Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Order, new world order, new world order.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
This is a moment disease. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us re order this world around.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.
Speaker 5 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United stated in a key position to shape this
so that the problem of the rentidentity will be the
emergence of a new international order the.
Speaker 6 (00:39):
First decade of the twenty first century.
Speaker 7 (00:42):
But out of what is will be clean of the
greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy.
Speaker 8 (00:52):
A new world order.
Speaker 9 (00:53):
Was created, documenting the graces of our rebelly.
Speaker 10 (00:58):
The very word secrecy repugnant in a free and open society.
And we are as a people inherently and historically opposed
to secret societies, the secret oaths and a secret proceedings.
Speaker 9 (01:13):
Waiting war on the new world Order, and.
Speaker 11 (01:15):
The councils of government.
Speaker 12 (01:17):
We let guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or.
Speaker 11 (01:22):
Unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 9 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.
Speaker 13 (01:42):
From FEMA Regions five to ten. This is governed America.
I'mduring Wick. Vickey Davis is here as well. It is
the tenth of May twenty twenty five. Nice to have
you with us once again, ladies and gentlemen. I am
seeing a comment on the chat room right now that says,
for any of you that served King Jesus the Christ,
please lift up David Knight. He's in a battle and
he needs prayer support. So I don't know what that's about,
(02:05):
but I sounds like something might be wrong. So we
ask that people would remember David Knight in prayer.
Speaker 14 (02:15):
Yeah. I wonder if they can call in whoever posted that,
because I always I like David Knight.
Speaker 13 (02:24):
Yeah. Yeah, he's one of the few people out there
that are trying to be you know, not even involved
in the Trump cult for one thing, uh, and trying
to look objectively at all of these different people who
are not what they purport themselves to be. And so yeah,
that would be interesting if someone is in the position
(02:45):
to be able to call in. Six ten, six hundred
seventeen seventy six is the call in number. That's aera
code six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six or toll
free eight four four six four six eight three seven
six or toll free number works in anywhere in North
America and a lot of other places as well. But
eight four four six govern is how you can remember
(03:07):
that eight four four six govern or numerically it's eight
four four six four six eighty three seventy six. A
lot going on, you know. Big thing this past week
was the pope. Lots of people focused on the papacy.
And I don't know why, really, I don't you know
(03:29):
anybody that calls themselves a Christian, I don't know why
they follow or want to follow the direction of one man,
a man on earth. Now, you know, my Bible says,
and I think it's first Timothy, there is one one man.
There's one God and one man. Let me start over.
There's one God and one mediator between God and man,
(03:52):
the man Christ, Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom
for everyone. So I don't know what the Catholic Bible says,
but that's what my Bible says is we shouldn't be
focused on man. We should be focused on Christ, who
is God that came down in the form of man,
not the Virgin Mary, and certainly not the pope. But
(04:14):
that's what a lot of people are focused on. And anyway,
the point is is that even if you might want
to listen to what somebody says and maybe even take
direction with them if they're a good person, every indication
that I have here reading about this pope is that
(04:36):
he's not a good person, just like the last pope
was not a good person, and the papacy and that
whole system is not a good system. There is very
involved in the United Nations sustainable development, control of mankind,
the corrupt as hell. Why would anybody want to follow them?
Speaker 15 (05:00):
I just don't.
Speaker 13 (05:01):
I don't understand that, But go ahead.
Speaker 14 (05:09):
There is a one organization, the World Council of Churches.
And I do have uh an image of the Pope
meeting with I don't know if he was a Grand
Mufti or you know, whatever, but with a Muslim. And
(05:37):
I have another segment where the Archbishop of Canterbury I
think it was, was talking about merging or going back
into the Catholic sphere, you know, so there is like
a world movement of religions, you know, to create an
(06:01):
association of all religions in the same way that the
United Nations is a one world entity for governing policy,
you know, or law and all of that. So it's
really I didn't pursue much of it because I'm really
(06:24):
not a religious person. So every time I have to
look at anything to do with religion, it's you know,
like a whole new learning experience for me, and one
that I'm not particularly interested in. So but there is that.
And I don't know if you remember the Moscow Forum
(06:47):
in nineteen ninety when Mikhail Gorbachev had a forum of
you know, religious and government leaders and so forth. I
consider that to be one of the most important video
clips I ever found.
Speaker 13 (07:07):
Yeah, somehow the people who are pulling the string, you know,
it's amazing. Gorbacheff, who comes from the Soviet Union, and
the Soviet Union is a very communistic or you know, communism,
and and at its root it pretty much mandates an
absence of God. Just if I find it interesting that Gorbachev,
(07:32):
of all people, would be promoting any kind of religion,
but they're promoting this green religion, this gaya worship they're promoting,
which really it has its roots in the occult you know,
and mysticism and all of that. That's what they're promoting,
is really occultism earth worship. And that's what Gorbachev I
(07:54):
think is promoting, and or was and green.
Speaker 14 (08:00):
I think they call it pantheism or something like that. Pantheism.
Speaker 13 (08:04):
M yeah, pantheism. You know, that's more than one, that's
more than one God. And the new this hat also
ties in with the New Age movement, you know, because
the Earth is God. The New Age movement believes everything's God,
your God. The earth is God everything and uh, you know,
(08:26):
and I've heard people refer to the earth as a
living organism. Yes, no, it's full of living organisms, but
itself is not a living organism. But I've heard a
lot of people confuse.
Speaker 14 (08:39):
That you never was into that. That I've found very interesting,
but I never really pursued it was Stephen Rockefeller, and
in all my research, you know, eventually it all goes
back to the Rockefeller family. Yeah, and I think the
(09:00):
Rockefellers were like a crime syndicate within one family.
Speaker 13 (09:06):
Well, certainly the Rockefellers were very closely tied to Maurice Strong.
Speaker 14 (09:13):
Exactly. Yes.
Speaker 13 (09:14):
And Maurice Strong, of course was the United Nations. He
chaired that UN UNSEID Conference, the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development in Real Dejaneiro, when they unveiled to
the world in nineteen ninety two, Agenda twenty one, which
later became Agenda twenty thirty. It was Maurice Strong that
(09:38):
oversaw that whole thing. And he's a communist, was a communist.
He's dead now, but anyway, regardless, this is the situation.
And you know, we have this pope situation now, and
you know, meet the new pope, same as the old pope.
I guess they're calling him. He's he's taken a name,
(10:01):
Pope Leo the fourteenth, and he was all for He
criticized Trump's deportation policies. So apparently he's I guess, in
favor of illegal aliens being in the country. So he's
against nationhood. Why would anybody think any different?
Speaker 14 (10:20):
Really, Well, according to these people, there aren't no illegal aliens.
We are all children of the earth, if you will.
Speaker 13 (10:29):
Yeah, I don't want to be a child of the earth.
Speaker 14 (10:32):
Yeah, I don't either.
Speaker 13 (10:33):
I want to be a child of my father in heaven,
you know, who is the creator of the earth. But
they won American News, which, by the way, it's kind
of funny. One American News. They tried to shut down
the Trump administration tried to shut down the Voice of America,
and then, of course, as the left does with everything,
(10:56):
they go to court to fight it, and of course
the people that worked for the agency, I guess, went
to court to fight it. Anyway they got they got
that whole thing stopped by court order. So Carrie Lake,
who was over the government agency who is responsible for
One America for the Voice of America, she actually announced
(11:21):
this week that they were going to have a partnership
with One American News to provide news content for the
Voice of America, you knowing. Yeah, isn't that like that's
called a plan that's backfired spectacularly.
Speaker 14 (11:42):
Yeah, I that's very surprising. I I'm not sure about
Voice of America. I think they started out with a
good mission, but they were anti am American, which is
why Trump wanted to shut him down.
Speaker 13 (12:04):
Well, I'm not in favor of government propaganda of any sort,
to be honest with you. I don't think the government
should be in the business of funding media.
Speaker 14 (12:13):
I don't kind of remember that the era that it
was born in, people didn't have access to information like
they do today, and so it was a way to
the radio station was.
Speaker 13 (12:32):
A way to spread Usque propaganda into other countries. Yeah, well,
you know, if they don't have access, well.
Speaker 14 (12:41):
No, there is another way under their other than their
communist government.
Speaker 13 (12:47):
I understand. But you know the problem is now that
we have a communist government, or at least it's certainly
heading that way appears to be.
Speaker 14 (12:55):
Oh, it definitely is. I have been going back back
over turn it. I've got to take over my throat.
Speaker 13 (13:04):
That's sorry. It happens, happens to all of us.
Speaker 14 (13:08):
It seems to happen when I have something important to say. So,
I don't know, psychological response or something. But Bill Clinton
was working with the Socialist International and they redesigned the
Reinvention of Government were programs of the Socialist International. Here,
(13:35):
you better take.
Speaker 16 (13:36):
It all, right?
Speaker 13 (13:36):
Yeah, what I was going to share about the Pope,
just getting back to that for just a moment, because
he's undoubtedly a socialist too. So Pope Leo the fourteenth
who was elected to his role on Thursday in Vatican City, which,
by the way, okay, I love this. How they have
the Sistine Chapel or whatever it's called, and they have
the stack smoke stack out of the cistern chapel. Is
(14:00):
it so stern or sesteen?
Speaker 17 (14:02):
Uh?
Speaker 13 (14:02):
Anyway, okay, So they got the smoke pouring out of
the stack, right, and it's black smoke. And then their
signaled to the world that hey, you got a new pope,
you know, and everybody's saying, we got a new pope,
and I'm no, I don't have a new pope. I
didn't have the old pope.
Speaker 14 (14:20):
Well it's white smoke.
Speaker 13 (14:21):
Yeah, they switch it to white smoke from the black smoke.
How much Seal two has the Vatican spewed into the atmosphere?
That's what I want to know. I think that there
needs to be an investigation about the level of Coeal two.
This is completely unnecessary. You don't have it in this
day of technology. You mean to tell me you don't
(14:41):
have a better way of telling the people that there
is a new pope.
Speaker 14 (14:46):
Yeah, well, you know, file a lawsuit.
Speaker 13 (14:49):
That's right in the hag accountability. So anyway, they say.
Robert Prevost, who was announced with Pope Leo the fourteenth
and the success of Pope Francis on Thursday, has been
especially critical of the Trump administration deportation of al salvagn
Salvador and illegal alien Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Yeah, the M
(15:12):
S thirteen gang member who Trump deported, and the Democrats
and apparently the Pope too, want to get him back
inside the country.
Speaker 6 (15:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (15:24):
I don't understand why they're why they pick these losers
and and make this the hill they die on.
Speaker 14 (15:30):
But that's because they want the one world government.
Speaker 13 (15:35):
Yeah. So you know, he's an open borders guy. Uh,
he's a critic of the administration, which I am a
critic of the administration for many reasons, but not the
fact that not not to the extent that they want
to deport uh illegal aliens that don't belong here. So uh,
you know, there's other things he Uh, there was a
(15:57):
he did nothing about the abuse alections the whole time
the Catholic Church. You know, there was all this child
abuse going on. Pope Leo apparently sat on his hands,
did nothing, and then he spoke out about the urgent
need for climate change. Accident VICKI uh.
Speaker 14 (16:16):
For climate change action yeah, uh huh okay, yeah.
Speaker 13 (16:21):
So he he's following in Francis's environmental footsteps. Fast Company
says when Francis spoke in November twenty twenty four about
how climate change would impact the world's most vulnerable populations
and how it requires global cooperation to address Cardinal Privos
that's Pope, the new Pope, or as Roger Mundy used
to call them, the new poop. Cardinal Provos shared his
(16:45):
support for climate action too. Prevosts quote stressed it is
time to move from words to action unquote on the climate,
and that was according to the Vatican News. Prevosts also
warned against the consequences of unchecked tuch logical development, while
reiterating the Church's commitment to protecting the environment through actions
(17:05):
like the Vatican Solar Panels or by shifting to electric vehicles.
Speaker 14 (17:10):
For Heaven's sake.
Speaker 13 (17:12):
So the Pope mobile apparently is going to be the
electric and electric car now, So I guess he can
pray that he doesn't get burned up by all the lithium.
Speaker 14 (17:26):
Yeah, so that it doesn't explode.
Speaker 13 (17:29):
Yeah. And in Catholicism, there's the belief that God has
given humans dominion over nature, a directive that has been
interpreted by some as dominion over the planet and its creatures.
H Pope Francis, however, championed an interpretation that advocated less
for exploitation and more for harmony and the need to
(17:50):
care for it. Cardinal Provos has echoed this idea, saying
per Vatican News that dominion over nature should not become
a quote unquote tyrannical but instead must be a relationship
of reciprocity with the environment. Well, look, nobody wants to
destroy the environment, but CO two is not a fix
(18:12):
to the environment limiting CO two. How many times do
we have to keep telling people this. It's ridiculous to
suggest that CO two limiting that is somehow an environmental move.
Speaker 14 (18:25):
The plants need CO two absolutely, Yeah, So what it
is it's a coded way of saying depopulate.
Speaker 13 (18:34):
Yeah, that's exactly what it is, perfect way of putting it. Well,
we had our real id roll out.
Speaker 18 (18:43):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (18:43):
This has been going on for a long time, the
last couple of decades, and this week the May seventh
deadline came and went, and a lot of people are
They're saying, required have a real ID. Now, you know,
as I see it, Uh, there's very little need for
(19:07):
a real ID if you if you have air travel,
my understanding is you can still travel by air. Now
you'll be harassed more possibly.
Speaker 14 (19:18):
How could you be harassed more.
Speaker 13 (19:20):
Well, because people who are approved there there are approved
travel mechanisms that get you on a fast lane in
an airplane. Now, of course, if you're a terrorist, that's
the direction you'd want to take, right.
Speaker 14 (19:34):
Yeah, I'm not sure that they that the real ID
doesn't replace those because because what the real ID really
is is your entry into the big.
Speaker 13 (19:47):
Database, right exactly, if you're not already in the database anyway.
But Fox who says starting today, passengers must have a
real ID, and this was a h an article that
came out May seventh, or another accepted form of identification
like a passport to travel domestically in the country. Well,
(20:10):
so apparently you can travel without the real ID. Yet
you know, we've been hearing propaganda out let's say over
and over again, Oh you can won't be able to travel,
You won't be able to travel, you won't be able
to go into some domes, some federal buildings. Well, maybe
I don't need to go into those federal buildings anyway.
Speaker 14 (20:28):
Yeah, who wants to anyway?
Speaker 13 (20:30):
Homeland Security Secretary Christi Nome announced on Tuesday the Americans
who don't have a real ID will still be allowed
to fly, but they could face extra screening and delays
at the airport. Well, isn't Secretary's Christi Nome in an
ability to get rid of the extra screening at the airport?
She's over the Homeland Security, which is over the TSA,
(20:52):
is it not? So why doesn't Christine Nome essentially gut
the real ID bureaucratically since she's over the bureaucracy that
oversees that whole harassment thing.
