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July 5, 2025 176 mins
"Tune of the Dog Whistle" 

Hosts: Darren Weeks, Vicky Davis 

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

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

COMPLETE SHOW NOTES AND CREDITS AT: https://governamerica.com/radio/radio-archives/22625-govern-america-july-5-2025-tune-of-the-dog-whistle 

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

Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" signed into law, but what does it do? Trump floats limited amnesty. Peter Thiel on the antichrist, transhumanism, and the survival of humanity. Wildlife extremists push to cancel Fourth of July festivities. Few Dems proud to be American. Feds warn of "lone wolf" attacks, despite no evidence. Healthcare fusion centers. Border crossings at record low. EZ Pass can buy you gas? Pardoned FBI rioted at J6, now serves on "Weaponization" panel. AI algorithms predict shoplifting, and more.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

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

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

Speaker 4 (00:21):
New world order, a world where the United Nations is
poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United stated in a key partition to shape so
that the problem of the rensidentity will be the emergence.

Speaker 5 (00:37):
Of a new international.

Speaker 6 (00:39):
Order the first decade of the twenty first century, that
out of what it will be feared, the greatest restructuring
of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new world orders created.

Speaker 7 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebublic, the very.

Speaker 8 (00:59):
Word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society. And
we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to
secret societies, the secret oaths and a secret.

Speaker 7 (01:12):
Proceedings waging war on the new world order.

Speaker 9 (01:15):
The councils of government.

Speaker 10 (01:17):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
it's sought or unsought by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 11 (01:27):
This is Governor America Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 12 (01:40):
From Female Regions five and ten. This is Governor America.
Vicky Davis is here. I'm during Weeks. It is the
fifth of July twenty twenty five. Nice to have you
with us once again, ladies and gentlemen. Well, this week
has been all about the big beautiful bill, or is
at least that's what they call it. Hey, Vicky, Yeah, yeah,
you got a TV on in the background or something.

Speaker 13 (02:00):
Oh okay, yeah.

Speaker 12 (02:02):
That would be great. Yeah. They've had the I guess
Trump said of July fourth deadline for this thing, and
the Congress has sent it over. They went through the
process and everything and one thousand pages. Ladies and gentlemen.
You know, I say that there's nothing nothing good about
something big. You know, there are some good provisions in

(02:25):
the bill, but why do we have to have megabills
that nobody has the time to read. So there's a
lot of things happening, some of it good, some of
it bad. I was happy to see, at least from
what I've read, that the carbon pipeline provisions were removed.

(02:46):
They shouldn't have been there in the first place. They
should have never been in there in the first place.

Speaker 13 (02:52):
But that's a ridiculous thing to build a pipeline for carbon.

Speaker 12 (03:00):
Right, Yeah, exactly. And it's even more ridiculous, and I
would dare say criminal. Really, it should be criminal to
be taking land from farmers and other private individuals by
eminet domain to build carbon pipelines through their land.

Speaker 13 (03:19):
I totally agree.

Speaker 12 (03:21):
But thankfully that was apparently defeated according to what I've
read this morning from the final bill that Trump signed yesterday.
So just to give you a real quick once over
on this thing, it's, like I said, one thousand pages.
It was just signed yesterday by Trump. The copy that

(03:41):
was signed has a bunch of tax policy changes. They
were an extension of the twenty seventeen tax cuts. It
makes most provisions of the twenty seventeen Tax cuts and
Job Act permanent, including lower individual and business tax rates.
The child tax credit increases from twenty to twenty five

(04:03):
hundred through twenty twenty eight, but only for those with
Social Security numbers. The estate and lifetime gift tax exemption
is permanently extended, and increased to fifteen million dollars for
individuals thirty million dollars for couples, indexed for inflation. The

(04:23):
standard deduction is temporarily boosted for those sixty five and
older from twenty twenty five to twenty twenty eight, phasing
out higher incomes. Phasing it out at higher incomes. I
should say the deduction has increased. That's qualified business income
deduction is increased from twenty percent to twenty three percent
for qualified business income with altered phase en rules. To

(04:48):
avoid high marginal tax rates. There is the salt deduction cap.
The cap on state and local taxes. The state and
local tax are salt deductions that's raised from ten thousand
dollars to forty thousand dollars for five years and then
returns to ten thousand dollars. There is the no tax
on tips and overtime provision. Taxes on tips and overtime

(05:11):
pay are eliminated, fulfilling a key campaign promise. You know
this is the great thing about it when when you
know government gives and the government takes away, you know, well,
the benevolent government is giving you. Hey, you can you
can work overtime now and not get text for it.

Speaker 13 (05:30):
Well, the joke on the no tax on tips is
that there are job center job centers where they the
people that are working there, they get, you know, like
a fixed nominal charge for the use of their services.

(05:54):
But you're supposed to give a tip to the workmen
that comes to your house, and that includes plumbers, carpenters, electricians,
do you know, whatever you need done on your house.
So the no tax on tips, the impression given is
that it's just for like waitresses and waiters. That's not true.

Speaker 12 (06:17):
Well, we shouldn't have taxes on any of it because
it's income, and income shouldn't be taxed because when you're taxed,
you're a slave. If all you have to sell is
your labor and the government can come in like a
bully and say I want my cut of your labor.

Speaker 13 (06:32):
What is image cut by a huge.

Speaker 12 (06:35):
Cut exactly right, Then that makes you a slave. So
if these Republicans want to do anything good for the
American people, cut out income tax altogether. But they never
even talk about that. That's not even on the table.
Get rid of the federal reserve system and let's get

(06:55):
rid of the income tax. But that's not the.

Speaker 13 (06:58):
Alternatives hold on the alternative system is a national sales
tax system. And in I think it was two thousand
and four or two thousand and five, I listened to
a hearing. I listened to it about five times to
make sure that I understood every word that was being said.

(07:23):
To replace our income tax system, our other tax systems
would require about a fifty percent tax on every dollar
that you spend. So we got to be careful, you
know what, be careful which you ask for, because yeah.

Speaker 12 (07:43):
I think you're damned if you do. Damned if you don't,
I mean any direction they're going to go at you know.
Uh So, anyway, the bill the.

Speaker 13 (07:51):
Congress doesn't work for the American people. If they did,
you know, we wouldn't have that issue. They would tax
corporations the way that they used to, so that there
is a shared tax burden. But I don't know exactly
what year you would say that the Congress went full

(08:17):
on working for corporations. It might be nineteen ninety. And
the reason why I say that is because that's when
the government started into the whole technocratic agenda partnering with corporations.

Speaker 12 (08:38):
Yeah. So the bill ends miscellaneous itemized deductions and modifies
rules for casualty loss and qualified residents interest deductions regarding
healthcare and social programs. Nearly one trillion dollars in cuts
to mediciate over a decade, with new work requirements eighty
hours a month, eighty hours a month we ableed by

(09:00):
adults without children starting December twenty twenty six, and more
frequent re enrollment and verification. Significant policy changes in the
health insurance marketplaces through specific details. I'm sorry those specific
details are not fully outlined in the available summaries. Establishes

(09:21):
a fifty billion dollars stabilization fund for rural hospitals to
offset impacts from Medicaid cuts the SNAP program, which is
also known as food stamps. States must contribute more to SNAP,
and able bodied adults without dependence faced new work requirements.
The bill restricts USDA from increasing the cost of thrifty

(09:45):
Food Plan the fifty through Food Plan except for inflation adjustments.
No tax on Social Security. The bill does not fully
abolish taxes on Social Security benefits. It benefits the standard.
I'm having a terrible time. I'm tired today. The dog
woke us up at four o'clock this morning having a seizure,

(10:08):
and he released his bowels unfortunately as well. So that
was it was not a good morning, let's put it
that way. Anyway. The bill does not fully abolish taxes
on Social Security benefits. It increases the standard deduction for seniors,
reducing their tax burden temporarily. It allocates forty six and

(10:31):
a half billion dollars for border wall construction and related expenses.
I'm all favor in favor of border wall construction. What
I'm not in favor is all the surveillance that comes
along with it, and because we don't need it, and
I got some more examples for that as time progresses here.

(10:52):
You know, we've talked about everify that's not needed and
it doesn't work. But there's there's you know, the fact
that order crossings are literally a record low right now
indicates we don't need all the surveillance and stuff that
they want to install the border. We just need somebody
who is a president of the United States who's taking
border border enforcement seriously, which the last administration clearly was not.

(11:18):
They were doing everything they could to get them to come,
and some you know, a cynical person might say that
that was a deliberate effort because he knew that the
next administration coming in would be pushing police state tactics,
and they wanted to make it as bad as possible
so that they could make the argument the next administration,
which is now the president administration, can make the argument

(11:39):
for all these police state stuff and say that it's
needed at the border. You know what I was that
would be the cenecle.

Speaker 13 (11:47):
I was thinking about the same thing. You know that
what we're living through now in terms of what the
big issues are in front of the public, it's kind
of like a replay of what was occurring in two
thousand and four, two thousand and five. I don't know
if you remember, our border was being invaded, and so

(12:14):
a couple guys formed militias protect our borders, so you remember, absolute, Yeah,
Christopher Cox was one of them. The other group American Renaissance,
I don't know I have their names anyway, but they

(12:34):
formed militias and they were patrolling the borders just as citizens.

Speaker 12 (12:41):
Right right exactly, And I mean no citizens should ever
have to be put in a situation where they are
forced to do that when we have a government, and
that is the number one thing the government really should
be doing.

Speaker 13 (12:57):
We don't have a government. We have a corporate front
that acts as if it's a government, and every time
they need to do something, every time they want to
do something within government, they execute a dialectic.

Speaker 5 (13:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (13:18):
Well, so there's forty six and a half billion dollars
in this bill for border and border walk construction and
related expenses. It provides forty five billion dollars to expand
attention capacity for illegal aliens and about thirty billion dollars
for hiring and training ICE personnel. Sets a minimum one

(13:40):
hundred dollars fee for asylum seekers, down from the initially
proposed one thousand dollars. There is the debt ceiling. It
raises the statutory debt ceiling by four trillion dollars, which
is insane. Why even have a debt ceiling if we
keep raising it up. But they have have to because

(14:00):
they can't control spending. So the Congressional Budget Office estimates
the bill will add three point four trillion dollars to
federal deficits over ten years, primarily due to tax cuts
and spending increases. And you know, I look, they're gonna
keep spending the money, you know, the federal government. I'd

(14:23):
rather have the people have their own money. To be
perfectly honest, it doesn't belong to you. That's the whole thing.
It doesn't belong to you. It's your money, not the
federal government. So these people in the media who say, well,
it's going to increase the federal deficit by adding you know,

(14:45):
by because of the tax cuts. They seem to think
the federal government has, you know it all, owns it all,
and by letting you keep your own money, Well, they're
going to run a deficit. What it's too damn bad.
That's not my deficit.

Speaker 7 (15:00):
I know.

Speaker 12 (15:01):
It just drives me nuts how these people think.

Speaker 13 (15:04):
I was thinking about that if the government needs money,
they should hold another series of hearings on nonprofit corporations.
I mean, there are I don't know, hundreds of thousands
of nonprofit corporations where money is donated tax free.

Speaker 12 (15:27):
Yeah. Yeah, if you want to do something to mitigate
the deficit, pull a five oh one c three, just
undo it, completely, wipe it out all these nonprofit organizations
and yes, churches too, Make them all pay the same thing,
make them all pay taxes. And you know what, how

(15:47):
quickly would preachers start actually preaching again? You know, because
I think preachers should be involved in politics. I think
they should be railing against corruption in government, regardless of
what party it is.

Speaker 13 (16:03):
But they don't. They they don't in favor of the corruption.

Speaker 4 (16:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (16:07):
Well, it's our team, our team, our team, and they'll
stay they'll stay out of it. Except somehow, the uh,
the left wing liberal churches managed to get away with
it somehow. That's kind of interesting. They'll even host politicians
in their pulpits.

Speaker 13 (16:24):
Yeah. Well, there there was a coup de etats on
our government, the Clinton administration, Clinton Gore. They implemented what
what was called Third Way.

Speaker 12 (16:40):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 13 (16:41):
Third Way was a a reinvention of our government using
I T systems and uh, it was initiated by the
DLC Democratic Leadership Council, and they in redesigning our government systems,

(17:10):
they changed our form of government.

Speaker 12 (17:14):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 13 (17:15):
And I challenge anybody to go research the DLC and
the Progressive Policy Institute and prove me wrong.

Speaker 12 (17:25):
All right, getting through this, The bill includes increased funding
for domestic energy production, though specifics are not detailed. In summers.
We don't need increased funding for domestic energy production, you know,
that's a giveaway obviously to probably pass the bill. But
we don't need that. All you need is to get
out of the way and quit regulating them to death.

(17:46):
They'll do. You know, the private sector will handle energy production.
They always have the government. This is not the government's
job to be involved in this. Vehicle loan interest deduction
allows deduction of interest on loans for US manufactured vehicles.
I guess they're going to be able to so all

(18:11):
loans you get as long as the vehicle is made
in the USA. And I don't know how they're going
to determine that, because the parts are made all over
the world, so you can get a US US made
is supposedly made in the USA vehicle and all the
parts are made everywhere, So how are they going to

(18:32):
determine this? But I guess if you get a loan
for something they deem to be made in the USA,
the interest on that vehicle will be deductible on your
income taxes. Legislative process and scope. The bill was passed
using the budget reconciliation process, allowing for expedited consideration and
limiting amendments in the Senate. The final bill is over

(18:56):
one thousand pages, as I said, and incorporates legislation from
a eleven House committees touching nearly every major federal agency
in program, A proposal to order the sale of public lands,
and a pause on state regulations of artificial intelligence were
removed from the final version. And that is very important
because that was one of the sticking points of Marjorie

(19:17):
Taylor Green. She they wanted to make it to the
point where there could be absolutely no regulations or laws
passed against artificial intelligence development for ten years. And they
were even as I recall, or even making it a

(19:41):
criminal offense if states were to pass a law regulating
artificial intelligence. And I'm sure this is probably Peter Teele's
influence going in here.

Speaker 13 (19:55):
Oh there's a whole buttory.

Speaker 12 (19:58):
That measure was finally pulled in order to get this
thing passed.

Speaker 13 (20:03):
Keep in mind that Marjorie Taylor Green is from Georgia
and Watson Georgia. The CDC, okay, so so she wouldn't
want any interference with what they're about to do.

Speaker 12 (20:23):
Well, Marjorie Taylor Green was against the AI, you know,
in other words, she wanted she she came out in
favor of states rights, is my point. She stood up
against what they were trying to do with this bill.

Speaker 13 (20:39):
Well, States' rights that it was the states that initiated
the changes to our healthcare system to begin with. That
would be the National Governor's Association. So it's kind of

(21:00):
kind of opposition, but not you know, and I'm pretty
sure that Marjorie Taylor Green knows that. Well.

Speaker 12 (21:13):
All I know is I'm glad she stood firm. She
took a lot of arrows because people were accusing her
of being a traitor to Trump, and you know, that
could very well be the death knell of your political
ambitions if you're not supporting Trump and you're a Republican.
But she came out and against this provision where states

(21:35):
could not regulate AI for ten years, and she would
not budge on that, and they finally removed it. So
I think she was instrumental in getting that provision removed.

