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October 25, 2025 176 mins
"Robot Roommate" 

Hosts: Darren Weeks, Vicky Davis 

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

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

COMPLETE SHOW NOTES AND CREDITS AT: https://governamerica.com/radio/radio-archives/22640-govern-america-october-25-2025-robot-roommate 

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

SNAP program threatened due to government shutdown. World Economic Forum promotes "No Till" farming. Panelist at WEF says robots will live among us in five years. Cancer research and national health databases. UK's Keir Starmer continues with Digital ID plans, despite massive opposition by the People. Real ID and the National Animal ID System were components of U.S. Digital ID implementation. E-Verify will not fix the illegal alien problem, but will give the government more power over everyone! Trump administration thwarts proposed carbon tax on shipping. Michigan students don't meet standards for reading, and more.
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Episode Transcript

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

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

Speaker 3 (00:10):
This is a moment to cease. The kaleidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.

Speaker 4 (00:17):
Before they do, let.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Us reorder this world around.

Speaker 5 (00:20):
Us, a new world order, a world where.

Speaker 6 (00:22):
The United Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision
of its founders.

Speaker 7 (00:27):
Nevertheless, United States it in a key position to shape
is so that the problem of the push rentidentity will
be the emergence of a new international order.

Speaker 8 (00:39):
The first decade of the twenty first century.

Speaker 9 (00:42):
But out of what is will be created 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 was created.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Documenting the crisis of our rebebty.

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 11 (01:13):
Waging war on the new world order.

Speaker 12 (01:15):
The councils of government.

Speaker 13 (01:17):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 14 (01:27):
This is Governor America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 15 (01:42):
From Female Regions five and ten. This is Governed America.
Vicky Davis is here. I'm during weeks. It is the
twenty fifth of October twenty twenty five. Nice to have
you with us once again, ladies and gentlemen. Light going
on and we'll be covering as much of it as
we can as the time progresses in the next three hours. Hey,
good morning, Vicky, good morning. Hey. You sounded loud and clear.
That's good. I always love it when a plan plan

(02:03):
comes together.

Speaker 16 (02:05):
Yeah, it was just I guess I forgot to click
the button to get into the room today. So I
was sitting outside.

Speaker 15 (02:13):
You were sitting out ready. You have to click a
button to get in the room. Yeah, I I didn't
know we had a green room.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Agree, we kind of do.

Speaker 15 (02:22):
Yeah, a green room is for those that don't know.
In television you have u when when you have a
TV studio, the room outside where the guests wait. It's
often called the green room. So Vicky evidently found herself
in the green room.

Speaker 16 (02:38):
Yeah, I was just hanging out there, you know.

Speaker 15 (02:40):
You know, well, okay, learn something new every day. I
was completely unaware of this. It was bizarre. Well, I know,
I didn't connect to the last minute. So maybe you
were waiting in what you thought was a green room
and it was really the room. But uh, anyway, and
that I guess we don't need to waste all our

(03:01):
show talking about the technical aspects of putting this thing
all together. It looks like, you know, we've had the
government shut down. Now, how many days has this been
going on now? With like twenty something now.

Speaker 16 (03:13):
So over twenty yeah, so what I just keep thinking
they're working together on this, Oh yeah, because the objective
has been to basically disintegrate the American government and stand
up the free trade area of the Americans, the I

(03:40):
guess you would say governance under the Organization of American States.

Speaker 15 (03:46):
Well, Trump is Trump is not talking about not talking
with China Canada rather about trade anymore. So yeah, that's
the USNCA is still is still a thing. The agreement
is still on the books, I suppose. I don't think

(04:07):
anybody's ever unraveled that.

Speaker 16 (04:11):
Yeah, No, I don't think so either. As a matter
of fact, that's why I got really angry at Trump.
During his first administration, he promised to get us out
of NAFTA, and he didn't do it.

Speaker 15 (04:24):
He got us into an agreement just like NAFTA. Yeah,
but he's saying now that because some of the things
that they did, you know, in terms of I don't know.
There was an ad that they ran. He didn't like
it was misrepresenting I guess what Reagan had said or something.
I only saw it in passing, but it kind of
ticked to Trump off. And now he says he's not

(04:46):
going to do any agreements with Canada on trade.

Speaker 16 (04:49):
So I wonder was that the speech that Reagan gave
about free trade, free trade?

Speaker 15 (05:00):
Yeah, I think it was something like that. I would
have to go and dig deeper. I haven't planned on
talking about this, but yeah, I mean, it's interesting to
see all the stuff that's going on, and it's difficult
to know what's true and what's not anymore in terms
of whether the administration, whether something is a front for
something else, whether it's you know, whether we're being played

(05:21):
or not. But you know, it dawns on me with
the government shut down, VICKI, they've figured out a way
to get people to really care about the government being
shut down. Cut off, the food cut, the food supply
off from the impoversed city.

Speaker 17 (05:35):
Families who rely on food stamps or federal SNAP benefits
will be cut.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Off at the end of this month.

Speaker 17 (05:41):
The state Department of Economic Security confirms the funding is
about to lapse. With the federal government shut down.

Speaker 18 (05:47):
More than nine hundred thousand people in Arizona rely on
those subsidies.

Speaker 19 (05:51):
And I want people to take a look at these
stats right here, right behind me. Now, these are from
the Center and Budget and Policy Priorities, And now the
numbers are from last year showing that one in eight
people in our state rely on the program. And like
Nicole said, that's nearly a million people now, more than
sixty eight percent our families with children.

Speaker 20 (06:11):
For days in the governments shut down, Americans are facing
real consequences.

Speaker 21 (06:15):
Federal employees are set to miss their first full paychecks,
and SNAP benefits could end in a week. The second
longest government shut down in history continues with no end
in sight.

Speaker 11 (06:26):
Millions who rely.

Speaker 21 (06:27):
On SNAP benefits to feed themselves are preparing for them
to run out on November first.

Speaker 22 (06:33):
I can't afford to stop at the store.

Speaker 21 (06:35):
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries is calling on the White
House to fund snap if the government doesn't reopen in time.

Speaker 23 (06:41):
The trouble Administration has the resources now, including through an
emergency contingency fund that has about five billion dollars in it.

Speaker 21 (06:50):
Democrats opposed a measure that would pay federal workers who
are still forced to show up. People like air traffic
controllers will miss their first full paycheck in a few days.
Workforce shortages have already been causing flight delays, and now
future employees are bailing from the FAA academy.

Speaker 24 (07:08):
They're asking themselves, why do I want to go into
a profession where I could work hard and have the
potential of not being paid.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
For my services.

Speaker 21 (07:16):
Democrats are still holding out for an extension of Obamacare subsidies.
Millions of Americans could see their insurance costs a skyrocket.
The clock is ticking with open enrollments starting in a week.

Speaker 23 (07:27):
The crisis has grown worse because of Republican and action
over the last several weeks.

Speaker 21 (07:35):
While the shutdown standoff continues into next week, Senate Democrats
plan to force votes on reversing President Trump's tariffs.

Speaker 15 (07:44):
Well, this could get ugly. This has the potential of
getting really, really ugly. Now, can you imagine how the
cities are going to look if people don't get their
genetically engineered and process poison.

Speaker 16 (07:56):
It would be a very dangerous place to be.

Speaker 15 (08:00):
This could make the Summer of Love look like a
gentle handshake. I think, yeah, yeah, yeah, food.

Speaker 16 (08:08):
Food is a we But of course, I mean I
think that's a weapon that the United States has used
on other.

Speaker 15 (08:15):
Countries, continues to do so. Absolutely. Yeah. In fact, I
think it was Catherine Bertini of the United Nations World
Food Program said food is power. We use it to
control behavior. Some may call it to bribery. We do
not apologize. Yeah, that's the way these people are. But
but you know, if you want to, you always kind

(08:36):
of wonder how the civil war is going to start,
you know, and this could be it. You know, all
the more reason why you need your powers at the
World Economic Forum to bail you out. Well we'll get
to that in a moment, because they've been talking about
food too. But here's a here's another little background.

Speaker 25 (08:54):
It goes out for the thing among the kid Now,
what can we do? We can't let alone. If we
do have job again, what can we do? Cadella's helping us.

Speaker 26 (09:05):
If Democrats continue to hold Americans but hostage, there will
not be enough funds to provide SNAP benefits for more
than forty million Americans on November.

Speaker 16 (09:14):
First, that is next week.

Speaker 26 (09:16):
The Administration would absolutely support that legislation. We hope that
it would come over the finish line. But the bill
that we'll get everyone paid and put everyone back to
work is the clean continuing resolution. That's what the President
and Republicans want to see.

Speaker 27 (09:30):
What you're seeing is this Democrat Republican fighting people on
opposite out sides of the end, won't come to the
table and negotiate and put people first.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
That is going to kill our state.

Speaker 27 (09:40):
That's going to kill our country, and is most importantly
going to hurt families and keys.

Speaker 18 (09:44):
Millions of Americans or a risk of losing critical benefits
that help them cover grocery expenses in formula for babies.
Gina Platanino is the acting director for the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program New to SNAP at the Food Research and
Action Center and Advocacy Group. Roughly forty two million people
rely on SNAP benefits to help pay for food The

(10:05):
US Department of Agriculture says SNAP has about six billion
dollars and a contingency fund, but November SNAP benefits or
expected to total eight billion dollars. The other federally funded
program impacted is WICK Women, Infant and Children, which provides
financial assistance to more than six million pregnant women, new moms,

(10:26):
and children up to the age of five.

Speaker 15 (10:28):
So, you know, I see from activist post it talks
about how Trump is setting price floors to prevent prices
from falling too low. Isn't it great that we live
in a free market?

Speaker 28 (10:45):
I know.

Speaker 16 (10:45):
That's the biggest joke on the American people ever, is
that they think that the free trade free market was
a good thing.

Speaker 29 (10:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (10:57):
Yeah. And the people, as we said earlier, that are
at the helm or at the at the height, at
the apex of all of this are the billionaires, the
billionaire class. I came across an article about Tim Hinch
how do you pronounce his name? Hinschiliff. He's at the

(11:18):
at the sociable. He has a uh, I think it's
a hamstack called sociable. And yeah, he's been connecting some
dots to the technocratic system from the panelists at the
World Economic Forum, because you know, the the WEF. They've
had some recent panel discussions, and it's interesting that the

(11:40):
same time that SNAP is being cut off, the World
Economic form is is talking about what to do about food,
you know, and they were dusting off the same idiotic
idea of no till plowing or no till farming.

Speaker 16 (11:55):
You know, uh, that that'd be a good trick. How
you do that?

Speaker 30 (12:00):
Well, the way they do it is to leave the weeds,
leave the what they call residue or whatever from the
previous year in place, and drill holes in the ground
and plants or seeds among all the weeds.

Speaker 15 (12:16):
Basically, so when you drill a.

Speaker 16 (12:19):
Hole, it's basically the same thing as tilling, except that tilling.

Speaker 15 (12:24):
But it's not. But it's not though. The problem with
that is you're leaving all kinds of things in place
that can grow and choke out your plants.

Speaker 16 (12:35):
There's a reason, so I also get some poisoned in
their poison plant.

Speaker 15 (12:39):
Well, that's exactly what they do too. I'll get to
that in a moment, but here's here's here's the World
Economic Forum because, as I said, panel discussions about what
to do about food This guy here is from the
United Arab Emirates, so listen to what he has to.

Speaker 31 (12:53):
Talk about it.

Speaker 32 (12:54):
The innovation is very important to our company, and technology
is as well.

Speaker 22 (12:58):
And I really like to.

Speaker 32 (12:59):
Comment that a lot of the innovation that we need
to grow yields around the world is already available.

Speaker 22 (13:04):
While the newest drone or.

Speaker 32 (13:06):
The latest aise cases generates a lot of excitement and
it will help us to grow yields in the future,
there are a lot of innovations available right now.

Speaker 22 (13:15):
We can apply this year next year.

Speaker 15 (13:17):
And okay, I don't like their innovations. Every single time
they come out with innovations, it seems like it's a
step backwards for everybody. I mean electric cars.

Speaker 16 (13:25):
Well it is, and that's really the idea I think
is just most people don't get it. All of the ideas,
all the changes to our economy once they started down
this road for sustainable development has been just the opposite.

(13:47):
You know, they present an idea, but they present it
in a positive way, but it actually has a negative effect.
Makes things harder, makes things more expensive, and of course,
you know the more expensive and the harder it is,
the fewer people you have involved in it. People lose

(14:08):
their farms, and then fat pigs like Bill Gates comes
in and buys up their land.

Speaker 15 (14:15):
Yeah yeah, well, well so.

Speaker 16 (14:19):
That's the way that works. The whole thing. I've been
working on the concept of writing an article about the inverse,
because every move forward that they take actually has an
inverse effect and takes us backward. And people are actually

(14:43):
getting more stupid, I think, because they're not comprehending the
way this whole game works, and so they think they're
thinking forward when actually the effect is that we're moving backward.

Speaker 15 (14:58):
Well, it's interesting that you say that people getting stupid.

Speaker 16 (15:00):
I actually have a quote from Mashton Carter, who was
the Assistant Secretary of Defense, who's who actually said that.

Speaker 15 (15:09):
Yeah, well, I got an article here.

Speaker 16 (15:12):
It's not my imagination. I'm not making it up. Can
you hear me, It's it's the way they're working.

Speaker 15 (15:18):
Hey, Vicky, can you hear me? Okay?

Speaker 22 (15:21):
Are you there?

Speaker 15 (15:22):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah. Unfortunately I don't think she can hear me.
That's weird. Tech check check one, two two. Can you
hear me? Okay? All right, I don't know what's going on.
I know as far as I know that, I'm all right.

(15:43):
I don't know what's happening here with Vicky, but I
do know that we have assessments. There's an article here about,
to her point, people getting stupid. I'm talking to you,
assessments show most young people can't meet state standards for reading.
That's a Michigan Capital Confidential article. Uh. There, So I'm

(16:08):
not sure where you are. Yeah, I've been here the
whole time. I don't know what I mean.

Speaker 16 (16:13):
Yeah, I don't know what happened.

Speaker 15 (16:15):
I wasn't quite sure how to solve this problem because
I saw that you were connected. And uh so I'm
glad that everything corrected itself. But yeah, I was just
I was just pointing out that the Michigan Capital Court
Capitolconfidential dot com was which is a very good publication
by the way, covering Michigan. Uh they were saying that

(16:35):
assessments are showing that most young students can't meet the
state standards for reading. Now, I don't think Michigan standards
are probably very high for reading, but that being even,
even so, they're not meeting the standards. So we pay
more for education and we're getting less all the time.

(16:56):
To your point about people getting stupider.

Speaker 16 (16:59):
That's because they redesigned the education system to be for
workforce development. No, we don't need to teach them to
read and do basic math. We need to teach them
how to be a waitress or a beautician. And so
they integrated those workplace concepts into the curriculum. I mean,

(17:25):
it's just it's insane. What they have done to this
country is absolutely insite to start diving down into it.

Speaker 15 (17:36):
Yeah, yeah, exactly. Well, continuing though with this World Economic Forum,
and they're talking about controlling food or well they don't
put it that way, controlling food, but that's what they're
really talking about. They're talking about how to increase yields. Ah,
they don't want to do that. When you're talking about
no till farming, folks, you're not going to increase yields.

Speaker 32 (17:57):
Maybe if I can highlight an innovative way of working,
like no tillage farming, which has been around for decades
but not all across the world, that will really help
to generate yields and to promote more sustainable, regenerative farming.
No tillage basis means that you don't plow the land anymore,
which sounds very simple, but.

Speaker 15 (18:17):
If you know it doesn't sound simple at all, don't Senorge?

Speaker 16 (18:21):
And what the hell does a guy from a foreigner
from over in Europe the UAE, probably ua has never
been on a farm, worked on a farm. What the
hell does he know about farming anyway?

