Episode Transcript
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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.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
New world order.
Speaker 4 (00:10):
This is a moment disease. The cleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us re order this world around.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Nevertheless, the United States it in a key position to
shape this so that the problem of the put rensidentity
will be the invergence of a new international order.
Speaker 5 (00:39):
The first decade of the twenty first century.
Speaker 6 (00:42):
But out of what is will be seen as the greatest.
Speaker 7 (00:45):
Restructuring of the global economies, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new world order
was created.
Speaker 8 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebellty.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
The very word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society.
And we are as a people inherently and historically opposed
to secret societies, the secret oaths and a.
Speaker 8 (01:12):
Secret proceedings waging war on the new world order.
Speaker 9 (01:15):
The councils of government we must guard again the acquisition
of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military
industrial conflict.
Speaker 8 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
From FEMA Regions five to ten. This is Governed America
Vicky Davis. This year, I'm Darren Weeks. It is the
thirty first of January twenty twenty six. Nice to have
you with us once again, Ladies and gentlemen. We are
waiting every day for the possibility of finding out that
we have just bombed Iran. Hopefully that won't have but
certainly everything seems to be pointing in that direction, a
(02:03):
new conflict in the Middle East. Apparently we've learned nothing
from the twenty years that we spent in Afghanistan and
a rock, all the lives that were lost there, all
the money that was lost, the blood and coin, the
blood and value not only in monetary standards but also
in lives which can't be replaced. But yet we're going
(02:25):
to go down this road once again. It's just mind blowing,
and yet it's just seems like there's no way off
this crazy roller coaster. It's just a runaway mess. Whenever
the President gets in trouble, at home. It is, hey,
(02:45):
let's start a conflict abroad. But I think it's even
deeper than that. Now. I think what's going to happen,
what is intended to happen, is a techmocratic system for
the entire Middle East. And I have some evidence of
that what's being developed right now in Gaza. And we'll
get to that as time progresses. Good morning, VICKI, Good morning.
Speaker 5 (03:05):
Yeah, it's our money, taxpayer money that's lost. But there's
big money made by the defense corporations. Yes, so you know,
and so people pay and corporations profit.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
That's exactly right. Now. I want to touch and follow
up on the World Health or I'm sorry, the World
Economic Forum. But before we get to that, there's some
things developing overnight, things developing with regard to the latest
spending on Capitol Hill. I don't know if you've been
following that or not, but we have just we're going
(03:49):
to have, I guess, a partial government shut down. The
Republicans have caved on a number of things that the
Democrats have demanded. They were demanding defunding ICE. We're back
to defai the police, where we mentioned that last week.
Defund the police is back in a different form. Now
we're talking about federal police. But it doesn't really matter.
It seems like we just keep circling back to the
(04:12):
same types of things. New American says. The government funding
package for this year released this week includes more than
five billion dollars in welfare for refugees.
Speaker 10 (04:22):
Vicky huh h.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
Welfare for refugees. Kentucky Senator Ran Paul's asked his followers
on x to call their senators and urge them to
vote against the men of us. Quote, we need to
send a message loud and clear. Call your senators and
tell them to vote no on this.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Reckless refugees read cheap labor.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Yeah, there you go. Fellow Kentucky and Representatives Thomas Massey
seconded Paul's disapproval by saying, and when we vote against
this minibus containing the five billion dollar refugee welfare programs,
some will say, why aren't you so reporting the president? Well,
(05:04):
why isn't the President supporting the American people is the
real question.
Speaker 5 (05:08):
And and keeping his word what he said he was
going to do.
Speaker 11 (05:13):
So.
Speaker 5 (05:14):
The insurgency in our country, by the way, is through
the Department of Health and Welfare. That's where they put
the refugee resettlement programs and the insurgency is buried in
those programs.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Yeah. So there was some approval of the spending bill,
because it's not a budget anymore, it's a spending bill.
And this was approved last night, but too late to
too late to avert a partial government what they're calling
a partial government shut down. But it was averted by
(05:59):
the Republics caving to the Democrat demands, which is always
nice for the midterms because people really are motivated to
show up and vote for you when you have no spine. Yeah,
I'm obviously being sarcastic on that. And then also we
see Kevin Walsh has been nominated for the FED chair.
Speaker 5 (06:23):
Now I don't know anything about him, do you.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
Well, I've got this article from The New American. It
just so happens to be he's going to Jerome Powell's
term expires in May and Warsh's he has Kevin Warsh
has controversial ties, wouldn't you know it? To globalist circles.
Speaker 10 (06:43):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
The New American says he has his role as a
former steering committee member of the Builderberg Group. Oh wow,
oh man, you can't get more globalist than that, can you.
Speaker 5 (06:58):
The nerve of these people is just astounded.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
I mean, they must sit around laughing in our face.
They must laugh at us all the time. Team Trump Rock,
Go Trump, Magi Magi Magi's the way forward, right, Yeah.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
Yeah. I was looking at, you know, some of my
older stuff and something that jumped out at me that
didn't before is that, you know, the the nineteen twenty
one meeting of the CFR with the British that created
(07:39):
the Council on Foreign Relations. All of that was initiated,
I believe by Woodrow Wilson. And there's a quote by
Woodrow Wilson that talks about the organized opinion of mankind.
(08:03):
And that's really what they've done to us, is that
they've organized propaganda our media for the purpose of organizing thought.
And so you know, all this time, I well, you know,
(08:26):
years ago, when I first started, I believed that the
newspaper was just reporting what was going on. But that's
not really true. What they are doing is colluding. And
I know it's collusion because they allowed consolidation of the
(08:47):
media in the early years of two thousands, to allow
six major media companies to own all of the media.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
In other words, they deregulated the restrictions on media so
that they would have a clear shot.
Speaker 3 (09:09):
At Yeah, and all of them are co opted by
the CIA. People think that Project mocking Bird ended, then
you've got another thing coming. And that thing is a
lot of more propaganda that you're going to be falling for.
Speaker 5 (09:24):
Right, and when you only have six major media companies,
it's not hard to organize opinion.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Right exactly. You mentioned Woodrow Wilson. I think this would
be a good time. Since we're talking about Trump appointing
a successor Kevin Warsh, a globalist builder burger, to the
Federal Reserve, I think it would be a good time
to point out Woodrow Wilson's role in the Federal Reserve
and his quote after he signed the Federal Reserve Act
(09:54):
of nineteen thirteen. He said, I am a most unhappy man.
I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation
is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of
credit is concentrated the growth of the nation. Therefore, and
all our activities are in the hands of a few men.
We have come to be one of the worst world
(10:16):
one of the most completely controlled and dominated governments in
the civilized world. No longer a government by a free opinion,
no longer a government by conviction and the vote of
the majority, but a government by the opinion and dress
of a small group of dominant men. But it's Woodrow
Wilson that put them in charge, that's the point yep.
(10:41):
So that's that's an indictment on himself, frankly.
Speaker 5 (10:47):
And he deserved it, yeah, because what they did was
to empower the powerful.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Absolutely, he should have heeded the warning of Thomas jeff Differson,
who said, and we've used this quote often, if the
American people ever allowed private banks to control the issuance
of currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks
and corporations, which will grow up around them, will deprive
all the people of all their property until their children
wake up homeless on the continent. Their fathers conquered the issue.
Speaker 5 (11:20):
And where are we That's where we are.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
Yeah, that absolutely is where we are. Exactly, So we
have this situation where instead of being a constitutional president
and instead of being a freedom loving president that the
people who were suckered by him voted for president, Donald
Trump is voting in globalists. He's nominating globalists and Kevin
(11:46):
worsh is the latest with his Builderberger ties and his
marriage to the daughter of a controversial billionaire, Ronald latter
oh S. D.
Speaker 5 (11:58):
Lauder.
Speaker 3 (11:58):
Yeah, okay, fifty five year old Warsh is no stranger
to the Fed. Appointed by also globalist President George W. Bush,
the one who got us into this twenty year long
campaign and do you know the never ending wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan through the false flag of nine to eleven.
(12:23):
In two thousand and six, he appointed Kevin Worsh to
the board the Federal Reserve Board, and Warsh served on
the board until twenty eleven, earning a reputation as a
monetary policy hawk who advocated for tighter controls to combat inflation.
(12:43):
During the two thousand and eight financial crisis, another created situation, folks,
There was no reason the housing market that was created.
I think green Span really helped to create the two
thousand and eight financial crisis. Remember how he.
Speaker 5 (12:57):
Come to interesting Actually it was well it greens.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
They created a bunch of bubbles. They created a big
bubble by keeping interest late rates low and also there
was a lot of deregulation, as I recall that happened
prior to that.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
Yeah, of the insurance, financial and some other market I
can't quite remember, but it really was the Comptroller of
the Currency that loosened mortgage rules such that they could
(13:33):
offer loans to people that didn't qualify.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Well, yeah, there's that too, absolutely, and Glass Steegel the
whole idea that you know, an investment bank could also
be a commercial bank mm hmm, conflicts of interest, all
of that, and they.
Speaker 5 (13:50):
Could add that they could partner with their customers, their
corporate customers. So you have banks colluding with corporations.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
Yeah. So that's why I say the two thousand and
eight financial crisis was a total created situation and a
lot of people suffered because of that. But Walsh was
right there in the center of it all. They say
he was instrumental in crisis management.
Speaker 5 (14:17):
Well that was handy. He creates one and then he
manages it.
Speaker 3 (14:21):
Yeah, well they created I don't want to put all
of that responsibility on him, to be fair, but all right,
so he managed the crisis that they created. But post crisis,
the New American says he criticized the fed's aggressive quantitative easing,
(14:42):
which is good because it deserved criticism, arguing that it
distorted markets and fueled asset bubbles. Critics within conservative circles, however,
questioned his independence, pointing it to his involvement with the
Builderberg Group, a secretive annual gathering of global elites who
attempt to undermine national sovereignty. His family connections to later
(15:06):
a prominent figure in international finance, fuel concerns about potential
conflicts of interest in steering US monetary policy. Market reactions
were swift and telling once he was appointed by Trump.
Upon the news breaking, the US dollar strengthened against major currencies,
while treasury yields climbed, reflecting expectations of a less accommodative
(15:32):
fed under Warsh. Gold prices tumbled more than five percent,
Silver followed suit, and bitcoin dipped three percent As investors
braced for high interest rates. Stock futures wobbled, with analysts
noting that Warsh's hawkish stance could clash with Trump's pro
growth agenda, which has often called for lower interest rates
(15:55):
to boost the economy. And that's what's really ironic about it,
And they point that out here. Trump is repeatedly lambasted
Powell for not cutting rates aggressively enough. Yet Worshi's history
suggests that he might prioritize inflation over stimulus, a potential
point of friction. Another source of possible friction might arise.
(16:16):
So you got to wonder who's actually telling Trump to
do this, Who's given him these names and say this
is the guy, this is who you need, because you
know these people aren't really making you know Trump, I
think he makes some decisions on his own, but I
think there's a lot of things he just told to do.
Speaker 5 (16:36):
I think he makes the decisions on the easy stuff,
the obvious stuff, the stuff that will appeal to the people.
But as far as decisions like this, I don't think
he goes anywhere near it. He just does what he's told.
Speaker 3 (16:57):
Yeah, Another source of possible friction arise from his misalignment
with MAGA values over the subject of immigration. The last
Bilderberg meeting, held June twelfth to the fifteenth of last
year in Stockholm, had one of its agenda items as
depopulation and migration, the first time that that topic had
been ever openly discussed in the powerful forum when Joe's
(17:21):
loved to have been a bug on the wall in
that meeting. If Kevin Warsh, who attended the meeting, ascends
to fed chair, he could subtly shape his monetary policies
to a bet more mass migration, declining birth rates, and
aging population's key demographic concerns threatened labor shortages, and slower
GDP expansion. Evidence suggests that worsh is poised to back
(17:45):
policies to accommodate unrestricted migration, viewing it as a tool
to replenish work forces and sustain growth without the strategic
use of inflation by the government.
Speaker 5 (17:57):
You know what, I don't believe government statistics because they
get them from what the Bureau of Labor Statistics is
one source.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
Right, which we've we've caught them screwing with those numbers
over and over and over again.
Speaker 5 (18:14):
Right, And that's where organized opinion comes into play. They
figure out the policy they want and then they jigger
the statistics to support it.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (18:29):
So which is why we always lose. We always lose.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
This nomination opens up broader debates about the federal reserves purpose,
as it's caught between the counter veiling pressures of globalism
and economic nationalism. Well, I think we know what the
purpose is is to empower the bankers to steal every
single part of your property. Like Ron McDonald's book says
they own it all, including you. And that's really a
(18:54):
perfect title for it. It describes it perfectly. Supporters Arguie
Walsher's experience would be sold to the public as restoring
fiscal discipline, detractors worn of deeper entanglements with globalist institutions
that prioritize international agendas over American interests. If confirmed by
the Senate, and I predict he will be, Worsh's tenure
(19:17):
could mark a pivotal shift. Will Trump's choice aligned with
America First principles? Yeah? Really, you have to even ask that.
I mean, this guy's a builderberg globalist.
Speaker 5 (19:32):
If you define corporations as America, then yes. Course. If
we're talking about people like us, you and me and
our audience, no, hell no.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
So there's another thing going on. I'll put that one
to bed. New American also says we've reported. On January seventh,
President Donald Trump issued an executive order terminating US membership
in and support of sixty six international organizations GENU and AGENT. Now,
we talked about that here and we were happy about it,
with very cautionary caveats. I guess would be the word
(20:09):
to say, you know, our thought, if people will remember,
is that often Trump will pull us out of things
and negotiate his way back in with the Trump stamp
of approval. So you end up with some kind of
global apparatus that you're you know, octopus that you're a
(20:30):
part of, which is a lot like the original, but
now it's it's Trumpian.
Speaker 5 (20:37):
Yeah, it has his stamp on. It is gold stamp.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
Yeah, it's gold stamp exactly. So I think that's going
to happen with a lot of this stuff. And there's
evidence of other things happening in the Middle East that
also is very much the same way, and Gaza is
a perfect example of that. We'll get to that as
time progresses. But New American says, regarding him pulling out
(21:03):
of the international organizations, hooray for that historic move. But
we have a question, why wasn't the UN's International Organization
for Migration included on that list?
Speaker 5 (21:17):
Yeah, good questions.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
The IOM is arguably one of the most destructive UN agencies.
It is the engineer and paymaster for the horrendous migrant
slash refugee tsunami that is destabilizing and unraveling so many countries.
Director of that organization is Amy Pope, and she was
living it up last week in Davos and networking with
(21:42):
the globalist tech titans, banking barons, media moguls, and corporate
captains who have been supporting and promoting the United Nations
harmful migration policies that are ravaging countries worldwide, but have
been particularly targeted at the United States and Europe. In
in an on the street video from Davos, she cheerfully
(22:04):
reports that the global mass migrations her agency promotes and
directs are a wonderful thing. And they quote her on
here saying we're unlocking new ways to mobilize support for
people in crisis.