Speaker 13 (21:46):
Okay, yeah, that was a good provision. Actually, AI should
be prevented, period kind of story.

Speaker 12 (21:57):
Well, you don't want, I don't care what the issue is.
States should not be restricted by the federal government, and
that was Marjor Taylor Green's position, and so the fact
that she stood firm on that, God bless her for that. Now,
I may have problems with Marjorie Taylor Green in other
areas at times, but I will tout her performance for

(22:22):
doing things that are right, and in this case she
was right.

Speaker 13 (22:27):
Well, you know what the federal government does. They through
their departments, through their agencies, they use extortion against the
states to get the states to do what they want
them to do. And I was personally involved in one

(22:49):
issue in the state of Idaho when we found out
that the federal government was promoting a piece of legislation
that included a reference to a Hague convention in our
state law requiring our state judges to honor the decisions

(23:13):
of the court at the Hague.

Speaker 12 (23:16):
Yeah, I remember that when that was when you were
talking about that first.

Speaker 13 (23:22):
And it was included in every state. And the reason
why they had to get it passed through the states
rather than just like every other treaty that the Senate
votes on is because it was not self executing, and
by self executing, it means that the Senate bill would

(23:46):
have had no effect on the state judges requiring them
to do anything. So it had to be passed into
state law to require state judges to honor the deis
of the Court at the Hague.

Speaker 12 (24:04):
Yeah, Derek bros about this, wrote about this bill, and
I think it's important what he says about this. He
says the headline in the Activist post is Trump's Big
Brother Bill expands the US surveillance state. Says Trump's Big
Brother Bill simply represents one more step towards the completion

(24:26):
of the technocratic state. On Tuesday, US Vice President j D.
Vance helped push Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act through
the Senate with a tie breaking vote. Vance's vote came
after Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine, Ran Paul of Kentucky,
and Thomas Tillis Tom Tillis of North Carolina joined Democrats

(24:48):
to vote against the bill, leading to a tie of
fifty to fifty. And at that time, at the time
this article was put out, they talked about it's going
to be moved forward. The bill. It received critics from
both the left and the right. One of the measures
that was nearly universally opposed was the ten year ban

(25:11):
on local and state regulation of AI, which I am
happy to say has been removed according to what I'm
reading this morning and last night. So but you know
the fact that this was in there in the first
place is just mind boggling. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will
receive two and a half billion dollars, specifically for artificial

(25:33):
intelligence systems, biometric data collection platforms, and digital case tracking
under the heading of US Customs and Border Protection Technology,
vetting activities, and other efforts to enhance border security. The
bill gives six hundred and thirty seven million dollars for
the deployment of technology relating to the biometric entry and
exit system under section seven to eight of the Intelligence

(25:56):
Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of two thousand and four.
This section also states that the funds may only be
used for the procurement or deployment of surveillance towers after
they have been tested and accepted by US Border Patrol.
The mention of a biometric entry exit system and surveillance
towers is perfectly in line with the long term plans

(26:18):
of the US government and Donald Trump during his first administration.
In fact, Derek's argues, He says, I've argued since Trump's
election in twenty sixteen that the issue of immigration would
be used to divide the masses and help usher in
the final stages of the American police state. In twenty seventeen,
he says I reported the US Border Patrol had announced

(26:40):
a plan to scan the faces of all flyers existing
or exiting the United States. The Traveler Verification Service called
for using face recognition on all airline passengers boarding flights
exiting the US, including Americans. We gotta take the break,
We'll be back.

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Speaker 11 (30:57):
One with a let's go to find out what's really
going on. This is govern America.

Speaker 12 (31:19):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America, finishing
up this article here real quick, talking about the Big
Beautiful Bill as it was called. Derek Browse writes in
The Activist Post. The American Civil Liberties Union warned that
the program which he's talking about, the program to scan
the faces of all flyers.

Speaker 5 (31:41):
This is a.

Speaker 12 (31:42):
Technocratic surveillance scheme. ACLU warned that it would endanger civil
liberties by normalizing facial recognition as a checkpoint technology. The
ACLU warrned that once the government begins to collect biometrics
from every person crossing the border, they will like expand
the practice to new places and for new purposes. And

(32:04):
this is what I've been saying about. You verify all along,
you know today is for the illegal aliens. Tomorrow, it's
for each and every one of us. In fact, you
can't I don't think you can. You can't really even
implement that without implementing it across the board, right because
everybody's got to be checked. So everybody has to have

(32:26):
the government stamp of approval. And just like you have
no fly lists and this isn't his words, it's mine.
Just like you have no fly lists for airlines, how
long would it be if everify becomes pervasive before you
have a no work list.

Speaker 13 (32:45):
Well that's what the people can be. That's what your
ESG scores are for. Yeah, so they can rate you
as a person, as a citizen, as a so whatever,
you know, you'll have a rating, just like commodities have rating.

(33:08):
You know, when they passed the WTO and they included
trade in services, they turned people into commodities because a
service is a person or a job, and so they
commodified people worldwide.

Speaker 12 (33:30):
Yeah, he says, he says. In my February twenty eighteen article,
Trump administration to test biometric program to scan faces of
drivers and passengers in vehicles, he said. I noted that
the Border Patrol was launching a pilot program to scan
the faces of drivers and passengers at the Anzoldius Port

(33:51):
near McAllen, Texas. To accomplish this goal, the Department of
Energy hired researchers at Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory to
help over come the difficulties of using facial recognition technology
on moving vehicles. The researchers said the facial recognition technology
would be capable of identifying the driver, front passengers, and

(34:12):
the passengers riding in the back, so basically everybody in
the car. Of course, this is not a problem exclusive
to Trump. In the post nine to eleven era, the
expansion of the surveillance and police state has been passed
like a baton from Republican George W. Bush to Democrat
Barack Obama, back to MAGA Republican Donald Trump and back

(34:34):
and to Joe Biden. So you know, tag teen tyranny
ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 13 (34:38):
Yeah, well, it actually began in nineteen ninety with George
Herbert Walker Bush and their plan for a new transportation
system which included all modes of transportation. So we used
to have separate laws, you know, on transportation, which meant

(35:03):
cars and boats or ships, boats, airplanes, all of that.
But under George Herbert Walker Bush, they put them all
under one Department of Transportation.

Speaker 12 (35:18):
Yeah. In early twenty twenty, he says, I reported that
the Trump administration is setting the stage for a Biden
surveillance state. In November of that year, the Border Patrol
under Trump, issued a new rule allowing for the expanded
use of facial recognition at the border. The CBP posted
a notice announcing their intention to collect the face print

(35:40):
of nearly every single non US citizen who enters or
exits the United States. Additionally, shortly before Trump left office,
the Border Patrol released a privacy impact assessment detailing plans
to collect DNA from individuals temporarily detained at border across

(36:00):
the second. Trump administration is currently facing a lawsuit from
the Georgetown Law Center on Privacy and Technology for DNA
collection at the border. The lawsuit demands the Department of
Homeland Security detail how the agency collects, stores, and uses
DNA samples. Is these types of practices that set a

(36:21):
precedent and then are inherited by the next regime. These
types of technological encroachments facial recognition, gate detection, and retina
scanning have often been known as a smart or virtual
border wall. The idea is that these technologies can serve
the purpose of Trump's long promise border wall without the

(36:43):
cost of building an actual physical barrier, although I think
they're going to do that as well. That's what it
sounds like anyway. The concept was supported by Trump and
the Biden administration.

Speaker 7 (36:54):
Eh.

Speaker 12 (36:55):
Yeah, you know that same Biden administration that let all
the illegals in. In February twenty twenty one, he says
I reported that more than forty privacy, immigrant rights, and
civil liberties organizations called on the Biden administration to abandon
a bill that would extend the Trump administration's border policy,
particularly the ongoing creation of a virtual or biometric wall.

(37:19):
Isn't that amazing? So Biden was doing the same thing
Trump is doing now, although Biden wanted all the illegals here, obviously,
because they certainly did everything to facilitate that. The letter
came in response to the US Citizenship Act of twenty
twenty one, which would direct the Department of Homeland Security

(37:42):
to implement new biometric and aerial surveillance technologies at ports
of entry and along the US Mexican border. The smart
Border surveillance technology is a continuation of the Trump administrations.
They call it. This is a quote, by the way,
racist border policies, not a break from it. The letter stated, Now,

(38:02):
there's nothing racist about keeping people who don't belong here
out of the country.

Speaker 13 (38:07):
Okay, you know what the real difference is between the
Democrats position and the Republican's position. It's who gets the
corporate money, you know, the payoff for implementing whatever phase
of the of the global technocratic tyranny that they're implementing

(38:29):
at the moment.

Speaker 12 (38:30):
Well, a lot of it has to do with rhetoric too,
rhetoric state.

Speaker 13 (38:34):
They changed the rhetoric, but the underlying programs don't change.

Speaker 12 (38:38):
It's which tone.

Speaker 13 (38:40):
Parties, both parties support those underlying programs.

Speaker 12 (38:46):
It's the tune of the dog whistle. Yeah, uh, that's
what changes, is the tune of the dog whistle, which
what you know, which crowd are we playing to? So
I'm almost done with this and we'll move on. But
the smart border surveillance technology is a continuation of the
Trump administration is what they call the letter racist border policies. Again,

(39:11):
nothing racist about keeping people out that don't belong here,
But the letter stated, we applaud President Biden's efforts to
halt Trump's border wall construction and provide relief to immigrant communities,
but protection from deportation and access to due process should
not come at the cost of militarization and surveillance unquote.

(39:35):
The letter noted that the increase in surveillance technology at
ports of entry is concerning, particularly because of increased biometric collection,
which most prominently includes expanded facial recognition and DNA collection unquote.
When considered with all the above advancements in surveillance tech,
Trump's Big Brother Bill, the one that he just signed yesterday,

(39:57):
simply represents one more step towards the completion of the
technocratic state. It should also be clear that politics cannot
and will not save us from the technocracy. The answer
is to opt out, to exit and build before it's
too late.

Speaker 13 (40:15):
Well to do this, to do with that, you can't
opt out because the surveillance state technology is ubiquitous. It's everywhere.

Speaker 12 (40:28):
Yeah, and they have You know, it's interesting, what do
you think of the current efforts to get rid of
the property text in multiple states? Right right now we
have one in Michigan. I'm all in favor of getting
rid of the property tax, but the fact that this
is being done all over the country makes me wonder

(40:50):
if there isn't something afoot, Like.

Speaker 13 (40:52):
If it's well, there is something afoot. And what's afoot
is that what they want to do as their deconstruct
our nation state. That's something you have to understand is
that they are deconstructing our nation state. So they want
to denationalize the tax system, turn it over to corporate control.

(41:18):
And the proposal will be a national sales tax and
who collects sales taxes corporations.

Speaker 12 (41:30):
Yeah, I know that the states will probably jack the
sales tax way up. But you know, the nice thing is, though,
is that you I don't like having anything attached to
my property. It's not really property that you own if
you have to pay for it every year or twice
a year, basically rent to the government.

Speaker 13 (41:51):
But it won't it won't matter. I mean, that's a
that's a knit compared to the idea of a national
sales tax, over which neither the states nor the federal
government have any control, corporate control of taxation. Yeah, and

(42:13):
and so we're screwed either way.

Speaker 19 (42:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (42:17):
Well, I'm still going to sign the proposal AX my text.
For those that are living in Michigan, you can go
to ax m I tax dot org. There's a lady
that's taking this whole thing on herself, and she has
been working on it quite diligently for quite a while.
And Carla Wagner is her name, and she has been

(42:38):
working tirelessly to get rid of the property tax in Michigan.

Speaker 13 (42:42):
And yeah, I bet, I bet she doesn't understand the
bigger picture.

Speaker 12 (42:46):
I think I think she understands the fact.

Speaker 13 (42:50):
I think she understands running to do with taxation.

Speaker 12 (42:54):
Well, I don't know about that, but I think she
understands the fact that the tax system here in Michigan
has become overwhelming people can't they can't afford to live anymore.
I mean, it's getting higher and higher all the time,
and something has to be done or nobody's going to
be able to have private property in this state except
the most affluent. And that's the problem. And maybe that's

(43:18):
that's the dialectic in place. I don't know, but something's
got to be done. Control these federal or state.

Speaker 13 (43:26):
People centivizes that the high they keep going higher and
higher on the taxes. I mean, I've noticed the same
thing here in Idaho, you know, where they keep raising taxes.
But the governor of Idaho signed legislation about oh no,

(43:48):
that was confiscation of property. Sorry, never mind back up
on that. But they started this whole thing with property
taxes in California. I don't know how many people remember
the what was it, the Jarvis Act, where they actually
froze property taxes in California at the level they were at.

(44:14):
And I forget what year that was, about nineteen seventy
four something like that. So what did they do? They
just raised all other taxes. You know, the real solution
is to control your government and make them control spending.

Speaker 12 (44:38):
Had good luck with that.

Speaker 13 (44:41):
Exactly yes.

Speaker 5 (44:44):
Ah.

Speaker 12 (44:44):
So anyway, so we just had the fourth of July
just yesterday, and you know, I think it's good to
go back sometimes in time and remember where we were
as a nation just a few years ago. Here's the
old senile Joe.

Speaker 20 (45:00):
It need you to get vaccinated when it's your turn
and when you can find an opportunity, and to help
your family, your friends, your neighbors get vaccinated as well.

Speaker 21 (45:11):
Because here's the point. If we do all this, if
we do our part, we do this together. By July
the fourth, there's.

Speaker 20 (45:21):
A good chance you, your family's and friends we'll be
able to get together in your backyard or in your
neighborhood and have a cookout and a barbecue and celebrate
Independence Day. That doesn't mean large events, no, there's lots
of people together, but it does mean small groups will
be able to get together.

Speaker 12 (45:39):
That was just a few years ago, Vicky, Yes, I
remember remember that. Yeah, how fast times have changed.

Speaker 20 (45:48):
They take a song and they cut your head off.
They literally had to take the top of my head off.

Speaker 12 (45:55):
Anyway, that's Joe Biden. But yeah, oh well, you we'll
let you gather together. We'll let you join together.

Speaker 13 (46:04):
Isn't that nice?

Speaker 12 (46:05):
Yeah, isn't that great? So the loveless sour radical environmentalists
were at it again, working to cancel any fun, any
fun that people might have. It's incredible every holidays like this.

Speaker 22 (46:18):
Wildlife officials say a fourth of July fireworks show at
California's Big Bear Lake is threatening the safety of a
famous eagle family. Now, a local nonprofit is calling to
cancel the fireworks, but a local tourist group is pushing back,
arguing the city relies on visitors who are drawn to
the Independence Day festivities. The nonprofit Friends of Big Bear Valley,

(46:40):
which operates a twenty four hour live feed monitoring the
Eagle family, is behind the call to cancel.

Speaker 23 (46:51):
They say loud.