Speaker 14 (21:06):
Well, in the Stasi police state systems that our government
has built, it's really important that they have like a
master record of you, you know, and absolute positive identification
that it's you. And so that's and converting to a
(21:30):
system like that is an evolutionary process until you can
get everybody into it and until it's reliable, which I'm
not sure it ever will be, but that's why they're
doing it. It's like a phase in approach to building
(21:52):
the master file of people in the United States, citizens,
non citizens, everybody that's here.
Speaker 13 (22:02):
Yeah. Uh, lawmakers on Capitol Hill spoke with Fox New's
Digital about how their home states implemented the final phase
of real ID as President Donald Trump's administration signaled that
there would be no deadline extensions. Diana Harshbarger, a Republican
from Tennessee, said I had to go through all of
(22:22):
that to get my license, and that was about a
year or two ago. So she says, uh, Tennessee put
it into effect a long time ago. If there's a
hard deadline now, people better get on the stick. Well,
I don't think so. I don't think. I don't have
any intention of getting a real ID on my driver's
(22:44):
license if they let me renew it without it.
Speaker 14 (22:48):
Yeah, it was about five or six years ago when
Idaho send out information on it and you had a choice,
you know, to get the real idea with the yellow
star on it, yeah, or not get it.
Speaker 13 (23:04):
That's what they do here in Michigan as well. Opted Yeah,
So I'm going to tell the Secretary of State to
go stick the real ID because I don't want I
don't want any part of it. And I remember that
this all goes back all the way at least back
to the Clinton administration. I remember the Clinton administration talking
(23:25):
about the need or the quote unquote the need, which
really meant their desire for a national ID card. Yes,
that's what it was.
Speaker 14 (23:36):
The mid nineties and Grover Norquist testified in front of
Congress about you know, good idea.
Speaker 13 (23:45):
Yeah, yeah, there's nothing good about it though. You know
this shouldn't we shouldn't have to have our papers please
to walk around in the United States or to travel.
Travel is your right, it's your birthright. Taking away all your.
Speaker 14 (24:00):
Brind All the computer systems that were built were built
as if we were a big communist country. Everybody belongs
in a database. They want all information about you and
everything that you do.
Speaker 13 (24:21):
Yeah. Now, last week we turning a corner here. We
had a discussion about birthright citizenship and Art and Georgia.
I said, I didn't want to move away from that
because I'm concerned that moving away away from it would
give them the ability to basically say that you don't
(24:42):
have a country anymore. That was my concern. The Art
and Georgia in the chat room says, I believe birthright
citizenship needs to be eliminated if it is an illegal
alien who has a baby here, only babies born to
US citizens should have birthright citizenship, and I actually agree
(25:02):
with that. So maybe that's the solution, is you keep
birthright citizenship in place, but not to people who are
you know, I mean, you specifically carve out that exception
for anchor babies, and that would be the logical thing,
(25:23):
I think, in which case I guess they would be
attached to the same country that their parents are attached to.
Speaker 14 (25:30):
Yeah, there was an issue with John McCain's birth. Actually,
I think his father was in the military, and I
think he was actually born somewhere else. It might have
been Panama, but there was an issue with his citizenship
(25:52):
and there was a court case and it was decided.
Of course, both of his parents were Americans and his
father was military, therefore he was an American.
Speaker 13 (26:02):
Yeah. Yeah, there was an article in The New American
dealing with birthright citizenship. And I can't talk about it
yet too much because we got the break coming up.
But they had a really good take on this, and
that was Joe Wolverton, who is apparently a legal expert,
and he says, for far too long, the American legal
(26:25):
and political landscape has been distorted by a fundamental misunderstanding
of the fourteenth Amendment that merely being born on US
soil makes one a citizen. This misconception contradicts the original
intent of the amendments framers. Furthermore, it undermines the foundational
principle that citizenship arises from allegiance, not geographic happenstance. And
(26:48):
he goes into more detail, But we'll have to cover
this a little bit on the other side of the break.
Stay with us, ladies and gentlemen, governed America continues here
in just.
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Speaker 9 (30:59):
One with a spoof. Go to find out what's really
going on. This is govern America.
Speaker 13 (31:22):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is govern America. The
website for the show is Governamerica dot com. That's Governamerica
dot com. My email address is radio at Governamerica dot com.
And Vicky, you want to give your information out please?
Speaker 19 (31:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (31:37):
My website is the Technocratic Tyranny dot com. My older
website is Channelingreality dot com. And my email addresses on
both websites.
Speaker 13 (31:48):
All right, we'll get back to the article here in
just a moment from The New American. But we have
a call on the line, and you're welcome to call
in folks as well. Six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy
six phone lines are wide open six ten, six hundred
seventeen seventy six or toll free eight four four six
four six eighty three seventy six. It's eight four four
six and governed. Hello, and let's go to Kentucky. You're
(32:08):
on the air, go ahead, please?
Speaker 9 (32:11):
Well?
Speaker 8 (32:11):
Howdi Yeah, And this is Mike of Kentucky. I think
just that one simple word.
Speaker 13 (32:17):
Okay, whoops, yep, I hang up on you. Nope, no,
I can hear you.
Speaker 8 (32:22):
Okay, okay, host town to shut down some stuff here anyway.
The RBN listeners know me as Mike of Kentucky. But
if you change it. You know, Mike in Kentucky has
I think a lot of different connotations. But Jefferson was
very influential, and some say even wrote part of the
(32:43):
original constitutions for Kentucky. And in that there's a section
x KI you know, the Greek lutter ten for ten
and at the very end of that it's essentially a
rewriting of the so off deal of rights. At the
very end of that, it says that the provisions in
(33:05):
this section are to forever remain outside the scope and
power of government or and I add the duped masses
to alter. Because these rides of provisions are innate. When
we're born of a woman, we're not born in a one.
We're born other women. And so in contract law there
(33:30):
are several concepts that will avoid a contract there if
there has to be a full meeting of the mind.
So you have to be told the implications of all
these terms and whatever that you're doing, you know, to
have a contract, otherwise it's invalid. You know, sign and
you can qualify your signature. A lot of people don't
know this. If you're rushed through an emergency room or
(33:51):
a doctor's office and candle the stack of paper to sign.
You can set there at initial everything and before you
sign it, put signe without reading, without a council or
something like that, because that's what's going on. They wants
you to sign this big stack of papers and not
just like with your cell phone or start from the internet.
You know, the service provider makes you check a little
(34:13):
box that says you understand all the terms and conditions.
Everybody knows, I hope by now that would take three
and a half months to read through all those terms conditions,
let alone be able to understand them. So the idea
that there's a.
Speaker 13 (34:26):
Contract, well, it's even worse than that, Mike, because now
they don't even give you the documents to look at.
You can't even skim through them. They give you a
little pad, an electronic pad with an electronic stylist, and
you're supposed to touch this thing to the screen. You
don't even see the documents.
Speaker 8 (34:46):
And if you can't, if you're not allowed to sign
something like signed under condition of receiving service or without reading,
you can just simply put your signature in brackets, which
means it's there for reference only. This is recognized invarious styles.
Manuals from California to New York. Something is in brackets
means it's there for reference, is not part of the document.
(35:08):
So beware of that when you see that in a contract,
they'll put a term, you know, something in brackets. But
the reason I'm bringing this up is, you know, you
got that fourteenth Amendment, which most people don't even read
the whole thing, and the idea of being born or
naturalized in the United States makes you a subject. Yeah,
(35:30):
a US person subject, the.
Speaker 13 (35:33):
Subject to the jurisdiction thereof absolutely, And that's the part
that I that I don't like. Go ahead, I'm sorry
I interrupted you.
Speaker 8 (35:41):
That's okay. One more thing about that section ten or
X in the first two Kentucky constitutions is that there's
a provision that there shall be no law basically preventing
or blocking you from immigrating out of the state. Other words,
you're born of Kentucky, born of a woman within the
(36:03):
extra boundaries of Kentucky. They can't make a law that
says that you're trapped here. You can immigrate somewhere else.
But by implication, they also can't trick you into immigrating
out of Kentucky. Stuff. What I started telling people basically
is that I never knowingly, willingly, with a full meeting
(36:27):
of the mind, signed or did anything to relinquish my
natural born citizenship in the state of Kentucky. There's also
a Commonwealth of Kentucky. You can still find documents that
say both changed in eighteen fifty they changed that. So
(36:47):
a lot of people need to look into claiming their
rights of citizenship in the state in which they were
born and or comwell. And because that's how a lot
of this fourteenth of THEMIT citizenship is built, and all
these little things that people do give implied consent. Right,
(37:10):
but you agree, you are by default admitting to being
a US citizen subject unless you say otherwise. Like you said,
citizenship comes from allegiance. So I think there's a good
reason why they want you to sign a tax for
them every year, pledging that you know you know everything
(37:30):
is true and correct, and that you're a US citizen.
You also got to have a the youngsters used to
say the pledge of allegiance all the time. Socialists, the
socialists you've talked about that, I guess the Bellamie brothers,
but their cousins. So I think this is an aspect
to reclaim or this is a direction we could used
to reclaim that. Somebody in the last twenty some years,
(37:53):
apparently I talked to you, said that one of the
Kentucky Secretary of States, not Daniel Cameron, but one of
the guys prior actually was confronted or kind of back
into a corner or somewhere and and said when he
was asked about it, he said, well, I wasn't aware
that there were any citizens of Kentucky left. In other words,
(38:14):
they've tricked everybody into no longer being a citizen of
the state that they were born in. You know, yeah,
and that birth certificate is your anchor to be in
the fourteenth Amendment person subject to the millions and millions
of laws and regulations of the United States, even if
you're not doing something in the.
Speaker 13 (38:35):
Well, okay, here here's the problem that I have with
all the people who promote the sovereignty stuff. I'm sorry,
but you're still subject.
Speaker 8 (38:43):
That's that's one word you do not want to use
his sovereign.
Speaker 13 (38:47):
Well, okay, but look, here's here's the they use it.
And there's there's a lot of debate on this. The
problem is if you don't follow the law even if
you decide that you're not so subject to it, they
decide that you're subject to it, and so they're going
to enforce it on you, regardless of what you think.
(39:08):
That's the difficulty.
Speaker 8 (39:09):
Here's how far bad all of it. Here's how far bad.
Here's how far far bad down the road we are.
Let's say in the you know, you do get a
charge with the crime, and they assume jurisdiction over you
because you dare to answer their letter or something they
send you. When you get into the discovery process, they
(39:30):
will not let you face your accusers. So you know,
there's a whole bunch of the amendments that have been
defected by all this domestic surveillance, and you want to
you want to face your accusers. You want to know, well,
how do you know I was at such and such
a place, such as a time? And then for equal justice,
(39:51):
you should be able to demand discovery on all of
your phone data for the last several years or something,
whatever is the scope of the crime that you're being
charged with. They will not let you have that, even
though they can use that against you. And that's not
equal justice. It's because they have these agreements multi jurisdictional agreements.
(40:13):
It was called the Special Operations Division. They've completely you know,
revamped a lot of the code words or you know
the names of these secret programs because it was all
leak WikiLeaks and Snowden and others. But you're not allowed
to demand discovery and face your accuser on that data.
(40:35):
They can use it against you, and they can also
you know, make up what they call parallel construction, So
somebody is perjuring themselves basically lying about where they got
where they got the evidence against your Why what was
the probable cause that caused them to look into some
(40:58):
aspect of your phone data or something like that, and
so there goes freedom of association. By the way, you
got you went to a meeting about you know, citizenship
or something like that, and all of the people that
were at that meeting or links to some militia group, Well,
now you're under suspect because you went to that meeting.
(41:19):
So there's there's no freedom of association.
Speaker 13 (41:21):
They're going to chunk to the fart guilty by association exactly, right,
Uh huh. Yeah.
Speaker 14 (41:27):
A big problem with a lot of the sovereign citizens
is that they don't they they try to do their
thing in an inappropriate venue, you know, like they've got
a speeding ticket or you know, some stupid uh ticket
for some municipal thing, and they wanted to bring forward
(41:53):
constitutional issues in a municipal court. That's stupid.
Speaker 8 (41:59):
Well, mean you have Do you have a valid contract
if you by getting a driver's license and a real
idea you talked about real.
Speaker 13 (42:08):
Lifty Yeah, which have become one.
Speaker 8 (42:12):
And the same, by the way, if you in a
lot of places, Yes, in a lot of cases. But
I was going to say, do you have a valid
contract with that jurisdiction if you weren't told that you
were relinquishing your state citizenship. No, And you could argue
that all these terms and conditions of that license are
(42:35):
not valid because I wasn't fully informed that I was
giving up my right to liberty and my right to
being a Kentuckian. And I was not told this when
I went to get that license. Dislike soft security number.
When I was growing up, I think Reagan was the
one that mandated that everybody had to have some security
number to be claimed as a dependent on a tax form.
(42:58):
I don't know what year that was, feteen eighty two
or something. I never had one. Growing up, I didn't
get a social Security number. And when I was of
age wanting to get a job, wanting to get a
driver's license, I was told by the adults around me
who were misinformed, that well, if you want to do anything,
you've got to get that sold security number in order
(43:18):
to get a driver license. I said, well, that sounds
like the mark of the beast. You've been preaching on
and talking about all this time, the beer mongering stuff
that you're going to lose your soul if you accept
the mark. You can't buy or sale. You can't get
a driver's licens or job without that damn so security number.
Speaker 16 (43:35):
Yep, that sounds like the.
Speaker 8 (43:36):
Mark of the beast. Well you just have to get
You have to get one if you want to do that.
Speaker 13 (43:41):
Got to comply.
Speaker 8 (43:42):
They act like do they act like it's not voluntary,
So there's no valid contract there. If you weren't told
you don't need one. You know, if you misinformed by
all the responsible adults around you, and you were underage,
and you've got a solid security number at sixteen or whatever,
now they just get assign them at birth.
Speaker 13 (44:02):
Yeah, Well not only that, but they fingerprint and footprint
them at birth, you know, so they get their biometrics
right out of it, you know, as sue as the
mother squeezes them off.
Speaker 8 (44:12):
And that's that's been the case in a lot of
places for decades, but not everywhere. There was a lot
of people born at home that had to apply for
a birth certificate with witnesses you know that are just
a little bit older than me, you know, talking I
don't know, late well, early seventies on back there's people
that were still born at home, and there was a
(44:32):
radical movement after, you know, these sovereign citizen types provoked
some people to do start doing home birth again. I
talked to him woman in Ohio that had one or
two rested children in like five or six that weren't
rested births, you know, saying that that's some kind of
contractual nexus or whatever. But with a pirate government, you're
(44:53):
not going to get very far anyway in any of
these arguments unless you try to approach these people pre arraignment,
you know, Yeah, one of the methods I've heard, and
you slap down there, uh, in their private capacity, you
serve them as hey, I don't have any valid contracts
here with this government because I was not fully informed
(45:17):
of the change in my status. You know, I'm no
longer a natural person accord to the view of your jurisdiction,
and I don't accept that. You know, a lot of
times you can end up with a diversion agreement because
they don't want to fool.