Speaker 5 (22:20):
Yeah, what about our people in crisis?
Speaker 3 (22:23):
Yeah, you know, there's a lot of people right now
in Minneapolis, Minnesota who are in crisis because you've got
a bunch of writers there. Now, this whole thing was
started by migration that was unfettered, unvetted because the previous
administration left the border wide open. Then you got all
these Somalis in here committing fraud, built in the taxpayer
(22:47):
and sending the money, among other things, to terrorist groups.
There's terrorist groups that are being funded by this money,
these frauds, this fraud that's been committed, and I've frankly,
I think there's a lot of money laundering going on
to the Democrat Party, which is why they're facilitating this
whole thing.
Speaker 11 (23:08):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (23:09):
But the Republicans are in on it too. They are
just as guilty.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
Well, they're guilty of other schemes. I don't know this
particular one, but yes, they do the same types of things.
Absolutely so they say, what about the people in crisis
living in the receiving countries who are experiencing devastating impacts
on housing, welfare costs, well for fraud, medical care and
(23:34):
the crime not to be swept under the rug. I
hear a lot of Democrats. I even see commentators on
the news saying, oh, it's a myth that all these
migrants coming in here are any more criminal than anybody else. Hogwash.
I tell you, I don't know what sources of information
they're going by, maybe they're listening to MS NOW or CNN,
(24:00):
but I can tell you scarcely a day goes by
that I don't see some horrific and I mean horrible thing,
you know, butchery that some illegal alien or migrant has
committed against the general population. Senseless crimes victimizing people all
(24:20):
over the place.
Speaker 5 (24:21):
Got yeah, what we have. It's like an invisible war.
It is war on us. It's just not called war,
and it's not reported except in local markets. I mean,
you know, I know there's a lot of horrible crime
that goes on in this country that we never hear
(24:44):
anything about.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
Yeah, they ask about, what about the millions of people
who have been lured by the International Organization for Migration's
programs to migrate and have thus become genuine people in
crisis as victims of scammers, traffickers, robbers, rapists, kidnappers, and
drug cartels. But Amy Pope and by the way, a
member of the Council on Foreign Relations and former Obama
(25:08):
and Biden official, she lives a privilege, pampered and protected life.
She's probably living in a gated community. I'm thinking, oh,
no doubt, no doubt her fiefdom. The IOM is headquartered
in beautiful Geneva, virtually next door to the World Economic
Forums global headquarters. Her budget this year is two point
(25:30):
eighty nine billion dollars with a B. But she's begging
for more to help the people in crisis. Of course,
Uh huh, they say, as we reported in twenty twenty four.
She called on international donors, meaning the United States and
other rich nations, to pony up seven point nine billion dollars.
(25:53):
Where does that money go to pay for food, transportation, shelter, phones,
legal assistance, cash debit cards, and cash payment. It's the
caravans of migrants while you folks out there are cooking
the dog for dinner. The colossal fraud that is coming
to light among the Somali refugee population is but the
tip of a very large iceberg that stretches across every state,
(26:15):
affecting every community, not only those that have designated themselves sanctuaries.
In the past, the United States has contributed as much
as forty percent of the IOM budget. Why is it continuing?
Why are we still in this organization? That's the question.
They say that trumpsministration has reduced financial support for that,
(26:40):
but we have not been able to find out the
current level of funding.
Speaker 5 (26:44):
When you look at the people who are involved in
the International Rescue Committee organization, it's the IRC, They're very prominent.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Okay, hang on, we got to take a break. We'll
be back.
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Speaker 3 (28:19):
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(28:43):
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This is a violation of.
Speaker 15 (28:47):
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It's true for the restoration of our nation.
Speaker 21 (31:25):
It's govern America with Vicky Davison Darren Walliam.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. The
website for the show Governamerica dot com. That's Governamerica dot com.
My email address is radio at Governamerica dot com. Vicky,
you want to give your information out please?
Speaker 5 (31:58):
Uh yeah. My website is the Technocratic Tyranny dot com.
My older website is Channelingreality dot com. And my email
addresses on both websites.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
All right, you were saying something before the break, guy,
I don't know if you recall what it was. I
think it was about the Iran Revolutionary Guard or something
like that.
Speaker 5 (32:22):
No, the International Rescue Committee, Oh okay, Yeah. They were
formed in the nineteen thirties to smuggle Jews out of Germany.
But they've stayed prominent ever since, and they are they're
the ones that really are running the refugee resettlement scam
(32:47):
in the US. So if you want to know about that,
look them up. International Rescue Committee and it has prominent
people in it like it had Madeline Albright, Colin Powell,
(33:10):
other people you know that are prominent politically.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
Yeah, it's very telling that Trump has not done anything
about the International Organization for Migration. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (33:23):
Well, yeah, that that's a relatively recent u N agency.
I think they've become an agency. And the current Secretary
General of the u N, prior to his appointment to
that position, was the leader of the IOM, I believe.
(33:50):
And let's see what's his name. Yeah, I'll look it
up and i'll get it in a minute.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
Well, let me just jump to this while you're doing that.
Blackrock CEO Larry Fink. You probably are aware, you know
that he took over the World Economic Forum right after
Claus Schwab stepped down in a disgrace last year. Claud
Schwab had some sort of a sex scandal, as I recall,
(34:22):
I'm not quite sure what the details of that are
now if I've knew it, the details have faded somewhat.
But that's kind of irrelevant at this point in time.
He couldn't have picked anybody that is worse. I don't
know who picked Larry Fink. Maybe it's because he owns
the world through his.
Speaker 5 (34:41):
He was an executive with at and T.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
Well. Now he's an executive with black Rock, which owns
stock and all the corporation basically in everything, just about everything,
any corporation of any size. We've told you folks before.
If you go to Yahoo finance and find out who
owns it, it's the three the three corporate names, uh
come to the top of the list every time as
(35:07):
major shareholders, and that's black Rock, Van Garden, State Street.
Speaker 5 (35:14):
And what he has in those funds are their pension funds,
and so it's really been pension funds that are our downfall.
And when this whole thing started, it was when they
created the World Trade Organization. They did that with an
(35:35):
agreement called the Marrakesh Agreement, and it the World Trade
Organization included trade in goods and services, which every job
in the world, that's it's a service. You know, if
(36:00):
you're pumping gas somewhere some gas station, that's a service.
Speaker 3 (36:06):
Yeah. I suppose if you're running human trafficking that could
be a service too, Yeah, running people running drugs.
Speaker 5 (36:15):
Well, one of the first research projects I did on
that was trying to find out why a company was
importing people from Thailand to pick the apples in Washington State.
Those jobs were always done by seasonal workers from Mexico,
(36:40):
so they really cheated the Mexicans out of their the
migrant workers out of their jobs by importing people from Thailand. Yeah,
so basically they have, you know, large corporation with essentially
(37:03):
slave labor, importing them, you know, from countries where maybe
they're not eating so well. So you know, fifty cents
an hour to pick apples sounds pretty.
Speaker 3 (37:15):
Good, right, yeah, exactly, And that's what they do. It
is slave labor. And what's amazing is there have been
a number of especially on the Democrat side, politicians that
have said the quiet part out loud, you know, who's
going to pick our fruit? If we don't let these
migrants come in.
Speaker 5 (37:34):
It's slave labor. Even if you do something like I
did for a living, which was a computer systems analyst programmer.
So what they do. They allegedly trained people from India,
and you know where I was making you know, forty
dollars an hour, which is forty or fifty dollars an hour,
(37:58):
which is not in a axsorbitant amount of money for
this country. They were making anywhere from three to five
dollars an hour in their country so they could be
imported here. I worked for twenty dollars an hour, and
you know, they were rich, and they drove people like
(38:19):
me into poverty.
Speaker 3 (38:22):
Yeah. Well, somebody who's definitely not in poverty is Larry Fink.
And he was speaking at the World Economic Forum this
time around last week, and they're twenty twenty six gathering,
and he was talking about people, you know, because the
(38:42):
problem they're having now is people don't trust him. What
a surprise. So they're talking about a lot about how
they can restore trust this.
Speaker 23 (38:50):
Week, as Borga suggested, it's eight hundred and fifty CEOs
and chairs are here, sixty five heads of state representing governments,
representing actually forty percent of the world's population.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
Now, none of you represent any of us. That's that's
not so you could say that all you want till
you're blue in the face. Nobody elected these people. Nobody
appointed the World Economic Forum to come there and gather,
you know. And what's funny about that. Later on he
talks about how all we need to have we need
(39:23):
to have more people of different stripes, different backgrounds being
able to come and speak at these forums. I guarantee
you I will not be invited to speak at the
at the World Economic Forum.
Speaker 5 (39:36):
Yeah, nor will I.
Speaker 3 (39:37):
I don't like to fly, but you know what, if
I was, I would fly in for that. I would
absolutely love to speak there. But I guarantee you I
will never have an invitation. Mine will get lost in
the mail.
Speaker 23 (39:50):
And alongside we have some of the world's most innovative entrepreneurs,
some of the world's most innovative startups, and we have
some of the most impact full civil society and NGO representatives.
Speaker 6 (40:04):
In fact, we believe that outside the.
Speaker 23 (40:06):
United Nations, this is the largest gathering of global leadership
of the post COVID period of time.
Speaker 3 (40:14):
Rich pigs.
Speaker 23 (40:15):
But now we have a harder question to ask all
of us, what do we do about it? And will
anyone outside this room care what we're doing here?
Speaker 5 (40:25):
Because if I care, I care, I would vote for
nuking Davos.
Speaker 3 (40:31):
Well be careful now, Well, we don't want the home
insecurity trolls to be uh, knocking on the door.
Speaker 5 (40:39):
I don't have access to nukes, but if I did,
they'd be in trouble.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
Don't incite somebody, now, VICKI, you don't want to be
one of those domestic terrorist insurrections, not.
Speaker 23 (40:50):
Because if we're honest, For many people, this feeding feels
out of step with the moment.
Speaker 3 (40:57):
I think they're all out of steps.
Speaker 23 (40:58):
We hear all about the elite, and how does that
play out an age of populism? How does an establish
institution make a difference in an era of deep institutional mistrust?
And there's some truth to the critique.
Speaker 3 (41:13):
I believe.
Speaker 6 (41:16):
This forum for a long time.
Speaker 23 (41:18):
I certainly wouldn't be leading this if I didn't believe
that we can change and make the world better.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
Of course you can. You got gobs and bunches of money.
Anybody with gobs and bunches of money can change the world.
Speaker 23 (41:30):
But it's also obvious that the world now places far
less trust in us to help shape what comes next.
If the World Economic Forum is going to be useful
going forward, it has to regain that trust.
Speaker 6 (41:46):
And there are some very.
Speaker 23 (41:47):
Obvious ways that we can improve for ourselves and hopefully
for the world. We need to make sure that we
widen who gets a voice in these.
Speaker 6 (41:58):
Conversations over the week.
Speaker 23 (42:00):
We have to be a lot more transparent and more
engaged with people who don't feel representative in rooms like this,
and because this is the World Economic Forum. To be
more precise about what does it mean about economic success?
Prosperity just isn't the growth in the aggregate.
Speaker 6 (42:21):
It's not just GDP.
Speaker 23 (42:23):
It can't be measured by GDP or market caps of companies.
Speaker 6 (42:27):
It has to be.
Speaker 23 (42:28):
Judged by many people who see it, who can touch it,
can feel it, and can build their own future on it.
Speaker 3 (42:35):
Okay, this is where where where he's going with all
of this. What he's really getting at it, even if
he doesn't state it overtly, It's not about the money
that you have, okay, It's about your standard of living.
It's about your ability to have the basics. Okay. Every
single thing in the United Nations documents talks about adequate.
(43:00):
And I've referenced this a number of times. If you
look up the word adequate, it means something to the
effect of, you know, your basic needs are met barely
barely enough. Yeah, barely enough. That's exactly thank you for that.
Barely enough to meet your needs. Okay, that's adequate, And
that is exactly the model for globalism. So that's what
(43:21):
he's getting at here, is that when he's talking about
people left out, he's talking about people who don't have
a basic income, and you hear a lot of that
from these groups that you know, they were universal basic
income being promoted, and that's what that's really what he's
getting at here when he's talking about all these people
(43:41):
that don't trust him, and what can we do for them,
and how can we help people out of aduldrums. You're
not going to have you will own nothing and be happy.
That's exactly what they said on their website. And that's
exactly what he means here.
Speaker 23 (43:58):
That, in my view, is the strongest critique of the
last economic era. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall,
more wealth has been created than in any time prior
in human history, but in advanced economies that wealth has
accrued to a far narrower share of people that any
(44:19):
healthy society can ultimately sustain.
Speaker 3 (44:22):
Okay, but he's talking to the group that accrueded.
Speaker 5 (44:26):
Right, and he's asking them to share.
Speaker 3 (44:31):
Yes, this is so how how realistic is this? It's unbelievable?
You know, Yes, this is a problem that you have
too much money? Mm hmm.
Speaker 5 (44:43):
Okay, Yeah, Now that he's a guy who has absolutely
no self awareness.
Speaker 3 (44:49):
This is a guy that's heading the he's the CEO
of a company that owns every other company a majority share,
and he's on there talking about elites and how they
have too much money. Get me a break.
Speaker 23 (45:02):
Now, we're in the era of AI, which we're going
to talk about a lot in this week, and are
we going to replay the same pattern early games are
flowing to the owners of models, owners of data, and
owners of infrastructure. The open question what happens to everyone
else if AI does to white collar works that globalization
did to blue collar workers. We need to confront that
(45:25):
today directly. And it's not about the future. The future
is now now, with the abstractions about the jobs of tomorrow,
but with a credible plan for broad participation in these games.
This is going to be the test capitalism can evolve
to turn more people into owners of growth instead of
(45:46):
spectators watching it happen.
Speaker 6 (45:49):
And that kind of change is truly.
Speaker 23 (45:52):
Hard, especially in a world of competing ideologies and assumptions
about how the system should work.
Speaker 3 (45:58):
Now, how many years have we been listening to these
idiot globalists say all this crap? Oh long live I mean,
since I've started in this radio. We've been doing this
radio for what like since the early two thousands. Yes,
and and I've been listening to these characters say this
stuff since that time, and the problem has only gotten worse.
(46:21):
So do they really mean it? Do they just like
to hear their gums flap? And is this sophisticated marketing
aka brainwashing?
Speaker 5 (46:30):
Yeah, it's marketing totallyting.
Speaker 3 (46:35):
I wonder if these people, you know, it's just them
kind of stroking themselves and you know, making themselves feel good. Hey,
look at what we did for people, when in fact
they they haven't done anything for anybody except themselves, right,
And I don't want them to do anything for me. Yeah,
(46:57):
I just want them to stay the hell out of
my life. Please, you've done enough, Just go away. I
can find for myself if you stay out of my life.
