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, a new world order, new world order.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
This is a moment to cease. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.
Speaker 5 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United stated in a key pocision to shape this
so that the problem of the Bush prens dentity will
be the emergence of a new international.
Speaker 6 (00:39):
Order the first decade of the twenty first century that
out of what is will be seen as the greatest.
Speaker 7 (00:45):
Restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economies,
greatest restructuring.
Speaker 6 (00:50):
Of the global economy, a new world order was created.
Speaker 8 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic.
Speaker 9 (00:58):
The very word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society.
Speaker 10 (01:03):
And we are as a people inherently and.
Speaker 9 (01:07):
Historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths and a
secret proceedings.
Speaker 11 (01:13):
Waging war on the new world order.
Speaker 12 (01:15):
The councils of government.
Speaker 13 (01:17):
We must guard again, the acquisition of unwaranted 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 14 (01:40):
From Femal Regions five to ten. This is Governor America
Vicky Davis's year. I'm during Weeks. It is the nineteenth
of July twenty twenty five. Nice to have you with
us once again, ladies and gentlemen. Well Man, I am
so sick of hearing about Jeffrey Epstein. I'm sick of
having to talk about Jeffrey Epstein. I really wish we
had an administration in Washington, DC that would investigate Jeffrey Epstein,
(02:02):
the whole fiasco and all the clients and all the
child abuse victims that would be received justice. But that
doesn't seem like it's something that's going to happen.
Speaker 15 (02:17):
Well, I think that's a misdirection play the entire thing,
because what the real story, the important story about Jeffrey
Epstein is that he was a deal broker, you know,
between people with money at the global level, and he
(02:44):
was a pervert, no question about it, you know. But
that's not the real story about Jeffrey Epstein. It's the
deals that go on at the global international level. He
was a broker. That's why I got all that money.
You know, No nobody gives that kind of money for
(03:09):
child perversion. But so I stopped working, you know, trying
to figure out what the whole Epstein thing was about,
because it's a misdirection play.
Speaker 14 (03:24):
I think, well, I think, what's what's going on. He
may be a deal broker, but he also was very
involved in intelligence, the intelligence establishment.
Speaker 15 (03:37):
Well, that's the interesting thing about deals at the global level.
As one of the things I found out is that
do you remember the name Adnan Koshogi. He was an
arms merchant.
Speaker 14 (03:53):
Is that the guy that was murdered by the Saudis.
Speaker 15 (03:58):
That But that guy that was murdered was a relative
I believe.
Speaker 14 (04:02):
Of Okay, that's where I recognized the.
Speaker 15 (04:05):
Yeah, they called ad Nan Kashogi, I think they called him.
Oh no, that was another guy, bend Arbush. He was
an arms merchant. But one of the videos that I watched,
they talked about the Saudis and a purchase of airplanes.
They tried to purchase airplanes from the United States, but
(04:29):
the US said no. So what they did is they
went to Britain to get those to get those airplanes. Well,
you're talking about like a if one airplane costs seventy dollars,
Sadi's are buying a fleet, You're talking about a lot
(04:49):
of money. So a deal broker between those two would
make a lot of money on commissions.
Speaker 14 (05:00):
Yeah, I'm sure that this is being leveraged or was
being leveraged by the intelligence establishment in whatever way. But honestly,
I think it was more of a mafia type.
Speaker 15 (05:15):
The international there's no difference really.
Speaker 14 (05:19):
Well, the intelligence establishment and business leaders. Well, they were
getting their way with whomever they wanted to get their
way with by getting them getting dirt on them. And
this is really what we've been saying all of that.
Speaker 15 (05:34):
It's not real patriot I mean, it's getting whatever it
is that they want.
Speaker 14 (05:38):
Well, when you sleep with the children, it is dirt,
I mean that's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 15 (05:43):
Well, yes, and I think that was just just Lane's, Maxwell's, Ballywick.
Speaker 14 (05:52):
Well, it's Epstein's as well. And you know, obviously they
were in together and she's the only one that's ever
been prosecuted for this, And I guess that's the thing
that's the reason why everybody is outraged about it is
because they're trying to whistle past the graveyard and say, hey,
there's nothing to see here. And yet clearly nobody's went
(06:13):
to prison for it other than her. And now she's
come out, she.
Speaker 15 (06:18):
Wants to testify in front of Congress. I love to
hear her testify.
Speaker 14 (06:23):
Everybody wants to hear her testify, except for Congress. Now
why would that be. Why would the Republicans in Congress,
who control Congress, why would they be so at odds
or so against her coming out and testifying. They could
call her up there? What's going on? Why why are
(06:45):
so many against this? Well?
Speaker 15 (06:48):
You know what, that's the interesting thing. Before the program,
I said, I was working on one thing, and that
led to another thing led to another thing. Well, we
know that the Federal Reserve is working against our country
with the high high interest rates. Right. I went back
(07:15):
and I looked at the amendments to the Constitution, and
the Federal Reserve Act was passed in nineteen thirteen. But
before that, let me, let me get this up. Okay,
(07:39):
the sixteenth Amendment gave us the income tax right, and
then the seventeenth Amendment change how we elect senators that's
the important one. The Senators do not work for us.
They were for the international system. And that happened at
(08:04):
the point in time when they passed the seventeenth Amendment.
Speaker 12 (08:08):
They took the.
Speaker 15 (08:09):
Power away from the States, gave it to senators. And
it's the senators who vote on all these international agreements
that has over time gutted our economy.
Speaker 14 (08:25):
Yep, I can't say you're wrong.
Speaker 15 (08:29):
Yeah, and that's a very important time frame, that nineteen
thirteen to nineteen Well, and who was the guy who
ushered in those pieces of legislation. He was a man
named Cordel Hall, and Cordell Hall is known as the
(08:55):
father of the United Nations. So he was probably a
much bigger trader to this country than Benedict Arnold.
Speaker 6 (09:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (09:06):
Well, there's a lot of people that could line up
behind him and in front of them and around them,
because we have had no shortage of that traders.
Speaker 15 (09:15):
I mean, uh yeah, yeah, But he's kind of like
the head of the snake in terms of the international
setting up the system that enabled senators to sell out
our country, but still while giving us the impression that
(09:38):
our Congress is working for us, while the Senate are
the traders. Yeah, because they're the ones that voted to
basically take away the power of the people and give
it to the wealthy who put the senators in office.
Speaker 14 (09:58):
Yeah, this whole thing, the Epstein though, this is remarkable
to watch as there it continues to play out and
Gallaine Maxwell, as you pointed out, said, she wants to
come out and speak to Congress. She's ready to reveal
all and everybody's kind of predicting now that you know
that she may be the next one. In fact, I
saw a tweet by uh by what Wnita Broadrick, and
(10:23):
she says, I just want to be the first to
say Glaine Maxwell did not kill herself, you know, a
reference to the oft repeated phrase Epstein didn't kill himself.
You know, because she's going to be the next one,
everyone thinks, and I you know, it almost seems like
something that would be inevitable. At this point. They're going
(10:48):
to do everything they can to silence. They can't let
her talk.
Speaker 15 (10:52):
They can's the key to the Epstein story at this.
Speaker 14 (10:55):
Point, right, She's the only key to the Epstein story.
And there's no way they're going to allow her to talk.
And there's no way they're ever going to let her
out of prison alive. In my thinking, they can't. So
my question is, who is it that's so important that
they're protecting that both Republicans and Democrats alike have to
(11:16):
protect these people. Who are the people behind the scenes,
Who are the people in the shadows? You know? I
think honestly, this is a major intelligence operation going on
and probably more than one intelligence you know, more than
one country involved.
Speaker 15 (11:33):
Yeah, I would agree.
Speaker 14 (11:36):
And this really strikes to the heart of the shadow government,
doesn't it.
Speaker 15 (11:42):
Yes, it does. Yeah, how they operate.
Speaker 14 (11:46):
And now Trump is calling his own base stupid people
because they're demanding to see the files. They're wanting more information.
And you know, it's remarkable to watch this. Uh as
you would think, you know, but you would think that
that Trump's base would turn on him, But according to CNN,
(12:11):
his popularities continue to rise.
Speaker 16 (12:13):
Me.
Speaker 17 (12:13):
Look, I think this one surprised me a bit because
of all these complaints online going after Trump and the
Epstein fig. You might think his approval ratings were going
down with Republicans. If anything, they're going up. Republicans who
approve of Trump. Look at our CNN poll the prior
one to eighty six percent the one out this week
eighty eight percent with Republicans. How about Guinnipiac the prior poll,
eighty seven percent approved of Republicans this week out, ninety
(12:36):
percent with Republicans. If anything, Donald Trump's approval rating has
gone up since this whole Epstein saga started.
Speaker 11 (12:42):
He is at the apex.
Speaker 17 (12:44):
Or close there too in terms of his popularity with
Republican voters.
Speaker 8 (12:48):
Epstein files complaints.
Speaker 18 (12:50):
Or not, you just prove that not everything online is
real in real life?
Speaker 14 (12:55):
Who knew? Amazing reality?
Speaker 19 (12:59):
Is there any reason that you can find that this
hasn't taken hold and hurt him?
Speaker 12 (13:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 17 (13:04):
I mean, on ax, all you hear about is the
Epstein files. But how about out in the real public?
Republicans who said the top issue was Epstein case, The
answer is one one and not one percent.
Speaker 11 (13:16):
One responded.
Speaker 17 (13:18):
This is a great little finding that Ariel Edwards Levy,
who of course is part of our polling unit, found
just one single Republican said that the nation's top problem
is in fact the Epstein case. Not much of a
surprise that, therefore, Donald Trump's approval rating has not suffered
with Republicans because of the Epstein case. Because the bottom
line as most Americans say, it's not up high up
(13:38):
on their priority list.
Speaker 14 (13:39):
So there you go. Just goes to show you the
cult is live and well people will support him and
follow him down the cow path and right over the cliff.
It's amazing, isn't it.
Speaker 15 (13:54):
Well yeah, it well, it just shows you how the
messaging system works on the Internet, you know. And I
don't know at this point, I would think whatever the darking,
barking dogs of the Internet focus on, look somewhere else,
(14:15):
you know, look look on the periphery for what else
is going on. Yeah, he's because you can't trust the
consensus of the Internet.
Speaker 6 (14:27):
Right.
Speaker 14 (14:29):
Well, now he's calling for the Justice Department to release
quote any and all pertinent grand jury testimony unquote related
to Jeffrey Epstein. Anything this Pam Bondi or the Justice
Department releases. You know, this is going to be a
limited hangout if they release anything. So this is to
(14:49):
placate those that are in this base because apparently he
is worried about it enough to do something. It's not
going away, That's the whole point. People are going to
keep clamoring about this. This will haunt him as it
deserves to haunt him throughout his whole administration. You know, congratulations,
(15:12):
Donald Trump. Your legacy will be that you protected wealthy,
you know, affluent pedophiles. That will be your legacy. Congratulations,
What a legacy. We can always remember Donald Trump as
somebody who protected wealthy, affluent, powerful pedophiles.
Speaker 15 (15:36):
Well, I'll put in the show notes the videos that
I've watched over the last few days about business at
the global level, because you're talking about billions of dollars,
and so if you don't think that if there's a
(16:00):
billion dollar deal involved, or you know, hundreds of thousands
of dollars for the broker of a deal at the
global level, like you know, fifty or sixty airplanes that
are seventy billion dollars apiece, then your brain did. So
(16:27):
I view what Epstein was doing on that island, which
he had other other properties too.
Speaker 14 (16:37):
He was.
Speaker 15 (16:40):
Accommodating, you know, whatever whatever it is that these buyers
and sellers of things at the global level. He was
accommodating their wants.
Speaker 14 (16:56):
Yeah, well, I don't doubt at all he was. He
was an arm twister. He was you call him a
deal maker. Well, the deal was that you do what
we say, or you know, some of this might end
up in public. You know, That's what I really think
was going on. It's a blackmail. I can't forget about.
Speaker 15 (17:19):
He was a pervert. Well, yes, of course he was
a He was a bad guy, right, But the.
Speaker 14 (17:27):
People that are being protected right now, VICKI, are bad
people too. We don't know who they are. That's my point.
And I can't forget about that. These people need to
be brought to justice. And that's what everybody needs to
pound their fist on the desk and say that they
need to be brought to justice. You don't get two
tears of justice when it comes to victimizing kids. You know,
(17:53):
whatever Epstein was, he's in hell now, I have no doubt.
But there are still people out there at law charge, many, many,
many people apparently that this present administration has no interest
in investigating. I don't think that's a red airing.
Speaker 15 (18:10):
Well, there's a lot of places you could look where
the United States does not give a damn about children.
Oh absolutely, Look you look up in northern Idaho and
there are those perverts up there that are you know,
drag Queen's story hour, I mean, wtf on that? Who
(18:31):
does that to children?
Speaker 14 (18:34):
Well?
Speaker 15 (18:34):
And the hospitals, that one in particular, which I won't mention,
but they are apparently engaged in transgender surgeries on children.
Speaker 14 (18:47):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely more communist deconstruction of our society.
Speaker 15 (18:52):
Right, Epstein is dead, But those people up in northern Idaho,
they're very much alive, and they are very much engaged
in these crimes against children.
Speaker 14 (19:03):
And where is the administration at pursuing them? Where's the
administration at? You know, I realized they can only do
so much, you know, in terms of going after people,
But there I would like to hear an initiative at
least to unravel these pedophile networks that apparently exist everywhere.
(19:24):
I mean, you just pointed out a good, good one.
There is evidently an orchestrated I don't know if you'd
call it a conspiracy, but it just really strikes me
that all of this stuff is just kind of materialized,
seemingly out of nowhere. I mean, prior to the last administration,
I never heard I don't think we heard much about
(19:45):
drag Queen's story. Hour did we? When did that? When
did all that start? I mean, I guess it's probably
been brewing for a while, but it seems.
Speaker 15 (19:53):
Like I'd have to go back and search, but I
can tell you that in the ninth teen nineties, that's
when the pedophiles came out into the public. And I
suspect that it was probably after nineteen ninety five, which
(20:16):
was when the World Trade Organization was established nineteen ninety five.
It was voted on December eighth, nineteen ninety four, and
then it became effectiveteen ninety five. And that's where you
get the Senate, the Senate, you know, selling us out
(20:38):
yet again. But the interesting thing was, as I remember
Justice Ginsburg, Ginsburg's husband was involved somehow with that Man
Boy Love Association.
Speaker 14 (20:56):
I remember that. Yeah, I'd forgotten about that, but yeah,
you're right, I remember we talked about that at the time.
Speaker 20 (21:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (21:04):
It's just incredible, you know.
Speaker 15 (21:06):
Yeah. Yeah, So all the all these things all fit together.
They are all pieces of the puzzle of and and
the idea of course, with creating the World Trade Organization.
I remember a few years before that, the Congress voted
(21:28):
on NAFTA. To create NAFTA, it was to break our
nation state. Everything that has been done, these big uh
pieces of legislation that internationalized our economy had been stepped
by betrayal to break our nation state and to create
(21:55):
the Americas as a continental governing structure under the United Nations.
Speaker 14 (22:02):
Yeah, absolutely, and then drag Queens Story Hour and all
this predation of children and the gender bender restroom policies
that you know, all of that cultural Marxism has is
to weaken the cultural fabric, and the exactly and the
flying of the country in general is to weaken the
(22:22):
cultural fabric of our nation, the morality of our nations.