Speaker 22 (46:52):
Noises and flashes from fireworks threaten the lives of sister Eaglitz, Gizmo,
and Sonny, as well as their parents Jackie. In Shadow,
the group warned of the impact of fireworks on the
environment and wildlife, especially the eagles. In a Facebook post
on Monday, the group says it's pushing for this city
and its tourism arm visit Big Bear to call off
this year's show to protect the popular birds. So far,

(47:15):
they say efforts to convince the agency and community partners
have failed. The organization also shared a change dot org
petition calling for the show's cancelation. As of Wednesday morning,
the page had more than thirty five thousand signatures. Visit
Big Bear says it will move forward with its Fourth
of July fireworks spectacular. The agency CEO, Travis Scott, says

(47:37):
officials must balance valuable tourism and tradition with conservation efforts.
He says the city typically brings in one hundred thousand
tourists for Independence Day. According to data obtained by the
La Times, tourists bring in an estimated three hundred and
fifty million dollars to the local economy annually. Scott also
noted they've worked with Friends of Big Bear Valley in

(47:58):
the past. He says they cancel the twenty twenty two
Memorial Day fireworks and held a drone show instead of
fireworks on Labor Day of twenty twenty three. Friends of
Big Beer Valley say Independence Day fireworks are top of mind.
They say the shows in twenty twenty two and twenty
twenty three caused Jackie in Shadow to flee their nest,
and the two went missing for days before returning. The

(48:20):
US Fish and Wildlife Service also warns fireworks can cause
animals to end up in dangerous places like roads, or
lead them to run into buildings or other obstacles. Officials
also note litter from fireworks present choking hazards and can
be toxic to wildlife.

Speaker 12 (48:35):
This is why we can't have nice things. You know.
It's like to spot it out all over again, isn't it.

Speaker 13 (48:43):
Well, it is exactly.

Speaker 12 (48:45):
Only it's eagles. Ironically, eagles. The eagle is the national bird,
you know, it's the symbol of freedom, and yet we
have them saying, oh, we got to curtail all of
our freedoms. You've got a curtel what we do because
we've got to protect that eagle.

Speaker 17 (49:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (49:04):
You know what.

Speaker 13 (49:05):
When I was up in Alaska and it was after
this whole thing, We've got to protect the eagles outside
as you drive you have to take a ferry from
Juno and then drive from there. But there was this
one park up in Alaska absolutely loaded with eagles. I

(49:32):
mean there were so many it was unbelievable. They are
not an endangered species.

Speaker 12 (49:40):
Well, I don't know, you know that that's the problem
with a lot of this stuff is how you determine
exactly how many there are, you know, I mean, there's
it's impossible to count them. So all they can really
do is estimate.

Speaker 13 (49:55):
About yeah, when they are about four or five in
every tree, and there's trees everywhere, you know, on that
road going from Hanes to trying to get to Anchorage,
that park is just absolutely loaded with eagles.

Speaker 12 (50:18):
I'll tell you, I have a hard time counting my
my birds out in the chicken coop. Sometimes I go,
I go there at night to make sure they all
made it back after being out and rummaging, you know,
eating bugs, and you know, because they're supposed to eat
bugs unlike people, and you know, after free ranging, making

(50:41):
sure that they all are in the coop, and the
way that the way they move around a lot, it's
difficult sometimes to count them to make so counting eagles
in the wild, good luck with that. But they seem
to think that they can. But you know what the

(51:01):
environmentalists can't do to destroy your Fourth of July. Guess what, VICKI,
the government and the terrorists, they're going to finish the.

Speaker 24 (51:08):
Jobs Americans across the country look to celebrate Independence Day.
The FBI and Department of Homeland Security have a warning.
They're alerting local authorities to potential threats from lone wolf
attackers or small extremist groups. The bulletin was obtained by
ABC News and CNN. It says the biggest threats to
mass gatherings this weekend are those with religious, political, or

(51:29):
personal vendettas. They highlighted the need for extra vigilance around
New York City's Macy's Fourth of July fireworks in San
Francisco's annual fireworks show, which draws roughly two hundred thousand spectators.
New York Governor Kathy Hochel says the city is ready,
with National Guard troops active across major transportation hubs and
authorities actively tracking social media activity. So far, federal officials

(51:53):
say they have not found any credible threats, but acknowledge
ramped up security efforts as a precaution.

Speaker 15 (52:00):
Like this ahead of major gatherings are not new.

Speaker 24 (52:03):
However, Federal authorities warn the risk of attacks this year
are heightened with global opposition to Israel's war in Gaza
and American air strikes on a rany and nuclear facilities
last month.

Speaker 12 (52:13):
Okay, the key statement in that report did you catch it.

Speaker 13 (52:17):
So far thinking be afraid, be very afraid.

Speaker 12 (52:21):
Yeah, exactly right, there, be afraid, be very afraid. Yeah.
So the key there in that report was they said
that there was no evidence of any credible threat, and
yet we're going to issue these warnings and make everybody.
It's just a big giant fear campaign. So anyway, Hey,

(52:45):
more reason, more reason to have the surveillance state, isn't
it right? Well, you got to treat everybody like a suspect.

Speaker 13 (52:52):
Fear is the best motivator. M hm.

Speaker 12 (52:57):
So speaking of more.

Speaker 13 (52:59):
Fear they create, the better it is for them.

Speaker 12 (53:02):
Peter tele you know, mister Pallanteer, who is whose company
is being utilized by cities to spy on the American
people in those cities. He was interviewed by a New
York Times columnist, Ross Do That I think is his name?
Is this kind of an interesting name, Ross Do That. It

(53:26):
was fascinating. It was a really fascinating interview. You know,
if you want to know what these people are up to.
It's so empowering the fact that we have the Internet
now and we can actually go and find their interviews.
In this particular conversation, they discussed several things. The topic

(53:47):
of transhumanism came up when the interviewer asked mister Teal
if the human race should survive. Interesting, well, not surprising
at all, really is that Peter tele is all in
with the transhumanism but he couldn't even really give an
emphatic yes that the human race should survive. I'll tell
you what, man, I think I'm gonna have to push

(54:09):
this to the next hour because there's just about out
of this hour. I don't think I have time to
play this.

Speaker 13 (54:17):
And I'm glad you found that that's an important interview. Yeah,
I can hear what he has to say.

Speaker 12 (54:25):
Yeah, it is. It's interesting because this is a guy,
as we said, often he puts him forth himself forward
as so called libertarian. And this is the problem again
with libertarianism. It's I've maintained for a long time now

(54:45):
after reading the Libertarian Party platform, that libertarian you know,
libertarianism is just another path to globalism because they're all
about you know, no government basically, I mean, and no
government really means no borders, no enforcement of the border.
Everything's open, free movement of goods and people, resources including

(55:10):
human resources, no government regulation, which means everything is just
free flowing.

Speaker 13 (55:16):
And it turns people into a commodity.

Speaker 12 (55:20):
The point is yes, and somebody is going to govern,
that's the key. If it's not an actual government institution,
well it'll be the corporations. Then it's like the king
of the hill. Whoever's the bigger entity gets to play
the part. And that's perfect for somebody like Peter Teal
who has gobs and bunches of money, limitless funds to

(55:43):
push whatever agenda he wants to push. So tell you what,
let's take the top of the hour break and when
we come back, we'll have some from this interview with
Peter Teel and the New York Times. I think it
was a fascinating interview. We'll be back here in a moment.
This is governed America. Our number two is straight ahead.

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Speaker 7 (58:42):
Two still.

Speaker 25 (59:02):
Poor American Family News. I'm Chris wood Word. President Donald
Trump has signed the One Big, Beautiful Act into law.
The bill was in doubt over the last few weeks.
It was narrowly approved by the House in late May
and then went to the Senate, where changes were made.
The House approved those changes yesterday and got the bill
to President Trump just in time for his July fourth deadline.

Speaker 26 (59:24):
John Thune and Mike Johnson right there. I see, Mike,
what a job they've done. What a job they've done.
But you know, it was supposed to be in three, four, five,
six or seven different bills. And I was in one
of the fake news shows and I said, let's do
it in one beautiful, big one beauty.

Speaker 15 (59:46):
We want one big beautiful bill.

Speaker 26 (59:49):
I said that to this newscaster, and I think a
lot of the congressmen and senators were watching, and they said,
let's name the bill that one big beautiful bill.

Speaker 15 (59:58):
And that's what we did.

Speaker 26 (59:59):
And what we've done is put everything into one bill.
It's never happened before. It's the biggest bill of its
type in history. We've never had anything like that before,
nothing like that they thought would be possible to get past.
And actually I liked it because we had so much
in there that no matter who you are, there was
something in that bill that would make your congressman or

(01:00:21):
your senator or your congresswoman much more importantly raise their
hand and support right, Lisa. So that was something and
it was really something special. So the American people gave
us a historic mandate.

Speaker 9 (01:00:36):
In November.

Speaker 19 (01:00:37):
We won everything.

Speaker 26 (01:00:38):
We won the swing states, all seven swing states, We
won everyone that rarely happens. We won the popular vote,
we won the districts two thousand, seven hundred and fifty
to five hundred and five. That's why when you look
at a map, it's all read a little blue on
each end, but it's all red. And by the way,

(01:00:58):
red means Republican take case, but we made promises, and
it's really promises. Made promises, Captain, We've kept them.

Speaker 25 (01:01:09):
The One Big Beautiful Act is President Trump's signature legislation.
So is this the best knight of Trump's presidency? Former
Representative Tree Gowdy was asked that question on Fox News Channel.

Speaker 27 (01:01:20):
He ran on this, no tax on tips, on overtime,
social security is stronger border. This may be. Yeah, it
may be the best night of his presidency. Although if
he were on with you, Julian, he would say there
are many more victories to come, and you'll get tired
of winning.

Speaker 25 (01:01:37):
Democrats plan to use the Big Beautiful Bill to help
them regain control of the House and Senate in twenty
twenty six. Republicans believe the bill will actually help their case.
Read more about the bill on AFN net. When you pray,
be sure to include one for the people. In Texas
Hill Country, at least six people are dead, many missing

(01:01:57):
after overnight flooding in Kerr County. As much as ten
inches of heavy rain poured down in just a few hours.
The president of l Salvador has denied accusations that Kilmar
Abrego Garcia was tortured in prison in his country. Here's
fox is tiny j powers.

Speaker 28 (01:02:14):
El Salvador President naib Bucelea disputes Kilmar Abrego Garcia's claim
that he was tortured and beaten while being held in
a Salvadoran high security prison. In a court filing in
the US this week, Abrego Garcia described losing thirty one
pounds in his first two weeks at Seacott, also suffering
sleep deprivation, inadequate nutrition, and psychological torture. Bukele's social media

(01:02:35):
post on Thursday included pictures and video of Abrego Garcia
in detention and asked quote, if he had been tortured,
sleep deprived and starved, why does he look so well
in every picture. Abrego Garcia was deported from the US
to El Salvador in March, despite a twenty nineteen immigration
court ruling did he not be sent there. He was
finally returned to the US last month.

Speaker 25 (01:02:57):
In other news, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear
too cases concerning state laws that keep males out of
female sports. New research is showing that just as unused
muscles can atrophy, the use of artificial intelligence could impair
brain function. Finally, more than twelve thousand students and adults
are attending the Southern Baptist Convention supported infuge camps. Thank

(01:03:19):
you for listening, and God bless America.

Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new.

Speaker 7 (01:03:35):
World order, a new world for that new world order.

Speaker 3 (01:03:38):
This is a moment to seaze. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around us.

Speaker 29 (01:03:49):
A new world order, a world where.

Speaker 4 (01:03:51):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 2 (01:03:55):
Nevertheless, the United States if make key position to shape
this so that the problem of the Bush presidentity will
be the emergence of a new international order.

Speaker 9 (01:04:08):
The first decade of the twenty first centuries.

Speaker 6 (01:04:10):
But out of what is will be seen as the
greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring.

Speaker 9 (01:04:19):
Of for global economy, a new world order was created.

Speaker 7 (01:04:23):
Right documenting the crisis of our republic, The very.

Speaker 8 (01:04:27):
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 holds, and the secret proceedings.

Speaker 7 (01:04:41):
Weaving war on the new World order.

Speaker 9 (01:04:43):
The Council's of government.

Speaker 10 (01:04:45):
We must guard against the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 11 (01:04:55):
This is Governor America for Daring Weeks and Vickey Davis.

Speaker 30 (01:05:17):
Glenn Valley Foods in Omaha, Nebraska, became the focus of
national attention last week after immigration officials carried out the
largest work site rate of the year. Within days, the
meatpacking plant saw a surge of job seekers applications in hand,
hoping to land a spot on the line. On Tuesday,
June tenth, federal immigration officials arrested seventy six people at

(01:05:38):
Glenn Valley Foods, according to an email from the Department
of Homeland Security to NBC News. Following the operation, US
Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a news release, some
had active local warrants prior to UI convictions and have
been previously deported. Many may now face additional federal charges
fraud and misuse of visa's permits and other documents. Assaulting

(01:06:02):
a federal officer, resisting arrest, illegal re entry, and or
misuse of Social Security numbers. For company president Chad Hartman,
the scene was unlike anything he had experienced in his
fifteen years with the business. The raid gutted nearly half
the plant's workforce, many of whom had worked there for years.
Hartman called the rehiring process painful, comparing it to trying

(01:06:26):
to replace a family member. Glen Valley Foods has for
years used Everify, a federal system operated by the DHS,
to confirm the legal status of its workers. Hartman said
all employees, including those detained, were approved through the system.
He told DHS agents during the raid that the company
used Everify as required, but agents responded that the system

(01:06:48):
is flawed and vulnerable to fraud. Hartman told NBC that
he continues to use Everify to fill the positions left
vacant after the raid, despite concerns about its reliability. That's
says doesn't capture a solution. If somebody's got a fake ID,
that's what needs to be repaired, he said.

Speaker 12 (01:07:05):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governed America. Our
number two. It continues to be the fifth of July
twenty twenty five. Yeah, Everify. That's a follow up of
the story that we told you about before where this
plant in Nebraska was using everify and yet they were
still hiring illegal aliens because the illegal aliens were using

(01:07:26):
bogative papers, bulgative documents to obtain their everify status to
make it look like they were actually US citizens. So
he's hiring using Everify and it doesn't matter one way
or the other. Which was proves if the system so
easily easy to gain or easy to gain, then who

(01:07:49):
is it really designed to track?

Speaker 13 (01:07:52):
Right? Well, you know what, that's not a new problem.
When I lived in California in the early seventy I
worked for a company that processed the pension and health
and welfare deductions from checks from employees that were union members.

(01:08:17):
One of the big problems we had at the end
of every year was reconciling the names and Social Security
numbers of the people who had pension and health and
welfare benefits paid for them. And the problem was illegal

(01:08:39):
aliens that were trading social Security cards. They get a
Social Security number from somebody, so you might have ten
ten claims or ten statements of health and welfare and
pension benefits paid to a Gonzalez Hernandez. You know, just

(01:09:06):
name the name ten different ten different names on one
Social Security number. So that's not a new problem. The
thing is is that the Social Security Administration, under their laws,
they can't throw out those statements. You know, at the

(01:09:27):
end of the year, when you get your statements of
how much Social Security has been paid on your Social
Security number. Social Security Administration cannot delete those records that
they know are fraudulent. So the real question is not

(01:09:47):
that they're not nothing to do with it. There are,
there's bad data on their files. But what do they
do with the money? That's what I always wondered, what
they do with the money that was paid on these
Social Security numbers that have ten different names.