Speaker 16 (45:29):
With all that.
Speaker 13 (45:30):
Yeah, sometimes you can, you can work. I've talked to people.
I've heard people talk about, uh having certain wins in
court on these on these matters, with these arguments, oh
the win and uh, but you know, it's a kind
of a mixed bag, you know, and so there's.
Speaker 8 (45:49):
A compromise, compromise, and that generally, once the local constabulary
is on to you, if you don't have any political ambitions,
don't start to leave you alone because it's they know
you're not going to back down. And just unless they
run some off one you like they've done with others,
or they end up with getting swatted and killed. Yeah,
(46:11):
there's no songs written about some of them, but uh,
you know, beyond Randy Weaver, there's a lot of unsung
people that stood up and got killed.
Speaker 13 (46:19):
Yeah. I admire people to that do stand up. And
do you know the difficulty I have is in defining
where where the line is with regard to divorcing yourself
from the state and all of a sudden by default
defaulting to becoming a global citizen. Because I have a
(46:41):
feeling that's kind of what everybody what they really want anyway,
the globalists I'm talking, they don't. They want the death
of a name of the nation state anyway. So if
everybody divorces themselves from the state, that's perfect because by
default you become a global citizen.
Speaker 8 (46:58):
Well, you're not stateless because you're you if you were
born in one of the fifty states. That's they are
still states. They still have secretaries of States. So by
that evidence alone, you're not stateless. They want to say
that you they want.
Speaker 16 (47:10):
To That's what I had.
Speaker 8 (47:11):
One guy accuse me of a county crust or said,
I know you're a world citizen. I said, where did
you get that? I'm not I'm not saying anything about
being a world citizen. I was born over here neckon
County over I never mentioned anything about being a world citizen.
But they have been trained when they're seminars on how
to deal with what they call law fair or you know,
(47:32):
people trying to do legal warfare, le whatever you want
to call it, and they should consider that you're trying
to find remedy in the court when there's no remedy
in the court for somebody that in the in the
black robed religion, the priests of law, that's what they're
(47:56):
always trying to do is provide remedy. If there is
no remedy, then that leads to you know, vigilanteism and
taking them out and logged in your own hands sort
of thing.
Speaker 13 (48:08):
Yeah, exactly, Oh, miss, Anyway, I need to move on,
but I appreciate that this is a very deep and
interesting conversation and one we've had over the years with
different people, similar types of one thing. Yeah, go ahead.
Speaker 8 (48:23):
One thing. I'll mention that same paralegal use that Constitution
section X in confront of the Kentucky Chief Counsel to
the governor, and within a year, within a year, the
concealed carry permit process was scrapped in Kentucky because you
have the right to carry concealed under those first two
Kentucky constitutions and the next two constitutions are missing. They
(48:46):
have no signed copies of the eighteen fifty or eighteen
ninety two.
Speaker 13 (48:51):
Yeah, Hey, God bless thank you appreciate the call. All right, Yeah,
it's a very interesting conversation. And I think that people
should do everything they can, whenever they can, to try
to minimize their exposure. Certainly, we don't want to be
fourteenth Amendment subjects to the system, to the really the beast.
(49:17):
That's what looks like. I hate to say it, but
a lot of times the other countries, the Muslim countries,
call the United States the great Satan. Well, certainly, when
the US has done a lot of the things around
the world that it has, I could certainly see how
they would believe that. And I could certainly see how
(49:37):
with pushing real id and pushing all of this global panopticon,
surveillance state stuff, police state stuff, that's not individual liberty,
that's not freedom. And so to that degree, there is
a Satanist soul in America. But I'm still inclined to
(50:01):
I don't want to be down talking America all of
the time either, because that is exactly what our enemies
want us to do. They want to trick us into
talking us down talking. The United States, in my opinion,
is the best country that's ever been created, and so
(50:23):
much in terms. Historically I'm talking has been done by
America to end slavery. You know, they brought you know,
we hear all of this stuff about these these communists
and these university campuses that talk about critical race theory
and talk about oh, you know, the United States was
(50:45):
founded by people who own slaves. Look how evil the
whole system is. We freed the slaves, listeners, Well, there's
still people in the in the world right now that
still owns still owns slaves to this day.
Speaker 14 (51:00):
Yeah, look at the Middle East.
Speaker 13 (51:01):
Yeah, look at Africa. I mean, so the system that
we had, and I say had past tense because I
think we certainly have moved away from it, has made
the average person wealthy compared to the rest of the world.
(51:23):
There's a reason why other people from other countries are
dying to get in here, literally dying. I mean they
float across the ocean in a raft to try to
make it to our shores. Many of them die in
the process. There is a reason why they're doing that.
There is a reason why we had this flood available
(51:45):
legal aliens during the last administration in the first place,
because this is a place that they recognize. If I
could just get to America. I can, I can live
a good life. We want to protect that. We need
to protect that, and it's worth protecting, and that's really
(52:10):
you know, so I don't want to downtalk America. The
problem is we need to get back to those values
that made America great. Is Trump doing it well? People
can argue about that, can't they. There are some things
that he's done that his administration has done that I
think are arguably good. But there are some things that
(52:31):
I think are worrying signs. And I just pushed toward
technocracy and the idea that we're not going to end
the policies that have put us into a mess. And
I'm talking again. I'll come back to Christine Oleman, the
real idea act at perfect example. Why is she promoting that?
(52:57):
Why isn't Trump doing something? And I realize it's a
congres national law. Why aren't the GOP the Republicans who
control Congress. Now all three branches are all you know,
both Houses of Congress and the Executive branch are all
controlled by Republicans. Why aren't they doing something to solve
(53:21):
this problem? Why isn't anything of substance being done to
solve the problem? Of the global police state, or the
police state at least in America.
Speaker 14 (53:33):
Well, both parties are involved in building it, exactly. And yeah, well,
I would say the Republicans even more than the Democrats. Vicky, Well,
they started taking our nation apart in the nineteen eighties
with Ronald Reagan, and that I believe, based on the history,
(53:57):
that the idea was to create a condominium governing structure
over the continental Americas, the entire continent. Now why they
thought they could have an American government and a Canadian
government and a Mexican government, but with a condominium governing
(54:23):
structure over the top of them. I have no freaking idea,
because you know, you can only serve one master and so.
And that's a big part of the problem in the
United States is how many levels of law we have.
(54:44):
And most people are not even aware of the idea
that the Westphalian nation state is under attack by globalists.
Speaker 13 (54:56):
Right, yeah, exactly. I'll tell you what st up to.
The brake already got a couple of calls on the line,
so we'll have to take them after the break six ten,
six hundred seventeen seventy six. If you'd like to call,
plenty of open lines six ten, six hundred, seventeen seventy
six or toll free eight four four six four six
eight three seven six. It's eight four four six govern
lots more to cover, and really we're just really just
(55:20):
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Speaker 17 (58:34):
One two five.
Speaker 25 (58:46):
Still American remy news al must depute Detroit's Big three
automakers are criticizing President Trump's trade deal with the United Kingdom.
Speaker 26 (59:08):
Jeff Minosso reports.
Speaker 27 (59:09):
Under the trade deal announced by President Trump Thursday, British
carmakers will be given a quota of one hundred thousand
cars per year that can be sent to the US
at a ten percent teriff freight. That's got the American
Automotive Policy Council worried. It represents four to GMN Stulantis
and says it'll now be cheaper to import a UK
vehicle than a USMCA compliant vehicle from Mexico or Canada,
(59:33):
and along with vehicles from many other countries, for now
are being charged a twenty five percent tariff, which could
change as it did for the UK upon a trade
deal with the US, though as American and other automakers
because of the tariffs have also boosted investments and manufacturing
here Jeff Monosso, Fox News.
Speaker 28 (59:53):
President Trump says he's open to Congress raising taxes on
the rich in the budget plan he is hailing as
the big Beautiful Bill the push a forward the Trump
Administration's agenda. Senate Majority Leader John Thune weighs in we don't.
Speaker 29 (01:00:05):
Want to raise taxes on anybody. I mean, we're about
lowering taxes on Americans. But as the House and they're
they're the first mover on this is they look at
how to accomplish the Presden's big, beautiful bill. They've got
to figure out how to wedge all the things that
things a president wants to do.
Speaker 28 (01:00:21):
Florida Senator Ashley Moody says the priority must be extending
the president's twenty seventeen tax cuts.
Speaker 30 (01:00:27):
I can tell you right now we are all united
and that we have to extend the tax cuts. We
can't have the American suffering a rise in taxes.
Speaker 28 (01:00:38):
The National Defense analyst says the issue of who is
qualified to serve in the military should be determined by
Congress and not a presidential executive order.
Speaker 26 (01:00:46):
Chad Groaning has more.
Speaker 31 (01:00:48):
As we've reported on AFN, the Supreme Court has ruled
in a six to three decision to allow the Trump
administration to enforce a bent on transgender people in the military.
While legal challenges proceed. Free federal judges had ruled against
the executive order signed by the President. Bob McGinn has
a National Defense Strategies and author of more than a
dozen books, including Preparing for World War Three. During his
(01:01:10):
military career, he fought against the push to allow homosexualists
to openly serve in the military.
Speaker 18 (01:01:15):
The executive order that mister Trump put out basically says
the same thing that we said back in ninety three
when we wrote Don't Ask, Don't Tell, and then Hegsath
of course implemented a policy that led to the challenges
in the court.
Speaker 31 (01:01:31):
But mcginni says, this is about a law that ought
to be made by Congress rather than by executive orders.
Speaker 4 (01:01:36):
The problem Congress ought to weigh in heavily on this issue,
and unfortunately, because they're all politicians, they typically go with
the voice that's heard the loudest, which is of course
from the left, and that's unfortunate, but it's a reality.
They should have settled it a long time ago.
Speaker 28 (01:01:55):
I'm Chad Groaning, a Christian advocate for Families. Warrens that
schools will soon let out for the summer. There's no
time to let your guard down from LGBTQ activists.
Speaker 26 (01:02:07):
Bob Kellogg explains.
Speaker 32 (01:02:09):
Even those school teachers, administrators, and school board members take
time off during the summer. Linda Harvey of Mission America
notes LGBTQ activists never let up, and she says the
previous administration is the reason for increased homosexual.
Speaker 33 (01:02:24):
Activism because of the Biden administrations, the recklessness of the
teachers' unions. They're continuing push for all of these progressive agendas,
and it's been hard for parents, even though many more
parents are involved now to overcome this.
Speaker 32 (01:02:42):
Nevertheless, with the Trump administration, she says, we're beginning to
see signs.
Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
Of a rollback.
Speaker 33 (01:02:48):
We're beginning to see a rollback that I hope continues
through the Pride season in the summer, where we see
less activity on the promotion of homosexual pride in our
communities and schools, and I hope we continue to see
the rollback of funding for the Pride Parade.
Speaker 32 (01:03:11):
It should be noted that June has been designated as
Prague Month when classes are not in session. I'm Bob Kellogg.
Speaker 28 (01:03:19):
American Femmy News is online at AFN dot net and
download the AFN.
Speaker 26 (01:03:23):
Mobile app for your Apple or and or device. I'm rustling.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.
Speaker 3 (01:03:37):
Order, New world order, New world order, This is a
moment to season. The glide escape has been shaken. The
pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again. Before
they do, let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 4 (01:03:50):
Us, a new world order, a world where.
Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.
Speaker 5 (01:03:57):
Nevertheless, United States to make keepers of to shape this
so that the problem of the put rensidentity will be
the emergence of a new international order the.
Speaker 6 (01:04:09):
First decade of the twenty first centuries. But out of
what is will be seen as the greatest.
Speaker 7 (01:04:15):
Restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy,
greatest restructuring of the global economy, a.
Speaker 6 (01:04:22):
New world order was created.
Speaker 9 (01:04:26):
Documenting the crisis of our republic.
Speaker 10 (01:04:28):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed the secret societies, the secret oaths, and a secret.
Speaker 9 (01:04:42):
Proceedings waiting war on the new world order.
Speaker 11 (01:04:45):
The Council's dis government.
Speaker 12 (01:04:47):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 9 (01:04:57):
This is govern America and Ricky.
Speaker 13 (01:05:01):
Davis from FREMA Regions five and ten. This is the
second hour of Governor America. Vicky Davis is here. I'm
Darren Weeks. It continues to be the tenth of May
twenty twenty five. As we go back to the phones
right now, welcome to the show caller from Utah. Go ahead,
you're on the air.
Speaker 15 (01:05:19):
Go ahead, please, Yes, Darren, this is Tom Rogers in Utah.
Speaker 13 (01:05:25):
Yeah, go ahead.
Speaker 15 (01:05:27):
John Benson and Glenn Ambert were the authors of a
book called United Slaves of America. So John was big
uru who actually influenced Rogers sales in the sovereign citizen issue.
The problem is John and Glenn both ended up in
(01:05:49):
prison for a couple of years.
Speaker 13 (01:05:50):
Yeah, that's the problem, isn't it.
Speaker 15 (01:05:55):
So no matter what you believers say or theorize, they
have the guns, they have the power, and they have
the court recal.
Speaker 13 (01:06:05):
Yeah, and that's that's really you. You're you hit the
nail on the head. That's to the point I was
trying to make earlier. You can be one hundred percent
right and still find yourself in a situation where you're
in prison or or worse. I don't know if there's
anything worse than prison really, but I think I'd rather
be dead. But the point is is that, yes, I
(01:06:29):
can think of and I come back to Irwin Shift.
Speaker 15 (01:06:32):
Remember Irwin Shift, Oh, yes, yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:06:37):
I think he was right. Technically, I think he I
mean he had like several paragraphs that he uh And
for those that don't know, those that might be new
listeners to the Patriot Radio venue, Irwin Shift years ago
was a man who was fighting the income tax, teaching
(01:06:59):
people holding semin ours about how to avoid paying the
income tax. And I do believe the income tax is unjust.
I do believe it's unlawful, and I think Irwin Shift's
arguments were in my opinion, I think they were sound.
But in the end it didn't really matter because they
ended up locking him up and Ermine Shift died in prison.
I think he was chained to a bed. As I recall,
(01:07:21):
they treated him very poorly. And frankly, I think he
was a hero. I think he died a hero because
he died fighting for not only what he believed in,
but also fighting for liberty and trying to free people
from the tyranny of the income tax. The problem is
(01:07:42):
is that you can be one hundred percent right and
still end up finding yourself in a very bad position.
Let's put it that way.
Speaker 15 (01:07:55):
I think impressed by the statement and exclusiation.
Speaker 13 (01:07:58):
Yeah, Vicky, you're you're muted. Sorry, go ahead, Tom.
Speaker 15 (01:08:05):
I was just gonna say I was impressed with the
words in the Ecclesiastics where says wisdom brings grief. Yep,
knowledge grief sorrow.