Speaker 15 (22:26):
The big middle class.
Speaker 14 (22:28):
So there's nothing that we can galvanize.
Speaker 15 (22:30):
Class was the moral backbone of this country.
Speaker 14 (22:34):
Yeah, you can't really galvanis around anything anymore because everything
is disputed.
Speaker 15 (22:40):
Well, the whole Now, remember the wto covered goods and services.
A service is a person or a job. So when
they passed that legislation, they war on the American middle class.
Speaker 14 (23:05):
Yeah right, yep.
Speaker 15 (23:08):
And then they started massively importing Indians to take middle
class jobs, right, outsourcing and importing Indians to take middle
class jobs.
Speaker 14 (23:21):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 15 (23:22):
It was a war on the middle class. But just finished,
it was the moral backbone of the country.
Speaker 14 (23:29):
Finishing up this Epstein thing real quick. That now the
administration or Trump himself is suing the Murdoch family because
the Wall Street Journal published a story alleging that he
sent sketches to Epstein. And that's just the one of
the most recent and latest bizarre developments in this what
I would call it, growing scandal.
Speaker 19 (23:50):
OBI agents were tasked earlier this year with flagging any
mentions of President Donald Trump while reviewing files related to
deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, according to Senator Richard Durbin
d il Durbin included the allegation in a letter he
sent Friday to the FBI and the Department of Justice.
The letter was first reported by CNBC. Durbin asked federal
(24:13):
officials to explain apparent discrepancies regarding the handling of the
Epstein files and a July seventh DOJ memo detailing instructions
reportedly received by FBI personnel. Durbin said the FBI was
pressured to place one thousand agents and other bureau employees
on twenty four hour shifts to review one hundred thousand
Epstein related documents that could then be released on an
(24:35):
arbitrarily short deadline. Many of those assigned to the review
lacked the expertise to identify statutorily protected information regarding child
victims and child witnesses, and were instructed to flag any
records in which President Trump was mentioned. Maga world is
completely imploding over the Jeffrey Epstein cover up, Durbin wrote
(24:56):
on x The FBI was told to flag any file
mentioning President Trump. Why it's time for some real answers.
As the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Durbin
has oversight authority over both the DOJ and the FBI.
Durbin's letter followed a report late Thursday from The Wall
Street Journal detailing a racy birthday letter that Trump allegedly
(25:19):
gave Epstein in two thousand and three. Trump has denied
writing the letter, which includes a drawn image of a
naked woman and a note wishing every day to be
another wonderful secret. Trump said he does not draw pictures,
but The New York Times reported Friday that in the
early two thousands, Trump regularly donated sketches and doodles for
charity auctions. The Time said many of those drawings appeared
(25:43):
to be done with a thick black marker and prominently
feature his signature in a manner similar to the birthday
note he purportedly sent to Epstein. Trump was photographed numerous
times with Epstein in the late nineteen nineties and early
two thousands, including at parties at Trump's Mar A Lago
estate in Florida. Trump has said their relationship ended before
Epstein was charged with prostitution related offenses in Florida in
(26:06):
two thousand and six. Trump is threatening legal action against
the journal over the story about the birthday greeting. The
Wall Street Journal printed a fake letter supposedly to Epstein.
Trump wrote on truth Social these are not my words,
not the way I talk. Also, I don't draw pictures.
I told Rupert Murdoch it was a scam that he
shouldn't print this fake story, but he did, and now
(26:29):
I'm going to sue his ass off and that of
his third rate newspaper. Trump has also called for grand
jury testimony from the Epstein case to be unsealed, although
details are scarce, Yeah, scarce.
Speaker 15 (26:41):
So you know what the key thing in that whole
thing was to me another secret? Oh yeah, that refers
back to Les Waxner Victoria's secret.
Speaker 16 (26:54):
Hmmmm.
Speaker 15 (26:56):
So you think the angle that I would pursue.
Speaker 14 (27:00):
You think he's kind of like talking in code. Yes,
that's interesting. I didn't even pick up on that. Wow, yep. Well,
I don't know what to make of that report in
its entirety or even partially. I just know there are
(27:21):
things that are not being told, not being disclosed to
the public. And for somebody that ran on putting out
the secrets about this case and investigating bringing people to justice,
making promises that basically, and I'm paraphrasing, but all will
be revealed. I mean that's what we were led to
believe anyway. And now they get in there and they're
(27:44):
all protecting and all of them, every one of them,
have reverse course on this. You got to ask yourself
the question, what happened? Well, this is such a drastic reversal. Yeah.
Speaker 15 (27:57):
My answer on that is exactly what I said. The
Epstein story is a distraction. The important story right now
is what Telsey Gabbert released.
Speaker 14 (28:11):
Okay, hang on, we got the break. We're a little
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One with a spoos go to find out what's really
going on. This is govern America.
Speaker 14 (31:22):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is govern America. The
website for the show Governamerica dot com. That's governamerica dot com.
My email address is radio at Governamerica dot com. That's
radio at governamerica dot com. Vicky, you want to give
your information out? Hello Vicky? All right, I don't know
(31:44):
what happened to Vicky. I'm not hearing you if you're
talking so anyway. On the website at governamerica dot com, listeners,
there is the mega group, Maxwell's and the Masad the
spy story at the heart of the Jeffrey Epstein's scandal.
(32:06):
This is in the spooks section at governamerica dot com.
This was a deep dive that Whitney Webb did when
she worked for mint Press News, and she was talking
about let me just share a couple of few paragraphs
of this and we'll have this in the show notes.
I meant to put it in last week's show notes,
(32:28):
but I didn't, so I will try to put it
there and also in this week's as well. But as
she says, as billionaire pedophile and alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey
Epstein sits in prison, reports have continued to surface about
his reported links to intelligence, his financial ties to several
companies and charitable foundations, and his friendships with the rich
(32:49):
and powerful as well as top politicians. Well. Part one
and Part two of the series the Jeffrey Epstein's Scandal,
Too Big to Fail have focused on the widespread nature
of sexual blackmail operation and recent American history, and their
ties to the heights of American political power and the
US intelligence community. One key aspect of Epstein's own sex
(33:09):
trafficking and blackmail operation that warrant's examination is Epstein's ties
to Israeli intelligence and his ties to the informal quote
unquote informal pro Israel philanthropists faction known as the Megagroup.
The Megagroup's role in the Epstein case has garnered some attention.
As Epstein's main financial patron for decades, billionaire Leslie Wexner
(33:33):
was a co founder of the group that's the Megagroup
that unites several well known businessmen with a penchant for
pro Israel and Ethno philanthropy i e. Philanthropy benefiting a
single ethnic or Ethno religious group. However, as this report
will show, another uniting factor among Megagroup members is deep
(33:55):
ties to organized crime, specifically the organized crime network discussed
in one of this series, which was largely led by
notorious American mobster Mayor Lanski Meyer Lanski. By virtue of
the role of many Megagroup members as major political donors
(34:16):
in both the US and Israel, several of its most
notable members have close ties to the governments of both
countries as well as their intelligence communities. As this report
and the subsequent report will show, the Megagroup also had
close ties to two businessmen who worked with for Israel's Masad,
Robert Maxwell and Mark Rich, as well as to top
(34:39):
Israeli politicians, including past and present Prime ministers. Would deep
ties to Israel's intelligence community. One of those businessmen working
for the Massad Robert Maxwell, who, by the way, I
think is the father of Galaine Maxwell. Yes he is,
and I think he died on mysterious circumstances. As I recall,
(35:03):
he was on his boat, which was named after Glaine
Maxwell her lady Gallaine I think was the name of
the boat. And he just disappeared. Nobody knew if he
fell into the water. Nobody knew what happened. He just disappeared.
That's how I remember it. Anyway, Now you can look
(35:26):
that up yourself. But certainly he died under mysterious circumstances.
Sounds like he might have been suicided. If he get
my drift, he might have suffered the same. Yeah, might
have suffered the same fate as Epstein, who didn't kill
himself apparently or did he you know, we're told that
(35:51):
he did.
Speaker 20 (35:54):
So.
Speaker 14 (35:55):
Will Gallaine suffered the same fate as her father, Well,
she just disappeared. Anyway. This report is very important and
does a deep dive into les Westerner and so many
others that are surrounding this. But this has the all
the earmarks, all all the smell, the stench of intelligence
(36:20):
agencies all around it, and and and and really when
the intelligence establishment or establishments plural can get you know,
can blackmail people and get dirt on people they work,
and get dirt on people so that they can twist
(36:42):
their arms to force them into doing whatever they want
them to do. Then who really runs things, who's really
running the country, who's really running all countries, who's really
running the world? I think that that's.
Speaker 15 (36:57):
At the heart big question.
Speaker 14 (36:59):
Yeah, that's at the heart of everything, isn't it.
Speaker 15 (37:02):
Yeah, And I would say it's the banksters, and which
you know, I was never one of those people who
joined the end the FED thing, you know, because I
just we need a banking system. You can't have fifty
(37:26):
states with their own banking system. That'd be ridiculous. But
on the other hand, the Treasury Department actually should be
the head of the banking system in the United States.
And globalizing our banking system was a huge mistake. When
(37:51):
when the Breton people, when the people met at Breton Woods,
they in what was it nine team, They began meeting
in the early nineteen forties and they designed the international
financial system. They're the ones that really, I would say,
(38:18):
cemented the sellout of our country and put us under
the system that the British wanted. Except for one thing.
The guy who was the British representative, he wanted the
(38:42):
banking now this is as I recall, he wanted it
to be independent. But the committee representing the United States,
which would be Harry Dexter White. They wanted the United
States to be the head of it, which of course
(39:04):
means if they run it, then of course, you know,
they can set themselves up for the biggest benefit of it.
Speaker 14 (39:13):
Right m h yeah, okay, I yeah, it's it's this
is all. I don't want to beat a dead horse here,
but my concern is is that we're not going to
find anything out. This is going to continue to go
on and because there's no accountability. If the administration is
(39:35):
able to skate on this, this is the last chance
anybody's going to really have to do anything about this,
because honestly, Trump isn't going to release any information. People
should hold his feet to the fire on this. I
don't care if he likes it or not. But the
problem is when you see Poles. If this poll by
CNN is accurate and he's getting more popular despite this,
(40:00):
then that really does deflate hope that there's going to
be any accountability, and there needs to be accountability. What
are they afraid of? You know, some people will speculate
that maybe Trump is tied up in this, and maybe
he is. He probably is, But the bigger issue is
I think he's protecting the intelligence establishment, as are all
(40:22):
the Republicans and the Democrats. You know, there are some
Democrats that are calling for information to be released. But
it just goes back to the words that Chuck Schumer said.
You know, when you go up against the intelligence establishment,
they have six ways from Sunday to get back at you.
And that's what I really think this is really about,
(40:44):
and that's why I think this is so important. We
have a shadow government in our country and in the world,
and these people are able to blackmail people, bry people,
overthrow governments with impunity. They're able to do covert operations,
have black budgets, they have all the power, all the
(41:05):
ability to operate in secret. Nobody is allowed to know
what they're doing. Everything is talked about behind closed doors
in hush tones, and we the people get the fund
at all. We the people are just along for the right.
We're spectators in their court.
Speaker 15 (41:24):
Yes, just slaves in their system. Yeah, because remember nineteen
ninety five World Trade Organization trade in goods and services.
They made us all slaves with that, and slaves that
have no power. So the businesses can just import a
(41:48):
new workforce and that's what's happening. What was happening at
our border. They were importing a new workforce for the
blue collar jobs. While the I can't remember which agents
say it is that issues the H one B visas
and the investment visas, Customs and I guess it is
(42:13):
Customs and Border Protection, come to think of it. But
but they basically threw us all to the wolves.
Speaker 14 (42:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (42:23):
When you when your government has no loyalty to its people,
that means the entire system is corrupt and rotten to
the core. And that's what we're.
Speaker 14 (42:36):
Looking at exactly right. Well, Congress just passed the Recisions Package,
which was defunding U S a i D. So the
funding for US A I D has been cut off,
as is the UH the funding for the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting as well. Lauren, that's right.
Speaker 28 (42:57):
The Recisions Package passed the House just after midnight on
Friday with a vote of two sixteen to two thirteen.
This just after the Senate sent it through about twenty
four hours earlier.
Speaker 14 (43:08):
On this vote, the Ya's are two hundred and sixteen,
the nays are two hundred and thirteen.
Speaker 11 (43:15):
The resolution is adopted.
Speaker 29 (43:18):
After twelve hours of voting. The President's planned to rescind
nine billion dollars of funding passed the House early Friday.
The breakdown in the Senate was fifty one to forty eight.
The cuts include over a billion dollars to the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting in about seven billion in foeurign aid.
Speaker 14 (43:36):
Okay, so h nine billion of unobligated funds affecting twenty
one budget accounts is what the So this was a
clawback from I guess they passed the bill, the Omnibus
spending bill, which you know had the funding in it
to begin with, and then they ended up later on
wanting to claw it back, and so they put forth
(43:59):
this desisions package. One point one billion dollars cut from
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds PBS and NPR,
and then the foreign aid programs. There's eight billion dollars
for usaid, which evidently two and a half billion for
(44:21):
Development assistance, one point seven billion for Economic Support Fund
and International Disaster Assistance, Migration and Refugee Assistants, and Democracy
Fund and related programs. So you know, some would argue,
and many have that, you know, how much of this
stuff should Congress even be funding in the first place.
Speaker 15 (44:44):
You know the question, well, wey always say when they
talk about foreign aid, it's only like one percent of
the budget. But what are they doing in the nineteen
nineties ninety Well, it was nineteen ninety five when the
G seven agreed to build collective global systems computer systems,
(45:12):
all right, that are integrated between these It actually ended
up being five countries, which where you is where you
get the five eyes and these global systems is what
they're implementing, is what USAID was implementing throughout the world,
(45:38):
in particular global health. Yea right, okay, So and if
you look at those systems, they gave a high level list,
which was transportation, health, maritime system and you know, it
(46:02):
goes down down the list where they were creating a
global system that on the top side serves an interest.
But at the bottom side, it was the global surveillance system. Yeah,
that Edward Snowden was reporting on. It's the global police state, yeah,
(46:25):
and the global police state when it gets down into
our country, it's the domestic police state yep.
Speaker 14 (46:34):
And there's a lot going on on that front. The
domestic police state absolutely, yes, you know, but these go ahead,
you were going to say something. Oh I thought you
started to say something.
Speaker 15 (46:49):
No, that's okay, go ahead.
Speaker 14 (46:50):
I well wow, you know, I wonder how much of
this money, you know, because we know that for instance, USAID,
they go in and they soften the population, They go
in and they do things in order to try to
win people over against a regime. So it's like a
(47:11):
soft war going on, and very much the same way
that happened during the Maidan, you know, an overthrow of
the Ukrainian government. And we can see now they're end
result of that. You know, supposedly Trump was going to
end this war on day one, by the way, between
Russia and Ukraine, still waiting, still waiting. And as a
(47:32):
matter of fact, now the administration seemingly more and more
solidified in his position. Where it really you can't tell it,
Dine's worth a difference between the foreign policy of the
president today than you could Biden's presidency.
Speaker 30 (47:47):
President Donald Trump is facing new scrutiny for the pace
and scale of US air strikes early in his second term.