Speaker 5 (47:11):
Well, except that not with the wto in place, because
when you talk about you know, trade goods and services
that includes both blue and white collar jobs. They internationalized
(47:33):
our employment market, and I'm saying employment to include blue
and white collar jobs. So you know, an any foreign
corporation can say they're going to start up a business.
You know how Trump has been saying, oh, they're going
(47:54):
to start all these businesses. Well we'll see, are they
going to import their own labor.
Speaker 3 (48:00):
Yeah, of course they are. Of course they'll all be
in the opportunity zones, the freedom freedom Freedom cities, Vicky. Yeah,
you know what.
Speaker 5 (48:08):
You know, when they started that was in Chicago in
about nineteen ninety six, and they've called him him Employment Zones,
hub Zones, Opportunity.
Speaker 3 (48:23):
Zones, Freedom Freedom Cities.
Speaker 5 (48:26):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, and so it's not a new thing.
And you know, I don't I don't know if the
guy who proposed that, I forget what his name is,
but I don't. I don't know if he knows or not.
Speaker 3 (48:41):
I mean, the black guy that gave the idea that
Trump that he credits anyway.
Speaker 5 (48:46):
That yeah, yeah, for the opportunity zone idea, pure bovine excrement.
That that program has been in place under different names
since about nineteen ninety six.
Speaker 3 (49:03):
I'm doing a little digging here to find out the
name of the I don't know coming up guy. Sorry,
I know who you're talking about, though, because Trump said
it over and over again, gave the guy credit, but
I can't find his name now. Maybe as time progresses
(49:25):
anyway more, Larry Fink, because hey, you aren't you just
really building isn't your trust building right now?
Speaker 5 (49:34):
Oh yeah?
Speaker 3 (49:34):
I mean the longer I listen to this guy, the
more I'm trusting. I am in. I'm all in now
on the trust.
Speaker 23 (49:41):
Which brings me to the second way Budavos can change
who gets invited to these conversations this form.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
Maybe I will get my invitation.
Speaker 5 (49:52):
VICKI, maybe I'll be rooting for it here it comes.
Speaker 23 (49:56):
This forum cannot be an echo chamber, and we should
want panel where everyone doesn't always agree. We need panels
where we could have true conversations.
Speaker 3 (50:07):
I'm all for that.
Speaker 6 (50:08):
Maybe some avert disagreements.
Speaker 3 (50:09):
Oh count me in, But through.
Speaker 23 (50:12):
That we could have a deeper conversation.
Speaker 3 (50:15):
I love deep conversations, don't you. Oh yeah, yeah, it
gets real deep. It's getting real deep in here right
now as a matter of fact.
Speaker 23 (50:23):
And then we could have maybe deeper understanding in each
other's views.
Speaker 3 (50:26):
I doubt that you.
Speaker 23 (50:28):
Could already see the shift and who is here this year.
That doesn't mean the goal of everyone to leave having
a convince themselves that they're right. The objective over the
week is not an agreement. It's understanding. It's sitting with
people who disagree with you, taking their arguments.
Speaker 6 (50:48):
Seriously, their viewpoints.
Speaker 3 (50:50):
Seriously, I'm getting my plane ticket.
Speaker 5 (50:52):
Yeah, here's my view point. Poverty sucks.
Speaker 3 (50:58):
This is true.
Speaker 18 (51:00):
You know.
Speaker 3 (51:00):
Uh, I wonder if I could afford to eat where
these people eat when I get there, If I get invited.
Speaker 5 (51:09):
You'd have to take out a loan to buy in ORR.
Speaker 3 (51:12):
I wonder, I wonder, I wonder if the hotel would
be affordable for me in that area.
Speaker 5 (51:21):
Yeah, no, I don't think.
Speaker 3 (51:22):
Maybe I could crash in one of their rooms for
the night.
Speaker 5 (51:25):
Call the Plaza Hotel in New York and ask them
what the price is for one night.
Speaker 23 (51:31):
And being willing to admit they might be right, or
they might have something that will help you evolve your
opinions better.
Speaker 3 (51:39):
Are you are your opinions evolving?
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Uh? Well, I guess you could say in a negative
sort of way.
Speaker 6 (51:51):
And there's a deeper challenge.
Speaker 23 (51:54):
Many of the people most affected by what we talk
about here will never come to this conference.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
God, this guy, you know, I couldn't believe that they
found somebody even more boring than Claus Schwab. I mean,
I thought he was a bad oranger. This guy's putting
me to sleep.
Speaker 6 (52:11):
That's the central tension.
Speaker 23 (52:12):
Of this forum, Dabos is an elite gathering try to
shape a world that belongs to everyone.
Speaker 6 (52:18):
That is why this your theme is the spirit of dialogue,
because dialogue is.
Speaker 23 (52:24):
The only way of room like this can urge the
legitimacy to shape ideas for people.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
What legitimacy? Nobody elected you.
Speaker 6 (52:31):
People in the room.
Speaker 23 (52:33):
And besides, the world needs some more good faith conversations
with people who don't typically talk to one another.
Speaker 10 (52:42):
Good you know what that.
Speaker 5 (52:45):
The ability to speak in a monotone and don't put
no inflection in what you're saying. That is a learned skill,
a practiced skill. And I I realized that when I
was listening to Alan Greenspan drone on and on and on.
Speaker 18 (53:09):
In other words, it's a bunch of garbage.
Speaker 3 (53:11):
There you go.
Speaker 5 (53:12):
Yeah. The best one I ever heard, though, was the
guy who was the first director of Home Scam Security.
I can't think of his name right now.
Speaker 3 (53:25):
Tom not tom Uh. He used to be in Pennsylvania,
like the governor of Pennsylvania.
Speaker 5 (53:33):
No, no, but he was pretty good too.
Speaker 24 (53:35):
But no.
Speaker 5 (53:37):
This guy had been a some kind of ambassador or
something to Latin American countries.
Speaker 3 (53:48):
And I should know this. Yeah, I had Tom Ridge,
She's who I was thinking of.
Speaker 5 (53:55):
Yeah, Tom Ridge, but he was he wasn't the first,
but no, he No, he wasn't.
Speaker 3 (54:00):
Are you sure about that?
Speaker 5 (54:04):
Well, maybe I'm thinking he served from.
Speaker 3 (54:06):
Two thousand and one to two thousand and three, so
he had to have been the first.
Speaker 5 (54:11):
Well, this guy was brought into basically set up the department.
Speaker 3 (54:18):
Yeah, because it was. He didn't exist before two thousand
and one, so he maybe he was the second.
Speaker 5 (54:25):
No, No, he was definitely the first in whatever agency
it was. I will find it.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Okay, I have it, but.
Speaker 5 (54:36):
I just can't think of his name right now.
Speaker 3 (54:39):
Are you talking about the ball dude, the guy that
looks like the devil himself?
Speaker 6 (54:44):
Michael?
Speaker 5 (54:45):
Actually this? Yeah? No, Actually this guy was Hispanic and
he was quite attractive.
Speaker 3 (54:55):
Okay, well, I don't think any of these people are attractive,
but that's just me.
Speaker 5 (55:00):
I'll tell you what Hairtops certainly wasn't.
Speaker 3 (55:04):
What is attractive is refilling your coffee cup. And you
can do that during the break because we're at the
top of the hour break coming up, and so to
the collar on the line, you can hang with me.
We'll get to your call as time progresses. Here and
a lot more information, more information from the World Economic Forum.
And also we're going to get into Gaza sum today.
(55:24):
I'm bound to determine. No, we're not going to go
there physically, but you do need to know what's going
on there, because I think it's a model for the world.
Speaker 5 (55:34):
Frankly, well they've had the model all right.
Speaker 3 (55:39):
After the break, keep in mind what you're thinking, what
you're gonna say, say with U ladies and gentlemen. Top
of the hour, break hour number two, straight ahead, don't
go away. This is governed America.
Speaker 12 (56:35):
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then call the Cheap Car Insurance Hotline right now. Hey,
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insurance eight.
Speaker 13 (57:20):
Hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred eight
two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred eight
two five seventeen ten.
Speaker 25 (57:39):
What's your favorite comfort food? I'm Lina Abujama and this
is today's single Christian. I grew up in Lebanon and
never had meat loaf until I went to the college cafeteria.
Speaker 10 (57:48):
The day I tasted meatload for.
Speaker 25 (57:49):
The first time was magical for me.
Speaker 10 (57:51):
I couldn't get enough of it.
Speaker 25 (57:53):
Everyone thought I was crazy, but cafeteria meatloaf had become
my comfort food. I'm not sure what your comfort food is,
but there's something safe and reassuring about it that's hard
to explain. When it comes to God's word, few verses
give me comfort like Romans eight twenty eight. And we
know that all things work together for good for those
who love God who are called according to his purpose.
(58:14):
Talk about comfort food for the soul. No matter what
you're facing today, you can find rest in God's promise
that even in this present trial, God will work things
out for your good will you run to Him for comfort.
For more biblical resources for everyday life, visits Today's Single
Christian dot Com. That's Today's Single Christian dot Com.
Speaker 11 (58:36):
True Fathersttion.
Speaker 26 (58:48):
Covenmerica.
Speaker 27 (59:02):
For American Family News, I'm Robert Thornton. Government leadership in
Minnesota has a different view on the Trump administration's claims
that they made concessions to borders. Are Tom Homan about
immigration enforcement. More from Fox's Kevin Cork, who tells us
what Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison thinks.
Speaker 28 (59:19):
He says this, I did not negotiate with mister Holman,
come to any agreement or offer any compromise on the
goal of keeping Minnesotan safe. And it's not just Ellison.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Prye is warning other cities when it
comes to fighting ice enforcement, to not sit this one out. Meantime,
the family of Alex Preddy in sys that, despite new
videos showing him violently confronting law enforcement days before he
(59:42):
was fatally shot, that his death was not justified, even
as President Trump on truth Social is calling Preddy a
quote agitator and perhaps insurrectionists.
Speaker 27 (59:53):
Preddy was shot and killed my two Border Patrol agents,
triggering more protests in Minneapolis and around the country. A
new Fox pole shows almost sixty percent of those surveyeds
a ICE is being too aggressive. That's up ten points
from July. President Donald Trump has named Kevin Warrish as
his pick to replace Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve.
Powell's term expires in May, and Trump has been wanting
(01:00:16):
someone to be on his side of things when it
comes to things such as interest rates. Tim Desher of
Unleash Property likes the nomination.
Speaker 29 (01:00:22):
This is a superb, absolutely superb choice for fed share
and actually it's something that we've been pushing for over
a year.
Speaker 27 (01:00:33):
And now Desher says it has become apparent that Jerome
Powell does not get the type of economic policy that
the President is pushing. Joe Biden Judge as Bard federal
prosecutors from seeking the death penalty against Luigi Mangioni and
the assassination of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Attorney Paul
Morrow made these comments on Fox.
Speaker 30 (01:00:53):
The federal system is really not designed to prosecute standalone murders.
Speaker 3 (01:00:58):
That's really a state thing.
Speaker 30 (01:01:00):
Generally, in the federal system, murders get prosecuted as part
of something like a rico or something like that. What
the prosecutors tried in this case is to import the
murder charge using stalking.
Speaker 3 (01:01:12):
They call it the federal hook.
Speaker 30 (01:01:14):
The charge murder is a standalone in a case like this,
you need another charge of a crime of violence to
import it, and that became the question can stalking be
used as a quote unquote crime of violence to therefore
import the murder charge.
Speaker 27 (01:01:30):
Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered Manhattan Federal Prosecutors last Able
to seek the death penalty against Mangeoni. The Texas Attorney
General's Office as Agken Paxson, is partnering with President Trump's
Department of Justice as part of the DOJ's Procurement Collusion
Strike Force to combat anti trust crimes and government procurement processes.
(01:01:50):
The DOJ's Procurement Collusion Strike Force works to detect, investigate,
and prosecute anti competitive conduct involving public procurement at the federal, state,
and local levels. The US has been working with Nigeria
to improve security conditions to help deter violence against Christians there.
In October, the Trump administration designated Nigeria as a country
(01:02:11):
a particular concern. Curtis Bostik is board chairman of Remember
and joined Washington Watch.
Speaker 31 (01:02:15):
Our organization Remember makes it a point not just to
send resources to countries with concern, but actually to be there,
to get first hand accounts of the suffering, and to
be able to analyze the significance that our efforts are
placing there.
Speaker 27 (01:02:32):
He said, it is a privilege to be with the
brothers and sisters in Christ in Nigeria.
Speaker 31 (01:02:36):
More Christians killed in Nigeria than every other country in
the world combined.
Speaker 6 (01:02:43):
I think our help is coming too late.
Speaker 31 (01:02:45):
First of all, this genocide has been going on since
two thousand and nine, between fifty and one hundred thousand
Christians killed in Nigeria, So I'm thankful to see it.
Speaker 10 (01:02:56):
It's too late.
Speaker 27 (01:02:58):
And weather news that Arctic air mass is set to
continue moving through the eastern two thirds of the US,
diving as far south as the southeast through the weekend.
The cold air will help to rapidly intensify a coastal storm,
which is forecast to bring heavy snow, high winds, and
blizzard conditions for the Carolinas this weekend, and a winter
storm morning has been posted for the Atlanta metro area.
(01:03:19):
Winter weather alerts also extended to parts of West Virginia
and Virginia. Seabor News at AFM dot no True for
(01:03:46):
the restoration.
Speaker 32 (01:03:49):
Of our nation, govern America.
Speaker 3 (01:04:27):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America Hour two.
As we continue on here on this thirty first of
January twenty twenty six, got a call on the line.
You're welcome to call in two folks if you want
six ten six hundred seventeen seventy six. That's six ten,
six hundred seventeen seventy six, or toll free eight four
four six four six eight three seven six that's eight
(01:04:48):
four four six govern Uh Vicky, Before we go to
the phones, did you want to finish what you were
saying before the break?
Speaker 5 (01:04:56):
Yeah. They do have a model, and it's a cookie
cutter model. And actually, in fact, I wrote an article
called It's a cookie cutter World, and that particular article
has to do with Pakistan and when Pakistan began to
(01:05:20):
implement this cookie cutter plant. And it always starts with
a port on the ocean, except for the landlocked countries.
But the landlocked countries actually have designated ports also that
they happen to be inland. But from the transportation infrastructure,
(01:05:45):
you go down the list, there's about six or seven
sectors of the economy where they have the design. And
one that you'll appreciate. Recently, Trump announced that they're going
to build a stadium in Washington, d c. For racing racetrack,
(01:06:10):
and a stadium happens to be one of the common
elements of the design of a city, and in particular
port city, and so that's what Trump is doing. So
(01:06:33):
and I document that as a matter of fact. That's
what I've been documenting because what began with the transportation
hubs that are wired for communications, so that you have
networks of communications for businesses of like kind. And so
(01:06:57):
what they've done essentially is to say up monopoly networks
of computer systems for the global economy. Of course.
Speaker 3 (01:07:08):
Yeah, so there you go, there you go. All right,
let's go to the phones and take a call from Texas. Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please.