Speaker 15 (18:36):
Well, the UAE is desert, isn't it. I mean it.
I guess they probably would want their land not requiring
as much water. So I don't know, maybe not what
plowing the land uses less water. Maybe that's their argument.
I mean, maybe that would work better over there. I
don't know, but sure, as somebody who's grown gardens, I

(18:58):
can tell you that not plowing the garden is very problematic.
It's not going to work, at least not for me.

Speaker 16 (19:07):
It's hard enough to idea just is absurd? Absurd?

Speaker 32 (19:12):
Yeah, but if you don't send your machinery into plow
the land, actually you save diesel, you save labor.

Speaker 22 (19:20):
You don't compact the soil.

Speaker 32 (19:22):
You let the stubble residue be on the land, which
then covers the land to provide prevent.

Speaker 22 (19:30):
Erosion from wind and rain.

Speaker 32 (19:32):
It captures more moisture in the land, it gives more
organic matter in the land, and all those benefits are
by doing.

Speaker 22 (19:41):
Less, but its signific can change.

Speaker 32 (19:44):
It doesn't sound maybe so innovative, but on the farms
that we have, we are promoting to get to one
hundred percent of no tillage. It requires a farming to
change the mind. The picture that most of us have
of a nice farmland is black soils. Well, if you
don't till them anymore, they're not black because you haven't plowed,
and it looks like a mess. And then you have
to plant right into the mess. So it's a change

(20:06):
of mindset that is actually better.

Speaker 15 (20:08):
It's better better. Don't you want to plow into the mess? Vicky?

Speaker 16 (20:12):
I you know what I don't know. I don't understand
how people can listen to morons like that hey and
not call them out. I mean, I've I've always been
that way, you know. Challenge whoever, whoever is an authority.
If they're saying something stupid, they're going to hear about

(20:33):
it from me. I do not sit passively.

Speaker 15 (20:36):
Well, well, let's sit passively for a moment and listen
to this moral a little more now.

Speaker 32 (20:40):
In terms for the soils and also for your cost
and for your yields.

Speaker 22 (20:43):
You have better yields.

Speaker 32 (20:44):
Better yields, said You also often need different machinery, for
instance planters, because they need to be a bit more
stronger to plant in right into the stubble of the
maze that you've planted. This innovation reduces cost, increase yields
better soil. So you would say everybody would embrace that,
but it makes quite some steps.

Speaker 22 (21:06):
We can do it everywhere.

Speaker 32 (21:07):
Even in our large farm in Egypt, which is a desert,
we applied no tillage farming and we've seen in the
last five seven years or being built up to one
percent in the soils, which is a lot. Doesn't sound like,
but it's great from complete sand to soil. So it's
one innovation that is everybody could, I guess apply with

(21:28):
training with the right machinery, you don't need AI for this,
which has many benefits.

Speaker 15 (21:34):
Yeah, it's got many benefits.

Speaker 16 (21:36):
I should put a new motel on my web, starvation
being one of them suffer no idiots.

Speaker 15 (21:43):
That would be a good bumper sticker. So one thing
that I found is a book or part of a
book on Oklahoma State University website dealing with no tilling,
no till crops, and it was interesting talking about wheat
and they see wheat occupies the largest acreage of any

(22:04):
grain crop in Oklahoma, so it is likely that any
no till production system in the state will include wheat
at some time in the presence of a crop rotation.
The agronomic and managerial requirements for no till wheat production
are similar to those of a conventional till system without

(22:26):
a rotation, no till wheat production requires much more planning
and management than a conventional till system. The level of
planning and management required for no till wheat will vary
by producer, region, and production objective. There are, however, some
universal truths regarding no till wheat production and no till

(22:48):
crop production in general. Even distribution of the previous crops residue,
for example, is critical for no till farming. Wheat farmers,
especially those using custom harvesters, may not see you, sorry,
be accustomed to closely monitoring combines to ensure that straw

(23:08):
choppers are engaged and working properly, and that chaff spreaders
are covering their entire header with the There was one
place I wanted to read here, and I apologize I
wasn't able to print this out in highlight, which would
have been a better way of handling this. But oh,

(23:29):
here it is weed control. This is an important thing
for anybody who's growing a crop or a garden. Most
Oklahoma farmers know of someone who has tried no till
wheat and then reverted back to conventional tillage. Now, if
it was so far superior, VICKI, why would they do that?

(23:50):
Why would they try no till wheat and reverse somebody
was paying Well, maybe they were sold a bill of
goods and decided yeah, yeah, I'll try it. And then
but they must have realized it's crap. Like everything else
these idiots promote with their so called solutions, you know,

(24:12):
like the like just like the electric cars. Oh look,
don't you want a battery operated car. No, it's an
inferior product. So is no till crop growth. It's it's
it's insane, they say, with you.

Speaker 16 (24:30):
It's like walking forward with your head screwed on backward.

Speaker 15 (24:34):
Yeah, oh, that's a good way of putting it. With
proper planning and management, this does not have to be
the case, you know. In other words, them reverting back.
Perhaps one of the most important components of this planning
process is to begin with clean fields. Now, how can
you begin with clean fields if you don't plow them.
So right here, immediately exactly, they're talking about beginning with

(24:58):
clean fields. So uh, if you are promoting no till plowing,
you know, no plowing on the fields, No, no Roda tillers,
nothing like that, how are you gonna begin with clean fields?
You can't. So yeah, I mean they're they're contradicting themselves

(25:20):
right off the bat. Another place they talk about disease control.
They say switching to no till will lower the incidents
and severity of some disease but increase others. Doesn't it
sound like a real winning.

Speaker 16 (25:37):
Yeah, well, what we like is variety.

Speaker 15 (25:39):
There yet go exactly, that's exactly what perfect example. So
this this whole thing is just ridiculous. And there's more
that I could probably share with that. But it's an interesting,
an interesting problem that we have here. But another interesting
problem is that we're almost up to the break, so
I'm gonna have to put a pin in that and

(26:02):
continue here in just a moment. But yeah, we got
got one more clip there from that part of the
World Economic Forum, and I also have some other things
from the w e F as well. Lots on the
front of laws and regulations. Vicky. Yeah, they're really pushing

(26:24):
the laws and regulations, you know, in the technocratic police state,
in all of it. And so we'll get to all
of that as time progresses and the anytime, though, we're
gonna take a quick time out here at the bottom
of the hour and we'll continue here in a moment.
Govern America dot com and the technocredit Tarity dot Com
is Vicky's website. We'll be back here in just a moment.

Speaker 33 (26:46):
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Speaker 36 (28:03):
Hi, I'm Eric, a student at Hillsdale College. Here is
President of Hillsdale College, doctor Larry arn On Natural rights
versus entitlements.

Speaker 37 (28:11):
America was founded on the idea that human beings are
born with natural rights, such as the rights to life, liberty,
and property. A person who holds this view of rights
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(28:31):
These are rights understood as entitlements, and a person who
holds this view of rights, far from making no demands
on other people, is making claims on other people's money
and resources. This understanding of rights not only sets citizens
against each other, but it undermines the whole idea of
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Speaker 14 (31:01):
A spoofs go to find out what's really going on.
This is govern America.

Speaker 15 (31:17):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is Governed America. The
website for the show once again is Governamerica dot com.
That's governamerica dot com. My email address is radio at
governamerica dot com. Chatroom is open if you'd like to
join in chat dot governamerica dot com. And Vicky, you
want to give your information out, please.

Speaker 16 (31:36):
Yeah, My website is the Technocratic Tyranny dot com. The
older website is Channelingreality dot com. My email address is
on both websites, and I have an article on my
website called Global Supply Chain Field to Table, and what

(31:58):
it's about is setting up a supply chain for tracking
the production of food. These traders in our government, which
one of them happens to be Michael Levitt, he was
in office when they came up with this idea of
using a computer system to set up a supply chain

(32:22):
management system for food. The European Union did the same thing,
only their program was called the Farm to Fork.

Speaker 15 (32:36):
Yeah, I believe that sounds great.

Speaker 16 (32:39):
Yeah, And so it really is the computer industry that
was behind the whole idea of supply chains and having
the suppliers organized into supply chains, you know, from the

(33:01):
point of origin of the of the product whatever it is,
clear up through the marketing of it. So it's absolutely
antithetical to what we thought was our capitalist system. This
is a communist system.

Speaker 15 (33:21):
Yeah. Before the break, we were sharing audio from the
World Economic Forum and it was about food and it
was about these subjects, you know, with regard to no
till plowing or you know, no till in other words,
not growing, not plowing, not tilling your crops. And the

(33:43):
whole point is for this is carbon sequestration. That's what
they're really getting at here, is to not release the
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Speaker 16 (33:54):
And plants made carbon dioxide. We plants and the oxygen,
well they take carbon.

Speaker 15 (34:02):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm sorry, you're right, they take You're right,
they need carbon dioxide and release oxygen. We need the oxygen.
So but this no till farming is you know, we
were just sharing from the University of Oklahoma. How many
have tried it and reverted back because it's an inferior

(34:24):
way of doing things. Now they don't say it's inferior, inferior,
but obviously it is. But you know, just like the
electric cars and so many other things, so many other
so called solutions that they promote for us, you know,
how do you get people to do it? Though? You
force them to do it, And that's where the regulations come.

Speaker 40 (34:43):
My name is Utilia and Amongan NIZA head Special Projects
for the Institute for Security Studies, serve on the GFC
on Good Governance, and I'm a member of the High
Level Task Force for the Munich Security Conference on Food security.
Piggybacking on what you just said now less around policy
cannot emphasize it enough without the right framework, without the

(35:07):
right adjustments to be able to enable everything that you've
talked about.

Speaker 15 (35:12):
You just want to achieve it, Okay, So force them
into compliance. That's what she's really saying here. Now. When
you when you have to force people onto inferior methods
for doing things, you need good laws and regulations, don't you.
Which brings us to another forum session from the World
Economic Forum called regulation friend or Foe. And here's a

(35:33):
woman from the UAE again who is talking about that
they're using chat gpt AI to generate laws and keep
their rules updated. This is this is a perfect example
of technocracy, a technocracy, a technocratic society being built. Right
before our.

Speaker 41 (35:52):
Year, the UI government have launched the first project for
how to introduce AI in the legislation ecosystem. And when
we do that one actually the first thing that comes
to the mind of everyone, well, child Gibt now can
draft any law, child Gibt. If you give him the

(36:15):
right prompts, it will go. And it has all the
link to all the international trains and sources. It will
bring for you the best.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
Law that you want.

Speaker 41 (36:29):
Is it relevant or not relevant?

Speaker 15 (36:31):
Okay, so let me stop it right there. What she's
saying here, and this, by the way, is the perfect
reason why founding fathers. You know, the states in the
United States are perfect the way they are set up
because each one has its own little government. Okay, so
if you don't like the laws in one state, you

(36:51):
can go to another. What she's advocating here is using
chat GPT to basically harmonize laws across the board, harmonized
regulations across the board, but not just across the board,
across the entire globe ultimately, right, that's what that's what
they're advocating here at the World Economic for using chat
GPT to automatically keep all the laws, all the regulations

(37:14):
updated so that everything is perfect and then you know,
from the standpoint of control. Of course, won't be perfect
for you, you peasants out there, but that's what they're
advocating for.

Speaker 41 (37:28):
Whatever we are thinking in the AI project in the UAE,
in our legislation ecosystem is not how to draft legislations.
It's not anymore challenge in the UE. Anyone can do
that one AI can do that.

Speaker 28 (37:43):
One.

Speaker 40 (37:44):
Actually, we are.

Speaker 41 (37:45):
Building an eco AI AI ecosystem that is link to
the all the sources international and locally, all the legislation
that we have it on the federal level and in
the local level. It is linked to the social medium.

Speaker 15 (38:02):
So are you listening to this, VICKI, yes, say, link
to all the sources, and it's linked to your social media,
so that they can get all these points of data
from your social media, so that they can make their policies,
make their rules, make their regulations, and make their laws
based upon the feedback from all these different data points.

(38:25):
This is exactly the thing that we've been warning people
about for what twenty years now? Yes, yeah, and here
it is here. It is Chapter forty of Agenda twenty one,
Information for decision making. It's all coming together, all the.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
Legislation that we have.

Speaker 41 (38:41):
It on the federal level and in the local level.
It is linked to the social medium. So whenever people,
our stakeholders talk about any challenge they have, the system
itself will alert the government. People are talking about thatch
and in a specific they are looking about that cluse

(39:05):
or that article in that law.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
We want to reach to that level of.

Speaker 41 (39:10):
INTEGRATIONI in our ecosystem, it will link to the services
that we are providing to our customers.

Speaker 15 (39:19):
It will link to the services that they're providing to
our customer. You mean, like maybe the Snap program. Maybe
if they don't like what you see they see on
your social media, maybe you just won't get your Snap
benefits when when they're re established or whatever they're calling.

Speaker 16 (39:38):
It's a system of absolute total control. And why there
aren't more people speaking up about it, I truly do
not understand.

Speaker 15 (39:48):
This is so transparent what she's advocating here.

Speaker 16 (39:52):
Absolutely, I mean they're just saying it right out there.

Speaker 15 (39:56):
Hidden in plain sight.

Speaker 41 (39:57):
Exactly if you are granting any license to an investor
and the people in the front line they're asking more
required and the law doesn't say that one okay, So
we are knowing that the people at the implementation for
the law in the field is not exactly what is
in the law.

Speaker 22 (40:14):
We need that.

Speaker 41 (40:15):
AI tool to detect for us, based on the international trend,
if there is any duplicating our law, if there is
any article which is outdated, So it will tell us
if we did any change in any law. The AI
tool will tell us because it is like cohesive system

(40:35):
will tell us if you did that change in that article,
you have to always remember that that article is linked
to this article in different laws. So when you do
the change in this law, you have to do the
changes in the other law.

Speaker 42 (40:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (40:50):
So that to help you if you went to school
to be a pair of ego.

Speaker 16 (40:54):
Yeah, why anybody would listen to a bubblehead like this,
I don't know.

Speaker 15 (41:00):
I don't know, But she's all plugged in, she's all
tuned in, she's very well aware, and she's helping implement
it all.

Speaker 41 (41:06):
So it will keep us always updated. This is how
we look to the AI in legislation in the UA.
We wanted to be real life feedback from our stakeholders
and the same thing to measure for us the impact
of our regulations.

Speaker 15 (41:26):
In the AUE. Yeah, too bad, we can't be a stakeholder, VICKI.

Speaker 16 (41:30):
Yeah, And actually I should have said that. The reason
we are in the international system is through a series
of treaties that were past having to do with the environment.
So they internationalized our environmental law, you know, way back

(41:54):
going to nineteen eighty six is when they started this,
and so so they've kind of locked us into these
international programs, and I don't know who we have working

(42:14):
in our government, whether they're actually Americans, or whether they're
North Americans, or whether they are citizens of the Americas.

Speaker 15 (42:28):
They might just be citizens of the world.

Speaker 16 (42:32):
They could very well be. I actually joined a group
that are citizens of the world, and they go back to.

Speaker 43 (42:43):
Uh oh.

Speaker 16 (42:46):
I forget to like the early sixties or something, and
their ideas global citizens, you know, like there should be
no no borders, no nation states. We should be all
one big human family. Except that when that happens, then
you get people like this woman who are representing moneyed

(43:10):
interests who set the rules, and the rules are to
put you out of business so that they, the billionaire class,
can buy up what you own and turn you into
a slave.

Speaker 15 (43:24):
Well, you just got a negative attitude there.

Speaker 16 (43:28):
I know you know what you need.

Speaker 15 (43:30):
I allow, let me tell you what you need. A
robot roommate. That's what you need, a robot roommate. Because
this is all about compliance. And Jack Hiery, who is
the CEO of sambox AQ, he's going to tell you.
He's going to tell you need to get ready for
your robot roommate.

Speaker 44 (43:46):
I think we have to really grapple the fact that
AI is just at the very beginning, as much as
we think it's already quite advanced and it has.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
Already had quite an impact. Governments are using it, people
are using it personally.