Speaker 12 (01:10:08):
Interesting. I don't know. The system in every system is
like this. When it's the government system, it's yeah, it's
just rampant fraud, rampant fraud and abuse.

Speaker 13 (01:10:22):
Yeah, but it's not fraud on the part of the government.
It's fraud on the part of employers and employees.

Speaker 12 (01:10:30):
I'm not so sure about that.

Speaker 13 (01:10:31):
I think it's well, there is fraud in government. Don't
get me wrong. I'm not saying there isn't fraud in government,
but This particular kind of fraud is initiated by people
using social Security cards that are not there.

Speaker 12 (01:10:49):
Yeah, well, anyway, turning a corner, although not very really
very far from turning a corner. At the end of
the last hour, I teased that we were going to
be playing some clips from the Peter Teal interview. He
was interviewed, as I said, from by the New York Times.
It was a columnist Ross do That, which I don't know.

(01:11:11):
His name is like do O U T H A
T so it looks like do that, which I think
is kind of a fun name. Actually Ross Ross do That.
But anyway, that's his name, and he the whole interview,
as I said, was fascinating. They discussed many things, transhumanism
being among them. They even got into the anti Christ

(01:11:35):
and some biblical references. You know what Peter Teal thinks
of all of that. And but starting off, you know,
they the question was should the human race survive? That
seems like a normal question, that should be a relatively
easy thing to answer, wouldn't you think, Figgy, Yeah, you

(01:11:58):
would think. But he reference, you know, the trans movement,
if you want to call it that, and how transhumanist
moved no, the trans movement. And see, that's the thing
is really I think we've kind of pontificated or speculated
in the past that trans the whole trans movement. You know,

(01:12:21):
this this gender vendor ideology, which is poisoning minds all
across the country and really around the world. It's it's
poisoning Western civilization for sure. But we've kind of positive
I think in the past that this could very well
be a stepping stone toward this the transhuman movement, because

(01:12:46):
when you're taking away the sexual identity of somebody, well,
if you're turning everybody into into robots, wouldn't that be
the first step taking away their sexual identity? And so
he says Peter Teel, you know, mister libertarian, mister the
guy that's actually funding the Grand Old Party right now,

(01:13:10):
bank rolling Republicans. He actually said, well, you know, trans
gender doesn't go far enough, but should the human should
the human race survive?

Speaker 31 (01:13:20):
You would prefer the human race to endure?

Speaker 2 (01:13:22):
Right?

Speaker 12 (01:13:24):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (01:13:25):
Hesit yet?

Speaker 7 (01:13:25):
Well, yes, I.

Speaker 12 (01:13:27):
Don't know, I I would.

Speaker 5 (01:13:30):
I would.

Speaker 31 (01:13:31):
This is a long, long hesitation.

Speaker 32 (01:13:34):
There's so many questions in place.

Speaker 31 (01:13:36):
Shouldn't the human race survive?

Speaker 5 (01:13:40):
Uh? Yes?

Speaker 32 (01:13:41):
Okay, but but uh, I I also would I I
I also would like us to to radically solve these problems.
And uh and so you know, it's always I don't know,
you know, yeah, transhumanism is this, you know. The ideal

(01:14:01):
was this radical transformation where your human natural body gets
transformed into an immortal body. And there's a critique of
let's say the trans people in a sexual context, or
a transvestite is someone who changes their clothes and cross dresses,

(01:14:21):
and a transsexual is someone where you change your penis
into a vagina. And we can then debate how well
those surgeries work. But we want more transformation than that.
It's the critique is not that it's weird and unnatural. It's, man,
it's so pathetically little, and okay, we want more than
cross dressing or changing your sex organs. We want you

(01:14:42):
to be able to change your heart and change your
mind and change your whole your whole body. And then
Orthodox Christianity, by the way, the critique Orthodox Christianity has
of this is these things don't go far enough. Like
that transhumanism is just changing your body, but you all
need to transform your soul, you need to transform your

(01:15:03):
your whole self.

Speaker 12 (01:15:04):
Okay, First of all, orthodox Christianity. I'm a Christian and
I don't I don't think that anybody in the Christian community,
if I want to use that phraseology for lack of
something better, believes that transhumanism should be practice at all,
you know, let alone that it doesn't go far enough.

(01:15:27):
It's not our job to transform our soul. That's I
guess that's the So Christianity believes that it's Christ that
transforms the soul. It is Christ's work on the Cross,
that in your acceptance of Christ in your heart, asking

(01:15:48):
Him to forgive you for your sins, and repenting of
those sins and accepting Christ, accepting his work on the Cross,
that's what transforms your soul. In Peter Teel's world, it's
our job to do it ourselves. And there's the problem.
I think there's the discountry.

Speaker 13 (01:16:07):
Yeah, but do you know what, I was doing some
research and I did find that it was religions, Protestant
religions that were kind of involved in establishing world religion.

(01:16:31):
The World Council of Churches.

Speaker 12 (01:16:34):
Which is not a real Christian organization in my opinion.
They're a communist organization. In my opinion, exactly exactly. So
the Bible talks about entities that are wolves in sheep's clothing,
and I would put them the World Council of Churches
in that category.

Speaker 13 (01:16:55):
Well, yes, because in I think it was nineteen ninety
Mikhail Gorbachev held the second Global Forum on what Human
Human something or other, but it had to do with religion,

(01:17:18):
all religion.

Speaker 12 (01:17:19):
What year was that?

Speaker 13 (01:17:21):
I think nineteen ninety, but it was the second one.
The first Global Forum was held at Oxford University in
the UK.

Speaker 12 (01:17:30):
Second World Forum on let's see, let's see what we
can come across here?

Speaker 13 (01:17:40):
I have it on my.

Speaker 12 (01:17:44):
World Conference on Religion and Peace accords.

Speaker 13 (01:17:49):
No, it was actual a global Spiritual Forum.

Speaker 12 (01:17:53):
Okay, what about the World Council, the World Conference on
Religion and Peace? Would that be it?

Speaker 5 (01:18:00):
Me?

Speaker 12 (01:18:01):
That was nineteen seventy four, not nineteen ninety.

Speaker 5 (01:18:03):
Sorry.

Speaker 12 (01:18:04):
The Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders was held.

Speaker 13 (01:18:09):
Yes, that's probably it.

Speaker 12 (01:18:11):
In nineteen ninety Moscow, following its nineteen eighty eight Oxford meeting,
and preceding others in nineteen ninety two Reo in nineteen
ninety three Kyoto. These forums brought together spiritual and political
leaders to discuss global issues including the environment. Oh boy,
the environment and interfaith cooperation. Doesn't that sound nice? We

(01:18:33):
all join hands and throw all of our principles out
the window.

Speaker 13 (01:18:38):
Interfaith cooperation because because all of the religious organizations together
under one world organization, doesn't they can't include each religion
or under one particular religion. So what you end up

(01:18:59):
with is pantheism.

Speaker 12 (01:19:02):
Yeah, and that's what the order of the New Age is.
You know, you're God, I'm God, The earth is God.
Every little insect on the earth is God. Everything, you know,
all the bugs, you know, the trees are God. Everything's God,
little g yes, Yeah, that's what you know. This this pantheistic,
pante waste religion of the New Age, which is the

(01:19:24):
world religion that they're trying to push. Now there's also
the World Council of Churches. I think that this might
be the one you're talking about the Theology of Religions
that was in Switzerland in nineteen January of nineteen ninety.
They held a Theology of Religions.

Speaker 13 (01:19:40):
Yeah. Now, this one was held in Modern.

Speaker 12 (01:19:43):
World Forum on Religion. Okay, so the Moscow one, Yeah,
that would be the Global Forum of Spiritual and parliamentary leaders.

Speaker 33 (01:19:55):
Yes, that's it, okay, Yeah, disgusting makes you want to
throw up, Yeah, but that's that's what it is.

Speaker 12 (01:20:06):
These are substitutes of of what's real. These are these
are not genuine Christian entities. They they're they're wolves in
sheep's clothing coming in and masquerading as the real deal.
Just like a lot of these churches that have these demonic,
satanic politicians in their pulpit and they're hosting them, giving

(01:20:31):
them platform. It's mind blowing. But you know they're all
tax exempt. We get to pay for them, we get
to pay for their operations anyway. Peter Teele, Uh, you
know they go on discussing like.

Speaker 32 (01:20:46):
The transformanism is just changing your body, but you also
need to transform your soul, and you need to transform
your your whole self.

Speaker 12 (01:20:53):
No Christ will transform the soul. You don't have to transform.
He's done the work. All you have to do is
accept it. So Peter Teel is wrong and so right.

Speaker 31 (01:21:02):
But the other wait wait sorry, I generally agree with
your What I think is your belief that religion should
be a friend to science and ideas of scientific progress.

Speaker 5 (01:21:16):
I think how.

Speaker 12 (01:21:16):
About science being a friend to Christian principles or you know,
I'm hesitant to use the word religion, but given the
fact that you have tolerance being preached everywhere, how about
the how about making it the other way around, where
things don't have to necessarily adapt to the science. Let

(01:21:37):
the science, you know, just tolerate what we believe and
leave us the heck alone. That sound like a plan.
It's worked pretty well up till now.

Speaker 31 (01:21:46):
Any idea of divine providence has to encompass the fact
that we have progressed and achieved and done things that
would have been unimaginable to our ancestors. But it still
also seems like, Yeah, the promise of Christianity in the
end is get you get the perfected body and the
perfected soul through God's grace, And the person who tries

(01:22:10):
to do it on their own with a bunch of
machines is likely to end up as a dystopian character.

Speaker 7 (01:22:17):
Well, uh, it's.

Speaker 12 (01:22:21):
You know what's interesting about this. He's struggling. Peter Tail
is struggling to answer the really I would say surface
level arguments that this New York Times reporter is asking him.

Speaker 13 (01:22:35):
Well, he's in kind of a tight spot because he
knows the answer, he just has to formulate it in
such a way that it will be socially acceptable.

Speaker 12 (01:22:48):
I don't I don't know. I don't think that he's
been challenged very much on his ideologies. He's in a position.

Speaker 13 (01:22:55):
I mean, if you're advocating human experimentation and modification, you
can't just say that straight out.

Speaker 12 (01:23:06):
Well, he has He pretty much has it by talking
in this interview. He openly says he's in favor of transhumanism.
What does that entail transforming us? You know, the trans
agenda hasn't gone far enough, he says, Well.

Speaker 13 (01:23:25):
When you get it, when you get down into specifics.
I mean, I'm sure he said that, but the reporter
didn't follow up on it. But if he had followed
up on it, there would be and Peter Tiele answered, honestly,
there would be a big reveal about the changing nature

(01:23:46):
of our healthcare system.

Speaker 12 (01:23:48):
There should be a big reveal about Peter Teel And
you know, but and then we could easily dismiss Peter
Teele as just some nut job, except for the fact
that he's got bill millions of dollars to be able
to pull it off and buy politicians and uh pass
laws which he almost got in the big beautiful Bill,

(01:24:10):
his volunteer surveillance state parts of it. I'm sure he
probably did get.

Speaker 13 (01:24:15):
Well, and it's come out that. I mean, he he's
the one that really basically funded Donald Trump. That's true
for the presidency.

Speaker 12 (01:24:26):
Yep. So continuing here.

Speaker 31 (01:24:28):
Let's let's articulately this and you're gonna have a heretical
form of Christian right that says something else.

Speaker 12 (01:24:35):
I I don't know.

Speaker 32 (01:24:36):
I I think the word in nature does not occur
once in the Old Testament. And so, uh, you know,
if you if you you know, and there is you know,
there is a word in which a sense in which
the way I understand you know, the you know, the
Judeo Christian inspiration is it is it is, it is.

(01:24:57):
It is about transcending nature. It is about overcome main things.
And you know, and the closest thing you can say
to nature is that people are falling and that that's
the natural thing. In a Christian sense is that you're
messed up. And that's true. But you know, there's some

(01:25:17):
ways that you know, with God's help, you are supposed
to transcend that and overcome that.

Speaker 12 (01:25:23):
All right. I think he's the one that's messed up.

Speaker 13 (01:25:27):
No question about it. And the more the more you
know about it, about what they're really talking about, the
more messed up it is.

Speaker 12 (01:25:38):
These are the this is the guy though once again,
who is in bed with jd Vance, Donald Trump? You know,
people like Curtis Jarvin too, you know, uh, they're all
working together to try to push this agenda. And people
really do need to be aware of this. Ah, this
is like so many different shape a crazy. I remember discovering.

Speaker 13 (01:26:04):
This against humanity will be committed.

Speaker 12 (01:26:09):
I remember discovering this transhuman movement back around the turn
of the century, and I was looking at it back
then and there were a lot of people with money
that were pushing these ideologies. But I remember thinking, eh,
you know, this is so nuts, so crazy, most people
wouldn't ever believe it. And how many years ago was that?

(01:26:32):
That was, you know, over twenty years ago now, and
yet now it's becoming mainstream. Now, it's on a New
York Times podcast. Now you actually actively have people pushing
it more and more in the open. It's becoming So
is it going to be accepted? That's the question. We

(01:26:54):
got the bottom of the hour break. We'll be back.

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Speaker 11 (01:31:00):
Let's go to find out what's really going on. This
is Governor America.

Speaker 36 (01:31:20):
Using technology to catch thieves in the act. Grocery stores
now harnessing artificial intelligence.

Speaker 23 (01:31:26):
To crack down on shoplifting. Who's force checking back for
taking answer one?

Speaker 36 (01:31:29):
Supermarketing Queen's with a closer look at how this works.
Things we're pretty much stable, but owner Jason Ferrera says,
post pandemic things have drastically changed.

Speaker 37 (01:31:40):
But number to the degree that we're seeing in today.

Speaker 23 (01:31:43):
He's talking about rampant shoplifting.

Speaker 37 (01:31:45):
Oh, we would see a whole sections all of a
sudden wiped out.

Speaker 36 (01:31:47):
He shared these videos with us, one after another, a
woman shoving case after case of raw meat into a
shopping bag, a man stuffing a tub of detergent under
his coat, another man putting cans of so into a backpack.
But Ferrara says three out of the four would be
thieves were stopped before walking out.

Speaker 37 (01:32:07):
This technology has been tremendous in helping us return up.

Speaker 36 (01:32:10):
He's talking about artificial intelligence now connected to his cameras
by a French company named Vision.

Speaker 38 (01:32:17):
We detect an individual on the shopping floor that is
placing an item in a container, either backpack, a purse,
or a chempus back for example, and.

Speaker 23 (01:32:27):
Co founder ben Wa Kunig says, it's not in the
way you think.

Speaker 18 (01:32:31):
We're not doing any official recognition.

Speaker 39 (01:32:33):
We're not recognizing people when they come back to the story.
But although you don't know their name, you could say, oh,
this is the same person that came two days ago.

Speaker 9 (01:32:41):
We don't do that.

Speaker 39 (01:32:42):
We don't track people within the store. And again, when
you see how the algorithm is working, the most important
component makes the analysis come.

Speaker 9 (01:32:51):
To be anonymous.

Speaker 36 (01:32:52):
Vision uses what's known as gesture recognition.