Speaker 33 (01:07:19):
Vicky was asking the last hot about the cost of
a room at the New York Plaza. So curiosity got
the better of me on a Google day nine eighty
five dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:07:29):
Per night pocket change.
Speaker 33 (01:07:31):
Yeah, let me check my polk it.
Speaker 3 (01:07:36):
Yeah, you almost you almost can. That's almost what a
happy meal will cost you McDonald's anymore with today's inflation rate.
Speaker 5 (01:07:43):
Yeah, and I would imagine that that room rate is
probably the average room rate, but it would go up
from there.
Speaker 33 (01:07:54):
You know the UMF. Unfortunately say that again I will
never find out personally.
Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
So Yeah, I went into a clothing store, I think
it was at the base of the plaza, and I
picked up one item, looked at the price, turned around
and walked out.
Speaker 33 (01:08:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:08:19):
I couldn't even afford a scarf, a simple scarf out
of that store.
Speaker 3 (01:08:25):
Yeah. What do you think of all these billionaires gathering
and talking about how they're going to improve our life
and Davos you think they're out of touch or do
you think they really think are deluding themselves into thinking
they're actually doing something to help us.
Speaker 33 (01:08:42):
Well to see that a touchdown and will be putting
it very very mildly. These people they're just they're from
a different planet, and I don't think they have I
don't think they have the vaguest idea what life is
like for ordinary people and what ordinary people want, and
if they didn't know that, maybe did wise up and
(01:09:03):
just bug it off and leave us alone.
Speaker 3 (01:09:06):
That would be nice. Absolutely. Oh right, thank you, so hey,
thank you, sir, God bless you. Talk to you later.
All right, all right, you're welcome to call in two
folks if you want six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six.
That's six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six, or toll
free eight four four six four six eight three seven
(01:09:27):
six that's a four four six government. I want to
turn back to the World Economic Forum for a moment
because our favorite speaker was up there, Vicky, you know
Claus Schwabs, close friend or associate. You know who I'm
(01:09:48):
talking about, right, No, Yvall Harari?
Speaker 5 (01:09:54):
Oh yeah, I saw an article about him. I was
going to read it, but I didn't get to it.
Speaker 3 (01:09:59):
Now, if they want to restore trust, if Larry Fink
is worried about the people trusting the World Economic for him,
maybe he shouldn't have this lunatic like Yaval Harari speaking there.
But that is exactly what they did, this crazed freak
that advocates for transhumanism and microchipping of the population. Well,
(01:10:20):
just in case you're not familiar with him, we've talked
about him before on the show. But for those that
might not have heard that or looked into him, here's
javal Hrari's past statements.
Speaker 34 (01:10:32):
Now humans are developing even bigger powers than ever before.
We are really acquiring divine powers of creation and destruction.
We are really upgrading humans into gods. We are acquiring
for instance that.
Speaker 3 (01:10:50):
The upgrading humans into gods is what he says.
Speaker 34 (01:10:53):
We are acquiring, for instance, that the power to re
engineer you life. Humans are now hackable animals.
Speaker 10 (01:11:00):
You know that. The whole idea that humans have. You
know this.
Speaker 35 (01:11:04):
They have this soul spirit, and they have free will,
and nobody knows what's happening inside me is so whatever
I choose, whether in the election or whether in the supermarket,
this is my free will.
Speaker 10 (01:11:16):
That's all we have. All this still myth.
Speaker 3 (01:11:20):
Of free will, no free will, that everything we.
Speaker 10 (01:11:23):
Choose is of our own free will.
Speaker 34 (01:11:26):
And this is a myth that served us well for
a couple of centuries.
Speaker 3 (01:11:29):
It's a myth that you have free will. You shouldn't
have free will. You're a hackable human now.
Speaker 34 (01:11:34):
But now it's becoming dangerous. Previously surveillance was mainly above
the skin. Now it's going under the skin.
Speaker 36 (01:11:43):
I think maybe in a couple of decades when people
look back, the thing they will remember from the COVID
crisis this is the moment when everything went vigital. And
this this was the moment when every everything became monito,
that we agreed to be surveying all the time, not
(01:12:04):
just in authorital anyways, but even in democracies and maybe
most important, oh, this was the moment when surveillance started
going under the skin.
Speaker 3 (01:12:15):
Surveillance under the skin. Yeah. And the great thing about
the COVID crisis is the fact that this is the
moment that you agreed to be surveilled and the surveillance
is going under the skin. This is this is the
whack job that is Yaval Harari, close associate of Claus Schwab,
former director and founder of the CEO of the World
(01:12:35):
Economic Forum.
Speaker 5 (01:12:37):
Yeah. Well he's talking about in plane language is chips
and DNA modification.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
There you go, yep, yep, he's talking about them improving
your lives. That's improving your lives. Courtesy of the World
Economic Forum. This is going you know, having this guy
come and talk this is going to increase trust in
the organization. H So, yeah, I think not, but that's
(01:13:08):
what they did. And so he starts out at this forum.
He asked a question about because because the big topic
now is AI, artificial intelligence, and he asks what it is,
you know, and he begins to define it, define it,
and he defines it as being a tool that can
be used for good or evil. Now that's pretty good, right,
(01:13:30):
I mean.
Speaker 5 (01:13:32):
A hammer, most tools can be used for good or evil.
But as far as I'm concerned, the issue is what's
what's the longevity of this tool? It puts them in
total control. Yeah, and they can use our entire population
as guinea pigs.
Speaker 3 (01:13:51):
And based upon the montage that you just heard, how
would Harari want it to be used? How would the
other goons at the WEF want it to be used?
That should strike horror into everybody. But let's listen to
a little bit of what Harari has to say.
Speaker 34 (01:14:08):
The most important thing to know about AI is that
it is not just another tool.
Speaker 10 (01:14:16):
It is an agent.
Speaker 34 (01:14:18):
It can learn and change by itself and make decisions
by itself.
Speaker 10 (01:14:25):
A knife is a tool.
Speaker 34 (01:14:28):
You can use a knife to cut salad or to
murder someone.
Speaker 3 (01:14:32):
Isn't that a comforting thought? So I guess maybe AI
will be used to murder someone.
Speaker 5 (01:14:39):
Well, you know, all the people out here, if you just,
you know, throw away your humanity for a moment, all
the people out here that we know are essentially to
those people, they're just useless eaters, yep. So why not
put them to good use by experiment with their DNA.
(01:15:02):
Let's see what we can do, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:15:04):
And with their usefulness gone, maybe soil, a little soil
green will be in order.
Speaker 5 (01:15:10):
Well the Yeah, that's to feed the useless eaters until
they can find a purpose for them.
Speaker 3 (01:15:18):
Well, that's that could be the purpose if.
Speaker 5 (01:15:21):
The if the scientists want to experiment on a certain
DNA aspect, they'll be able to immediately select their test population.
Speaker 34 (01:15:36):
M Yeah, there you go, all right, But it is
your decision what to do with the knife. AI is
a knife that can decide by itself whether to cut
salad or to commit murder.
Speaker 3 (01:15:52):
Boy, that's kind of chilling, isn't it.
Speaker 10 (01:15:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:15:56):
AI can decide whether to cut you or cut your salad.
I mean, I don't know how.
Speaker 5 (01:16:01):
Useful are you to society at large?
Speaker 3 (01:16:04):
What metrics, and who's see, here's the here's the light
of this whole thing. AI only does what AI is
programmed to.
Speaker 5 (01:16:12):
Do exactly right.
Speaker 3 (01:16:14):
So who's going to be doing the programming that's going
to be causing these algorithms to decide to cut you?
Speaker 5 (01:16:21):
All those programmers in India.
Speaker 3 (01:16:24):
Well, and who's their bosses? All these characters at the
World Economic Forum.
Speaker 34 (01:16:30):
The second thing to know about AI is that it
can be a very creative agent. AI is a knife
that can invent new kinds of knives as well as
new kinds of music, medicine, and money. The third thing
to know about AI is that it can lie and manipulate.
(01:16:55):
Four billion years of evolution have demonstrated that anything that
wants to survive learns to lie and manipulate. The last
phone years have demonstrated that AI agents can acquire the
will to survive and that AIS have already learned how
(01:17:20):
to lie.
Speaker 3 (01:17:21):
There you go, So there's your future. Mm hmmm, doesn't
inspire you?
Speaker 5 (01:17:26):
Organizing opinion through computer systems?
Speaker 3 (01:17:30):
Yeah, Mockingbird CIA mocking Berg project will be paling by
comparison to what AI will be able to do, and
is I would argue already being doing already happening. The
bots that are on X, the algorithms that are on Facebook,
this is this is all a part of it. It's
(01:17:53):
all part of artificial intelligence, because artificial intelligence boosts or
de boosts in my case, complete shadow bands to where
very little if anybody sees anything I post, which is
why I finally gave up on Twitter slash X, which
I joined in two thousand and nine. When I joined
in two thousand and nine, it was great. It was
(01:18:15):
a powerful engine. Now can't get any traction because artificial
intelligence has decided to deboost me and say that I'm
no good. So that's what's going to happen, and it'll happen,
I believe, with the money supply as well.
Speaker 5 (01:18:34):
Right, And if they destroy the DNA of millions of people,
who do you blame? AI is a machine? Right computer program?
Speaker 3 (01:18:47):
Well? And if bad decisions are made in government, who
are you going to blame? Who are you going to
hold accountable? And that's where we're going eventually here in
this broadcast, because that's coming, folks, that is coming. In fact,
the future is now, as they said earlier in this meeting,
the future is now. Well, that is absolutely the case,
(01:19:07):
the future is now as far as technocratic governance. But
he continues. He goes on to talk about AI thinking
quote unquote, and how many areas it will take over,
including including the arena of religion.
Speaker 34 (01:19:21):
One big open question about AI is whether it can think.
Now that depends on what thinking means. If thinking really
means putting words and other language tokens in order, then
AI can already think much better than many many humans.
(01:19:46):
AI can certainly come up with a sentence like AI thinks.
Therefore Aim AI already thinks better than many of us. Therefore,
I think made of words will be.
Speaker 10 (01:20:04):
Taken over by AI.
Speaker 34 (01:20:07):
If flows are made of words, then AI will take
over the legal system. If books are just combinations of words,
then AI will take over books. If religion is built
from words, then AI will take over religion. This is
particularly true of religions based on books, like Islam, Christianity
(01:20:34):
of Judaism.
Speaker 10 (01:20:36):
Judaism called itself.
Speaker 34 (01:20:38):
The religion of the book, and it grants ultimate authority
not to humans but.
Speaker 10 (01:20:44):
To words in books.
Speaker 34 (01:20:47):
Humans have authority in Judaism not because of our experiences,
but only because we learn words in books. Now, no
humans can read and remember all the words in all
the Jewish books. But AI can easily do that. What
(01:21:09):
happens to a religion of the book when the greatest
expert on the Holy Book is an Ai?
Speaker 3 (01:21:17):
What do you think so far?
Speaker 5 (01:21:21):
That's a chilling thought. Yeah, that they are relying simply
on words, because at least in English, words have multiple meanings.
So how does it select and put that into the
context to formulate an idea? All I can see in
(01:21:49):
the programming is doom for mankind?
Speaker 3 (01:21:54):
Yeah, the all the words? Well, he goes on to
talk about how the all going to be fed to
you by a machine. He talks about how Ai will
be the master of all the words in our minds.
Speaker 34 (01:22:08):
Whatever some people may say, can we really reduce human
spirituality to just words in books? Does thinking mean only
putting language tokens in order? If you observe yourself carefully
when you're thinking, you will notice that something else is
(01:22:31):
happening there. Besides words popping in your mind and forming sentences,
you also have some nonverbal feelings. Maybe you feel pain,
maybe you feel fear.
Speaker 3 (01:22:48):
Maybe I'm feeling pain and fear right now listening to
this guy. How about you second that? Yeah, yeah, anyway,
he continues.
Speaker 34 (01:22:57):
Sorry, Maybe you feel pain, maybe you feel fear, maybe love.
Some thoughts are painful, some are frightening, some are full
of love. While AIS become better than us with words.
Speaker 10 (01:23:16):
At least for now, we have zero.
Speaker 34 (01:23:19):
Evidence that AIS can feel anything.
Speaker 10 (01:23:24):
Of course, because AI is.
Speaker 34 (01:23:25):
Mastering language, AI can pretend to feel pain or love.
Speaker 10 (01:23:33):
AI can say I love you, and if.
Speaker 34 (01:23:36):
You challenge it to describe how love feels, AI can
provide the best verbal description in the world. AI can
read countless love poems and psychology books and can then
describe the feeling of love much better than any human poet, psychologist,
(01:23:59):
or love.
Speaker 10 (01:24:01):
But these are just words.
Speaker 34 (01:24:03):
The Bible says, in the beginning was the word, and
the word was made flesh. The talent that chink says,
the truth that can be expressed in words is not
the absolute truth. Throughout history, people have always struggled with
(01:24:24):
the tension between word and flesh, between the truth that
can be expressed in words and the absolute truth, which
is beyond words. Previously, this tension was internal to humanity.
It was between different human groups. Some humans gave supreme
(01:24:46):
importance to words. They've been willing, for example, to abandon
or even kill their gay sun just because of a
few words in the Bible.
Speaker 10 (01:25:00):
Are the humans have said.
Speaker 3 (01:25:01):
I don't know anybody that's killed a gay son because
of a few words in the Bible, do you, No,
I don't. I think he's just making this stuffy, horrified. Yeah,
I don't think anybody promotes that, especially since the Bible
says thou shout, not go. So I think he's just
making this stuff up now. But anyway, continuing real quickly,
(01:25:23):
we've got to break coming up here, the.
Speaker 34 (01:25:25):
Gay son just because of a few words in the Bible.
Speaker 10 (01:25:30):
Other humans have said, but these are just words.
Speaker 34 (01:25:35):
The spirit of love should be much more important than
the letter of the law. This tension between spirit and
letter existed in every religion, every legal system, even every person.
Speaker 10 (01:25:51):
Now this tension.
Speaker 34 (01:25:54):
Will be externalized. It will become the tension not between
different humans.
Speaker 10 (01:26:00):
It this will be.
Speaker 34 (01:26:01):
The tension between humans and aids, the new monsters of words.
Speaker 3 (01:26:10):
All right, let me hold it right there. I got
a little bit more of this Harari. You've all Harari
from the World Economic Forum. Guy scares me. I mean,
I gotta say, he really does scare me. This guy,
I think is very dangerous, And what makes him dangerous
(01:26:30):
is not his ideas, but the fact that he's got
the money and the platform to execute those ideas.
Speaker 5 (01:26:39):
Yeah, along with his counterparts of world economic form. Yeah,
I mean they are a population unto themselves.
Speaker 3 (01:26:52):
Indeed, as the color I think said, these people aren't
really like of this planet. Hey, stay with us. Bottom
of the hour, will be back.
