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July 10, 2025 • 47 mins
Alligator Alcatraz
Jeffery Epstein ( No List???????????)
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to standing around with Jeremy Lahey.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
I drank a lot.

Speaker 3 (00:05):
I used to belong to AA, but I had to
quit that because I don't know if you know this,
but their drinking policy is really strict. And now I'm
much better. I just have a glass of wine with dinner,
and so far today eleven dinners.

Speaker 4 (00:17):
That's pretty good, right.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
I'm not what I would call a wine douche, though.
I'm not one of these people that holds it up
to the light by the stem and swirls it and
sniffs it and tells you everything they need to know
about wine. Shut up, it's going to be urine in
three hours.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
Get over yourself.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
I like Jaegermeister. Clap if you ever had Yegermeister, Yeah,
look around, everybody clapping has projectile vomited because Jegermeister is
loosely translated from the German yack master. This stuff is
Satan's piss. It should have a warning label that says
pour directly into toilet, thus cutting out the middleman.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
I drank yeager at a bachelor party.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
I woke up the next morning with a headache. Right
back here right with a toilet seat kept slamming into
the back of my skull, woke up on a spinning bed.
We've all been there before, right, And all I could
do is, you know, I couldn't even remember what happened
the night before. Because God gives you a little gift
when you drink yegor. It's called the blackout, because he
doesn't want you to live with the agony of knowing
just how much of an asshole you were the night before.

(01:18):
That's why your friends call and recreate every millisic and
the humiliation. So my friends called to tell me that
I had crashed a few parties the night before, and
apparently at one of them, I had a ball hanging
out of my fly, and I am no longer welcome
in Chuck e geez.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
I'll tell you that right now.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
Standing Ground is a production of Lahy media.

Speaker 6 (02:56):
On this vote the yaser to eighteen, the Naser two
four teen.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
The motion is adopted.

Speaker 6 (03:17):
You know, Ronald Reagan said one time that no speech
should be longer than twenty minutes, And unlike the Democrat leader,
I'm going to honor my colleague's time and be a
little more brief than that, right, you know what, I
just want to say something that many of us learned
when we were children. We were taught you know, it
takes a lot longer to build a lie than to

(03:40):
tell the simple truth.

Speaker 5 (03:48):
Thank you, mister speaker. And yes, that is totally correct.
Keem Jeffries, the Minority leader got up and filibustered for
like twelve hours or something. And it's true, you can.
It takes a long time to build a lie when
you can give someone the simple truth. And as Ronald

(04:08):
Reagan said in twenty minutes or less, there's an old saying,
I forget, I forget who. I'd love to give proper attribution,
but I just don't know. At the top of my head.
Who once said, if you want to help someone, tell
them the truth, if you want to help yourself, tell

(04:29):
them what they want to hear. You'll avoid confrontation. It
works every time, that is it. So the Big beautiful
Bill has passed. I love I love the way the
media reported it. They always said that it barely passed.
It passed. It's like God, but the Supreme Court decision

(04:54):
that doesn't go their way. They'll say, for instance, whatever
it is and say, you know, it's a win for
the Trump Trump or any conservative president okay, and say
the judicial allocation. There's nine on the court and it's
a decision that the media doesn't like. They'll say a
very very narrow decision. Well it's five to four, but

(05:17):
for instance, when it's gay marriage and it's five to four,
it's just this huge, overwhelming victory. But the majority is
the majority. That's how it works. So the media in
there narrowly. It did it, It happened. Okay, I'm Jeremy lady.
This is standing ground, this is Mojo Fiver Radio. Been

(05:38):
a while since we last spoke, and I've been getting
a lot of messages on ex Twitter asking me when
my next show is going to be downloaded. Well, a
couple of things, just just let you know housekeeping details
with my schedule the way it is, and back and forth.
I want to do as many shows as I can,
but sometimes life takes me in other directions and things

(05:58):
I need to do, and there's a lot of work
that goes into this, so i'd like to do it.
And when I do what, I want to do it right.
So the days that I'm not on or i haven't
dropped a show, I'm probably cutting up sound and doing things.
So a lot of our shows are catch up. But
that's fine because you might get a fresh perspective what

(06:19):
you might not hear somebody else say whatever. But anyway,
there you have it. Okay. So on today's program, Alligator Alcatraz,
which has been referred to by many on the left
as a concentration camp, as you know, open just this

(06:39):
past week. And it's got the name Alligator Alcatraz because
obviously they're putting alligators, alligator moks they're putting around around
the prison. Well, you know, it's kind of like a
it's a it's a natural bob wire fence, I guess.
But a lot of people are calling it inhumane and
they want the United Nations whatever Council to review it.

(07:02):
It's a human rights violation. They always go there. But anyway,
we're gonna get into that. Also, the Jeffrey Epstein client
list that doesn't exist. I don't buy it. I don't
buy I'm sure you heard that that they heard that story.
We'll get into that, and then towards the end, I
have some great audio of a traffic stop that you

(07:25):
guys are gonna love. All right, and with that little tease,
I'm germanly. This is standing Ground. This is Mocho Fiber Radio.
Follow me on Twitter at Lady l e a h
y Jeremy. That is at leahy l e a h
y Jeremy j E r e m y. Let's get going.

Speaker 7 (07:41):
I'm also announcing that as part of our additional tax cuts,
we will end all taxes on overtime.

Speaker 8 (07:49):
You know what that means. They do that, broke of them,
think of that.

Speaker 7 (08:06):
That gives people more of an incentive to work. It
gives the companies a lot, it's a lot easier to
get the people. And you know, I went to some economists,
great ones, and I said, what do you think They said,
it would be unbelievable.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
You'll get a whole new.