Speaker 44 (43:58):
I know many friends will use it as their therapist
now and they're talking to AIS as a therapists.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
But it's actually at the very beginning.

Speaker 44 (44:05):
I'll just give you one concrete example. Right now, in
this room, as far as I know, we're all humans
in this room. But four or five years from now,
at this very room, when we have a Global Leadership
Futures Council of the WEF in the UAE, we're going
to have humanoid robots in this room.

Speaker 15 (44:23):
Now, he can't tell whether or not everybody in the
room is a male or female, because you know, I mean,
that would be controversial, but he is fairly certain they're
all humans. I'm not so sure about that, but that's
you know, anyway.

Speaker 44 (44:36):
But four or five years from now, at this very room,
when we have a Global Leadership Futures Council of the
WEF in the UAE, we're going to have humanoid robots
in this room.

Speaker 2 (44:47):
Michines. Yeah, yeah, they'll be. There'll be robots.

Speaker 44 (44:49):
They'll be they'll be sitting on a chair, they'll.

Speaker 2 (44:52):
Be taking notes or doing other things.

Speaker 44 (44:55):
And we're going to have to grapple with this as governments,
as regulators, and as companies. We're go to say, look,
there's a lot of positive that can come from these
human eye robots.

Speaker 2 (45:03):
An example, again.

Speaker 44 (45:03):
Would be as people get older, instead of having them
go to a nursing home or other kinds of places,
they can.

Speaker 2 (45:10):
Stay in their homes. They can be cared for by
a robot. I think we all think this is a
very positive thing.

Speaker 15 (45:15):
Yeah, VICKI do you want a robot changing your diaper
when you get old?

Speaker 29 (45:20):
No?

Speaker 16 (45:21):
I do not, And I don't even want AI. I'm
having to fight AI in my word system. Microsoft Word.
What I want is the way to turn that damn
thing off.

Speaker 15 (45:37):
Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 16 (45:38):
I don't even want I don't want anything AI on
my machine.

Speaker 15 (45:42):
It would be my luck my robot would upgrade to
the next version of Windows and kill me. Because I
came into this room the other day and Windows had
popped up a blue screen saying let's get you backed
up for Windows eleven. In mind, I am running an

(46:04):
application on all any Windows tend machine, and I'm still
you know, I like to hang on to old technology anyway,
because you know, in fact, a lot of the stuff
that we do the show on here. You see, there's
there's like one, two, three, four, five computers I used
to do the show. Okay, two of those five are
actually on Windows XP still because they don't need to

(46:25):
be on anything further more advanced than that. So I
hang on to technology for as long as I can.
And I'm not crazy about Mac. You know, Apple's Mac
you know, you know system, So I've stayed with Windows
and Linux has has its issues, so I'm still kind

(46:47):
of kind of toying around with going with Linux. But
I'm really sick of Microsoft's crap, honestly, and I'd love
to be able to abandon that if I can figure
out how to make it work for what we're doing here.
But the point is is I came into the room
and this Windows ten machine has a Windows eleven promotional
on it, and I freaked out because I thought it

(47:09):
was gonna forcefully upgrade me to Windows eleven. Now apparently
the uh And and by the way, anybody who's running
Windows ten who doesn't want it to automatically upgrade. There
is an application you can get from Steve Gibson of
Gibson Research Corporation. You go to his website which is
at g r C dot com. That's uh Gibson Research

(47:34):
Corporation g r C dot com. There is a free
application called in control I N CO O N t
r O L and that it doesn't even have to install.
It's a tiny little application. What happens is you download
it and it's a very small. In fact, you might

(47:56):
even download two or three copies of it because you
think you it's stalled out. No, it's a small I
mean literally killabytes of data is all it's going to
take on your hard drive. It's tiny. So once you
launch that, it will give you a little gooy, a
little graphic interface and it's got literally a push button.

(48:18):
And what it does is it will change the policy.
You know, it'll make it. I don't know how it
does it, maybe a registry change or something, but it
uses Microsoft's own policy to stop your system from upgrading. Now,
the updates, in terms of the security updates, those will

(48:40):
still come through for as long as Microsoft supports security updates,
so it won't stop that. But it'll stop your system
from forcefully being upgraded. And then if you at some
point want to upgrade it, you just log back. You
just launch the application again and hit the button to
release it and let it do it. It makes it very,

(49:02):
very easy to stop the forceful upgrading of your operating system.
I highly recommend it. I got it running on all
of my machines. But what it doesn't stop is the
promotional materials that come forward from Microsoft. And and that's
why this, uh, this window popped up saying let's get
you backed up and get you ready to go. Like, no,
I don't want to go so anyway.

Speaker 16 (49:25):
Yeah, every every time I turn on my machine, I
get those miss and just about upgrading. Well, I don't
think it's an upgrade. I think it's a down grade.

Speaker 15 (49:35):
Yeah, I'm a firm. If it isn't broke, don't fix
it kind of guy. I don't. I don't need their features,
I don't need all that crap. Just leave me alone
and let me do what I want with my system.
But see, increasingly they're not your systems. You get the
you get to buy the use of them, but somebody
else is going to control them.

Speaker 12 (49:57):
You know.

Speaker 15 (49:58):
It's the same way with your refrigerator, your you know,
all your appliances. They want to be able to control
it all from afar.

Speaker 16 (50:06):
Yeah, that's the ultimate objective, is to just have your
PC be a dumb terminal on on a network.

Speaker 15 (50:17):
Dump so that they.

Speaker 16 (50:19):
Yeah, they can control everything that you do.

Speaker 15 (50:22):
Yep, we'll control the horizontal, we'll control the vertical. Yeah,
just sit there and shut exactly. Peasant slave anyway. Uh,
but you know the bots, the bots are coming, VICKI,
And it's all about clont compliance. It's all about interacting
with your digital roommate, your robot, your your robot roommate

(50:43):
and uh and and w e f just wants you.
He can't come quick enough for that.

Speaker 44 (50:49):
You can stay in their homes. They can be cared
for by a robot. I think we all think this
is a very positive thing. But you know, time introducing
humanoid walking, talking robots in our society, it's going to
be a much bigger shot than any GPT.

Speaker 2 (51:03):
That we've you know that we've now engaged with.

Speaker 44 (51:06):
This is going to be a very big shock to
the system as we now have them enter into society.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
That's only four or five years away.

Speaker 15 (51:13):
Only four or five years away. He says, we're going
to be living with robots. You know what was a
robot on the Jetsons?

Speaker 8 (51:22):
Was that.

Speaker 16 (51:24):
Three CPO?

Speaker 12 (51:26):
Was that?

Speaker 29 (51:27):
No?

Speaker 15 (51:27):
That was probably a different show, that Star Wars, not
the Jetson's. Yeah, I think it was the Jetsons. I
want to say Judy, but I think that was the daughter. Anyway,
it doesn't matter. But I don't think that's going to
be the case. I don't think that it's going to
be like the girl on the the robot on the Jetsons,

(51:47):
the Maid.

Speaker 16 (51:49):
Yeah, or any of any of the robots and any
of the preconditioning movies that they've made. Yeah, because they've
been conditioning as for absolutely for years.

Speaker 15 (52:02):
Well, and it's funny that you mentioned that, because he
talks about if you're thinking of resisting no worries, they
have a plan for that. They have to condition society
to accept at all.

Speaker 44 (52:13):
Japan, I predict will be one of the societies that
best uses robots because they've been preparing their society for
forty years. That because they have an aging society with
fewer childbearing right to blow the two point one. They
see robots as part of the solution, not as a danger,
but part of the solution, and Japan has put in

(52:34):
place regulations that make sure that robots are safe to
be around, and that when you develop a robot, you
must meet certain standards so that the robot will not
move wildly and things like this. So I think that
there's examples around the world where we can anticipate future technologies,
not just wait till they come, but actually anticipate before
they come, so we can get society ready for these.

Speaker 8 (52:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (52:57):
I could just see myself waking up in the middle
of the night, my doing an amputation in the middle
of the number. Doesn't that sound like? Doesn't that sound great? Hey?
The future is yours?

Speaker 42 (53:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (53:13):
Man, all right, so let's go to the phones. Let's
see we have art in Georgia. I might have to
hold them over a Hello Art, you're on the air.
Go ahead, please, Oh good morning guys. Are you ready
for a robot amputation?

Speaker 42 (53:29):
Oh? Absolutely, I'm planning up right now.

Speaker 15 (53:32):
There you go. I'm see you got the right attitude.
Sure your digital currencies will not be canceled.

Speaker 42 (53:41):
Yeah right, I think.

Speaker 15 (53:43):
Your social credit score will be right up there. Go ahead, Sorry, yeah.

Speaker 42 (53:49):
I'll be at the top right along with you. And yeah,
let's see how that works out right. You mentioned snap.
M Anybody who's listened to me for any length of
time when I call in knows that I love numbers

(54:10):
because numbers don't lie. So let's let's talk about SNAP here.
First of all, let me say I've heard a lot
of people complaining about we're gonna lose our Snap in November. Well,
I actually did something a lot of people don't do.
I actually called the local defects office and talked to

(54:32):
an agent at the office. Okay, I got a lot
to throw out there, so bear with me.

Speaker 15 (54:38):
Okay, Well, we may have to Uh, you said the
numbers don't lie, but the numbers on the clock aren't
lying either, so we're almost up to the brig so
we may have to hold you over there.

Speaker 42 (54:49):
Got about Dad's fine, Okay, So what she tells me
is currently here in Georgia. That's all I can speak for.
Nothing is definite at this point because they have not
yet and this is as of Wednesday. They have not
heard anything definitive on whether or not SNAP will be

(55:13):
withheld in November. However, if it is, they are by
law required to send out notices to all recipients notifying
them of whatever changes may be coming up. So I
don't know anybody who's receiving SNAP who has got a
notice yet. So as it sits right now in the

(55:34):
state of Georgia, you're still going to get your benefits. Now,
keeping that in mind, let's go to the numbers.

Speaker 15 (55:43):
Okay, let's go to the numbers on the clock and
hold off right there, and I'll have to continue this
on the other side of the break. Okay, stay with us,
ladies and gentlemen. Art is on the line. Vicky Davis
is here. I'm during weeks. This is governed America. Our
number two is straight ahead, and we do have a
little bit more from the World Economic Forum as well,

(56:03):
lots lots to do. Stay with us, we'll be back.

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on Russia.

Speaker 47 (59:07):
This nineteenth package of European Union sanctions includes banning the
import of Russian liquefied natural gas, intended as a blow
to the valuable income stream Russia gets from selling energy.
Slovakia was holding out a relatively pro Moscow government, worried
that energy prices might soar as a result. The new

(59:28):
package also adds travel restrictions on Russian diplomats and identifies
over one hundred more vessels from Moscow's sanction evading shadow fleet.
Even China, seen by many as enabling Russia's war on Ukraine,
will find some of its firms affected by these new measures.
Jonathan Savage Fox News.

Speaker 46 (59:47):
Democratic lawmakers on the House over zy Comitte announced Wednesday
they were launching what they call a tracker for ICE
agent misconduct. White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller
criticizes the move and Democrats' reaction.

Speaker 48 (01:00:00):
ICE in general, this is a party that has embraced
full scale insurrection against the laws of the United States.

Speaker 46 (01:00:07):
An order blocking National Guard troops from being deployed in
Chicago will now be indefinitely extended Box thirty two. Chicago's
Jonny Lum reports.

Speaker 49 (01:00:16):
Judge Abel Prairie had encouraged both sides to.

Speaker 50 (01:00:19):
Agree on extending the temporary restraining order blocking the deployment
of the National Guard for longer than thirty days, since
she can only grant that once and so now both
sides agreed to extend the tro until a final ruling,
either the Supreme Court decides or this goes to trial
on merit. President Trump wanted to deploy three hundred Illinois

(01:00:40):
National Guard troops and about four hundred from Texas for
the safety of federal agents detaining illegal immigrants. Judge Perry
previously said she had no faith in the declarations of
federal officials.

Speaker 46 (01:00:52):
War Secretary Pete Heggsath announced Wednesday, at least five people
were killed after more military strikes on drug votes in
the Pacific Ocean. Secretary of State Marco Rubio defends the strikes.

Speaker 51 (01:01:03):
He's a well funded, dangerous, violent drug cartels that operate
as terrorists who are flooding our country with drugs.

Speaker 12 (01:01:12):
The United States is going to deal with it.

Speaker 46 (01:01:13):
The National Intelligence Director Tulsea Gabbert, detailing the impression this
White House is giving the people looking to smuggle drugs
into the nation.

Speaker 52 (01:01:20):
You're seeing these cartels and these narco traffickers afraid because
for the first time they're actually seeing in President Trump
someone who means what he says, that he's going to
stop them from putting the American people's lives at risk.

Speaker 46 (01:01:37):
Cancel culture and the rest of wokeness as the result
of the feminization of the culture and its institutions, according
to a theory from a conservative commentator.

Speaker 4 (01:01:47):
More from Steve Jordal.

Speaker 53 (01:01:48):
During one of the town halls, Congresswoman Alexandria A Casio
Cortez head with Senator Bernie Sanders. Recently, Aos accused Republicans
of radicalizing young men.

Speaker 20 (01:01:58):
They are able to radicalize and target and exploit a
generation of young boys away from healthy masculinity and into
an insecure masculinity that requires the domination of others.

Speaker 53 (01:02:13):
Hellan Andrews writes in Compact magazine that quite the opposite
culture is suffering from wokeness, which is feminine patterns of
behavior applied to institutions, empathy over rationality, cohesion over competition,
and feelings over everything. AFR talk host Jenna Ellis says
the experiment to let women lead our culture, our businesses,
our schools, and our politics has failed.

Speaker 43 (01:02:35):
Instead of women actually becoming stronger and more masculine in nature,
what's happened is that we have very, very weak men.

Speaker 53 (01:02:45):
And she says, despite the best efforts of AOC in
the Wok crowd, society would be best served if we let.

Speaker 43 (01:02:51):
Men be men, strong warriors in society and in policy.
Who are the protectors the strength to the pillar of societ.

Speaker 53 (01:03:00):
And nowhere, she says, is that more needed than in
the church. Pastors need to speak the hard truths of
the Bible without apology.

Speaker 43 (01:03:08):
We now have an overfeminized society that's so concerned about
ascending our opponents and pastors who are so concerned about
ascending non Christians that we're not being effective anymore.

Speaker 46 (01:03:21):
I'm Steve chordal More News online at AFN dot net
and on the AFN Bubbile app.

Speaker 4 (01:03:27):
I'm much speaking.

Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
Order, new world order, new world order.

Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
This is a moment to seize. The glaudoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 6 (01:03:50):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.

Speaker 7 (01:03:57):
Nevertheless of the United States, if they keep position to
shape this so that the problem of the put residentity
will be the emergence of a new international order.

Speaker 9 (01:04:09):
The first decade of the twenty first century, but out
of what will be seen as the greatest restructuring of
the global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, greatest
restructuring of the global economy, a new world order was created.

Speaker 4 (01:04:26):
Documenting the crisis of our republic, the very.

Speaker 10 (01:04:29):
Word secrecy is repugnant in a free and open society,
and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed
to secret societies, the secret Oaths and a secret Proceedings.

Speaker 11 (01:04:43):
Waging war on the new World.

Speaker 12 (01:04:45):
Order, the Council's dis government.

Speaker 13 (01:04:47):
We must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 14 (01:04:57):
This is govern America Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 15 (01:05:07):
From TEAMA Regions five and ten. This is Governor America
Vicky Davis this year. I'm Darren Weeks, and it continues
to be the twenty fifth of October twenty twenty five,
and I'm not sure what happened here, but somehow the
phone bridge has has gone down. Let me see if
I can. I don't know, if I don't know if
I'm still connected or not. Let's go ahead and see

(01:05:29):
if is art hard? Are you still there? Yes, sir,
I am okay. That was weird. Okay, Well, I'm glad
that I'm glad it's still connected. So anyway, you were
saying that you want to live with robots and that
you're looking forward to having a burgeoning social credit score system.
So once you go ahead and pick it up where

(01:05:50):
you left off, there. I'm kidding, of course.