Some are calling his strategy bold, others overreach. In just
five months, Trump approved five hundred and twenty nine US
air strikes, nearly matching the five hundred and fifty five
during former President Joe Biden's four year term.
Speaker 14 (48:10):
Okay, did you hear that? So five hundred and twenty
nine air strikes in five months. Many of these things
we haven't even heard about, right, I haven't heard about it.
Speaker 15 (48:22):
Tell us anything.
Speaker 14 (48:23):
I'm pretty I'm pretty intrull.
Speaker 15 (48:25):
That Ukraine hit Moscow and I expected the whole internet
to explode on that information because that is a direct
act of war.
Speaker 14 (48:37):
Yeah, they've been hitting Moscow, and yeah, absolutely so, five
hundred and twenty nine air strikes in five months, and
he's nearing Biden's four year total. So he's really surpassed
Joe Biden as a warmonger.
Speaker 30 (48:52):
Most of the Trump approved strikes targeted Iran backed Houties
and Yemen, but US forces also launched attack in Somalia, Syria, Iraq,
and in a major escalation Iran. In Yemen alone, there
have been four hundred and seventy air strikes since January.
The campaign ramped up in March as Huti's disrupted global shipping.
(49:16):
Despite the scale and a price tag topping one billion dollars,
the Houtis already sank two vessels halfway through July Trump
ordered a series of strikes on June twenty second on
three Iranian nuclear facilities. Fourteen massive bunker buster bombs were deployed,
along with dozens of Tomahawk missiles. Trump called the strikes
(49:39):
among the most successful in US history, but as we've
reported on before here at straightero Neews, the assessments of
how effective those strikes were are still ongoing. Trump's strategy
is drawing fire even from within his own MAGA base.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Green of Georgia says all the sh
(50:00):
strikes violate the president's campaign promise of no more foreign wars. Still,
polling shows strong Republican support. In one survey, eighty four
percent of MAGA voters backed the Iran strikes, and traditional
conservatives are largely on board too. White House officials say
the pace of the strikes reflects a broader shift air
(50:22):
power over boots on the ground, but experts warn that
over reliance on force without a deeper strategy may increase
risks for civilians and allies and may threaten long term
global stability.
Speaker 14 (50:37):
So Trump is calling conversations with Vladimir Putin now meaningless,
and he's approved more weapons for Ukraine, and he's meeting
now with NATO's Mark Rudy as a plan's surface to
have the Atlantic Alliance by US made weapons for Ukraine.
(50:58):
So of the weapons manufacturers will be happy until we're
all blown up by nukes. So there you go, yep.
In the meantime, in China, the US Navy is also
expanding its footprint over there in the South China Sea.
Something else you can look forward to, the.
Speaker 30 (51:16):
United States Navy is going to help the Philippines build
a new repair and maintenance facility. It will not be
a military base, but it will help the Philippine Navy
beef up its military presence near some highly disputed waters
in the South China Sea. US Embassy in Manila says
the new maritime maintenance hub will be situated in the
western coastal town of Kazon in the Pulawan Province. The
(51:41):
site directly faces the South China Sea and is about
one hundred and sixty miles away from the Second Thomas Shoal,
which has been a flashpoint between China and the Philippines.
Embassy officials say the project is in line with a
nineteen fifty one mutual defense treaty between the two nations
and helps achieve quote a free, open, and resilient Indo Pacific.
(52:05):
These facilities will be near the Philippine Military's Western Command,
which deploys Navy patrol vessels, surveillance ships, and military aircraft
to defend the region. The shop will focus on repairing
and maintaining smaller vessels and also offers storage for equipment.
Once constructed, it's expected to enhance the Philippine military's logistical
(52:29):
ability to respond to conflicts in the area. The project
also provides the US with a way of expanding its
so called low footprint deterrence against Chinese aggression. China asserts
numerous claims to the South China Sea, despite international bodies
ruling against Beijing, but that isn't stopping China from acting
(52:51):
more aggressively. The new repair facilities are seen as a
way to help US allies in the region counter the
growing threat from China without the US having to get
directly involved. In a separate series of projects authorized by
a twenty fourteen Defense agreement, the US also built warehouses, barracks,
and other structures in nine Philippine military camps where US
(53:15):
forces can be stationed, and American weapons stored. Beijing has
not responded to the news that the US Navy will
help build these new facilities for Manila, but China has
repeatedly accused the US of secretly colluding with allies in
the region to challenge China's standing.
Speaker 14 (53:34):
Now, one thing that's interesting talking about Russia for a
sum I don't know if you've been following Vicky. The
seventeenth Bricks Summit has taken place.
Speaker 15 (53:45):
I didn't.
Speaker 14 (53:47):
RT reported on that a few days ago. The city
of Rio de Janeiro hosted its seventeenth Bricks Summit, making
a significant step forward, marking a significant step forward for
the organization amid the accelerating transformation of the global political
and economic landscape. Representative represented by the Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov,
(54:10):
Russia played an active role in the summit's proceeding, while
Vladimir Putin addressed the plenary session via video link. In
his remarks, the Russian leader offered a comprehensive analysis of
current global trends, emphasizing that the liberal model of globalization
is losing viability as the center of economic and political
(54:31):
activity shifts decisively towards what they call the global South,
developing countries with rising demographic, resource and technological potential. I'm
running up against the clock here. I want to go
into this a little bit more into the next hour
somewhat because what looks like hat is happening here is
(54:53):
that the Bricks Nations are working toward taking control of
the what they basically the global push towards a new
world order.
Speaker 15 (55:06):
Yeah, the language financial system.
Speaker 14 (55:10):
Yeah, the language in this declaration. They just put out
a declaration in which they they use very very similar
sounding language than the globalists here that are pushing it.
It's it's it's very similar in nature in fact that
the same kind of phraseology promoting sustainable development, sustainable governance,
(55:32):
strengthening global cooperation, multilateralism, all of the buzzwords, and they
are all present, economic integration, global coordination. I mean, if
you didn't know that this was a Bricks document, you
would swear it's something that came out of the State Department.
(55:53):
And they're pushing for more of the United Nations control.
So you know, is there really your strategic competition going
on here?
Speaker 15 (56:06):
Well, it's the game plan that's kind of like the
crown on the monster that they've built, which is the
international system Okay, hold it right there, uns world Government.
Speaker 14 (56:20):
Keep your thoughts in place. We have to take the
top of the hour break. We'll be back in a moment.
Stay with us Our number two straight at.
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That's eight hundred five eight seven forty two eighty.
Speaker 31 (58:33):
One three fives signs.
Speaker 32 (59:00):
This is American and Family News.
Speaker 22 (59:02):
I'm Robert Thorne.
Speaker 32 (59:03):
At least three people were killed by what investigators believe
was an accidental explosion at a Los Angeles Sheriff's Department
training facility. KTTV Fox eleven, Los Angeles, Gina Silva reports
these were.
Speaker 16 (59:15):
Law enforcement professionals who were working in one of the
most dangerous units, you know, handling explosives as part of
their regular training. And it's just absolutely shocking that it
happened at a facility that's supposed to be highly controlled.
Speaker 33 (59:29):
Obviously, that just adds.
Speaker 16 (59:31):
To the mystery of what went wrong.
Speaker 15 (59:34):
Now.
Speaker 16 (59:34):
I've been told that the show's department is working right
now with federal agencies SBIATF Homeland Security to figure out
exactly what happened.
Speaker 33 (59:43):
What went wrong.
Speaker 32 (59:44):
The explosion reportedly happened as the explosives were being transported
to the training facility. The US says a note of
the World Health Organization's efforts on international health emergencies Foxes
Lilian Wu has.
Speaker 34 (59:56):
More Secretary of State Marco Rubiel and Health and Human
Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior putting out a joint
statement rejecting twenty twenty four amendments to the International Health Regulations.
That's a legally binding agreement between nearly two hundred countries
to detect and report public health events. Kennedy alleging the
(01:00:17):
changes approved by the World Health Organization to better respond
to severe disease outbreaks threatened US sovereignty and failed to
adequately address what he calls the who's susceptibility to political
influence and censorship, most notably from China during outbreaks. Critics
warned the US move could hamper global cooperation for future
(01:00:39):
health crises.
Speaker 26 (01:00:40):
Lillian Wu Fox News.
Speaker 32 (01:00:43):
A major announcement from the Defense Secretary Pete haig Seth,
the Defense Department has apologized to National Rights to Life
and other pro life groups for calling them terrorists. The
incident occurred during the Biden Harris administration. Carol Tobias called
it frustrating.
Speaker 33 (01:00:57):
It was also kind of scary. We had the US
military telling soldiers that pro life people were terrorists. If
that had stucked, if that had stayed in place, who
knows what could have happened. The proluct movement has always
been peace. We don't want to hurt anyone, So it
(01:01:20):
was actually kind of scary to think that your federal
government could be coming after you because of your beliefs.
Speaker 32 (01:01:27):
The PowerPoint presentation to soldiers included logos from various organizations,
including National Right to Life. The Vanderbilt University Medical Center
has jettisoned its gender identity program and laid off five
staff members. Here's AFN's Bob Kellough.
Speaker 35 (01:01:42):
Vanderbilt University Medical Center is the latest institution to eliminated.
According to Campus Reform, Doctor Brick Lance of the Christian
Medical and Dental Association is glad that Trump administration is
taking this step.
Speaker 10 (01:01:57):
So I think by again withholding funds that institutions are
changing now. These are going to be have pactice to
public funds versus private institutions, but any even private institutions
are following suits.
Speaker 35 (01:02:11):
Earlier this year, Ohio State remove its LGBTQ webpage.
Speaker 10 (01:02:16):
We need to have medical education teach according to science,
good science, and there's more and more good science coming
out so that we can actually help, truly help these
individuals and not be fearful of being claimed as big
as Metro.
Speaker 35 (01:02:31):
Nashville Council's LGBTQ Caucus condemns the move, describing the layoffs
as systemic discrimination.
Speaker 32 (01:02:40):
I'm Bob Kellogg, Texas Scorecard says. The founder of Parents
of Trans Youth revealed that non governmental organizations are assisting
in transporting Texas children to New Mexico and other states
for gender manipulation procedures that are banned in Texas. Founder
of Mandy Giles emphasized to the outlet that the efforts
avoid using taxpayer funds to evade any strings attached, and
(01:03:03):
that the organization is the best kept secret in the state.
The disclosure highlights ongoing circumvention of Texas laws prohibiting puberty blockers,
hormone therapy, and gender manipulation related surgeries for miners. And
that is all our time for now. Find more news
at AFN net and we hope you have a wonderful weekend.
Speaker 22 (01:03:22):
I'm Robert Thorne.
Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new.
Speaker 2 (01:03:35):
World order, new world or that new world order.
Speaker 3 (01:03:38):
This is a moment disease. The gleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle them again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 4 (01:03:48):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.
Speaker 5 (01:03:55):
Nevertheless, the United States to make key position shaped is
so that the problem of the push presidentity will be
the emergence of a new international order.
Speaker 6 (01:04:07):
The first decade of the twenty first century.
Speaker 22 (01:04:10):
But out of what is will be seen as the greatest.
Speaker 7 (01:04:13):
Restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy.
Speaker 6 (01:04:17):
Greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new.
Speaker 22 (01:04:20):
World order was created.
Speaker 8 (01:04:24):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic.
Speaker 9 (01:04:26):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oths, and the
secret proceedings.
Speaker 11 (01:04:41):
Waging war on the new world order.
Speaker 12 (01:04:43):
The Council's of government.
Speaker 13 (01:04:45):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 8 (01:04:55):
This is Governor America for Daring Week's and Ricky Davis.
Speaker 14 (01:05:00):
From Female Regions five and ten. This is the second
hour of Governor America. Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis here
with you as we are every Saturday. It continues to
be the nineteenth of July twenty twenty five. As we
get right back into it talking about the Bricks Summit
which was just held in Rio Dejaneiro, just South Latin America,
ladies and gentlemen in our own backyards here and the
(01:05:22):
bricks of course, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
They are presenting themselves or are working to become the
challengers of US hegemony around the world. And the more
(01:05:45):
I read about what they've done and what they've declared, though,
it makes you wonder how much is it of It
really is a challenge. There may be some competition between
who's going to control the world order, But make no
mistake about it, ladies and gentlemen, what is being built
is a world order, and it will be between the
(01:06:05):
United States and the bricks nations, you know, and even
the United States is under the Trump administrations, he's really
not building alliances. He's not trying to reach out to
nations that have historically been allied with the US. And
(01:06:28):
so as things continue to go forward, the United States
becomes more and more isolated, and I think that that's
probably by design.
Speaker 15 (01:06:37):
Well, he may not be reaching out because don't forget,
that's been the plan since before nineteen forty five, was
to have a world government, a world federation. And so
(01:06:57):
I mean they call it New World Order, because nobody
knows what the hell new World order means. But what
it really is is a world federation. And so at
the foreign policy level of the US government, they've been
helping to build it all along.
Speaker 14 (01:07:20):
You remember.
Speaker 15 (01:07:22):
When Tieneman Square happened in China, President Bush should have
broken up for relations with China if human rights and
you know, were really important. But they're not. They're a tool.
(01:07:44):
They're simply a tool. And so what Bush did. He
sent Lawrence Egelberger and brent S Gocroft over to China
for secret meetings. And the only reason that ever came
out was because Brent's Gocroft made a mistake. He gave
(01:08:08):
a toast at some party and he mentioned those meetings,
and so you know, and then Congress investigated and they
found out about that. So they've been working against us
all along. So there's no reason to think that just
(01:08:28):
because the Bricks now want to establish the beginning of
what would be a world federation, a world governing system
under the United Nations, why the US would stop that.
That's been their objective.
Speaker 14 (01:08:49):
Yeah, My point is this is supposed to be something
that's kind of supposed to look I guess like they're
challenging the New World Order by the West, and yet
it sounds a lot like the New World Order by
the West. Actually, it sounds exactly like the New World
Order by the West.
Speaker 15 (01:09:07):
Right. There is the the public story and then there
is the real story behind. And you don't see the
real story behind unless you've studied the history of how
did we get here? And when you see how we
got here and who is involved, then then you can
(01:09:32):
look at it with a with both eyes rather than
just one eye.
Speaker 2 (01:09:37):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 14 (01:09:39):
Yeah. I was sharing before the break an article from
r TEA. I'm gonna I'm gonna let that rest for
a moment because I want to jump to off Guardian
where they talk about July and July sixth BRICKS Member
nations they call them states signed the Joint Declaration of
(01:10:00):
seventeenth Bricks Summit Strengthening Global South Cooperation for More Inclusive
and Sustainable Governance. Now, doesn't that sound exactly like something that, oh,
the Clinton State Department might put forward strengthening everything, but
the Global South Strengthening cooperation will leave the Global South
(01:10:23):
out Strengthening cooperation for more inclusive and sustainable governance. I
mean that sounds exactly like something the State Department would.
Speaker 15 (01:10:30):
Push, doesn't exactly, That's my point.
Speaker 14 (01:10:34):
Yeah, and this was held in Real Dejenio. Similar to
the game changing Kason Declaration, this year's Bricks Declaration serves
as a manifesto for the multipolar world order. Containing one
hundred and twenty six commitments, the document reads like a
bill of rights against the global tyranny of the collective West.
(01:10:56):
BRICKS is committed to improving global governance with the United
Nations playing a central role in the international system. How
is that any different than what the global brand of
the global governance that the Western you know, New World
Order is pushing. I don't see any difference.
