them was the Gemini System Global Emergency Management where and

(03:47):
that system, you know, through the United Nations, would assist
countries in collaborating to come up with a global emergency
management system. And what kicked it off was the demolition

(04:10):
of the Twin Towers. So you have Gemini, the Gemini System,
and the Twins Twin Towers.

Speaker 10 (04:20):
You know, it's interesting you talk about the Gemini system,
that's the name also of Google's AI tool.

Speaker 12 (04:29):
Yeah, not a coincidence. I'm sure because it was the
tech companies of course, that are building the global systems.
So and if you remember little things, you know, like
the interview with the guy from FEMA, and he said

(04:55):
that they arrived in New York City on the tenth
for an exercise.

Speaker 10 (04:59):
Yeah, yeah, we have the audio of that. I don't
have a handy, but yeah, absolutely he did.

Speaker 12 (05:04):
Yeah, and the Nowday Brothers, you remember they were filming
an exercise by the New York Fire Department and probably
the only location in Manhattan where you could be like
blocks away from the Twin Towers but see the entire

(05:29):
picture of the upper stories of the building. I don't
know if you've ever been to New York City, but
when you're walking around in the downtown area, you can't
see anything. It's like you're in tunnels, you know, because
of all the tall buildings, except for that one place
in Manhattan where there is a perfect view of the

(05:52):
towers for where the one airplane allegedly flew into the building.

Speaker 10 (05:59):
Yeah, no plan behind that is there.

Speaker 12 (06:03):
No, No, not at all. And yeah, I'm going to
put these my recollections and research on that together, because
that is the most critical clue is Gemini and the
twin towers. It was an exercise. And another thing, if

(06:24):
you remember the military person who was sitting at the
desk you know where they would receive calls from FAA
for emergencies. He was brand new. They put him on
the desk just for that one morning. So obviously, and

(06:49):
the guy who was supposed to be in charge, a
very experienced military person, was nowhere to be found.

Speaker 10 (06:58):
Yeah, there's so many things about nine eleven. I mean, uh,
I've been saying for years I want to go back
and revisit that. Uh, and you know, share that information
with people who because a lot of people have awakened
since then. It's old information for a lot of us,
but a lot of people have awakened to these issues,

(07:20):
patriot issues and stuff in recent years and they don't
know all this stuff that we know going way back
to nine to eleven. Some of them are just now
learning some of this stuff. But there's a lot of
details there that people have forgotten. Things like you know,
secure Kom controlling security for Dallas Airport, United Airlines and
the World Trade Center. You know secure Com connected to

(07:42):
a Bush company. You know, Uh, the fact that the uh,
the Ben Laden's were business partners with with the Bush family,
you know, uh, through the Carlisle Group. There's just a
lot of little things like that that aren't really little
at all, and they are not so much.

Speaker 12 (07:59):
When you when you put them all together individually, they're
they're small things, but when you put them all together,
it paints a picture for you.

Speaker 10 (08:08):
Yeah, it paints a picture, but I don't even think
they're small things. You know, you have an oil company.
John Moresca testified before Congress he was an executive with
Unical talking about the need to build a pipeline through Afghanistan.
That's a motive. That's a motive. And then that was
in the late the late nineties, you know, just enough

(08:29):
time to organize a conspiracy to create the motive. And
you could you could say that that's a that's a
little thing. But there's a lot of things. There's a
lot of things like you say, you could say they're little.
The Penac Report. I refer to that often because that's
not little at all. That thing thing was published a
year two the month prior to them pulling this thing off,

(08:52):
and it laid out motive. It laid out the plan
in detail exactly what they wanted to do, exactly what
they wanted to accomplish, and the fact that they needed
a new Pearl Harbor to do it.

Speaker 12 (09:05):
Yeah, and what is nine to eleven. It's September eleventh, Okay,
So there you go, another another clue to the big
picture that this was the Twin Towers demolition was a

(09:25):
dialectic for a global emergency management system. Yeah, operating under
the UN.

Speaker 10 (09:34):
Absolutely, and now they're trying to do it again in
the Middle East. I guess that's really the background leading
up to the fact that we have this present day situation,
which in my view is there's no reason for it.
There's no purpose for it. You know, you get Trump
with his Board of Peace. You know, they overthrew Bashar
al Assad in Syria and that's a mess now. And

(10:00):
I just saw too that you know, we spent twenty
years in Afghanistan and Iraq twenty years, and I just
saw that the Taliban just passed a law. VICKI and
I told my wife last night, I said, you know,
because she was going on about current events, and I said, well,
you know, no, what she was going on about was work,

(10:23):
how bad work was. And I said, you know, it
could be worse. You could live with the Taliban because
they just passed a law saying that your husband can
can beat you. The husband can beat women as long
as they don't break bones.

Speaker 12 (10:42):
No, well, that's nice.

Speaker 10 (10:43):
I would never beat my wife. But you know, if
you were a Taliban member, if you were living under
the Taliban government and you were a woman, you could
be looking forward to getting beaten by your husband as
long as he doesn't break your bones. Now, I think
it's good that they have that special carve out there,
that special caveat shall we say that the bones must

(11:09):
not be broken. I suppose if there's any good there,
at least they can't break your bones. But I'm thinking
the whole wife beating thing probably shouldn't happen at all.

Speaker 12 (11:21):
Yeah, I'd go along with that.

Speaker 10 (11:25):
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 12 (11:27):
The Taliban are really primitive people. Do you remember at
the beginning of the war over there, they had built
a stadium. Because I don't know if they built it
or it was probably one of the multinational corporations, maybe
an oil company or something. The part of the model

(11:51):
design of ports and inland ports is to have a stadium.
The Taliban we're using it for were public executions.

Speaker 10 (12:04):
Mm hm.

Speaker 12 (12:05):
You know, they would apparently in some way, get the
word around that they were going to execute somebody for
being an infidel. Yeah, and they'd shoot them, you know,
right in the middle of the stadium.

Speaker 10 (12:18):
You know, I'm not an expert on Taliban religion, but
if your religion requires that you be executed, other people
be executed if they don't adhere to it, then there
might be something undesirable about your religion. That's that's not
really the best way to get converts.

Speaker 12 (12:34):
I'm thinking, Yeah, no, I don't think it is.

Speaker 10 (12:38):
There's something really screwed up about your religion if it
requires threats of death if you don't comply. Now this article,
here's the Taliban, here's the Telegraph, maybe something like the Taliban,
but they say the Tealiban has passed a law that
allows men to beat their wives as long as it

(12:59):
does not cause broken bones or open wounds. Oh so
they have the open wounds clause too. So that's good.
I mean, at least you got that going for you.

Speaker 12 (13:10):
Yeah, so you can hit her on the head with it.

Speaker 10 (13:14):
It doesn't I don't think it says anything about bruisings. Yeah, No, bruising.
I mean, it doesn't say anything about bruising, so I
apparently bruises our fair game. Okay, So the Telegram obtained
the sixty page penal code. I say, I said the
Taliban at the Telegraph the sixty page penal code signed
by Hibbatala as Honda Zadah. I mean he should be

(13:37):
whipped just for having a name like that, the Taliban
supreme leader, and distributed to courts across the Afghanistan. Now
bear in mind, we spent again twenty years in the
Middle East, ladies and gentlemen, to supposedly depose the Taliban. Okay,
the Afghan Mujahideen, which, by the way, we trained. The

(13:59):
U US government trained the Carter administration. We've talked about
this a lot of times. The Big New Zabrinski, Carter
senior policy Advisor. They built them addresses in Afghanistan to
train the Afghan Mujahideen in the art of being good
little terrorists. And they did this so that, in the
words of the Big New Brazinski, so that they could

(14:22):
give the Soviet Union their own Vietnam. Okay. So these
are the people that the US CIA has been partnering with,
well my whole life pretty much. And this is the
kind of people that we've left in power over there.

(14:45):
After the US government under the Biden administration, which was
facilitated by the Trump Agreement, I think it was the
Doha Agreement left by the Trump administration and implemented by Biden,
they pulled out and rather recklessly left all of our
weapons there, gave them basically all a lot a lot

(15:06):
of the weapons that we had, their sophisticated technology into
the hands of the Taliban. But these are the people
they left in power, the same people that were in
power when we first went in. So what was the
thing really about? That's the question.

Speaker 12 (15:22):
Well, there are two two basic aspects to Islam. There's
the is Shariah and then there's the the other one,
which I guess is more like the religion of the Taliban.

(15:45):
So that that's what they're trying to resolve, because if
you're going to have global systems right, you've got to
bring those two together so that they can work together.

Speaker 10 (15:56):
Well, I know that there's a lot of a nuance
did you detail about and I don't fully understand Muslim beliefs.
I know that there's a lot of Muslims who live
in the United States, who are peaceful and you know,
they don't bother anybody. You know. One of them my
wife used to work with. His name was Faruke and

(16:19):
he was a very nice guy. You know, there's a
lot of there's a lot of Muslims who, in fact,
really I told my wife recently, there's no reason why
Muslims and Christians can't live side by side with each other,
because they have they are today in certain places even
like theyron, you know, they're they're there. But there are
there are elements of it. There are there are factions

(16:41):
that are more extreme than others, and those are the
things that people have to be concerned about.

Speaker 12 (16:48):
Well, with Islam, it's not just a religion, it's a
political system. And from what I've read and heard people
talked about, when they're infiltrating a country, they're they're very
quiet and peaceful, but once they tip the balance on population,

(17:09):
then that's when the radicals take over. And we're kind
of seeing that here back down in Texas, they're trying
to implement a Sharia, I mean not Shrea and Islamic town,
you know, and they're using the the port system that

(17:34):
was implemented which you know under international law. It under
international law, ports are special locations, you know, under special
laws and all of that stuff. So when they started
rebuilding the interstate system to be fully technologically enabled, they

(18:00):
included inland ports in the system. And that's what Kansas
City is, Kansas City smart Port. It is an inland port.
So it's there's a lot too that the details of

(18:21):
how they've really broken our country with international law. In
this the international economy that was created by the customs
agreement between Mexico, the United States, and Canada, creating the

(18:42):
North American Customs Union, and that's really when we lost
control of our country.

Speaker 10 (18:50):
Yeah, Spender in the chat room says Afghanistan was about
opium and they certainly did use our soldiers to guard
the opiate fields.

Speaker 12 (19:00):
Yeah, I remember that, m yep.

Speaker 10 (19:03):
And so anyway, that's you know, what it really boils
down to is demoralizing our military.

Speaker 12 (19:14):
Our military was our operatives in the global systems. The
guys on the ground, you know, the regular soldiers, they're
not privy to this level of information. But at the
highest levels. Colon Powell, Colin Powell's level.

Speaker 10 (19:36):
Where's Jackie Petrue called him? Colon pile.

Speaker 12 (19:41):
Yeah, they of course were totally in on it, and
I was just going to put together the information that
I have on the defense acquisition system, which was redesigned
basically to be able to loot our country. And you

(20:06):
remember Donald Brumsfeld when he testified, I think it was
on September tenth, Yeah, the.

Speaker 10 (20:13):
Following two trillion dollars missing from the Defense Department.

Speaker 12 (20:18):
Right, it's because they gave credit cards to DoD procurement
people and to buy commercial technology. You know. Prior to that,
the military would always produce absolute detailed specs on everything
that they purchased. But through the Defense acquisition redesign, you know,

(20:46):
they were buying off the shelf crap from Microsoft. And
I'm sure it saved quite a lot of money in
a lot of ways, but it cost us far more
than they ever saved. Yeah, country.

Speaker 10 (21:04):
We talked about the Pakistan situation and Trump's actually no,
the Gaza situation with Trump's Board of Peace and how
they had fifteen different people, you know, basically technocrats running
this thing and that's the future of Gaza. And we
said that we think this is the model for the world,

(21:26):
and I think this is really what's scaling up here
in the West with all these data centers. We'll get
into some of that some today. Probably there's data centers
going in everywhere.

Speaker 12 (21:36):
That's what they've been doing with those color revolutions. They
go in. If a government doesn't want to give up
control of their governments, their administrative governments, they take them
out and they do it by way of a color revolution.

Speaker 10 (21:56):
Yep, that we saw that going on in Iran. They
were scaling up the protests there, protests in quotes, because
these you know, all of a sudden, it started off
being a protest. Next thing you know, it's a full
scale riot. Next thing you know, the police cracked down
on it, and they say, ah, a bunch of people died.

(22:17):
So we got to have a regime change. We got
to change things. Now we're hearing that Iran is rebuilding
his nuclear facilities, they're rebuilding the Enrichment Center.

Speaker 13 (22:27):
For the first time tonight, we know the President is
indeed weighing a limited US military strike on Iran, a
strike he said today he hopes might push the country
to dismantle its nuclear program as talks continue in Geneva,
and the President today also for the first time put
a US estimate on the number of protesters killed by
the regime, pegging it at thirty two thousand people.

Speaker 14 (22:49):
Tony good evening well.

Speaker 15 (22:51):
As President Trump continues to surge major US military assets
into the region, Iran is insisting diplomacy is still alive.
I bet it will submit a written proposal to Washington
within the next two to three days, but the core
disputes remain unresolved, namely Iran's nuclear program, its ballistic missiles,
and its regional proxies. Tehran has also issued a warning

(23:14):
of its own if attacked, it will retaliate at US
bases in the region, which house tens of thousands of
American troops would be considered legitimate targets now behind all
this is also a hardening calculation in Tehran sources tel
CBS News.

Speaker 14 (23:30):
Iran's leadership believes.

Speaker 15 (23:31):
The current US terms will not guarantee real security or
sanctions relief, and so talks are no longer being pursued
at any cost. The picture tonight, a narrow diplomatic window
remains open as the US military continues to scale up
at an, Iranian leadership signaling it's prepared to respond.

Speaker 10 (23:52):
Okay, so I just have to point out here. They
talked about all the protesters that Trump said, I he's
pegged it at three thousand and something protesters. Now, I
don't know if Iran really killed that many protesters. I
don't know if they killed any. To be frank with you,
as I'm not there, and I know that nothing that
comes out in the mainstream media is anything but propaganda.

(24:15):
That being said, let's just assume that that number is
accurate and it is three thousand and something. As tragic
as it is, we're going to go to war with
Iran for killing three thousand something people when Israel admits
admits to murdering seventy thousand in Gaza, that's the number

(24:36):
they admit to. So I think something is a little
tilted here, wouldn't you say?

Speaker 12 (24:42):
I would say so, Yeah, I wonder it's another coincidence
that it's three thousand some odd people. Let's same number
of people that died in the Twin Towers demolition.

Speaker 10 (24:55):
At least that's what we're told. Speaking of debts, I
think we should at least acknowledge the passing of the
civil rights leader, you know, the great great Jesse Jackson,
m M. And I'm being a little sarcastic there, I
think you might detect. I'm not going to go and

(25:18):
get t shirts printed up like the left did for
Charlie Kirk. But Jesse Jackson, communist extraordinaire, did a lot
of damage to our country, has now went to his
eternal home. Yeah.

Speaker 12 (25:38):
Jesse Jackson headed up the Rainbow Coalition and he was
working very closely with Donald Trump. He was Yeah, they
had a project.

Speaker 10 (25:52):
Now, how about that day? Because Donald Trump is a racist?

Speaker 12 (25:56):
Yeah, isn't that amazing? He had a project called the
Wall Street Project. And I'm not exactly sure what the
Wall Street Project was, but it may have been. You know,
they were redesigning the Wall Street systems to automate trading.

(26:25):
Prior to the automation, of course, they would the traders
were on the stock exchange floor and they would, you know,
they had their manual system of trading stocks.

Speaker 10 (26:39):
Okay, Well, Howard.

Speaker 12 (26:41):
Lutnik, by the way, was one of the brokers that
had a huge staff of traders trading the old way.
They all died in the Twin Towers.

Speaker 10 (26:56):
Interesting, Hang on, Vicky, hold your thoughts. We'll be back.

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Speaker 17 (28:03):
Hi, I'm Shelby, a student at Hillsdale College. Here's President
of Hillsdale College, doctor Larry yarn On. Congress granting itself
legal exemptions.