Speaker 13 (01:08:14):
Because in much wisdom there is much grief, and increasing
knowledge results in increasing pain. That is true. And we
struggle with that pain all the time because what do
you do with the knowledge once you acquire it? I mean,
get in trouble?
Speaker 15 (01:08:32):
I can.
Speaker 13 (01:08:34):
Yeah, that's my concern. Hey, hey, thank you for the call.
I appreciate it. God bless you. Let's move on and
then let's take another call. Hello, you're on the air.
Go ahead, please.
Speaker 34 (01:08:45):
Are you talking to me?
Speaker 13 (01:08:46):
Yes?
Speaker 35 (01:08:47):
I am, I'll have it okay, this morning, Good afternoon,
shar you. I wanted to say something listen about the
election of the Propose that would be all right with you?
Speaker 8 (01:09:00):
You sure?
Speaker 35 (01:09:02):
Okay? And I also wanted to make a common to
that illegal immigration. You don't have to be sympathetic to this,
but you just have to keep in mind it's from
an observation perspective, You're not meant to be sympathetic to it, okay,
saying that you have a horrendous abortion rate in the US.
(01:09:22):
An abortion directly impacts the population, and those state has
had the courage yet to put a cap on the
number of abortions that they allow per year. But what
I will say about it is that immigration illegal and
illegal has replaced the population that's been lost by abortion.
(01:09:43):
So please keep that in mind. You don't have to
be sympathetic to it. But it's an observation.
Speaker 13 (01:09:48):
Well can I can I insert a response to that?
Speaker 17 (01:09:51):
You do?
Speaker 35 (01:09:52):
Please do?
Speaker 13 (01:09:53):
Let's let's let's examine the reasons why people don't, you know,
more broadly, just setting aside the abortion I for a moment,
let's examine the reasons why people don't want to have
children in America today. It's in my view, I think
it's symptom of a much bigger problem. And the problem
(01:10:16):
is people are looking People want to have children. Many
of them want to have children, but when they look
around them and they see things conditions are not good.
They don't believe that they can provide a future for
a child. They can see tyranny in closing in on them,
(01:10:36):
then that doesn't create the conditions necessary for them to
want to pro create. Couple with that, you have Marxists
and population control people who are promoting communist ideologies in
the schools and the universities and frankly on TV as
(01:10:57):
well in the media, and you have this ideology which
turns young people who normally would populate into you know
that it gives them, fills their ideas with their heads,
with ideas on why being in these traditional roles of
parents isn't something that's in their best interest. So I
(01:11:21):
guess what I'm really getting at is the reason why
we have a declining population right now, declining reproductivity in America,
and I think in other countries as well. Japan has
an aging population is because of the the population control
(01:11:42):
ideologies and the conditions that have been set by globalists
that create the environment that people don't want to pro create. Now,
as far as abortion is concerned, that's another symbol of
another greater problem. And frank as a as a person
who is a conservative, I should be all in favor of,
(01:12:05):
you know, people who have the the opposing ideology, you know,
offering themselves because they're they're they're killing their own. But
I don't like genocide. I don't like children being being
murdered in the womb. And uh So the question is, then,
(01:12:25):
what will we do about all of this? Uh that
that really is the sticky, wicked, isn't it. What do
you do to counter this Marxist ideology, this population control
push that's going on everywhere, and to fix the economic
(01:12:47):
climate that makes it necessary. I know one thing that
Trump's trying to do, is he well, at least he's
talked about doing. And who knows if he'll follow through
on it or not, because I don't even know if
he has a plan. I don't even know if from
day to day. I kind of feel like he gets
up on a whim and just does everything on a whim.
But they've talked about incentivizing people to have children in
(01:13:10):
our country. I don't believe. See, once you get generations
of people in from foreign countries and they'll be indoctrinated
with the same Marxist ideologies that other people are indoctrinated with,
then you're going to have a similar problem. And I
(01:13:31):
think that that's exactly what the globalists want. They have
no allegiance you have no allegiance to the American value system.
When you are importing other people into the country, they
don't have allegiances to our values. That's the problem. I
don't have a problem with immigration. I have a problem
(01:13:53):
with people who are not vetted. Number one and number two,
they're not made to assimilate because the process of assimilation
guarantees that they will be, or at least makes much
more likely that they will be. They will hold those
values and they'll get along better. And they're not going
(01:14:15):
to be raping people and you know, grabbing women at
the store and beating women down because that's what they
did in their home country and it was acceptable. So anyway,
go ahead, No, and just.
Speaker 35 (01:14:29):
You know, and I just this one more comment from
me about those subjects is that the currency and the
economy does have you know, ninety percent you know of
you know, what your plans about having kids are, because
you know, the currency has distorted the value of stuff.
(01:14:52):
And so the currency itself has something to do with
you know, the cast living that the decorates, the based
guarantee that we have. I mean, it's it's distorted the
value of things. And yes, the economy has an impact
(01:15:13):
on the number of kids you're willing to have. But anyway,
the common about the election of the pope, which is
an underdiscussed topic, and it's the civil rights violation if
you ask me, But forty some percent, over forty percent
(01:15:34):
of the cardinals were ineligible to vote because of their age,
and so that's a discussion about, you know, why there
was a rule made to eliminate forty percent of the
voting capable cardinals because of their age. And so I
(01:15:55):
just wonder if this papal election is politically motivated, because
you know, I mean, under normal circumstances, being eighty doesn't
bore you from voting.
Speaker 13 (01:16:07):
Yeah, well, I agree with you. Why why would we
believe that such a power center like the Vatican would
have an honest election. I mean, you're talking about a
lot of power, a lot of influence by people all
around the world. A lot of people look at the Vatican. Well, look,
they look at this guy as the spokesman for God.
(01:16:30):
With that level of influence, why wouldn't it be rigged?
Speaker 35 (01:16:37):
Well, yeah, there are good rules that the Church has,
and there are rules that ought to be looked at.
But I'd like to see that the good rules that
the church has, you know, in place. And the other
concern is, and I understand that not everybody who should
be a cardinal is a cardinal, but the other concern
is that is one guy from you know, Chicago, you know,
(01:17:04):
I you know, the installation to cardinal happened less than
a year ago, and so anyway, okay, yeah, I mean
that has just got to be addressed.
Speaker 14 (01:17:18):
That.
Speaker 35 (01:17:18):
You know, they flat out rendered over forty percent of
the cardinals ineligible to vote, and you know.
Speaker 36 (01:17:31):
That.
Speaker 35 (01:17:32):
I'm not sure what kind of an impact that that had,
and I'll leave it at that.
Speaker 13 (01:17:36):
Yeah, well, I appreciate that knowledge and insight. I was
not aware of that. I wasn't honestly following it that
closely because I don't care who the pope is. You know,
to me, they're all evil. But that's just my opinion.
I'm not a Catholic, though, so I guess for those
that are, you know, they could probably disagree with me
(01:17:57):
quite significantly. But hey, listen, I appreciate the call, thank
you very much.
Speaker 14 (01:18:02):
That's fascinating. I didn't know that either, So I would
say they roped the election.
Speaker 13 (01:18:08):
That's what it sounds like. Yeah, that's certainly what it
sounds like now getting back real quickly. I don't want
to spend too much time on this. We were talking
about birthright citizenship earlier, and I mentioned that The New
American had a good piece on that, an interesting piece.
It talked about the historical and legal foundations of the issue.
(01:18:29):
They say, the principle that allegiance determines citizenship, talking about
the crux of the issue being that, you know, of course,
the primary argument for birthright citizenship hinges on the citizenship
clause of the fourteenth Amendment, which reads all persons born
or naturalized in the United States and subjects to the
(01:18:52):
jurisdiction thereof. And that's the phrase that a lot of
people stumble over. And I don't like it either. I
don't want to be the subject to the jurisdiction of anybody,
but the subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of
the United States and the state wherein they reside. Advocates
(01:19:12):
of birthright citizenship often isolate the phrase born or naturalized
in the United States, disregarding the critical qualification that follows
subject to the citizenship thereof. The New American says this
latter phrase is not mere surplusage it carries substantive legal
meaning rooted in allegiance, not mere presence. That's where they
(01:19:36):
come down on the issue allegiance. Senator Jacob Howard of Michigan,
who introduced the citizenship clause in eighteen sixty six, explicitly
stated its intent. He says this will not, of course,
include persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens,
or who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign
(01:19:58):
ministers accredited to the government of the United States, but
will include every other class of persons. Senator Howard's remarks
make clear that the mere accident of birth within US
borders does not automatically confer citizenship if the individual's allegiance
lies with a foreign power, How can a person be
(01:20:20):
both a citizen and an alien simultaneously if mere birth
location were the sole determinant of citizenship. The principle that
allegiance determined citizenship rather than mere nativity predates the Fourteenth Amendment.
The American legal tradition, heavily influenced by English common law
and principles of natural law, consistently rooted citizenship in the
(01:20:44):
voluntary allegiance of an individual or in the case of
minors their parents. Swiss legal scholar Emeric de Vital, whose
treatise The Law of Nations profoundly influence the founding fathers,
and defined citizenship as follows quote. The natural born citizens
are those born in the country of parents who are citizens.
(01:21:06):
As the society cannot exist and perpetuate itself otherwise than
by the children of the citizens. Those children naturally follow
the condition of their fathers and succeed to all ceced
to all their rights. But tells definition underscores that citizenship
is inherited from one's parents, not dictated by the location
(01:21:28):
of birth. The society's continuity depends on the transmission of
allegiance from citizen to parents, from citizen parents to their offspring.
This principle was fundamental to the understanding of citizenship at
the time of the constitutions drafting, so that goes on
from there. Talks about the Supreme Court decision. There was
(01:21:51):
a landmark Supreme Court decision which are frequently cited in
birthright citizenship. People are always talking about it, and that's
the United States versus Wang kim Ark eighteen ninety eight.
In that case, the Supreme Court held that a child
born in the United States to Chinese parents who were
(01:22:11):
lawful permanent residents, was a citizen, he says. Yet critical
to this decision was the lawful and permanent resident status
of Wang kim Ark's parents, distinguishing it sharply from cases
involving the children of illegal they call it illegal immigrants.
I'll call them illegal aliens or temporary visitors. So that's
(01:22:32):
the key. You follow the status of your parent, not
you don't go on where you were born. So that's
the answer really to anchor babies, ladies and gentlemen. That's
the argument that I think people should be making. So
I don't you got any feedback on that, Vicky, Well.
Speaker 14 (01:22:55):
That's the I would agree with that. The idea that
you can just come here, drop a baby at the
airport and that baby is therefore an American citizen, that's insane. Yeah,
in that case, I mean, anybody in the world can
(01:23:16):
become an American citizen just by being born on our soil.
Speaker 13 (01:23:20):
And that's exactly what's exactly what they try to do.
Now a couple of couple of things follow up on
last week's show. The question came up on last week's
show about I Think. I asked the question about the
long Port of Long Beach in California, and it was
said that the Chinese still owned the Port of Long Beach.
(01:23:42):
Apparently that is not true. I did a little follow
up after the show, and from my understanding is I
found an article back from October fifteenth of twenty nineteen
where it says, and this is from you Universalcargo dot Com.
So apparently a trade publication, they said US forces China
(01:24:05):
out of Port of Long Beach terminal ownership. They said
that it's probably not a good idea for a country
you're fighting in a trade war to control one of
the biggest ports. That's a situation that was set to
happen because of the costco shipping deal to buy Orient
Overseas International Limited back in twenty seventeen, and President Trump
(01:24:26):
back then started a battle as of escalating tariffs terrifiights
with China in twenty eighteen. So it says who owns
the Long Beach Container TERMINALIL owns the Long Beach Container Terminal.
That's the company that operates the Long Beach Container Terminal
at the Port of Long Beach, and the company shares
(01:24:49):
the same name as the terminal rather than the oil
using an orient overseas moniker. Costco, the China's ocean shipping
company Shipping is a It's a Chinese state owned company.
Taking over its Hong Kong based rival, Oil means Costco
would take over Long Beach Container Terminal. Apparently, though the
(01:25:13):
US put a stop to that. The US government required
Oil to sell the Long Beach Container Terminal and it
took some time for it to find a buyer and
the sale to get the approval. But things we're moving
forward with the transaction, and my understanding is that it
was completed.
Speaker 14 (01:25:34):
So guess the best part of that story is to
know that they're actually watching, they're actually paying attention. Yeah,
that's good news.
Speaker 13 (01:25:44):
Yeah, well that was the first Trump administration, is my understanding.
That was again back in twenty nineteen. But so again,
you know Trump. I can't say there's no good that
comes out of the Trump administration. My problem is I
don't trust any of these characters, and we've been stabbed
(01:26:07):
in the back many, many times, and there are things
that are happening today that are very unsettling with regard
to the Trump administration and Donald Trump himself. We can
explore some of that, maybe we will as time progresses.
All right, we're at the halfway point of the broadcast, however,
and we're going to have to take a break and
(01:26:28):
we'll come back and cover some other things as well.
And I do have a follow up too on Kennedy.
Regarding last week's show. There were some things that I
believed about Kennedy and somebody did a deep dive on that,
and we'll get into that sum when we come back
for the break. Apparently things aren't what they were originally
(01:26:50):
reported to be, So there's a tease for you. We'll
be back in a moment. Stay with us.
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(01:28:44):
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(01:29:29):
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With a spoof go to find out what's really going on.
Speaker 2 (01:31:05):
This is in America.
Speaker 13 (01:31:21):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governor America. Vicky
Davis is here. I'm Darren Weeks as we continue on
here on this tenth of May twenty twenty five. Last
week on the show, I mentioned about the health and
Human Services announcing plans to pay Maderno one hundred and
seventy six million dollars for an mRNA flu vaccine. This
(01:31:42):
has been widely reported in the media, apparently. But the
problem is, you know, and I didn't drill down on it,
except that there were media reports about it, and I
talked about this on the show based upon those media reports. Thankfully.
(01:32:03):
Jeffrey Tucker over there at the act of it. Oh well,
it's actually the Brownstone Institute is where he's writing from.
He went to look for the actual contract because he
wanted to know more about it, looked more deeply into it,
and he says, uh, there were another report. Let me
(01:32:25):
see if I can find the original. Sorry about that,
because yeah, they don't link directly to it. Okay, yeah,
here it is. Sorry about that, folks, He says, uh, Yeah,
it's kind of weird because this article starts off in
the middle. Sounds like it's in the middle of it.
He says. Yet another report just appeared about how HHS
(01:32:47):
has contracted with Maderna to produce a bird flu vaccine
and the contract is worth one hundred and seventy six
million dollars. The latest report, dated May first, runs in
something called indoor Criminology Advisor.
Speaker 14 (01:33:04):
Indoor criminology.
Speaker 13 (01:33:08):
Oh, indo criminology advisor. Okay, indo chrinology chrinology. Sorry, that's me.
That's my lack of being able to pronounce things properly.