Speaker 23 (01:32:55):
It has nothing to do with faces.

Speaker 36 (01:32:57):
It zones in on the movements people make for instance,
grab this bag of bread and shoved it into my jacket.
Take a look at what the technology does recording me
in real time, and.

Speaker 5 (01:33:08):
It doesn't care what people look like.

Speaker 36 (01:33:10):
It calculates the probability of theft based on movement and
sends an alert to the manager or owner's phone.

Speaker 40 (01:33:16):
The one hand, we have a stock market. On the
other hand, with really high inflation, it's disproportional effecting low
income of families.

Speaker 36 (01:33:24):
Doctor Stanislaw Mamanov, who teaches predictive modeling at AI at
NYU and Montclair State, believes that's indicative of the rise
in shrinkage or thefts, but he's not sold on Vision's vision.

Speaker 40 (01:33:36):
I'll be very habitant to move forward with the foreign
ownership and working through channel partner or absolute questions regarding.

Speaker 36 (01:33:44):
Data, Kunick claims Vision does not sell data and follow
strict regulations in France on how data is managed.

Speaker 23 (01:33:51):
As for what stores do with Vision's technology.

Speaker 37 (01:33:53):
Well, I can get up to one hundred and fifty
notifications of suspicious activity in one day. Let's say if
even ten percent of those, that's fifteen dufts in a day.

Speaker 36 (01:34:02):
Arraras as workers can now deter theft by simply asking
a suspicious person if they need a basket, letting them
know they're being monitored.

Speaker 37 (01:34:10):
Many times we'll just try to get rid of what
they've got, so we're preventing at that moment.

Speaker 23 (01:34:15):
In Jackson Heights, check you, Beckford, Use four, New York.

Speaker 12 (01:34:18):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is govern America. Yeah,
that's pre crime, ladies and gentlemen. That's where we're headed to.
AI detecting shoplifting, AI stopping crimes, Artificial intelligence, detecting what
you're going to do before you actually do it. And
that really is the model, isn't it. It continues to
be the fifth of July twenty twenty five as we

(01:34:40):
get right back into the show. Nothing wrong with catching shoplifters.
We all pay the price for shoplifting when those crimes
go unpunished. But we have, you know what, we really
need our laws on the books that prosecute shoplifters. We
have California and some places in these big cities around

(01:35:05):
the country that are getting soft on crime. We need
to go forward with punishing criminals for being criminals. But
that's not what this is. This is looking at everyone
suspiciously and detecting crime before it actually occurs.

Speaker 13 (01:35:25):
Yeah, preventative crime.

Speaker 12 (01:35:27):
Minority report type stuff. Welcome back to the show. Before
the break, we were sharing audio from this interview from
Peter Teel, who was interviewed by The New York Times
in a fascinating interview. I think it's really good to
actually go through and listen to what these billionaires and
the people pushing the global agenda are actually saying. Yeah,

(01:35:51):
Ross do that. Actually did that, and he shared it
on his podcast. Are you're going to say something, VICKI, yeah,
I was going.

Speaker 13 (01:36:00):
To say, Peter Tiel is I would say, right at
the center of it. He's not really an IT guy
as much as he is a lawyer. He was a
lawyer for the IT people that built these surveillance systems.

Speaker 12 (01:36:21):
So well, during the interview, and I got one more
clip from that, they spent some time talking about world government,
which was interesting in light of the fact that Peter Teel,
you'd think it would be somebody who might favor that.
All I know is he goes to the global conferences.
He's been to the Builderberg Conference a number of times.

(01:36:43):
So these are the globalists, these are the people pushing
world government. These would be the people that would be
all in with the Antichrist.

Speaker 13 (01:36:51):
Right, And what do you need for world government? You
need world systems.

Speaker 12 (01:36:57):
Yeah, and that's exactly what Peter Teel is pushing world systems,
and so they it's fascinating listening to him answer questions
about these issues.

Speaker 31 (01:37:08):
You have been giving talks recently about the concept of
the Antichrist, which is a Christian concept and apocalyptic concept.
What does that mean to you? What is the Antichrist?
How much time do we have We've got as long
as much time as you have to talk about the Antichrist.

Speaker 32 (01:37:28):
I think there's always a question, you know, how how
do we articulate, you know, some of these existential risks,
some of the challenges we have, and they're all framed
the sort of runaway dystopian science text. So there's a
risk of nuclear war, there's a risk of environmental disaster,
maybe something specifical like climate change, or there are lots

(01:37:48):
of other ones we've come up with. There's a risk
of you know, I know, bioweapons. You have all the
different sci fi scenarios. Obviously, there are certain types of
risks with AI. I always think that if we're gonna
have this frame of talking about existential risks, perhaps we
should also talk about the risk of another type of

(01:38:10):
a bad singularity, which I would describe as the one
world totalitarian state, because I would say the political solution,
the default political solution people have for for all these
existential risks, is one world governance. You know, what do

(01:38:30):
you do about nuclear weapons? We have United Nations with
real teeth that controls them, and it's it's they're they're
controlled by an international political order.

Speaker 15 (01:38:42):
It's uh.

Speaker 32 (01:38:43):
And and then something like this, you know, is is
also uh. You know what do we do about AI?
And we need global compute governance. We need, you know,
a one world government to control all the computer's log
every single key stroke to make sure people own program.

Speaker 12 (01:39:01):
You know, a dangerous AI.

Speaker 32 (01:39:02):
And I've been wondering if that's sort of a you know,
going from the frying pan into the fire.

Speaker 12 (01:39:08):
And so the.

Speaker 32 (01:39:09):
Atheist philosophical framing is one World or None. That was
a short film that was put out by the Federation
of American Scientists in the late forties. Starts with the
nuclear bomb blowing up the world, and obviously you need
a one world government to stop it. One world or None,
And the Christian framing, which in some ways is the

(01:39:32):
same question. Is Antichrist or armageddon? You have the one
world state of the Antichrist, or we're sleepwalking towards armageddon.
One world or none. Antichrist or armageddon on one level
are the same question. One question is and this was
a plot hole in all these Antichrist books, people wrote,

(01:39:53):
how does the Antichrist take over the world?

Speaker 7 (01:39:55):
He gives these.

Speaker 32 (01:39:56):
Demonic hypnotic speeches and people just fall for And so
it's this plot hole, it's this de ammonium and totally
it's implausible. It's a very implausible plot hole. But I
think we have an answer to this plot hole. The
way the Antichrist would take over the world is you
talk about armageddon NonStop, You talk about existential risk NonStop,

(01:40:17):
and this is what you need to regulate. It's the
opposite of the picture of Baconian science from the seventeenth
eighteenth century, where you know, the Antichrist is like some
evil tech genius, evil scientists who invents this machine to
take over the world. People are way too scared for that.
In our world, the thing that has political resonance is

(01:40:40):
the opposite. It is it is the thing that has
political resonance is we need to stop science. We need
to just say stop to this. And this is where, Yeah,
I don't know. In the seventeenth century, I can imagine
a doctor Strangelove Edward Teller type person taking over the world.
In our world, it's far more likely to be Gretathunberg.

Speaker 5 (01:41:02):
I knew it.

Speaker 12 (01:41:04):
I knew that little girl was the Antichrist from the
moment I saw how dare you?

Speaker 5 (01:41:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 13 (01:41:12):
So everything he said there up to that point is
so important, and it's what has been driving me for
this two decades that I've been working over two decades
that I've been working on this, trying to sound the

(01:41:32):
alarm because the global systems are the systems of the
anti Christ, as I would term it. I'm not a
religious person, but if I had to come up with
a term for it, the people that are designing and
developing these global systems are the anti Christ.

Speaker 12 (01:41:55):
Yeah, it's all. It's certainly the beast system, the beast system.
And that's a perfect segue to your healthcare fusion center
thing that you found. Did you want to set this up?
The Department of Justice announced a takedown of medical fraud,

(01:42:16):
but that's not all. They announced.

Speaker 13 (01:42:18):
Yeah, it according to the spokesperson. You know, they had
one of those press conferences of the DOJ officials.

Speaker 12 (01:42:27):
Where they like to gloat.

Speaker 13 (01:42:30):
Yeah, where yeah, they all get together and they do
a press conference on what they've done, and they announced
the biggest ever takedown of insurance fraud, like.

Speaker 12 (01:42:45):
Over like three hundred people arrested or something like that.

Speaker 13 (01:42:48):
Yeah, for three hundred people arrested. And this is the
third about the third press conference that I've watched where
they announced the biggest ever Yeah. Yeah, because Medicare, Medicaid,
insurance fraud and everything. So I pay attention whenever one

(01:43:11):
of them happens, because the first one I watched, I
wasn't even politically active at that point.

Speaker 12 (01:43:17):
Seems like they're always exaggerating, you know. It's like Trump.
Trump does the same thing. You know, Michelle and I
were watching his Independence Day speech and I was making
fun of Trump because you know, every time he speaks,
it's like, we've never seen anything like it. You know,
that's one of his biggest phrases, is we've never seen
anything like it. Yeah, so you pretty much punctuate everything

(01:43:42):
he says. Yeah. Yeah. So anyway, this.

Speaker 13 (01:43:46):
Is anyway at the press conference. At six minutes into
the press conference comes the punchline.

Speaker 41 (01:43:55):
My name is Matthew Elliotty and I'm the head.

Speaker 12 (01:43:57):
Of the Sorry I stepped on you.

Speaker 13 (01:44:00):
Oh go ahead.

Speaker 41 (01:44:01):
My name is Matthew Galliatti, and I'm the head of
the Justice Department's Criminal Division. Thank you all for joining
us today as we announce the largest coordinated health care
fraud takedown in the history of the Department of Justice.
Seeing like announcing today charges against three hundred and twenty
four defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud

(01:44:22):
schemes involving approximately fourteen point six billion dollars in false
claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid, and other health care programs.
In a takedown this large, I can't possibly describe all
of the work that went into dismantling each scheme. Today's
takedown marks a historic day. In addition to the tireless

(01:44:44):
work of our Fraud Sections Healthcare Fraud Unit, this extraordinary
effort would not have been possible without the law enforcement
agencies with me here today, Health and Human Services Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid services, the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
and the Drug Enforcement Administration, and of course countless partners
across the federal, state, and local law enforcement community, and

(01:45:07):
dozens of United States Attorney's offices. Now, despite these historic achievements,
we aren't resting on our laurels. We're making advancements to
stay ahead of their criminals and their illicit schemes. That
is why today I'm also announcing that we are working
with our partners at FBI, HHSOIG and other federal agencies
to create a healthcare data Fusion Center to revolutionize how

(01:45:31):
we detect, investigate, and prosecute health care fraud. These efforts
will be led by the Criminal Division, specifically the Fraud
Section's Healthcare Fraud Unit and comprised of data specialists from
the unit's data analytics team. The Fusion Center will break
down information silos using coordinated data analysis to enable our
investigative teams to quickly identify and dismantle emerging fraud schemes,

(01:45:55):
preventing money from going out the door. Today's enforcement action
represents the largest health care fraud takedown in American history,
but it's not the end. It's the beginning of a
new era of aggressive prosecution and data driven prevention.

Speaker 12 (01:46:10):
Pre crime pre crime minority report type stuff.

Speaker 13 (01:46:14):
Well, yeah, worse than that though. It's the completion of
the project they've been working on since nineteen ninety to
create a national database of medical records. First they began
with health insurance, but it moved. The idea was to

(01:46:39):
aggregate all of the medical records of all of the
people in the United States. Well, right there. It should
have been a five alarm fire because why would the
federal government need a database of everybody's medical records. The

(01:47:00):
only reason, well, as I've researched it, and this is
one of the topics that I have spent more time
researching than just about anything else. The reason is medical research.
So now picture this in your mind. They've got a

(01:47:23):
national database of medical records on everybody. The new paradigm
for the entire government is preventative defense. So why do
they need your medical records? Well, preventative medicine, of course. Okay,

(01:47:44):
They've got your DNA, They've got everything. So how would
they use that information? How could they use that information?
They could analyze your medical record which has your bio
with has your biological information in it, your DNA. They

(01:48:05):
can select candidates for medical research and do medical research
because they have been slowly retiring doctors out of frontline
healthcare and they've put in second tier healthcare providers, and

(01:48:26):
that means nurse practitioners and physicians assistants. Because those two
nurse practitioners and physicians assistants don't have the credentials to
question the AI the decisions of the computer system, they

(01:48:47):
will implement the decisions of the computer system because they
don't have they can't they can't question the computer system.
They don't have the credentials doctors do. So what the
set up with this national system of medical records is
to make everybody a potential subject of essential covert medical

(01:49:12):
experimentation DNA experimentation.

Speaker 12 (01:49:16):
And that goes perfectly in line with what they're doing
at the border. We come full circle because these fusion
centers that they're setting up, this crunching of data, the
consolidation of data, the fusing of data across agencies, across entities,
you know, public and private, makes everyone a suspect. And

(01:49:39):
you know, I come back to the border because border
crossings are way down, yet they're going forward with the
surveillance TECHNOLOIY.

Speaker 42 (01:49:47):
Resident Trump's border policies are serving as a deterrent at
the US southern border, as illegal crossings have hit another
record low. In June, border patrol encountered the lowest number
of migrants along the southwest western border since the nineteen sixties,
when the agency started tracking the data. According to Border
Patrol data released by the Department of Homeland Security, agents

(01:50:11):
apprehended just over six thousand migrants between southern border ports
of entry last month. That's down from more than eighty
three thousand in June of twenty twenty four. June's numbers
also beat out the record low set a few months
back in March, when there were over seven thousand illegal
border crossing arrest. That was down from over one hundred

(01:50:33):
thirty seven thousand the year before. According to the new data,
on June twenty eighth, border Patrol hit a single day
record low with one hundred thirty seven migrants encountered across
the southern border, and for the entire month, CBP says
they didn't release a single apprehended migrant into the US.

(01:50:53):
It's something Trump touted this week at a press conference
in Florida after touring a new migrant detention for facility.

Speaker 43 (01:51:00):
The number of illegal aliens into the United States was zero.
Zero even I find that somebody must have gotten it.

Speaker 15 (01:51:11):
I think I don't know, but they say zero.

Speaker 42 (01:51:14):
Immigration was one of the top issues Trump campaigned on
leading up to the twenty twenty four election, and it's
also been a major focus of his administration's early policy changes.

Speaker 18 (01:51:25):
He ended what was called.

Speaker 42 (01:51:26):
The CBP one app, a phone app that helped migrants
apply for asylum and enter the country. Ice and deportation
operations have ramped up, and on Day one, Trump issued
ten executive orders on immigration. One paused refugee programs and
asylum claims for those crossing into the US. Tighter asylum

(01:51:48):
restrictions have historically been linked to lower border activity, but
a judge on Wednesday just blocked one of Trump's Day
one policies. The judge ruled the administration overstepped its authority
with the blanket pause on asylum. The Trump administration is
expected to appeal, but it's unclear as of now if

(01:52:09):
this recent ruling will have an impact on the number
of people encountered at the border.

Speaker 12 (01:52:14):
Now we're hearing that there has been the largest takedown
you're talking about. Every time they do these announcements, it's
the largest, This the largest, that the biggest. Never see
anything like it.