Speaker 18 (28:11):
In seventeen eighty eight, as the Constitution was being debated
James Madison wrote that the chief restraint preventing Congress from
passing laws that apply to us but not to Congress
is quote the vigilant and manly spirit which actuates the
people of America, a spirit which nourishes freedom. If the
spirit shall ever diminish so as to tolerate a law

(28:32):
not obligatory on the legislature, the people will be prepared
to tolerate anything but liberty. Today, Americans live under many
laws that do not apply to elected officials and those
who work for them. If we hope to preserve our liberty,
we must recultivate that manly spirit of freedom that our
fathers had.

Speaker 17 (28:49):
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Speaker 19 (29:00):
Love your neighbor as yourself. We've likely heard it hundreds
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(32:01):
four six cover.

Speaker 10 (32:02):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. You'll
go to the phones in a moment. But first, Vicki,
you were talking about Howard Lutnik before the break and
his associates dying in the World Trade Center back in
two thousand and one. You want to pick it up there.

Speaker 12 (32:15):
Yeah, the traders who traded the old way, you know,
floor trading, they were at work that day. The other traders,
the internet online traders, were across the street at an
alleged meeting of some kind, which was very convenient for

(32:37):
Howard Lutnik because it relieved him of the liability of
the pensions for those traders you know that had worked
for Cantor Fitzgerald, you know, for some of them, probably
most of them, for most of their working lives.

Speaker 10 (33:00):
Yeah, it was convenient for Larry Silverstein, who owned the
WTC property, because he got a massive insurance payout uh
for for that uh. And he didn't have to get
rid of the ah, what's the name of the insula,
I'm blinking on the name of the insulation that.

Speaker 12 (33:21):
Asbestos.

Speaker 10 (33:22):
Yeah, yeah, he had to pay. He's going to have
to pay a lot of money for asbestos renewval renewal removal,
if I can talk.

Speaker 12 (33:29):
And I was living in New York in about nineteen
ninety three ninety four when in the newspaper there was
quite a few big articles about the World Trade Center
and the asbestos abatement that they were required to do.

(33:51):
They were going to have to remove the asbestos from
there from both towers. Well they did, yeah, they did.

Speaker 10 (33:59):
They shared, they and they released it into the air
so all the New Yorkers in the area that were
in the area that day could breathe lungs full of it. Yeah,
and a lot of them have respiratory problems after that.

Speaker 12 (34:13):
And it just coincidentally, the city of New York had
lots of trucks to start cleaning up debris immediately.

Speaker 10 (34:22):
Immediately. I mean the stuff was barely it was still smoking. Yeah,
I shouldn't laugh, it's horrible. But they hauled that stuff
right out of the country. You remember that.

Speaker 12 (34:34):
Yeah, Well, they hauled a lot of it over to
Staten Island to the dump first, and then I'm sure
from Staten Island they probably, you know, shipped it.

Speaker 10 (34:44):
I don't.

Speaker 12 (34:45):
It seems to me like I remember them shipping a
lot of it to India, but I can't quite remember.

Speaker 10 (34:53):
I don't recall where they shipped it to. I just
I just seem to remember that they shipped a lot
of it right out of the country. And we were
talking about it at the time. How how the evidence
you know, there was no you know. And then conveniently,
they they dropped passports there for people to find. Yeah,
isn't it nice that the supposed hijackers just happened to
have their passports there where somebody could somebody could locate

(35:17):
them and pick them.

Speaker 12 (35:18):
Up right the Christine and clean.

Speaker 10 (35:21):
And they were so in app they had to take
flight manuals to the airport, yet they could do a
sophisticated maneuver with their with the jet flying right into
the building. Mm hm you know. So, yeah, there's there's
just so much about this. I mean, anybody the real theory,
conspiracy theory, is that it wasn't a US shadow government operation.

(35:43):
I mean, when you're confronted with overwhelming evidence and you
still choose to be leave a lie, then you're part
of the problem. I'm sorry, Yeah, you really are.

Speaker 12 (35:52):
Well, that was the beginning of the takedown of our country.
You know, they want to We know that the Democrats
want to eliminate our borders. Well that's part of the
same plan that they did for Europe, you know, eliminate
the borders between countries and just have a commercial union,

(36:17):
a customs union, you know, with no borders and the
European Commission running the entire thing, and the governments of
the countries that are part of the European Union they've
basically been neutered.

Speaker 10 (36:37):
Yeah, let's go to the phones. Vancouver, BC. Hello, you're
on the air. Go ahead, please, good morning. Hey.

Speaker 23 (36:47):
I was in New York City July of two thousand
and one, actually earlier as well, and then of course
I was there December of two thousand and one in
the aftermath. Well this you can ask the question right now,
we got a fifty thousand dow how much money was

(37:10):
spent on weapons since two thousand and one and to
the present day and all the weapons that Biden gave
away back to you guys. Morning Vicky, Derek.

Speaker 10 (37:24):
Yeah, good morning, goes. Well, I don't know the answer
to that. I know that it's been going on ever since.
And I would have to push back a little bit
on what Vicky said a moment ago about nine to
eleven being the beginning of the takedown of our country.
I think it began much much earlier than that, but

(37:46):
I will concede that it definitely was the beginning of
the acceleration.

Speaker 12 (37:51):
Yeah, they said, I agree with you on that.

Speaker 10 (37:54):
They said, before we're going to hit the ground, we're
going to hit the twenty first century running. Yes, And
boy did they ever you know, with the whole y
two k nonsense. You know, we have pretty much spent
our entire lives going from one crisis to another, one
stomach twisting, knots in your stomach, stress inducing terror to

(38:20):
another and now we're facing another one in the Middle East.
And for what what purpose is this being done? There
is no good reason for it.

Speaker 12 (38:31):
Well, they want a one world government. They want the
UN to be the government of all the countries.

Speaker 10 (38:41):
Well, see the Trump just pulled us out of a
lot of UN organizations, so supposedly that's not the reason.
I would suggest to you that maybe this is a dialectic,
and maybe the pulling US out of world organizations and
common a war leading to the zenus of another world

(39:04):
war might be a dialectic to say, see there, this
is what happens when you don't have a world body
overshadowing you or controlling your governments or governant.

Speaker 23 (39:18):
One thing, you know, China is buying one point five
million barrels a day from Iran. I think this is
one of the issues. It was definitely an issue when
the Bushes were in power that Saddam Hussein was selling
his oil at five dollars a barrel to European oil traders.

Speaker 4 (39:40):
You see, So.

Speaker 23 (39:43):
This is what's going on? Is it isn't because the
Iranians shot a bunch of people. I don't think they
shot anybody quite Frankly, it's because Iran is the keystone
to the Russia China.

Speaker 10 (40:00):
Alliance. They're in a position to challenge US.

Speaker 23 (40:04):
It's and yes, and the American regime and everybody that's
aligned with America does not want the Chinese to build
a pipeline and road right to Germany. This is what
they don't want, though it's global business rather than a

(40:24):
one world government. But you know, people like Sam Huntington
wrote that book, a Clash of Civilizations. Huntington knew what
was going to happen. And some of the trading people
I knew. Morgan Stanley was out of those buildings when
everything was short, and that Canter Fitzgerald. I think they

(40:46):
were holding short positions because the market was just simply
going down and they were making money off it. But
one more thing I could add for you is if
there is a destruction of any Chinese vessels and people
in this Iran thing coming up, in this possible war,

(41:08):
you will see that the Chinese and America will rise
up and start to rebel.

Speaker 4 (41:15):
Yeah, this is one thing you could look for.

Speaker 10 (41:17):
So yeah, I don't look forward to it either, But
I think you're right.

Speaker 23 (41:23):
Not to mention the Muslims of course, and anyway, I
look at all the best and thanks for taking the goal.

Speaker 10 (41:30):
Yeah, I appreciate it. God bless you, sir, Thank you
very much. We're welcome good input, and yeah, this is
something that we need to be concerned about and being
watchful for. You know, we just had a situation right
now in our country where we're talking about sending ice
around into cities, not just talking about it, but they've
been doing it. Trump's pulled back a little bit on it,

(41:54):
but you got all this civil unrest going on right
now over Oh, they're turning us into a police state.
Never mind, the previous president left the border wide open
to facilitate this police state.

Speaker 12 (42:07):
It was the Democrats who designed and began implementing the
police state. That's what all these technocratic systems are, you know,
the automated facilities on the interstate, the smart grid.

Speaker 10 (42:27):
Well, I have to push back a little bit on that.
It's been a bipartisan situation because I remember after nine
to eleven, which we've talked a lot about so far today,
that all this police state stuff were was massively boosted
after September eleventh, and we didn't have one land security

(42:49):
which is a surveillance. The whole thing is about surveillance.
The fusion centers got a major shot in the arm,
if not an outright design under nine to eleven. Well,
I mean, you could probably take it all back to Clinton,
I suppose. But the thing is is that.

Speaker 12 (43:07):
You can, because that's my part. That's when it started.
They did a project called the National Performance Review and
the NPR, and that was the initial study to determine
what systems of government would be integrated and basically a

(43:31):
full technological plan for the United States for technology everywhere.
And that documentation is of course available because it was government,
a government project from the beginning, and it was really

(43:52):
George Herbert Walker Bush that kicked it off with the
plan for the transportations system. They implemented a system of
integrated management for all forms of transportation so that the
system would be a national system, fully integrated. But the

(44:16):
biggest one, as far as I'm concerned, was the health
insurance reforms and the beginning of the reinvention of our
healthcare system.

Speaker 10 (44:29):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, yep. So I mean you've just proven
my point. This is whole thing is a bipartisan effort.
You take it back to George HW. Bush forty first president,
and you know here you know, but it's he's the
one also that was responsible for negotiating NAFTA, as I recall,

(44:54):
and Bill Clinton came in and signed it.

Speaker 12 (44:57):
Yeah, and it started with something called the Enterprise of
the Americas. That was the initial plan, and that was
a project, an initial project of George Herbert Walker Bush.

Speaker 10 (45:14):
Yeah, let's go back to the phones. Let's go to
Georgia right now. I think this is art. Hello, you're
on the air. Go ahead, place, good morning, Darren and VICKI.

Speaker 20 (45:26):
Where you want to go? You want to talk about
mom Donnie in New York, or you want to talk about.

Speaker 10 (45:30):
Well, we could talk about mom. Yeah, there's a big
there's a big protest going on over there. As my understanding,
his oh, hold on, hold on, we're going to talk
about mom Donnie. We gotta we got to play the
theme song here, hold.

Speaker 26 (45:43):
On the big apple rots. The city is going to
pot with murders and rapist and rants.

Speaker 25 (45:52):
We had lots the elected. He's gone, and thank your man.
He'll give it all the way to another man. You
won't have a pun to be and you won't want
to be.

Speaker 10 (46:11):
And it's time to.

Speaker 25 (46:12):
Be because the coming I'm done.

Speaker 10 (46:19):
He is mad of new you and boy did we
call that. I mean, as soon as he got in there,
he immediately started talking about giving away land to other
people and raising amazing. Yeah anyway, sorry, go ahead, O.

Speaker 20 (46:38):
Well, I thought it was really interesting that I was watching.
I don't know, I'm sure you've probably heard of him,
Tim Poole, he's on uhh yeah, absolutely got a channel
on YouTube. I love this guy.

Speaker 10 (46:48):
He's just amazing.

Speaker 20 (46:50):
And I was watching a video the other day and
of course the kind of guy, and I got to
research everything, and again Tim Kim hits it hits the
nail on the head every time. You know, here's mom
Donnie giving a speech where he's talking about you know,
first of all, you got ninety seven million dollars in
school funding that's going by bye. They're they're they're losing that.

(47:15):
They've now got introducing and I can't believe this, introducing
one hundred and twenty seven billion dollar budget with a
five point four billion budget gap. That sounds a little
a little shy to me.

Speaker 10 (47:33):
He's got a little of that communist math, but more
than that.

Speaker 20 (47:37):
But yeah, real little a little bit is being night.
But then he comes out and he says, we got
two ways forward here. One. Path number one is to
increase personal income taxes on New Yorkers earning more than
one million, and corporate taxes on the most profitable corporations,

(47:57):
as well as a nine point five percent property tax
increase on working families, to end the drain by fixing
the imbalance between what the city provides New York State
and what the city receives in return, or Path number two. Well,

(48:18):
path number two is where the property tax, the nine
point five percent property tax comes in. This is part
of path number two, but also part of path number
two is and wow, this was.

Speaker 27 (48:30):
Amazing to literally draw down by.

Speaker 20 (48:33):
Nearly fifty percent or possibly more, the reserves of the
Rainy Day Fund for fiscal year twenty twenty six, and
draw down the Retireing Health Benefits Trust Fund for fiscal

(48:53):
year twenty twenty seven. I'm thinking to myself, he's not
even a year in, yeah, even not even.

Speaker 27 (49:03):
Not even two months in yet, and he's already moving
toward literally crippling not just the City of New York
but the state.

Speaker 10 (49:14):
Yeah. Well, they have a bunch of.

Speaker 20 (49:16):
Governor Hulkell Governor Hulkel and the and the New York
State Legislature needs to lock this guy down.

Speaker 10 (49:23):
Well, they already have a bunch of poop in the
street too, on the sidewalk, So it's starting to look
more and more like San Francisco.

Speaker 20 (49:31):
Yeah, I saw the videos of after the snow melted away.
It's just the sidewalks freckles of poop.

Speaker 10 (49:41):
Yeah, sorry folks who are eating dinner or lunch or
breakfast or something. But yeah, I mean, I guess it'll
be good for the person that does the poop app,
you know who has enables people to go around and
you know how they have a like a map, an
app that has a map up on it where all
the poops on the sidewalk, so that you know where

(50:04):
to avoid. It'll be good for the developer at least
they'll be able to expand their operations.

Speaker 12 (50:11):
When I was there, they there was he just pooper
Scooper law, and they enforced it.

Speaker 10 (50:17):
Well this is homeless people. These are homeless people. Yeah,
oh my god, drug addicts and what have you.

Speaker 27 (50:24):
I can't you can't stop the city position.

Speaker 20 (50:27):
It'll be they'll have a new city position and they
will be called the official super duper poop.

Speaker 10 (50:33):
Scooper say that ten times? No, don't.

Speaker 20 (50:37):
Yeah right, I'm telling you, New York done for it.
They don't do something about this guy. Governor Hulk really
needs to lock down on this guy because he can't
be allowed to continue. Because what I'm really worried about
is we're going to see.

Speaker 10 (50:53):
Well, Hunkle's probably just as bad as he is.

Speaker 12 (50:56):
Isn't he an illegal?

Speaker 10 (50:59):
Who? Huckel?

Speaker 12 (51:00):
She's a female, the the the mayor of New York.

Speaker 10 (51:06):
I don't, Donnie, No, I don't think he's.

Speaker 20 (51:09):
A Vick's a naturalized citizen, isn't he?

Speaker 10 (51:11):
Yeah? I think is he?

Speaker 12 (51:12):
Okay?

Speaker 20 (51:14):
All right?

Speaker 12 (51:15):
I was thinking he was an illegal and they could
just deport him.

Speaker 4 (51:22):
That would be nice.

Speaker 10 (51:23):
Well, it seems like if that were the the the situation. Yeah,
he's he's from the Uganda, but he is a natural naturalized.

Speaker 4 (51:33):
Citizen.

Speaker 12 (51:34):
So yeah, somebody from u Ganda really is qualified to
be a mayor of our melting pot.

Speaker 20 (51:42):
We have a melting more than he's more than that, Vicky,
he's a rapper.

Speaker 10 (51:48):
Oh there you go. Yeah, what wast omar rapper omar?
I'm sold.

Speaker 28 (51:54):
Well.

Speaker 12 (51:56):
Clinton was a saxophone player.

Speaker 10 (51:58):
Yeah, so that's all you got. Ideas, if you're a musician,
you get a pass on everything.

Speaker 20 (52:03):
Yeah, and Zelenski was a piano player. Couldn't resist that with.

Speaker 10 (52:08):
His uh never mind, thanks, all right, appreciate the call.
All right, let's go to Austin, Texas. Hello, you're on
the air. Go ahead, please, Hi, good morning, Hi, good morning.