But the headline is HHS announces plans to pay Maderna
one hundred and seventy six million dollars for mRNA flu vaccine.
(01:33:30):
He says. Similar stories of run in US News and
World Report and Infectious Disease Advisor. HHS announces plans to
pay Maderna one hundred and seventy six million dollars for
mRNA flu vaccine. There's he says. This is where things
get odd. You can search the sites of HHS, NIH
(01:33:52):
and ASPR and will not find anything about this contract.
He says. That's odd because the government always announces these
things unless they're classified. He says, so, what's the credible
authority for this huge breaking news. Each of these stories
links to the cited authority as Health Day and its report.
(01:34:15):
He links to the report, however, that story is from
July second, twenty twenty four, fully nine months old. Health
Day in turn cites the Associated Press, which also has
a story from July second, twenty twenty four, So he
has the first couple of paragraphs of the Health Day report. Now,
(01:34:39):
he says, Maderna itself announced the reward last July. In
other words, this is supposed to be breaking news. That
was old news. This supposed old news was suddenly resurrected
by US News as it were new, as if it
were new, for no apparent reason. The supposed journalists who
(01:35:00):
wrote that story, Robin Foster and Stephanie Brown, are said
to work at Health Day, and they have no contact information,
And he says, my email to the site has not
yet been answered. He says, so far as I can tell,
if such a contract did exist, it is now canceled
or on pause. He says, what the breaking news story
(01:35:22):
did do was circulate widely in the Health Freedom movement,
cited as an example of how RFK and Trump are
betraying their base. He says, I personally received probably a
half a dozen contacts from people who spent who sent
the US News story to me. Several mentioned it on
the phone without recalling the source. It is now widely
(01:35:44):
believed that the Trump administration has approved one hundred and
seventy six million dollars for Maderna. Even though there is
no credible news source on this at all, the canard
is already burrowed into the brains of the people who matter.
Is this how medical news works? He says. The story
gets even better. The one hundred and seventy six million
(01:36:04):
dollar number from last spring was upped in January twenty
twenty five to an incredible six hundred million. The widely
reported story appeared on January seventeenth, twenty twenty five. Here's
here's an article from CNN. HHS invests nearly six hundred
million dollars in Maderna's bird flu vaccine experiment. He says,
(01:36:26):
this was just before the Trump inauguration. If you go
to AHHS now what you will find is a dead
web page. So the article goes on from there, you know.
But I just wanted to call this to people's attention
because I'm trying to be fair. Okay, I don't want
(01:36:49):
to be I don't want to contribute to something that
is a takedown campaign. There are many things we can
criticize the administration for, but I am trying to be
objective and fair in my reporting here, and so it
looks like this could very well be. And this is
(01:37:10):
something that this writer in Brownstone Institute, who was also
republished an activist post, believes that this was something that
was resurrected in order to make RFK and the administration
look bad and lose support among his staff, and that
could very well be. So I just wanted to bring
(01:37:31):
that before people's attention because I think it's important. Based
upon that, I called RFK Junior last week controlled opposition,
and frankly, he may very well be. There are other
things that RFK Junior has said that I don't approve of,
but this one we will assume. You know, based upon
(01:37:58):
a lack of evidence that the contract is new. There
looks like they're rehashing old stories, bringing them up like
they're new to make, you know, for propagandistic purposes. In
other words, you know, Trump was right right about one thing.
The establishment media really is an enemy.
Speaker 14 (01:38:16):
Of the people, no question about it.
Speaker 13 (01:38:20):
And knowing what the truth is today becomes more and
more of a challenge all the time. You know, they
talk about missing disinformation, Well, they're the biggest proponents of it,
the biggest purveyors of it. So anyway, well, let me let.
Speaker 14 (01:38:39):
Me tell you what happened with that public health was
a a military service. You know, the Surgeon General is
over the public health. Well, what they did and in
(01:39:00):
two thousand and five they moved the Assistant Secretary for
Health to be under HHS, and so HHS sits over
the top and supposedly, I guess theoretically that gives the
(01:39:25):
public health system a civilian management structure because the military
is not allowed to operate on our domestic soil. And
I would think that that includes the Public Health Service
as a branch of the military. And I do mean
(01:39:48):
branch of the military. I didn't know that before I
started researching the public health system, but that's how that
happened to be, how it happened to be put under HHS.
(01:40:08):
So that's what he that's what he should be looking for,
is to do a search on the Assistant Secretary for
Health under HHS. Yeah, and that's that's a very important
connection that I don't think anybody would just conceive out
(01:40:33):
of their own imagination. You know, it's like, he can't
make this stuff up, you know, they this is what
they did.
Speaker 13 (01:40:44):
Yeah. Now, last week, turning a corner here, we were
talking about this power outage in France and Spain and Portugal.
It was part of France anyway, but it's being in
Portugal especially, and they had this big, huge mass blackout,
and you know, they try to blame some kind of
atmospheric event and everything, but what it really boiled down
(01:41:06):
to is they're not generating enough enough power over there.
There's not enough enough electricity going into the grid and
they're putting you know, they're they're pulling more and more
out of the grid and not enough going in. And
it doesn't take a rocket scientist. You don't really have
to understand much about electricity to know that you can't
(01:41:27):
get something out of something that you don't first put
in it. And uh but now, uh, they're instead of
trying to fix the problem what Spain, what they're trying
to do over there in Europe is cracked down on
people talking about it.
Speaker 14 (01:41:42):
Oh yeah, that makes sense.
Speaker 13 (01:41:44):
You know, they're they're they're invoking myths and disinformation with
regard to that, and uh, trying to crack down on
people who are trying to expose Well, good luck, because
I'm not in Spain, Portugal or France. I'm not in Europe.
So too bad for you, because I'm not going to
quit talking about it, you know, But we have more
(01:42:05):
and more, you know, silliness going on with regard to
the climate climate change. A recent article published in Nature
claims that climate liability lawsuits. You remember the kids suing
the oil companies. I think the name of the group
was called Our Children's Future, and they were suing Supposedly,
(01:42:28):
they were children suing because you stole our future. And
you know, I predicted at the time that they were
going to lose. The only thing I was surprised about
was how long that it took. Because you have so
many different corrupt judges everywhere, they kept pushing it forward.
Finally it got to a place I think it was
the Supreme Court finally struck them down. But anyway, now
(01:42:51):
there's similar lawsuits, climate liability lawsuits, such as ones with
various states in the US States, municipalities, and they're continuing
to pursue these and supposedly on rock solid legal grounds.
I don't know how rock solid they could be. But
(01:43:14):
the real clear Wire says that new research supposedly proving
that the world would be twenty eight trillion dollars richer
today but for carbon emissions from fossil fuels over over
a thirty year period from nineteen ninety one to twenty twenty.
Ignoring the emissions from developing countries, notably China, which today
accounts for one third of all energy related greenhouse gas emissions,
(01:43:37):
the authors focus instead on oil companies, which they call
the carbon majors, especially Saudi Aramco, Chevron, Exon Mobil, BP,
and Gasprom. According to the authors, Chevron has caused an
estimated two trillion dollars in damages and perhaps as much
(01:43:58):
as three point six trillion dollars. Exxon Mobil is right
behind them with one point nine trillion and supposed damages. Similarly,
Saudi Aramco and gas Prom are each responsible for two
trillion dollars in damages. BP is the laggard at just
one and a half trillion dollars in damages. Levying fines
of those amounts, which greatly exceed these companies' market values,
(01:44:21):
would lead to their immediate bankruptcy. And that is the point.
If they can get their win on this, these companies
could cease to exist or you know, would be significantly
curtailed anyway. And so this is the point these judges,
(01:44:42):
I honestly I think the law should be changed to
prevent these types of lawsuits from going forward.
Speaker 14 (01:44:49):
Oh, I totally agree with you.
Speaker 13 (01:44:51):
These are clogging the court systems. The whole point of
this is to solve to push forward a political agenda,
and it's one that will, ultimately, if they get their way,
will rob us and future generations of the ability to
have energy at all.
Speaker 14 (01:45:11):
That's that's their objective. No energy, no economy, no life. Yeah,
it's a it's a it's a roundabout way for depopulation.
Speaker 13 (01:45:22):
Yeah, exactly death now.
Speaker 31 (01:45:25):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (01:45:26):
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Kearney, he was talking back a
while ago about climate change and net zero. You know,
this guy is a total scumbag, and you know he
called climate change in net zero the greatest commercial opportunity
of all time. Listen to what he had to say here, VICKI.
Speaker 39 (01:45:46):
It was only in February that, emboldened by Sir David Attenborough,
we met in a packed guildhall to map the road
to Glasgow. Almost immediately COVID intervened the journey.
Speaker 14 (01:45:58):
What's at I said, guild hall? Yeah, said, They met
in a guild hall that goes back to the city
of London and the category of the livery company for
the electricity is the fuelers if you e L L
E ers, Yeah, and it was. It was a consultant
(01:46:22):
from the UK who started the project of restructuring our
electric system, our electricity system and came up with the
design for the national transmission grid. So just a little
(01:46:43):
bit of background.
Speaker 39 (01:46:44):
Yeah, absolutely, in a packed guildhall to map the road
to Glasgow. Almost immediately COVID intervened. The journey went virtual
and its timetable was extended. And some might have become concerned,
but the resolve of the private sector, the resolve of
private finance, has redult We've made considerable progress and momentum
is growing. Our destination remains the same. The COVID crisis
(01:47:07):
has not altered that. In fact, what COVID has done
this tragedy has exposed the problems with undervaluing resilience, ignoring
systemic risks, and not investing upfront. And so it is
with climate change, a crisis that involves the entire world
and from which no one will be able to self isolate.
COVID is forcing a social reset for countries and a
(01:47:30):
strategic reset for companies. Society is placing a greater value
on resilience and on sustainability. One hundred and twenty six
governments have now committed to net zero, including three global
giants China, Japan, and South Korea in the last few weeks,
and more and more countries are recognizing that green stimulus
(01:47:53):
is essential. Building a sustainable future will be capital intensive
after a period when there's been too little investment. It
will be job heavy when unemployment is soaring. It's what
the world needs for its.
Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
Future, and it's what we all need right now.
Speaker 39 (01:48:10):
Given the wholesale shift in economic and social drivers of
value since COVID, it will be a rare company whose
pre crisis strategy remains optimal. And so businesses of all
stripes increasingly recognize that changing consumer preferences and new climate
policies are creating the greatest commercial opportunity of our time.
(01:48:31):
The leaders are publishing their transition plans for net zero.
There's now five hundred major companies that have science based targets,
and there's a further five hundred in the pipeline by Glasgow.
Net zero transition plans will become the norm for large companies.
Speaker 13 (01:48:49):
Okay, they'll become the norm for large companies and he
calls them science based. There's nothing scientifically based about this.
This is all pseudoscience. This has never been proven.
Speaker 14 (01:49:01):
Consensus science is what it is. There scientists that are
first and foremost environmentalists, and they want to deprive us,
all of us of energy.
Speaker 13 (01:49:19):
Yeah, absolutely, and.
Speaker 14 (01:49:21):
They plan to make a lot of money on it.
Speaker 13 (01:49:24):
There's a relationship between We talked about this before. There
is a relationship between carbon dioxide and temperature. But it's
it's not the carbon dioxide that's driving the temperature. It's
the temperature that's driving the carbon dioxide. And that was
demonstrated al Gore and is inconvenient truth kept He didn't
(01:49:44):
zoom in on that chart because he didn't want you
to see that global temperatures, that the carbon dioxide was
following the global temperatures, not the other way around. The
amount the higher the temperature is, the more the carbon
dioxide tends to go. So they're lying to you, is
(01:50:07):
the point, ladies and gentlemen. CO two is a very small,
tiny amount of the atmosphere. Water vapor is the overwhelming
greenhouse gas that holds the majority of heat in And
are you going to get rid of the water vapor?
I don't think so. So this is a non problem.
(01:50:30):
Go ahead, what did you say.
Speaker 14 (01:50:31):
I was gonna say, maybe that's one of the purposes
of chemtrails.
Speaker 13 (01:50:34):
Well, that's exactly what they're trying to do with the
chim trailing or the geoengineering or atmospheric injection or whatever
they're calling it on a given day, is that they're
they're using this to try to hold in heat, basically
polluting the planet in the process to try to you know,
(01:50:54):
while hold you know, holding in heat under the guys
of holding in heat or gosh, reflecting the sun. That's
what they're trying. What they say they're trying to do,
what they're actually doing is creating cloud cover which will
hold in the heat.
Speaker 14 (01:51:09):
Yeah. You know what, if, if ever there was a
subject for world government terraforming the planet should be right
up there outlaw completely banned weather modification in any form whatsoever.
Speaker 13 (01:51:28):
Yeah, zero head says, we're two months away from the
northern in the northern hemisphere, particularly in the lower forty eight,
leftist corporate media, billionaire funded climate nonprofits, some taxpayer funded
and woke lawmakers, blinded by their climate crisis blinders, will
begin orchestrating a mass media informational war of climate hysteria.
(01:51:49):
How does day Ever, Behind the scenes, these climate alarmists
will pull many levers so that their climate hysteria headlines
dominate and manipulate public opinion and push for climate taxes,
toxic degrowth policies, and even depopulation measures, all under the
guise of saving the planet. Yet this so called emergency
(01:52:10):
is nothing but fake news. Bloomberg data shows that corporate
media headlines publicizing the hottest day ever typically surge in
June and peak during July and August, closely mirroring the
height of summer in the Northern Hemisphere. The number of
Hottest Day ever headlines in corporate media has surged to
record levels over the past three years, coinciding to the
(01:52:32):
massive twenty twenty two eruption of the underwater of volcano
Hanga Tonga hunga high, high, high ape.
Speaker 14 (01:52:42):
The eruption set again see it.
Speaker 13 (01:52:45):
I can't say it once. This was an underwater volcanic
eruption they're talking about, which sent vast plumes of soot, water, vapor,
and sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere and events some experts
cite as the key driver behind recent warming trends, Yet
mainstream media has largely excluded the Tonga eruption from the
(01:53:06):
climate conversation, as it challenges the prevailing narrative that Taylor, Swiss,
private Jet and Calfarts are the primary culprits. Another inconvenient
truth for climate alarmist comes from private meteorologist Ryan Maui,
who noted in an ex post welcome climate update, global
temperatures have returned to early twenty twenty three levels. Gee,
(01:53:29):
I bet they're not going to talk about that, are they?
Speaker 14 (01:53:32):
You know what? The whole subject just makes me sick
to my stomach because they've only had technology for about
one hundred years. And how old is the Earth? How
long has the Earth that we know of been producing
(01:53:53):
life and doing what it does. The stupidity of it
just boggles my mind. Well, we're well, these these sociopaths
can get up there and say, you know, we're going
to stop climate change or whatever it is that they say.
(01:54:17):
It's just it, it's so absurd, it's just yes remarkable.