Speaker 42 (01:05:53):
Okay, So let's look at the numbers, and folks, get
your crayons out, because this is going to be a
fun one. This is probably one of the toughest ones
I've had to work through when it comes to numbers. First,
let's look at the demographics of the United States white America.
White people make up approximately fifty seven point eight percent

(01:06:16):
of the American population, Hispanics eighteen point seven percent, Blacks
twelve point one percent, Asians five point nine percent, and
multi race or biracial four point ten percent. Now keep
those numbers in mind, so in order white, Hispanic, Black, Asian, biracial.

(01:06:37):
All right, Now, let's go to SNAP. When we look
at SNAP, and this is according to the USDA's own reports,
I go to the sources. I don't jerk around with
people that don't do this for really, I look at

(01:06:58):
the actual stats. When we look at who receives SNAP benefits,
Whites approximately thirty seven percent of the people in about
thirty seven percent of all SNAP recipients are white. Black
people make up about twenty six percent, Hispanics for about

(01:07:20):
sixteen percent, Asians about three percent, and Native Americans Hawaiians
of stuff like that about two percent. Now, looking at
both numbers, let's go race by race in order. Most

(01:07:46):
to least twenty four point nine percent of Black people
are on SNAP, twenty three point one percent are Asian,
twenty point two percent are Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders,
eighteen point five percent are Hispanic, eight point five percent

(01:08:09):
are Asian, and seven point nine percent of white people
on SNAPS. So when you look at these numbers, we
have to look at our Black people. Of black people,
twenty four point nine percent of the Black population are
on food stamps, yet they only make up about twelve

(01:08:33):
point two percent of the population of the country. Now,
why is this important. We're talking about the percentage of
each ethnic group here. While whites make up over fifty
percent of the US population, they are the least likely
in this country to get SNAPS benefits, while Blacks, who

(01:08:57):
only make up about twelve point two percent of the population,
they get nearly one fourth. Nearly one fourth of their
population the most of any other racial group are SNAP beneficiaries. Now,
I have been watching over the past two weeks since

(01:09:18):
this whole wine fest has begune about They're gonna cut
off our food STAPs. I have watched video after video
after video of people complaining and talking about making these
threats about how they're gonna loot and they're gonna rob
and they're gonna do all this kind of crap if
they don't get their food stamps in November. Guess who

(01:09:40):
the only people I've seen in these videos are. I've
not seen one Hispanic person makeal video. I've not seen
one Asian person macal video. I've not seen one white person,
not one Native Hawaiian, not one Pacific islander ever. Out
literally one hundred percent of all the videos I've seen
people making these videos are black people. Well, and it

(01:10:04):
wouldn't see a problem here.

Speaker 15 (01:10:06):
Well, I see the problem is that civil unrest is coming.
And it doesn't really matter to me what the color
of the skin is of the person doing it. They'rein
it's it's on its way if and and this is
all engineered, it's all the problem is you got too

(01:10:27):
many people dependent upon the government, and this is there's
a reason for that this has been pushed. It's societal
decay and it's it really is an orchestrated decline in
the family. Uh, the you know, the nuclear family that's
really what we're dealing with here, because in the inner cities,

(01:10:50):
the reason why so many Black people are impoverished is
because of the decline of the family. You know, you
have out of woodlock babies coming. You know, you have
a bunch of babies being made, and there isn't a father,
the father figure is missing in the home, out of
the home. And as a result, now that's why you've

(01:11:13):
got a lot of dependency going on. And they've engineered
things deliberately so that people can't go get jobs. They
decentivize getting jobs because then you lose what you got,
what you're currently living on. So it becomes a cycle
that you can't get out of. You know, rather go ahead, VICKI.

Speaker 16 (01:11:37):
I also have to defend black people here because the
breakup of their families was intentional. That started in the
nineteen six days when they started with wealth there. But
there couldn't be a man in the home in order
for the woman to get help for her children. So

(01:12:02):
a lot of black families split up just so that
they could feed their children. Because for some reason, in
the nineteen sixties, it's when Lyndon Johnson started as whole
Great Society Program.

Speaker 15 (01:12:21):
Yeah, I mean they don't have to loot.

Speaker 42 (01:12:23):
Voting Democrats for the next hundred years.

Speaker 15 (01:12:26):
Yeah. Well, I think a lot of people are waking
up to that. But the problem is the Republicans. See,
that's the thing is if they wanted to solve this problem,
and it's not really solving the problem. I mean, re
establishing funding for SNAP isn't is putting a band aid
would be putting a band aid. Really, fixing it requires
a lot more. It requires bringing people out of poverty

(01:12:48):
and promoting solid families. But they've worked so hard to
destroy them. Why would they ever want to do that. Yeah,
So that's the deal. If you want to get to
the root of problem.

Speaker 42 (01:13:00):
With their agenda, Yeah, they don't want They don't want
to fix the problem. They have no interest in fixing
the problem, exactly. And Vicki, you're absolutely right on everything
you said. This was all engineered from the very beginning.
This was land.

Speaker 15 (01:13:17):
Yep.

Speaker 42 (01:13:17):
And as much as I hate to say it, Darren,
I think you might be right. This might be because
I've been talking about this for years. I don't even
know how many years I've been talking about this now,
about a potential civil war breaking out in this country,
what it would what would be the catalyst, what would
be the tipping point? And this it's starting, you know

(01:13:41):
with what we see happening with anti food, anti ice
protests and no King's rillies and all of this other
craft and now this, yeah, this may well be the
tipping point.

Speaker 15 (01:13:53):
Well, you know good and well that with the funny
money system that we have right now, the Federal Reserve system,
the the riding has been on the wall since nineteen thirteen,
since they pass that thing, and they have been doing
everything everything they can to ramp it up. From COVID,
from the various wars, all the money they've given away

(01:14:13):
to foreign countries, you know, the weapons that we've built
and sent overseas and other places, you know, to many
of the countries that you know, people here couldn't even
pronounce their names, you know, a myriad of Mohammad's you know,
destroying you know, all the stuff in the Middle East,
you know, and now soon to rebuild it, making it. Hey,

(01:14:35):
we're going to make it into a tourist attraction. Now, no,
thank you, I don't think I want to vacation on
the corpses of the Palestinians. Thank you very much. But
all of this stuff has cost the American people in
terms of really the debt that they're trying to hang
on our heads. We don't really owe this, but they

(01:14:56):
say we will, and they're going to treat it like
we do.

Speaker 8 (01:14:59):
And and.

Speaker 15 (01:15:01):
So we can see it coming. They have to they
have to do something because the whole system, no FIAT
monetary system has ever survived, They've all collapsed. The I
think the only reason why this one has survived as
long as it has is they've been in a unique
position to export the inflation to the rest of the
world via the Breton Woods Agreement. You know. But but

(01:15:25):
everything has its limits, especially when you weaponize the money
system that you built. And and that is exactly what
they've did with the Russians, forcing all of them to
flee uh, the US monetary system and and and then
try to build their own for the what they what
they're calling them multipolar world. Yeah, ah, it's incredible, you know,

(01:15:53):
the the chess game that they've laid out here and
the moves that they have made. You know, all I
can say is get your storage food ready, you know,
get your powder ready, because it's coming, folks. They're engineering it.
You can see it from miles away, and I think
we're getting closer and closer all the time. And that
may not be this time, but you never know, it

(01:16:15):
could be. I mean, they may tomorrow say, hey, we
have an agreement, we're going to turn the snap back on.
But that's just it. They've engineered things so they can
snap it on, snap it off anytime they want, and
they play the society. They play the people's minds like
a fiddle.

Speaker 42 (01:16:36):
Well, I'm glad I saw the writing on the wall
back in twenty. In two thousand and nine is when.
I mean, I've been following the bs going on for
oh god, since I guess Waco and Ruby Ridge. But
in two thousand and nine, I really began to see

(01:16:58):
a shift in things. As you know, things were progressing
and beginning to accelerate. And so that's when I really started,
you know, because up until that point, my prepping basically
basically was learning how to forge food and things like

(01:17:18):
that and stuff like that that I believed was going
to be important. But in two thousand and nine, I
began stockpiling food. And I'm here to tell you, I'm
sitting pretty right now. I've got probably oh three years
worth of food and probably two to three years worth
of seed all ready to go.

Speaker 15 (01:17:37):
Well, you can, you can do all that no till
farming there or a no tail crop going right, and
that'll last you much longer than what you've gotten.

Speaker 42 (01:17:45):
That whole thing. I was laughing at that whole thing
talking about. I mean, especially when he said that with
the no till, because chilling compacts the soil. I'm thinking
to myself, this guy obviously never been on a farm
a day in his life, because anybody who knows anything
about farming knows that tilling breaks.

Speaker 15 (01:18:09):
Up the soil exactly, It fluffs it.

Speaker 42 (01:18:11):
Up, and it helps to air rate the soil, which
is good for the soil. Yeah, so I don't know
where this guy's going.

Speaker 15 (01:18:18):
That's he's one of those foucy scientists. You know, he's
a pseudo scientist. Yeah, so you better listen to him,
make sure, because he'll move his robot roommate in with
you and it'll be like you know, in fact, somebody
that the guy that I turned me on to a
lot of this stuff. He talked about the movie Cassandra.

(01:18:42):
That's apparently this is a movie on Netflix, And I
think that you call they talk about pre programming, you know,
putting out movies and shows. Predictive programming is the term,
and I think Cassandra would be an example of one
of those shows. Series. I guess it's a series on Netflix.

(01:19:04):
I don't subscribe to Netflix, but apparently it's about a
robot that's living with people, and everything starts off nice
and Rosie and then it goes very downhill, very wrong,
and it's kind of like a predictive programming type of thing.
And that reminds me the maid on the Jetsons. The
robot made her name was Rosie, Rosie the robot ironically.

Speaker 42 (01:19:28):
Oh and and oh, here's another one. I would god,
I this is what I woke up to this morning. Okay,
I get up, I turn my computer on, I get
my cup of coffee and my my lemon vinegar, my
lemon juice vinegar drink that I do every morning for
my kidney and all of that, and I sit down

(01:19:50):
at the computer and what's the first thing I see
is a post. I don't even know why somebody posted
this on my timeline, but they posted it from Rose
O'Donnell talking about Black Friday. And I've seen several videos
about this. Do you know the next No King's Rally
is supposed to be Black Friday, and they're saying, we're

(01:20:12):
gonna do our shopping the day before Black Friday and
the day after Black Friday. We're not gonna do any
shopping on Black Friday because we want to hit the
corporations in their pockets.

Speaker 15 (01:20:21):
Now, these people are such idiots. I mean, if you
spend your money, god, I saw it, it doesn't matter which
day you spend it. I mean, it's just like these
idiots that promote the gas boycotts. You know, oh, we're
gonna buy gas on this day. The gas stations don't care.
All they care about it is you buy gas exactly.

(01:20:41):
It doesn't matter if you buy it which day you
buy it.

Speaker 31 (01:20:44):
Jeez.

Speaker 15 (01:20:45):
But this is a level of intelligence we're dealing with. Hey, Art,
thank you for the call. I appreciate it.

Speaker 42 (01:20:50):
So I saw that. I saw that, and I'm thinking
to myself, So you would rather go the day before
or the day after and pay full price than to
go on Black Friday and get a discount.

Speaker 15 (01:21:01):
Yeah. I avoid the stores on Black Friday because there's
so many people.

Speaker 16 (01:21:06):
I don't even remember the last time I went shopping
on a black on the Black Friday. Yeah, because because
the crowds are just too insane. I can't deal with well.

Speaker 15 (01:21:16):
And people are nasty too. That's you know, that's the
thing is that it's it's all encompassing.

Speaker 42 (01:21:22):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (01:21:23):
It just demonstrates the level the society has a brick
and broken down when people what should be a joyous
season and you get all these ornary, grouchy, grumpy people
in the store, you know, all ticked off at each
other and snapping at each other, and I mean you
even get brawls but people, you know, fights breaking out

(01:21:45):
in various places. It's ridiculous. Yep. Yeah, Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Christmas.

Speaker 42 (01:21:51):
The logic, the logic of these people just escapes me.
I just I don't get it. It's well, look at
the education system, you know, but hey, it is what
it is.

Speaker 29 (01:22:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:22:05):
Anyway, Hey, thanks for the call. I have a great one. Yep,
you too, Bye, Boddy. All right, there's Art Georgia checking
in and you're welcome to check in as well. Six ten,
six hundred seventeen seventy six at 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 governed more information, more sound from the World Economic Forum.

(01:22:30):
You know, we have again with all the robots entering
the world, the billionaire New World Order class. They won't
need you folks, they won't need the peasants, they won't
need the slaves. This is the world that they dreamt of.
And this is why Larry Fink, who you know, he

(01:22:50):
told the World Economic Forum back in I think it
was twenty twenty four. He I don't know if it's
twenty twenty four twenty. I think it was more recent
than Yeah, he said twenty twenty four. I think that depopulation.
He was heralding it as a good thing.

Speaker 24 (01:23:07):
I could argue in the developed countries, the big winners
or countries that have shrinking populations, that's something that most
people never talked about. You know, we always used to
think shrinking population is a cause for negative growth. But
in my conversations with the leadership of these large developed

(01:23:30):
countries that have zatophobic immigration policies, they all have zatophobic
immigration policies. They'll allow anybody to come in. Shrinking unemployment,
excuse me, shricking demographics, These countries will rapidly develop robotics

(01:23:54):
in AI and technology, and if the promise I didn't say, it's.

Speaker 31 (01:23:58):
Going to happen. But of all that transforms.

Speaker 54 (01:24:02):
Productivity, which most of us think it will, we'll be
able to elevate the standard of living in countries and
the standard living individuals even with shrinking populations.

Speaker 31 (01:24:14):
And so the paradigm of.

Speaker 24 (01:24:16):
Negative population growth is going to be changing.

Speaker 31 (01:24:21):
And the social problems that one will have.

Speaker 24 (01:24:25):
In substituting humans for machines is going to be far
easier in those countries that have declining populations. And so
for those countries that have rising populations, the answer will
be education and so rapidly developed. You know, for those
countries that do not have a foundation of rural law or.

Speaker 31 (01:24:46):
Education, they're going to be left.

Speaker 24 (01:24:49):
That's where the divide is going to get more and
more extremely What do you think of that, Mickey, I
don't know.

Speaker 16 (01:24:55):
I think I'd have to record that and take out
all of his corrections and his sucking up of the
air and all of that was a distraction for me.
I couldn't I couldn't even concentrate on what he was saying.
Is he a lizard?

Speaker 15 (01:25:16):
Well? I haven't tested his DNA.

Speaker 16 (01:25:20):
But I think we should. I think somebody should test
his DNA.

Speaker 15 (01:25:23):
He might very well be a reptile as in a snake.
I think most of these characters at the World Economic
Forum would fit into that category. But yeah, he's promoting depopulation.
So it's a good thing. It's a good thing. Everything's
changing now. We don't need those peasants, we don't need
those slaves. We can the world is ours now with

(01:25:44):
machines and uh and and that's where that's where really
they're going to.

Speaker 16 (01:25:50):
Well I knew that that's where they were headed.

Speaker 31 (01:25:54):
You know when.

Speaker 16 (01:25:56):
People started talking about well, you can just look at
what's happened to what happened to the American economy. They
exported all of our manufacturing, all of our production, and
pretended like that those people could be retrained for jobs

(01:26:17):
in the services industry, which is primarily working with computers. Well,
that was never going to happen. I mean, that was
just that was absurd, that was ridiculous. So they left it.
They created a big population of useless eaters. And you
can tell the effect has had by the breakdown of

(01:26:40):
the family. Yeah, because you know, people men and women
still get married, they still have children, but can they
support those children? And on the economy that was created.

Speaker 15 (01:26:56):
Bottom the hour. Let's go ahead and take the bottom
of the hour break. We'll be back in a moment.
Stay with us.