Speaker 29 (52:25):
Hear me A right, Yeah, I'm talking about nine to eleven.
Back in two thousand and three, a mutual friend hooked
me up with a guy for a job to build
a garage apartment. And this guy, he took early retirement
as a maintenance supervisor at the University of Texas, and
we've been on the job for a few months, and

(52:46):
we were just sitting having lunch one day and he
just casually happened to mention that tried to nine to eleven.
The UT had taken receipt of an HVAC system in
the campus, and somehow or other, the World Trade Center
people had heard about this, and they were in a

(53:08):
desperate hurry to get an HVAC system, and rather than
wait for assembly and delivery, they asked the UT people
if they would let them have their system, which they refused.
But that just kind of blew my mind because this guy,
he wasn't a conspiracy theorist, and in fact, he was
a good old redneck George Bush supporter, So he wasn't

(53:30):
saying that for any particular reason. He just happened the
casually mentioned that day and always found that very interesting.

Speaker 10 (53:36):
Yeah, that is interesting. Yeah, there's so many things that
were warning of that day, so many things that were prequisites.

Speaker 20 (53:46):
You know.

Speaker 10 (53:46):
One thing that I found interesting is Willy Brown coming out.
You know who, By the way, Kamala Harris very close
to Willie Brown. Rumor has it that she's talking about
running for president of the United States again. God help us,
but hope she does.

Speaker 12 (54:03):
Because she's such she's such a ditch.

Speaker 10 (54:06):
I don't know why anybody would fund her, you know. Yeah,
sorrows you think he'd want to pick candidates that could
actually win. I guess if you throw enough money at
anybody and you get the electorate as ticked off as
they are, some of them about Trump, and divide the
conservative base, you can possibly get somebody slip slip them by,
you know, a couple that. Of course, with the rigged elections,

(54:29):
Dominion has now renamed itself. Liberty isn't that special. Yeah, so,
but anyway, there Willie Brown came out and he after
nine to eleven. They the the I think it was
a San Francisco chronicle, said that he had been warned
not to fly. Like well, that that's kind of interesting. Yeah,

(54:52):
you would think that he would have told somebody else
not to fly if he's being warned not to fly,
But nope.

Speaker 12 (55:01):
There's so many, so many clues like that that it
was known in advance. It was a dialectic. It was
a demolition of a building that was no longer wanted
by the New York Port Authority.

Speaker 10 (55:20):
Yeah, well that's okay. They got the Freedom Tower now,
despite the fact that they're working to gut freedom in
New York City and across the country every single day.
Hey it's the Freedom Tower. Hey, caller, you have anything else?
I guess, I guess he just drops all right, Well,
thank you for the call, appreciate it, all right, folks
with the Top of the Hour. Now, got to take

(55:41):
the Top of the Hour break for a few minutes,
and we'll hit the ground running an hour number two
with a lot more information here. On the twenty first
of February, twenty twenty six. Please don't go away, Governed
America continues in a few minutes.

Speaker 16 (56:35):
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and see how much you can save on your car insurance.

Speaker 1 (57:20):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen ten.

Speaker 30 (57:38):
I'm Lena Abu Jamer and this is today's single Christian
it's easier not to get involved, isn't it.

Speaker 31 (57:44):
Think about it.

Speaker 30 (57:45):
You're running late for work when you see the old
lady walking in the cool dragging a couple of grocery
bags on her hips, do you stop and give her
a ride, risking being late for work? Or how about
that neighbor, the single mom who can't keep up with
the snow on her driveway. Do you offer to shovel
her driver? Or do you mind your own busines this
and get on with your day. Every day we're given
opportunities to love those around us. It's up to us

(58:05):
to open our eyes and see. It's up to us
how we respond. In Galatians six ten, Paul tells us
to do good to everyone, especially to those who are
in the household of faith. So what are you doing
today to do good to those around you? To what extent?
When you go out of your way to show Christ's
love to those in your neighborhood. For more to help
you thrive, visit Todaysingle Christian dot com or email me

(58:27):
your story at Lena at Todaysingle Christian dot com.

Speaker 32 (58:36):
True for the Star.

Speaker 33 (58:47):
Covenmerica American Family News, I'm Robert Thornton.

Speaker 34 (59:03):
President Donald Trump criticized the Supreme Court sixty three decision
that ruled he does not have the authority to levy
tariffs under a specific emergency powers law, noting he will
pursue alternatives to tariffs under emergency law. The President announced
he is imposing a ten percent global tariff following the
Court's decision.

Speaker 35 (59:22):
The good news is that there are methods, practices, statutes,
and authorities as recognized by the entire Court in this
terrible decision, and also is recognized by Congress which they
refer to, that are.

Speaker 10 (59:38):
Even stronger than the.

Speaker 35 (59:39):
AIPA tariffs available to me as President of the United States,
and in actuality, I was very modest in my ask
of other countries and businesses because I wanted to do.

Speaker 10 (59:52):
And it's very important.

Speaker 35 (59:54):
I wanted to be very well behaved because I wanted.

Speaker 10 (59:58):
To do anything.

Speaker 35 (59:59):
I didn't want to do any that would affect the decision.

Speaker 11 (01:00:01):
Of the Court.

Speaker 34 (01:00:03):
Republicans are reacting to the Supreme Court's decision to strike
down the tariffs box business as Ladia who reports This is.

Speaker 36 (01:00:10):
From Republican Senator from Kentucky Ran Paul. He says, in
defense of our republic the Supreme Court struck down using
emergency powers to enact taxes. This ruling will also prevent
a future president such as AOC from using emergency powers
to enact socialism. Republican Senator from Iowa Chuck Grassley, it's
time for Congress to take some of those powers back,

(01:00:32):
but encourages Trump and his team to keep securing fair
and reciprocal trade deals. This is from Senator Bernie Morano
of Ohio. Quote Scotus's outrageous ruling handcuffs our fight against
unfair trade that is devastated American workers for decades.

Speaker 34 (01:00:49):
The late Reverend Jesse Jackson will not lie an honor
in the United States Capitol rotunda after request for the
commemoration was denied by House Speaker Mike Johnson's office due
to past press. Johnson's office said it received a request
from the family to have Jackson's remains lying honor at
the Capitol, but the request was denied because of the
president that the space is typically reserved for former presidents,

(01:01:12):
the military, and select officials. The US is increasing its
presence in the Middle East as the President threatens action
concerning Iran. Here's Fox's Jennifer Griffin.

Speaker 37 (01:01:20):
Sometime in the next month, the US could find itself
in another war in the Middle East without a clear
exit strategy. The amount of military hardware the Pentagon is
positioning in the region signals to most military observers that
it is not a question of if, but when. More
than one hundred and twenty warplanes have arrived in recent days,
including dozens of F fifteen's, F thirty five's, a wax

(01:01:41):
KC one thirty five refuelers and cargo planes loaded with
military equipment. In fact, in the past few hours, the
USS Gerald R. Ford Aircraft carry Strike Group passed through
the Strait of Gibraltar at the mouth of the Mediterranean,
after stopping outside the Strait for resupply after crossing the Atlantic.

Speaker 34 (01:02:00):
While at a governor's breakfast event at the White House,
President Trump said he was considering a limited strike on
Iran if a deal is not reached over the country's
nuclear program. The Texas Attorney General's Office says Agken Packs
and has files suit against companies doing business as the
global online shopping platform Team Move for unlawfully deceiving consumers
while covertly harvesting Texan's personal data and exposing it to

(01:02:23):
the Chinese Communist Party. The AG's office says, when operating
on the TMU site or app, consumers are exposed to
a digital security threat. The AG's office also writes that
TU utilizes dangerous software functions that are completely inappropriate for
a simple e commerce retailer. In weather news, Fox Weather
says the threat of a nor'easter looms for this weekend

(01:02:46):
for the Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston metro areas.
As computer forecast models try to pin it down, several
factors must line up to produce big impacts, namely, a
low and a precise track along the northeast coast, and
enough hold air from Canada. Snow totals will be limited
if any one of these forecast ingredients is missing. Foxwether's

(01:03:06):
Melanie black.

Speaker 38 (01:03:07):
Gar confidence continues to increase that there's going to be
impactful snow amounts, and as you look at some of
the impacts, not only just the snow, but also the
wind factor. This is going to be a nor'easter. And
when you have a nor' easter, that means you get
strong northeast wind.

Speaker 34 (01:03:23):
That is all our time for this hour's news. We
invite you to see more news at AFM got no

(01:03:43):
true for the restoration.

Speaker 10 (01:03:49):
Of our nation.

Speaker 39 (01:03:52):
Govern America, Welcome back to the broadcast.

Speaker 10 (01:04:33):
This is Governor America Hour number two. It continues to
be the twenty first of February twenty twenty six. Yesterday,
the Supreme Court issued a six to three decision holding
that President Trump exceeded his authority by using the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose sweeping peacetime global tariffs.
Chief Justice John Roberts majority, stressing that Congress, not the President,

(01:04:59):
controls tariff powers and the i e e p A
is not a blanket tariff statute.

Speaker 12 (01:05:05):
There's something about John Roberts that everybody should.

Speaker 10 (01:05:09):
Know, you know, completely on the other side, I think
he's supposedly a conservative, but he was.

Speaker 12 (01:05:14):
A corporate lawyer. Now, when he was nominated, the Family
Research Council was really promoting him as a family man,
you know, a religious, you know, family man, and he
was nothing of the sort. He was a corporate lawyer.

(01:05:37):
And you know, that baffled me why they would do that.
But now we know, of course, so we can't really
expect Roberts to be on our side for anything. And
I think it if I remember correctly, it wasn't very
long ago that he took a trip over to Europe

(01:06:01):
to meet with Normisen, mm hmm and uh norm Iisen.
Of course, it was heading up the oh U s
a I D agenda, Okay, which US A I D
were weaponized to engage in the color revolutions.

Speaker 10 (01:06:28):
Yeah, exactly, and the U s a i D continues
to go forward.

Speaker 12 (01:06:32):
Yeah, even though supposedly Trump defunded and defunded them and
fired them out of worked operating domestically. But I don't
I don't think they honored that.

Speaker 10 (01:06:48):
Yeah. So the situation with the tariffs just real quickly. Uh,
they gutted the tariffs that were imposed, but already they
are using a different tactic the Trump administration. Donald Trump
immediately got to work on implementing his tariffs by different means.
Treasury Secretary Scott Descent commented on the case. Here's what

(01:07:10):
he had to say about it.

Speaker 40 (01:07:12):
I would also like to take a moment to address
today's Supreme Court ruling, and I would note that I
did not change a single word in my speech. They
post the ruling. President Trump will always put our national
security in Americans first, and as I have said, before
the president has multiple tools in his toolbox. Let's be

(01:07:32):
clear about what today's ruling was and what it wasn't.
Despite a misplaced quoting from Democrats, bill informed media outlets,
and the very people who gutted our industrial base, the
court did not rule against President Trump's terriffs. Six justices
simply ruled that a EPA authorities cannot be used to

(01:07:56):
raise even one dollar of revenue. This administration will invoke
alternative legal authorities to replace the IEPA tariffs. We will
be leveraging Section two thirty two and Section three oh
one tariff authorities that have been validated through thousands of
legal challenges. Treasury's estimates show that the use of Section

(01:08:19):
one twenty two authority, combined with potentially enhanced Section two
thirty two and Section three h one tariffs, will result
in virtually unchanged tariff revenue in twenty twenty six.

Speaker 10 (01:08:33):
So there you go. Uh so, I guess there's already
a ten percent across the board tariff on imports, which
you know we have said repeatedly on this broadcast. We've
been yelling for the need to have tariffs on imports.
You can't you can't allow free trade to go on

(01:08:54):
and expect to have an economy and a workforce that
can have a living wage. For all the Democrat talking
points about a living wage. They you know, what's what's
interesting about that even some of some Democrats now have
come out and actually admitted that tariffs have a role.

(01:09:16):
Our our dingbat governor here in Michigan, as as as
extreme and lefty as she is, has come out and said,
you know that tariffs have a role. She admitted as much.
So it's a surprising, but well it's common sense. Really.

Speaker 12 (01:09:33):
Yeah. It doesn't take a lot of brain power to
figure out that India has a billion and a half people.
And when I first started looking at the issue of
the H one visus, the price of a programmer computer
programmer in the United States on the low end was

(01:09:56):
fifty dollars an hour and a programmer from India three
dollars an hour. Right, So, you know, where did they
think that the companies that were service companies, like insurance companies,
we're going to send their business.

Speaker 10 (01:10:14):
You've got to have a way a mechanism, and tariffs
is that are that mechanism to keep your labor force
from competing with slave labor wages?

Speaker 12 (01:10:23):
Right, exactly, and.

Speaker 10 (01:10:25):
That's exactly what we have to do. All right, So
let's go back to the phones. Let's go to Kentucky. Hello,
you're on the air.

Speaker 4 (01:10:31):
Go ahead, please, Yes, have you ever had a presence
on Facebook at all? Officially?

Speaker 10 (01:10:41):
Have I? Yeah, in the past, A long time ago.

Speaker 4 (01:10:46):
Okay, so there's there's no way to contact you through that.
And you said something the last hour.

Speaker 10 (01:10:54):
Let me take a speaker so it don't sound so
I appreciate that.

Speaker 4 (01:10:59):
Yeah, sorry, anyway, the uh and I'm a little congested today.
But there's a bunch of Darren Weeks on there. Uh
but uh fa. Facebook just does a generic AI summary
when people inquire about you, which I don't think the
description is accurate or fair. But there's other people posting

(01:11:21):
some of your clips from I don't know, from last
year to maybe four years ago.

Speaker 10 (01:11:26):
Well, what is AI saying about me? I mean, I'm
just curious.

Speaker 4 (01:11:29):
Oh, I can read you that, I can read you
the whole paragraph. But let me first say what I
called about. If you want to, if you want to
do a shallow but why deep dive into what Islam believes.
There's a former professor of physics believe it or not

(01:11:51):
from terribly slow university, as he calls the Tennessee State University.
My name, doctor Bill Warner. Have you heard of him?

Speaker 10 (01:12:01):
Seems like they have. Yeah, the name rings a bell
a little bit. Go go ahead, VICKI, Well you can,
you can.

Speaker 4 (01:12:08):
You can do a quick overview of some of his videos,
like UH Islam versus the Crusades and how Islam destroyed
the Mediterranean economy over the course of about three to
four hundred years, and how the Crusades basically saved a
bloody stump of Christianity. There's no telling how much stuff

(01:12:30):
is yet to be found about Christianity that's buried and
hidden or burned. And he has another video that basically describes,
I think the various governments that are totalitarian under Islam.
And I think it was one of the European countries

(01:12:51):
asked him to do a report on this because their
constitution bans political parties that are totalitarians. So that was
the way that they were going to ban Islam from
their country. And I can't remember if it was Sweden
or Norway or one of those you know, uh, Scandinavian countries.

(01:13:11):
And so he did a video about it and it's
a good, little, short, concise thing for what they believe,
whether they know it or not. And you said, you know,
you knew some quote good Muslims or that got along
with Christians. They're really not good Muslims.

Speaker 41 (01:13:30):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:13:31):
If I was to say, I know some good Christians
that go to the bars on Saturday night and go
partying and then they, you know, they go to church
on Sunday evening, they wouldn't be or they, you know,
are worse. We could think of worse things that good
quote good Christians might why they're just as charitable. They
gave me a ride what I needed to ride, you know.

Speaker 10 (01:13:50):
But all right, I don't I don't see. That's the thing.
I don't know what they what constitutes a good Muslim necessarily.
I know they don't seem to like bar. They don't like.

Speaker 4 (01:13:59):
They follow their They follow their e Mom's edicts and yeah, the.

Speaker 12 (01:14:07):
Mom is the law leave the.

Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
Okay, well, yes, And they don't follow the Quran. They
follow Hadith and Sarah, which are you know, you've heard
the expression what would Jesus do? Their philosophy is more
of what would Muhammad do? And did Mohammad do? And
as the early Islam was peaceful. You know, you have

(01:14:31):
your religion, I have mine. But they weren't recruiting anybody
for like forty years, so they had a second I guess,
I don't know iteration of Islam, which became slash and burn,
you convert.