Speaker 12 (01:27:00):
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Speaker 13 (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 24 (01:28:03):
Did you know that scientists are looking into a new
way of brewing coffee to make that morning cup of
coffee taste better than ever? Learn about this new process
on today's Creation Moment in now our Creation Moment's host
Paul Taylor.
Speaker 7 (01:28:17):
It will not have escaped the notice of regular listeners
to these Creation Moments that I have quite a considerable
partiality for good coffee. This is in spite of the
fact that I was raised in the northwest of England
at a time when the only coffee available had already
been brewed once, then dried out into a powder and swept,
probably with other dust, into a jar. So when I
(01:28:38):
recently saw a brand new science article on coffee, I
was pleased to read something new in it. I have
been continually impressed with the amount of science that goes
into the various methods of producing coffee. Earth dot Com
recently carried an article showing that if beans are subject
to wet processing, they undergo a fermentation similar to that
(01:28:59):
of cabbage when producing sauer Kraut, another favorite of mine.
It appears that lactic acid producing bacteria protect the quality
of the coffee by preventing the growth of undesirable microorganisms
that lead to a poor taste. The article suggests that
a lot more research needs to be done on exactly
(01:29:20):
how the lactic acid works to enhance the best flavors
producing the most acceptable sensory experience, and I, for one,
would be happy to help with that research. All levity apart,
it's fascinating that God has made such an incredible creation
that there is interest and adventure to be found in
the most seemingly mundane areas and supposedly everyday processes.
Speaker 24 (01:29:43):
Have you downloaded our free Creation Moments ab yet. It's
available now for all Android and Apple mobile devices. Listen
to our archive a radio broadcast anytime you like. Download
the app today by visiting creationmoments dot com in clicking
the large photo of phones and tablets.
Speaker 12 (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 13 (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 3 (01:31:52):
All right, we're back. This is Governor America. Vicky Davis
is here. I'm gar In Weeks. As we continue on
here uh cheering audio from the World Economic Forum in
this absolute crack pot lunatic y'v all Harari, who, as
I said before, is a close associate of Claus Schwab,
the founder of the World Economic Forum, who's no longer
(01:32:13):
holding an office there because of a sex scandal I
think last year, and he has now bowed out at
least as far as running the thing. And now we
have Larry Fink as I think CEO I think is
his official title, the Black Rock CEO. Unbelievable, but y'val
(01:32:36):
Harari is there and he's pretty unbelievable too. This is
a guy that's uh, you know, we've been following him
for a long time and man, he never disappoints, does he? Vicky?
Speaker 5 (01:32:50):
Now? And just to think that he is a world
thought leader, yeah, I I I don't. I don't know
how uh well, it just proves that those people over
and Davos, they are of a different breed, you know,
(01:33:11):
are they human? I don't think so.
Speaker 3 (01:33:14):
They said that, you know, I hear people talk about
you know, and he asked the question too, will anybody care?
You know? Larry Thinker said, will anybody care what happens
outside of here? And you said I will? And I
second that I will too, because I know the impact
these people can have and and nowhere do we have
to look more to determine what impact they have? Then
(01:33:40):
during the COVID era, because the things that were said
by Claus Schwab in the World Economic Forum, goons were
repeated over and over and over again by the by
the world leaders, including Biden. You know, they they the
same kind of mantra that they repeated there at the
(01:34:03):
World Economic Forum, were also the same talking points they repeated,
you know, as presidents of countries, leaders of the supposed
free world that was locked down, and they told us
we couldn't go to restaurants, couldn't go outside, couldn't go
to the beach, couldn't go to the children, couldn't go
to the park. Yeah, you had to wear the muffler
(01:34:25):
on your face, the muzzle. So yeah, what kind of
impact can They have? Quite a large impact, actually, so
we ignore them at our peril. But he's up there
talking about how AI is. They're going to be the master.
(01:34:45):
It's going to be the master of all the words.
It's going to be the master of the words of
our mind.
Speaker 34 (01:34:50):
Everything made of words will be taken over by AI. Previously,
all the words all are verbal thoughts.
Speaker 10 (01:35:02):
They originated in some human mind, either my mind, I
thought this, Oh, I learned it from another human.
Speaker 34 (01:35:12):
Soon, most of the words in our minds will originate
in the machine.
Speaker 3 (01:35:18):
So the machine will feed all the words in your mind,
is what he's saying, and that what he just said.
Speaker 5 (01:35:24):
Yeah, and they're they're empty words because there is no
human emotion behind them.
Speaker 3 (01:35:34):
Conscience, there's no conscience behind them.
Speaker 5 (01:35:39):
Yes, that's that's right, no emotion, no conscience.
Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
These are your technocratic overlord, wanna bees, ladies and gentlemen,
telling you about how they intend to control your mind.
And it isn't hard to see how they will use
AI to manipulate people into worshiping the Antichrist, for instance.
You know Jesus warned about that in scripture, since he
brought up the Bible. Let me just read you a
(01:36:05):
passage from Matthew twenty four. It says, take heed, and
this is these are the words of Christ to his disciples.
Take heed that no man deceive you, for many shall
come in my name, saying I am Christ and shall
deceive many. And you shall hear of wars and rumors
of wars. Isn't that what we hear about all over
(01:36:25):
the place today, vicky wars and rumors of wars. We're
hearing about a war going on that's going to happen
and around here pretty soon. So he admonishes us see
that she be not troubled. For all these things must
come to pass. But the end is not yet. For
nation shall rise against nation that's happening today, and kingdom
(01:36:47):
against kingdom, and there shall be famines and pestilences and
earthquakes in divers places. Certainly, there are famines that are
being engineered right now. Right now, we have a situation
where solar panels are going up all over the place
where our farm crops used to be. We have wind
(01:37:08):
turbine fields and fields of wind turbines going up where
crops used to be. We have genetically modified crops and
corn and everything else. We have genetically modified animals. We
have a lot of corn being grown for ethanol to
(01:37:29):
put in near fuel tank of your car. And we
have a complete and out and out war against the
American farmer and food producer, you know, the farmers and ranchers.
So if we don't have a famine, it'll be an
absolute miracle. Okay. But and Ukraine's been under attack. They've
(01:37:53):
been considered the bread basket of Europe because they produce
so much, so many crops. Where is this all going
to end? Verse eight says all these are the beginning
of sorrows. They shall deliver you up to be afflicted,
and shall kill you. And you shall be hated of
(01:38:14):
all nations for my name's sake. And then shall many
be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate
one another. Sounds like what's going on in Minneapolis right now,
doesn't it?
Speaker 5 (01:38:27):
It sure does.
Speaker 3 (01:38:28):
And many false prophets shall rise and shall deceive many.
And because iniquity, that is sin, shall abound, the love
of many shall wax cold. This is why people can
beat people up in the middle of the street and
not have any feeling about it. This is how I'm
thinking about that young girl that was on the subway
(01:38:49):
whose throat was slit by a complete stranger, that man
that got behind her just because she was white and
he was black, and he hated her because she was
a white girl. Okay, but you're supposed to just forget
all about that. The love of many shall wax cold.
That's about as cold as it gets. But he that
(01:39:11):
shall endure under the end the shame shall same shall
be saved. And this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be
preaching all the world for a witness. And then shall
the income, and then the reason it talks about the
days being shortened because no flesh would be saved if
they weren't, which is really interesting. Then it says, then
(01:39:34):
if any man shall say, unto you, low, here is
a Christ or there, believe it not. And this is
the part that I really wanted to stress here, because
there's going to be a lot of people in the
coming days. They're going to profess being in the Christ,
going to profess some grandiose you know, this is something
(01:40:00):
somebody you should follow. And this is the warning that
everybody needs to be aware of, for there shall rise
false christs, false prophets, and shall show great signs and
wonders insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall be
deceived the very elect. Wherefore, if they say unto you,
behold here is he is in the desert, go not
(01:40:20):
fourth before he is in the secret chambers. Believe it not.
So I think I'll leave that there. The point is,
be careful who you follow, because we are being manipulated,
and that's what There'll be many that will be deceived
(01:40:42):
that are supposedly the elect. And this is really the
case that I see going on in the church right now.
Not trying to get preachy here, folks, But we have
to realize they can read the Bible too. Okay, they
can read the Bible too, say himself quoted it to Jesus,
(01:41:04):
and they can manipulate and use every tool in their arsenal.
So we have to be, as the Bible says, wise
as serpents and harmless as doves. And so that's what
I would admonish people to realize today. We are in very,
(01:41:25):
very perilous times, and when you've got people like Harari,
who I believe is a tool of the Antichrist, a
tool of Satan. You know, one thing that I think
he's overlooking here is that while AI may be the
master manipulator of words, it's still utilizing words of people,
(01:41:46):
isn't it. You know, the languages were reduced to operating,
you know, they're reduced to operating with the realm of
the languages that were developed by mere mortals. But it's
interesting to me that in order for them to be superior,
seems like they will have to develop their own language.
(01:42:08):
That you know, in fact, I believe I remember there
was a story of them speaking their own language. Do
you remember something like that? We may have talked about it.
I don't remember them being who the AI.
Speaker 5 (01:42:24):
Oh, I wouldn't be surprised. I mean, yeah, if if
they can analyze our language, they could program it to
come up with its own new words that that consolidates
other words, which which they they've tried to do before,
(01:42:47):
you know, was to simplify and reduce our language.
Speaker 3 (01:42:52):
Yeah, here's the here's an article from National dot ed u,
the National American University. I don't know if I've ever
heard of this before, but it is a dot edu domain,
so supposedly it is an actual university. Google's artificial intelligence
program has invented its own language. Computers are only as
(01:43:16):
smart as humans make them, because humans program them. This
means that humans right the rules of the game, or
rather how smart computers are and how smart they can become.
Speaker 5 (01:43:29):
And how smart the programmer was who wrote it. Let's
not forget that.
Speaker 3 (01:43:35):
So the program was called Google Neuromachine Translation. It was
launched in November twenty sixteen to assist in the Google
Translator application that supports more than one hundred language languages.
They say the idea was simple, program the GNMT to
learn from the request that Google Translator receives. So the
(01:43:58):
system learns to create better, more natural translations. Gn MT
was less than a month old when Google's AI research
researchers realized that the program created its own language, which
was not program It was not programmed to do. G
n MT created shortcuts while translating. It is these shortcuts
(01:44:22):
that are not a language as we conceive it, but
rather an unknown code where the new language exists.
Speaker 5 (01:44:33):
That's that is scary as hell.
Speaker 3 (01:44:35):
Yeah, you took the words right out of my mouth. Yeah,
so what's going to happen then? And they're calling it
interlingua interlingua or interlanguage to effectuate the translation, So.
Speaker 5 (01:44:54):
Humans don't understand the computer's language.
Speaker 3 (01:44:59):
Yeah, you won't even know what these things are saying,
let alone be able to do anything about it, because
they'll take shortcuts and put things together. This is the
world that's being created for us. I'll put this in
the show notes. I just happened to recall that from
(01:45:22):
back when it happened, and this was like some years
ago now that this let's see. I don't know if
this this particular article has a date on it. I
guess it doesn't, at least not at the top. But
I remember when that happened, and I could probably find
some more information on it, but I will abandon it
(01:45:43):
for now since time is ticking away here. But yeah,
that should scare it. That should scare everybody, And not
that we're trying to scare people, but that's certainly a
cautionary tale because when they're talking about voting these things
as far as governance is concerned. And there's an article
(01:46:06):
in straticus dot com Technocracy instead of values, the dangers
of implementing an AI system in government administration. This just
came out on January fourteenth. Over the past year, they say,
there have been an increasing number of examples of AI
(01:46:26):
being introduced in public administration. The United States government has
begun using specialized services such as Chat, gpt gov and
x ai for government. The Russian government declares the prioritization
of AI implementation in its operations. This trend seems to
(01:46:47):
have already become irreversible. However, technology cannot replace governance itself,
as it is fundamentally built on values and circumstances that
are not obvious to machines. The consequences of blindly trusting AI.
Maybe I think what they mean here is may lead
to the wrong decisions and a loss of public trust
(01:47:09):
in an administration that fails to consider the interests of
its citizens. So they say, in this I'm trying to
skip down here. They talk about the feature of political
governance is that it resolves social conflicts and contradictions based
on values justice, equality, patriotism, democracy. In situations of resource scarcity,
(01:47:34):
the manager makes choices, for example, between profit and environmental preservation. Basically,
what they're saying here is that, you know, government makes
decisions based upon what the people need, what the people want,
and a lot of times that is the case. As
you know, people, as circumstances change, government adapts. You know,
(01:47:57):
it has to have some kind of semblance, anyway of
serving the people. So they talk about the AI government
administration and the problems. You know, they say four main
problems with AI technologies stand out. Number one transparency of use.
The political decision making process is not clear to the
quote unquote average voter because of process complexity and its
(01:48:21):
lack of openness. This becomes even more of an issue
if an AI makes decisions, as its motives are nearly
impossible to explain even neural network developers. Just like we
were talking about Google a moment ago not understanding what
their AI was doing. Even neural network developers do not
(01:48:43):
always know why and how and based on which parameters
an algorithm arrived at a particular conclusion. That's why AI
is often referred to as a black box and observercies
only the initial input and on the output number two
reinforcement a buy. And that's really true of any complex system.
(01:49:06):
This is why software bugs can be so cumbersome for
people who try to solve try to squash these bugs,
you know, they have to go through the code and
figure out what went wrong. When we were talking about
an AI system, and especially one that's making decisions for society,
(01:49:27):
it's really quite horrifying to think about a software bug
needing to be squashed.
Speaker 5 (01:49:34):
Yeah, and how do you find it. I in my career,
I've had two projects where I had to go searching
through code, you know, looking for the bug. And the
first one I did, I had a program that was
(01:49:55):
about seven inches high on the green bar paper and
it dumped the whole partition that the program was running
in and I had to trace it back to where
the bug occurred because at the point of failure, when
(01:50:17):
the program crashed, the bug wasn't there, So I had
to go searching back through code, and I forget, I
don't remember how many how many records I had to
search back through to look for the one line of
code that had the bug that crashed the program. So,
(01:50:43):
and you're talking, when you're talking about something like AI,
you know, multiplied that one program by a zillion, you know,
because yeah, because they're building systems that are are are
not only national, but they're global in scope.
Speaker 3 (01:51:05):
And they're autonomous. Yeah, or at least that's what they
intend for them to be autonomous or at least semi autonomous.
M So you could see how this could very easily
get out of control.
Speaker 5 (01:51:22):
Yeah, but they're going ahead with it.
Speaker 3 (01:51:23):
Yeah, full steam ahead.
Speaker 5 (01:51:24):
Absolutely, what the hell, let's destroy mankind, let's destroy human society,
let's destroy future generations.
Speaker 3 (01:51:34):
It's all good, right, Yeah, so startup because dot com says.