Speaker 34 (01:27:00):
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Speaker 35 (01:27:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh that's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen in.

Speaker 55 (01:28:01):
Evolutionists tell us that large dinosaurs like t Rex evolved
into the birds we know and love today. If that
sounds pretty hard to believe, wait until you hear today's
creation moment. In now our Creation Moments host Paul Taylor,
I like to.

Speaker 56 (01:28:14):
Keep ducks because I love their eggs. Last summer, one
of my ducks became ill with eggs trapped inside her.
Despite my best efforts, she died. Scientists believe the same
thing may have happened to a specimen of Avimaya. This fossil,
dated by evolutionists at one hundred and ten million years old,
had evidence of an unlaid egg inside it. You are

(01:28:36):
probably now used to evolutionists referring to terrapod dinosaurs such
as Tyrannosaurus as feathered dinosaurs, despite the flimsy nature of
such evidence. These terrapods are supposed to have become extinct
sixty five million years ago, having evolved into birds. Yet
birds like Avimaya are older than these terrapods by fifty

(01:28:57):
million evolutionary years. The best known fossil bird Archaeopterics, described
by Wikipedia as a bird like dinosaur, is supposedly one
hundred and fifty million years old, yet still accepted as
a modern bird by a large minority of evolutionary biologists.
These deep time ages do not make sense in the

(01:29:18):
light of the creature's appearance. For example, the fact that
the Avimaya fossil has its unlaid egg within it suggests
that the process of egg laying has not changed for
these birds, which even evolutionists are having to admit must
have coexisted with the very type of dinosaurs which supposedly
evolved into them. These problems of dating do not arise

(01:29:39):
when we start from a biblical presupposition. The fossil layers
do not represent different eras, but rather different ecosystems which
existed in the pre flood world.

Speaker 55 (01:29:49):
Visit us at creationmoments dot com for a huge selection
of books and DVDs about Biblical creation in the Bible,
or call one eight hundred and four to two Bible
and ask how you can get a free ebook on creation.

Speaker 35 (01:30:00):
To start at twenty nine ninety nine a month with
sign agreement. Restrictions apply. Speak to a representative for complete
offer details. Seevivient dot com for licensed details. Terms and
conditions apply.

Speaker 34 (01:30:09):
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Speaker 35 (01:30:46):
Eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one.
Eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one,
eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one.
That's eight hundred five eight seven forty two eighty one.

Speaker 14 (01:31:01):
Where the spoofs go to find out what's really going on.
This is governed America.

Speaker 15 (01:31:54):
Welcome back to the broadcast. This is governor America. As
we continue on here at the website govern America dot com.
That's Governamerica dot com. My email address is radio at
Governamerica dot com. And Vicky, you want to give your
information on please.

Speaker 16 (01:32:09):
We already did that, But yeah, we did the technocratic
tyranny dot com and channelingreality dot com. And my email
address if you want to send me an email is
on both websites.

Speaker 15 (01:32:24):
Well, I can't keep track anymore. IBM's website, though, says,
a digital twin is a virtual representation of a physical
object or system that uses real time data to accurately
reflect its real world counterparts, behavior, performance, and conditions. Digital

(01:32:45):
twins enable continuous monitoring, simulation, and analysis of an object, product,
product or system over the course of its life cycle,
from design and production to maintenance and decommissioning. They can
also incorporate external processes and critical variables that affect an

(01:33:06):
asset's performance. A key feature is real time to way
data exchange between the object and its virtual replica, helping
ensure that simulated conditions accurately reflect their physical world. Enterprises
also can connect multiple digital twins to model more complex

(01:33:27):
systems in service of larger digital transformation or industry four
point zero st strategy. By providing insight into how an
object functions in the present and projecting how it might
behave in future scenarios, digital twins help organizations improve efficiency,

(01:33:47):
accelerate innovation and make data driven informed decisions. Common use
cases include process optimization, predictive maintenance, supply chain optimization, and development.
Now they talk about the different companies involved. Many modern
digital twin providers include Siemens, General Electric, Navidia, IBM, Bentley,

(01:34:10):
and Microsoft offer a suite of services. Packages might include
hardware layers such as sensor kits, data processors, synchronization services,
stimulization engines, analytics platforms, and visualizations dashboards, but enterprises with
more specialized applications might take a modular approach, choosing several

(01:34:31):
services to match their needs. So they're talking about how
the digital twins can represent any object, from buildings and
bridges to cars, airplanes, historical artifacts, and even the Earth.
They might also model complex systems such as traffic patterns,
weather events, healthcare treatment plans, and factory operations. Finally, Yep,

(01:34:52):
there you go.

Speaker 16 (01:34:53):
Care, healthcare treatment plans.

Speaker 15 (01:34:56):
Yep.

Speaker 16 (01:34:57):
That's what I've been worried about since about two thousand
and seven when I heard IBM and Mayo Clinic give
a presentation to the National Governors Association, and what they
were talking about is developing a system to manage the

(01:35:23):
manage people's healthcare and between the lines there is a
story about genetic engineering, and so, I mean, I've been
watching it. I've been watching the evolution of medical research

(01:35:44):
and our healthcare system since that time. And I went
back in history and the first mention of a nationalized
system of medical records, which is the first step towards that,
was in nineteen ninety and I forget which company it was,

(01:36:11):
ADP or something. They did a study and produced it
for George Bush, actually President George Bush, on the benefits
of nationalized medical records, and the first report said for
medical research. After that they changed it to efficiency or

(01:36:38):
cost cutting, but the first report was for medical research.

Speaker 15 (01:36:46):
Interesting, so yeah, they also say, you know, you might
have figured, but they come out and just say it outright.
Digital twins might also model complex some such you know,
we just said traffic patterns, whether events, healthcare treatment plans,
factory operations. But in more experimental contexts, digital twins might

(01:37:09):
be based on real or imagined people, complete with modeled voice, appearance,
and personality traits. So this is the thing. Anything and
everything can be a digital twin. And what they're trying
to do at the World Economic Forum, and that was
by the way my IBM with the digital twin information

(01:37:33):
that I just read. But what they're trying to do
at the World Economic Forum is model the entire world
as a digital twin. This is a University of Twin
TA professor Vanessa Evers, and she's talking about how they
need to build a digital twin of the entire world
in order to achieve true robot intelligence.

Speaker 57 (01:37:55):
Yeah, so for true robot intelligence, you would need to
build a more of the world, like a digital twin
of the entire world.

Speaker 22 (01:38:04):
We have no idea how to do that.

Speaker 57 (01:38:05):
So we think if we limit the world to a
classroom or a house, or a factory floor, or maybe
a hospital corridor, we are able to do that. But
even then, despite what all the tech pros might be
telling you to get your money, we have no approach
to that yet, we have no idea. So what about
social robots or social learning? So there are many aspects

(01:38:27):
of social learning that we can already achieve. We can
recognize emotional states from facial expressions, interpreting complex social situations
by looking at body pose and gestures speech. We can
keep the right distance while walking along, maintain eye contact
in a polite way. We could add superhuman capabilities. Listen

(01:38:50):
to the heartbeat or watch the breath of a person,
to no stress, to no pain. We can detect dominance, aggression,
creative flow. Those are all things you could detect in
an automate way. Also, a robot can learn from social
feedback by watching you, looking at your expressions and take
that as positive or negative reinforcements. And we can teach
robots by demonstrations showing them how to do something.

Speaker 15 (01:39:12):
Do you want to live in a world like this?

Speaker 16 (01:39:15):
Absolutely?

Speaker 12 (01:39:16):
Do not.

Speaker 15 (01:39:18):
I mean, everything that they're doing here is George Orwell
could not even begin to imagine this.

Speaker 31 (01:39:27):
And well, I think.

Speaker 16 (01:39:29):
It's monstrous what they're doing. And if people, if people
don't wake up to what's being done with these AI systems,
they're going to regret it.

Speaker 8 (01:39:39):
She went on.

Speaker 16 (01:39:40):
I've spent the last twenty years analyzing the systems of
government when our system, when our government was redesigned, and
at the bottom, at the core of all of it,
it's evil, absolute evil. You know, I was never a

(01:40:02):
person who believed much in evil and Satanism and all
that crap, But when you really study what's been done,
what they did, there's no other word.

Speaker 15 (01:40:17):
For Yeah, absolutely. I absolutely believe in good and evil,
and I have to believe good is going to triumph
in the end, but the evil is going to flourish
for a time and ultimately I think it'll destroy itself. Unfortunately,

(01:40:39):
it'll probably take a fair number of us with it,
and that's a kind of a depressing scenario. But there's
no question what they have planned for us certainly is
going to be a bumpy ride, to say the least. Now,
this professor went on to say that they need to
train these robots in very much the same way they
do large language models. Now, you know the Chat, GPT,

(01:41:02):
the Claude, the GROC, the Perplexity, these large language models,
which can be useful, you know, I've I've found them
to be very useful, you know, in searching for answers.
They're the ultimate search engine in many cases. But they
what they want to do with these, with the robotics

(01:41:23):
and programming them. The way they do large language models
is to have them so that they can predict what
the next best action would be based upon a lot
of data from the real world. Again, this is Professor
Evers of the University of twinte But.

Speaker 57 (01:41:43):
Of course that is super complicated. In the real world,
that's immensely more complex. Chet GTT has to choose for
twenty six characters, what is the best next character?

Speaker 47 (01:41:53):
But what about the real world?

Speaker 57 (01:41:54):
Imagine vision alone that we don't have hearing, such taste,
everything like that, just just seeing stuff. If you would
freeze frame and then predict what is the next thing
that's going to happen individual, it would be impossible to
know at the pixel level. Maybe if you have knowledge
general knowledge of the world, you could do it, But

(01:42:15):
then you would need to know a painting if it falls,
it falls down, never up, and the wallpaper doesn't just
change from like one second to the next. You'll need
to know all these things.

Speaker 15 (01:42:25):
Yeah, total information awareness. That's what we're talking about here,
you know. So anyway, that's that's the thing. The World
Economic Forum says the walking, talking robots are coming within
the next four or five years, so we can look
forward to that or not.

Speaker 16 (01:42:46):
Yeah, I guess I'm alert because I refuse to use
any of it. Yeah, I just won't do it. And
if that means I go off there and you know,
send my computer to the trash, that's what it's.

Speaker 12 (01:43:03):
Going to be.

Speaker 15 (01:43:06):
Well, you sent me the c Spans Beach from former
NIH director Monica burd Burdig GNOLLI is that how you
pronounced that?

Speaker 16 (01:43:17):
She's not sure.

Speaker 15 (01:43:18):
She's talking about needing more research into cancer in restoring
trust in the metal.

Speaker 16 (01:43:24):
Yeah, let me tell you. Let me tell you something
about her. She is the ultimate Pollyanna, and I don't
believe that she really understands the system that she's promoting.
Whoever coached her, they coached her on all the positive side,

(01:43:46):
but there is a negative side to the system, which
is what I've been worried about, Like I said since
two thousand and seven when I first heard it. As
you listen to her, understand that, listen for the naive

(01:44:06):
tay in her presentation.

Speaker 15 (01:44:10):
All right, yeah, again, this is Monica Burta Nalli, I
think is how you pronounce it. And she's talking about
again the need for more research into cancer, and she
wants to restore the trust into the medical bureaucracy.

Speaker 58 (01:44:23):
It's often said that those participating in clinical trials receive
the best care, and this is consistent with that assertion.
It also tells us that we need much to bring
more research to the communities who need better outcomes and
better care all of you know this side disparities in
research inclusion. This is just clinical trials inclusion, but it

(01:44:44):
really matches research overall. They match those in health overall.
We're missing important data from older people, people who live
in rural sites, they lack insurance, combers belong to a
minority group, have a very rare cancer, or have more
than one disease. We should not be surprised at all
that this list describes characteristics of people who are experiencing

(01:45:07):
health disparities.

Speaker 22 (01:45:09):
Next line, So.

Speaker 58 (01:45:10):
Now I'm going to get specific. Here's my wish list
for all of us. What would help us tackle health disparities,
improve health for everybody? Number one, more clinical trials, including
those that help us really understand the environmental and societal
causes of cancer and poor outcomes.

Speaker 15 (01:45:27):
You know I was going to have a completely different
answer to that question. Would what would help to resolve
the disparities in health? How about universal access, universal nutrition
in food in the food supply. How about getting rid
of the toxins in the food supply. How about educating
people as to the proper things to eat, as opposed

(01:45:49):
to know all the junk food, the processed food, the
genetically modified food. No, none of that is ever in
the discussion. You notice that they never connect the dots
to your diet, the diet that you eat, the garbage
that you eat. No, that's never.

Speaker 16 (01:46:08):
Never engineered food supply.

Speaker 15 (01:46:11):
Yeah, exactly, Nope, it's all about, Hey, we need more
clinical trials. We need more drugs, that's all it.

Speaker 58 (01:46:18):
Is, including those that help us really understand the environmental
and societal causes of cancer and poor outcomes. Real world
generalization of clinical trials results take the results from clinical
trials conducted in major centers of health research and find
out if they also work for other populations. We've already

(01:46:39):
seen this in AI. A nice tool that works very
well in the big hospital doesn't work in the clinic
down the street that has a completely different demographic. The
Health Professional Study, the Framingham Heart Study, all of these
studies follow communities for decades, but they were unbelievably expect

(01:47:01):
long and difficult. They don't need to be that anymore
way anymore. We have data technology that can truly transform
the ability of every single person in this room to
contribute their data to a longitudinal study.

Speaker 31 (01:47:14):
And it's time.

Speaker 58 (01:47:16):
It's cheaper, it's easier, it's better.

Speaker 47 (01:47:19):
Why are we not doing it yet?

Speaker 15 (01:47:21):
Yeah? Don't you want to transfer all your medical data
to her?

Speaker 2 (01:47:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (01:47:25):
She said, the technology is there.

Speaker 16 (01:47:28):
She says data, She doesn't say your medical record. So
you you The way I saw the system rolling out
was that the your medical record will be analyzed by
real doctors, and they will set the criteria for the

(01:47:50):
research subjects for what they want to research, and that
they will choose you based on your body chemistry and
for what they want to experiment with. And that information
will be communicated to your probably nurse practitioner or physician's

(01:48:15):
assistant because you won't have a doctor, and a nurse
practitioner or a physician's assistant doesn't have the training to
challenge the system. Yeah, so they will just do what
the system says.

Speaker 15 (01:48:31):
I see, we have a caller on the line. Just
hang with me, caller, I got one more clip in
this series and we'll get right to you. She goes
on to talk about the learning health system, learning health system,
and making your health data a public utility.

Speaker 58 (01:48:46):
Over the past twenty years, the National Academies of Science, Engineering,
and Medicine have been working on a comprehensive program. This
is twenty eleven this thing for the development of a
learning health system. Progress must be made on many fronts
for this to be achieved. One example, a critical component
not yet well adopted, was highlighted almost fifteen years ago

(01:49:09):
in this Academy's report. This stated that to deliver the
right care to the right patient at the right time
the definition of precision medicine, we needed to integrate research
data with clinical data, not just which gene predicts which
rug should be used, but to include all relevant data,

(01:49:30):
including the many environmental and societal issues that determine whether
an individual can thrive. During the twenty years since the
learning how system concept was champion, technology that can help
us has advanced tremendously. AI is the most striking example
of this. AI depends on data completely, so it is

(01:49:51):
an essential beginning is to develop a safe and reliable
way to link at an individual level, clinical outcome data
from a patient's digital records with the many other important
data sets relevant to health. Such a system which deliver

(01:50:11):
what people really care about. Because this is the only
way a learning health system that has the trust of
the people we serve, patients, clinicians and researchers will be
able to succeed Today, the healthcare industry generates thirty percent
of the world's total data volume, thirty percent just healthcare,

(01:50:33):
and the average hospital in the United States produces fifty
petabytes of data annually in the form of clinical notes, labs,
medical images, sensor readings, genomics, and operational and financial records.
AI is driving great progress by helping us capture data
now from text files, can read image in biometrics, annitate

(01:50:55):
genomic data, and integrate very diverse data sources at an
individual level, faster and cheaper by far than what we
have had in the past, but inability to access the
data we need remains a major limitation. Progress is also
happening here. Through its leadership consortium, the nam IS championed

(01:51:15):
the concept of health data as a public utility, a
utility that will include everyone and can be used to
improve health for everyone. We have seen impressive progress toward
implementing the data access defined by this concept, driven by
both federal government and private sector activities.