Speaker 15 (01:11:18):
Do you remember who the founding nations were? For the
United States or for the United Nations? It was the
United States, China, the Soviet Union, and then the colonial
powers which were Britain and France. Okay, those were the
(01:11:41):
first five members of the United Nations. And that is
significant in terms of the what what could be called,
I guess the geopolitics of the World Federation.
Speaker 14 (01:11:58):
Yeah, and it's supposed to be a pl place where
nacis can go to talk and prevent war. How is
that how has that worked out for us as we're
on the precipice of another world war, a world war,
we're on the precipice of another Uh. We've had conflicts
my whole life, We've had wars my whole life. But
(01:12:21):
we are really facing something quite frightening. Actually.
Speaker 15 (01:12:25):
But these nations of those by the way, none of
those wars were really for the security of the United States. No,
they were U and wars.
Speaker 14 (01:12:36):
Yeah, exactly, So they say in this declaration, we iterate
our commitment to reforming and improving global governance by promoting
a more just, a more just, equitable. Again, I can't
the same language, a more just, equitable, agile, effective, efficient, responsive, representative, legitimate, democratic,
(01:13:02):
and accountable international and multilateral system in the spirit of
extensive consultation, joint contribution, and shared benefits. You know, I
think these people, with all their global intelligence and their
global brilliances, I think they really need to learn that
run on sentences are not conducive to what you're trying
(01:13:24):
to say, because.
Speaker 15 (01:13:27):
They don't want you to know what they're talking.
Speaker 14 (01:13:29):
That's a run on sentence if I've ever seen one.
Speaker 15 (01:13:31):
Somebody slaved over that state not guarant gosh, well.
Speaker 14 (01:13:36):
They should have slaved a little longer to figure out
how to shorten it or at least break it up
into a few.
Speaker 15 (01:13:41):
They don't want you to know. They don't want you
to know what they're talking about.
Speaker 14 (01:13:46):
In this regard, if you can understand the last sentence,
we'll build on it. In this regard, we take note
of the adoption of the Pact of the Future at
the Summit of the Future, including its two annexes, the
Global Digital Compact and the Declaration of Future Generations.
Speaker 15 (01:14:05):
Yeah, Global Digital Compact, Global Systems. What have I been
talking about techno two decades?
Speaker 8 (01:14:12):
Almost?
Speaker 14 (01:14:13):
Yeah. We reaffirm our commitment to multilateralism and upholding the
international law, including the purposes and principles enshrined in the
Charter of the United Nations in their entirety and interconnectedness. Ugh,
there's that word, and it's indispensable cornerstone and the central
(01:14:34):
role of the UN in the international system in which
sovereign states cooperate to maintain international peace and security, advance
sustainable development, ensure the promotion and protection of democracy. There's
that word human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, as
(01:14:57):
well as cooperation based on solidarity, mutual respect, justice and equality. Well,
I can tell you right now that fundamental freedoms will
not play a role in this as long as the
United Nations and sustainable development are involved. And certainly democracy
is not a form of government that would be desired.
(01:15:17):
Yet they're playing all of the same buzzwords, they're playing
all the same games that the global planners here in
Western nations have been playing my whole life. So they're
trying to take the leadership on the global stage.
Speaker 15 (01:15:34):
Yeah, you know what, one of the most important articles
in the UN Charter is the one on regions. I
think it was title thirty seven or Chapter thirty seven,
the one on regions. And that's what they have been
(01:15:54):
using to break down nation states and creating regions. And
why is that? Because our constitution is based around the
concept of states. A region crosses state and international boundaries. Yes,
so they have been building these overlays. A region is
(01:16:17):
an overlay on top of the existing governing.
Speaker 14 (01:16:22):
Structure, right, and for what purpose?
Speaker 15 (01:16:27):
Because because they've moved to an ecta it's a world
communist system. I mean that the World Federation is a
world communist system.
Speaker 14 (01:16:38):
Well, specifically, though, let's stay with the regions for a second,
because I want people to understand the reason why they
Regional governance, as Vicky said, places a layer of a
governmental entity, a government like entity, but they call it
governance because it's not real government. So anything really that
(01:17:01):
controls the people, controls populations, or imposes rule upon somebody
is a governance. So governance is layered over cross borders,
over an area and they call it a region, and
in that area they harmonize the regulations, the laws, the rules,
(01:17:22):
whatever you want to call them, in order to make
it to the point where the border is unnecessary, the
border ceases to exist. So that's really the goal is
elimination of borders. And we see that again. You often
refer to it the nineteen eighty three Lapase Agreement on
the US Mexican border, which we still are living with.
(01:17:44):
By the way, today they just renamed it.
Speaker 15 (01:17:47):
It was a treaty.
Speaker 14 (01:17:48):
Originally it was Border Region twenty one, then it became
border twenty one, then it was bordered you know, twenty twelve,
and border twenty twenty and you know, I don't know
what the latest name isrobably border twenty twenty five. I
don't know. I'll have to look it up.
Speaker 15 (01:18:03):
But those are plans for integration. Those are like integrations
to implement initiatives that are integrating the United States and Mexico.
Speaker 14 (01:18:17):
Pieces coming together to form a whole. Yes.
Speaker 15 (01:18:20):
And the best one that I found to look at,
which is how I started looking at all of this,
is the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. That is an organization.
It was put into Idaho law participation and it was
put into Idaho law in nineteen ninety one and it
(01:18:44):
groups four states in the United States, Washington, Oregon, Idaho,
and Montana, and the Canadian provinces immediately above us. I've
been watching what's going on in Alberta very closely because
Alberta is one of those states in the Pacific Northwest
(01:19:07):
Economic Region, and you know they're talking about breaking off
from Canada. Well, they're already a member of the Pacific
Northwest Economic Region, and so I and what was the
other province, British Columbia that that was thinking of going
(01:19:29):
along with Alberta. But watch Alberta, watch what they do,
because if they if they do break off and become
sort of independent, they won't be totally independent because they're
still part of the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. But in
(01:19:52):
building the global system, the idea is a global world order,
which means which compasses, of course, a monetary system and
a trade system and all of that stuff. They're breaking
the world into regions.
Speaker 14 (01:20:09):
Yeah, you're out west and I'm here, you know, in
the east. They call it the Midwest. And the same
thing that's happening in your neck of the woods is
happening in mind. You know, we've had Compact, Great Lakes
Compact and the Council on Great Lakes, the Council of
(01:20:32):
Great Lakes Governors, you know, was a big thing and
is a big thing. So you know, this is an
international layer of governance that has been layered over our
northern border in the United States. So this is going
on all over the country, you know, wherever there's borders existing.
You know, we think you tend to think of regionalism
(01:20:53):
as as a as Nixon's regional governing system with the
ten federal regions, and that's a part of it. That's
to break down state sovereignty. But we also have national
sovereignty being broke down by these international agreements where there's
cross border cooperation to tackle some problems which may be
(01:21:13):
real problems, but their excuses to be able to harmonize
and govern cross border. So we don't really need these
pesky borders now, do we, right?
Speaker 15 (01:21:24):
Well, And that's the significance of the Seventeenth Amendment electing
senators by popular vote. When the Constitution was written, the
senators were supposed to represent the interests of the states.
And so when they took that control away from the
(01:21:44):
states and made the senators elected in the same way
that the House of Representatives is elected, they took the
power of accountability away from the states.
Speaker 14 (01:22:00):
Yep. So talking about the Bricks uh Nations and this
agreement that they had, this declaration, I should say joint
declaration really is what it what it boiled down to,
big massive declaration that they had to challenge supposedly the
West and and and I'm sure that they are challenging.
(01:22:21):
What they're doing is taking the leadership role. They call
it multipolarism, the multipolar roll, you know. So we don't
not gonna have unipolar anymore. We're gonna have multipolar. What
we're gonna end up with is a war. That's what
I'm afraid of. But Bricks recognizes the International Monetary Fund
as the center of global financial safety.
Speaker 15 (01:22:42):
There you go, I am at the.
Speaker 14 (01:22:44):
International Monetary Fund. So really, what challenging of the Western
hegemony is there? There's a to me, it's a cooperation,
it's a handshake, they say in the In the current
context of uncertainty and volatility, the International Monetary Fund must
remain adequately resourced and agile at the center of the
(01:23:07):
Global Financial Safety Net or GFSN Global Financial Safety Net.
Apparently VICKY is so important it has to have its
own acronym to effectively support its members, particularly the most
vulnerable countries. We call for improved management procedures, including through
(01:23:29):
such a merit based and inclusive selection process that would
increase regional and there's that word, regional diversity and representation
of emdes, which are emerging markets and developing economies. And
the leadership of the IMF and the WBG, the World
(01:23:51):
Bank Group. How is this any different than what we got?
They're just not joining in, joining in, So supposedly we're
supposed to think that there is animus against the world system,
(01:24:12):
and hey, we're all going to join in, and.
Speaker 15 (01:24:17):
Yeah, no, it's just next step in the plan. And
the people in our State department, they know that that,
you know, So that's why nobody's really excited about the
fact that the bricks are stepping up.
Speaker 14 (01:24:33):
Now get this, Get this, Bricks are committed, committed to
implementing the twenty thirty Agenda for Sustainable Development. They say,
we commend the work of the Bricks Urbanization Forum to
further strengthen collaboration between government and societies at all levels
(01:24:53):
in all Bricks countries, and implementing the twenty thirty Agenda
for Sustainable Development and promoting the low localization of the SDGs.
That is the sustainable development goals, right.
Speaker 15 (01:25:07):
And you know what, it's the Agenda twenty one was
really I think designed to put the United Nations basically
in control of our countries and trying to reach sustainable
development is like a greyhound in a race trying to
(01:25:28):
catch the rabbit, the mechanical rabbit. You'll never catch it.
Speaker 14 (01:25:32):
That's exactly right, good analogy. They call on the bricks
do the international community to maintain and scale up efforts
to combat Oh, look here we go climate change. I
mean they're just ticking all of the boxes. They're taking
all of the boxes. Bricks will transition to zero or
(01:25:53):
low emission transportation to help reduce its carbon footprint. How joyous.
So I guess we can look forward to seeing the
reports come out of our tea and spot nick of
all the wind turbines all over Moscow in different places.
(01:26:14):
They're going to start doing that, I guess.
Speaker 15 (01:26:17):
So they've already been doing it. I was reading or
I saw a video or something where they were talking
about all of the plastic garbage dumps where the windmills,
you know, the plastic from the wind mills are just
being dumped. They're not biodegradable, you know, and they don't
(01:26:42):
They don't last that long because when the wind does blow,
it's really hard on them. They get all that plastic crap.
Speaker 14 (01:26:53):
We got the break. Hang on, we'll be back here.
Folks still go away.
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In now our Creation Moment's host at Taylor.
Speaker 37 (01:28:12):
We don't know much about Galileo, quipped comedian Milton Jones,
except that he was a poor boy from a poor family.
Despite the intended humor, Galileo was born into a household
of moderate means. His father was a professional musician, playing
the lute and composing some financial problems Early in adulthood
led Galileo to inventing to earn money. In this he
(01:28:35):
was relatively successful, designing a hydrostatic balance and an early
type of thermometer. The most significant devices that he built
would probably be his telescopes. Eventually he built one with
a thirty times magnification. Of his many observations, perhaps his
most famous was as he observed small objects close to
the planet Jupiter. He tracked their movement and realized that
(01:28:58):
they did not orbit the Earth.
Speaker 11 (01:29:00):
Earth.
Speaker 37 (01:29:00):
At the time, most intellectuals assumed that astronomical objects orbited
the Earth, though some like Copernicus, had suggested that they
orbited the Sun. Galileo's objects did not orbit either, and
clearly seemed to orbit Jupiter.
Speaker 38 (01:29:14):
They were moons of Jupiter.
Speaker 37 (01:29:17):
Galileo's support for a heliocentric view of the universe got
him into trouble with the authorities. Even Church clerics preached
against him. The Dominicans sarcastically quoted Acts one eleven with
reference to Galileo. Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye
gazing up into heaven. Of course, Galileo's discoverers did not
contradict the Bible.
Speaker 6 (01:29:37):
Far from it.
Speaker 37 (01:29:38):
Galileo believed firmly in the truth of Genesis and expected
to see order in the universe because he knew everything
had been made by the Creator.
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Really with us, let's go to find out what's really
going on. This is governor America.
Speaker 11 (01:31:21):
Today.
Speaker 6 (01:31:22):
Being retarded means leading a full life.
Speaker 22 (01:31:25):
Retarded people go to work, school, just like the neighbors.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
They come back to a real home, a supervised home,
right in the neighborhood where they belong.
Speaker 38 (01:31:35):
Being retarded never stopped anyone from being a good neighbor.
Speaker 14 (01:31:38):
Yeah, you could be a good neighbor. That was an
actual spot that was running back in the nineteen eighties.
You can believe that. And now all of the retarded
people are pushing global governance and that's what we're talking
about right now. Yeah, I thought that was interesting, how
times have changed. They'd never run that on TV today.
Welcome back to the broadcast, ladies and gentlemen. This is
(01:32:00):
America as we continue here talking about the Bricks Summit,
and they're pushing all of the Agenda twenty one stuff,
pushing all the United Nations systems, all of the United
Nations institutions. And Vicky, did you finish what you were
saying before the break.
Speaker 15 (01:32:20):
I don't think I did, because I just looked up
a company called Hawku.
Speaker 14 (01:32:29):
And oh yeah, I remember, I can't remember.
Speaker 15 (01:32:31):
How it connected. But really the story of Haku and
Pocatello is that this company from Hawaii, they weren't a company.
They were just a couple of kids. Actually, yeah, that
started a small business, but they got a Navy contract,
(01:32:54):
which tells you a lot. But ultimately what ended up
happening is that they were supposedly manufacturing polysilicon and a
brewery opened up right next to them, and one of them,
either the polysilicon factory or the brewery, supplied steam for
(01:33:23):
uh for the other for electricity production, okay. And what
that did is that it made Hawku a utility. And
once they became a utility, then they of course could
(01:33:45):
participate in the States utility regular utility regulatory system. And
after that happened, then the Haku had been selling piece
this is of the company to the communist Chinese all along,
(01:34:05):
and so that's how the Chinese got into our utility
regulatory system. These people are damn clever.
Speaker 14 (01:34:17):
I have to say, oh yeah, I think you're right,
And certainly this Bricks Summit, This Bricks declaration makes it
look like to me that everything we're seeing as far
as the contest, the East West contest, is bogative. There's
cross well across the world, there's more cooperation. You know,
(01:34:40):
it could very well be that the United States is
deliberately giving up its global I mean, really, let's face it,
you couldn't fumble the ball any worse than they have.
Weaponizing the dollar, weaponizing the credit card system what do
they call that again, the processing of the credit cards,
(01:35:03):
to forcing Russia to build its own you know, I
forget the name of it, but they made it to
the point where through sanctions, they've been forced to adapt
and adopt their own systems and develop things so that
they can, i mean, just for their sheer survival. And
now they don't need us. The rest of the world
(01:35:24):
doesn't need us. And so Trump's solution all of this is,
I'm just going to continue to bully people. I'm going
to continue to talk tough. I'm going to continue to
push people around around the world, and it's having less
of less of an impact. He's frustrated now because Putin
(01:35:45):
isn't listening to him. Putin has a mind of his own. Russia,
the Russians have a mind of their own. It's having
less and less of an impact.