Speaker 10 (01:14:47):
Or die, you know, And so that's a way to
win the hearts and minds of people.

Speaker 12 (01:14:53):
Yeah, exactly, isn't it. Wahabi. Is that the Islam that
comes from Saudia, right, it is?

Speaker 11 (01:15:01):
Yeah, Okay, there's.

Speaker 4 (01:15:03):
About four brands of Islam, you know, just like there's
a lot of different sects of Jews. But when it
comes down to them becoming a majority, that it's a
totalitarian political system.

Speaker 10 (01:15:14):
Yeah, that's what I'm concerned about, and I think that's
what a lot of people are concerned about here in
the West. Is anytime you have a large concentration of
people who maybe won't assimilate, don't share your necessarily American values,
and they become concentrated in a particular area so much
so that they will, you know, they basically take control

(01:15:38):
of that area.

Speaker 23 (01:15:40):
You know.

Speaker 10 (01:15:40):
Now in New York City, I just recently read where
already you know, this Mamdani guy hasn't been there very long,
and already they have blurring from the loud speakers, people
getting woke up in the morning by the Muslim call
to prayer.

Speaker 4 (01:15:55):
You know, that's been a been a problem in Wisconsin
to where So, yeah, they don't and this is how
long our government has been watching them. I happened to
know a guy who passed away recently who was the
bagman carrying cash in the middle of the night because
nobody else wanted to do it for the FBI in

(01:16:18):
about nineteen fifty to nineteen sixty or nineteen fifty eight
to nineteen sixty two. He did that for about four years,
and I don't know why he quit. But in and
around Cincinnati in the late fifties early sixties, there were
literally hundreds of mosques and the FBI had hundreds of informants.
We're talking sixty five years ago that they've been watching

(01:16:40):
what's going on, and they have from another source I have,
they have their own arsenals. Now, this guy said he
knew nothing about the arsenals. You know that they had
in every.

Speaker 12 (01:16:53):
Whatever every month.

Speaker 4 (01:16:56):
I make well associated with every eva in every mosque.
I guess I don't know how they have their their districts,
you know, like Mormons have stakes. You know, they have
a steak which is a district in the Mormon Church.
So that the Islam Islam has their own basic militia
in whatever country they're in, and that includes America. So

(01:17:18):
it's known as for sixty five years and we're infiltrated
by how many millions?

Speaker 10 (01:17:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (01:17:25):
Yeah, they basically imported the Middle East war to our country.

Speaker 10 (01:17:32):
Yeah, and that's really the big thing right there that
I rail against. The Iran war that is threatening to
erupt the Middle East. Iran will not be if we
have a fully engulfed war over there like Iraq and
Afghanistan war. We're talking of full scale potential world war

(01:17:57):
here because as closely allied as they are with Russia
in China.

Speaker 4 (01:18:01):
And how many so called sleeper sales will be activated
in this country?

Speaker 10 (01:18:05):
Yeah, and how many refugees will be created?

Speaker 11 (01:18:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:18:10):
You know, anytime you destroy somebody's country, they go somewhere.
They're going to go somewhere, you know, and right now,
you know, I don't know if you saw that Rick
Steves documentary. Rick Steves went over there. He does a
travel show on the Create Network, and he went over
there and did a deep dive over there with the
Iranians and talked about Iran, and that's they welcomed Americans there.

(01:18:37):
They were very happy to see him over there, and
Christians and Muslims were living side by side together. And
when he was over there, and that wasn't that many
years ago. That was back when they were first talking
again about going in and taking out the regime and

(01:18:57):
all of that stuff. This has been something that they've
been building up to for a long time. And you know,
it's it's it's one of the I think one of
the more westernized countries in the Middle East, at least
as far as I can tell, in terms of the
ability for people to live there without without the iron fist.

(01:19:22):
You know, women were able to show their faces for instance.
You know, it's it's not like some of the other
countries that we've left. After we've left, after we leave,
it seems like it's always more radical.

Speaker 12 (01:19:36):
Why is there just a coincidence?

Speaker 4 (01:19:42):
Well, I think it's called blowback. It's the term you
know that used as a tradecraft term blowback, but not ran.
What people I think need to come to terms with
is that, of course Afghanistan was a losing proposition. But
uh Iraq uh is one about one fourth the size

(01:20:07):
of Iran, and I think it's at least Iraq is
at least double or more of the population. The terrain
is a lot more rugged, and I think there's a
good reason why it's called the graveyard of Empires. We
don't I don't think even if we had a coalition
with China, that was never going to happen. I don't
think we could take and hold Afghanistan or uh Iran.

(01:20:33):
It's the people there are Persian, they're not even Arab,
so it's a it's a little different heritage line, I
guess you could say, But it's just the roof of
the world's well is a big new Brazienski called it
the center for squares on a chessboard, and the concept

(01:20:57):
in the Western mind is whoever controls the four center
squares controls the world. And at least the court's a
big new Braziski. But I don't see why it matters
other than the fact that they have a bank that
is not a slave to the Rothchild Western banking Empire, so.

Speaker 12 (01:21:17):
That's why they've got to go.

Speaker 10 (01:21:19):
Yeah, that and the fact that they have their oral
revenues and are probably not using a lot of dollars
over there. I'm guessing.

Speaker 4 (01:21:27):
Well, the bricks, yeah, the Brazil, Russia, India, China, they
are Iran and China they're a key player in that.
I think probably the thinking is that they can take
down Iran and the rest of the bricks will fall down,
you know, they'll fall into place, I guess. But yeah,
it seems to be world financial domination. The domination is

(01:21:48):
the game.

Speaker 10 (01:21:49):
Yep, all comes back to the money junkies.

Speaker 4 (01:21:53):
Yep, exactly. But yeah, doctor Bill Warner has some pretty
good shortcuts. He has a dynamic battle map that explains
why we should not be ashamed of the crusades. Crusades
right to the ship one hundreds of years worth of
Islamic jihad. There's raping, pillaging, burning. They destroyed all the

(01:22:13):
Byzantine agriculture in Northern Africa. You know, the goat herders
just went through and just ate everything and anything that
wasn't Islam they burned it. So they burned libraries. If
everybody talks about the Golden Age of Islam and how
they invented this or that, you know, the flip side

(01:22:36):
of that coin. It's all the you know, the pillaging
and destruction that they did and still are doing. Jihad
is still going on. Thousands of thousands and thousands of
acts of terrorisms have have happened after September eleventh. It
doesn't really get talked about that much.

Speaker 10 (01:22:54):
Yeah, and I wonder how many of those the CIA
is behind, but could be. And quite a few.

Speaker 4 (01:23:00):
Christmas tree bombing like that Christmas tree bombing. Yeah, except
a kid who give him the van, built a fake
bomb and rush in and be the hero always saved
the Christmas tree from being bombed.

Speaker 10 (01:23:11):
Mohammed Mohammed Mohammud was Mohammed Muhammad basically.

Speaker 20 (01:23:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:23:16):
Well you remember the ninety ninety three World Trade Center bombing.
That was they had an informant on the inside and
he got made fun of for all of the money
that he lost trying to become a taxicab emon Salam.
I think he tried to get a taxicab driver's license
and all the money from his book got spent. And

(01:23:37):
you know he was he was the insider who said
the FBI came in and messed it up and otherwise
the nineteen ninety three World Trade Center bombing would not
have happened.

Speaker 12 (01:23:47):
So yeah, I believe that. I always thought that the
ninety three bombing was a test blast to see how
strong the.

Speaker 10 (01:23:58):
Oh what do you call those twins?

Speaker 4 (01:24:00):
The story, No, it goes.

Speaker 12 (01:24:03):
Ghost the girders or whatever they are, Well that hold
the building up.

Speaker 10 (01:24:09):
Something.

Speaker 12 (01:24:09):
I mean, those things are massive. I have pictures of them.

Speaker 10 (01:24:14):
Hang, what were you seeing their color?

Speaker 4 (01:24:17):
Okay? The official story basically says that some New Yorker thought, well,
these saw horses don't belong here, and move them where
the guy's truck was supposed to park at right next
to a major support column. The goal was to take
up that column, cause one tower to collapse and fall
into the other. And it could have worked. But this
driver that they picked to drive the bomb in there

(01:24:39):
could not have found that the parking space was taken already,
and he panicked and just found a random parking space,
and so the bomb is a lot less effective.

Speaker 10 (01:24:48):
Well, you know, it's important that he parks properly, because
we wouldn't want to be sighted by the place or something.

Speaker 4 (01:24:54):
He was told, he was told the bomb was going
to go off, he had to park.

Speaker 12 (01:24:58):
Yeah, I'll find my pictures that I have of those
girders I think they're called I'm not sure anyway, the
support posts for the towers, and they are massive.

Speaker 4 (01:25:12):
Yes, the cost to mitigate all the asbestos was more
than the real estate was worth.

Speaker 10 (01:25:16):
It exactly to demolish it. Yeah, thanks guys, Hey, thank you, Mike,
appreciate it. God bless you.

Speaker 4 (01:25:22):
Thank you.

Speaker 10 (01:25:23):
Ye talk to you later. All right, there's Mike and
Kentucky and we're just about up against the clock already.
But yeah, there's so many things. I mean, we could
talk about the Oklahoma City bombing, where certain key officials
were not there at the time. Janet Reno that you know,
all this stuff has been used for for various and

(01:25:44):
various purposes. In case the case of the Oklahoma City
thing that was right around the time as Waco, as
I recall, and you know, Janet Reno, Attorney General at
the time under the Clinton administration, up to her eyeballs
in that whole mess and then use that to go
after the militia groups, the patriot groups in a big way.

(01:26:05):
You know. But but but the whole official story was
so full of holes. It's just mind blowing how how
you can see through it. And you know, I recall it.
There were wasn't there a FEMA office there and they
didn't show up for work that day.

Speaker 42 (01:26:22):
There was a DEA office there, Okay, Yeah, and they
didn't show up.

Speaker 10 (01:26:29):
For work and probably records were destroyed, you know, because
there were a lot of talk, a lot of discussion
about the Clinton's being involved in the MINA cartel, you know,
so drug trafficking.

Speaker 42 (01:26:44):
Yeah, not only that, but the the reinvention of Government
project had already been kicked off, and the.

Speaker 10 (01:26:54):
Okay, well, hold your thoughts, we got to kick off
this break here. Stay with us. We'll be back in
a moment.

Speaker 16 (01:27:00):
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Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh, eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen ten.

Speaker 43 (01:28:03):
When atheist and Bible skeptics ask where Cain got his wife,
they aren't really looking for an answer. They merely want
to undermine the Bible. But you won't let them get
away with that after you listen to today's creation moment and
now our creation moments, ost Paul Taylor.

Speaker 44 (01:28:20):
The subject of Cain's wife is often used as an
excuse for not believing the account in Genesis. The problem
is stated, thus, Cain was the son of Adam and Eve.
Cain killed his brother Abel. So who were the people
east of Eden from which Cain took a wife? Did
God make lots of other people in different parts of
the world? Or is this just an inconsistency in the Bible,

(01:28:43):
part of its inherent weirdness? As Richard Dawkins once puts it,
it is in Genesis four that we read about the
conception and birth of the first two named children of
Adam and Eve, namely Cain and Abel. Later in the
chapter we read of the encounter between Cain and Abel,
where can Aine ends up murdering Abel. However, Cain and
Abel both appear to be adults at this point in

(01:29:05):
the account. Genesis five, verse four tells us that Adam
and Eve had other sons and daughters. Cain, Abel, and
later Seth are simply the only ones named, so there
could have been plenty of time before the events of
Genesis four for there to be a reasonably sized population,
and therefore it's logical to suppose that Cain's wife was

(01:29:26):
his sister. Although the Bible today forbids such close marriage,
this is because of the genetic damage it can cause.
In the second generation, there were as yet very few
genetic mutations, so there would have been little genetic danger
in such a marriage.

Speaker 43 (01:29:43):
Have you downloaded our Free Creation Moments app yet? It's
available now for all Android and Apple mobile devices. Listen
to her archive or radio broadcast anytime you like. Download
the app today by visiting Creationmoments dot Com in clicking
the large photo of phones and tablets.

Speaker 16 (01:30:00):
Are you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance,
then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
you're guaranteed to save money on your car insurance. Most
car insurances can be canceled at any time. That means
if you find a better deal, you can switch right away.
We're not just one company. We offer most of the

(01:30:20):
major brands of car insurance. We're like a discount supermarket
for car insurance, and it doesn't matter if you have
a good record or a bad driving record. Our agents
are experts at finding you the right car insurance for
your needs. Our average customer saves hundreds of dollars a
year when they call us to switch. So why don't
you make this one hundred percent free call right now

(01:30:42):
and see how much you can save on your car insurance.

Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen ten.

Speaker 26 (01:31:27):
The rest reason.

Speaker 10 (01:31:53):
All right, we're back. This is Governor America. As we
continue on here on the twenty first of February twenty
twenty six. VICKI, you were going to talk about the
Oklahoma City bombing, and I think connect it to the.

Speaker 12 (01:32:07):
The Trans Texas Corridor. Okay, Oklahoma City was right alongside
the highway, and in order to fulfill the plan of
the Trans Texas Corridor, they would have had to take
out the Murrah building anyway, but Oklahoma didn't as this

(01:32:33):
is as I understand it, Oklahoma did not want to
go along with the building of the Trans Texas Corridor,
which is if you look on a map and find
I thirty five, you'll see that it goes from I
think there's a town on the border of Mexico and

(01:32:57):
Texas that if you follow it up and you get
to Kansas City, the Oklahoma is in there somewhere, and
I think they would have had to take out take
it out anyway. And the government had also initiated a

(01:33:18):
project to make government buildings more efficient, more technologically controlled.
It all comes down to technology, the implementation of technology
in every aspect of government, and that's where we get

(01:33:39):
the partnership between corporations and government in the development and
the military, by the way, developing the technology to fully
automate our country. And so.

Speaker 10 (01:33:59):
But all the surveillance in the world isn't going to
do you any good if you elect communists to public office. Well, yeah,
empowered those communists to be able to use that surveillance
to control the people.

Speaker 12 (01:34:11):
Well. One thing that I found that surprised me when
I was looking at that the latest British guy, what
was it, Mandelssohn or anyway, he was a communist. And
I found out that Tony Blair was called himself a socialist.

(01:34:38):
And so that's where you get the conversion of labels
from communists to socialists. Yeah, and Tony Blair was one.
And so the British and the United States, through Bill Clinton,
Clinton and Blair, they were really working together to to

(01:35:00):
implement this technological police state for US.

Speaker 10 (01:35:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:35:07):
So, anyway, I just wanted to tell you that.

Speaker 20 (01:35:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:35:13):
Sarah Brady is quoted for The National Educator, Volume twenty five,
number eight, January nineteen ninety four. Set our task of
creating a socialist America can only succeed when those who
would resist have been totally disarmed.

Speaker 12 (01:35:29):
And that's what they've been trying to do.

Speaker 10 (01:35:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:35:31):
You know, Republicans have always been supportive of our gun
rights gun laws.

Speaker 10 (01:35:37):
But she admitted that that was their goal.

Speaker 12 (01:35:41):
Their plan is that the Sarah Brady.

Speaker 10 (01:35:44):
Yes from the Brady Bill. Okay, okay, yeah, exactly. Yeah.
It's not like Marcia and Greg that you grew up
and watching TV. No, it's a much more nefarious Brady.

Speaker 12 (01:35:59):
Yeah. By the way, I wanted to tell everybody that
on Steve Bannon's War Room this morning on America's Voice,
one of his guests talked about the global systems. He
wrote a book about it. He's the first one I've
heard in public talk about the global systems, globally integrated systems.

(01:36:25):
So if anybody out there, if you get a chance,
watch the first segment of the War Room and you'll
hear him talk about it. I didn't catch the name
of his book, but he gives the name of his
book and he mentions global systems. And that's so important

(01:36:50):
because that's what's really behind everything that's been happening to
the G seven countries, was that they were working together
to implement these global systems. Well, when you when you
implement a computer system like that, computer systems are management systems,

(01:37:12):
and so while you're thinking that, oh, you know, they've
made these tolls automated, so I could just go through
the toll booth. That's a management system and uh, it
keeps track of your license plate, what time you go through,
who you are, everything.