Speaker 13 (01:54:24):
SI Tech Daily has a headline Antarctica's astonishing rebound ice
sheet grows for the first time in decades. This just
came out April twenty ninth. So they're trying, they're going,
but you get ready, just like zero head says, get ready.
They're going to be promoting this thing as a huge
(01:54:45):
thing because there's money to be made, there's money behind it.
A little bit more of mark.
Speaker 39 (01:54:50):
Current private finance will fund the initiatives and innovation of
these plans, provided that is provided that private finance has
the necessary information and the tools and markets. And that's
why our objective for COP twenty six is to build
the frameworks so that every financial decision can take climate
change into account. We're publishing today our COP twenty six
(01:55:13):
private finance strategy to build a market in that transition.
It rests on four pillars. Three RS climate comprehensive climate reporting,
a transformation in climate risk management and mainstreaming of climate returns.
And one M creating new markets to mobilize private capital,
(01:55:33):
especially private capital and investment into emerging and developing economies.
Speaker 13 (01:55:39):
Okay, we'll have more of that on that.
Speaker 14 (01:55:41):
That is a galactic sized con game.
Speaker 13 (01:55:45):
Absolutely absolutely it is. I'll tell you what we got
the break. Let's go ahead and take the break and
we'll continue on the other side. Much much more to
cover here on Governor America. Our number three is straight ahead,
don't go away.
Speaker 19 (01:56:35):
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Speaker 20 (01:57:20):
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Speaker 21 (01:57:35):
Do you love watching television? If you're on a fixed budget,
you need to make this free call right now to
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That's a one hundred and sixty five dollars value yours free.
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Speaker 34 (01:58:46):
Rest seek.
Speaker 9 (01:59:04):
American Family News. I'm Robert Thornton.
Speaker 40 (01:59:07):
The Trump Administration's nuclear talks with Iran our schedule to
resume this coming weekend. Here's Fox's Jillian Turner.
Speaker 41 (01:59:13):
We're learning that Steve Witkoff President Trump special envoy is
going to in fact represent the US at the coming
negotiations with Iran that are going to take place over
the week, and the President's getting some important backing now
from key Republicans up on Capitol Hill who are pushing
for new legislation that would essentially require Iran to dismantle
(01:59:35):
all of its uranium enrichment in order for these negotiations
to continue. Senators Cotton and Graham want to codify US
military action should the Iranian regime renee on any of
its commitments to President Trump.
Speaker 40 (01:59:49):
President Donald Trump will be making his first trip to
the Middle East during his second term next week. Newark
Liberty International Airport experienced another radar outage in the mid
to flight delays and cancelations. Speaking to reporters, White House
Press Secretary Caroline Levet stressed the importance of modernizing air
traffic infrastructure.
Speaker 42 (02:00:08):
This outage at Newark Airport speaks to why the Secretary
of Transportation yesterday made a massive announcement in investing in
our aviation safety in our telecom system.
Speaker 40 (02:00:21):
Newark's flight troubles have been ongoing for weeks, as the
airport faces staffing shortages and equipment failures, the Pentagon will
immediately begin moving as many as a thousand openly identifying
transgender service members out of the military and give others
thirty days to self identify. Under a new directive issued yesterday,
boosted by tuesday Supreme Court decision allowing the Trump administration
(02:00:43):
to enforce a ban on transgender individuals in the military,
the Defense Department will begin going through medical records to
identify others who haven't yet come forward. Seen world on
this at AFN dot net. The University of Pennsylvania is
now ordered to remove athletic records won by men who
were competing on women's sports teams and give them to
the women they beat. Afen's bronzon woodrooves more.
Speaker 43 (02:01:05):
The Education Department's Office for Civil Rights gave this order
to you Pin. The office found that you Pin violated
Title nine protections for female student athletes. AFA talked with
Zachary Marshall, editor in chief of Campus Reform.
Speaker 44 (02:01:16):
This really has to do with the controversy around Leah Commas.
Although the communications around this announcement did not mention him specifically,
he was UPenn swimmer and the most famous male swimmer
competing in women's swimming a few years ago.
Speaker 43 (02:01:32):
Will you pin follow the Trump Admin's order? Awlet's reported
last month how the Trump administration held one hundred and
seventy five million dollars in funding to you Pin because
of Upen's policies around transgender athletes.
Speaker 44 (02:01:42):
So this is just common sense and there's really not
much to say for a story because why should men
win titles and records in women's categories? That makes as
much sense as Ron Swanson Pawnee Woman of the Year.
I would say it's upsur This is even controversial. Tostroduced
a black of whit. This is a black and white
(02:02:04):
this show.
Speaker 43 (02:02:04):
I'm Bron sin Widruff.
Speaker 40 (02:02:06):
Texas Scorecards says the state GOP measure would require state
issued licenses to identify illegal aliens as not eligible to vote.
The Senate bill would require driver's licenses and identification cards
issued to non citizens by the Texas Department of Public
Safety to display the phrase not eligible to vote on
the front of the license or ID. A Texas Civil
(02:02:27):
Rights Project attorney testified against the bill and said it
would create havoc for people attempting to vote after becoming
naturalized citizens. American cardinals are reacting to the election of
one of their own as Pope. Here's Fox's Jonathan Savage.
Speaker 45 (02:02:41):
He was made for it, says Cardinal Joseph Tobin of
Pope Lee of the fourteenth. American members of the conclave
which elected Cardinal Robert Prevost as the first US born
head of the Catholic Church have been speaking enrolled.
Speaker 36 (02:02:54):
A lot of dialogue occurred at meal time, coffee break,
those moments when you can engage one another.
Speaker 46 (02:03:02):
What was important was not the substance of what he said,
but the manner with which she's spoke.
Speaker 45 (02:03:07):
Cardinals Wilton Gregory and Robert McElroy revealing how the pope
won over the voters, several cardinals adding the Pope's US
nationality wasn't even a factor in Rome. Jonathan Savage, Fox News.
Speaker 40 (02:03:20):
And that to wrap on news this time around. You
can find more news online at AFN dot net.
Speaker 9 (02:03:25):
I'm Robert Thorne.
Speaker 1 (02:03:30):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.
Speaker 2 (02:03:37):
Order, new world for that new world order.
Speaker 3 (02:03:40):
This is a moment to see. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle them
again before they do let us reorder this world around.
Speaker 1 (02:03:50):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.
Speaker 5 (02:03:57):
Nevertheless, the United States that did make keepers to shape
this so that the problem of the put presidentity will
be the emergence of a new international.
Speaker 6 (02:04:08):
Order the first decade of the twenty first century.
Speaker 7 (02:04:12):
But out of what is will be seen as the
greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring.
Speaker 6 (02:04:20):
Of the global economy, a new world order was created.
Speaker 9 (02:04:26):
Documenting the graces of our rebublic.
Speaker 10 (02:04:28):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oths, and a
secret proceedings waiting war on the new world order.
Speaker 11 (02:04:45):
The councils of government.
Speaker 12 (02:04:47):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.
Speaker 9 (02:04:57):
This is govern America. Weeks and Pricky Davis.
Speaker 30 (02:05:04):
Bill Gates says he will donate ninety nine percent of
his tech fortune to the Gates Foundation.
Speaker 14 (02:05:09):
Today.
Speaker 30 (02:05:09):
He estimates his wealth to be one hundred and eight
billion dollars. It's one of the largest commitments in the
history of US philanthropy when adjusted for inflation.
Speaker 2 (02:05:20):
And the foundation work has spend.
Speaker 47 (02:05:23):
Way more impactful than I expected, and a great joy
to work with the people there and our partners. We've
decided that we'll take all the resources both in the
foundation and that I have, that will be given to
the foundation and spend that over the next twenty years.
Speaker 30 (02:05:39):
Gates started the foundation in two thousand with his now
ex wife Melinda French Gates. Over the last twenty five years,
they've funded vaccines, treatment for malnutrition, and spent a lot
of money trying to eradicate parts trying.
Speaker 13 (02:05:52):
To kill people. That's what they spend a lot of
money on. And welcome back to the broadcast our number
three of Governor America. It's the tenth of May twenty
twenty five. Welcome back into the show, ladies and gentlemen. Yeah,
Bill Gates deciding he's going to shut down the Gates
Foundation in twenty years. Well, I guess they plan on
having the Plan for Humanity completed, the Depopulation Agenda and
(02:06:18):
Agenda twenty thirty well completed by then, and so he
won't need it anymore. Certainly doesn't make anybody feel very
positive about the future. And you know, and that's not
surprising why people aren't having children, because why would you
want to bring children into a world like this? And
that's the problem. All right, Let's go to the phones.
(02:06:39):
Six ten, six hundred seventeen seventy six six ten, six
hundred seventeen seventy six are toll free eight four four
six four six eight three seven six. We'll get back
to some more of the Mark Kearney audio here in
just a moment, but first let's go down to Mark
and Texas. Hello, you're on the air. Go ahead, please,
I love some of that.
Speaker 16 (02:06:55):
That's all. Inflation is justin My whole life's been inflation.
That hasn't a stake in life. I mean, this is ridiculous.
My age brackets you and I'm the bust. Seventies. We
went through more inflation adjustments than any other group. And
the whole history of the world.
Speaker 13 (02:07:16):
It's been a study spiral, you know, in terms of inflation,
study downward spiral in terms of the value of the dollar,
which yeah, downward. You know. It's a lot of people
think it's rising prices. The rising prices are a symptom
of the problem of decreased dollar spendability, you know.
Speaker 14 (02:07:38):
Uh so it's because the US has been funding the
building of the entire world, you know. They put that
on the backs of the American people and in particular
the baby boomers.
Speaker 2 (02:07:54):
Yeah, I agree.
Speaker 16 (02:07:56):
Yeah, And just to add it sold to injury. We
inflated some we've in played the penny out of existence, Adam,
are you something right there?
Speaker 13 (02:08:05):
Yeah, they certainly don't want to use that anymore. Do
they produce any more of them, which means the old
ones ultimately will be worth something more. I don't know
how much more you'd want. How long do you want
to save your pennies?
Speaker 16 (02:08:19):
That's the question, those old wheat pennies. Isn't there pretty
much a lot a lot of it's copper in those?
So yeah, it's gonna have value, it will it sure will.
Speaker 13 (02:08:30):
Yeah, So anyway, go ahead, Mark.
Speaker 16 (02:08:34):
It's not called if you have a youngster and their
fiction to graduate high school, haven't become a meteorologist.
Speaker 13 (02:08:44):
That's a good field.
Speaker 16 (02:08:47):
It's the perfect field of endeavor, yep. Because it's always
going to be in the news and everybody's going to
be on the edge of their seat just waiting. Think
about we have meteorologists on site, I mean on not retainer.
They're actually employed with our electric companies. We have five
or six at every TV station. We have two or
(02:09:09):
three at every radio station we have The Army has them,
the Navy has them, the Coast Guard has them. What
are flying around plays for hurricanes and the media relatives
all coming together and they give us five different models
to choose from. That's still where it's going to hit.
Speaker 13 (02:09:28):
Yeah, well, I know the more the National Weather Service
just laid off a bunch of them. Whether or not
they'll higher them back or not, who knows. But the
problem with the World Meteorology, the Meteorological Accreditation Organization, they
they're as steeped into this climate change nonsense as well, right,
(02:09:52):
So it's just more in doctrination. So you you it'd
have to be a situation where you're dealing and I'm
I'm not sure if they are requiring now they're meteorologists
to bow down and worship at the heels of the
climatological climate change God little gee.
Speaker 14 (02:10:12):
I'm sure they are.
Speaker 13 (02:10:13):
But I believe I believe that that's the case. And
if you don't do that, you may end up finding
yourself discredited or you know, in other words, having your
credentials pulled.
Speaker 14 (02:10:24):
Our weather guy in the town I was living when
I first started my activism, his name was Scott Stevens,
and he was the first one that I know of
who started talking about chemtrails and modification of the weather
and all of that stuff. And ultimately he had to
(02:10:49):
I guess he left his job. I don't know if
he had to leave his job, but you know, in
since he was a weather man, I listened to what
he said. You know, he had credibility as far as
I was concerned.
Speaker 13 (02:11:08):
Yeah, it's the American Meteorological Society AMS is the organization,
the entity I was trying to think of a.
Speaker 16 (02:11:15):
Moment ago, but they're everywhere every I bet your corporations
have them. I mean, it would be the perfect occupation.
Never have to be right, never have to be wrong,
Just have an opinion and you're off to the races.
And in the summertime, what do you do. It's going
to be one hundred degrees, we don't see any rain inside.
(02:11:35):
Make sure don't leave babies in the car, you know,
watch your pets, that's all they do. That's it. And
it's the same stuff every flipping year. It's exactly the
same mantra. They This is ridiculous.
Speaker 14 (02:11:52):
I remember a you know, one of those phone survey people.
They called and asked me if there was a weather channel,
if I would subscribe to it. I said no. If
I want to know what the weather is, I just
look outside.
Speaker 16 (02:12:09):
Yeah. I wonder how many of these people even have
a window where they can do that. Now I can
go on the internet, and we all can't. We've all
done it. You can pull up the right horn, you
can pull up where the cap is to break through
the cap.
Speaker 8 (02:12:25):
Here we go.
Speaker 16 (02:12:26):
Yeah, temperature looks like it's gonna be the same as
due point in the morning. We'll go to have fog.
This isn't rocket science.
Speaker 13 (02:12:33):
Here, No, it's not rocket science. I mean, there are
a lot, there's a lot of things to it. But
the more you learn about it, the more you can
get better at predicting the weather yourself. Absolutely.
Speaker 14 (02:12:45):
You know what disturbs me is that they used to
talk about the jet trail. They don't do that.
Speaker 13 (02:12:55):
The jet the jet stream.
Speaker 14 (02:12:57):
The jet stream. Yeah, they haven't done that for about
ten years. And that really bothers me, and I wonder
if they didn't mess it up somehow.
Speaker 16 (02:13:11):
They do show that sometimes they really do that. They
just had an effect they showed, uh, just within the
last week, and it pretty much oscillated flyover country, you
know here in the center of the States, and the
jet stream. It took a dip over by California. You
come up, come up to overby let's say Colorado went
(02:13:31):
up north toakolor to turn around, come right back down,
and they went back up toward the east coast, and
that's what caused ninety degree weather in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Speaker 13 (02:13:43):
Yeah, I don't watch weather reports too much because, like
you were just saying, I mean, I really don't think
it's necessary anymore because you got so many different apps
that tell you the weather, and you got your own radar.
I don't even need to look at the meteorologists on
TV or anything now. I pretty much get my weather
from that. My particular app, the main one that I
(02:14:06):
go by is it gets its forecast from the National
Weather Service, and I think those meteurologists they do a
pretty good job at Yeah, I think it's pretty accurate.