Speaker 15 (01:35:55):
And with the Chinese, and you've got to always keep
in mind the big objective was world Federation, world government.
Speaker 14 (01:36:05):
Yeah, and they're building their own.
Speaker 15 (01:36:06):
So you have now China and Russia working together, and
the United States is pretending, and I do mean pretending
to work against that. I don't know how much Trump
understands of this whole system and the strategy since nineteen
(01:36:31):
forty five.
Speaker 14 (01:36:33):
I don't know how much he understands either, but I
know he's willing to go along with anything he's told
to do it. I think he's doing what he's told.
Speaker 15 (01:36:40):
Makes a case to you that sounds good based on
what you know, which is only a sliver of the truth.
I mean, you know, he's not superhuman. I you know,
how can he guess at the treachery of what's been
(01:37:00):
done to our country?
Speaker 14 (01:37:02):
Well? Maybe maybe the Epstein files going along with how
you know where Trump's position is in the world, I
mean in terms of world government. You know, if that
can be held over his head at any time, we're
going to expose you for the you know, if he's
a pedophile. And I'm not saying he is or isn't,
(01:37:23):
but I'm just saying if he is, if he's guilty,
then the question then is is this being used against him?
Is he subject to blackmail? And how many of our
politicians are subject to blackmail? Could it be? Could that
be the reason why we have so much of this
(01:37:43):
world government treachery going on here and the betrayal of
our nation on a massive scale. M that's the question?
You know this?
Speaker 15 (01:37:53):
Yeah, I do. I can see that being the case.
Speaker 14 (01:37:59):
This declaration and says we stress our commitment talking about
the bricks countries, we stress our commitment to uphold multilateralism
as necessary to address challenges threatening our shared planet and future,
such as climate change. Well, folks, climate change is not
caused by people. There's nothing you can do to stop it.
Climate change is a natural phenomenon, except when it comes
(01:38:23):
to weather modification. And we don't know the extent to
which that's being used to manipulate the client climate.
Speaker 15 (01:38:29):
I think it's being used to manipulate the dialogue because
one of the global systems is the global Emergency Management
system YEP. And you know how much they've been talking
about FEMA, and we've had we've had this anomalous weather
(01:38:51):
that causes a lot of damage and fires, and what
does all that go to? Goes to emergency management?
Speaker 14 (01:38:59):
Yeah, and there is the phenomenon of the fact. The
fact of the matter is that the poles are shifting
on the Earth as well, and that can also cause
problems with regard to extreme climate and weather events. So
how long does.
Speaker 15 (01:39:17):
How long has the world existed that we know of?
Millions of years? Right? Millions of years?
Speaker 14 (01:39:25):
Yeah, and we have history of it for really a
very small part of that m h.
Speaker 15 (01:39:31):
Yeah. So how do they have the hut spot to
say that we are causing global warming? Yes, wing the earth?
I mean, it's all such bs. It's all such stupid bs.
Speaker 14 (01:39:43):
Yeah. And Michael Mann at the University of Pennsylvania or
Pennsylvania State University. I guess it was who who sued
our friend, the late uh Tim Ball, who was a
climatology former guest on the show more than once, but
(01:40:05):
he sued him for saying for just making a joke
that Michael Mann should be, you know, instead of at
penn State, he should be in the state pen I
mean that was a joke.
Speaker 15 (01:40:16):
Yeah, that's pretty good. That's good.
Speaker 14 (01:40:17):
Yeah, it's pretty clever. It was just a joke. But
Michael Mann sued him over that. And Michael Mann, of course,
the hockey stick hoaster, the guy who came up with
a bogus hockey stick where you put anything in and
you get a flat line, you know, at front and
a hockey stick, you know, a spike at the end.
Put any data in to that computer model, you get
(01:40:39):
the hockey stick out. And they used the hockey stick.
The media did add nauseum to as supposed evidence that
you know, we were at the hottest period on record,
and it was bogus all along, thoroughly debunked.
Speaker 2 (01:40:55):
Well.
Speaker 15 (01:40:55):
One of his measurements of global warming was that he
took some temperatures at the top of a volcano. Yeah,
you think it might have been a little warm up there.
Speaker 20 (01:41:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:41:07):
And a lot of these, uh, a lot of these
monitoring stations are in places where they're in cities near
hot hot areas as well, just you know, maybe not
volcanic uh hot, but hot. Nonetheless, it's let's face it,
it's hotter. You gotta go out of concrete and asphalt
and steel in the cities which hold in the heat
better than the countryside. It's always cooler in the country.
(01:41:31):
So uh so if you're gonna take measurements, I mean,
you know, but they don't look at the space measurements either.
That's one thing doctor tim Ball used to point out
is they have satellites that can measure temperatures too, and
they don't look. They always use these measurements from the
ground in the hot city areas. But uh, anyway, finishing this,
(01:41:51):
but you know, but the Russians, the Chinese, the South Africans, uh,
the Brazilians, you know, they're these brick nations are pushing
forward with the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
They say, we resolve to remain united and the pursuit
of the purpose and goals of the Paris Agreement and
(01:42:13):
the objectives of the un FCCC, the High Nation Framework
Convention on Climate Change, and call on all countries to
uphold their existing commitment as parties to the UNFCCC and
its Paris Agreement, and to maintain and scale up their
effort to combat climate change. We call for a disagreement.
Speaker 15 (01:42:32):
Does you lie and will swear to it?
Speaker 14 (01:42:36):
There you go. We call for a strengthened global response
to climate change and the context of sustainable development and
poverty eradication. Understanding the urgency of climate change, we endorse
the BRICKS Climate Leadership Agenda as a statement for our
resolve to exercise collective leadership through mutual empowerment by advancing
(01:42:58):
solutions that support RICKS development needs and priorities, while accelerating
action and enhancing cooperation towards the full implementation of UNFCCC
and its Paris Agreement. We underscore that this outcome demonstrates
the multilateralism and global south cooperation can shape a more
inclusive and sustainable governance for a better future. What do
(01:43:20):
I throw up?
Speaker 15 (01:43:22):
Communist world government?
Speaker 14 (01:43:24):
There we go. We also recognize the need to encourage
the use of zero and low emission vehicles in urban mobility.
We emphasize the importance of cooperation among BRICKS members and
the context of reducing carbon emissions in aviation and maritime transport.
You know, maybe maybe the Russians, if we ever go
(01:43:44):
to war with them, maybe they will use the solar
powered tanks. Hmm, not likely. You don't think so?
Speaker 15 (01:43:54):
No, I don't.
Speaker 14 (01:43:55):
I think Jennifer Granholme should go over there. And you know,
request citizenship. Maybe she can push them to do that.
Speaker 15 (01:44:02):
So she can market the BS over them.
Speaker 14 (01:44:06):
We recognize the importance of sustainable aviation fuels or saf
lower carbon aviation fuels are LCAF and other aviation cleaner
energies as a pathway for reducing carbon nuitions from international aviation.
We encourage technological cooperation among bricks countries considering their national
realities and then the development and deployment of cleaner aviation
(01:44:28):
energies and associated technologies. We also emphasize cooperation to enhance
air and maritime connectivity and promote decarbonization of maritime transport,
as well as to strengthen initiatives and logistics integration and innovation.
Global systems YEP global systems of control, which have been
(01:44:54):
pushed massively by the US State Department and now are
being led apparently by the Bricks nations taking leadership over
the new World Order. All right, I'll tell you what.
We got a couple of calls on the line six ten,
six hundred seventeen seventy six if you'd like to join
in six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six or toll
free eight four four six Govern that's eight four four
(01:45:17):
six four six eight three seven six. Let's go to
first to Canada and take a call there. Hello, you're
on the air.
Speaker 39 (01:45:24):
Go ahead, please, well, pleasure to be able to talk
to you. I suppose if you wanted to have lower
carbon fuels, admitting, simply fill your tank to half because
that's what's burn Well, that's what burns, is the carbon
you see. So it's a ridiculous statement to say we
(01:45:47):
want to have lower carbon emitting.
Speaker 14 (01:45:49):
Fuels, or maybe we could just have all these globalists
quit going into all these conferences where they make these
worthless declarations.
Speaker 39 (01:45:58):
Well, as long as you put them in so older
powered jet aircraft, I would agree. But you can make
very good diesel oil from carbon dioxide in the air
of That process was perfected and used in World War
II by Germany. Now, the idea of the base in
(01:46:21):
Philippines being a what they say a repair station, I
would say that there's a cover for well, maybe we're
repairing missile something like that. And the second and I
guess their last point would be that China and Iran
definitely want to have a pipeline. Okay, that pipeline from
(01:46:43):
Iran to China will of course carry the oil that'll
get rid of the necessity of having ships, except that
the side effect is all our Emirate and Saudi Arabian
allies in the Middle East will lose money because oil
will be sold to China from Iran based on a
(01:47:04):
different currency, and so the John Maynard Kaines Bretton Woods
US dollar will not be the currency of necessity in
that case. And this is the whole rub And this
is why, again I think I've said before, this is
why we're going to war with the bricks nations.
Speaker 14 (01:47:24):
Back to you, Yeah, I can't say you're wrong on that, Honestly,
I think that we are. You know, ultimately, what I
what I can see happening here is a hostility. The
hostility continues to build. There's a war going on regardless
of which side wins. Ultimately, the people who are really
(01:47:48):
pushing the levers and you know, switches of power controlling
everything from the top down, none of it matters to them.
They're getting their world government regardless of which side wins.
So this is a race to the bottom in terms
of you know, who is going to control it. But
we will have world government regardless of who controls it.
(01:48:10):
That's that's the way I see it.
Speaker 39 (01:48:11):
They're underground chambers of thousands of feet down. I think
you did a show on that. They've got these big
caverns they built in the last ten twenty years. So
they will be going down like the not the Eloy
but the other ones, the morlocks in the time Machine novel,
(01:48:32):
you see. So this will be a new era for humanity.
So thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 14 (01:48:38):
Hey, thank you for calling. Appreciate it. God bless you, sir.
Let's go to California. Now take a call there. Hello,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, good morning.
Speaker 40 (01:48:48):
Good morning there. Yeah, I've wanted to have you given
an opportunity to call. And you know the situation of
WAYI where they set up utility company and started selling
it off to another country, China or any country falls
under a constitutional provision that a state may not contract
with a foreign entity without permission of Congress.
Speaker 41 (01:49:13):
And I'm not right.
Speaker 15 (01:49:14):
And isn't that interesting that I thought of the same
thing with Idaho participation in the Pacific Northwest Economic Region.
Where did they get that permission from the Senate?
Speaker 40 (01:49:30):
Well, they may have obtained that, in which case it's
quite possible we should consider all the senators traders.
Speaker 15 (01:49:40):
Yes, I agree totally.
Speaker 40 (01:49:43):
Anytime you give away your sovereignty, they have violated the
Constitution just because they enter a treaty. If that treaty
gives away our sovereignty, it is not a valid treaty
under the Constitution.
Speaker 14 (01:49:54):
Absolutely, thank you for saying that. You know, I hear
so many Cynthia, even on supposedly patriot broadcasts across the realm,
across the spectrum of patriot broadcasting, people saying that a
treaty supersedes the Constitution. That is not true. That is
(01:50:15):
not true. And when people say that, they're helping the
other side, because if people start buying into that and
accept that as truth, they won't come out against these treaties.
They won't come out against the politicians for pushing this nonsense.
Speaker 40 (01:50:33):
So the petitions to get us out of these arrangements
are called First Amendment petitions, And in the petition you
have to explain what the Constitution says and what the
entity has done that violates the Constitution and make a
demand that they reverse that decision. And there are petitions
already prepared that can be downloaded and modified to fit
(01:50:57):
your own. You started to county level, because your county
is supposed to be the bulwark of the state. They're
supposed to be the building blocks of the state, and
they need to insist that the state legislatures step up
to the job and insist that the Congress obey the constitution.
So can I tell you the sites that those lists
are posted.
Speaker 14 (01:51:15):
On, sure.
Speaker 40 (01:51:18):
Reclaiming there republic dot org, which is owned by a
retired USMC that's Marine Corps Systems engineer who has extensively
studied those ratification debates, which the law schools have never taught.
Most many judges have no idea the ratification debates actually
(01:51:39):
exist and those are illegal underpinnings, because that's what the
states were told. The county representatives who voted yes or no,
up or down for this constitution, this is what they
were told. And if they said something to one state,
it applies to all the states. And it's the ignorance
of our constant futional history that is causing all these problems.
(01:52:03):
So many of the legislators are just doing what they
were taught to do by the people before them, many
of whom were compromised, very much compromised. We have a
lot of families here that are their offspring of the
famous wealthy elites of Europe, you know, like the Bushels.
(01:52:23):
They were related to Marie Antoinette's family, which was an
extensive family that controlled France, in Germany and lots of Europe.
And they moved here. They got new names, they set
up shop, and they used their foreign money quietly to
do do influence. And so we have to vet who
(01:52:45):
we select to office. We have to vet whether they
actually understand the Constitution and be prepared to throw violations
of the oath of office at them left and right.
Where the sheriffs and the state the states are administrators executors,
they are afraid not to prosecute. They have to prosecute.
(01:53:08):
The States can prosecute when there's a violation of the
oath of office. Then we don't have to wait for
the federal DOJ to do a darn gun a dead
gun thing.
Speaker 14 (01:53:18):
Yeah, I agree. Well, yeah, we'll be waiting until hell
frais is over if we do anyway. Yeah, states do
need to take back the rightful authority. Absolutely. Hey, thank
you for the call. I appreciate it. I'm just saying
they really.
Speaker 15 (01:53:31):
Can't do that unless we repeal the seventeenth Amendment, because
that really was the state's mechanism of control on the
federal government, and that was given away by the seventeenth Amendment.
Speaker 14 (01:53:50):
What were you saying, Cynthia, Well, when when.
Speaker 40 (01:53:53):
Biden was in office, he got Delaware to change their
from this on the seventies Amendment, Uh huh okay, which
means they opened the door for other states to change
back okay, to say, well, we approved the seventies dimendment,
but we're rescinding that vote, and there's only like maybe
(01:54:14):
three or four states that have to do it to
bring it into force, and some states which never approved
it may still have the right to pull their senators back.
Speaker 42 (01:54:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 40 (01:54:26):
He explains this in some of his podcasts, but those
were some months back. I don't have the dates on
chip of my fingers. So okay, if you for that site,
he has explained how.
Speaker 39 (01:54:38):
You do this.
Speaker 14 (01:54:39):
Okay, very good.
Speaker 15 (01:54:41):
Yeah, you know, it's so important your projects. Oh sorry,
go ahead.
Speaker 14 (01:54:47):
Now we're almost at the break, so we're gonna have
to go here pretty soon.
Speaker 20 (01:54:50):
But I wanted.
Speaker 40 (01:54:52):
To mention that Jeff Rintz had a man on who
explained that Trump was mentored by Roy cohe who was
actually running his own blackmail sex thing, and so he
is not Trump is not he is compromised from day women.
Speaker 14 (01:55:12):
Yeah, I believe that.
Speaker 15 (01:55:15):
Yeah, that's an angle on Trump that I knew about
but haven't pursued at all.
Speaker 14 (01:55:21):
Yeah, it's becoming more and more upparent than that.