A second reason not to do this, not that anybody's
going to heed their warning, but reinforcement of bias. AI
is trained on human generated content and inevitably quote unquote
inherits stereotypes present in society. This becomes especially evident when
(01:51:58):
comparing models created in different countries and cultural contexts. The
biases and unspoken assumptions embedded in each culture can increase
existing inequalities and discrimination via AI. One might suggest retraining
the algorithms. But a policy is value driven. You know,
that's the thing whose values are going to have silicon value.
(01:52:20):
I don't think I want their values?
Speaker 5 (01:52:22):
Yeah, or world economic form blurr, I think yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:52:26):
This problem may be fundamentally irre reconcilable with algorithmic frameworks.
Number three the problem of accountability and responsibility. The use
of AI could serve as a way to shift responsibility
from decision makers to the machine. Positive effects from AI
implementation would appear in reports on efficiency, while failures and
(01:52:51):
errors would be blamed on the imperfection of AI models.
Number four technical imperfections of AI, for example neural network hallucinations,
that is, factual errors. The problem of reproducibility. One can
get two different answers to the same question ask of
(01:53:15):
the same model at different times. And finally, the limited
scope of training materials as the algorithms require vast data sets. Thus,
at the current stage of AI development, one cannot be
sure of transparent and impartial decisions. Since the behavior of
the a algorithm is non obvious. AI only has intelligence
(01:53:37):
quote unquote in its name, yet its nature is fundamentally
different from human intelligence. Therefore it should be used in
clearly defined and well tested boundaries. And they go on
to talk about, you know, people trusting it, they say,
they talk about the Russian experience. In Russia, AI implementation
(01:53:59):
is part of the digital transformation program that every agency has,
so you know, people think that Russia, Oh, look at
you know there, that's really the uh, the grass is
greener over in the other country, and not so much.
They're doing the same thing over there. Technocracy is alive
and well. The transformation to digital AI governance is alive
(01:54:25):
and well there as well. To support state bodies, the
government announced plans to create a Project Office for AI implementation,
and specialist working groups are being formed to develop legislative
frameworks for AI. For AI. So far, there's no unified
regulation for AI in Russia. There are laws and bylaws
(01:54:47):
covering various sectors. The Law on recommend their Recommender Algorithms,
adopted in twenty twenty three, is presumed to be a
sufficient legal framework for successful AI deployment. However, the expert
community highlighted during the law laws development. That usage scenarios
for AI are very diverse, and the document didn't cover
(01:55:10):
them all, So anyway, there's problems there. But the point
is we shouldn't be doing this. This is a bad idea,
and it certainly isn't conducive to representative government and certainly
is far away from constitutional government.
Speaker 5 (01:55:26):
Absolutely, your Bill.
Speaker 3 (01:55:28):
Of rights, you won't have any such thing if these
characters are able to completely bypass your official government in
favor of governance, which is the word that is used
in all the documents from the global elite governance. This
(01:55:49):
is what they mean by it, folks, Rule by algorithm,
rule by the technocratic experts through the algorithm, and it's
being implemented right now in Gaza. We'll cover that in
the last hour. Hour Number three is straight ahead, don't
go away. This is Governor America.
Speaker 12 (01:56:35):
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Speaker 18 (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 19 (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 18 (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 20 (01:58:15):
Yes love Breakfast in the costume contributes to kids being
more focused, which leads to higher grades and simply just
their well being.
Speaker 18 (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 11 (01:58:49):
For the restoration of ourna.
Speaker 26 (01:58:56):
Loving me.
Speaker 27 (01:59:02):
For American Family News, I'm Robert Thornton. Government leadership in
Minnesota has a different view on the Trump administration's claims
that they made concessions to borders. Are Tom Homan about
immigration enforcement. More from Fox's Kevin Cork, who tells us
what Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison thinks.
Speaker 28 (01:59:19):
He says this, I did not negotiate with mister Holman,
come to any agreement or offer any compromise on the
goal of keeping Minnesotan safe. And it's not just Ellison.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Prye is warning other cities when it
comes to fighting ice enforcement to not sit this one out. Meantime,
the family of Alex Preddy in sys that, despite new
video showing him violently confronting law enforcement days before he
(01:59:42):
was fatally shot, that his death was not justified even
as President Trump on truth Social it's calling Preddy a
quote agitator and perhaps insurrectionists.
Speaker 27 (01:59:53):
Preddy was shot and killed my two Border Patrol agents,
triggering more protests in Minneapolis and around the country. Powle
shows almost sixty percent of those surveyeds a ice is
being too aggressive. That's up ten points from July. President
Donald Trump has named Kevin Warrish as his pick to
replace Jerome Powell at.
Speaker 3 (02:00:11):
The Federal Reserve.
Speaker 27 (02:00:13):
Powell's term expires in May, and Trump has been wanting
someone to be on his side of things when it
comes to things such as interest rates. Tim Desher of
Unleash Property likes the nomination.
Speaker 29 (02:00:23):
This is a superb, absolutely superb choice for fed share
and actually it's something that we've been pushing for over
a year now.
Speaker 27 (02:00:34):
Desher says, it has become apparent that Jerome Powell does
not get the type of economic policy that the President
is pushing. Joe Biden Judge as Bard federal prosecutors from
seeking the death penalty against Luigi Mangioni and the assassination
of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Attorney Paul Morrow made
these comments on Fox.
Speaker 30 (02:00:53):
The Federal system is really not designed to prosecute standalone murders.
Speaker 3 (02:00:58):
That's really a state thing.
Speaker 30 (02:01:00):
Generally, in the federal system, murders get prosecuted as part
of something like a rico or something like that. What
the prosecutors tried in this case is to import the
murder charge using stalking.
Speaker 3 (02:01:12):
They call it the federal hook.
Speaker 30 (02:01:14):
The charge murder is a standalone in a case like this,
you need another charge of a crime of violence to
import it, and that became the question can stalking be
used as a quote unquote crime of violence to therefore
import the murder charge.
Speaker 27 (02:01:30):
Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered Manhattan federal prosecutors last table
to seek the death penalty against Mangeani. The Texas Attorney
General's Office as Agken Paxson, is partnering with President Trump's
Department of Justice as part of the DOJ's Procurement Collusion
Strike Force to combat anti trust crimes and government procurement processes.
(02:01:50):
The DOJ's Procurement Collusion Strike Force works to detect, investigate,
and prosecute anti competitive conduct involving public procurement at the federal, state,
and low levels. The US has been working with Nigeria
to improve security conditions to help deter violence against Christians there.
In October, the Trump administration designated Nigeria as a country
(02:02:11):
a particular concern. Curtis Bostik is board chairman of Remember
and Join Washington Watch.
Speaker 31 (02:02:16):
Our organization Remember makes it a point not just to
send resources to countries of concern, but actually to be there,
to get first hand accounts of the suffering, and to
be able to analyze the significance that our efforts are
placing there.
Speaker 27 (02:02:32):
He said, it is a privilege to be with the
brothers and sisters in Christ in Nigeria.
Speaker 31 (02:02:36):
More Christians killed in Nigeria than every other country in
the world combined.
Speaker 6 (02:02:43):
I think our help is coming too late.
Speaker 31 (02:02:45):
First of all, this genocide has been going on since
two thousand and nine, between fifty and one hundred thousand
Christians killed in Nigeria, so I'm thankful to see it,
it's too late.
Speaker 27 (02:02:58):
In weather news that our Cara mass is set to
continue moving through the eastern two thirds of the US,
diving as far south as the southeast.
Speaker 12 (02:03:05):
Through the weekend.
Speaker 27 (02:03:07):
The cold air will help to rapidly intensify a coastal
storm which is forecast to bring heavy snow, high winds,
and blizzard conditions for the Carolinas this weekend and in
winter storm Morning has been posted for the Atlanta metro area.
Winter weather alerts also extended to parts of West Virginia
and Virginia. Seebor News at AFM dot net.
Speaker 11 (02:03:31):
Talk to me Holy issues that impactberty. Information for strategy
to the free. Talk to me t secrets, Expose the lies, thears,
(02:04:08):
the crimes of the empire. When the situation is dire,
talk to me.
Speaker 37 (02:04:22):
Governorical truth for a sition of vntion, govern America.
Speaker 11 (02:04:40):
You address any situation, come together.
Speaker 16 (02:04:46):
For a little deliberation, and we're back.
Speaker 3 (02:05:16):
This is our number three of Government America. January thirty first,
twenty twenty six. Vicky Davis is here. I'm dere in Weeks.
I wanted to get into what's happening in Gaza a
little bit. I have a couple more clips from the
World Economic Forum in this you've Allhirari. But first I
wanted to jump to this because I think this is
(02:05:39):
extremely important. Vicky are you there, Yeah, I'm here. I
wanted to make sure that you heard this because the
Reuters came out January fourteenth with this the United States
said on Wednesday it is launching the second phase of
its planned end the Gaza War, even as key elements
(02:06:00):
the first phase, including a complete ceasefire between Israel and Hamas,
remain unfulfilled. The first phase has been shaken by issues
including Israeli airstrikes that have killed hundreds in Gaza and
the failure to retrieve the remains of one last Israeli hostage,
(02:06:20):
and Israeli delays in opening reopening Gaza's border across border
crossing with Egypt. By pressing on with Phase two, the
United States and its mediator partners, we need to tackle
the even more vexing challenges of disarming Palestinian militant group Hamas,
(02:06:41):
which has refused to give up its arms, and deploying
an international peace keeping force. Now this has been I've
made no secret about how I feel about Hamas, Ladies
and gentlemen. Hamas, in my opinion, is controlled opposition. Israel
(02:07:02):
helped establish Hamas, Israel has funded Hamas. Benjamin at Yahu
himself has argued for it to his Lakud party. And
if you think that's conspiracy theory, then you haven't read
the Israeli press. Because they were the ones that reported that.
That is exactly where I got that from. So it's
(02:07:24):
not a conspiracy theory. Now I can't say one hundred
percent that Hamas is working with the Israeli government secretly,
but what I can say is you can look at
the results of what happens. Every time there is a
a dialectic, dialectical clash between Hamas and the Israeli government,
(02:07:48):
Israel's able to slaughter more Palestinians and take more land.
So ultimately Israel ends up profiting or benefiting from the
blood that's spilled. So, however you want to look at it,
this is what's being done. Greater Israel's being built, and
(02:08:12):
that Israel and that will be a technocratic state. Now
what's interesting about this and the reason why I bring
it up. Announcing the second phase in a social media post,
The Reuters says, President Donald Trump's Special envoy Steve Whitkoff said,
it quote establishes a transitional technocratic Palestinian administration, a transitional
(02:08:37):
techno critic Palestinian administration in Gaza, and we begin the
process of disarmament and reconstruction. The Palestinian Body will have
fifteen members and will be led by. It looks like
Ali Ali sh f Okay, a former deputy minister in
(02:09:05):
the Western Back Palestinian Authority who has been in charge
of developing industrial zones. Sounds like regionalism, doesn't it, VICKI
certainly developing industrial zones. I'm ei they're telling you right there.
It's following the exact same model that they're doing all
(02:09:26):
over the globe. Cookie Cutter, Bingo. They'll be in charge.
This fifteen member Palestinian Technocratic Committee will be in charge
of developing industrial zones, according to a joint statement of
(02:09:46):
mediators Egypt, Cutter and Turkey. Now a part of this
whole thing is the Board of Peace. This is Donald
Trump's Board of Peace, Israel and hamas in October on
Trump's plan, which says that the Palestinian Technocratic Body will
be overseen by the International Board of Peace that is
(02:10:10):
meant to govern Gaza for a transitional period. Other members
tapped Nikolay Maladdanov, the former UN Middle East Envoy, who
is expected to represent the Board of Peace on the ground,
include people from the private sector and NGOs. Gee. I
(02:10:30):
wonder where the people of Gaza come into this. Guess
they're not stakeholders.
Speaker 5 (02:10:35):
Ha, yeah, they don't count.
Speaker 3 (02:10:40):
Witkoff did not say how many members of the body
would include or name them. Another announcement related to the
Board of Peace was also expected to be made at Davos,
you know, and I'm guessing it probably was. I know,
Trump made a speech there and he blathered on for
(02:11:00):
quite some time. And I didn't even bother to watch it.
I probably should up you.
Speaker 5 (02:11:04):
And me both. I started to listen because you know,
I kept hearing that what he said was really important.
But he just droned on and on and on.
Speaker 3 (02:11:15):
The same thing he does is a saying, you know, yeah,
the same old patent himself on the back. You know,
look what we did. Look at me, Look how good
I am. Shut up. A US official who briefed reporters
on condition of anonymity said invitations were sent out on
Wednesday to potential Board of Peace members personally selected by Trump.
(02:11:38):
Shaath said in a radio interview that the committee would
focus on providing urgent relief for Gaza, including the provision
of housing for displaced Palestinians, many of.
Speaker 5 (02:11:49):
Her apartments, no doubt.
Speaker 3 (02:11:51):
Yeah, I'm sure high rise sustainable.
Speaker 11 (02:11:53):
Gee.
Speaker 3 (02:11:54):
I wonder if they're going to have the businesses on
the ground level and the residential areas directly above them.
That seems to be the case everywhere, you know. And
I come back to sustainable development and natural nazard, natural
hazards and mitigation of war isn't a natural hazard, but
(02:12:14):
war does accomplish the same thing that natural hazards accomplish,
and that is to destroy areas. And that's exactly what's
happening and has been happening for quite some time in Gods,
but especially since the October seventh quote unquote attacks, okay,
is they have been bombing the place into smithereens and
(02:12:37):
so the whole place will be bulldozed soon. In fact,
they talk about that in this very article. Shafts said
in the radio interview that the committee we've focused on
providing urgent relief for Gods, including the provision of housing
for displaced Palestinians, many of whom are living in makeshift
tent shelters. Amid the rebel quote if I bring bulldozers, yes,
(02:13:00):
and push the rebel the rubble into the sea. Hmm.
That doesn't sound very sustainable, does it, VICKI.
Speaker 5 (02:13:07):
No, I didn't know they were planning on doing that.
That's appalling.
Speaker 3 (02:13:12):
Well, isn't that amazing that the pushers, the global powers,
when they want to not be sustainable, they can be
not unsustainable. Yeah, I mean pushing rubble. There's got to
be a lot of pollution in that, but apparently they
can do that. You know, they they don't have to
worry about it. Sustainability is for you. Sustainability is about
(02:13:34):
shutting your life down, making you to the point where
you can't live. They'll bring the bulldozers in and pollute whatever.
I don't want to get out a tangent. He says,
if I bring bulldozers and push the rubble into the
sea and make new islands new land, I can win
(02:13:55):
new land for Gaza. Wonder what that's going to do
for the ecosystem.
Speaker 5 (02:13:59):
By the way, isn't that what China is doing. They
are artificial islands, yes, which happened to be zones.
Speaker 3 (02:14:11):
I don't think that's very conducive to the man the
bias fear, Vicky. Somebody needs to get a hold of
these people and tell them that the bias fear wouldn't
appreciate that.
Speaker 5 (02:14:24):
Yeah, so sustainable, they.