Speaker 10 (01:37:33):
Yeah, it's total information awareness implemented in the West. Absolutely,
And and that was something that came out. Total information
awareness became gain gained prominent prominence after nine to eleven.

Speaker 11 (01:37:48):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (01:37:48):
You know, we were talking about Mom Donnie earlier and
the protests that are going on over there, and you
up in New York City and uh, you know, I
think it's interesting now that he hasn't been there that long,
and I'll do you have these protests going on because
he's wanting wanting to raise property taxes in a major way.

Speaker 5 (01:38:05):
With the greatest respects in every campaign speech and every
debate where you engaged, we opened our ears to listen
now today accept the words echoing from us.

Speaker 45 (01:38:16):
Now, do your job is mare and leave our taxes
on it t having only two options, you're saying, if
we don't tax the rich, then I got to increase
property taxes. We are not uppon in Southeast Queens. We
are not part of your negotiation tactics. There's Oman, Donna,
you are out your dearn mind.

Speaker 10 (01:38:34):
So I think it's funny. Uh you know, they they
vote this communist in office, you know, and and and
you can say, well, okay, they have ranked choice voting,
So did they really vote them? I think many of
them did, actually, because New York has been headed in
that direction for a long time. But but they've got

(01:38:55):
who they who they evidently wanted, and now they're having
to live with the consequences of living under this communist
dictators rule. Dictator want to be anyway, and so.

Speaker 12 (01:39:12):
Go ahead.

Speaker 10 (01:39:13):
I guess my only hope here is that he'll fail
so badly that people will actually learn something from this
experience and say, hey, we don't want that here and
it won't spread. After looking at Gavin Newsom though, and
they still talk about running in for president, that kind

(01:39:33):
of leaves me without hope.

Speaker 12 (01:39:38):
We can look at Seattle as the model because Seattle
was really one of the first cities to really go leftist.
And fortunately that happened after I left. I lived there
and I used to commute over to Seattle. But they

(01:40:02):
they really went off the deep end with the socialism.

Speaker 10 (01:40:07):
Well, if there's anything good, uh, you know, at least
Trump is going to release the UFO files, So that's
something that we can all look forward to. After Obama
made his comments about uh the did you see Obama
made those comments about aliens being real? Yeah, yeah, yeah,

(01:40:28):
And now Trump's coming out and saying he's going to
declassify a bunch of UFO stuff. So there, there you go.
We can have war in the Middle East, we can
have all this crazy stuff going on everywhere. The Epstein files.
Forget about the raped children. You know, let's pay attention
to the DOW and let's pay attention to the UN,
the the U, A, p S or UFOs, well, any

(01:40:53):
more classified stuff you can read.

Speaker 46 (01:40:56):
How much they can do to baffle us with the BS,
that's what they do.

Speaker 10 (01:41:00):
Yeah, baffling with the BS. Absolutely. But you know, in
the meantime, opportunity zones go forward agendatory.

Speaker 12 (01:41:10):
So what that really pisses me off because the idea
of an opportunity zone is not new. That legislation was
passed in about nineteen ninety three to create enterprise zones,
and what it means is that they're going to flood

(01:41:31):
the area with a lot of federal money through corporations
and nonprofits, and they will be implementing the technology to
turn the people in that zone into profiteers, enslaving the
rest of the population.

Speaker 10 (01:41:51):
Well, no matter what you do, you've got to be sustainable, VICKI, Yeah, right.
And like all pushures of sustainable development, this CEO of
the Institute for Sustainability Leadership, Lindsey Hooper, she thinks that water, soil,
and oxygen should all be very limited to you. She

(01:42:12):
was on the panel at the World Economic Forum. Let's
know what we talk about capital.

Speaker 47 (01:42:16):
We tend to think only about financial capital, about cash,
financial assets, but we know that's not the only value
on which our economies depend. We know that every aspect
of every part of the economy is fundamentally dependent on nature.
As you highlighted that we breathe the water, we drink,
the soil, the oceans that we need for the food

(01:42:38):
that we need to consume, the minerals that we need
as inputs to technology into infrastructure.

Speaker 10 (01:42:43):
So what she's saying here is the entire economy based
is based upon the earth, the land, the minerals, you know,
the things that God has given us, and those are
the things that they want to commoditize.

Speaker 47 (01:42:57):
And without these forms of value, these forms of now capital,
we won't have economies. They are the fundamental building blocks
of our economies. But the ways, as you said, the
ways in which we have grown our economies, our models
of economic development have been incredibly successful for global prosperity.
But the unintended consequences of the current models.

Speaker 10 (01:43:17):
So we can't have that. See, we can't have successful economies.
We've got to do something about that.

Speaker 47 (01:43:25):
But the unintended consequences of current models of growth are
simply not sustainable on a finite planet. The amount of
resource that we are drawing in to our economies, Earth's resources,
and the amount of pollution and ways that we're pumping out,
whether that's through green house gas emissions, whether that's surge
into our water, whether it's plastics into the ocean, is

(01:43:46):
beyond the Earth's carrying capacity. And we know that that's leading,
so you said, to very significant direct impacts for society,
but very significant.

Speaker 10 (01:43:55):
Now, I wonder how they determine what the Earth's carrying
capacity is. You never really thought about that when one
of these clowns say this stuff.

Speaker 12 (01:44:04):
Well, all they all they're doing is just determining that
the number of useless eaters. And between the lines of
what she's saying is we've got to get rid of
these useless eaters because they're using our resources.

Speaker 10 (01:44:20):
Yeah, our resources as in her resources.

Speaker 12 (01:44:23):
As in her But you know, I just.

Speaker 10 (01:44:26):
Want to know this term carrying capacity that that implies
that there's been some sort of determination that the Earth
can only handle this much and no more, no much more.
Where is the where's the studies on that?

Speaker 12 (01:44:41):
Oh, there's studies were done in the early nineteen seventies.
It's all anecdotical books, books like Limits to.

Speaker 10 (01:44:49):
Growth, Yeah, which have been proven false over and over
and over again, exactly long wrong every single time.

Speaker 12 (01:44:59):
But they but they never gave up on that idea.
They're obsessed with the idea that we're going to run
out of our planets resources, even though every time it's
even come close, alternatives have been.

Speaker 10 (01:45:17):
Produced or the Earth has just adjusted. Yeah, imagine that,
you know, I mean it doesn't necessarily do. They base
the stuff on computer models, very much the same way they.

Speaker 12 (01:45:30):
Base it on their own insanity. That those people are
just absolutely nuts. You've heard of Earth Liberation.

Speaker 10 (01:45:39):
Front, Oh yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 12 (01:45:41):
Yeah, terrorist group, they were the ones. They were putting
spikes in spikes in trees and killing lumberjacks.

Speaker 10 (01:45:52):
Yep, yep, exactly. Yeah, well the insanity continues.

Speaker 47 (01:45:58):
It's very significant direct impacts for society, but very significant
financial costs for the economy. You can look at that
as you have and calculate that at.

Speaker 20 (01:46:09):
A macro level.

Speaker 32 (01:46:10):
But the way that.

Speaker 47 (01:46:11):
That's showing up as we're breaching these boundaries and breaching
these limits and undermining nature is showing up in very
practical ways that are showing up for financial risk for institutions.
Lack of water is leading to disruption of operations of
supply chains where water is needed as an essential input.

Speaker 10 (01:46:31):
Now in a moment, we're going to get into all
these data centers and the demand for water and the
sighting of these data centers sometimes in the desert where
water is extremely scarce, and all this is so that
these clowns, many of whom are at this World Economic
form event, so that they can make money collecting data

(01:46:53):
on you.

Speaker 12 (01:46:54):
Okay, well, look what happened to the Middle East. It's
a large part desert. They used they used up all
their water. Did you know that? Well, I know they
used to look like.

Speaker 10 (01:47:13):
Uh, Hawaii or there are things that that can be done,
and this is this is Israel has some technology and uh,
I believe it was Momart Kadafi he made the desert bloom.

Speaker 12 (01:47:29):
Yes, there you go see, and that's what he was.

Speaker 10 (01:47:32):
Very proud of. His water program there, the irrigation program
that he had before they destroyed it. So, I mean
there are things that can be done technologically to deal
with desertification.

Speaker 12 (01:47:43):
Well, they they also can desalinate water exactly, you know,
from the ocean. The whole thing is just stupid. If
you stop, and if you stop and think about what
they're saying, do a little bit of research, you'll see
that what they're saying is just simply not true. It's exaggerated.

(01:48:04):
There are a bunch of paranoid freaks.

Speaker 10 (01:48:07):
Well, I think what we're talking about here is the
carrying capacity for the bs. I think that that's really
the the limit to growth that we have here.

Speaker 12 (01:48:21):
Yeah, they exceeded my limits.

Speaker 10 (01:48:24):
Yeah, many many years ago anyway, but she's going to
try to push it a little further.

Speaker 47 (01:48:28):
Manufacturing or power production. The degradation of soil is leading
to reduced agricultural yields. The decline of pollinator species is
also having an impact on agriculture. So that's leading to
direct financial risks for organizations, the businesses, and ultimately for investors.
And we said, ultimately the reason for this is at

(01:48:49):
the moment, the way that decisions are made on an
everyday level within businesses and financial institutions is because we're
looking only at financial data, financial metrics that are not
factoring in nature. Nature is treated within the economy as
though it's unlimited and predominantly as though it's free, and
the risks and harms are simply not costed in financial terms.

(01:49:12):
We can cost them at a macro level, they're not
costed into day to day decision making. And the result is,
as a consequence, we've put all of our economies at
fundamental risk. We can't do business on a dead planet
if we're going to protect natural systems. One of the
solutions is to bring nature onto the balance sheet, to

(01:49:32):
bring nature into the ways that decisions are made within business,
to allocate a value to it, and to bring it
into accounting and financial mechic case.

Speaker 10 (01:49:42):
So right there, she's laid it out. Bring nature onto
the balance sheet. This is your technocrat tyranny, this is
your technate, your tech neate. That concept is based. It's
a monetary unit that she's talking about here, bringing your uh,

(01:50:03):
your nature onto the balance, in other words, creating a currency,
pricing things in terms of what it's going to cost nature.
And how is that going to be. It'll be arbitrary,
of course, you know, just like the art carrying capacity
for environmental CO two emissions is all arbitrary. But she's

(01:50:29):
laid it out there, didn't she.

Speaker 12 (01:50:31):
Yes, she did, And and there I do believe they
do have a national account for resource usage. But what
numbers are they using. They're making them up, is what
they're doing. Yeah, that's the I think the ESG score Economics,

(01:50:54):
social and governance. Y. Yeah, And and you.

Speaker 10 (01:51:00):
Don't hear too much about ESG anymore because it's not
fashionable anymore. Well, we have to change the uh, change
the uh. Too many people caught onto ESG, didn't.

Speaker 12 (01:51:12):
They, Well, yeah, because I mean it's a separate it's
a new way of accounting, and there there is no
way to validate any numbers.

Speaker 10 (01:51:24):
Yeah. I'm looking at a story here on Fox News, Okay,
and this is from February fifth, so earlier this month,
where an Arctic blast fueled scrutiny of Biden's eight billion
dollar electric bush bus push watchdogs site oversight failures. Now,

(01:51:46):
the Biden administration when he was in office, put all
this money into electric vehicles, and you know, none of
this would have had any kind of wings, would have
gained any strength, gained any momentum had it not been
for the subsidies. It's just like wind. Nobody wants wind
in a normal situation. You know. Uh, solar panels are okay.

(01:52:07):
I got one on top of my chicken coop and
it operates the little electric door that opens and closes
at sunrise and sunset. Okay, so I don't have to
run out there all the time. And you know, it's
a great innovation. It says it was a little pricey,
but it keeps on going. Chickendoors dot com. They're not
an advertiser on the show, but I recommend them because

(01:52:27):
those people have a small business. I've even called them
on Sunday and surprisingly they answered the phone and because
I was in a situation where I needed support and
they talked me through it. It was it was something easy.
But uh, you know, so chicken. But my point is

(01:52:48):
is that I bought a solar panel a little tiny
thing to power this door. So solar power can be
useful in certain circumstances, but not for feeding the grid,
and especially in cloudy areas like Michigan, where you're not
going to get a return on that investment. And it's

(01:53:09):
it's not a replacement for coal fired power plants. There
is no way that that solar and wind can replace that.
But in these people's minds, and.

Speaker 12 (01:53:19):
That's all subsidized, you know, you're paying for that with
through your taxes, yeah, theies.

Speaker 10 (01:53:28):
And it's not even necessarily even environmentally friendly. A lot
of these technologies, you know, you have to have the
mining of minerals, you know, the lithium batteries, all this stuff. None,
none of it is environmentally friendly. But it is an
opportunity for monetary grift. Yeah, and that's what it's really
about now. Fox News says the Arctic blast that snowed

(01:53:51):
in much of the East exposed not only the need
for road salt, but the possibility that untold tax payer
dollars were wasted on risky electric bus subsidy programs under
the Biden administration. According to critics of those initiatives, that's
the claim from Power of the Future, a top energy
advocacy and watchdog group that also compared the disbursement of

(01:54:14):
more than eight billion dollars over at least two related
federal subsidy programs to oversight failures by the Minnesota government
involving its Medicaid and children entitlement crises. Recently exposed e
buses have been purchased by transit agencies in part through
a low no emissions Low to no emissions grant program

(01:54:36):
mainly through the Federal Transit Administration that received one point
six billion dollar infusion during the Biden years. But see,
the thing is is these buses were failing, VICKI. They
couldn't they couldn't withstand the cold. And this is what
you have with these, with these you know, electric vehicles

(01:54:58):
don't like extreme temperatures, either hot or cold.

Speaker 12 (01:55:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:55:04):
I heard a talk show host up North's talking about
somebody in a Tesla. Extreme cold up there and they
were stranded and and you know, no heat, no nothing,
but their tesla didn't like the cold. Very expensive vehicle
ain't gonna do you very good if you can't go
in it, and certainly you'll freeze to death. And extreme temperatures,

(01:55:28):
especially up there when you're out in the middle of nowhere.

Speaker 12 (01:55:34):
It's crazy. Yeah, this is insane. The deeper you look
into it, the more insane it gets.

Speaker 10 (01:55:41):
Absolutely, And that's one thing that is actually good, at
least with the Trump administration. You know, I'm critical of
him a lot, but one thing I am glad of
is that we've pulled back from some of this nonsense,
at least for a while anyway, anyway, until.

Speaker 12 (01:56:00):
The next Democrat gets an office. Yeah, and then it'll
start up again.

Speaker 10 (01:56:04):
Yeah, if we uh, if we get that far before
we get blown to smithereens by the war. It's I
hate to be bleak, but anyway, all right, we're out
of this hour. One more hour to go. We'll take
the top of the hour break. We'll continue here in
a few minutes. Uh. I got some other stuff electric
vehicle related by the way, from the World Economic Forum,

(01:56:25):
other audio, other lots, lots, lots lots to cover, so
we'll cram as much of it in as we can
in the final hour. Don't go away.

Speaker 16 (01:56:35):
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then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
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(01:57:17):
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Speaker 1 (01:57:20):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh that's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen ten.

Speaker 22 (01:57:35):
Children are the greatest joy and our best hope for
better future. Friends, they are the future. But did you
know that millions of kids right here in our own
backyard are facing hunger every day. Without healthy food, it's
harder to grow, to thrive, to feel their best.

Speaker 38 (01:57:55):
The impact when children don't have enough to eat is
tremendous because when you're hungry and your basic needs aren't
being met, you cannot learn.

Speaker 22 (01:58:03):
Every child deserves to be fed. This is a problem
we know how to solve. Food is not just food,
it's energy, health, confidence, hope, and even love.

Speaker 48 (01:58:15):
Yes love pactist in the classroom contributes to kids being
more focused, which leads to higher grades and simply just
their well being.

Speaker 22 (01:58:26):
Learn more about how No Kid Hungry is helping end
child hunger in America at help noo kid hungry dot org.

Speaker 26 (01:58:49):
For the restoration of ournation, lov make.