Speaker 15 (01:55:23):
That's most interesting.
Speaker 14 (01:55:24):
Hey, thank you for the call. God bless you. Good
points as always. Thank you very much. Let's go ahead
and take the top of the hour break now and
we'll continue on in the final hour of the show
in just a few minutes. Stay with us, ladies, gentlemen,
this is Governor America. Please don't go away.
Speaker 27 (01:56:33):
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Speaker 23 (01:57:18):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
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eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
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Speaker 21 (01:57:33):
Do you love watching television? If you're on a fixed budget,
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by NPS.
Speaker 31 (01:58:42):
Three ft.
Speaker 43 (01:58:48):
SEK, American Family News almost repete. The Department of Health
in Human Services says billions in potential fraud or abuse
have been identified, as they claim millions of people have
(01:59:09):
been enrolled in more than one publicly funded health insurance system.
Speaker 44 (01:59:13):
As many as two point eight million people may have
been enrolled both in Medicaid and a health plan via
the Affordable Care Act exchanges. Those health plans are heavily
subsidized by taxpayers. This discovery was made by the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the arm of HHS responsible
for policing medical billing practices, among other things. The Affordable
(01:59:35):
Care Act, championed by former President Obama, directs people seeking
health coverage either to Medicaid or to the exchange plans
based on location and income, but people are not supposed
to be enrolled in both HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Junior calls it an example of abuse and fraud, costing
taxpayers fourteen billion dollars yearly. Evan Brown Fox News.
Speaker 43 (01:59:59):
US border agents are assisting with deportation everything California. Bill
Malujian reporting from Sacramento.
Speaker 45 (02:00:04):
This is the first time we've seen Border patrol do
something like this. They came here to the capital of
the sanctuary state of California, and they carried out an
immigration enforcement operation. As soon as we pulled up to
a local home depot out here, suspected illegal aliens started
taking off, running in all different directions pretty much as
soon as they saw the federal agents. That led to
several foot pursuits, with agents chasing several of these men down.
(02:00:27):
Border patrol telling us they ended up arresting eleven illegal
immigrants in this single home depot parking lot, several of
whom had criminal histories and prior deportations.
Speaker 43 (02:00:36):
The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee says he
is pleased that most of our NATO allies are paying
a bigger share of their economies on national defense. Chad
Groening as more.
Speaker 46 (02:00:46):
NATO Secretary General Mark Rua visited the White House this
week in order to advance critical effage in supporting Ukraine's
defense against continued Russian aggression. Mississippi Republican Senator Roger Wicker
chairs the Armed Services Committee.
Speaker 38 (02:00:58):
I met with him twice actually, and of course the
good news is our NATO allies, particularly the ones in Europe,
are very much trying to fulfill their goal.
Speaker 7 (02:01:09):
Now.
Speaker 38 (02:01:10):
We were having trouble during the Biden administration getting them
to spend two percent of their economy on their contribution
to national events, and they've recently promised to do five percent.
Speaker 2 (02:01:22):
So it's a huge.
Speaker 38 (02:01:24):
Accomplishment by the Trump administration.
Speaker 46 (02:01:27):
But Wicker called one of our NATO allies to task.
Speaker 38 (02:01:30):
Canadian prins in NATO are not doing anywhere near what
they should do, and so we need to work on them.
But most countries.
Speaker 46 (02:01:38):
Are, I'm chad groaning.
Speaker 43 (02:01:41):
As the branches of artificial intelligence extend increasingly over society,
a new study is unveiling a concerning reality relative to
teenagers use of AI.
Speaker 8 (02:01:50):
Read Ritter has more.
Speaker 47 (02:01:52):
Speaking to Fox News Channel, Michael Robb, who is the
head of research at Common Sense Media and the author
of this study, revealed that a shocking seventy two percent
of tains or using AI for companionship.
Speaker 18 (02:02:03):
There's a lot more teams using AI companions than I
thought when we first started out on this, on this
research study. I thought, you know, we'd just be getting
kind of like a baseline. This is kind of a
new technology. I didn't think it would be permeating, you know,
across society.
Speaker 47 (02:02:19):
Why could the consequences of this be one might ask.
Speaker 18 (02:02:22):
The potential consequence of kids replacing human relationships with AI
companions is that they don't get the opportunities to really
develop the skills that they're going to need in the
real world. And I think, even though we're moving into
a world where AI is obviously becoming much more predominant
in people's lives and computers are becoming very dominant in
(02:02:43):
people's lives, people's skills are going to be really, really important.
Speaker 11 (02:02:46):
And what I would hate.
Speaker 18 (02:02:47):
To see is that both the kids don't develop those skills,
and that, in a quest to feel less lonely, they
accidentally make themselves more lonely because they are more reliant
on AI companions.
Speaker 47 (02:02:58):
Rob also urged parents to be very, very month al
about their children's interactions with AI.
Speaker 11 (02:03:03):
It's good to help your.
Speaker 18 (02:03:04):
Kid understand that these platforms are programmed to be agreeable
and validating, which is not how your relationships work. Real
friends sometimes just disagree with us. They help us see
things from other perspectives, and they can provide support in
ways that AI simply cannot.
Speaker 43 (02:03:20):
I'm read reader more news online at AFN dot net
and on the AFN mobile app.
Speaker 22 (02:03:25):
I'M must repe.
Speaker 1 (02:03:29):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new.
Speaker 2 (02:03:35):
World order, new world or that new world order.
Speaker 3 (02:03:38):
This is a moment to seeds. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 2 (02:03:48):
Us, a new world order, a world where.
Speaker 4 (02:03:50):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.
Speaker 5 (02:03:55):
Nevertheless, the United States to make key position shaped is
so that the problem of the push rensidivity will be
the emergence of a new international.
Speaker 6 (02:04:07):
Order investicade of the twenty first centuries. But out of
what is will be seen as the greatest.
Speaker 7 (02:04:13):
Restructuring of the global economies, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy.
Speaker 6 (02:04:20):
A new world order was.
Speaker 8 (02:04:21):
Created, documenting the crisis of our rebelly.
Speaker 9 (02:04:26):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths and the
secret proceedings.
Speaker 11 (02:04:41):
Waiting war on the new world order.
Speaker 12 (02:04:43):
The Council's of goroblement.
Speaker 13 (02:04:45):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 8 (02:04:55):
This is Governor America with Darren Wheats and Vicky Davis.
Speaker 14 (02:05:11):
From FEMA Regions five and ten. This is the third
and final hour of govern America. It is the nineteenth
of July twenty twenty five. As we start hour three.
And by the way, I wanted to say, as we've
been talking about the Bricks system and how the US government,
the State Department, and its infinite brilliance, has given all
(02:05:32):
of the cards to the Russians and the Bricks to
be able to establish global governance and global hegemony. But
through all these sanctions, we're going to show them why.
We'll put all these sanctions against them, and they'll never
be able to survive what they've done is they've adapted
and developed their own systems, which challenge and I was
(02:05:53):
trying to remember the name of the credit card system
that the world was using that the US developed. It
was the Swift system. Thanks to uh listener Ron and
Missouri for messaging me during the break or actually before
the break when I was trying to remember that, uh
he uh he, let me know what that is, reminded
(02:06:15):
me it was called Swift, the Swift system. That was
the system that they used to quickly, swiftly, if you will,
uh process credit card payments. Yeah, the version.
Speaker 15 (02:06:25):
I thought the Swift system was a like a a
res trade resolution system, not just credit cards.
Speaker 14 (02:06:41):
Uh well, I don't see how.
Speaker 15 (02:06:42):
Your financial yeah financial.
Speaker 14 (02:06:45):
You're gonna make me look it up, aren't you. Let's
take a look. Let's let's let's do a search here
real quick. Make sure we get the information right. The
SWISS System, which is a Society for Worldwide inter Bank
Financial tele Communications, as a global messaging network used by
banks and financial institutions to secure securely transmit information and
(02:07:08):
instructions related to financial transactions, especially international money transfers. SWIFT
does not itself hold funds, manage accounts or subtle transactions. Rather,
it serves as a secure communications channel that enables institutions
to inform each other about payment instructions and other financial exchanges.
(02:07:30):
Used by over eleven thousand financial institutions in more than
two hundred countries. All member nations are assigned a unique
Swift code that identifies the bank and its location, ensuring
precise routing of messages. It handles not only payments, but
also securities, treasury, trade, and other financial communications. Routes over
(02:07:51):
forty million messages a day, holding transactions worth trillions of dollars,
utilizes standardized codes and formats to sure interoperability, you know. Uh,
and messages are routed over swift Net, a private, secure
network of various protocols for different transaction types. So anyway, yeah, uh,
(02:08:13):
it's financial transactions is what uses the Swift So what
if what you're describing boils down to financial transactions, then
then that might very well be the case.
Speaker 15 (02:08:24):
Yeah, And who runs the Swift system the British.
Speaker 14 (02:08:28):
Well, the banking, the bankers.
Speaker 15 (02:08:31):
Uh yeah, but out of the City of London, well probably.
Speaker 14 (02:08:38):
Banks.
Speaker 15 (02:08:38):
Everything goes financial City of.
Speaker 14 (02:08:40):
London, financial technology companies, corporations, government, entities, securities and trading firms,
money brokers and more. Uh So, as far as where
the main frame systems set, I imagine those are probably
pretty dispersed as well, at least if they're smart. They are. Yeah,
(02:09:03):
I'm sure it's load balancing and all of this. So
if something goes down, they'll have they probably have it
all over spread all over the world. But the Russians
were cut off from it and by the US government.
The Russians were cut off, and so they were forced
to establish their own. Now they're not dependent upon the
swift system anymore. So they're swiftly becoming independent in all
(02:09:28):
aspects of their their business, except that somehow they just
keep promoting the same international institutions.
Speaker 15 (02:09:36):
Yeah, this is not amazing.
Speaker 14 (02:09:37):
Yeah. So the more independent they become, the more they're
pushing the same old tired global governance, the same old
tired new world order. All right, let's go to Cambridge,
Massachusetts for a call there. Hello, you're on the on
the air. Go ahead, please, you're on the air, sir.
Go ahead.
Speaker 20 (02:09:58):
Oh yeah, I'm calling from Boston.
Speaker 14 (02:10:02):
Okay, is David?
Speaker 20 (02:10:03):
Hey, uh, I was calling to I was gonna tell
you something really important about the whole President Trump and
Jeff Epstein. Okay, but but you know I I have
to devote this call to something Ricky brought up before
UH disappears in the mellowly Old for Lover Ricky. Ricky
(02:10:25):
brought up, uh, Brent's Brent scowcrop, which I referred to
them as Brent Scarecrows and Laceburger. And I always said
that Lawrence has made Ego Burger out of our national symbols. Anyways,
that was a top secret delegation that was and to
(02:10:48):
China both democracy demonstration demonstration demonstrations in Beijing, UH, and
it was top secret center before the back. And also
with them was Jane Patrick and also Alexander i'man control
(02:11:09):
hagg was with them. With was Larry Eagleburger and Scarecrow
with the top secret delegation. And it wasn't we were
never supposed to find out about it, but plus leaked
out and I stayed on top of it, and they
were over there and some of these dumb luped well
after weeked out thought that they were going over there
(02:11:30):
to tell the communists to UH become over their policies
and listen for the foe democracy demonstrators and make democratic reforms. No,
what they were doing.
Speaker 14 (02:11:42):
They told them to, Well, you're we have a lousy
connection here, David, uh for some reason. Yeah, it's it's
it's cutting in and out, very difficult to understand.
Speaker 20 (02:11:57):
If I hold it away from my further away. Can
you hear me outder down?
Speaker 14 (02:12:00):
Well, we'll go go ahead and try it.
Speaker 48 (02:12:02):
Go ahead and continue, okay maybe anyways, Yeah, no, they
they they they told the communist Chinese to brutally rooflessly
cracked down, uh, which which they did.
Speaker 20 (02:12:15):
And they were promised uh most favorite nation station and
and uh they were. They were promised uh uh uh
for their for their nuclear for their missiles launchers uh
site Uh what do you call it launching?
Speaker 12 (02:12:31):
Uh?
Speaker 20 (02:12:32):
You know, the uh targeting of the new of their
nuclear missiles they were In other words, in short, they
were promised all our technology and the most favorite nation
uh status and and everything else if they would cracked down.
In other words, Washington didn't make China uh to become
free and uh so that's what uh, that's what happened.
Speaker 14 (02:12:54):
Yeah, I believe that. And that makes all the sense
in the world, especially when you consider that China has
really become the the experimentation lab for the United States
in terms of technology, technocratic governance. Uh. The whole COVID
mess came out of China. You know. Now we have
the uh, the behavioral control with regard to the uh
(02:13:18):
what do you call it? The man, I'm blanking on
a lot of things today. The credit score, the social
credit score is what I credit? Yea, yeah, I mean
all of that stuff is being experimented right now, being
perfected on the different Chinese provinces.
Speaker 16 (02:13:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 20 (02:13:37):
You know where you can find out a lot of
the long range goals of uh. You know, the illuminat
exam Washington, DC, and everything is perfect an uh man.
The Order of the Stolen Cross bum the um Establishment.
Speaker 14 (02:13:55):
Yep, I got the book.
Speaker 20 (02:13:58):
Yeah, he devoted it to Chinese and he said, just
just like this, the America's secret establishment, UH finance Hitler
and uh and finance to the Soviets maiden. Take it.
Speaker 14 (02:14:13):
Yeah, you're you're breaking up again. So I'll tell you what.
I appreciate the call. Okay, thank you so much. I'm
sorry you just can't make out what you're saying. Very good,
but blessings to you.
Speaker 20 (02:14:24):
I make the mistake a holding it too much to
my face downg okay, yeah, uh so, so Professor Sutton
uh said that you know that we're gonna gonna build
up China for for World War three? And and uh
uh Professor Sutton, his up and and boring all were gone.
Speaker 49 (02:14:46):
He had a he had a store and a bookshop
and a ministry, we might say, although he wasn't a
clergy man, but it was called patriot about patriot something love.
Speaker 20 (02:14:59):
And boring oli gone.
Speaker 12 (02:15:00):
Well.
Speaker 20 (02:15:01):
He was raided by the FBI. He was hunted down
by a dog like a dog by the FBI, so
much so he had to hide out.
Speaker 16 (02:15:09):
And in.
Speaker 20 (02:15:11):
In a in a in a bunker in Montana by
the New Age there were what uh uh what's her
name there? Anyways, then then he was wound up. He
was wound up, murdered, professor uh Sutton was wound up,
uh uh murdered his his wife rust him in the
kitchen and once she came back a little while later,
he's dead on the kitchen floor. Uh but but but anyways,
(02:15:35):
he exposed the whole plan was to build up China
and uh but but but uh yeah, those rotten SOPs that,
as I say, uh Alexander, I'm in control. Hey, you
remember that after wagon got started and I'm in control. Hey, hey,
you know he wasn't even you know, and uh and
then and then I call uh Jeane dimple Push, Kirkpatrick Well,
(02:15:57):
Ego Berger, and of course Brent Scarecrow.
Speaker 14 (02:16:01):
But yeah, amen, amen, Yeah, there's no shortage of treason
and backstabbing. Absolutely, Hey, thank you, thank you for going
down memory lane with us there, And folks, I do
recommend highly the book that he mentioned, America's Secret Establishment,
a very important book, very important to reveal all of
(02:16:24):
that history behind all of this. Were you going to
say something, VICKI.