Speaker 13 (01:52:27):
It's a dialect, a.

Speaker 12 (01:52:30):
Joint task force of federal, state, and local law enforcement.
This is Breitbart. These officials led to an arrest the
arrest of sixteen members of the Venezuelan Anti Trend Gang,
a spinoff faction of the Trend de Arragua. Foreign Terrorist Organization.
Officials called it the largest takedown of suspected anti trend

(01:52:53):
members and associates by the FBI so far. How long
has this gang been around?

Speaker 13 (01:53:00):
Quite a while?

Speaker 12 (01:53:01):
Why trend to Ragua has been around for a while,
But the Anti trend gang, the spinoff?

Speaker 13 (01:53:08):
Oh, I don't know, I haven't heard of them.

Speaker 12 (01:53:11):
No, So saying it's the largest anti trend takedown, well,
I guess if it's the first, it would be the largest,
do right, I don't know. Well.

Speaker 13 (01:53:21):
The thing to understand is that they need to make
the the crime or the subject have a dollar value
as big or bigger than what they're going to ask
Congress to spend on the solution.

Speaker 12 (01:53:41):
Ah, okay, okay.

Speaker 13 (01:53:44):
So that in the case of this medical the health
insurance fraud, that it came out in a fourteen billion
dollar fraud, so they're going to ask for a heck
of a lot more money than that, and it's probably
that money is probably already in Trump's big beautiful bill.

Speaker 12 (01:54:09):
I wouldn't be surprised.

Speaker 13 (01:54:11):
Yeah. And the concept of a fusion center, it doesn't
matter what the subject of the data is. The fusion
center itself is the thing to focus on, because it's
the aggregation of data into a central repository, taking in

(01:54:34):
all sources of information and disseminating it out to whoever
requests it. So those fusion centers really are a weapon.
They are a weapon, and it doesn't matter what political
party is in charge. The weapon is the same because

(01:54:56):
you can use you can get data on the Democrats
pet issues, or you can get data on Republican pet issues.

Speaker 12 (01:55:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:55:08):
So the central focus should be on the idea of
a fusion center, which is not just national, it is
freaking global.

Speaker 12 (01:55:18):
Yeah. So, border crossings are down to record lows now,
and the Republicans and Trump want electronic surveillance systems in
place at the border when it's proven that we don't
need them by virtue of the fact that the border
crossings are down, we don't need these systems to patrol
the border, and they don't work like you verify, they
don't work. Meanwhile, Trump is actually floating trial balloons about

(01:55:42):
a possible limited amnesty. Breitbird also reports that President Donald
Trump floated a form of semi amnesty for illegal hotel,
restaurant and farm workers during a victory speech in Iowa
late Thursday, But he also said a bitterly divided Congress
have to write the legislation. Yeah, why would we be

(01:56:03):
talking about amnesty?

Speaker 13 (01:56:05):
And who would it be that they would be giving
amnesty to. It would be the people that are already
in the fusion centered database.

Speaker 12 (01:56:13):
Well maybe I don't know, but the point is is
that I don't want amnesty. The whole point was to
get them out of the country if they're legals.

Speaker 13 (01:56:21):
Right, So he backtracked.

Speaker 12 (01:56:22):
Trump backtracked, Well, it's more like backstabbed. All right, We
got the h the top of the hour. Break Our
number three is straight ahead, Ladies and gentlemen, much much
more to come looking.

Speaker 14 (01:56:34):
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Speaker 7 (01:58:43):
Two five.

Speaker 25 (01:58:48):
Seek Poor American Family News. I'm Chris wood Word. President
Donald Trump has signed the One Big Beautiful Act into law.

(01:59:10):
The bill was in doubt over the last few weeks.
It was narrowly approved by the House in late May
and then went to the Senate, where changes were made.
The House approved those changes yesterday and got the bill
to President Trump just in time for his July fourth deadline.

Speaker 26 (01:59:24):
John Thune and Mike Johnson right there. I see, Mike,
what a job they've done. What a job they've done.
But you know, it was supposed to be in three, four, five,
six or seven different bills. And I was in one
of the fake news shows and I said, let's do
it in one beautiful, big, one beauty. We want one big,

(01:59:48):
beautiful bill. I said that to this newscaster, and I
think a lot of the congressmen and senators were watching,
and they said, let's name the bill that one big
beautiful bill. And that's what we did. And what we've
done is put everything into one bill. It's never happened before.
It's the biggest bill of its type in history. We've
never had anything like that before, nothing like that they

(02:00:10):
thought would.

Speaker 9 (02:00:11):
Be possible to get past.

Speaker 26 (02:00:13):
And actually I liked it because we had so much
in there that no matter who you are, there was
something in that bill that would make your congressman or
your senator or your congresswoman much more importantly raise their
hand and support right, Lisa. So that was something and
it was really something special. So the American people gave

(02:00:34):
us a historic mandate.

Speaker 9 (02:00:36):
In November.

Speaker 19 (02:00:37):
We won everything.

Speaker 26 (02:00:38):
We won the swing states, all seven swing states, we
won everyone that rarely happens. We won the popular vote,
we won the districts two thousand seven hundred and fifty
to five hundred and five. That's why when you look
at a map, it's all read a little blue on
each end, but it's all red. And by the way,

(02:00:58):
red means Republican.

Speaker 15 (02:01:00):
Take case, But we made.

Speaker 26 (02:01:03):
Promises, and it's really promises, made promises, Captain, we've kept them.

Speaker 25 (02:01:09):
The One Big Beautiful Act is President Trump's signature legislation.
So is this the best knight of Trump's presidency? Former
Representative Trade Gowdy was asked that question on Fox News Channel.

Speaker 27 (02:01:20):
He ran on this, no tax on tips, on overtime,
social security, is stronger border. This may be Yeah, it
may be the best night of his presidency. Although if
he were on with you, Julian, he would say there
are many more victories to come, and you'll get tired
of winning.

Speaker 25 (02:01:37):
Democrats plan to use the Big Beautiful Bill to help
them regain control of the House and Senate in twenty
twenty six. Republicans believe the bill will actually help their case.
Read more about the bill on AFN dot net. When
you pray, be sure to include one for the people.
In Texas Hill Country, at least six people are dead
many missing after overnight flooding in Kerr County, as much

(02:02:00):
as ten inches of heavy rain poured down in just
a few hours. The president of l Salvador has denied
accusations that Kilmar Abrego Garcia was tortured in prison in
his country. Here's fox is tiny j powers.

Speaker 28 (02:02:14):
El Salvador President naib Bucelea disputes Kilmar Abrego Garcia's claim
that he was tortured and beaten while being held in
a Salvadoran high security prison. In a court filing in
the US this week, Abrego Garcia described losing thirty one
pounds in his first two weeks at Seacott, also suffering
sleep deprivation, inadequate nutrition, and psychological torture. Bucele's social media

(02:02:35):
post on Thursday included pictures and video of Abrego Garcia
in detention and asked quote, if he had been tortured,
sleep deprived and starved, why does he look so well
in every picture. Abrego Garcia was deported from the US
to El Salvador in March, despite a twenty nineteen immigration
court ruling that he not be sent there. He was
finally returned to the US last month.

Speaker 25 (02:02:57):
In other news, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear too,
cases concerning state laws that keep males out of female sports.
New research is showing that just as unused muscles can atrophy,
the use of artificial intelligence could impair brain function. Finally,
more than twelve thousand students and adults are attending the
Southern Baptist Convention supported mfuge camps. Thank you for listening,

(02:03:20):
and God bless America.

Speaker 1 (02:03:29):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 7 (02:03:36):
Order, new world for that new world order.

Speaker 3 (02:03:38):
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 12 (02:03:48):
Us, a new world order, a world where.

Speaker 4 (02:03:51):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 2 (02:03:55):
Nevertheless, the United States to make key position to shape
this so that the problem of the put presidentity will
be the invergence of a new international.

Speaker 6 (02:04:07):
Order the first decade of the twenty first century, but
out of what will be seen as the greatest restructuring
of the global economies, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new World Order was.

Speaker 7 (02:04:22):
Created, documenting the crisis of our republic.

Speaker 8 (02:04:27):
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 7 (02:04:41):
Waging war on the new world order.

Speaker 9 (02:04:43):
The councils of government.

Speaker 10 (02:04:45):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwaranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 7 (02:04:56):
This is Governor America with Darren Wheet's.

Speaker 5 (02:04:58):
And Vicky Davis.

Speaker 24 (02:05:22):
A former FBI agent once accused of storming the Capitol,
is now working inside the Justice Department. Jared Wise, indicted
for assaulting police and unlawfully entering the Capitol on January sixth,
is now part of the DOJ's Weaponization Working Group, an
internal team tasked with investigating so called prosecutorial overreach in

(02:05:43):
politically sensitive cases. Bodycam video captured Wise shouting kill him
as rioters attacked officers on the Upper West Terrace. He
spent about nine minutes inside the Capitol shouting, gesturing, and
reportedly compared arring police to Nazi agents. His federal trial
was cut short in early twenty twenty five, after President

(02:06:06):
Trump issued a full pardon. Now Wise serves as a
counselor and investigator under Ed Martin, a longtime defender of
January sixth defendants. The Working group was launched by Attorney
General Pam Bondi in February to review what she called
unethical prosecutions. Critics say putting Wise in that role undermines
the group's credibility. Supporters claim he's a victim of a

(02:06:29):
politicized justice system. Before his indictment, Wise worked counter terrorism
for the FBI until twenty seventeen, then joined Project Veritas
using the code name Benghazi, running undercover ops on unions
and democratic campaigns. The Justice Department has not commented on
his role, but his hiring is already fueling debate about

(02:06:50):
whether the Trump administration is holding prosecutors accountable or rewriting
the rules entirely.

Speaker 12 (02:06:56):
I smell a rat with his story.

Speaker 13 (02:07:00):
What do you remember about the Benghazi episode. They tried
to make you think that it was about gun running. Well,
that guy Christopher Stevens, he was in Benghazi to talk
to the emergency room doctor. What he was doing was

(02:07:21):
that he was bringing the global health system to Libya.

Speaker 12 (02:07:30):
Well, it goes deep and I can't.

Speaker 13 (02:07:36):
I can't stress enough to people that, please, for God's sakes,
look into this system of the nationalized medical records because
they are going to be committing crimes against humanity. It's
a rerun of what happened in Nazi Germany. The whole

(02:07:57):
reason behind the Nuremberg trial and what came out after
the Neuremburg trials was the nerum Burg Code that prohibited
human experimentation, experimentation on humans. So what we're seeing is
a rerun and nobody, nobody is talking about it, and

(02:08:22):
it's just driving me freking out of my mind.

Speaker 12 (02:08:26):
Well, the whole Nuremberg thing was, in my opinion, a
game anyway, because the people that really were responsible for
crimes against humanity skated. They were operation paper clipped into
the United States and I think used by the federal
government to do much of the stuff probably that we're
living with right now.

Speaker 13 (02:08:48):
That's possibly true. But the focus of the Neuremburg trials,
even though nobody talks about it, you know, they make
it seem as if it was because they were starving
Jews in prison camp. No, that isn't what it was about.
It was about human experimentation and one of the one
of the doctors, doctor Mangela. Everybody's heard of doctor.

Speaker 12 (02:09:12):
Oh, doctor of death yep, a angel of death I
think is what they called him.

Speaker 13 (02:09:17):
Angel of Death. Yeah, no, I'm not sure if he
escaped Argentina. A lot of the UH UH war criminals
in Nazi Germany, they they ended up down in Argentina.
But there's a whole lot there's a whole lot more

(02:09:39):
going on in our country and it is all dangerous
and it's all going to be crimes against humanity, and
people better wake up. I mean, you know, I've been
I don't have a very big reach. I don't have
a big voice. I have a small voice. And it's

(02:10:00):
that's not by mistake. It's I never wanted to be
a public person, but when when I saw what they
were doing with it systems, I couldn't keep quiet. I
just I couldn't do it. I made myself start researching

(02:10:21):
this stuff and try to expose it as best I could.

Speaker 12 (02:10:26):
Yeah, regarding the story that we started the hour out
with this uh this guy that they it was former FBI,
he was present on January sixth, riling up the crowd,
and now we're supposed to you know, Trump ended up

(02:10:46):
pardoning him, and now he's in the Government Weaponization Panel,
the DJ Panel for Weaponization of Government. I think it's
interesting former FBI. You know, I thought there were no
FI assets at the Capitol that day.

Speaker 13 (02:11:03):
Oh, there were more FBI assets there than there were
regular people.

Speaker 12 (02:11:07):
But that's what they want us to believe. And this
guy was supposedly, I guess, an FBI agent up until
twenty seventeen, so he wasn't an FBI agent at the time.
I don't know. I think the whole thing smells to
high Heaven. Here he is urging the crowd to kill
a capitol police and he's a former FBI agent. I'm

(02:11:31):
thinking maybe maybe he's still working with the FBI, or
maybe he's still working with somebody undercover.

Speaker 13 (02:11:39):
Well, it's the same with that guy that was with
the Stuart Rhodes, the one who was caught on camera
in the crowd telling people go into the capitol, go
into the capitol.

Speaker 12 (02:11:55):
Right, Yeah, that's oh gosh.

Speaker 13 (02:11:57):
They didn't even arrest that guy until they were forced
to after several years.

Speaker 12 (02:12:03):
His name is Blanking now.

Speaker 13 (02:12:05):
Yeah, I forget his name too, but he was an
instigator there trying.

Speaker 12 (02:12:10):
Yeah, absolutely, same thing, same type of deal, and he
was originally charged and they ended up dropping the charges.
M that's going to drive me nuts now and that
I can't remember his name. Hopefully the chat room will
post it. Who's the guy at the capitol that received
notoriety for telling people to go into the capitol. It's

(02:12:37):
gonna drive me nuts anyway.

Speaker 13 (02:12:39):
Guess what the FBI I had a similar situation with
that woman, Elizabeth something or other that was arrested and.

Speaker 12 (02:12:53):
Yes, okay, it just came to me, all right, very good.

Speaker 13 (02:12:57):
Yeah, that woman that was a rested. Her company name
was Theranose and what she was doing was collecting blood
samples from everybody as if they could diagnose illness based
on a blood sample. Well, she was used as a

(02:13:17):
stooge to collect blood samples and it was for the
purpose of this predictive preventative medicine. Even though they never
really brought that out in her court case, they presented
it as if she was committing fraud. Well she really wasn't.

(02:13:40):
She was working with that guy from Pakistan to get
blood samples from all of the people that she possibly could.

Speaker 12 (02:13:52):
You know, a couple of people in the chat room
have posted the names a few of them now, so
thank you anyway. So, the FBI is in the process
of moving out of the Hoover Building. Apparently this Hoover
Building is a rundown, so the FBI is Originally there
is a plan I guess with the Biden administration to

(02:14:13):
move the FBI. They were talking about moving it to Maryland.
I guess, well, that fits.

Speaker 13 (02:14:19):
That fits, that's where the Center for Medicaid Medical is.