Speaker 24 (01:59:02):
American family news almost epee. President Trump, delivering remarks that
Kusa Steel and Rome Georgia telling supporter is that democrats
affordability claims are unfounded and claims his administration is responsible
for lower prices.

Speaker 35 (01:59:15):
Airfares, hotels, car payments, rent, sports events, groceries.

Speaker 10 (01:59:21):
Everything's down.

Speaker 35 (01:59:22):
Everything's down, dairy, eggs, potatoes.

Speaker 49 (01:59:25):
And chicken.

Speaker 24 (01:59:26):
President Trump announces billions of dollars and thousands of troops
for peacekeeping for Gaza.

Speaker 31 (01:59:31):
Nearly fifty countries were represented at the inaugural meeting of
the Board of Peace chaired by President Trump, and.

Speaker 35 (01:59:38):
In terms of prestige There's never been anything close, because
these are the greatest world leaders.

Speaker 31 (01:59:45):
The Board of Peace was created as part of a
multi phase Gaza ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. The President
says several members are pledging seven billion dollars in aid
to Gaza. The US is committing ten billion dollars to
the Board of Peace.

Speaker 35 (01:59:58):
But every dollar spent is investment in stability and the hope.

Speaker 31 (02:00:02):
Still, dozens of US allies are so far not committing
to the Board, where a President Trump is seeking to
ultimately replace the United Nations. The President says he's working
with the UN to strengthen the institution at the White House.
Jared Halbern Fox.

Speaker 24 (02:00:16):
News firefighters battling two major wildfires in northern Texas. Fox
fourd Dallas Fort Worth's Dion England with.

Speaker 50 (02:00:23):
More more than two dozen North Texas fire departments are
sending help to those who are battling those Panhandle wildfires.
That's a deployment that totals about one hundred personnel from
the DFW area. Now those are firefighters who are already
there or there preparing it to deploy and travel there.

Speaker 10 (02:00:44):
Now.

Speaker 50 (02:00:44):
The Texas A and M Forest Service share the latest information.
The eight Ball fire in Armstrong County has scorched more
than nine thousand acres and it is currently twenty five
percent contained. The Lavender fire in Oldham County, also covering
nine one thousand acres, it is just ten percent contained.

Speaker 24 (02:01:02):
President Trump and members of his administration, like Commerce Secretary
Howard Lutnick, downplaying their relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,
both named in Justice Department Epstein files releases, but Attorney
General Pam Bondi insists there's no evidence the president committed
any crime. House Oversight Committee Chair James Comber says, from
what he sees, the President is innocent. Despite Democrats' demand

(02:01:24):
to release more files, and.

Speaker 1 (02:01:26):
What we've seen from the millions of documents that have been
released is that Donald Trump is completely exonerated in the
whole Epstein saga.

Speaker 24 (02:01:35):
The mainstream media is doing its level best to rehabilitate
Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortes after a disastrous debut on the
world stage last weekend. Steve JORDANLL reports.

Speaker 49 (02:01:47):
Vice President J. D Vance called it the most uncomfortable
twenty seconds of television he'd ever seen.

Speaker 51 (02:01:53):
You know, I think that, uh, this is such a
You know, I think that.

Speaker 49 (02:02:02):
This is a Democrats through Congresswoman Alexandria Ocazio Cortez into
the deep end of the pool last weekend at the
Munich Security Conference, and it became painfully obvious to the
world that she forgot her water wings. But Nick von
DeCaro of Media Research Center says The New York Times
dutifully ran cover for her in an article that described
AOC as feeling misunderstood.

Speaker 52 (02:02:24):
Oh yeah, of course, as another infamous Conservators pounce narrative,
not a bartender term member of Congress was out of
her element.

Speaker 49 (02:02:31):
AOC didn't help herself out by trying to critique Secretary
of State Marco Rubio's speech, who, by contrast, was coherent
and literate.

Speaker 51 (02:02:39):
My favorite part was when he said that American cowboys
came from Spain. I believe the Mexicans and descendants of
African enslaved people's would like to have a word.

Speaker 49 (02:02:53):
Fonda Carlo says, it's nonsense, like thinking so called African
enslaved peoples had anything at all to do with the
heritage of amer and cowboys. That are going to sink
any chance AOC might have had at the White House.
Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckeby Sanders says, with or without AOC,
the Democrat field for twenty twenty eight will be remembered
for its lack of intellect.

Speaker 53 (02:03:13):
I think twenty eight is looking really good for Republicans.

Speaker 49 (02:03:17):
I'm Steve Jordal.

Speaker 24 (02:03:18):
There's more news online at AFN dot net and download
the AFN mobile app for your Apple or Android device.
I'm Rustype.

Speaker 32 (02:03:31):
Talk to me Holy issues at impack dobty information for
strategy to the free. Talk to me till the secrets

(02:04:03):
expose the lies, thors the crimes of the empire. When
the situation is dire, talk to me, Governor.

Speaker 11 (02:04:27):
Truth for a.

Speaker 19 (02:04:28):
Sition of vation.

Speaker 32 (02:04:33):
Govern America, We'll address any situation. Come together for a
little deliberations.

Speaker 10 (02:05:02):
Welcome back to the broadcast Hour number three. It continues
to be February twenty first edition twenty twenty six, and
this is Governor America. Vicky Davis is here.

Speaker 4 (02:05:12):
I'm dear.

Speaker 10 (02:05:13):
In weeks we were talking in the end of the
last hour about electric buses and electric cars and what
a mess they are certainly pretty much worthless in the
cold and in the extreme heat as well. Batteries fail,
but it isn't going to stop. You know, our idiot
mis Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer, who wants to be president
of the United States by the way, Yeah, she just

(02:05:36):
had a recent spectacular failure as far as being questioned
on I think she was at the Munich Security Conference.
I didn't clip the audio, but it was actually very
painful to listen to because it received wide scale. You've
probably seen the clips. They were talking I think AOC

(02:05:58):
was there, and they were talking to her about foreign policy,
and I mean she just totally fell on her face.
And then they were asking h Whitmer, uh, some question
about Ukraine and what the endgame should be and and
and and she totally couldn't answer the question. In fact,

(02:06:19):
she deferred to AOC. She said, AOC knows more about
foreign policy than she did.

Speaker 12 (02:06:25):
Oh my god. So dumb and dummer.

Speaker 10 (02:06:31):
Yeah. So, I mean, I I, you know, I don't
know that that would be a sum. But you know,
the Democrats keep running these people Jasmine Crockett. Jasmine Crockett
makes AOC look like like Einstein or something. It's it's incredible.
Why do where do they find these people? And how
why do they keep running them. That's my question. Why

(02:06:55):
more importantly, why do keep people keep voting.

Speaker 46 (02:06:57):
For them, because like, can't get any smart people to
pursue this, the crazy agenda of destroying our country.

Speaker 10 (02:07:10):
You know, Yeah, I don't know why you'd want to
destroy the best country that's ever arguably existed.

Speaker 12 (02:07:18):
Well, they're looting it, They're looting our country.

Speaker 11 (02:07:22):
And so yeah, you know.

Speaker 10 (02:07:25):
So anyway, Whitmer, who by the way, hopped on a
fossil fuel guzzling plane that pooped out a lot of
CO two into, you know, into the atmosphere. She she
hopped on that plane so she could travel over there
to hobnob with the elite at the World Economic Forum.

Speaker 12 (02:07:43):
Rules for thee but.

Speaker 10 (02:07:45):
Not for me. Here you go trip of course, being
on the Michigan taxpayers back, so you know, all under
the guys of economic development, VICKI uh, you know. But
she's over there talking about how long, oh, how great
electric vehicles are.

Speaker 14 (02:08:02):
Coming from the state of Michigan.

Speaker 41 (02:08:03):
You know, we produced over twenty percent of the autos
in the US, and we're very proud of that. We
also recognize that there are a lot of head wins
right now.

Speaker 14 (02:08:14):
Yeah, politically and on the home front.

Speaker 41 (02:08:16):
But we've been really bullish about making sure that we're diversifying.
And I was just at the Detroit Auto Show the
other day.

Speaker 10 (02:08:25):
No, you had no choice but to diversify. That's the point,
because now you have a divided legislator. A divided legislature
means that you can't cram through all your radical crap,
which again, folks, not a fan of the Republicans either.
But here's the thing. You still have to vote. You

(02:08:46):
have to vote because it does make a difference if
you don't vote. So this is where you know, again,
I understand all the problems. I understand the party system,
the two party one parties system, but there still are
consequences for elections if you don't show up, so for

(02:09:08):
your state and local stuff, even if you don't vote
for a candidate in the national election. Okay, fine, but
you still have to show up for the local stuff
because it's just too important. There's too much here in
Michigan that has happened as a result of conservative people,
good people not showing up to vote.

Speaker 41 (02:09:29):
There's a host of both internal combustion engine vehicles and
evs that vehicles. I think it's exciting to see the
transition continue to happen, although I for one would like
to see us continue to move as fast as we can.
Right now in the States, it's important that we've got

(02:09:50):
a diversity of choices for consumers. So we're very focused
on making sure we've got the skills to support that,
that the companies can be competitive while they pursue both,
and that's been a central focus of our work at
the state.

Speaker 10 (02:10:06):
Blah blah blah. Now all of a sudden, she's a
big moderate, she's a big moderate. She's eyeing the Oval office.
That's what's going on here. Most people don't want an
electric vehicle. The subsidies have been cut. That's that's why
they're Oh, we're doing all of the above. Why we
want to do electric vehicles and internal combustion. We're all

(02:10:28):
about diversity, don't you know? We're about diversity.

Speaker 12 (02:10:32):
Well, I think the auto companies would have gone broke
if they didn't, you know, stop trying to push electric
vehicles because nobody wants them. Nobody can afford them.

Speaker 10 (02:10:47):
Yeah, nobody wants them. And even if they even if
they could bring the price down, they're still an inferior product,
you know, with with an internal combustion engine. You can
use your car as an energy generating generator. Okay. If
you have an inverter, you can attach that to the battery.
You can produce power. You can produce AC power. Okay,

(02:11:14):
Well you can't do that with an electric vehicle. All
you have in the batteries is what you have in
the batteries. After that's gone, you're done.

Speaker 12 (02:11:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:11:23):
So in every way, imaginable electric vehicles are an inferior product.
And you know, but that doesn't stop them, you know.
And they were lamenting the Trump pullback from ev subsidies. But
if people wanted them, you know, why would they need subsidies.

Speaker 41 (02:11:42):
I appreciate what Sella said with regard to having a
very clear and static policy that has been encouraged and
fed early on, and now it's taken off and it's
durned by consumers. I think that's one thing that the
United States has not done, and that is I think
the back and forth policies at the national level have
have made it more difficult for industry to throw all

(02:12:06):
in and and ramp up the way that some of
the Chinese companies have been able to.

Speaker 10 (02:12:11):
It's not difficult at all. If people, if there's a demand,
then the companies would go all in. So what she's
saying here is nonsense. You don't need subsidies if there's
a demand, right right, I mean, how many other examples
do we have to give? I mean, there's if there's
a demand for it, then you don't need the government

(02:12:34):
to fund it for it to be successful. I mean literally,
what she's saying is absolute crap.

Speaker 41 (02:12:41):
I think that's something that we're working to overcome. But
alas I am the governor of Michigan at the president
of the United States, and so I think that that's
something we're trying to de risk, but has been something
that's set.

Speaker 14 (02:12:53):
Us apart and made it harder in the States.

Speaker 54 (02:12:56):
Do you think the current US tariffs are actually better
a fitting China?

Speaker 41 (02:13:02):
Oh, we could have a couple hours to talk about tariffs.

Speaker 14 (02:13:06):
But I think that there's tariffs have a place now.

Speaker 10 (02:13:11):
Remember me telling you earlier that she had said that,
mm hmm, there she is there, she said it, tariffs
have a place.

Speaker 28 (02:13:19):
Now.

Speaker 10 (02:13:19):
How long have they spent ever since Trump has been
implementing tariffs, how long have they spent trying to demonize Trump? Oh,
my goodness, you're driving up the prices of everything. Why
this is a tax on the American people. Blah blah
blah blah blah. Here she's taking the more moderate approach
and saying, yeah, they do have a place.

Speaker 12 (02:13:38):
Well, actually, it kind of did have that effect. It
allowed it allowed our price not not all prices, but
it allowed prices of a lot of stuff to go up.
And once the prices go up, they don't go down.

Speaker 10 (02:13:55):
Well, here, here, here's the thing. Here's the thing, Biki.
We we we've enjoyed and I'll put that word in quotes.
We've enjoyed cheap communist Chinese crap for a long time. Right,
and where have the jobs gone? Affordability has continued to
go down. Why is that? Well, everything was cheap, right.

Speaker 12 (02:14:18):
Yeah, my son, I have to tell you this. My
son used to term that just cracked me up. He
called it the shittification of American products. That wasn't original
with him. He heard it, passed it on, But that
that's really what's happened.

Speaker 10 (02:14:38):
Well, the thing is is that as tariffs are nothing new,
they're how the government funded itself prior to the income tax,
you know, prior to nineteen thirteen. You know, the George
Washington talked about tariffs. That's how they funded the government.

Speaker 12 (02:15:00):
And that that's how they allowed our economy to grow
so that we wouldn't be flooded with cheap imports from
Great Britain exactly.

Speaker 10 (02:15:12):
So the point is is that this is protectionism, and
protectionism has been a smear word that the globalists have
tried to use and have used against anybody who was
promoting tariffs. But you have to protect your workers. So
I say, hey, let's welcome, let's embrace I embrace protectionism.

(02:15:34):
I do too.

Speaker 12 (02:15:36):
But because they've they've destroyed the American middle class on
the low end, not the low end, I mean the
low end of the middle class. And so this is
just a way to rebuild it because they're Americans too,

(02:15:57):
you know, they deserve to make a living. Who's that
the lower middle class?

Speaker 10 (02:16:04):
Oh absolutely, yeah, absolutely, yeah exactly.

Speaker 12 (02:16:06):
The people that are not involved in tech related jobs.

Speaker 10 (02:16:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 41 (02:16:13):
Anyway, she continues, but it has to have a strategy
behind them, a goal that's been articulated. There is no
question that the chaotic policies that we've been seen coming
out of Washington, d C. Have created a lot of hardship,
not just in the auto industry, but for consumers in
the United States, and obviously for relationships globally, I think

(02:16:36):
there's a lot of downsides to the way that they've
been implemented in the last twelve months.

Speaker 10 (02:16:43):
Now. I agree with her on that actually, which is
really amazing that I actually agree with her on anything.
But I do think, and we've been critical repeatedly on
this on this broadcast about how the tariffs have whimsically
been implemented. But anyway, Trump, well, I.

Speaker 12 (02:17:04):
Think he was using them as a negotiating tool, and
so that's why he's been flip flopping. Okay, now there's tariffs,
now there's not, which is fine with me. I don't
really care. What I care about is that they rebuild
our economy to let the American people make a living well.

Speaker 10 (02:17:29):
The problem with it is that it makes it difficult
for businesses to adjust. You can't plan anything in an
environment where you got to industry has got to be
able to do what industry needs to do, and supply
chains get disrupted.

Speaker 12 (02:17:46):
To well, supply chains right now, there.

Speaker 10 (02:17:49):
Are people having difficulty. I'm not in favor of pharmaceutical drugs,
but unfortunately some people have to have them supply.

Speaker 12 (02:17:56):
They're getting disrupted legal because they're a cartel. Who and
when you have cartels, they control the supply and the
price and everything else, which is why our pharmaceuticals want
sky high. Yeah, well, because they're a supply chain cartel.

Speaker 10 (02:18:19):
I think Trump backing away from electric vehicles is a
good thing, albeit very upsetting for the panelists at the
World Economic Forum, and that would include Elaine Buckberg. She
is the former chief economist at General Motors, and she
thinks we need to be more like China and dictate
what people are able to buy.

Speaker 55 (02:18:39):
China's used a wide array of policy instruments going back
at least a decade to both incentivize production incentivized battery production,
so subsidizing both those and incentivizing the consumer. And to
give an example of how power these fold these are

(02:19:00):
in a market where half the new vehicle purchases are
someone either buying for the first time or adding a
second car. In the biggest cities in the country, you
can't get a license plate, you can't register that car
without it being a new energy vehicle, either a bed,
a pure battery elect vehicle, or a plug in hybrid.