But both the American Meteorological Society and the Royal Meteorological
Society have both issued at statements that adhere to a
(02:14:27):
climate change philosophy. You know, So even if they don't
require those that are credentialed with them to adhere to
their philosophy, I mean, obviously the pressure is going to
be on them to try to promote that because those
are that's your credentialing organization. Your livelihood largely depends on it. So,
(02:14:50):
I mean, this is how they they're influencing and shoving
these agendas off on people through professional associations.
Speaker 16 (02:14:58):
As part of the agenda. And that's exactly what they're doing.
Exactly what they're doing, and that's why they have so
many of them. And they can be consistently wrong. But
I'm not sound familiar. Doesn't that sound familiar?
Speaker 13 (02:15:13):
Yes, sounds like the media. They can be consistently wrong too.
Speaker 16 (02:15:18):
Yes, or FEMA or I mean, let's just name them. Yeah,
the list just keeps growing and growing.
Speaker 13 (02:15:24):
But if you say too much, that's true, you're a
disinformation agent. Yeah, you're you need to be censored it.
Speaker 16 (02:15:30):
You're not qualified to have an opinion on that, mister Weeks.
Speaker 13 (02:15:33):
Yeah, where are your letters after your name?
Speaker 16 (02:15:36):
You got to follow the science.
Speaker 11 (02:15:38):
Ya.
Speaker 16 (02:15:39):
Oh God, God bless you too. I just had to
throw that in there.
Speaker 13 (02:15:43):
All right, appreciate the call, thank you, thank you, God
bless All right, let's go to Michigan here up in
Flint and take another call. Hello, you're on the air.
Go ahead, please, yeah, yeah, you're on the air. Go ahead.
Speaker 48 (02:16:00):
The weaponized public he Catherine Wa Kwatt, intestively a super brilliant,
a legal loss scholar, did a sixteen minutes sole presentation
the title K Watts Own Words Killbox on Bitches K
(02:16:23):
Watt at the K for Catherine Watt like a light
bulb Bert's killbox. She definitively elusive it with Pentagram Pentagon
documents that she and her colleague UH forced with legal
(02:16:46):
action to disclosure proving that all of these vaccination programs
and as the earliest, the incarnation implementation, have been weaponized
(02:17:07):
for depopulation purposes.
Speaker 13 (02:17:10):
Yep, I don't doubt that one, bet the.
Speaker 48 (02:17:13):
First one that she well, no, Actually, David Martin, if
you haven't heard David martin in present entitled COVID Treatson Act,
you really need to hear that he's super brilliant, super eloquent.
Speaker 8 (02:17:36):
Wit the.
Speaker 48 (02:17:38):
Sixtinctly concise and in that presentation, COVID treesons acts with
the United States Code and the warp Speed Executive Orders,
which declares described the implementation of self assembling nano particle
(02:18:05):
robot in the injection moderna was created by the National
Science plum Station with the garant. How do you like that?
And I think that was twenty ten. Yeah, this is
all elucidated in his brilliant presentation. And this is at
(02:18:29):
a major, major league church on the East coast.
Speaker 13 (02:18:36):
Okay, Okay.
Speaker 48 (02:18:38):
And he did one three years ago in Salt Lake City,
I'm sure Mormon Assembly. Paul by the title Covid jebs aimed.
And it was in that one Covid jebs aimed in
which he elucidated the fact that Tuskegee was the first
(02:19:05):
National Public Health Service depopulation experiment.
Speaker 13 (02:19:12):
Yeah, that was the experiment upon the Blacks.
Speaker 16 (02:19:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 48 (02:19:16):
The siphilis gallery of injections without any informed consent disclosure.
Speaker 13 (02:19:23):
Yeah, well documented by the way.
Speaker 48 (02:19:27):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (02:19:27):
And then.
Speaker 48 (02:19:30):
If you haven't seen this one, there's two others. Uh, DARPA,
Mind Wars, Slow Kill Vactes, depopular Uh yeah, Dark Winter Okay,
DARPA mind war, slow kill vacues. That's all you really need.
I'm bitchoo and the guy that does that one and
(02:19:53):
this other one, uh entitled packing the Human Mind with
DNA slash rona hacking theme in Mind with DNA slash
rona at times. Watch this guy is awesome? Awesome?
Speaker 13 (02:20:11):
Are these documentaries.
Speaker 48 (02:20:15):
On bit shoot exclusively?
Speaker 8 (02:20:16):
I bit shoot?
Speaker 13 (02:20:17):
Okay? Can you write those? Can you send those to
me on an email?
Speaker 48 (02:20:26):
I can try. Okay, really bad damaged hands just a
microwave shit.
Speaker 13 (02:20:32):
Oh you can't say that word on the air.
Speaker 48 (02:20:34):
Yeah, the microwavey missions garbage. Yeah, it causes my hands
to gramp up really bad.
Speaker 13 (02:20:44):
All right, Well, I'll have to try to re listen
to this part of the show and jop the names down.
I did get some of them, but hey, I got
to move on. But thank you for the call. I
appreciate it. All right. Let's let's go back real quickly
here to the Mark Carney audio that we were playing earlier, Vicky,
because I want to finish that up so that we
(02:21:05):
can move on to other things. Earlier, I was playing
this audio from Mark Kearney. Mark Kearney has just become
the Canadian Prime minister, and I think it's important for
people to understand because he's this guy. I don't know
how you can get much worse than Justin Trudeau, but
(02:21:26):
if you could, the name would be Mark Kearney.
Speaker 14 (02:21:30):
Wasn't he the president or whatever of the Bank of Yeah,
he is a banker, yes, Englander.
Speaker 13 (02:21:40):
Well let's let's let's take a look here, because I
know that he came from a financial background. He has
high connections. I believe he's connected to the World Economic
Forum as well, because let's see Mark Joseph Kearney, Canadian
politician economist who is the twenty fourth and current Prime
(02:22:02):
Minister of Canada since twenty twenty five, served as the
leader of the Liberal Party and Member of Parliament since
twenty twenty five, and before entering politics, Carney had a
distinguished career in finance and public service. He was the
Governor of the Bank of Canada during the two thousand
(02:22:25):
and eight financial crisis, guiding Canada through a turbulent economic
period and helping to protect jobs and strengthen the economy.
According to the Bio, Anyway, I don't know how much
he really protected anybody. Honestly, I think he's protecting himself.
In twenty thirteen, he became the Governor of the Bank
of England, the first non Britain to hold the position
(02:22:47):
since its founding in sixteen ninety four, and he led
the UK economy through Brexit, another political and economic crisis
crises until twenty twenty. Yeah, Brexit is a crisis according
to what they say. So anyway, yes he's a big
time banker, but he's all in on the whole climate
(02:23:10):
change nonsense as you would expect. But what's interesting is
he spoke at this at this conference, and you know,
they kept dissolving out of his speech onto a full screen.
I guess they were having some kind of technical troubles.
And I was wondering what was going on because every
few minutes, I mean, he would he speak a little
(02:23:32):
bit and then they would take a full screen, and
then they would come back to him, and then he
would he was looking a little bit like a whipped puppy,
and uh, and then he would try to recap what
he was saying, talk a little bit more, and they
did take a full screen again, and uh, I was
wondering what was going on with this with a speech
and all of a sudden it hit me, Vicky. They're
(02:23:54):
on the cutting edge. These people are on the cutting
edge of of of of net zero. So of course
the entire venue where they're holding this conference would be
powered by green energy. So so obviously the wind turbine
powering the conference stopped turning. That's what I think was happening.
Speaker 14 (02:24:15):
Well, they wouldn't want to tell their audience that, right
while he's promoting green energy.
Speaker 13 (02:24:21):
So I don't know if the lights went out because
they kept dissolving to the full screen, but apparently there
wasn't enough, you know. And then then maybe a stray
cloud floated by the solar panels, so they weren't getting
any rays either. That's that's all. Wow, that's all I
could figure, you know. So, but listen, it's a small
(02:24:41):
price to pay to avoid dooms day, you know. So
he but he kept referring to something called TCFD, which
I had to look up, and it stands for Task
Force on Climate Related Financial Disclosure RECAP.
Speaker 39 (02:24:56):
Investors representing over one hundred and forty trillion of assets
are demanding this information and disclosure. In line with TCFD,
they're also calling on companies to disclose whether or not
the assumptions in their financial statements are compatible with the
Paris Agreement. With Ireland's announcement last week, over sixty countries
(02:25:16):
and national authorities now support the TCFD, and the most
forward looking are enshrining it in law, with New Zealand
leading the way. Since February, guidance from international standard setters
has sharpened. The IASB has made clear that where climate
change risk is considered material, the standards already require that
(02:25:39):
it's disclosed in mainstream financial statements, and theasb's guidance to
auditors shows that climate change is an issue that must
be regularly assessed by the accountancy and audit profession. So
allow me to translate. We have governments setting the goal
of net zero. We have over one hundred one hundred
trillion dollars of capital demanding action. At a minimum, companies
(02:26:03):
must disclose whether the assumptions in their accounts are aligned
with Paris. In other words, are they joining us on
the road to Glasgow or not? Now the best companies
are responding. Almost half of companies with market capitalization greater
than ten billion are disclosing in line with most of
the TCFD recommendations, but most isn't yet enough. We need
full disclosure, and we need full disclosure, particularly about forward
(02:26:29):
looking strategies. And this underscores the need to make climate
related disclosures mandatory.
Speaker 13 (02:26:36):
Making them mandatory. So okay, all businesses are going to
be controlled by the finance strings, the per strings.
Speaker 14 (02:26:46):
By the standards set by the City of London.
Speaker 13 (02:26:50):
There you go, exactly. This guy is a global banker.
All right, hang on, we got the bottom of their break.
Stay with us.
Speaker 48 (02:27:00):
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Speaker 9 (02:31:01):
A spoof go to find out what's really going on.
This is govern America.
Speaker 13 (02:31:17):
Welcome back to the broadcast Governed America. Final half hour
of the show today, as we're talking about climate finance
here or we were before the break. I look at
Climate Policy Initiative dot org, which says that global climate
finance has demonstrated remarkable resilience and growth amid global crises.
They claim, reaching one point four to six trillion US
(02:31:41):
dollars in twenty twenty two. So this is going on
in a major way. Yeah, people, I think you got
your you're not. I don't think your volume is full
of vicky.
Speaker 14 (02:31:54):
Oh okay, people should understand that guild system of the
City of London. Originally it started out with individual tradesmen
and they set the standards, you know, whether you were
a candle maker or cloth you know, if you manufactured cloth,
(02:32:16):
they set the standards. But then, you know, as the
world grew, as businesses grew, they created guilds of corporations.
So there is a guild for the insurance corporations and
a guild for the hospitals, the Association for Hospitals. They
(02:32:44):
set the standards, so they are the master marionettes for
the world's largest corporations.
Speaker 13 (02:32:53):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 14 (02:32:55):
So what they're doing with dictating these climate standards is
that they are taking control over business, you know, all businesses,
because all business you know, they've done analysis and you know,
what percentage does your business contribute to quote global warming
(02:33:19):
or climate change or whatever. But they've come up with
this system of standards indicators that each corporation has to
evaluate their business against. These standards dictated by the City
of London. Yeah, that whole system needs to be shut down.
Speaker 13 (02:33:42):
Yeah, exactly, you know. And according to the World Resources
Institute COP twenty nine, wealthy nations agreed to a new
collective target providing three hundred billion dollars annually by twenty
thirty five for climate midtication and adaptation in developing nations,
(02:34:03):
up from the previous one hundred billion dollar goal. And
beyond this, public and private actors are urged to mobilize
one point three trillion dollars per year by twenty thirty
five for the country's most vulnerable to climate change impacts.
These targets reflect recognition of the gap between what developing
(02:34:25):
countries can provide domestically and what's needed from external sources.
But the whole thing, you know, there's one thing to
adapt to climate change, because the climate does change naturally,
but human caused climate change is a myth, Ladies and gentlemen.
It's not real. Is it political? It is a con
(02:34:48):
game exactly right now. According to the World Bank, they
delivered a record forty two point six billion dollars in
climate finance for fiscal year twenty twenty four, a ten
per increase from the previous year, and committed to raising
climate finance to forty five percent of total lending total
lending forty five percent of total lending for fiscal year
(02:35:09):
twenty twenty five. So again the purse strings. There's a
lot of money to be made from.
Speaker 14 (02:35:14):
This, right Yeah. And if you think it doesn't affect you,
that's where your tax dollars go to support that con game.
Speaker 13 (02:35:24):
Yeah, uh, they say the World Bank. The World Bank
aims for balance between adaptation and mitigation funding. And the
mitigation funding is really the thing that I should be.
You know, it's one building buildings, building things, structures, infrastructure
to withstand let's just say, severe storms or floods. That
(02:35:44):
should be common sense, you know, and that's fine to
be strengthening or hardening your infrastructure against various things including
wildfires what have you, that may happen naturally. Of course,
I'll a lot of the wildfires we have, let's say
in the West of western part of the United States
(02:36:04):
are due to very poor policies that operate or put
put in that we're put into place under the guise
of environmental protection.
Speaker 14 (02:36:15):
So exactly, miss Environmental Protection Agency has been basically running
our entire country from within the agency, both through their
power to affect the other agencies of government and their
ability to impose requirements on our states.
Speaker 13 (02:36:39):
Yeah. Now it's very very good that Trump supposedly anyway
supposedly pulled us out of the Paris Agreement. I would
argue that we never really were in the Paris Agreement
because it was never ratified. Number one and number two
though how much does it really matter that much? Because honestly,
on a local level, this is being implemented in a
(02:37:01):
lot of places in cities, big cities across America. They're
adhering to the Paris Climate Accord regardless of what the
status of the national government is doing.
Speaker 14 (02:37:13):
So that's well, that's our localities have been internationalized by
the US US Mayors, the Conference of Mayors, who voluntarily
sign on because they they got into the foreign policy business.
Speaker 13 (02:37:35):
Yeah, exactly, and so they're implementing the national you know,
they say, think globally act locally, and that's where this
is being implemented. It's on a local level, ladies and gentlemen.
So you got to get a handle on your city council,
your mayors, as Vicky pointed out, your state and local
governments is where really the battle is being fought in
(02:37:55):
a major way. But they like to keep you focused
on the national government because they're ones making the most noise.
So uh. But the Interior Secretary, Doug Bergham, speaking of
the national government, he was talking about this blackout in Spain.
He did issue a good statement. Uh, he was talking
(02:38:18):
about the we we've been discussing, and we discussed last
week how Spain and Portugal were pretty much left in
the dark by their their policies of green energy, and
unfortunately the United States in a big way, is heading
down that same road, the road to blackouts and brownouts. Uh.
(02:38:39):
California in recent years, actually not so recent years, going
back quite a few years. Now we're experiencing brownouts, rolling
blot you know, rolling power outages because they didn't have
enough money or enough electricity energy in their grid. And
so now other states are facing similar things as continue.
(02:39:00):
Michigan certainly is on board with that, we got an
insane bunch of politicians here led by the moronic, idiotic
governor that we have. But there's no shortage of politicians
in the legislature that are right on board with this
whole green energy wind turbine, solar array, solar panels everywhere,
(02:39:22):
buying up all the farmlands and turning it into energy generation,
and our.