Speaker 12 (02:14:24):
Well, that plan has been scrapped though. That plan, that
plan has been scrapped. Now they're going to keep it
in Washington, DC. But they didn't want to keep it
in Washington, DZ because hey, it's too unsafe for the
agent's VICKI apparently the town is so unsafe we got
to protect the agents. So that's why I guess the

(02:14:45):
Biden administration didn't want to keep it.

Speaker 22 (02:14:47):
The FBI is moving out of its iconic headquarters, the J.
Edgar Hoover Building, for a new home just three blocks
away in downtown Washington. The move to the Ronald Reagan
Building culminates years of political wrangling over w to relocate
the nation's most prominent law Enforcement Agency. The decision scuttles
plans approved by the Biden administration to move the bureau

(02:15:08):
to a new building in suburban Maryland. The fifty year
old Hoover building has been described as decrepit, crumbling, and
run down, and needs repairs that would cost hundreds of
millions of dollars. But shortly after taking office in January,
President Donald Trump said he wouldn't allow the FBI to
leave its longtime home from Maryland, which he described as

(02:15:29):
quote a liberal state. In his first term, Trump proposed
downsizing the FBI headquarters in Washington and moving thousands of
employees to remote offices in Alabama, Idaho, and West Virginia.
Political leaders from Maryland denounced the decision to keep the
FBI in DC, saying a new location outside the capitol
would keep agents and other employees safe.

Speaker 12 (02:15:51):
Now, think about this, We're talking about the federal law
enforcement agency, and they didn't want the keep them in Washington,
d C. Because it wasn't safe for the agents. Yeah,
why don't you just work on getting the towns safe
for everybody?

Speaker 13 (02:16:11):
Yeah, I would say, what the what the building isn't
safe for is for their fusion centered data they need
They need a big IT center.

Speaker 12 (02:16:23):
Washington, d C. Is a very very dangerous place. But
by the way, uh, we've been talking a lot about
surveillance here. You know the easy Pass system, you know
the system on the highways where they have a transponder
and you're driving along and you're automatically charged a toll
on the toll road. Now they're talking about using the

(02:16:45):
easy Pass system as he means by which to pay
for your fuel. What yeah, uh, this is out of
the sun. Drivers can now pay for gas without physically
interacting with the pump by using their easy Pass transponder
at hundreds of participating stations across the US. A new

(02:17:09):
feature for easy Pass has been offered in partnership with
pay by Cars driven program, enabling contactless gas payments and
eliminating the need to touch pump buttons or screens because
you know, it's so difficult to actually pay at the
pump with a credit card.

Speaker 13 (02:17:27):
They're doing the same thing with the grocery stores, you know,
where you be able to walk in, pick up your stuff,
and walk out because there will be a reader YEP
for your ID and they know who you are.

Speaker 12 (02:17:44):
That's exactly it. Everywhere they go they're going to know
who you are, as all these systems.

Speaker 13 (02:17:49):
Are total global totalitarian police state.

Speaker 12 (02:17:52):
That it is. It totally is three hundred and thirty
six participating stations apparently now exist across the country, and
that number will no less, no doubt grow. But they
work by having the gas station detect a car's transponder
and sending a text message to the driver's phone. The

(02:18:14):
driver then replies to the text with the pump number
and pay by car act. Oh man, it's not hard
to see all kinds of ways this system can be
abused text message. You're going to do this by text
enabling the drivers to start fueling. Oh man, I don't

(02:18:37):
know is the easy path of have to look at
more deeply into easy pass now, because I'm interested to
know now if the credentials for easy pass are at
all encrypted, because now that you've provided a monetization scheme
using easy pass, it isn't hard to imagine if the

(02:19:01):
data isn't encrypted when it passes from your car to
whatever reader, you're gonna have people capturing this stuff and
using it to steal gas and charging it to your
account if in fact, of course, I guess that's the
reason for the text message two vector authentication. I have
to look more deeply into this system. Every single system

(02:19:24):
that they come up with, there's always ways for criminals
to exploit it.

Speaker 13 (02:19:28):
Yes, as well all of this exploit They'll work on
it until they can exploit it.

Speaker 12 (02:19:40):
So there was a shooting last week. We didn't get
a chance to talk about it on the show, but
in Wayne County, which is a suburb of Detroit, And
I bring this up because I think it's important. It
serves to illustrate once again how firearms in the hands
of law abiding people save the day. You know, so

(02:20:02):
often we hear about these shootings everywhere where people die,
and those are tragic circumstances, absolutely, but we never hear
about the countless, numerous While I say never, this is
a good example of where we are hearing about it,
but rarely, rarely, very rarely do we hear about the
countless times every single day where violent criminals are stopped

(02:20:28):
by guns in the hands of law abiding people. And
this is a perfect case of that in this Wayne
County shooting.

Speaker 30 (02:20:38):
Here in Michigan, security guard shot and killed demand suspected
of opening fire during services in Wayne, Michigan Sunday, June
twenty second, The Associated Press reports the shooting happened at
cross Point Community Church just outside of Detroit. The church's
pastor said a church deacon ran the suspect over with
his truck, giving the security.

Speaker 12 (02:20:55):
Guard time to shoot him.

Speaker 30 (02:20:56):
Police describe the suspect as a thirty one year old
white male. The pastor tells the Detroit News the security
guard was shot in the leg. Video from inside the
church shows the moment the crowd begins to react to
the reports of a suspected active shooter. The church had
just wrapped up an event that was being live stream
to its YouTube page. The video shows the crowd clapping,
some people begin to stand, and then shouting can be

(02:21:19):
heard off screen. Meanwhile, people in the church took cover
behind chairs and began to run from the room. Someone
told them to go to the back. As people began
fleeing from the room, everybody to the back. Please, everybody
come to the back. Come to the back. A person yells.
A loud bang is heard, followed by more screaming. The
sound begins to cut out as everybody exits the room

(02:21:40):
where the event was being held. Wayne Police Deputy Chief
Finley Carter. The third said it was too early to
know why the suspect attacked the church. FBI director Dan
Bongino posted on social media Sunday afternoon, our leadership and
support teams are on the ground at the scene in Wayne, Michigan,
providing assistance and investigative support.

Speaker 12 (02:21:59):
Perfect exacts how a bad situation could have been so
much worse had honest, law abiding people not been armed,
and this is why restrictions on guns are a death
sentence for society. There's another example from Breitbart. Alleged intruder

(02:22:20):
taken to hospital after being shot by homeowner. An alleged
intruder was taken to the hospital for treatment after being
shot by a Portland, Oregon homeowner Thursday morning. This was
June twentieth, around one thirty pm. NBC sixteen reported the
homeowner claiming that the alleged intruder banged on the front
door for about ten minutes. The homeowner warned the alleged

(02:22:43):
intruder that he was armed, but the suspect came to
the front door anyway, apparently not very bright or hey,
I'm gonna call your bluff. The homeowner shot him, and
arriving officers quote applied to tourniquet to control bleeding. According
to Sergeant Kevin Allen, KGW eight noted that the a

(02:23:05):
Legend Truder incurred non life threatening injuries which we're taken
or which were treated at the hospital. After being treated,
the Legend Truder was then booked into the Monomah County
Detention Center on first degree burglary. Hopefully they will follow
through and prosecute this thirty five year old Austin R.

(02:23:26):
Mason who was the accused shooter or a burglar.

Speaker 13 (02:23:35):
That would be interesting to investigate that, to find out
what's really behind it. I don't trust I don't trust
the news media. I don't trust the government. Everything is
a dialectic. Anything that happens that's anomalous is a dialectic.

(02:23:58):
So what you really need to invent instigate is what's
the backstory on that? What are they? What's the government doing?
What purpose will this serve?

Speaker 12 (02:24:10):
Well, I'll tell you what what purpose? What they should
do is put people like Cynthia Gonzalez. Yeah, are you
familiar at all? Did you hear this story of this
mayor in Southeast La County? Uh? It's uh. The vice
mayor of Kudahi Kudai. I'm not quite sure how you

(02:24:32):
pronounced that, but that's the county. She's now under federal
investigation by the FBI for posting a video to social
media where she was called she was calling upon criminal
gang members to show up and fight the ICE agents.
Oh yeah, and if you listen to how this stupid
woman talks, how in the world you know it's no

(02:24:54):
wonder if after listening to how she talks, it's no
wonder that California is such a mess for nothing.

Speaker 44 (02:25:00):
But I want to know where all the trollos are
at in Los Angeles, Eighteenth Street, Flrdencia. Where where's the
leadership at? Because you guys are all about territory and
this is eighteenth.

Speaker 18 (02:25:12):
Street and this is Toranze.

Speaker 21 (02:25:13):
You cays tag.

Speaker 44 (02:25:13):
Everything up, claiming hood, and now that your hood's being
invaded by the biggest gang there is, they're.

Speaker 18 (02:25:20):
In a peep out of you.

Speaker 44 (02:25:22):
It's everyone else who's not about the gang life that's
out there protesting and speaking up. We're out there like
fighting our tur, protecting our tur protecting our people, and
like where you at, Minka ya Vito, Minka Yatosto. I'm like, dude,
they're running a muck all up in your on your streets,

(02:25:43):
on your streets and in your city, and Pete, when
the big gang guns come in, nothing but like quiet,
and we're out here, the regular ones that have never
been jumped in.

Speaker 18 (02:25:54):
Out here calling things out, trying to organize people, trying.

Speaker 23 (02:25:57):
To do the thing.

Speaker 15 (02:25:58):
So don't be trying to no black, no nothing.

Speaker 44 (02:26:01):
If you're not showing up right now trying to like
help out and organize, I don't want to hear a
peep out of you once they're gone, trying to claim
that this is my block.

Speaker 23 (02:26:10):
This was not your block. You aren't even here helping out.

Speaker 44 (02:26:13):
So whoever's the leadership over there, just you can get
your members in order.

Speaker 12 (02:26:19):
I mean, what a nut. This is a woman who
is calling upon gang members to go to war basically
with the Immigration Enforcement and Customs officers.

Speaker 13 (02:26:30):
Yeah, did they? You said they arrested her.

Speaker 12 (02:26:33):
Well, she's under federal investigation. Now, I guess the FBI
is a case open needs to happen. They she put
her in Alligator Acuatras with all her friends. Apparently that's
what I'm advocating for. All Right, we're at the bottom
of the hour. Now let's take a break, We'll be back.
This is governed America.

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Speaker 7 (02:31:04):
This is Governor America.

Speaker 12 (02:31:34):
All right, when the home stretch of the broadcast, one
more half hour to go here, as we continue here
on this fifth of July twenty twenty five, and we'll
SuDS at another one here, let's go out to California
and take a call here real quick though, let's let's
see California. You're on the air. Go ahead, please.

Speaker 5 (02:31:53):
HI.

Speaker 45 (02:31:55):
Regarding the cut of hey, it's pronounced cut of hay.

Speaker 12 (02:31:58):
Okay, thank you appreciate that.

Speaker 45 (02:32:00):
And uh, it's a very rough area. And I believe
she said she was calling out Eighteenth Street Gang. Yeah,
is the gang part of the gang. I'm not sure
if you're familiar with the Jamail Shaw killing who Trump
used his father used as a prop during Trump Round

(02:32:22):
one elections and then dropped him like a dead fish
once he got elected. But it was the Eighteenth Street
gang member who killed Jamail Shaw. Second, Okay, it's one
of the two really bad gangs in Los Angeles area.

Speaker 4 (02:32:39):
So if she's.

Speaker 45 (02:32:43):
Connected to that, and Katay is like, if you're white,
should not go there. I think I believe it's almost
all Hispanic.

Speaker 12 (02:32:51):
Wow.

Speaker 45 (02:32:53):
Yeah, it is known as a very rough, rough area,
you know, not always, but it grew to be that.
And then I'm not sure if you're familiar. I mean
to bring up Curtis Jarvon.

Speaker 12 (02:33:06):
Yes, Curtis, you know this done?

Speaker 45 (02:33:09):
Yeah? He you know, on the the recent voting for
the Big Beautiful Bill, which is a sham, but there
was a reporter from Fox that talked about that the
Republicans were voting in bloc and that was and he
stated block that was something that Curtis Jarvon has pushed

(02:33:35):
in a conversation with Michael Anton, who has been in
both Trump uh administrations and is in the current policy
division right now. But Curtis Jarvon talked about that the
Republicans should vote in block and anybody who does not
vote in block should be ousted.

Speaker 12 (02:33:55):
Well, that just goes to show you the influence he
has by voting in block. Are we talking about vote
basically in lockstep? Is that kind of another way of
saying that.

Speaker 45 (02:34:06):
Yep, if you don't vote as told by you know,
the leader, the Republican leader, whether it's you know, for
whichever house, then you should be ousted. You vote in
block or you're gone.

Speaker 12 (02:34:19):
Yeah, which is flies completely in the face to of
representative government. The whole point of representative government is that
we have representatives that we send to Washington.

Speaker 5 (02:34:31):
D C.

Speaker 12 (02:34:32):
To be our voice in our stead. Since we're not
able to do that. If they're all just listening to
the leadership and not to the constituency that sent them there,
that defeats the whole purpose of representative government. But Curtis
Jarvin doesn't care about that.

Speaker 7 (02:34:49):
Now.

Speaker 13 (02:34:49):
You know, it's been that way for quite a long time. Yeah,
you know, where the members are basically told how to vote.

Speaker 12 (02:35:00):
H It's it's it's mind boggling to imagine the influence
that Curtis Jarvin's this this guy is a total nutcase,
and the fact that he has any influence at all
in Washington, especially being big buddies apparently with jd Vance,
it tells you all all that you need to know
about jd Vance. The fact that Jadie Vance is quoting

(02:35:21):
this guy making any kind of reference, taking them seriously
at all, is incredible.

Speaker 45 (02:35:28):
Peter Kill is a big backer of Yarvon and David Sachs,
which is in the Trump administration Steve Bannon. I mean,
there's there are quite a few. There's enough to really
change and move towards the Yarvin ideas and the whole
executive order thing. That was something that there's also in

(02:35:51):
this Michael Anton thing was that that Jarvon talked about.
You push out in the very beginning, you just clare
emergencies and you push out a bunch of executive orders
the cloud Piven style. Nobody can keep up because there's
so many pushed out that and it amazes me that,

(02:36:12):
you know, how many people are not seeing what's going on,
because it's to me it's clear, but I guess.

Speaker 12 (02:36:20):
Yeah, they're blinded by the rhetoric. Many of them believe
many of them have gone to sleep because they think
that their team is in office and they don't have
to worry anymore. So there's that segment of the population,
and then the others are blinded by the rhetoric. They
hear all the things that they want to hear, but

(02:36:42):
they never look beneath the surface to find out what's
really going on. And in many cases, looking beneath the surface,
you find that it's a lot of the same stuff
that was started under the previous administration that you hated.

Speaker 45 (02:36:57):
Well and podcasters Monica Perez calls it ping pong politics.
There you go, that's the perfect that's the perfect saying,
because it is it's back and forth. Whether it's like
Democrats or Republicans, it's the same thing.

Speaker 39 (02:37:12):
It's just.

Speaker 45 (02:37:14):
Yeah, it's all the same.

Speaker 12 (02:37:16):
Yeah, right exactly. She calls it ping pong politics. I
call it tag team tyranny. It doesn't matter, you know
what of the phrase, you know what of the term,
it's nothing. You know, the more things change, the more
they remain the same.