(02:19:21):
So that really drives the consumer in that direction, so
they've been willing.

Speaker 12 (02:19:26):
To spend more.

Speaker 14 (02:19:27):
And if you.

Speaker 55 (02:19:28):
Look at or report out of MITS Center for Energy
Policy Research that shows the spending has been much higher.
But there is that stable policy commitment. And one of
the most powerful things in terms of incentivizing the product
that automakers bring to the table is these long term

(02:19:50):
plans for greenhouse gas and fuel economy regulation that compel
the automakers to plan what vehicles they're going to bring
into market. US automakers when I was such typical planning
process is five years before a vehicle comes into market
and you're planning to keep it there for six years.
So keeping those incentives stable that's really powerful. That's a

(02:20:11):
place where the US is really pulling back under the
Trump administration god and either making or planning to make
those incentives easier, and Europe is considering the same thing.

Speaker 10 (02:20:21):
I'm so happy take some five years to plan and
all the plans have been disrupted. I say, good, thank
god that was disrupted. So now they're going to have
to go and wait another five years before they can
implement nothing but electric vehicles.

Speaker 12 (02:20:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 46 (02:20:42):
I don't think they will though, because they're not there's
not a market for them.

Speaker 12 (02:20:48):
They're too expensive and they're not practical.

Speaker 10 (02:20:51):
No, it's just like the mRNA shots. They want to
do everything to cram that down your throat. So they
don't care about markets. That's just it. The market is.
You'll do what you're told, and this is what you're
gonna buy, and you won't be able to you hurt her.
You won't be able to register your vehicle in the city.
You won't be able to get a license plate unless

(02:21:11):
it's a so called clean energy vehicle.

Speaker 12 (02:21:14):
Yeah, you're right.

Speaker 10 (02:21:16):
I mean that's what she wants us to adopt, a
China model. Uh so. Uh. The moderator, I think, ask
for a show of hands in the room of the people. Now,
this is kind of funny, all the people who own
an electric vehicle, and a few hands went up. Uh

(02:21:36):
not enough hands though, right now. Gretchen Whitmer, however, I
don't think I I don't think her hand went up.

Speaker 12 (02:21:48):
I would have been surprised if it did, you know.

Speaker 10 (02:21:51):
But they so. So he asked her what I think,
He asked her what kind of car she drove? Put
your hands?

Speaker 54 (02:21:56):
Who in the room actually owns an eBay? Crazy on vehicle.

Speaker 10 (02:22:02):
Very good.

Speaker 54 (02:22:03):
Okay, that's really interesting, Governor.

Speaker 10 (02:22:04):
What time of call do you have?

Speaker 14 (02:22:06):
I haven't driven in eight years.

Speaker 54 (02:22:08):
If you could buy one, would you buy an evy?

Speaker 10 (02:22:10):
So she doesn't have a car at all? Her husband?
Is that a car?

Speaker 12 (02:22:14):
She probably has a car that the city pays for
and a driver.

Speaker 10 (02:22:19):
Well, is that electric vehicle? I'm betting not.

Speaker 12 (02:22:22):
I'd bet not too.

Speaker 10 (02:22:24):
So she hasn't driven an eight years. That's a good
way of not answering a question, you know, good and well,
she's got a car somewhere. Sure, and it's not an
electric vehicle, because otherwise she would have probably said, yeah.

Speaker 12 (02:22:36):
I own one and just love it.

Speaker 10 (02:22:39):
Yeah, it's the best thing ever. And never mind the
fact that the Left was we're keying them all over
the place not too long ago. This just goes to
show you how insane it is.

Speaker 14 (02:22:50):
Eve or hybrid.

Speaker 41 (02:22:51):
Yes, that's going to be the next car that I
buy when I'm back to being a private citizen next year.

Speaker 10 (02:22:56):
Okay, there, Yeah, sure it is. Can we hold her
to that? Will anybody follow up on that? Probably not?

Speaker 12 (02:23:03):
No, she'll fade off under the sunset.

Speaker 10 (02:23:06):
Yeah, Well, let's hope she doesn't end up president of
the United States President Whitmer.

Speaker 12 (02:23:12):
I could never vote for somebody like her.

Speaker 10 (02:23:14):
Oh no, you wouldn't. But there's believe me. As somebody
here is from the Great Lakes State, I can tell
you there are plenty of idiots here that will that's scary.

Speaker 12 (02:23:25):
That's ary scary.

Speaker 10 (02:23:27):
So uh, final clip on this series, this is Stella Lee,
who is the executive vice president of BYD that's one
of the largest vehicle makers for the Communist Chinese. She
says they're trying to tackle the fact that it takes
too long to charge these sys.

Speaker 56 (02:23:43):
Add something here because in China the government the deed
the support to add almost four times more for charging place.

Speaker 14 (02:23:52):
Than the gasoline station. But during the.

Speaker 56 (02:23:56):
Holiday season, still people complaining they are waiting longline to
charging because of the charging takes like a half hour,
twenty minutes, one hour.

Speaker 14 (02:24:04):
It's not the effective.

Speaker 56 (02:24:05):
So that's the reason BID latest introduced flash charging is
one week word charging, then it's five minutes two minutes
you get four hundred kilometers. So charging speed is as
faster as a gas refueling gas and then this will
be big game changer. So BID start leading this direction.
Then ourselves also invests this charging station, and not only

(02:24:28):
in China but globally in every country we met with
all the utility company. So it means this flash charging
technology going to imput charging effunciency like by maybe ten forty,
like thirty times more So then by this way, it's
like in the future, the people will no longer have

(02:24:49):
concern and leaving. In US, people like drive long distance.
But then if you don't have charging, then each time
every five hundred four hundred is three hundred miles, you
need to stop for one hour.

Speaker 14 (02:25:01):
It's impossible.

Speaker 56 (02:25:01):
But now with this flash charging two minutes five minutes,
you get another five hundred. This will be the key
game changer in next five to ten years.

Speaker 54 (02:25:12):
What about the interoperability between charging network story byd obviously
investing heavy in that charging technology, will you allow other
carmakers to tap into that as well?

Speaker 56 (02:25:22):
Yes, yeah, this charging infrastruction will open to everybody. But
the key stuff you have charger side another side in
the battery in the car side. You need to have
like a one thousand color vote this kind of capability,
and also you need to have battery can accept this
quick fast charging. So but we saw the industry each

(02:25:44):
time like a bid as a technology leader, we introduce
something everybody will follow. So we're thinking in three to
in three to five years, everybody will have this capability.
That's the reason that's the we're thinking about ev is
not only bring this sustainable future, but a re innovation
because these mega technology become more like a popular then

(02:26:07):
the tachology really changing the whole like a whole.

Speaker 10 (02:26:10):
Would charging is really important.

Speaker 14 (02:26:13):
Go ahead of right, they diverted you from critical minerals.
So coming back to that.

Speaker 55 (02:26:16):
I think that to get to continue to get conviction
and policy conviction around evs in the US and Europe,
diversification of critical mineral supply chains and where supply chains
are very important. So China has dominant roles in processing
of most of these.

Speaker 14 (02:26:34):
So there's a couple of different things.

Speaker 55 (02:26:36):
One is diversifying where processing is done even more importantly
than extraction.

Speaker 14 (02:26:40):
It's really about processing.

Speaker 55 (02:26:41):
The other is changes in battery chemistries that can move
away from these some of these minerals where supply chains
are more challenging different ways, including for example, moving away
from cobalt, which is dominantly from the Democratic Republic of Congos.

Speaker 10 (02:26:56):
Okay, all right, we got to take the bottom the
art break, we'll be back.

Speaker 16 (02:27:00):
Are you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance,
then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
you're guaranteed to save money on your car insurance. Most
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(02:27:20):
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for car insurance, and it doesn't matter if you have
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(02:27:42):
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Speaker 1 (02:27:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen.

Speaker 21 (02:28:01):
Doctor Gary Chapman with a love language minute.

Speaker 57 (02:28:04):
As we come to the end of the year, many
people are suffering from the pain of Christmas debt. Others
are troubled with the upheavals of the financial markets. Let
me remind you of the words of Jesus. A man's
life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.
If you understand that truth, it will change your life forever.
Real satisfaction is found not in money, but in loving

(02:28:27):
relationships with God, our spouse, children, and friends. Loving relationships
are our greatest assets. Most of us could live with
less money, and may have necessity have to do so.
But if that helps us focus on relationships, then we
still come out winters. Why not have a family soup night,

(02:28:47):
eat only soup and crackers, and thank God that you
are alive and together.

Speaker 21 (02:28:53):
Doctor Gary Chapman is the author of the Five Love Languages.
For more, visit five Loovelanguages dot com.

Speaker 53 (02:29:00):
Moms, you can't imagine how important it is for your
children to know that you spend time.

Speaker 21 (02:29:06):
With the Lord.

Speaker 58 (02:29:06):
I remember the mornings and even now I wake up
to hear someone weeping in our front room, only to
walk in and find my mother on her knees praying
for them.

Speaker 53 (02:29:15):
To know that when you wake them up, you've already
prayed for them.

Speaker 58 (02:29:19):
Child would just go through me and I would start crying.

Speaker 53 (02:29:22):
Even now, whenever I'm tempted to skip my time with
the Lord, I have the image of a mom and
dad who spent time with God first thing in the morning.

Speaker 58 (02:29:30):
But how comforting it was to hear her and see
her there, just her and her God. I will always
hide that in my mind.

Speaker 53 (02:29:38):
Your children need to know that the words of Isaiah
fifty are true for you. He wakens me morning by morning,
wakens me like one being taught.

Speaker 58 (02:29:47):
Watching her from my childhood, I have learned to make
my own prayer time with just me and God. I
love you, Mom, Thank you so very much.

Speaker 53 (02:29:55):
With seeking Him, I'm Nancy Demos Walkmouth.

Speaker 16 (02:30:00):
Are you looking for the cheapest prices on car insurance,
then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
you're guaranteed to save money on your car insurance. Most
car insurances can be canceled at any time. That means
if you find a better deal, you can switch right away.
We're not just one company. We offer most of the

(02:30:20):
major brands of car insurance. We're like a discount supermarket
for car insurance, and it doesn't matter if you have
a good record or a bad driving record. Our agents
are experts at finding you the right car insurance for
your needs. Our average customer saves hundreds of dollars a
year when they call us to switch. So why don't
you make this one hundred percent free call right now

(02:30:42):
and see how much you can save on your car insurance.

Speaker 1 (02:30:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen.

Speaker 11 (02:31:00):
In two.

Speaker 26 (02:31:25):
For the restoration of a nation. Govern America.

Speaker 10 (02:31:41):
Welcome back to the broadcast final half hour. We're in
the home stretch. Governamerica dot com is the website for
the show. That's Governamerica dot com and Vicky give your
information out if you would please.

Speaker 12 (02:31:55):
Okay, my website is the Technocratic Tyranny dot My older
website is Channelingreality dot com and my email address is
on both websites.

Speaker 10 (02:32:08):
Yeah, and sharing the information from the World Economic Forum
of it's electric vehicles. You know, they're talking about how
to make them better. You know, it seems to be
like this is a conversation that maybe they should have
had before trying to replace the internal combustion engine with
this garbage. You know, smart thought, smartphones, smart TVs, smart watches,

(02:32:28):
all of this stuff is proven that people generally like
new technology, and so if the product is good, people
will probably try it. But what you don't like is
a cumbersome, impractical, and excessively exorbitantly costly piece of garbage
that won't last and you can't use it for what

(02:32:49):
you need it for when you need it.

Speaker 12 (02:32:51):
Right, and it's not as good as what they're replacing, right.

Speaker 10 (02:32:56):
Yeah, I don't want it because I know it's a
step in the direction of losing our right to travel.
You know, they're slowly phasing out the right to travel.
All of those people in Florida who lost power because
the hurricane came through, they were able to travel out
of the state and get supplies because they had gas cars.
The power companies that worked on the lines, they were

(02:33:17):
able to get the electric back on because they were
driving diesel trucks. They weren't driving electric trucks.

Speaker 12 (02:33:26):
Yeah, having an electric vehicle in a weather event like that,
I mean, you're stuck no matter what's coming at you.

Speaker 10 (02:33:35):
Yeah, so let's let's hope to heaven. You know that
that this insanity won't ever come back again, that that
smarter minds will prevail. You know, we're seeing in various states,
California being one of them, Michigan being another. They're they're
they're trying to push a per mile tax. I think Oregon,

(02:33:56):
Oregon or Washington State, maybe both. I don't know. I'd
have to go back and search you again. They've already
done something like that. Uh, you know, and they're trying
to replace the gas tax, which they say is is
being supplanted by the electric vehicles. It's like I told
my wife, you know, when I heard this, I said, oh, yeah,

(02:34:17):
there's so many electric vehicles everywhere. I think I've seen
like one or two on the highway when I'm going
down there. What I'm saying, one or two?

Speaker 12 (02:34:28):
It would be really great if we had sane people
leading our country.

Speaker 10 (02:34:35):
No, it's just a bunch of greedy bastards. They want
more and more and more all the time. Out of here. Yeah,
all right, I'll take you.

Speaker 12 (02:34:43):
Does they keep implementing technology more and more and more technology. Well,
technology isn't cheap.

Speaker 10 (02:34:50):
Right exactly. Let's go back to the Phone's got a
couple of calls on the line. Let's go to Vancouver, BC. Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead please?

Speaker 4 (02:34:58):
Oh yeah, I just had to call back.

Speaker 23 (02:35:01):
One of Michigan's greatest sons, Bob Seeger, wrote that song
in fifty five we were making thunderbirds, and no truer
words could be spoken, because you can't get when it
comes to weight. Electrical energy can't handle the weight. If
you're sitting on a two ton battery, who wants to

(02:35:22):
sit on two tons o lithium?

Speaker 22 (02:35:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (02:35:24):
Not only that, but they are they're tearing up the
roads at a greater pace. Yeah. So I think if
they want to do a permile tax tax to people
that are actually driving the electric vehicles, yeah, but they're
not promoting that idea. Yeah, if you want to own
an electric vehicle, then pay the permile tax, but don't

(02:35:46):
force it on the rest of us. It's just another
excuse to take more of your heart and money.

Speaker 23 (02:35:53):
Right when I was a child, I was living in
la with my great aunt, and the electric vehicles they
had there were specifically for shopping, but we saw one
at the shopping center.

Speaker 28 (02:36:05):
Right.

Speaker 23 (02:36:06):
That's the efficiency of an electric vehicle about a mile
from your house to the shopping center. Back again, but
look at the innovation that built the United States. Look
where we were in one hundred years ago, in nineteen
twenty five, United States entrepreneurs were building America and they
were doing it privately, with all this political bs and without.

(02:36:32):
I'll hope to talk to you next week.

Speaker 59 (02:36:34):
Right, Yeah, that's the important point.

Speaker 10 (02:36:36):
Yeah, thank you very much, appreciate that. Yeah, my in
laws have a little golf cart thing that they used
to ride around on up and down the street, you know,
And that's fine. I'm not against that.

Speaker 12 (02:36:49):
I mean, as long as you don't get on the highway.

Speaker 10 (02:36:52):
Well, as long as you don't get hit by a
real car, well that too. But they, you know, people
ride around golf clubs and golf courses and play golf
with a little electric vehicle. Hey, I'm all for that.
That's that'd be fine. Just don't force it on me.
You know, the free market is the way to go.
Let's go to Texas. Hello, you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Hey, Darren, Vicky,

(02:37:18):
Hey Steve.

Speaker 52 (02:37:18):
I got something wonderful the other day.

Speaker 10 (02:37:21):
By the way, before you get to your wonderful speaking
a wonderful yeah. Uh. Steve did a great show last
week on AI. He had a pan, he had he
had people on talking about the They did both the
pros and the cons of AI, and so I encourage
people to go check that show out. If you didn't
hear it, it should be in the archives at at RBN.

(02:37:44):
So anyway, yeah, go ahead, sorry about that.

Speaker 52 (02:37:48):
Well, I appreciate it, Thanks for the thanks for that.

Speaker 10 (02:37:52):
No, a lot.