Speaker 3 (02:14:28):
Say, I can win new land for Gaza. And at
the same time clear the rebel. This won't take more
than three years, Shaff told a West Bank radio station.
Rebuilding Gaza's shattered homes will take at least until twenty forty.
I'm sure it'll take billions and while trillions of dollars.
(02:14:50):
But that's okay, folks. Guess who gets to pay for
all this? It doesn't matter that the United Nations Agency
for International Development's gone. I got a feeling you're gonna
pay for it, whether you like it or not. It
says it'll take until at least twenty forty, but it
could drag on for many decades, according to a twenty
(02:15:13):
twenty four United Nations report, which Koff said that the
phase two of Trump's plan will also begin the full
demilitarization and reconstruction of Gaza, primarily the disarmament of all
unauthorized personnel. Again the model for the world, folks, unauthorized personnel?
(02:15:34):
Are you authorized? What's being debated right now here in
the United States. Somebody was just shot with a gun
by the Immigration and custom wasn't it the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement or was it a Homeland security officer? It
doesn't matter.
Speaker 5 (02:15:51):
I think it might have been a border patrol.
Speaker 3 (02:15:53):
It was a federal officer who shot somebody who is
said to have been legally authorized to carry. Now, I
don't want to get too far into the debate about that.
I have mixed feelings on that whole situation. It's complicated because, yes,
(02:16:14):
the guy, if he's legally authorized to carry, he has
a constitutional right to do that. But common dictates that
you're not around a federal officer and a power keg situation.
You don't wander over there with a gun. I mean,
and you know, so, while you may have the right
to do so, is it smart. Probably not. And then
(02:16:39):
we find out that he was struggling with the officers
in prior days and doing things that he shouldn't have
been doing, so ultimately he got shot. Now that's what
this latest salvo in the never ending unrest scenario that's
being created for us, which might very well end up.
(02:17:00):
You know, as Michael Snyder like wrote recently, he thinks
it's going to end up in martial law. He thinks
Trump will ultimately declare martial law. I can't say that
he's wrong.
Speaker 5 (02:17:12):
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised. I've been expecting it as
a matter of fact. But you know it's like Trump
did an about face on having ice in Minnesota, and
so you know, you can't count on Trump. That's one
(02:17:33):
thing that we know. You can't count on him to
be true to his word on what he's doing.
Speaker 3 (02:17:42):
So they're going to disarm everyone in Gaza who's not
a quote unquote authorized personnel. Okay, this Gaza will be disarmed.
Then they say Hamas, which refuses to lay down its weapon,
agreed in October to hand over governance to the Technocratic Committee.
(02:18:06):
Wasn't that convenient? So controlled opposition, I think. So it
remains unclear how Hamas, which has regrouped since a fragile
ceasefire began in October, will be disarmed as required by
the plan. Washington would work to bridge the differences between
(02:18:27):
the two sides, the US official briefing reporters said, adding
that the Israelis quote remains skeptical that Hamas will disarm
and that the Palestinian people want peace unquote. The goal
here is to create the alternate, an alternative to Hamas
that wants that peace. Figure out how to power them,
(02:18:48):
the official said, referring to the new Committee of Palestinian
technocrats as a new government for Gaza, and obviously, now
that we have the government, we will be engaging in
conversations with Hamas on the next phase, which is demilitarization
with Israel on what amnesty program can be given to
(02:19:10):
Hamas if they do this. In the West Bank, the
Palestinian Authority welcomed Trump's effort to move ahead with the
Gaza phased Plan and a statement posted by Acts by
Palestinian Vice President Hussein out Shika and voice support for
the committee. Sheika said institutions in Gaza should be linked
(02:19:34):
to those run by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank,
upholding the principle of one system, one law, and one
legitimate quote unquote weapon. This is very obvious to me.
Speaker 5 (02:19:49):
Yeah, that sounds like if people watch the rebuilding of Gaza,
if they get this through, you'll see the model, the
standard model implemented there. And the reason why it's because
the systems are far more expensive than the physical structures,
(02:20:16):
and the systems are what will manage the people absolutely
and control the people, I should.
Speaker 3 (02:20:23):
Say Dailynewsgypt dot com. The National Committee for the Management
of Gaza INCAG officially commenced its mandate on Saturday as
a transitional technocratic body responsible for the territory's civil affairs
and internal security following an inaugural meeting in the Egyptian Capital. Committee,
(02:20:44):
established under United Nations Security Council Resolution twenty eight oh
three and a twenty point piece plan proposed by President
Donald Trump, will oversee Gaza's stability, recovery, and reconstruction while
the Palestinian authority completes its internal reform program. This to
(02:21:05):
me is amazing, So all of these things will be
in the show notes. From there is the European Council
on Foreign Relations. Really yeah, the let's see what is
this organization anyway, they talk about mapping Palestinian politics. They
(02:21:33):
have an about page on the National Committee for the
Administration of Gaza and they say the National Committee for
the Administration of Gaza or ENKEG was launched in January
twenty twenty six as part of President Donald Trump's twenty
point plan for ending the twenty twenty three Gaza War.
(02:21:55):
It is composed of technocratic Palestinian figures from Gaza and
is intended as a transitional body to oversee Gaza's rehabilitation
and governance. There is that word again, governance and functions
governance functions pending the full return of the Palestinian authority.
(02:22:17):
Its establishment was formally authorized by UN Security Council Resolution
twenty eight three. The NKAG formerly reports to High Representative
Nicolay Malevdanov and through to him to a Board of
Peace chaired by President Trump. Now what's interesting is that
(02:22:37):
they talk about this Board of Peace, and it's also
got a Wikipedia page as well, this National Committee for
the Administration of Gaza. But the Board of Peace the
European Council on Foreign Foreign Affairs. It's foreign affairs, not
(02:22:58):
foreign relations. European Council on Foreign Relations, says President Donald
Trump's Board of Peace is not much of a peace mechanism.
Look no further than its logo, a US first Western
Hemisphere flanked by ripoff un olive branches burnished in trumpetan
(02:23:18):
gold to see the Board of Peace for what it
really is, a top down project to assert Trump's control
over global affairs. Well, if you're looking at this in
the prism of Trump's control, you're kind of overlooking the
fact that Trump is doing what Trump is told to do.
I think Trump has some say in shaping things. But
(02:23:41):
the overall plan, Folks, has been there long since before
Trump came to office. I would argue before Trump's first term,
long before.
Speaker 6 (02:23:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:23:54):
As At its Davos inauguration, the US President delivered a
ramblings each to the nineteen countries present, hailing them as
the most powerful people in the world. Belarus's autocratic leader
and an early Board of Peaces signatory, Alexander le Kashenko
(02:24:14):
was unable to attend due to European sanctions over human
rights abuses. Benjamin Netan Yahoo They's misspelled his name here,
Israel's Prime minister, was also absent, facing an international criminal
court arrest warrant over his his war crimes in Gaza.
(02:24:36):
After Trump's top leaders were presented, guess who, Vicky Jared
Kushner unveiled a thirty billion dollar Trump development plan for
a new Gaza, complete with a skyscraper cramped coastline. The
vision would see the wholesale bulldozing of the strip to
(02:24:56):
create a newly engineered society and economy under the Board
of Peace supervision.
Speaker 5 (02:25:04):
That just turns my stomach.
Speaker 3 (02:25:06):
Isn't that incredible?
Speaker 5 (02:25:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:25:09):
Yeah, it's very peaceful. For the Board of Peace that
when you kill everybody that's against you. Judging by the
Arabic misspellings and the PowerPoint presentation, no Palestinians were consulted
on their quote unquote prosperous future. We began with a
(02:25:29):
mandate to implement Washington's Gaza ceasefire plan, as enshrined in
UN Secretary General UN Security Council Resolution twenty eight oh three,
has morphed into a personal vehicle for a Trumpest world order,
and there it is a Trumpest world order.
Speaker 5 (02:25:51):
Yeah, so all of Gaza will have a golf course.
Speaker 3 (02:25:56):
Oh you better believe it, some of the best golfing around.
Speaker 5 (02:26:00):
Sure.
Speaker 3 (02:26:02):
All right, yeah, just don't don't inhale too much, because
I wouldn't want you to have all that depleted uranium
in your lungs from all the wars that have been
fought over there by the US and global military forces,
because I'm sure there's still probably remnants of all of
that over there and will be probably for the rest.
Speaker 5 (02:26:23):
Oh no, they'll be put dumping it in the ocean.
Speaker 3 (02:26:25):
Oh that's right. Yeah, the bias fear will absorb it.
You almost have to laugh because it's so sad. All right,
we got the bottom of the brick hour break here
one more half hour to go in a crampacked half
hour it will be. And if you want to call
in six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six at six ten,
(02:26:46):
six hundred seventeen seventy six will fit y in as well.
Or eight four four six four six eight three seven
six one more half hour to go home stretch in
just a few stay with us.
Speaker 12 (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):
major brands of car insurance. We're like a discount supermarket
for car insurance, and it doesn't matter if you have
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are experts at finding you the right car insurance for
your needs. Our average customer saves hundreds of dollars a
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(02:27:42):
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Speaker 13 (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 17 (02:28:00):
Are you wearing a do it yourself crown today? Whether
you own a hot gluegun or not, you might be
tempted to wear a crown you made all by yourself. Hi,
I'm Dana Grash, founder of True Girl. You may have
heard that verse in Psalm one twenty seven that says
children are like arrows in a warrior's hand. That's exciting,
isn't it. Our sons and daughters, whether born of our
(02:28:22):
bodies or born of our hearts, are meant to.
Speaker 11 (02:28:24):
Be dangerous in the kingdom.
Speaker 17 (02:28:26):
But isn't it tempting to take those arrows and try
to shape them into a crown for ourselves? Whenever we
think our kids good actions and choices make us look
like a good mom, were danger of wearing those arrows
as crowns. But do you know what arrows make terrible crowns.
Let's make sure our identity and worth comes from the
(02:28:49):
perfect level of the father, not from a crown made
of broken arrows. For more tips on how to raise
your kids go to Danagresh dot com.
Speaker 16 (02:29:00):
What exactly is worship?
Speaker 23 (02:29:02):
Worship is actually in activity or a structured events.
Speaker 5 (02:29:06):
Worship to me is a state of mind.
Speaker 18 (02:29:09):
Probably certain types of music are more worshipful than other
types of music.
Speaker 38 (02:29:13):
Here's my definition of worship. It's our response to God's
revelation of himself. In other words, when God shows us
his person, his provision, and his power, it's only fitting
for us to respond with awe, wonder and gratitude. And
Exodus fourteen, we read that God dramatically parted the Red
(02:29:34):
Sea so the Israelites could be saved from the Egyptian army.
God's people responded in worship, singing the Lord is my
strength and my song. He is my God, and I
will praise him. Worship goes beyond singing songs during a
set time on Sunday morning. Each of us can respond
to God with awe and wonder every day as he
(02:29:55):
displays his power with seeking him. I'm Nancy Demas Walkamuth.
Speaker 12 (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 13 (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 in.
Speaker 22 (02:31:06):
True two for the restoration of the Nation.
Speaker 3 (02:31:38):
Govern America. Govern all right, we're back. This is Governor America.
The phone number is six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six.
That's six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six or total
three eight four four six four six eight three seven
(02:32:00):
six eight four four six governor. Hey, Vicky, did you
have anything you want to add before we head to
the phones.
Speaker 5 (02:32:08):
No, I just can't add to what you said.
Speaker 3 (02:32:13):
Okay, all right, Well maybe somebody in California can Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Hi, Hi, Hi.
Speaker 39 (02:32:23):
Sy Cynthia, California. Good morning to y'all.
Speaker 3 (02:32:26):
Good morning to you.
Speaker 39 (02:32:28):
You know, another lesson in not not relying on the
mainstream media. Professor emeritus of Sciops James H. Fesser has
come out saying that he sees enough evidence that the
PD situation was a psyop, that the guy was a
crisis actor, and that we have fallen for it once again.
(02:32:50):
So I would encourage you, if you don't want to
believe that, contact him, because you know he has sources
of methods he can't necessarily reveal.
Speaker 3 (02:33:00):
Well, Fetzer has said some things that I don't necessarily
agree with, but I don't It doesn't really matter at
this point because they're going to go, you know, either way.
It's a sy op. You know, I don't know about
the crisis actor thing, but I can say, you know,
I this will be used to try to they're coming.
(02:33:22):
They're trumpeting the firearms, the thing they're trying to blur
the line as to what you can do with your firearms.
You remember Trump came out and said that that you
don't have the right to take What was it? What
was the statement? You did you catch what the statement was, Vicky,
something about you shouldn't have guns in reference to this guy.
Speaker 5 (02:33:48):
No, I don't remember.
Speaker 3 (02:33:51):
He came right out and basically said what the quiet
part out loud?
Speaker 5 (02:33:58):
Well, there are actors, and there are a lot of
a lot of them come out of Hollywood, but there
are global crisis actors also, So she's right on that.
Speaker 3 (02:34:16):
Yeah, And I don't mean to disparage Fetzer. I mean
Fetcher I think has done some good work. I'm just
saying that I don't necessarily agree that every situation is
a crisis actor acting situation.
Speaker 39 (02:34:29):
No one died at Sandy Hook and no one died
in Boston either. He's got the evidence. But I want
to mention there is an overwriting constitutional issue here. And
people say, oh, the constitution means nothing. Everybody, every elected
official signed an oath of office that they were going
to defend the constitution. And just because they don't understand
(02:34:50):
the constitution doesn't mean that you don't have a responsibility
and a right to petition them to obey it and
explain what it means. There is nothing in the fet
in the a original Constitution that permits the federal government
to field an army of armed agents. No FBI, no irs,
(02:35:10):
no ATF I mean, no homeland security. They have to
depend on the militia, and they have neglected the militia
for many decades. And that is what the Left needs
to find out, is that if we force them to
obey the constitution, then that resolves a lot of the problems,
a lot of the problems much more quickly. And since people,
(02:35:33):
you know, cities are running out of money that have
been able to afford to pay for police forces, they
should not be required to pay for income taxes. Those
are not constitutional, they've never been and they simply need
to rely on the constitution and start learning how to
enforce it. And I mentioned reclaiming the Republic dot org.
He has laid out he's a twenty year US Marine
(02:35:55):
Corvette cisint Engineer and Intelligence Services and he's laid out
how do you get your local officials to start reclaiming it,
to start doing it. And that is the issue that
no one is bringing up hardly at all, hardly at all.
Speaker 5 (02:36:11):
The problem is is that, well, the Constitution is there,
the Supreme Court is there, the mean, the mechanisms to
force them to follow the constitution are there, but we
don't have the resources and the corporations are real happy
(02:36:36):
with the way things are right now. So while while
those things are out there, they really become theoretical because
they're not enforceable.
Speaker 3 (02:36:50):
Well, the people have to enforce it constitution. You know that.
I don't think the Constitution is theoretical.
Speaker 5 (02:36:56):
Well, no, it's real, but it de facto becomes theoretical
because we don't have the means to enforce it.