Speaker 14 (02:39:28):
Lands covering it with windmills.
Speaker 13 (02:39:31):
Yeah, exactly who the thing.
Speaker 14 (02:39:33):
Is insane And they're not doing it, I guarantee you
they're not doing it out of a belief in climate change.
They're doing it because somebody is paying them to do it, absolutely,
whether whether directly or indirectly through a relative who has
a holding company or you know whatever. That's one of
(02:39:57):
the things that I discovered about our electric utilities is
that in nineteen thirties there was a legislation that was passed,
the Public Utilities Holding Company Act of nineteen thirty five,
And what that did was prevent utility companies from setting
(02:40:19):
up holding companies and basically taking over the whole rest
of the economy. Why because electricity is the first input
to any business. Yeah, okay, So what they did to
get around this and this was during I believe the
Clinton administration was to allow holding companies to own electric
(02:40:45):
utility companies. Now, that was something that I missed when
I was looking at at the utility system and the
smart grid and all of that, because I just assumed
that the Public Utility PUKA of nineteen thirty five was
(02:41:07):
protecting us. But they went around that by having the
utility companies themselves owned by holding companies. Yeah, and that's
something that must be fixed. They have to fix that.
Speaker 13 (02:41:24):
Yeah. Now, Doug Bergham is the Interior Secretary under the
Trump administration, and he warned that this blackout thing. As
I was saying, you know, we're following the path of
the other countries what Spain and Portugal and part of
France experienced about a week ago. We're headed that way too,
(02:41:45):
and it's coming to the West if we continue to
listen to losers like Mark Kearney.
Speaker 49 (02:41:51):
Let's talk about the energy demand equation. The US is
forecasted to increase its electricity production capacity from one to
two taro watts by twenty forty fifteen years from now.
During that same period of time, China is going to
go from three to eight carawaans, and that China forecast,
by the way, excludes any of the gen for nuclear reactors,
the new hydro electric facilities, and the new thorium or
(02:42:12):
if that ever scales that they're considering rolling out in
addition to what they've already planned to roll out. So
in the next fifteen years, China is adding five Americas
in electricity production capacity. And if everything gets automated, factories
are automated, AI becomes the great accelerant of the global economy.
China is hugely advantaged relative to where we sit today.
(02:42:34):
What do we need to do about it?
Speaker 50 (02:42:36):
Well, this is the if you were to ask me,
what's the thing that keeps me awake at night?
Speaker 6 (02:42:40):
This is the issue.
Speaker 50 (02:42:42):
And it's so thrilling and refreshing that you understand the scale,
the magnitude, and the importance of this. The AI arms race,
which is really driven by access to electricity, and China
last year brought on ninety four and a half gigawatts
of coal powered electricity. One gigawatt is Denver, so they
brought a ninety four denvers just last year. That's more
(02:43:04):
than all we have today for all of California and
all of New York is less than ninety four, So
they added to New York and a California worth of
elections last year just from coal. They're still getting sixty
percent of their baseload from coal, and people made they
stop listing when they hear the word coal. But coal
from an electricity standpoint, thermal coal is fantastic based load.
Speaker 13 (02:43:26):
It has, you know, all.
Speaker 50 (02:43:27):
The characteristics to allow you to maintain amfage and voltage
to keep a system going. And I think we just
saw in Spain. You know, they were celebrating on April
twelfth of this past month that they'd shut down their
last coal plant, and then a week after that they
were celebrating the fact that they had their first day
of one hundred percent renewables on their system. And then
the next week they were a global news story because
(02:43:48):
people were trapped in subways, all airline flights canceled, hospitals
were panicking with a lack of power because they had
a rolling blackout. In grid failure, because it just defies fit.
You can't run an electrical grid with just intermittent power.
You cannot run with something that is based in intermittent
(02:44:08):
is the definition of solar or wind, because the sun
doesn't shine at night and the wind doesn't blow every
day and you can have it. And so in America
we became dangerously close to that. Right now, we've got
parts of our country that are at risk for those
same kind of of what I'll call the Biden brownouts
and blackouts to happen because we over subsidized the intermittent
(02:44:29):
and we overregulated all of the baseload in an idea
to quote save the planet. And all we're doing is
potentially putting our own country at risk.
Speaker 13 (02:44:37):
So what are they going to do about it? That's
the question. Hopefully the Trump administration will be able to
be successful at you know, assuming that they mean well
in this regard and you know, with some of the
stuff we were talking about last week with regard to
the fact that they're into climate carbon capture, they're going
(02:44:59):
along with this. Yes, yeah, that's that's.
Speaker 14 (02:45:02):
Really what they need to do is let the utility
companies do their business and get the environmentalists out of it.
Speaker 17 (02:45:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (02:45:12):
It's been the environmentalists that have dictated utility company policy.
Speaker 13 (02:45:18):
Yeah, and so well, the banks are doing it now.
Speaker 14 (02:45:22):
Stop.
Speaker 13 (02:45:22):
The banks are dictating the policy, and they're putting a
stronghold on everyone, and they're in lies the rub you know.
Speaker 14 (02:45:29):
Well, that's another thing that they did during they deregulated
all of our industrial infrastructure. They deregulated and that that
includes the the bell companies, the phone companies, which was
probably a good thing, but nevertheless, they deregulated the natural
(02:45:55):
gas business. That's what ken Lay was involved in. They deregulated.
Uh I don't I don't know if oil was included
with the natural gas. But they deregulated the utilities, which
(02:46:15):
is what which is what started us on this path
of insanity with renewables, you know, as if they were
going to replace baseload capacity with a windmill. It's just
it's ridiculous.
Speaker 13 (02:46:35):
Yeah, let's go to the phones. Let's go to Arizona. Hello, Color,
you're on the air. Go ahead, please, Yeah.
Speaker 16 (02:46:43):
This is Bob calling us.
Speaker 36 (02:46:45):
See if you know about Tom Nelson as a climate
realism channel on Rumble.
Speaker 48 (02:46:50):
Have you heard of them?
Speaker 13 (02:46:51):
Uh no, I don't think you haven't.
Speaker 51 (02:46:53):
Okay, he produced the movie Climate the movie.
Speaker 36 (02:46:59):
You might have heard about that.
Speaker 8 (02:47:01):
It was a year or two ago.
Speaker 36 (02:47:04):
But anyway, it's Tom Nelson is his name. This guy
his whole life is about debating and debunking his climate
change and his Rumbup channel has top scientists from all
over the world.
Speaker 8 (02:47:18):
It's unbelievable.
Speaker 48 (02:47:19):
So I want to let people know about that.
Speaker 36 (02:47:21):
Just Tom Nelson, he has a couple of debates on there.
Ask you, how'd you know about the Tongua explosion?
Speaker 16 (02:47:28):
The what.
Speaker 51 (02:47:30):
The tongue explosion?
Speaker 13 (02:47:33):
Oh, that was something I covered in the article earlier. Yeah,
I was just reading about it. I was reading about it.
Speaker 51 (02:47:41):
Okay, Well, it's counterintuitive that a sudden warming actually disproves
the carbon dioxide hypothesis because it's supposed to go up
slowly and they deny any natural variability. But the explosion
predicted that the temperature would go up almost a degree centigrade,
(02:48:05):
which it did.
Speaker 36 (02:48:06):
In twenty twenty four.
Speaker 26 (02:48:09):
So my point there.
Speaker 51 (02:48:11):
Is that it's the sudden warming actually disproves their hypothesis.
Speaker 13 (02:48:17):
To follow me, Yeah, yeah, I think, and I think
that's what they were saying is now that it's over,
the warming that was associated with that is ending, and
so temperatures are going back down.
Speaker 16 (02:48:31):
Right.
Speaker 51 (02:48:32):
So the thing is it's easy to prove historical variations,
and the way they deal with that is to say, quote, well,
there's no evidence of natural variation in the last thirty
or forty years. Now they can't say that anymore because
of that Tonga eruption. So that's my basic point. And
(02:48:56):
I think it's interesting because when I heard about the
warming of twenty twenty four, about oh that's bad, until
I saw, you know, some scientific articles that explain you
know what I what I just said.
Speaker 13 (02:49:08):
Yeah, well, you know, the whole thing is based on fraud.
And of course we can go back to the hockey stick,
the fraudulent hockey stick, which was produced by a computer
model which pretty much ignores history, climatological history as we
know it, you know, completely wipes it out and flattens
the line up until you know modern you know, industrial revolution.
(02:49:30):
So yeah, everything. You know, if if they ever told
the truth, then the people wouldn't fall for this. But uh,
it's that's the thing that's really you know, the most
of the hot air is coming from academia and grant
funded to scientists, not real scientists exactly.
Speaker 8 (02:49:51):
Yeah, that's what.
Speaker 36 (02:49:52):
Climate the movie is all about.
Speaker 51 (02:49:54):
It's about how it started out with a little bit
of fun there.
Speaker 48 (02:50:00):
Everyone just piled.
Speaker 8 (02:50:01):
On to it until it became a trillion dollar business.
Speaker 48 (02:50:05):
So I would recommend checking that album.
Speaker 13 (02:50:07):
Yeah, I definitely look at that. Thank you so much
for that tip. I appreciate it.
Speaker 48 (02:50:11):
Thanks so thanks for your time doing a good job.
Speaker 13 (02:50:14):
Yeah, thank you, God bless you. All Right, Yeah, that's
very good. I like that feedback. I'm definitely gonna I
jotted that down. Climate the movie by Tom Nelson, important stuff,
all right. In the waiting moments of the broadcast, you know,
I came across this good video Vicky who you know.
We were talking about Maurice Strong earlier, and he's the one
(02:50:34):
that they say came up with the term I guess
climate change. He's basically was big in that realm, but
he had really a meteoric rise, and in fact he
was He came from supposedly poor upbringings and then ended
(02:50:54):
up becoming a multi millionaire I think in his twenties.
This there is a documentary that was produced I think
by what was it. I think it was the network
in Canada, CBC.
Speaker 14 (02:51:12):
Maybe yeah, could be.
Speaker 13 (02:51:15):
But anyway, they were talking about and of course again
Maurice Strong oversaw the ninth ninety two UNSAID conference United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development, which announced to the
world Agenda twenty one. Now they're calling it Agenda twenty thirty.
But Maurice Strong was set over that whole thing, and
he's been very, very connected to people like David Rockefeller
(02:51:37):
and that sort of thing. But the story about how
he got to where he was is pretty interesting.
Speaker 52 (02:51:43):
Maurice Strong is born in nineteen twenty nine, the year
the stock market crashed and the Great Depression began. He
grows up in Oak Lake, Manitoba, the eldest of four children.
Speaker 53 (02:51:55):
They live in extreme poverty.
Speaker 46 (02:51:57):
My father had no steady job, to work very hard
just to produce a bare subsistence living for us. One
of my most vivid memories is freight trains going both
ways loaded with people, people sitting on the box cars
up on the top, and when the train stopped, they
would come across to our house and to other houses
that were wanting water, wanting food, And I remember thinking,
(02:52:22):
what is wrong with the system, and maybe I ought to
do something.
Speaker 13 (02:52:25):
About it, you know, yeah, what is wrong with the system.
Might as well become a communist then.
Speaker 2 (02:52:30):
Never being poor. I remember them saying that he'd never.
Speaker 21 (02:52:32):
Be poor whatever he does, because he saw the restrictions
of being.
Speaker 13 (02:52:37):
Poor and they realized that in order to do the
things he wanted, he had to get some financial security.
Speaker 52 (02:52:42):
He makes his fortune in the Alberta oil and gas boon.
By his mid twenties, he's a millionaire. He wants to
be rich and independent, but also wants to champion social justice.
Speaker 13 (02:52:55):
So, in other words, he wants to be a communist,
just like Bernie Sanders. He wants to be a communist,
but yet he also wants to benefit from the He
wants to rake in the cash from the capitalist system.
Speaker 52 (02:53:07):
To his parents' dismay, he drops out of school at
fourteen to earn a living. He works as a deckhand
on ships. Eventually he comes back to Oakleagh to finish
high school.
Speaker 53 (02:53:19):
But now he has a dream.
Speaker 46 (02:53:22):
And I read a newspaper that was sort of blowing
in the wind, and it talked about Churchill and Roosevelt
meeting in the Atlantic and deciding that after the war
there would be a great new United Nations organization to
ensure that the world would never gain have to experience
the tragedy of war.
Speaker 13 (02:53:40):
And I fick, how did that work out for people
done that?
Speaker 46 (02:53:42):
And said that's what I want to do with Actually.
Speaker 52 (02:53:48):
Strong gets his first real job at age sixteen. Driven
by a sense of adventure and taste for travel, he
goes north as a buyer of first for the Hudson's
Bay Company. Here he makes a crew connection. Bill Richardson
is a prospector and a bit of an adventure Through
his wife Mary McCall, he's well connected in both the
(02:54:08):
Toronto establishment and abroad. The Richardsons are charmed by the
clever and ambitious young man. They introduce Strong to people
who have connections at the un.
Speaker 46 (02:54:20):
I learned very early though, I could never get any
job by applying to the personnel department because when they
look at my resume, they will never be impressed. So
I always was fortunate to get my jobs because somebody
met me and was good enough to offer me an opportunity.
Speaker 52 (02:54:39):
Strong gets a job as a clerk at the headquarters
of the United Nations in New York. Heady times for
a boy of seventeen, Maurice Strong has an extraordinary capacity
to make the most of his luck. After only a
few months in New York, he meets David Rockefeller, the financial.
Speaker 53 (02:54:56):
Guru of the un son of John D.
Speaker 52 (02:54:59):
Rockefeller, who's made construction at the famous un building possible.
It's the beginning of a long friendship and a network
of contacts and influence which today extends around the world.
Speaker 13 (02:55:10):
All right, I want to come out of that right
now because we're out of time. I'll put the whole
thing in the show notes. I encourage people to listen
to that. I think it was pretty interesting.
Speaker 14 (02:55:21):
Yeah, I'd like to hear that that was his entree
to the global system. Yes, through David Rockefeller.
Speaker 13 (02:55:30):
There you go, exactly, and it kind of feels like
some of these people are chosen to be brought up
under the ranks into the globalization.
Speaker 14 (02:55:39):
Thing that didn't that video didn't mention is that he
also helped organize the nineteen seventy two, oh yeah, a
Stockholm conference on human settlements. And so that's that's the link,
the nineteen seventy two conference, the nineteen ninety to conference,
(02:56:02):
and you know, just follow his career.
Speaker 13 (02:56:05):
Yeah, and that ends this twenty twenty five conference that
we're having today because we got to go. We're at
a time. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen for being with us.
Thank you, Vicky as always appreciate everything you do. God
bless each and every one of you folks. Out there
and join us back here next week, same time, same outlet,
and we'll do it all over again. Thank you, Dark Yep,
thank you, bye bye you everybody week