Speaker 15 (01:51:37):
What do you think she's talking about there.

Speaker 16 (01:51:40):
Well, once she says precision medicine, she's talking about body
chemistry and diagnosis and treatment based on that precision information,
which is what makes the entire system experimental, and we

(01:52:01):
know that different medications that they produce on a mass
level have different effects on different people. But they're talking
about changing over to precision based on your body chemistry.

Speaker 8 (01:52:18):
But the.

Speaker 15 (01:52:20):
Public utility part of that, oh.

Speaker 16 (01:52:23):
Yeah, well yeah, that makes your data available to anybody
out there there you go. I mean, it's just it's
so horrifying that That's why I've spent so much time
on it, because what they have in mind to do
is so horrifying to me that I just dedicated myself

(01:52:50):
to watching the progress of this thing. And then now
here we are, they're rolling it out.

Speaker 15 (01:52:56):
Yep, exactly. Let's go to the phone. Speaking of rolling
things out, let's roll out the call that's waiting in
the line. Let's go to Tennessee. Hello, you're on the air.
Go ahead, please, good show.

Speaker 5 (01:53:08):
Like all your topics so far, what I called about
was the no till farming thing. I grew up and
farmed up until the late eighties, and I saw the
start of the use of round up on soybeans. And
my main gripe is using corn for ethanol fuels. If

(01:53:30):
we didn't do that, we wouldn't have to put on
so many chemicals but even the chemicals we put on
shouldn't be put on there. We're about the only big
country in the world that uses herbicides like that, especially
the round up and the glyph of States. It's everybody
knows it's causing cancer. Europe doesn't use these chemicals on
their grain, and then all the processed foods over there.

(01:53:53):
So I wonder what Kennedy's doing. Not we know what
he's not doing, but.

Speaker 15 (01:53:59):
Yeah, I think in large part to me, he's been
a big disappointment in many respects to a lot of
different people.

Speaker 5 (01:54:09):
Well, the whole Trumpet admin has been.

Speaker 15 (01:54:12):
Yeah, exactly, but yeah, I mean, and and what's interesting
about that is, sorry, I was a little distracted. My
wife came in and said, somebody just opened the back
door of our house here. Uh, and and that's why
I don't know if people heard the dog parking in
the background. Uh, nobody's supposed to be here, you know,

(01:54:32):
And yet the back door was just open. It's very strange.
So I'm gonna have some yeah, investigation to do in
about a minute.

Speaker 5 (01:54:39):
But anyway, well, don't let me stop you grab you
nine mil and go after me.

Speaker 15 (01:54:44):
Well, I hopefully it's under control. But the point is
is that we have a lot of situations going on
right now with.

Speaker 34 (01:54:54):
This.

Speaker 15 (01:54:55):
I tell you what, let me let me go ahead
and take the break.

Speaker 42 (01:54:58):
It's okay.

Speaker 15 (01:54:59):
Can you hold over the for a few minutes?

Speaker 8 (01:55:01):
Sure?

Speaker 15 (01:55:02):
All right, hang on, We'll be back here, ladies and gentlemen.
I'm gonna find out what's going on here. Uh, don't
go away, our number three governor America straight ahead.

Speaker 29 (01:55:12):
M hm.

Speaker 34 (01:55:15):
H m.

Speaker 59 (01:55:28):
Hm.

Speaker 34 (01:56:35):
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Speaker 35 (01:57:20):
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Speaker 35 (01:58:21):
Eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one
eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one
eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one.
That's eight hundred five eight seven forty two eighty.

Speaker 29 (01:58:34):
One two.

Speaker 4 (01:58:47):
Still.

Speaker 46 (01:59:01):
American Family News on muster pe a one two punch
as Europe joins the US and slapping new sanctions on Russia.

Speaker 47 (01:59:07):
This nineteenth package of European Union sanctions includes banning the
import of Russian liquefied natural gas, intended as a blow
to the valuable income stream Russia gets from selling energy.
Slovakia was holding out a relatively pro Moscow government, worried
that energy prices might soar as a result. The new

(01:59:28):
package also adds travel restrictions on Russian diplomats and identifies
over one hundred more vessels from Moscow's sanction evading shadow fleet.
Even China, seen by many as enabling Russia's war on Ukraine,
will find some of its firms affected by these new measures.
Jonathan Savage, Fox News.

Speaker 46 (01:59:47):
Democratic lawmakers on the Houseover Zych Committee announced Wednesday they
were launching what they call a tracker for Ice agent misconduct.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller criticizes the
move and Democrats reaction in de Ice in general.

Speaker 48 (02:00:01):
This is a party that has embraced full scale insurrection
against the laws of the United States.

Speaker 46 (02:00:07):
An order blocking National Guard troops from being deployed in
Chicago will now be indefinitely extended Box thirty two. Chicago's
Jonny Lum.

Speaker 49 (02:00:16):
Reports Judge Abel Prairie had encouraged both sides to agree
on extending the temporary restraining order blocking the deployment of
the National Guard for longer than thirty days, since she
can only grant that once and so now both sides
agreed to extend the TIRO until a final ruling, either
the Supreme Court decides or this goes to trial on merit.

(02:00:38):
President Trump wanted to deploy three hundred Illinois National Guard
troops and about four hundred from Texas for the safety
of federal agents detaining illegal immigrants. Judge Perry previously said
she had no faith in the declarations of federal officials.

Speaker 46 (02:00:52):
War Secretary Pete Heggsath announce Wednesday at least five people
were killed after more military strikes on drug votes in
the Pacific Ocean. Secretary of State Marco Rubio defends the strikes.

Speaker 51 (02:01:03):
He's well funded dangerous violent drug cartels that operate as
terrorists who are flooding our country with drugs.

Speaker 15 (02:01:12):
The United States is going to deal with it.

Speaker 46 (02:01:14):
The National Intelligence Director Tulsea Gabbert, detailing the impression this
White House is giving the people looking to smuggle drugs
into the nation.

Speaker 52 (02:01:21):
You're seeing these cartels and these narco traffickers afraid because
for the first time they're actually seeing in President Trump
someone who means what he says, that he's going to
stop them from putting the American people's lives at risk.

Speaker 46 (02:01:37):
Cancel culture and the rest of wokeness is the result
of the feminization of the culture and its institutions, according
to a theory from a conservative commentator more from Steve Jordal.

Speaker 53 (02:01:49):
During one of the town halls, Congresswoman Alexandria a Casio
Cortez head with Senator Bernie Sanders. Recently, AlSi accused Republicans
of radicalizing young men.

Speaker 20 (02:01:58):
They are able to radicalize and target and exploit a
generation of young boys away from healthy masculinity and into
an insecure masculinity that requires the domination of others.

Speaker 53 (02:02:14):
Helen Andrews writes in Compact magazine that quite the opposite,
culture is suffering from wokeness, which is feminine patterns of
behavior applied to institutions empathy overrationality, cohesion over competition, and
feelings over everything. AFR talk host Jenna Ellis says the
experiment to let women lead our culture, our businesses, our schools,
and our politics has failed.

Speaker 43 (02:02:35):
Instead of women actually becoming stronger and more masculine in nature,
what's happened is that we have very, very weak men.

Speaker 53 (02:02:45):
And she says, despite the best efforts of AOC in
the woke crowd, society would be best served if we let.

Speaker 43 (02:02:51):
Men be men, strong warriors in society and in policy.
Who are the protectors the strength to the pillar of soca.

Speaker 53 (02:03:00):
And nowhere, she says, is that more needed than in
the church. Pastors need to speak the hard truths of
the Bible without apology.

Speaker 43 (02:03:08):
We now have an overfeminized society that's so concerned about
ascending our opponents, and pastors who are so concerned about
ascending non Christians that we're not being effective anymore.

Speaker 53 (02:03:21):
I'm Steve Chortle.

Speaker 46 (02:03:22):
More News online at AFNT net and on the AFN
mobile app, I'm must be k.

Speaker 1 (02:03:31):
We have before us the opportunity to forge for ourselves
and for future generations, a new world.

Speaker 29 (02:03:38):
Order, new world or m.

Speaker 42 (02:03:39):
New world order.

Speaker 3 (02:03:40):
This is a moment to seize. The glidoscope has been shaken.
The pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again.
Before they do, let us reorder this world around.

Speaker 6 (02:03:51):
Us, a new world order, a world where the United
Nations is poised to fulfill the historic vision of its founders.

Speaker 7 (02:03:57):
Nevertheless, united position to shape this so that the problem
of the put rejudicity will be the emergence of a
new international.

Speaker 8 (02:04:09):
Order the first decade of the twenty first centuries.

Speaker 9 (02:04:12):
But out of what will be seen as the greatest
restructuring of the global economy, the greatest restructuring of the
global economy, greatest restructuring of the global economy, a new
world order was created.

Speaker 4 (02:04:26):
Documenting the crisis of our republic.

Speaker 10 (02:04:29):
The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and
open society, and we are as a people inherently and
historically opposed to secret societies, the secret oaths and the
secret proceedings.

Speaker 11 (02:04:43):
Waiting war on the new world order.

Speaker 12 (02:04:45):
The Council's of government.

Speaker 13 (02:04:47):
We must guard again the acquisition of unwanted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial conflict.

Speaker 14 (02:04:58):
This is govern America with Darren Weeks and Vicky Davis.

Speaker 15 (02:05:09):
From FEMA Regions five to ten. This is the third
and final hour of Governor America. I'm during Weeks. Vicky
Davis is here as well. It continues to be the
twenty fifth of October twenty twenty five. As we get
back into the show, you have the caller on the
line from Tennessee, and I apologize for the mayhem going
into that last break. My wife had popped her head

(02:05:30):
in the studio here and she let me know that
the back door had opened, apparently on its own. And
we've kind of had some weird things happening since my
father in law passed away recently I probably now, I
think it was April or somewhere thereabouts, and we've been

(02:05:54):
dealing with the estate matters and things like that. A
lot going on, but there's been some strange occurrences happening,
and I'm not sure if this is one of those
or not, but it was. There's no question about it
that the back door opened. I did it. We did
a cursory search of the house. Nobody is here, and

(02:06:17):
so we continue on with the doors now locked, so
hopefully they stay that way anyway. Sorry, about that color
you had called in about the no tail gardening or
no tail farming. I apologize because somebody else was talking
to me at the time. Can you can you briefly

(02:06:38):
just kind of sum up what you were saying again
so that I can respond in a better, more coherent manner.

Speaker 42 (02:06:48):
Sure.

Speaker 5 (02:06:49):
Just glad, everything's all right. Yes, the no tail farming
thing was a boon to farming because it cut down
on the amount of fuel you had to use, and
it cut down on wear and tear on it equipment
and everything like that. Before they came out with all
these chemicals, the farmers had to put used cultivators and
go through row crops to get rid of the weeds.

(02:07:11):
They didn't use any chemicals or anything. Yeah, and by
all this corn being utilized for ethanol fuel, that's just
exacerbating all of the problems with everything, the runoff and
the percolation down into the whales and the whole thing.

Speaker 15 (02:07:27):
Yeah, that reminds me of what I was going to
say before we got interrupted, and that was that one
of the things that they mentioned in that article that
I referenced earlier when we were talking about this subject
from the article from the Universe, It was actually the book.
It was a chapter from a book on hotel farming

(02:07:47):
from the University of Oklahoma. They talked a lot about
how they're having to dose the crops with all of
these herbicides, you know, and that's that's a critical part
of the novetail farming equation. It can't be successful without

(02:08:08):
all the herbicides. And I thought, well, that's really interesting
because we're being we're being sold that this is good,
this is good for the environment because it uses less
water and it keeps things carbon sequestered into the ground.
And yet they're they're openly admitting that you have to
flood the flood the soil with all of this these herbicides. So, uh,

(02:08:31):
that can't be good. And and as you rightly point out,
all the herbicides and everything, you know, the monsanto is
probably the worst thing that ever happened to farming. And
you know, I know a lot of farmers would probably
push back on me at me for that saying that, well,
it's helped with weed control and everything, and for a

(02:08:51):
time that may have been true. But my understanding of
the situation is they've it's required more and more and
more of these pesticide or not pesticides but herbicides in
order to accomplish the same thing. Because you have the
you have the weeds becoming more and more resilient because
they obviously adapt to what's being put there. So there's

(02:09:15):
no easy answer to all this, is there.

Speaker 5 (02:09:19):
No, there isn't. And the Montano salesmen are telling the
farmers and the nursery people that round up is safe. Hell,
you can almost drink it, they say, quote from several
nurserymen and I know around East Tennessee here. But it's
all just it's meant to weaken us and kill us

(02:09:42):
and make us sick and all of that.

Speaker 15 (02:09:44):
So yeah, it's doing a pretty good job of it too,
I think. Yeah, Tell you can almost drink it. Tell
that to the people who, some of whom have actually
filed lawsuits against the company now where they were completely
being eaten up by cancer as a result of spraying
some of these you know, like round Up and stuff
like that. So it's great.

Speaker 5 (02:10:06):
The guys that do most of the spray and on
farms on, several of them have gotten Parkinson's and other problems,
you know, in their seventies and from handling all the
chemicals and stuff.

Speaker 15 (02:10:18):
Yeah, that's a terrible situation, man. I wish yeah, thank
you for the call. I appreciate it. Someday, hopefully, My
hope is that there will be accountability for the people
who have pushed all this stuff upon humanity to be
able to destroy everything, to destroy the environment and the

(02:10:41):
name of saving it, supposedly, and then that's what they do.
They always say that they're in favor of something, and
they're doing the exact opposite of what they're promoting. But
there needs to be accountability for these people. We hear
a lot about oh, nobody's above the law, nobody's above
the law, but there are some people that are above
the way, and it may not happen in this lifetime,

(02:11:07):
but someday there will be accountability. Someday they will be
held to account.

Speaker 16 (02:11:13):
Yeah, I hope so. But I have to say that
all of my research has led me to the conclusion,
and this is just my personal feeling on it, is
that we actually lost World War Two, and our country,

(02:11:37):
through the State Department, has been led by people who
incrementally over the years, have sought to actually destroy our country,
destroy our people. And that's the way I feel about it.
That's what I think happened, and so take that for

(02:12:00):
what it's worth.

Speaker 15 (02:12:01):
Well, it's worth a lot to me. Well, it's worth
a lot to me. Anyway, let's go back to the phones.
Another opinion that's worth a lot to me is that
of Sherry in Kansas. Hello, Sherry, you're on the air.
Go ahead, please.

Speaker 60 (02:12:14):
There, you know, if you really want to get a
good handle glad to say. And you've probably looked at
some of the first stuff. Stephanie Sinneth.

Speaker 15 (02:12:29):
No, I don't think I'm familiar with the with the name.

Speaker 60 (02:12:33):
Oh man she has I know, uh, the lady that
that has Western eight Price Foudation dot org.

Speaker 15 (02:12:45):
Okay, Sally Morrell.

Speaker 60 (02:12:49):
She she publishes some of the first stuff. That's where
I've seen it. But Stephanie Sinneth has done more on
glass to say than anybody I know. And she even
they had this up on the Western Price website years

(02:13:09):
ago that there seems to be a relationship of the
of the things that have you know, they're round up
ready like corn and troy beans, and it's even it
would even be in cottonseed. And I don't know about

(02:13:31):
sugar beets, but a lot of the sugar now is
from sugar beets, and I'm I think I know they're
genetically modified a lot of them. It might even be
in the sugar. But something about that, uh, it interferes
with the the amino acid glyci, which glycy makes up

(02:13:58):
a lot of I mean, well, molecule glacy makes a
part of a lot of amino acids your proteins, and
it seems to be messing with that. But yeah, her
name is Stephanie Sentences. I don't know if she would

(02:14:18):
do an interview or not, but I have heard her
on some people's programs. She's really smart. She's been doing
this a long time, the toxic legacy. She talks about
the blood in there. But the other thing about this
no chill farming, and I think I think they still

(02:14:40):
disc they just the stubble doesn't go under because I've
got a field to the shot west of me that
they do that. And if they have to spray the
field of it's around a pretty crop, which most of
them are. They don't put their big heavy tractors in

(02:15:02):
there do that? They usually? Uh, this guy doesn't. By
playing he owns yeah, like.