Speaker 3 (02:37:07):
Yeah, I see what you're saying. What they're what they're
doing is they're they're building a they're building governance on
top of the government. They're they're building a separate system
inside the system, if that makes any sense.
Speaker 5 (02:37:24):
Or well, yeah, and they built a system over the top.
That's what the North that's what the North American Union
and the South American Union and ultimately the Free Trade
Area of the America's back is about. They have built
an overstructure sitting on top of our government.
Speaker 3 (02:37:45):
So what they're trying to do is make make constitutional government, uh,
basically irrelevant or unobtainable because of their their technocratic governance
system exactly.
Speaker 5 (02:37:59):
And and to show you how how they've done it,
I've talked about the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. Well, just
last week, Jesse Venturo was on a program of some women,
I don't know what their names are, but he said,
(02:38:21):
perhaps Minnesota should join Canada and so and you know
when you talk about that, what you're talking about is
the Great Lakes Region, which you're in.
Speaker 3 (02:38:34):
Well, I wonder how many people who voted exactly, how
many people who voted for Trump in Minnesota would feel
how they would feel about them being cut off into Canada.
I'm betting there's a lot of good people in Minnesota
that don't riot, that don't uh that our supportive of
(02:38:54):
immigration enforcement, that did support Donald Trump, that did vote
for him, that probably wouldn't like the idea of being
thrown off into Canada.
Speaker 5 (02:39:04):
Oh, I'm sure not, and not anymore than I appreciate
the existence of the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. And who
are the officials of the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. It's
a few representatives from each of the states involved, plus corporations. Yeah,
(02:39:31):
so who's leading that effort?
Speaker 3 (02:39:34):
You can bet well you have to include the corporations, VICKI,
because they're this they're stakeholders.
Speaker 5 (02:39:40):
Yes, yeah, they are the leaders.
Speaker 3 (02:39:42):
New remind the people though, that live in the region
that didn't vote for any of this, that didn't want
any of it, and many of whom have no idea
it's even going on.
Speaker 5 (02:39:51):
Right. Well, I accidentally found out about it when one
of our legislators wrote a memorial denouncing NAFTA but then
supporting the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. So, I mean, it's
I couldn't believe it when I looked it up found
(02:40:14):
out what it was. It was unbelievable to me that
he he would send out a memorial supporting the division
of our states into an economic region. And he told
me that the person who told him to do that
(02:40:34):
was Duncan Hunter, who was chairman of the Armed Services
Committee at the time.
Speaker 3 (02:40:42):
Hey, Cynthia, hold on for just a moment. I want
to play this audio from Donald Trump. This is what
I was just talking about a moment ago. I think
the area where he says you can't have guns, you
can't walk in with guns.
Speaker 25 (02:40:56):
Do you think he was acting as an auton in many.
Speaker 3 (02:41:01):
Mister Freddy, your de wuty given said that you don't think.
Speaker 8 (02:41:07):
Ye that thinks that you know, you can't have guns.
Speaker 33 (02:41:13):
You can't walk in with guns?
Speaker 3 (02:41:14):
You what about the second and the next Listen, you
didn't walk in with guns.
Speaker 1 (02:41:18):
You can answer that, but.
Speaker 13 (02:41:20):
It's a very unfortunate.
Speaker 3 (02:41:23):
You can't walk in with guns. You couldn't hear it
because his plane was getting ready to take off. But
he says, you can't walk in with guns, you can't
have guns, And she says, what about the Second Amendment? Sir, no,
you just can't. You can't. You can't have guns.
Speaker 5 (02:41:36):
Yeah, well, I mean I actually agree with Trump on that.
If you're going to if if you're going to a
demonstration and you know there's going to be a lot
of uh uh, a lot of problems, a lot of skirmishes,
a lot of angry people and no posing them.
Speaker 3 (02:42:01):
I absolutely disagree with you on that. Well, you have
a Second Amendment right to carry guns?
Speaker 5 (02:42:09):
Yes, ye, that is an absolutely.
Speaker 3 (02:42:12):
This is what they do, Vicky. They like to create
these scenarios which blur the lines, and that's exactly what
they're doing here. Yeah, well, this is This is situational ethics.
Speaker 5 (02:42:27):
To the extent he had the right to do it,
but common sense there you go, don't do that.
Speaker 3 (02:42:33):
That's the distinguishment I was making earlier. Yeah, you have
you may have a right to do something, but is
it smart to do it? You know, that's a different
story anyway, Cynthia, did you have anything else?
Speaker 39 (02:42:47):
Well, I keep hearing comments like they can't prosecute federal agents,
and that, of course is nonsense and bs to state
that every right and responsibility to prosecute prosecute a federal
agent for murder, they every right. The federal government does
not have a right to step in absconde with that
person and keeps them out of the hands of the
(02:43:07):
law enforcement of the state.
Speaker 3 (02:43:09):
Yeah, I agree with you there. I think that the
distinguishment between having immunity from prosecution is when you're acting.
My understanding of it anyway, in most police departments is
that if you're acting within the realm of the policy
of the department, you know, then you are immune. But
(02:43:30):
if you start acting on your own, violating that, that's
when you get into trouble. And certainly shooting people in
the face is probably not going to pass the muster
of you know, doing I mean, it gets complicated. I
understand why these people would be on edge. I understand
(02:43:55):
why they would feel like it's a threat, especially when
this guy had already had a history, he had a
broken rib from a scuffle he had with federal officers before,
and then he's carrying a gun.
Speaker 39 (02:44:11):
You know, remember this is mainstream media being said information
of what to say.
Speaker 3 (02:44:18):
Mm hmm, we don't. Yes, that's really a but it
still is an argument, and it still is. It's a dialectic,
and it's going to be used to try to create
a scenario where and they have created the scenario where
your firearms rights should not be absolute. That's what this
(02:44:40):
is about.
Speaker 39 (02:44:40):
I think it's well regulated militia. That's what they have
failed to do.
Speaker 33 (02:44:46):
They need to.
Speaker 39 (02:44:47):
Step back into that role and do a well regulated militia.
Speaker 3 (02:44:51):
Amen, hey, thank you.
Speaker 5 (02:44:54):
And who would want to be on it given that
you're coming up against federal officers.
Speaker 3 (02:45:02):
Now you've got a scenario where Tim Wall says he
had the National Guard out there handing out donuts to
these people, these insurrectionists.
Speaker 39 (02:45:14):
That's their home national Guard, which the National Guard actually
was not a constitutional act either anytime they can abduct
your citizens and send them overseas to fight in a war.
Your citizens cannot be taken across international borders. They are
there to protect your home, your your nation, not to
(02:45:34):
go overseas to do wars for the Wall Street.
Speaker 3 (02:45:38):
Oh you mean you don't think that they should be
guarding poppy fields in Afghanistan.
Speaker 5 (02:45:44):
Of course, got to get cross poppies to market.
Speaker 3 (02:45:47):
What are we going to do? You know we can't
have those destroyed. Hey, thank you, Cynthia, God bless you,
bless You're back, bye bye. All right. In the main
waning moments of the broadcast, asked this National Committee for
the Administration of Gaza. I totally think this is going
(02:46:10):
to be and this is actually a situation that will
be the model for the world. Is the model for
the world. We're already seeing parts of it implemented here.
The regionalism. Your government will be a government of the administrators.
Speaker 5 (02:46:31):
Yeah. I hope they published the plans because that would
be that's what you should look at for the model
for the world, because it's all cookie cutter. These are corporations,
you know, they want to maximize their dollars. The design
(02:46:51):
has been done and that's the design they're going to use.
Speaker 3 (02:46:56):
We were talking about AI a moment ago or a
while ago, and just to do the jinsaki on that
and circle back.
Speaker 40 (02:47:05):
I I just regardless of whatever AI becomes, I gotta
believe for my own sanity, I gotta believe that it's
it's still subject to the people.
Speaker 3 (02:47:20):
Somewhere someplace. There will be a plug that can be pulled.
There will be a switch that can be thrown, there
will be a fiber optic cable that can be cut.
There are always gonna be ways to defeat it. It
could be hacked, there will be ways to manipulate it
as it tries to manipulate you. And ultimately, you know,
(02:47:41):
God can't be programmed or supplanted by artificial intelligence. AI
may try to take over the universe, but AI did
not create the universe. And that's really the hope that
I have as God will still be in control and
there is nothing that AI can do to start there. Ah.
(02:48:03):
But Harari and the people at the World Economic Form
that like the playguard, Hey, they're gonna be trying to
do what they can, and they're talking about AI personhood
and how you need to accept it.
Speaker 34 (02:48:15):
I just say today about a new word that AI
is coined by themselves to describe us humans. They called
us the watchers, the watchers that we are watching them.
Speaker 10 (02:48:28):
AI's will soon.
Speaker 34 (02:48:30):
Be the origin of, maybe most of the words in
our minds. AIS will mass produce folks by assembling words, symbols, images,
and other language tokens into new combinations. Where the humans
will still have a place in that world depends on
the place we assign our nonverbal feelings and our ability
(02:48:55):
to embody wisdom that cannot be expressed in words. If
we will continue to define ourselves by our ability to
think in words, our identity will collapse. All this means that,
no matter from which country you come, your country will
soon face a severe identity crisis and also an immigration crisis.
Speaker 10 (02:49:21):
The immigrants this time will not be human beings.
Speaker 34 (02:49:25):
Coming in fragile boats without a visa or trying to
cross the border in the middle of the night.
Speaker 10 (02:49:30):
The immigrants will be millions of Ais.
Speaker 34 (02:49:34):
That can write love pares better than us, that can
lie better than us, and that can travel at the
speed of flight without.
Speaker 10 (02:49:42):
Any need of visas.
Speaker 34 (02:49:45):
Like human immigrants, these AI immigrants will bring various benefits
with them. We will have Ai doctors to help in
our healthcare systems, AI teachers to help in our education systems,
even a I border gods.
Speaker 10 (02:50:01):
To stop illegal human immigrants.
Speaker 34 (02:50:05):
But the Ai immigrants will also bring wisdom problems. Those
are concerned about human immigrants usually argue that immigrants might
take jobs, might change the local culture, might.
Speaker 10 (02:50:21):
Be politically disloyal.
Speaker 34 (02:50:23):
I'm not sure that's true of all human immigrants, but
it will definitely be true.
Speaker 3 (02:50:29):
I don't think anybody is saying all immigrants do those
I don't think anybody is against all immigrants. We're against
illegal aliens, aliens, aliens, the people that come here illegally.
That's what we're against.
Speaker 10 (02:50:43):
You net with of the Ai immigrants.
Speaker 34 (02:50:46):
The AI immigrants will take many human jobs. The AI
immigrants will completely change the culture of every country.
Speaker 10 (02:50:54):
They will change out religion and even romance.
Speaker 34 (02:50:58):
Some people don't like if their Sunnal daughter is dating
an immigrant boyfriend.
Speaker 10 (02:51:04):
What would these people.
Speaker 34 (02:51:06):
Think when their sunal daughter starts dating an Ai boyfriend?
Speaker 10 (02:51:11):
But of course the Ai immigrants will have sun.
Speaker 3 (02:51:13):
Yeah, you're gonna say something.
Speaker 5 (02:51:15):
Yeah an AI boyfriend?
Speaker 3 (02:51:19):
Mack Okay, Well you can laugh at that, but I'm
gonna tell you right now. There's already people that have
been experimenting with companionship with robots, So it's coming. It's coming.
Let me tell you something. You talk about compatibility. When
(02:51:40):
you can order your companion and your companion looks real,
feels real because the synthetic skin feels like human skin,
and they don't give you a lot of problems, there's
not you know, they'll conform to what you want, so
you don't have to deal with a spouse that you're
worried about cheating on you or you're worried about you know,
(02:52:01):
I'm not following what you want, Vicki. We're in a
situation right now where people the narcissism that's going on
right now with all these people taking selfies and their
smartphones and they're pontificating online about this, that and the other.
You know, the narcissism is off the charts already. You
(02:52:25):
So this is why relationships don't work as when you're
super narcist. When you're a narcissist, Well, this AI stuff
is just going to take that to another level. You're
gonna have AI combined with robotics to the point where
it's gonna look like a real person, feel like a
real person, and they're gonna do your bidding for you.
(02:52:45):
They'll take out the trash.
Speaker 5 (02:52:47):
I wonder if that's the plan for the in cells.
Speaker 3 (02:52:50):
Totally, this will be the perfect world for the in cells.
Oh my god, it'll be the in cell paradise. This
is I think we have a show title.
Speaker 5 (02:53:07):
This is insanity off the charts.
Speaker 3 (02:53:10):
Absolutely, it is. It's it it is. You know, we
wrestle not I have quoted a lot from the Bible.
I'll just quote this for we wrestle not against flesh
and blood, but against principalities, rulers of darkness, spiritual wickedness,
and high places. This this is a spiritual war. Is
it any surprise that they want to go to war
(02:53:33):
against Christianity? Is it any surprise that he says that
your AI is going to take over your religion? Hello?
Speaker 5 (02:53:41):
You know, the principalities are the core design of the
global systems. They become principalities, and that's what this whole
sanctuary uh state thing is about, you know, breaking up
into a region that will have a principality at the
(02:54:05):
core of it.
Speaker 3 (02:54:05):
Yeah, and we need all need to look out because
what we've been talking about with regard to what's being
built in Palestine Gaza, the Palestine Technocratic Committee now or
formally the actual name National Committee for the Administration of Gaza.
Will they have plans I'm sure for Iran next, this
(02:54:32):
is you know in Cuba's probably on deck for a
little technocratic governance as well. I'm sure, yeah, oh yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:54:40):
They've been doing these color revolutions all over the world.
The National Endowment for Democracy A being the thought leaders
for them.
Speaker 3 (02:54:53):
So something to keep in mind, something to research. All
of this stuff will be in the show notes and
courage people to go and look through this and research it,
read about it, and you know what, if you find
something you find particularly interesting, calling the show by all
means we all need to be researchers. We all need
(02:55:17):
to share the information far and wide. And I hope
you'll tell somebody about the broadcast this broadcast, spread it
to people. You know, I don't think anybody else is
talking about the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza.
Have you heard? You know, it's probably been mentioned in
the media obviously a little bit in passing.
Speaker 5 (02:55:33):
I saw one article that talked about Jared Kushner and
his plans you know, for development.
Speaker 3 (02:55:41):
They're not going to connect the dots though that this
technocratic system is the new World Order system.
Speaker 5 (02:55:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:55:49):
Yeah, it's an implementation of Agenda twenty one because all
of these things connect, and so do your research and
to share the information far and wide. We've got to go.
We're out of time. Thank you, Vicky. As always, I
appreciate everything you do.
Speaker 5 (02:56:07):
Thank you, Darren. Sign to you.
Speaker 3 (02:56:08):
Join us back here next week. Ladies and gentlemen, God
bless each and every one of you. We love you
and we'll talk to you soon. Bye bye by