Speaker 52 (02:37:54):
Of subject maybe on subject, but the AI, not AI
than the ev thing man these acronyms.

Speaker 10 (02:38:01):
Right, a few.

Speaker 52 (02:38:05):
Years ago, our supermarket installed HGV it's the Texas only
type chain, I do believe, installed a couple of chargations
powered by Shell. They were some kind of supercharger. I
think they were the Tesla things, and oh god, they
were obnoxious. The first day they came on, they had

(02:38:25):
advertisements on it and they were flashy and a big
old led on the side, and I say, oh, that's
going to go for real. Well, well, as the years
kind of went by, I kept noticing that there was
nobody parked there. Nobody, nobody, nobody, And this is a
parking lot with several hundred cars most of the time.

(02:38:49):
In fact, I had to park there during the time
before the end of the world. The last freeze or
snowstorm that we got. While everybody was buying their toilet paper,
I parked in the eedplot and well, anyways, I went
there that last week and they were taking them out.

Speaker 48 (02:39:11):
Well really, I bet anything.

Speaker 52 (02:39:13):
Yeah, they were just yanking them, so huge transformers sitting
there and they were in palettes when I saw them.
And then they had a crane park next to it
that they must have rented.

Speaker 59 (02:39:25):
And I was very excited.

Speaker 10 (02:39:26):
Yeah it worms my heart, Yeah, worms my.

Speaker 48 (02:39:30):
Heart by there, and I'd take pictures, right, I wanted
to catch and improve myself wrong that somebody used them,
but they didn't.

Speaker 10 (02:39:40):
Yeah, it's the same thing here in Michigan, you know,
even more so here. People should be using them. But
I see I've only seen like maybe one car two
with the most using the big long lines of ones
that we have. We have a local grocery store called
Meyer and it's a chain and they got all those

(02:40:01):
electric you know, vehicle charging places. You know, they got
a line of them, and there's several of them there,
but you rarely see people park there, at least for me,
I can only speak for my own personal experience. One
or two. Usually it's one if any at all, but
most of the time they're empty. And if any place
is going to have lots of electric vehicles, it should

(02:40:24):
be a blue state or at least a purple state
like Michigan, you know. And yeah, there's just not a
lot of demand for it. So yeah, nothing would make
me happier than to see them pull those things out.
That's end this madness once and for all.

Speaker 52 (02:40:41):
Yeah, where did the money come from my supermarket?

Speaker 10 (02:40:44):
It came from the federal government, you know it did,
otherwise it wouldn't be there.

Speaker 52 (02:40:48):
Yeah, must have. Yeah, So we've had some people crawling
around another lot right off of our main street, which
is high dollar real estate, and they're installing an eight
car super charging center right as ATV is carrying those out.
And I'm kind of like, what.

Speaker 59 (02:41:07):
Are you even thinking?

Speaker 52 (02:41:08):
And so these people have been they come out of Austin,
they drive all the way over here. They're an audio
video company and they're working on setting up Tesla chargers
at a charging station. I'm like, so you can put
in eight stalls so people can drive their Tesla's over here,

(02:41:29):
or no regular evs because they get adapters with their
non Tesla vehicles to hook up to Tesla chargers, since
that's become the de facto standard for electric vehicles if
you could use it.

Speaker 59 (02:41:44):
And even down on our winery row farmer has put
in an EV charging thing and has a hand painted
sign saying EV charging. I'm like going, do you guys
actually think there's a return on investment here?

Speaker 28 (02:41:59):
You know?

Speaker 10 (02:42:00):
Maybe that Yeah, maybe he's up charging with the electricity
or something, gaining a certain percentage per kilowatt hour or something.
It's difficult to understand this.

Speaker 12 (02:42:14):
Well, it's as long as you ignore subsidies. Yeah, but
it's easy to understand when you understand itself subsidized.

Speaker 10 (02:42:25):
Yeah, exactly. Well let's hope that that's fat stays right up.
But uh hey, appreciate, appreciate toy. You want to you
want to plug your show real quick?

Speaker 52 (02:42:36):
All right, I'm over at Republic Broadcasting republic broadcasting dot org.
You know, I'm on Sunday mornings between well eight o'clock
in the morning Central Standard time, that's GMT minus six
to ten o'clock two hours. And yeah, it's kind of fun.

Speaker 10 (02:42:55):
All right, very good, Thank you very much, and I
appreciate that. And folks can check him out there. God
bless you, sir, talk to you later. All right, bye,
bye bye. All right, let's go to Georgia. Now, hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Yes.

Speaker 20 (02:43:09):
Steve does a great broadcast every Sunday morning. If you
haven't checked him out, folks, you need to check him out.
Talking about these E day charging stations. I am in
Wilkes County, Georgia, population ten thousand. There are two charging
stations downtown at our square. We're talking down ten thousand

(02:43:32):
people here Linclnton, which is the next town over from us,
population tenn thousand. Two charging stations at the local grocery store.
Now I've seen people. I've only seen one person ever
at any of these And I asked him one day,

(02:43:53):
because there's nothing there for a credit card swipe or
money or nothing. So I asked him, I said, what's
it chart costs you to plug into that during the
day while you're here at work to charge up? He said,
doesn't cost me anything. I said, well, who pays for it?
He said, the city does? Oh wow, I said, who

(02:44:14):
do you think pays the city? Who do you think
pays the city time?

Speaker 10 (02:44:19):
The city? The city has, so you're subsidizing their their
their juice. In the battery too. There you go.

Speaker 20 (02:44:26):
The people that are driving gas powered vehicles are paying
for the two or three people in these two counties.

Speaker 10 (02:44:33):
Yeah, well that's not gonna last.

Speaker 20 (02:44:35):
Charge their vehicles for free.

Speaker 10 (02:44:37):
That's not gonna last. And doing it for two years,
Yeah well, that'll dry up eventually. If if they if
they get their way and the electric vehicles catch on,
they will find a way to They'll install something that
you have to run your credit card or something to
to pay for your electricity. And it might just be

(02:44:57):
a situation where you pre often authenticate for a an
amount and then once you reach that amount, it'll cut
off until it can authenticate another amount.

Speaker 20 (02:45:07):
I don't know, that's very possible.

Speaker 10 (02:45:09):
They'll figure out a way though.

Speaker 20 (02:45:10):
Mention this. I've told people around here about this. You know,
do you know you're paying for these people to keep
their vehicles charged for free? You know, nobody seems to care.
It's like, are you kidding you drive a internal combustion engine.
You are not benefiting from any green whatever. Right green

(02:45:33):
is a joke, But you don't have a problem paying
for them to be able to drive electric vehicles for
without pain to charge them up.

Speaker 10 (02:45:43):
They probably figure there's nothing they can do about it.

Speaker 12 (02:45:47):
Well, and also it would be a pity out.

Speaker 10 (02:45:51):
You both are talking.

Speaker 12 (02:45:53):
Yeah, if they did charge, they couldn't charge enough to
recover the investment, So why bother you know.

Speaker 10 (02:46:04):
I don't know. I think it's a what would you say.

Speaker 20 (02:46:07):
Art, I still don't want to pay for it?

Speaker 10 (02:46:11):
No, of course not no, Yeah, yeah, I agree. All right, Well,
Uh that's interesting. Thank you for uh for inputting that. Uh,
that's yeah. I don't see that lasting.

Speaker 12 (02:46:23):
Yeah, that would upset me if I were if I
lived there.

Speaker 10 (02:46:28):
Yeah, absolutely, I mean that's another subsidy. Another.

Speaker 12 (02:46:31):
I have enough trouble paying for what I do, what
I need to live on my own. I don't need
to subsidize somebody's delusion.

Speaker 10 (02:46:43):
Yeah, exactly, Kentucky, go ahead, please, you're on the air.

Speaker 4 (02:46:48):
I was taught tax on tax was illegal and unconstitutional
in America, but apparently not everything and sell whatever is
taxed everywhere over which every stage of the transaction. Now,
Elon Musk about two weeks ago announced the complete reshuffling
of the company. And I have to wonder, if you know,
these guys know ahead of time what's going to happen.

(02:47:10):
And so I think That's one of the reasons that
him and Trump had a falling out is because Trump
knew that electric cars were not going to be sustainable
with the government funding them like that.

Speaker 10 (02:47:22):
Yeah, it's the weirdest it's the weirdest dichotomy you see.
That very ironic to see Elon Musk working with supposedly
a conservative, supposedly uh and the two of them working together,
and the left getting mad at the head of an
electric car company and them gauging in gorilla warfare against

(02:47:47):
the electric cars.

Speaker 12 (02:47:48):
There's no logic on the left.

Speaker 10 (02:47:51):
There's no logic in anything political in America today. Yeah,
the whole thing is mad. It's just a complete and
absolute mad.

Speaker 4 (02:48:01):
But in the nineties, all this anti surveillance stuff was
liberal alarmism. But then Trump said he was gonna do
something about all the domestic spying, illegal stuff, and all
he did was privatize it. So now that you know,
you can't do anything without agreeing to be spied on
with any of these devices, from smart TV to your
cell phone to whatever. But at the same time all

(02:48:24):
this stuff, there are practical applications for electric vehicles. It
was done without computers in the seventies, there's a mother
Earth news magazine of very lefty thing that I never
would have known about except I've had a relationship with
the leftist former hippie or hippie wannab be. She was
too young to be a hippie really.

Speaker 32 (02:48:43):
But.

Speaker 4 (02:48:45):
Anyway, they built a Ford opal using twelve decycled marine batteries,
a lawnmower engine, and a starter motor of a DC
jet engine.

Speaker 10 (02:48:56):
Wow ex.

Speaker 4 (02:48:57):
One hundred and twenty vaults. Yes to the gallon. It
would go thirty five miles an hour on the batteries
or thirty five miles an hour on the engine. You know,
the gas powered blonde More engine like a twelve horse
power lin More engine was in the seventies. Well, the
Bridge and Stratton did their own version, and for some
reason they used six vault batteries. The thing was so heavy.

(02:49:19):
It was based on a four pinto sort of and
you can look at the video. They've restored this thing
as of public relations to show that Brigs and Stratton
still exists. And it was so heavy it had to
have two axles to carry the way its vault batteries
because it had like I think it had twenty or
more little six volt three cell batteries, and if you

(02:49:43):
use Edison type batteries that have nickel instead of lead,
you can wash those out and replace the electrolyte and
keep on going and the car down to your grandchildren.
Can the car down to your grandchildren instead of these
batteries that have to be replaced every seven years for
the cost of the vehicle. Almost.

Speaker 10 (02:50:02):
Yeah, I think the Communist Chinese are working really hard
to fix all these problems, and so just in time
for the next Democrat president, they'll have all this stuff
tackled and be ready to go.

Speaker 4 (02:50:13):
Oh, you don't need you don't need the computers. You
don't need ten computers to run your car. This is
a crazy thing.

Speaker 10 (02:50:19):
Oh, come on, I gotta be able to I gotta
be able to Bluetooth. I got a pair, I got
a pair.

Speaker 4 (02:50:24):
The high you can have the hybrid electric that doesn't
need one dang computer anyway.

Speaker 10 (02:50:31):
And then the government wouldn't be able to shut it down.

Speaker 4 (02:50:33):
Mike, No, but you can go seventy They redid this
whole scheme in I think nineteen ninety other or nurse
used a Azuzu pickup truck. What else is it good for?
But yeah, they took a midsize of Zuza pickup did
the same thing. The starter motor for the jet engine
that they used took up the whole pickup bed. But

(02:50:54):
still it would go seventy miles on one gallon of
gas in an hour. So we could do thirty five
miles to the gallon without the electric and it would
do about an hour with the electric. So you know,
you could charge it up while you were at work,
drive an hour or at home and drive an hour

(02:51:15):
to work it back. And that's the other thing I
was going to mention is the reason you don't see
a lot of these people using the station, the charge
stations is because they put in a home charger.

Speaker 10 (02:51:27):
I'm not sure what happened there.

Speaker 4 (02:51:28):
They put in a home charger. Yeah, I don't know
what happened either.

Speaker 10 (02:51:32):
That was okind sorry, all right, well that's interesting. Yeah,
thank you. I appreciate the call there. Hopefully everything VICKI
are you okay?

Speaker 12 (02:51:42):
Yeah, I'm fine. I was wondering what it.

Speaker 10 (02:51:45):
Was too, okay. I thought you might have been playing
the drums there. I didn't know you took up the drums,
but that was meat.

Speaker 4 (02:51:54):
Sorry I unmuted here at rb.

Speaker 10 (02:51:56):
OH Okay, all right, that was that was strange. Okay, anyway,
let's go to uh let's tell you what here's what
we can do. Uh, because we're talking about electric cars.
One of the where this is really going, where they're
really wanting to do, is they're wanting to take us
to self driving cars, which will be electric. But uh,

(02:52:19):
I don't want those either. Yeah, and uh Google has
sort who can.

Speaker 12 (02:52:25):
Afford all these technological solutions that don't help anything, but
that just cost us money.

Speaker 10 (02:52:36):
Yeah, it might cost you your life. Uh. This is
what Google has a line of these self driving vehicles
and they're called Weaymo. You remember we did a story
not too long well, it's probably been a number of
years now about how the Weymo cars were in a
parking lot and or they got confused in the middle

(02:52:56):
of the night and they all just started blowing horns
at each other.

Speaker 12 (02:53:00):
Oh my god.

Speaker 10 (02:53:01):
Yeah, and they just kind of got confused and just
sat there, and people were ticked off because the Weaiymo
cars were like waking people up in the middle of
the night blowing the horn at each other because they
just kind of sit there and get confused and not
be able to figure out which way to go, because
you know, like a person driving a car, he'd wave
your hand and tell the other guy to go first.

(02:53:23):
Well they just sit there and blow at each other.
So but now you had another one of these situations
in recent days. It just came completely, went out of control,
nearly ran somebody over.

Speaker 28 (02:53:37):
You had three new video out of Echo Park Take
a look shows a waymo van speeding and crashing into
a string of parked cars.

Speaker 14 (02:53:44):
This happened Sunday.

Speaker 28 (02:53:45):
Morning, a quarter mile from Dodger Stadium. The van went
down this narrow one way street before crashing into a
car and coming to a stop. The man who shared
this video with us as he pushed his mother out
of the way to avoid it, He says he pulled
the man operating the way go out of it right
after an airbag deployed.

Speaker 10 (02:54:04):
He loves a control the car. He was trying to
hit the brake, but he said that he loves that
control the car. So realy, he loves that control the car.

Speaker 28 (02:54:15):
And you can see the damage left behind.

Speaker 14 (02:54:17):
Fortunately no one was hurt.

Speaker 28 (02:54:18):
Way Moore confirmed the chain of events, but has yet
to release an official statement.

Speaker 10 (02:54:24):
There you go, you might die. There you go so
I would be careful about getting around a way Moore
car Vicky.

Speaker 12 (02:54:35):
Yeah, I'm here. Yeah, I h Well, the whole thing
is just stupid. I mean, I just put it out
of my mind because when you add up the costs
and benefits, costs are far greater than the benefits.

Speaker 10 (02:54:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (02:54:49):
So as far as I'm concerned, it's a dead issue.

Speaker 10 (02:54:54):
Yeah, and we're about out of time. The clock on
the wall is telling we have to go. But thank you, ladies,
gentlemen for being with us. Thanks to all the folks
who called in participated in the chat, and all the
folks out there, all the affiliates. Thanks thanks to RBN,
Shake and Wake Radio and all the others. Thank you

(02:55:18):
very much for being with US k Star Radio Network.
Thank you for being with us Lut's Community Radio. God
bless you folks, every one of you, Missouri Liberty Radio.
We appreciate the affiliates, Thank you, and if you can
slip them some money, if there's a way to do that,
do that because they need your support. Vicky, as always,

(02:55:41):
appreciate you and everything you do. And thanks to the
listeners as well. God bless each and every one of you.
And we'll talk to you again next week.

Speaker 12 (02:55:48):
Thank you Darren, thank you everybody.

Speaker 10 (02:55:51):
YEA, talk to you soon and join us back here
next week. By bye.

Speaker 26 (02:56:15):
The Truth God The race, Race about a sh gob
Man record
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