Speaker 15 (02:15:08):
A crop duster type of situation.

Speaker 60 (02:15:11):
He's he's been pretty you know, cognizant of which way
the wind's blowing, because whenever I've seen him spray and
it's not coming my way. And I appreciate that, but
not everybody is, you know.

Speaker 42 (02:15:28):
Yeah, but.

Speaker 15 (02:15:33):
Yeah, it's dangerous and and you know they round up crops,
the Monsanto crops. There have been numerous you know, people
that have talked about how they contaminate organic crops and
and and they have made it in such a way
that the legal framework is in favor of the patented crops.

(02:15:54):
If they get into your crops, you can't sue them
for eminating your organic crops. Monsandro can sue you for
having their patented genetic patterns in your crop. And you
never even planted Monsanto, So.

Speaker 60 (02:16:13):
Right, it's insane trespassed.

Speaker 15 (02:16:17):
Yeah, yeah, And so how this could ever have happened,
I don't know, other than you know, you have a
big company. And now Monsanto has been purchased by Bear
and so it makes perfect sense to me that the
drugs are you know, they've already talked about putting vaccines

(02:16:37):
in the food supply, so I could completely see that
coming down the road.

Speaker 60 (02:16:43):
YEA thing is and I heard this, there's this guy
named Sam Andrews who runs on the He doesn't own
it out right, it's in a corporation, but he runs
the a what's the name of it. He runs a
training center in Levanon, Missouri for fire arms and he

(02:17:06):
also teaches you know, battlefield type first aid and has
really didn't do it all himself. He has really good
experts teach this. But anyway, John Moore has him on
every Monday, and last Mandy towards the let's see it

(02:17:29):
was the second half hour and into the next half hour.
At the top of the hour, he was talking about
the comparison of men today young you know, young boys
men there are stopsterone level and compared to say somebody

(02:17:55):
who's a boomer or you know, even next generation, they
have hot testosterone level than these kids.

Speaker 15 (02:18:06):
And this.

Speaker 60 (02:18:08):
Glif wile say it's so ubiquitous or the soybean or
so ubiquitous is used for a protein and so much stuff. Yeah,
and the corn I can't help but think that that
has something to do with it.

Speaker 15 (02:18:23):
Oh, I don't doubt that at all, you know, but.

Speaker 60 (02:18:28):
I mean he talked like it's it's drastic and it's
it seems to be effect in the fertility rate for sure.
And you know, it's something interesting to look into because yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:18:43):
Well especially when you consider that the fish have you know,
there's certain fish in certain areas have had both sets
of organs. You know, Alex Jones made a comment about that,
and people were making fun of him for that, but
that was actually an actual article that was reported, I
believe in the mainstream media.

Speaker 29 (02:19:00):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (02:19:01):
And so he was talking, you know, he.

Speaker 16 (02:19:06):
There, Yeah, I remember that very well. Then the freaking
frogs gay.

Speaker 15 (02:19:12):
Yeah, well yeah, and he was. He was again lampooned
for that. But there may be things Alex Jones might
deserve to be lampooned for, but that was not one
of them. Uh. And as far as runoff, I think
that this was the result of of actual sewage where
people have used the bathroom and you know, the sewage

(02:19:34):
treatment facilities, uh do what they do with the water
and then dump it into the streams and and this
this is the result where the fish and and the
you know, wildlife aquatic creatures were deformed as a result
of it. Now, if if the aquatic creatures are being

(02:19:54):
deformed as a result of it, what's it doing to you?
You know, to your point and it could be why
we have so many insane people who don't know what
restroom to use anymore.

Speaker 60 (02:20:09):
Anyway.

Speaker 16 (02:20:10):
Actually, I believe it because my son in nineteen seventy four,
my son was four years old and I took him
to a preschool and you know, because I worked, and

(02:20:30):
the teacher there, the director there, told me that he
needed to be put on drugs. I forget what the
name of the drug was at the time, but he
was supposedly hyperactive. And when she said that, that was
his last day at that school. Because there was nothing

(02:20:53):
wrong with him. He was just a boy. And you
can't get boys, you know, real boys, at least back then.
You can't get him to sit quietly and play like
a girl.

Speaker 11 (02:21:07):
You know.

Speaker 16 (02:21:07):
That just wasn't going to happen with him. And so
I got him in a different school where he could
actually be a boy.

Speaker 12 (02:21:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (02:21:16):
Well, thank god he had a real mother, you know,
because today you have a lot of these people who are,
you know, trying to gain notoriety for themselves. Really, you
know a lot of these women who are themselves a
little mentally ill, and they're trying to you know, it's

(02:21:40):
virtue signaling where they're dressing their kid up at a
very young age as the opposite sex, saying that they're
transitioning or whatever. I mean, this is nuts. We have
an epidemic of mental illness here. That's the biggest disease
that we have anywhere, is the disease of the mind.

(02:22:00):
And I don't think that that's going to be fixed
anytime soon.

Speaker 16 (02:22:04):
Well, I knew another woman who had a son at
the same age as my son, and she did put
her son on drugs, and I thought, you know, she's
doing that because little boys, you know, they're kind of
a pain in the rear end. You know, they run

(02:22:25):
around wild, they do stuff, you know, and so you
gotta you gotta watch him, you gotta ride herd on him,
but let him go, you know, because that's that's who
they are, you know. And so I I have wondered,
you know, what was the outcome for her, for her son,

(02:22:48):
because she did go along with it.

Speaker 15 (02:22:51):
Well, one one, one guy who was a little boy
at one time is a Keir Starmer And I don't
know if he grew up to be a man or not,
but he certainly has grown up to be a tautalitarian
authoritarian wanna be and an implementer of the new World
Order digital ID system, and he's promoting that big time

(02:23:11):
over there, going along and going back to the subject
we've been talking about throughout the show. They're trying their
best to get this system in place where everybody has
a digital ID. You might have a digital twin, but
you're going to have a digital ID if they get
their way. And already here in the States we have

(02:23:32):
the driver's licenses, which many of which have the real
ID star or emblem on them. And this is a
step in that direction for sure, you know, and this
has been many, many years in the works. We've been
talking about this for a long time with you know,
with the Cattle i D, you know, where they wanted
all the ranchers and farmers to have all their crops

(02:23:55):
identified and all their cattle identified, the pigs. Nothing, nothing
can escape the total information awareness system. But the people
ID is very very draconian because if it's going to
affect how you live, but they first have to sell
it to you. They first have to get you to

(02:24:16):
buy into it as it's a good thing. And that's
what care Stormer is trying to do over there in
the UK right now. He just put out this promotional
video saying that once people learn about how much easier
it will beat them. You know it's going to make
their lives so much easier. Why they're all for it.

Speaker 12 (02:24:33):
You know.

Speaker 15 (02:24:34):
The only thing is he's lying through his teeth. It's
not the case, but that's what he said in his video.
So i'mon Brighton today.

Speaker 61 (02:24:40):
This is poplis Bank and I've been talking to customers
about digital idea.

Speaker 15 (02:24:44):
I'm not really enthusiastic. And he's got the idiot annoying
music in there too. Have you place informational.

Speaker 61 (02:24:50):
Life for everything other than proving you right to work?

Speaker 8 (02:24:55):
It won't be manatric You don't have to have it.

Speaker 2 (02:24:57):
But you can't have it.

Speaker 61 (02:24:58):
You can use it anything that we can as identification,
and there are lots of things.

Speaker 15 (02:25:02):
If you ought to rent, for example, if you.

Speaker 31 (02:25:03):
Want to applaform mortgage, if you.

Speaker 61 (02:25:05):
Want to get your child into primary school as a
catchment area, and you've got to show where you live,
proving who you are, what your data birth is will
just be able to be done.

Speaker 8 (02:25:16):
Particular idea.

Speaker 31 (02:25:17):
They're really up for it.

Speaker 61 (02:25:19):
I think once you understand just how much easier in
my life, so many more people will be too.

Speaker 15 (02:25:24):
Yeah, it's going to make your life a whole lot easier. No,
it's going to make your life to the point where
they can control it. Cradle de Grave.

Speaker 16 (02:25:30):
Yeah, well they'll be able to track you everywhere. I mean,
that's another issue that I was watching. And one of
the first issues actually Congress Tom tan Crado had a
build in Congress called the Real Idea Act, And the

(02:25:53):
Real id Act was going to be connected to a
human resource management system, you know, where they could control
the inputs and outputs of foreign workers, you know, a
total management system.

Speaker 15 (02:26:13):
Yep.

Speaker 16 (02:26:13):
And and I wrote about it. I'll include the article
in the show notes. But the first inquiry about a
national ID card that I heard of was in a
congressional hearing with Grover Norquist.

Speaker 15 (02:26:32):
Yeah. Well, the good the good news is that the
people are actually pushing back some on this. A lot
of people have signed a petition against it in the UK.
We'll cover that a little bit when we come back
from the break. That's the bright spot, because we still
have some say about this, and there needs to be
a loud and firm say saying of no, you will

(02:26:55):
not do this to us. We'll be back bottom of
the hour stay with Us.

Speaker 35 (02:27:00):
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Speaker 11 (02:27:10):
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Speaker 35 (02:27:46):
Eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one,
eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one,
eight hundred five eight seven four to two eight one.
That's eight hundred five eight seven forty two eighty one one.

Speaker 62 (02:28:01):
The Scripture's view marriage as a covenant relationship for a lifetime.

Speaker 39 (02:28:05):
Doctor Gary Chapman with a love language minute.

Speaker 62 (02:28:08):
But what if your spouse breaks the covenant? Are you
to abandon them or try to cover up for them?
Neither of these are biblical approaches. Jesus said that when
a spouse sins, we are to confront them, hoping they
will repent so we can forgive them. If they don't repent,
we're to try confronting again. If they ultimately refuse to repent,

(02:28:31):
we're to treat them as an unbeliever. How do you
treat unbelievers?

Speaker 4 (02:28:36):
You pray for.

Speaker 62 (02:28:37):
Them, you love them, and you return good for evil.
Who knows when they may repent and the relationship can
be restored. God often confronted Israel and always stood ready
to forgive.

Speaker 4 (02:28:49):
Them when they repented.

Speaker 39 (02:28:50):
He is our mod Doctor Gary Chapman is the author
of the Five Love Languages.

Speaker 27 (02:28:56):
For more, visit Fivelove Languages dot com.

Speaker 39 (02:29:00):
This is seeking Him with Nancy demas Wogglemouth.

Speaker 63 (02:29:05):
Sometimes God allows tough things in our lives so we
can be healed of a hard heart.

Speaker 4 (02:29:11):
Well it's official. The company's bankrutes, Oh Bob, I am
so sorry.

Speaker 63 (02:29:17):
We can respond to problems in different ways. Sometimes we
respond with pride.

Speaker 47 (02:29:23):
I'll show them I'm gonna build a new business and
wipe them all out.

Speaker 63 (02:29:26):
We can also respond in despair.

Speaker 22 (02:29:29):
Ah, who am I joking?

Speaker 64 (02:29:31):
I'm never gonna work again.

Speaker 63 (02:29:34):
Or we can choose to respond in humility.

Speaker 37 (02:29:37):
God has a plan for us, even if it means
that I start mopping the floors.

Speaker 16 (02:29:41):
We love God and we're called according to His purpose.

Speaker 63 (02:29:44):
Right with the pressures you're facing today, will you respond
in humility? Let God shape your life through the pressure
with seeking him. I'm Nancy Demas Woggamooth.

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Speaker 35 (02:30:45):
Eight hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight
hundred eight two five one seven one oh eight hundred
eight two five one seven one oh. That's eight hundred
eight two five seventeen with.

Speaker 14 (02:31:01):
A spoofs go to find out what's really going on.
This is govern America.

Speaker 15 (02:31:17):
All right, when the home stretch of the broadcast one
more half hour to go here on govern America. Govern
America dot com is the website for the show. The
Technocratic Tyranny dot Com is Vicki's website containing all of
her research, and of course you can link over to
Channelingreality dot com, her original website with her original research.
Lots lots to do, lots to read and discover there

(02:31:42):
as you do your research, and I hope everybody is
doing research as time allows. I know, with life, everything
is busy today, but we certainly need to understand what's
going on around us, because that's how really they have
been able to implement all of this stuff is by
keeping everybody distracted on things that don't matter and things

(02:32:02):
that certainly are well. Entertainments and various things like that.
I mean, when you work full time, certainly you have
to pay the bills, you have to be able to
pay for food, and that gets increasingly burdensome as time progresses,
and you know, a lot of times you don't feel
like doing the work, you don't feel like going and

(02:32:24):
reading when on the very little time that you have
to yourself for yourself. But it's it's critical because the
next generation needs to be aware. We need to be
able to teach them because certainly you're not going to
hear it from the public schools. They're not going to
hear it from the public schools or from any other
outlet more than likely, you know. So anyway we were,

(02:32:50):
we've been sharing about digital ideas and things of that nature.
I was talking about care Stormer over there in the
UK earlier and I said, there is a positive note
on this, and that is that the people of the
United Kingdom are actually fighting back on some of this stuff.
Martin Armstrong Armstrong Economics. He says the people of the
United Kingdom are fighting back against the government's plan to

(02:33:12):
roll out a digital ID system. There is a petition
that has been signed. The petition to counter the legislation
quickly became the fastest growing online petition in UK history.
VICKI wow, with over two million people signing in less
than forty eight hours.

Speaker 16 (02:33:31):
That gives me hope. That gives me hope.

Speaker 15 (02:33:35):
It says we demand that the UK government immediately commits
to not introducing a digital ID card. We think this
would be a step towards mass surveillance and digital control,
and that no one should be forced to register with
a state controlled ID system. We oppose the creation of

(02:33:55):
any national ID system. ID cards were scrapped in twenty
ten in our view for good reason, you know. And
that's the other thing is the fact that they were
scrapped in twenty ten indicates that people were active then
to make this happen. So if it happened once, it
can happen again.

Speaker 16 (02:34:15):
Yeah, I'll tell you why. It's because of World War
two and the Nazi regime. Show your papers, please, you know,
give me your papers now. Why they were doing that,
I don't know. I don't know what was the real

(02:34:36):
trigger for World War two, but I think there was
a push an invasion of Germany and they were trying
to repel the invasion and so but you know, we
don't get real history, we get made up history.

Speaker 15 (02:34:56):
So yeah, the government responded to the petition and they
said we will introduce a digital idea within this Parliament
to help tackle illegal immigration or they call it illegal migration,
make accessing government services easier and enable wider efficiencies.

Speaker 16 (02:35:16):
We have the traumash all kinds of stuff. You can
just walk right onto the airplane as it. You know,
going through the line was a big deal.

Speaker 15 (02:35:25):
Yeah, they talk about illegal migration, and that's the thing
that again we come back to everify because conservatives are
buying this in many cases hook line and sinker. That's
the thing that people need to be aware of. Everify,
ladies and gentlemen, is not your friend. Everify is to
everify you. It's not to everify just them.

Speaker 16 (02:35:50):
And it's not secure because you don't know what's in
the code exactly. The code could you know, authorize illegal
immigrants and make them automatically legal. They could cause you
a hassle by saying you're not legal to work, and

(02:36:13):
the employer, you know, chance Azari probably wouldn't tell the
applicant you know why he wasn't being hired. I mean,
it's a behind the curtains system, a black box. You
don't know what's going on in that black box exactly.