Speaker 13 (02:37:31):
Yeah, And the big thing for the politicians, the reward
is the money that they're going to get either for
their own family, you know, the way this whole scheme
works is that the corruption is through the family members
of the politicians. Yeah, so the wife might get, you know,

(02:37:55):
money to invest in a business, or she has a
bit business and she gets big contracts. So they've worked
it out so that the politicians profit, you know, from
participation in the system, and the participation is not for

(02:38:17):
your benefit.

Speaker 45 (02:38:18):
Yeah, exactly in California. That happened a lot with Dianne Feinstein,
Barbara Boxer, and Nancy Pelosi, where their spouses had businesses
that greatly benefited. Yes, California are outside of how they
voted for things.

Speaker 13 (02:38:38):
M hm, that's exactly right.

Speaker 12 (02:38:41):
Ye, hey, thank you for the call. I appreciate that. Okay, yass,
blessings to you. Let's go down to Texas now and
take a call there. Hello, you're on the air. Go ahead, please.

Speaker 19 (02:38:52):
Oil ten full had alert. Just to throw this around me,
I might as well have a disclosure, you know, I ask.
Performance is no guarantee of for future results. You know,
the python's gone by the wayside? How much longer to you?
You no longer are able to go out the afternoon

(02:39:13):
and go to the mailbox or get your mail.

Speaker 12 (02:39:17):
H Well, in my case, I don't go to the mailbox.
I have to go all the way to the post
office because we got lunatics that tear them down out here.
But yeah, they're already scanning the mail with Have you
ever seen this system where that they call it something delivery?

(02:39:39):
I forget now what the name of it is. But
they can send you an email with all the mail
that you're supposed to be getting in your mailbox, so
that you can see if something's missing. You didn't contact
the postal service and ask, hey, where is this particular
letter because it was supposed to be in the mail.
They're scanning every piece of mail.

Speaker 13 (02:40:02):
Well that's interesting. That must be how they're going to
deconstruct the post office. I'll just let you know when
when you have mail.

Speaker 12 (02:40:15):
I don't know if that's what I doubt that's what
you were calling about.

Speaker 19 (02:40:18):
Though, Oh yes, oh yes, it is.

Speaker 12 (02:40:20):
Okay.

Speaker 19 (02:40:21):
The Google, Google and y'all and all of them, they're
somewhat tied in their public private partnership, don't you know.
But wouldn't it be better with all the government is
just so ripped rowing ready for data centers. The post
offices the next to go. They throw it all through
a government data center, and your Google mail is no

(02:40:43):
longer that. It'll be something. They'll come up with something
and everything will be tracked through the net as far
as just communication, which we'll do away with all the
damn cartels and all their information. And you sayn't get that,
they'll use that as a disclosure. So well, you know,
we got to do this for to keep you safe security.

(02:41:04):
Would you say to do this? And they've got the
data centers already being set up mm hmm.

Speaker 13 (02:41:10):
Yeah, by the way, all for your security.

Speaker 12 (02:41:13):
It's called informed delivery. Informed delivery, that's what the postal
service has.

Speaker 19 (02:41:18):
Oh that sounds so delightful.

Speaker 12 (02:41:20):
Yeah, because don't you want to be informed, that's right,
about what's going to be in your mailbox. I mean
it's not enough to be able to wait for it
to appear there. You've got to be informed about what's coming.
And uh, of course the government's going to be informed
about what you have as well, and that really is
the whole purpose of it.

Speaker 46 (02:41:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:41:39):
Well, they've wanted to get rid of door to door
delivery for a long long time because the post office
model doesn't really fit with the technocratic tyranny. So it's
taken them a long time to come up with a solution,
you know, for.

Speaker 12 (02:42:00):
Out anyway, Marks, you everything else?

Speaker 19 (02:42:05):
No, I think that I've said my piece. All right,
thanks for giving me the time you two.

Speaker 12 (02:42:10):
Oh awesome, Yeah, absolutely, thanks for the call and we'll
talk soon. All right, there, he goes Mark in Texas. Yeah,
total information awareness. That's the name of the game, and
that's setting drag nets for everything. Uh, you know, find
interesting thirty four percent somebody you did a poll, thirty

(02:42:32):
four percent of Democrats are now proud to be American.
Only only thirty four America. Yeah, apparently that's a Gallup
poll results. And so it's not hard to see why
when you only have that mini number of that number
of people you know, that are patriotic they call themselves Democrats.

(02:42:59):
Why well, they're working so diligently to destroy the country.

Speaker 13 (02:43:04):
I have to say, it's getting harder and harder as
time goes on and as each of the programs roll out.
I'm actually very fearful of this government because they've become

(02:43:26):
the tool of corporations and in the systems that I've researched,
those are not for the benefit of people. And it's
quite the opposite.

Speaker 12 (02:43:40):
Isn't an interesting Sorry, I don't mean to interrupt you.
I thought I read yesterday that in some of these
protests that are going on around the country that you
have Democrats now that are handing out copies of the Constitution,
which I found very interesting. Yeah, I hope that that's true. Actually,

(02:44:04):
I hope that that's true because I think people need
to read it, they need to understand it. It would
be nice if we could come to common ground on
some of this stuff.

Speaker 13 (02:44:13):
The traditional Democratic base they were left behind when the
Democratic Leadership Council took over. The Democratic Leadership Council partnered
with the tech companies and that's when they began building
the technocratic tyranny. So it's just that the traditional base

(02:44:36):
of the Democratic Party didn't realize that they had been
left behind, you know, that they had been jettisoned. They
were no longer the focus of the Democratic Party. Yes,
So it's only the people who have been paying attention

(02:44:59):
to how little the Democratic Party actually represents their interests.
And you can take that right back to the wto
when they commodified people, and a factory worker in Ohio
actually is less valuable than the illegal that crosses the

(02:45:22):
border because the illegal that crosses the border works for less.
So it became all about all about money, the difference
in wages and benefits, and the American people, and I'm
talking both blue collar and white collar. We took second

(02:45:44):
place in our country because there's cheaper labor around the world.

Speaker 12 (02:45:49):
Yeah, there are no King's protests, no King's riots going
on in various cities. I guess there's multiple rounds of
these that are coming. James O'Keefe and his team went
to one of them in LA and one of his
undercover journalists talked to a participant there and she admitted,

(02:46:09):
you know, because we've been talking other patriot broadcasters have
been talking about the fact that we believe that these
are communists on the ground and in many cases paid protesters.
In other words, this isn't organic. But this particular person
that the O'Keefe's team was talking to actually came right

(02:46:32):
out and admit, Yeah, there's a communist group and they're
paying people to protest.

Speaker 46 (02:46:36):
Some guy was like, came with them yesterday, was like, hey,
like sign up here for a protest on Saturday. I'm like,
what do you But like he got paid, and I'm
like whoa I'm trying to do that.

Speaker 13 (02:46:49):
If I haven't do that twenty bucks I think I was.

Speaker 6 (02:46:52):
But who was the group?

Speaker 5 (02:46:54):
I forget?

Speaker 12 (02:46:54):
Who was communist group with the Ardier? A communist group
paying people twenty bucks to protest.

Speaker 13 (02:47:03):
We've got a nest of Marxist communists up in northern
Idaho and they're very active. They intimidate people, and of
course they're connected to Georgetown law, to Mary McCord and
who was an attorney in the Justice Department. And their

(02:47:25):
objective is to basically run the community. Yep, you know,
to walk all over citizens. There are no citizens up there.
There are only the Marxists and everybody else who they
call racists misogynists.

Speaker 12 (02:47:46):
Which is everybody they disagree with exactly.

Speaker 13 (02:47:50):
Yes, that's an intimidation tactic to make people shut up,
because nobody wants to be called a racist.

Speaker 12 (02:47:59):
Right so right, Well, recently I made the case for
President Trump sending the National Guard in and the Marines
to stop the riots, which fits the definition in my opinion,
of an insurrection. The Constitution grants that power to Congress,
who by law delegated it to the president. Now we

(02:48:24):
can say that they shouldn't have done that, but that's
what they did. But we have to be careful here
because while insurrections are one thing, violent crime is another.
And this is where the slippery slope comes in. Law
enforcement should not be done by the military. We don't
want the military policing our streets. That would be a

(02:48:46):
violation of the Posse Comitatus Act. And there's a reason
why the Posse Commatatus Act came into being. The military
and the police have entirely different missions. They have different roles.
The military are trained killers, while the police are supposed
to be peace officers. And I say supposed to be
because even domestic cops have become more militarized in the

(02:49:08):
last several years. You know, this is thing has been building.
But they have different roles, They have different terms of engagement.
When a military officer says covered me to his fellow soldier,
it means something very different than when a police officer
says it to a colleague. They're trained differently. One is
trained for war and the other is trained for peace.

(02:49:32):
So it all has to do with posture and how
they're trained to treat people differently the different people that
they engage. So the reason I'm bringing this up. There's
a big difference in using what the Constitution calls the
militia to restore order for an insurrection and using the
militia for ordinary policing. That's the slippery slope here that

(02:49:56):
we have to be careful about. The reason, like I say,
the reason I bring this up is because on Fox
News Now, there was recently a segment talking about the
Trendy Aragua gang. Remember the Aurora apartment complex where the
gang had taken it over. Yeah, well Fox and Friends

(02:50:17):
actually promoted Trump sending in the troops to take care
of that problem.

Speaker 23 (02:50:22):
Trenda Arragua.

Speaker 13 (02:50:23):
We've talked about them.

Speaker 47 (02:50:24):
They really were on the map because of all the
immigration problems through Joe Biden and we talked a lot.
We've talked a lot over the last year about that
apartment complex and Aurora, and it looks like, according to
police records, they are back. This is some video of
nine suspected Trendy Aragua gang members that just unleashed, unleashed
chaos in Colorado. It's chilling doorbell video because they were

(02:50:47):
knocking on neighbors doors, apartment complex doors again and no
telling what they would have done if people had opened
their doors. The police chief there, he said they weren't
bringing coffee cakes, they weren't bringing welcome trays. They brought guns.

Speaker 48 (02:51:02):
Based upon everything that I stated here, based upon the involvement,
the actions, the behaviors, the demeanor, there is without question
gang involvement in this. And again we are going to
hold those individuals accountable.

Speaker 49 (02:51:15):
So we see protests here like, are y'all going to
block ice in the federal agents that want to arrest
these bad guys get are y'all gonna link arms with
them when they try to take them into custody. They
are on the wrong side of this. And Brian, it
just reminds me of that major moment when JD. Vince
is on ABC and he was told it was just

(02:51:37):
a few apartment complexes.

Speaker 50 (02:51:39):
President Trump was actually in Aurora, Colorado talking to people
on the ground, and what we're hearing, of course, Martha,
is that people are terrified by what has happened with
some of these Venezuelan and gangs.

Speaker 51 (02:51:50):
Sender, I'm going to stop you because I know exactly
what happened.

Speaker 13 (02:51:53):
I'm going to stop you.

Speaker 51 (02:51:55):
The incidents were limited to a handful of apartment conflict
apartment complexes, and the mayor said, our dedicated police officers
have acted on those concerns. A handful of problems.

Speaker 50 (02:52:08):
Only, Martha, do you hear yourself? Only a handful of
apartment complexes in America were taken over by Venezuelan gangs.
And Donald Trump is the problem and not Kamala Harris's
open border. Americans are so fed up with what's going on,
and they have every right to be. And I really
find this exchange, Martha is sort of interesting because you

(02:52:28):
seem to be more focused with nitpicking everything that Donald
Trump has said rather than acknowledging that apartment complexes in
the United States of America are being taken over by
violent gangs.

Speaker 51 (02:52:42):
Let's just end that with They did not invade or
take over the city, as Donald Trump said, I want
to move on to.

Speaker 50 (02:52:48):
Just a few apartment complexes, no big deal, A few
apartment complexes that the mayor did not seem was invading
the entire city.

Speaker 13 (02:52:55):
I do want to move it wrong, of course she does.

Speaker 52 (02:52:58):
The T shirt was can you listen to you listen
to yourself? If you listen to yourself, this is so unbelievable.
Number One, if the mayor doesn't have a problem with that.
He should resign immediately, right and the governor to deny
and think that Donald trumps the problem. You have no
business in that position, Governor Polis. And now that they're
back TDA, this is what the President's already made clear

(02:53:19):
when you said in LA you can't control those riots.
I'm sitting in and I'm by the way posting. Now
he says, you're gonna you have problem in Chicago.

Speaker 23 (02:53:26):
I'm gonna send.

Speaker 52 (02:53:27):
There now, mister President, if he's watching right now, you
still got the same problem.

Speaker 23 (02:53:31):
But now you're president.

Speaker 52 (02:53:33):
So if this mayor and these police people will take
it that you send the National Guardian right there.

Speaker 12 (02:53:38):
There you go. Yeah, that's how, that's how it's done,
right there.

Speaker 13 (02:53:43):
I have mixed feelings on that. On posse comitatis and gangs,
because the gangs are not harmless.

Speaker 12 (02:53:55):
No, no criminal is harmless. That's the issue. No criminal.
But you're talking about fighting crime here versus an insurrection.
Gangs are hardly an insurrection unless they're burning a whole
city down and everything is completely out of hand to
the point where you have a complete utter breakdown of
law enforcement and it's threatening everything. That is not an insurrection.

(02:54:19):
This is the problem. You have people advocate police have
enough power that they can control it if they have
the politicians behind them.

Speaker 13 (02:54:27):
They don't have the numbers. They don't have the numbers.

Speaker 12 (02:54:30):
Sure they do. Uh No, they could have it if
they weren't, if you didn't have politicians defunding them.

Speaker 13 (02:54:40):
Have you have you been following what's happened in Seattle
for a long time? You know they were the city
was officially opposing, working against police. Finally they got so
many police to quit, and then they realized that they
couldn't control the so they tried to start hiring back.

(02:55:04):
And they can't get police office.

Speaker 12 (02:55:06):
Gee, I wonder why, Yeah, exactly because they all the
politicians aren't going to have their back. All right, real quickly,
let's squeeze in a call here. Can you be real quick?
Give you about thirty seconds?

Speaker 29 (02:55:17):
Yeah, okay. So the got to remember the communists get
their money from the same place as we do, the
good guys. And you'll read that in None Dare Call
It Conspiracy by Gary Allen. We'll see pictures of Nikita Khrush,
Jeff giving Huggy Bears, the Nelson Rockefellers. So this is
the hag Gellian dialectic. They set up yea Friday and

(02:55:40):
all those criminals under one regime, which was Biden, another
shipping them out under Trump. All done to confuse and
unfound the American people and get them to revolt.

Speaker 12 (02:55:52):
So yeah, there she is. Yeah, thank you, thank you. Yep,
thanks for the call. I appreciate it. All right, that's it,
We're gonna have to wrap it up. Time goes by
way too quickly. Thank you, Vicky. As always, I appreciate
everything you do. Thanks listeners. God bless each and every
one of you. Happy Fourth of July, have a good weekend.

Speaker 13 (02:56:11):
Thank you, Thank you for listening. Everybody.

Speaker 12 (02:56:14):
Yep, bye bye
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