Speaker 15 (02:16:29):
Yeah, I was going to say, and what is the
weapon of World War three? Technology?
Speaker 14 (02:16:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (02:16:40):
And what does China have that other countries don't have?
They have the population to be able to run global systems?
M okay. So, and if you want to look at
what percentage of the population is smart enough to work
(02:17:02):
on the development of systems at a global scale, I
would say maybe three percent of the world's population. And
so China has a big advantage just because of their
sure numbers.
Speaker 14 (02:17:19):
Yeah, absolutely, yeah, And I think they've loosened the one
child policy over there. If I'm not mistaken. It seems
like I remember seeing that, so that they could have
a larger population, or at least.
Speaker 15 (02:17:35):
What are they doing in the United States. They're trying
to increase the population, but they're increasing our population with
people from the Third World.
Speaker 14 (02:17:44):
Yeah, they're not. Primarily the United States is doing kind
of the opposite, where they're discouraging population growth by promoting
same sex couples, transgendering all of the crazy nonsense and
and promotion of AI. You know, one of the news
(02:18:04):
updates that we had at the top of the hour,
which not all the listeners are able to hear because
it's exclusive to our stream. One of the stories that
they mentioned is an increasing number of children or or
I shouldn't say children, but young adults are now using
AI as their companion talking to this this, these entities,
(02:18:26):
these machines, these learning models or whatever you want to
call them, on a regular basis like their companions.
Speaker 15 (02:18:35):
That's that's actually very horrifying.
Speaker 14 (02:18:39):
Yeah, so so real interaction among people from people to people.
Speaker 15 (02:18:47):
People would keep their kids off the internet. You know
that the children of all the tech all the big
tech CEOs, they don't let their kids on the internet.
Speaker 14 (02:18:58):
I have heard some of them not not let their
kids at least have complete freedom on the internet.
Speaker 15 (02:19:08):
One program that I was watching, one video, they revealed
the fact that the global purpose of the global health system,
which I knew this, I mean, I've known this for
a long time since the first time I heard about
nationalizing our medical records, is that they're going to be
(02:19:30):
doing genetic engineering on people and the internet with people's
medical records. It's the perfect tool to allow selection of
candidates for experimentation. And I think the whole transgender movement
(02:19:53):
actually is a.
Speaker 14 (02:19:54):
Part of that. Yeah, I want to finish this bricks
thing real quick. Mentioned the health system or medical records,
and they also had some stuff in there about the
World Health Organization as well, because they're all in with
(02:20:15):
all of these international institutions as we were saying earlier,
and the world. They're recognizing the World Health Organization's leading
role in the directing and coordinating international health work, which
I would argue is for real health. It's not especially
during crises. So they say, we underscore and this is
(02:20:36):
from the declaration, this bricks declaration. We underscore the role
of the World Health Organization as the directing and Coordinating
Authority on international health work within the UN system, particularly
in times of crises and emergencies, and emphasize the necessity
of bolstering its mandate capabilities and financing mechanisms. They go
(02:21:00):
on to talk about, you know, having a well funded
WHO to which will ensure vaccines for all you know,
and achieve health related sustainable development goals. They say, quote
a robust and adequately funded WHO is essential to effectively
(02:21:20):
address current and future public health challenges, mitigate inequalities, and
ensure equitable, equitable access to healthcare services, including medicines and
vaccines for all, particularly in developing countries. We commit to
actively supporting efforts to strengthen the global health architecture, fostering equality, inclusivity,
(02:21:45):
transparency and responsiveness, ensuring no country is left behind in
achieving health related sustainable development goals. They talk about the
WH health.
Speaker 15 (02:21:56):
By the way, public health is the function of the environment.
So you've got Agenda twenty one in the global health system.
That is the public health system, not the medical system.
Speaker 14 (02:22:10):
Yeah, they look to the WHO Pandemic Agreement to rescue
us or save us from future pandemics. They say, we
acknowledge the adoption of the WHO Pandemic Agreement by the
seventy eighth World Health Assembly. The agreement will solidify the
foundation for a safer and more equitable world against future pandemics.
We understand, we stand ready to carry this momentum forward
(02:22:31):
to ensure a timely conclusion of member state led and
driven negotiations for the agreement's annex on pathogen access and
benefit sharing unquote. So they also talk about Israel's Oh jeez,
Israel's attacks against Iran. They say, you know, and I
(02:22:58):
don't know. M I'd agree with him on this one.
We condemned the military strikes against the Islamic Republic of
Iran since thirteen June twenty twenty five, which constitutes a
violation of international law. In the Charter of the United Nations,
AN expressed grave concern over the subsequent escalation of the
security situation in the Middle East. We further expressed serious
(02:23:20):
concern over deliberate attacks on civilian infrastructure and peaceful nuclear
facilities under full safeguards of International Atomic Energy Agency in
violation of international law and relevant resolutions of the IAEA.
Safeguard safety and security must always be upheld, including in
(02:23:40):
armed conflicts, to protect people in the environment from harm.
In this context, we reiterate our support for diplomatic initiatives
aimed at addressing regional challenges. We call upon the United
Nations Security Council to be seized of this matter. Well,
(02:24:01):
I don't think that's going to happen.
Speaker 15 (02:24:02):
You use the word security, What a security mean? What
does that mean?
Speaker 14 (02:24:09):
Well? I think it means to tie us all down
so we can't move. That's what That's my definition of
it as I see there. Everything that they do is
to accomplish that end.
Speaker 15 (02:24:22):
Yes, well, and what was the outcome of COVID Global Health.
Speaker 14 (02:24:27):
Security tying us all down so we can't move.
Speaker 15 (02:24:31):
Yes, yeah, that's security. If you can't move, then of
course you're totally safe.
Speaker 14 (02:24:38):
You're real secure if you're completely uh paralyzed.
Speaker 12 (02:24:44):
Hmm.
Speaker 14 (02:24:44):
Yeah, it's exactly what it is about. You know, all
of the measures at the airport now Christy Nolmes saying, hey,
you you can take your shoes off now at the airport.
If we decide you can, we can take you.
Speaker 50 (02:24:59):
You know, you might be able maybe TSA first implemented
the no shoes policy in two thousand and six, almost
twenty years ago, and in those twenty years since that
policy was put in place, our security technology has changed dramatically.
Speaker 42 (02:25:14):
It's evolved. TSA has changed.
Speaker 50 (02:25:17):
We have a multi layered, a whole of government approach
now to security and to the environment that people anticipate
and experience when they come into an airport that has
been honed and it's been hardened. The key to our
approach is layered security. Passengers will still pass through multiple
layers of screening. They'll also go through identity verification and
(02:25:39):
in fact, TSA has recently experienced some fantastic success with
implementing real ID. As you know, real ID was put
into statute over twenty years ago, and we recently put
that into place.
Speaker 14 (02:25:51):
Okay, we recently, so here she is promoting the technocratic
systems in place, the real ID. This is all police
state technocratic control of the population. But it's your team
that's doing it now, it's the Republican administration that's doing
it so we can all feel so good about it.
Speaker 42 (02:26:11):
That went seamlessly.
Speaker 50 (02:26:13):
In fact, right now we are experiencing over ninety four
percent compliance with passengers who come through our airports and
screening processes with real ID compliant identification complies. Now, as
you know, most of those ideas. If they're driver's licenses,
they'll have a star in the right hand corner. They
may use other federally recognized identifications such as passports or
(02:26:36):
tribal IDs or military IDs. But many people thought that
when real ID was implemented that it would be difficult.
It would Some in the mainstream media talked about it
being armageddon, that it wouldn't be able to happen.
Speaker 42 (02:26:50):
And it has happened seamlessly.
Speaker 14 (02:26:53):
Okay, we got to take a break, seamlessly, and we'll
continue in a moment.
Speaker 6 (02:26:58):
Thank you.
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Speaker 8 (02:30:59):
With AUSPOS go to find out what's really going on.
This is govern.
Speaker 14 (02:31:04):
America all right? When the home stretch of the broadcast.
One more half hour to go and we sunset another one.
We're talking about homeland security, and it's not national security.
(02:31:25):
It's in't the interesting they talk. They call it homeland security,
but homeland security isn't national security. And that's the point,
you know, Christy know, I'm getting up there and talking
about all these systems in place at the airport real
id to be used against those big bag terrorists, e
verified to be used against those illegal aliens. Yet all
(02:31:45):
these systems for control and tracking and tracing everyone, keeping
track of everything you do, everywhere you go, that's all
going is being turned inward. That's what it's designed to
do for you.
Speaker 15 (02:32:00):
Yeah, that's what That's why I've always called them home
scam security, because it's not it's a scam.
Speaker 14 (02:32:10):
I got a little bit more from her speech at
the airport, and then I have some thoughts afterwards.
Speaker 50 (02:32:14):
Because of the hard work of those who work within
TSA and because of our security officers who did worked
very hard to make sure that passengers were compliant, but
to do it in a way that facilitated their traveler.
So please, I'd encourage all Americans to still go out
there if you don't have your real ID yet, it
does help us identify.
Speaker 14 (02:32:35):
Who you are there you go, that's what's that helps
us identify who you are.
Speaker 42 (02:32:39):
The passengers safe.
Speaker 14 (02:32:40):
It's not about keeping you safe, and we would encourage
you to go so and to do that.
Speaker 42 (02:32:45):
Now we're just getting started.
Speaker 50 (02:32:46):
We've implemented several transformational changes at TSA and our security
checkpoints already, just since the Trump administration.
Speaker 42 (02:32:53):
Has come into office.
Speaker 14 (02:32:54):
Checkpoint we have.
Speaker 50 (02:32:55):
Recently piloted different types of security lanes. We have family
lane security checkpoints that are open at several airports that
allow families to get screened separately from other people so
that it can be very accommodating for them and their
experience with children.
Speaker 14 (02:33:11):
Or we canna get your blast of radiation together as
a family.
Speaker 42 (02:33:14):
For small babies.
Speaker 50 (02:33:15):
We also have implemented around some of our air bases
at facilities the ability to have a military lane that
expedites the process for those who currently served in our
armed services, those who are stepping up to defend our freedoms,
that they can have a security checkpoint specifically dedicated to them.
Speaker 14 (02:33:32):
And yeah, isn't that nice? Those that fought for our
freedoms and now we have no freedoms. They have their
own lane. Isn't that wonderful? You know what's interesting is
I wonder if they still have the lane for the terrorists. Key,
they had a special lane for the terrorists way back. Well,
that's you chuckled when I said that.
Speaker 15 (02:33:52):
Entirely.
Speaker 14 (02:33:53):
You chuckled when I said that, But I wasn't Yeah,
I wasn't really joking. Yeah, I mean it wasn't a
formal lane, but they did have a lane for the terrorists.
Speaker 38 (02:34:07):
JESU.
Speaker 14 (02:34:08):
Fifteen years ago on this broadcast, I had on as
guests Kurt and Curt and Lorie Haskell. You remember the Hassles.
The Haskells were the ones that were sitting at the
airport in Amsterdam and they witnessed a sharp dressed man
come up to the well, let me go back. I
will play the clip. I got the clip here from
(02:34:30):
the show. Fifteen years ago. On Govern America, Kurt Haskell
and with his wife Laurie, they were talking about they
were attorneys in Taylor, Michigan. I used to live in
Taylor when I was grown up. That's a suburb of Detroit.
But they Taylor, Michigan. They were attorneys there practicing family law.
But they did a lot of travel for vacation purposes
(02:34:53):
and what have you, and they got a connecting flight
in Amsterdam and they were embroiled in the situation where
they knew he died on a board an airplane where
this guy blew his pants up, the underwear bomber.
Speaker 51 (02:35:06):
Actually, what I saw the airport, Yeah, this.
Speaker 14 (02:35:09):
Is him on Governor America fifteen years ago.
Speaker 51 (02:35:11):
Actually, what I saw in the airport at Amsterdam was
two men approaching the final ticket agent. One I would
describe as a poor black teenager and the other I
would describe as a wealthy looking fifty ish Indian man.
Speaker 29 (02:35:29):
Okay, now you were sitting on the floor there.
Speaker 28 (02:35:31):
At the terminal.
Speaker 51 (02:35:33):
We were sitting on the floor about ten feet from
the final ticket agent plane cards. There weren't any There
weren't any seats around where we could sit by each
other together. It was pretty crowded. Well that's why we're
sitting there. And when the two approached the final ticket agent,
only the Indian man spoke, and what he said was,
(02:35:54):
this man needs the board the plane, but he doesn't
have a passport. And the ticket agent then said, well,
you need a passport. To get on a plane, and
the Indian man then responded, well, he's from Sudan. We
do this all the time. And the ticket agent then
referred them to a manager down a hallway, and the
two went down the hallway. We never saw the Indian
(02:36:14):
man again. He never got on our plane. And the
man who I thought was a poor black teenager would
be the one that would later try and blow up
our plane.
Speaker 14 (02:36:23):
So there you go, And just like Epstein, nothing was
ever done about that either. Kurt Laurie Haskell both worked
hard to get the information out, the airport security video,
the surveillance video at the airport to be released, and
the whole thing to be investigated, but nothing, nothing was
ever done about it. And to this day, no one
knows who this sharp dressed man that looked like an
(02:36:45):
Indian man, who he was, or what he meant by
we do this all the time. No one knows why
the airport allowed him onto the flight without a passport.
It just all goes away, conveniently swept under the rug.
Speaker 15 (02:37:00):
Right, but it's used for a major trillion dollar change
in our airport systems. Right to use that as the
excuse for building what really is one aspect of the
(02:37:20):
global systems of security, because airports by definition are international, right.
Speaker 14 (02:37:28):
Yeah, so.
Speaker 15 (02:37:31):
If you have an event like that on a flight,
then they bring they can bring in all of the
airports all around the world into the system, and you've
got a global system of quote security.
Speaker 20 (02:37:50):
Yeah, you know.
Speaker 14 (02:37:50):
And the thing is that's Amsterdam, and obviously it's not
a US airport, but it doesn't really matter because these
there's synergistic things going on all the time, working to
for every I would call it a false flag, for
every false flag that happens somewhere else, it's always used
(02:38:11):
to the fullest benefit for the police state here as well.
Speaker 6 (02:38:15):
You know.
Speaker 15 (02:38:16):
And these things are planned, it's not it's not a
random happen stance.
Speaker 14 (02:38:23):
Right exactly.
Speaker 15 (02:38:24):
They planned on a global system. And what better way
to do that than you know, quote terrorism.
Speaker 14 (02:38:35):
Yeah, exactly. Well, and speaking of terrorism, we have a
lot of that going on potentially here in the United States,
as they have all these gangs. Now our country has
been flooded by international drug cartels and gangs, all this stuff.
You know, the border right now at the moment is
relatively secure. Okay, border crossings way down, but the damage
(02:38:58):
from the last administration has already been done. And all
of the MS thirteen, all these people coming in from
the Latin America and now from Northern America as well,
from the northern border. How many Chinese are coming across
the northern border. How much racket is going on up there,
don't We don't have any idea, you know, most people
(02:39:20):
focus on the southern border, but there's a lot happening
at the northern border as well, or has been, you know,
in terms of Chinese coming into the country. But one
of the things that have has been allowed to happen
is MS thirteen, this gang which originated in Al Salvador,
and still there are members of it, elements of it
(02:39:44):
that are being busted now in the United States.