Speaker 15 (02:36:31):
Now we're talking about digital IDs today, Minnesota has all
kinds of ID fraud that was just busting.

Speaker 2 (02:36:36):
My name is Joseph Edlo.

Speaker 65 (02:36:37):
I'm the Director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services. I'm
incredibly pleased to be here today to announce the successful
conclusion to Operation Twinshield, an enforcement effort of US Citizenship
and Immigration Services. Since September nineteenth, officers from our Fraud
Detection and National Security Directorate, working in teams, have conducted

(02:36:58):
over a thousand site visits across the Minneapolis Saint Paul area.

Speaker 2 (02:37:02):
As part of this operation.

Speaker 65 (02:37:03):
Focusing on a list of over one thousand target cases
involving more than nine hundred individuals, our officers encountered blantant
marriage fraud, visa overstates, people claiming to work at businesses
that can't be found, forged documents, abuse of the H
one B visa system, abuse of the F one visas,
and many other discrepancies. Over the course of the operation,

(02:37:28):
our officers found indication of fraud, non compliance, or public
safety and national security concerns in nearly a little less
than fifty percent of the cases interviewed, we found troubling
patterns with the Uniting for Ukraine program that should have
raised serious concerns under other administrations, such as an individual
filing to sponsor more than one hundred aliens an organization

(02:37:51):
sponsoring hundreds. We are continuing to investigate these cases. Some
of the other troubling cases that our officers found. In
one case identified an alien who had overstayed his visa
waiver who was the son of a known or suspected
terrorist on the no fly list. He had previously been
found to have engaged in marriage fraud, which resulted in
the denial of several immigration benefit requests. He was arrested

(02:38:15):
and is now presently being returned to his country of origin.
In another an individual admitted to obtaining a fake death
certificate in Kenya for just one hundred dollars to prove
he was no longer married. In reality, his wife is alive,
living here in Minneapolis and is the mother of five
of his children, and incidentally, he has another wife living

(02:38:35):
in Sweden, with whom he has an additional three children.
In another case, an alien entered the United States without
inspection in twenty twenty three was released by Border Patrol.
The alien married a US citizen while in removal proceedings
and was interviewed at the Minneapolis Saint Paul USCIS Field
office just last week, where both he and his American

(02:38:56):
spouse cyst spouse excuse me, stated under oath that their
marriage was legitimate. The USCIS officers conducting the interview were suspicious.
The site visits were authorized the same day. The American spouse,
ultimately that afternoon admitted the marriage was fraudulent and entered
into solely for immigration purposes, and withdrew her petition for

(02:39:17):
that alien. This type of same day action for interview,
from interview to site visit has really never happened before,
and I am incredibly impressed and thankful to the diligent
work of the agents who made that happen for the
first time, but not for the last time. And finally,
I wanted to note in one case, an alien engaged
in marriage fraud by taking advantage of an elderly US

(02:39:40):
citizen's spouse, including threats and severe neglect. The American spouse
was able to divorce the alien with the help of
her family and caregivers, but the family still lives in
fear of retaliation from the alien over the failed marriage
fraud scam.

Speaker 15 (02:39:54):
You know a lot of people are saying that he
verifies going to fix the fraud. We cover this story about,
you know, in Nebraska, I think it is. Was it
Glenn Foods or something like that. There was a meatpacking
plant we talked about on the show where the Feds
rated the meatpacking plant, found a bunch of people there
that were not legal to work, and they all had

(02:40:16):
been everified. The plant actually had Everify in place. So
this is not going to be a solution. Wherever there's
a system like that, there are ways to fraud the system.

Speaker 16 (02:40:29):
So well, that's when the invasion of our country really started,
was that they developed the US Immigration Service developed a
system that was supposed to check, you know what the
foreign country is this information accurate, and if they didn't

(02:40:54):
get a negative or reply, they gave the person the
visa to get into the country. You remember Phil Haney, right,
he had been he was over in Saudi Arabia when
they first implemented this system, And it really was Saudi's
who first began to exploit the system apparently.

Speaker 15 (02:41:19):
And yeah, there's a there's a lot of you know,
they're at the forefront of them, and the UAE. They're
at the forefront of a lot of this technological uh
you know, technocracy stuff.

Speaker 16 (02:41:35):
Well, Phil Haney died under mysterious circumstances. Supposedly now he
was engaged to be married, he was getting recognition for
his whistle blowing, and he was on a car trip
back to where he was living and just you know,

(02:41:56):
supposedly pulled over and shot himself with the shotgun.

Speaker 43 (02:42:01):
Gee.

Speaker 15 (02:42:03):
Yeah, so well, I'm sorry to hear that.

Speaker 12 (02:42:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (02:42:08):
Yeah, it was a sad story actually, because he was
he was a good man and and he was doing
all he could to blow the whistle on this global system.
It was one of the global systems that was agreed

(02:42:29):
to by the G seven slash G eight. But what
the system would do if there was no information, it
would approve the visa. So and you can imagine you
set up a global system like that, almost nobody has
any data for it, so you don't get a response back,

(02:42:54):
So then they just give him the visa. It's insane.

Speaker 15 (02:42:58):
Yeah. Well, I don't want to leave the show on
a bad note, because I know a lot of times
we do. So there is some good. There are some
good things that are happening. One of the things, I
will one of the things that's absolutely great news is
the fact that the Goshen plant here in Michigan. Are
you familiar with this battery plant that they wanted to

(02:43:19):
build for the electric vehicles. I think they called it
Goshen and but what it really is it was something
that was backed by the Communist Chinese is a Communist
Chinese plant. The CCP actually would own it. It was
a front company. And well, now this was something that

(02:43:44):
was being promoted big time by the Democrat Party here
in the state. But it's been killed. It's just been
announced that there will be no more money, no more grants.
In fact, they're clawing back the money that they already
gave them. They're going to have to pay it back.
So this is very great case.

Speaker 50 (02:44:01):
A controversial electric vehicle battery plant that was set to
be built near big rapids will no longer be getting
any state funding.

Speaker 28 (02:44:09):
We first told you about the Goshen Plant in twenty
twenty two when plans were announced. We've been tracking its
minimal progress, protests and legal pushbacks ever since.

Speaker 66 (02:44:19):
For the last three years, this quiet stretch of green
Charter township was set to become home to a massive
ev battery plant. Now those plans appear to be over.

Speaker 67 (02:44:30):
They were all rescued from a kill pen, so I
let them run free.

Speaker 66 (02:44:33):
For Lori Brock, whose farm is just a half mile
from where the factory was planned, the announcement of the
state's decision felt like the end of a long battle.

Speaker 67 (02:44:42):
Oh I started crying, absolutely started crying. This has been
three years of hell that they put us through.

Speaker 66 (02:44:47):
Since the project was first announced in twenty twenty two.
She and others in Green Charter Township organized petitions and
advocated against the development.

Speaker 15 (02:44:55):
It was just wrong.

Speaker 67 (02:44:56):
The whole thing about this was wrong.

Speaker 66 (02:44:58):
Goshen promised to invent two point four billion dollars and
bring more than two thousand jobs to Macosta County, but
many residents saw something else, a project that moved too
quickly and ignored their voices.

Speaker 67 (02:45:11):
It would have been horrible. It would have entirely uproaded
our way of life. Half the people, more than half
the people that live here live here because they don't
want to be in the city.

Speaker 66 (02:45:20):
But not everyone is celebrating. Some in the area saw
the ocean has a rare opportunity for growth in the region.

Speaker 15 (02:45:26):
I love how they they turn. They say some in
the area. This guy that they're about to interview, he's
from Michigan Works. He's not in the area. He doesn't
live in the area.

Speaker 68 (02:45:35):
We first heard the Ghostan plan was looking to build
in Macosta County. We were very excited bringing twenty three
hundred good paying jobs to a small community. Is his
life changing for or could be life changing for a
lot of folks.

Speaker 66 (02:45:48):
John Epley with the Michigan Works West Central told News
eight the county's unemployment rate sits at six point eight percent,
above the state average, which is at five point two percent.

Speaker 68 (02:45:59):
To have that level of unemployment in this in this county,
that many jobs could have dramatically lowered that.

Speaker 66 (02:46:07):
He calls the state's decision surprising, saying the project could
have created both construction and long term jobs for the region.
The Michigan Economic Development Corporation says the project is abandoned.
The state is now pulling one hundred and seventy five
million dollars in incentives, saying the company never met its
construction or job creation milestones. That includes one hundred and

(02:46:29):
twenty five million dollars in suspended grants twenty six million
dollars for site preparation, and a demand for Goshen to
pay back twenty three million dollars used to buy property.

Speaker 67 (02:46:40):
We're planning a party, so we can't be happier at
this point.

Speaker 66 (02:46:43):
News eight reached out to Goshen and as of Thursday
afternoon has not yet received a response. In Macosta County,
Tessa Kresh News.

Speaker 15 (02:46:51):
Eight, So it appears that this is dead and hopefully
it stays dead.

Speaker 16 (02:46:56):
Yeah, you know what I've wrote about that system, and
fortunately Trump, the Trump administration just shut them down. It
was a program run out of the Treasury Department for
Community Development, and how I found it was through Idaho

(02:47:21):
because they they the Chinese were doing the same kind
of thing. They wanted to build a solar farm. They
built the well. Supposedly the guy who started it, he
was basically a kid just out of college, but he

(02:47:44):
got a big economic development loan to build a company
called Haku in Pocatello, Idaho, to build a solar panels well.
It was absurd that ultimately, oh I should say ultimately
that plant was turned over to the communist Chinese and

(02:48:07):
they own it to this day, as far as my
knowledge goes, but it was the Community Development Finance c
d f I. And I'll put that in the show notes, okay,
because because it's a separate system and links into the

(02:48:30):
Small Business Administration funding of small businesses, which O'Keefe, who's
the guy O'Keefe, He James O'Keeffe. He just exposed the
fraud in the the sb A A program, which is
the Small Business Administration program. The the corresponds to this

(02:48:58):
whole big finance sing mechanism, which is a government funded
activity supposedly to bring economic development to our communities. It's
also called urban renewal.

Speaker 15 (02:49:14):
Yeah. You know what's interesting is I know that the
Trump administration, we were critics of it a lot, and
deservedly so, but they do get some things right. One
thing that the Trump administration has managed to do recently
was kill a proposed carbon tax on shipping. And here's

(02:49:36):
the background that was reported by the Washington Examiner.

Speaker 69 (02:49:39):
And to talk about again global warming and the carbon footprint,
it's a conjob at extreme cost and expense. You're produced
its own carbon footprint by thirty seven percent.

Speaker 31 (02:49:54):
Think of that.

Speaker 39 (02:49:54):
President Donald Trump says the United States won't comply what
they proposed international carbon tax on the shipping. He's blasting
the measure as a global green new scam that'll drive
up prices for American consumers. In a truth social post,
Trump called on other nations at the International Maritime Organization
to vote no on the net zero framework. I'm outraged

(02:50:15):
that the IMO is voting in London this week to
pass a global carbon tax, he wrote. Trump added that
the US will not stand for this tax on shipping
in any way, shape or form. He echoed his cabinet's criticism,
warning it'll create a bureaucracy to send your money on
green dreams. The London based IMO is set to vote
on the proposal of Friday, October seventeenth, needing a two

(02:50:36):
thirds majority to make it international law. Member states have
been debating amendments in recent days. The Trump administration has
threatened tariffs, visa restrictions, and port controls against countries that
support it. Even so, the measure looks poised to pass.
Experts warned that if the US doesn't sign on, non
compliant American vessels could face inspections and detentions by other nations.

Speaker 15 (02:50:58):
Okay, so they said it was past.

Speaker 64 (02:51:01):
But it didn't the US successfully blocked the passage of
a deal that would have established internationally mandated emission reduction
targets in the shipping industry. American leadership felt the deal
would have raised prices for consumers due to projected fees
that fleet owners said could reach hundreds of billions of
dollars annually. The International Maritime Organization got the IMO net

(02:51:21):
zero Framework approved in April after ten years of negotiations.
The goal was to cut down on fossil fuel usage
in the shipping industry to limit emissions. Shipping represents three
percent of all global emissions. President Donald Trump, Saudi Arabia
and several other countries sought to end the deal over costs.
During a meeting on Friday, Saudi Arabia called a vote

(02:51:43):
to adjourn the meeting for one year. More than half
the countries agreed, including several that had originally been in
favor of the deal that included island nations like the
Bahamas and Antigua. They told the BBC they rely on
the US for trade and received pressure from the Trumpet
minusministration to change their vote. Trump threatened tariffs, the withdrawal

(02:52:04):
of visa rights, and more against countries who voted in
favor of the deal. The President made his feelings about
it clear on social media Thursday. The United States will
not stand for this global green new scam tax on
shipping and will not adhere to it in any way,
shape or form, Trump wrote, We will not tolerate increased
prices on American consumers, the creation of a green new

(02:52:26):
scam bureaucracy to spend your money on their green dreams.
Those in support of the deal seem determined to get
it back on track, even if it takes a year.
What matters now is that countries rise up and come
back to the IMO with a louder and more confident
yes vote that cannot be silenced. Anius Rios, shipping policy
officer for Sees at Risk, said the planet in the

(02:52:49):
future of shipping does not have time to waste. One
supporter also seemed hopeful about keeping the deal alive, even
as she blamed the US. The delay leaves the shipping
sector lifting an uncertainty. Alison Shaw, IMO manager at Transport
and Environment, a Brussels based environmental non governmental organization, said,

(02:53:09):
but this week has also shown that there is a
clear desire to clean up the shipping industry, even in
the face of US bullying back Stateside. US Secretary of
State Marco Rubio celebrated the decision. This is another huge
win for POTUS, Rubio wrote on x. Thanks to his leadership,
the United States prevented a massive un tax hike on

(02:53:30):
American consumers that would have funded progressive climate pet projects.
Our country will continue to lead the way and put
America first. The goal of the measure was to get
the shipping industry to net zero greenhouse gas emissions by
roughly twenty fifty. The way they planned on getting there
was to set a marine fuel standard that would get
more strict over time. The deal would also set fees

(02:53:52):
for emissions above the allowed limits. In essence, it would
be a tax on countries that break the rules. It
would have made shipping the first industry to adopt internationally
mandated targets to reduce emissions. According to recent data, Greece,
which also voted against the deal, is the country with
the highest emissions from global shipping. It's followed by Japan

(02:54:13):
and the US. The Mediterranean Shipping Company MSc led the
market for shipping companies in total imports to the US
in twenty twenty four. MSc is a privately held company,
so its revenue is unclear, but the other two brought
in a combined ninety nine point fifty eight billion dollars
last year. Despite that, Trump and other administration officials were

(02:54:35):
concerned added costs from attacks would be passed on to
American consumers at a time where inflation is already an issue.

Speaker 15 (02:54:42):
Okay, I'm going to dump out of that right there.
There's a little bit more to it, but I think
it's great news. They did say that it was going
to be revisited in a year. So liberty requires eternal vigilance,
ladies and gentlemen. But for now, that thing is that
as well.

Speaker 16 (02:55:01):
Yeah, I have to say, some of the things that
Trump has done are great and actually exceed some of
the bad things that he's done. This you know, what
he did with USAID, with the Economic Development Finance system,

(02:55:23):
things like that, and this shipping tax. Those are great
things that he did.

Speaker 15 (02:55:29):
Yeah, you know, And rather than just criticize, we should
all be really praying for him and for the other
administration officials that God would give them wisdom and that
God would direct them path their paths to do the
right thing. I know, I've kind of failed at that
myself at times, and you know so, I think we

(02:55:50):
all really need to do the best we can to
do better at that. We're out of time. Thank you
ladies and gentlemen for being with us. Thank you Vicky,
as always, I appreciate everything you do and join us
back your next time, same out, the same time, and
we'll do it all over again. God bless you folks,
my wife, thank you, thank you.

Speaker 63 (02:56:16):
Truth, Rest, come on

Speaker 4 (02:56:27):
God, Recam
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