Speaker 52 (02:39:47):
In Colorado, the Aurora Police Department announced the arrest of
sixteen alleged gang members. The arrest calm after the Regional
Anti Violence Enforcement Network also known as RAVEN, a law
enforcement group focused on reducing by lance, wrapped up a
major investigation on Tuesday. These suspects are connected to two
criminal street gangs that operate in the Metro Denver area.
(02:40:07):
According to police, RAVEN and its local, state and federal
partners are committed to reducing violent gun crime in the
Denver Metro area of Oral Police Department. Lieutenant Tissdale, who
serves as commander of the Raven Task Force, said in
a statement. The Raven Task Force began investigating in June
twenty twenty four after getting evidence from National Integrated Ballistic
(02:40:28):
Information Network. The special technology from the ATF helps identify
guns used in crimes by analyzing bullets and shell casings.
The information showed that several suspects were involved in multiple
gang related shootings around the Denver Metro area. According to police,
RAVEN carried out two major raids, one on June eighteenth
(02:40:48):
and another on July eighth, arresting the sixteen people, and
more than half of the suspects were under age when
they committed the crimes. According to investigators, this case should
serve as an example that our dead icat CATERD investigators
will not stop pursuing those who use firearms to victimize
our community until they are arrested and held accountable for
their actions to Stale, said. Investigators say. All sixteen suspects
(02:41:12):
face a variety of charges, including violations of the Colorado
Organized Crime Control Act, attempted first degree murder, first and
second degree assault, and aggravated robbery, among others.
Speaker 14 (02:41:23):
Okay, so this presents a dialectic for having everything to
become more and more of a police state. So this
is how the whole game works. You allow all these
criminals and drug cartels.
Speaker 15 (02:41:37):
Models benefits developers because when you have gangs move into
your neighborhood, decent people, they start putting their houses up
for sale, sell them cheap, and get the hell out
of there, and so they can buy up property for cheap.
Speaker 14 (02:42:00):
And yeah, exactly exactly, John hasher.
Speaker 15 (02:42:04):
In Chicago, there was an area in Chicago. I forget
what the name of it was, but it was a
black neighborhood. It was kind of a poor neighborhood, but
it was you know people they you know, that had
lived there for generations. But then gangsters started moving in
(02:42:27):
and it became a dangerous place. Cabrio Green That's what
it was. Yeah, But that real estate where Cabrio Green was,
that was really valuable city because it was right in
near the primarya of downtown.
Speaker 14 (02:42:44):
But this is how the dialectic works, Vicky. You know,
you let in a bunch of illegal alien invaders, mafia types,
drug cartels, the worst of the worst MS thirteen, and
then you use that as a police state to crack down,
you know, building prisons everywhere, you know. John A. Nisha
Whitehead writes America is rapidly becoming nation of prisons, having
(02:43:09):
figured out how to parlay presidential authority and foreign affairs
in order to sidestep the constitution. President Trump is using
his immigration enforcement powers to lock up and lock down
the nation. After all, a police state requires a prison state.
And no one is cheering louder than the private prison
corporations making money hand over fist from Trump's expansion of
(02:43:29):
federal detention under the guise of national security and public safety.
The Trump administration is engineering the largest federal expansion of
incarceration and detention powers in US history. Now, this is
the problem. You need a place to put the criminals,
(02:43:50):
but we should have let the criminals in to begin with.
That's the problem. At the center, they say of this
campaign is Alligator Alcatraz, a federal detention facility built in
the Florida Everglades and held by the White House as
a model for the future of federal incarceration. But this
is a more than a new prison. Is an architectural
(02:44:10):
symbol of a car cerreal state being quietly constructed in
plain sight. With over one hundred and seventy billion dollars
allocated through Trump's megabill, we are witnessing the creation of
a vast, permanent enforcement infrastructure aimed at turning the American
police state into a prison state. The scope of this
expansion is staggering. The bill allocates forty five billion dollars
(02:44:34):
just to expand immigrant detention and move that will make
ICE the best federally funded law enforcement agency in American history,
with more money than the FBI, the DEA, and the
Bureau of Prisons combined. You yet be warned, what begins
with ICE rarely ends with ICE. Trump's initial promise to
(02:44:55):
crack down on violent illegal criminals has evolved into a
sweeping mandate, a mass, quarter driven roundup campaign that detains
anyone the administration deems a threat, regardless of legal status,
and at significant expense to the American taxpayer, immigrants, activists, journalists,
business owners, military veterans, and even spouses of American citizens.
(02:45:17):
What's more, the vast majority of these being detained are
not violent criminals. According to analyst Robert Reisch, do we
want to Is that the same Robert Reich that I'm.
Speaker 15 (02:45:29):
The former Labor secrets I.
Speaker 14 (02:45:32):
Hope he's not citing that Robert Reich of ice detainees
have no criminal record. Many are longtime residents, laborers and
small business owners, people who have contributed to the economy
for years. Well, if you're talking about illegal aliens that,
I'm all forgetting them out of here. Sorry, you break
our laws. You have to go. You have to go,
(02:45:57):
you know what.
Speaker 15 (02:45:58):
And for the illegal aliens that are criminals, why don't
we just pass a law that says that once they're
exported back to their home country, if they come back,
it's the death penalty. Oh I like period.
Speaker 14 (02:46:15):
And by the way, they're all criminals because they all
broke our laws to come here.
Speaker 15 (02:46:20):
So this this agent that's true, But there are non
violent crimes and there are violent crimes.
Speaker 14 (02:46:27):
So this business of day laborers and all this stuff,
you know, I I don't agree with people that say, oh,
it's okay to come here to labor during the day,
you know, this whole because this is what the administration
now is pushing guest worker programs.
Speaker 6 (02:46:47):
You know.
Speaker 15 (02:46:47):
But you know what that article whoever wrote that article Whitehead,
John Whitehead. They're they're using an excute, using them as
an excuse, filling up the uh the uh uh prisons
having to build new prisons, which which will actually serve
(02:47:07):
for the American people. So yeah, it's one dialectic after another.
Speaker 14 (02:47:13):
Yeah, here's uh, here's uh love it, White House Press
Secretary of Carolina love it because the question is, what
is the talk about offering illegals amnesty?
Speaker 6 (02:47:23):
You know?
Speaker 14 (02:47:24):
Uh we we mentioned previously on previous broadcasts that they're
pushing now that Trump has been out there trying to
push push amnesty, uh, floating these trial balloons. White House
Press Secretary Caroline Levitt was asked about this and uh
and because I guess there's a bill now in Congress,
and and she insisted, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no no one, no one here, no Trump. Trump is
(02:47:46):
not supporting amnesty at all.
Speaker 15 (02:47:49):
Thanks Caroline.
Speaker 26 (02:47:49):
I have two questions for here.
Speaker 53 (02:47:51):
First, Onress, Congress might sol is our issues legislation that
would give some legal inference in a country practices and
ship ten Republicans signed on she's calling the Dignity Act.
I'm curious what the White House's position is on the legislation,
and it the President for PTO this bill if they
needed to discuss. From my understanding, the White House nor
the President has actually read through this legislation. We've been
(02:48:13):
focused on, of course, the one big, beautiful bill which passed,
which is another historic accomplishment of this president in record time,
the Genius Act this week, the Recisions package.
Speaker 42 (02:48:22):
That's been the focus of the White House.
Speaker 53 (02:48:24):
But the President has made it very clear he will
not support amnesty for illegal aliens in any way.
Speaker 14 (02:48:29):
What does he support a guest working perfect I did hear.
Speaker 15 (02:48:32):
Him in one of his speeches somewhere he was floating
the idea.
Speaker 14 (02:48:38):
Absolutely, we played it here on Governor America, I think,
but she was it.
Speaker 15 (02:48:43):
I don't remember playing it, but I do remember hearing it.
Speaker 14 (02:48:46):
She was asked a follow up question about the guest
worker program, and she dodged the question.
Speaker 16 (02:48:53):
Here.
Speaker 54 (02:48:53):
I'm just upon now Reagan's question. Rexall of Salzor's bill,
it grants me till we aliens with we will status
for seven year increments. It also gives permanent path to
residency for so called dreamers. And you know President Trump
and Labor Secretary Shamas, who previously co sponsored a version
(02:49:15):
of this bill which she was in the House. They've
spoken about a work deal similar to the bill. I
believe what's the difference between of work deal and amnesty?
Speaker 53 (02:49:23):
Look, as I told Reagan, the President, the Wine House
have not reviewed this specific piece of legislation. It's just
not where our focus has been. But the President, for one,
has been very clear he does not support amnesty.
Speaker 14 (02:49:36):
What it looks like is that the administration is playing
word games.
Speaker 15 (02:49:40):
That's exactly right, That's exactly what I was thinking.
Speaker 14 (02:49:43):
The Republicans are putting forth an amnesty plan without calling
it amnesty. But let's be clear, amnesty by any other
name is still amnesty. But this is going to be
the battle. It's going to play out in the coming days.
You watch. All right, let's go to the phones, Texas,
you're on the air, Go ahead, please, Yeah, Hey, Jared.
Speaker 41 (02:50:04):
Vicky, I'll be real short here. You know what you
were talking about, you know, the the Everglades prison, you
know it brings back memories of something called Escape from
New York. Well, I remember that and just what you
were just talking about, you know kind of that brings
up animal farms like well, some illegals are more illegal
than other illegals.
Speaker 14 (02:50:23):
No, it's exactly.
Speaker 41 (02:50:25):
It's such a sham, such a mind game. Guys, thank
you for doing what you do.
Speaker 14 (02:50:28):
I'll jump off and let you finish the show, all right,
God bless hey. Promote your show. You got to show yourself.
Speaker 41 (02:50:33):
Alan. I've got Al's corner on RBN tomorrow, you know,
Sunday from twelve to noon Central or twelve to one Central.
Speaker 14 (02:50:41):
So all right, very good.
Speaker 41 (02:50:42):
You know, nothing spectacular, but you know I do what
I can.
Speaker 14 (02:50:44):
All right, Hey, appreciate you too. God bless you, sir.
Blessings to you. All right. There's Alan, God bless Alan,
and we always appreciate him. Many many, many people out
there have been out there for years and doing the
work and sharing, you know, in a way, this is
like a fellowship. We fellowship with each other, you know,
(02:51:06):
and kind of uplifting, you know, edify uplift. And that's
what we have to do to keep us going, because
otherwise just go nuts. You'll go nuts with the burden
of all this knowledge, knowing you know the dialectics and
how they work. And I'm very encouraged by a lot
of people at least being aware of the problems that
(02:51:27):
we face now, but getting them out.
Speaker 15 (02:51:30):
Of explaining it to people, because they have established a
system whereby if you think anywhere outside the mainstream narrative,
oh you're a conspiracy theorist.
Speaker 14 (02:51:47):
Absolutely, you know.
Speaker 15 (02:51:48):
But that's that's why I started collecting documentation so that
anybody says that to me, I will just freaking bury
you with documentation.
Speaker 14 (02:52:00):
All right, I gotta I gotta try to squeeze this in.
There's a mountain lion on the loose in Chicago. Uh nice, Yeah, apparently.
I don't know if it's been caught yet or not.
A local ABC News affiliate interviewed a black man there
who was describing his encounter with the large cat. It
was hilarious hearing him talk about this. I heard, I
heard raw, I felt, I felt that rour. I know
(02:52:22):
he keeping pushing.
Speaker 15 (02:52:23):
I know that.
Speaker 55 (02:52:24):
Curtis Jones says he was walking near Robbert Street late
Wednesday when he saw people running from what appeared to
be a large wild cat.
Speaker 14 (02:52:32):
I thought, I see the people.
Speaker 20 (02:52:33):
Well, I'll just see some big just walking just right
over here, right everybody, boy, way right over here.
Speaker 22 (02:52:38):
I swear I promised they were right over there.
Speaker 14 (02:52:40):
They just it's just I just cut walk. I've seen it,
seen me see it. So in my head, I'm like no,
I gotta go, man.
Speaker 47 (02:52:47):
I'm out.
Speaker 55 (02:52:48):
Rochester Police say officers became aware of a video on
social media that appears to show a wild cat, which
some people claim is a mountain lion. RPD says it
received numerous calls of report as sightings, including one year
North Clinton Avenue in Robert Street just after midnight about like.
Speaker 11 (02:53:06):
This bit.
Speaker 14 (02:53:08):
It was it was it was, it was just walking,
slithering like it was. I don't know, man.
Speaker 55 (02:53:13):
A shelter in place was ordered and then lifted when
RPD was unable to verify the presence of a wild animal.
Police say no reports have been substantiated. Jones tells me
he remains on edge.
Speaker 14 (02:53:26):
Yeah, keep this bat right here. I'm gonna keep this
bad right here.
Speaker 5 (02:53:29):
Man.
Speaker 14 (02:53:29):
That's okay.
Speaker 2 (02:53:29):
I'm gonna protect us.
Speaker 14 (02:53:30):
I ain't gonna let nothing happen. So it's nothing, okay,
they ain't find it last night. It's still out here.
It could be all heard one of these bushes or something,
you know, the mountain.
Speaker 22 (02:53:37):
Like heavy, wow, they've crawling.
Speaker 14 (02:53:40):
Little serious.
Speaker 55 (02:53:42):
The Monroe County Sheriff's Office assisted the investigation by using
an aerial drone. The Seneca Parkazoo told thirteen WRAM all
of its animals are accounted for.
Speaker 22 (02:53:51):
I don't play with lions. I don't play with tigers, bears,
nothing with the wild. I don't play with those, I
promise you. I don't even do roller coasters.
Speaker 14 (02:54:00):
Roller coaster.
Speaker 15 (02:54:02):
Oh well, it's the same thing. Yeah, I've heard of
animals like that being moved into populated areas. There was
a mountain lion in the Boise Foothills somebody brought in.
But those animals, and especially I know you've heard about
(02:54:24):
the wolves. Yeah, you know, rewilding the wolf. Well, the
wolves they brought into Idaho and what Montana, Wyoming. Those
are not native to to the United States anyway. Those
are Canadian timber wolves. Yeah, and they are far more
(02:54:47):
dangerous than any native wolves that we might have had
because those wolves will kill for fun.
Speaker 14 (02:54:55):
Yeah. Well, and so will a lot of the wild
animals in Chicago. And I'm not talking about mountain lions.
So he might want to keep his bat a little handy.
Speaker 15 (02:55:05):
Uh.
Speaker 14 (02:55:06):
Well, it won't stop bullets though, that's the only problem.
A lot of gun free zones in Chicago so there's
a lot of bullets flying around. Maybe we should fear
for the mountain lion.
Speaker 46 (02:55:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (02:55:19):
If I was a mountain lion, I I don't think
I'd be wanting to walk down Chicago streets, that's for sure. Anyway,
we got to go. God bless you folks.
Speaker 12 (02:55:28):
Thank you.
Speaker 14 (02:55:28):
Vicky has always appreciate everything you do. Pray for this republic,
do what you can to restore it. God bless you.
She's in every one of you. Join us back here
next week, bring a friend, and we'll do it all
over again.
Speaker 15 (02:55:40):
Thank you, Daron.
Speaker 14 (02:55:43):
God bless you folks, and we'll tuksu bye bye.
Speaker 31 (02:56:13):
The Truth by the Racetration about as
Speaker 11 (02:56:24):
Cab record