Speaker 7 (08:22):
Workforce by doing the no taxes on over time.

Speaker 4 (08:40):
Ones Sensit.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Sens you're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy. Lady.

Speaker 9 (09:22):
Alcatraz is an maximum security prison with very few privileges.
We don't make good citizens, but we make good prisoners. Burglary,
armed robbery, grand larceny. You'll escape from quite a few

(09:43):
prisoner servagers.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
That's why he.

Speaker 9 (09:48):
Alcatraz was built to keep all the rotten eggs in
one basket. I was specially chosen to make sure that
the stink from the basket does not escape. Since I've
been worn, a feweople have tried to escape. Most of
them have been recaptured. Those that haven't have been killed
or drowned in the bay. No one has ever escaped

(10:09):
from Alcatraz, and no one ever will.

Speaker 5 (10:17):
I thought it would be appropriate to play that cut again.
It was on my rewind show yesterday of the warden
meeting with Clint Eastwood in the movie Escape from Alcatraz,
where he says to him, you know you you've escaped
from all these prisons, but you're not going to escape
from this one. And turns out well, in my opinion,
he did three of them? Did They never found them? Anyway?

(10:40):
A great film, by the way, if you get a
chance to see it, Escape from Alcatraz with Cleeswood and
Fred Ward. Great movie, great movie. Well, Well, here's the
news report. You you've heard about this. We've opened up
a detention center in the Florida Everglades that has now
been affectionately called Alligator Alcatraz.

Speaker 10 (11:04):
It is soon to be the largest ice detention facility
in the country. Just hours from now, the so called
Alligator Alcatraz is expected to open. We have been tracking
this construction here for days. The new facility is going
up at the former DAID call your Training and Transition Airport.
When completed, it's expected to be big enough to hold

(11:26):
five thousand people.

Speaker 11 (11:28):
Security is amazing, But what natural and otherwise.

Speaker 5 (11:41):
Well, you know, the media, the media refers to this.
A lot of people like ons ms NBC at all
are all over this sort of it's a concentration camp
and all this other stuff. Well, anyway, look, the people
that are being brought to these facilities are pretty dangerous people.

(12:03):
And what's the difference between putting up electric barbed wire
fence or alligators? I mean to me, I'll be honest
with you, if I was going to escape, I would
I would much rather escape trying to get over an
electric fence than to dodge alligators. Because it's a horrible
it's a horrible way to go. But anyway, it is

(12:25):
now open. It can house up to five thousand individuals. Now,
my understanding is that they're given many privileges these people.
The conditions are not too bad, and I believe that
they do have access to internet. So if some some

(12:48):
buy some bizarre chance that there are some there today
that are listening to this podcast as they sit in
their nice comfy bet by the way, nice bunks, laundered
sheets and all that stuff. We'll get into that in
a minute. You know, hey, for a concentration camp, it's
actually pretty nice. But anyway, I thought it would be

(13:12):
very important for them if they're listening. This is on
behalf of myself at Leahy Media and Standing Ground. This
is a public service announcement for the detainees at Alligator Alcatraz.

Speaker 12 (13:24):
If an alligator grabs you, it might start a death roll,
a terrifying spin meant to dismember. Pray to survive. You
should try to roll in the same direction as the alligator.
If you have a free arm, aim for the alligator's
eyes or try to jab its nostrils, and if all
else fails, play dead. Sometimes the alligator will release its grip,

(13:47):
giving you a chance to escape.

Speaker 5 (13:49):
Okay, so there you go. I'm an extremely humane person,
So I've decided to broadcast that down to Alligator Alcatraz
to give them some safety tips in case they decide
to do a very stupid thing and fly the coop.
All right, here's President Trump.

Speaker 13 (14:06):
It's known as alligator Alcatraz, which is very appropriate because
I looked outside and that's not a place I want
to go hiking anytime soon. But very soon, this facility
will house some of the most menacing migrants, some of
the most vicious people on the planet. Were surrounded by
miles of treacherous swampland, and the only way out is

(14:27):
really deportation.

Speaker 1 (14:29):
Yes.

Speaker 5 (14:29):
So when Trump arrived to do a survey and tour
the facility, he was accompanied by Ron DeSantis, Stephen Miller, Christinome,
and a couple of others. Oh I said, I said,
Ron de Santasy. I believe it did. And they were
all there to kind of show and let the media

(14:49):
come in and say, hey, look, you know this is it,
this is how it works. But I thought that our
Secretary of Popeland Security, christinoam made a very good point,
which you're going to hear in a moment, and that
is if you're if you are in this country illegally,
just illegally, I mean I and you, you don't want
to end up an alligator Alcatraz. The best thing to

(15:11):
do is self deport you. You you have an option,
you really do. You have an option. You don't have
to end up there. Here's christ you.

Speaker 14 (15:23):
People don't have to They don't have to come here.
If they self deport and go home, they can come
back legally.

Speaker 15 (15:29):
We will let them come back.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
There is a lot of self but if you.

Speaker 14 (15:33):
Wait and we we bring you to this facility, you
don't ever get to come back to America.

Speaker 5 (15:39):
To me, it sounds what's known as a Hobson's choice.
You're only there's only one way to go here and
that and that is self deport It's very simple now.
Stephen Miller, Senior White House Advisor company the President on

(15:59):
this to Alligator Alcatraz.

Speaker 16 (16:02):
When President Trump came into office on January twentieth, the
United States had endured the largest wave of illegal immigration
in human history, not just American history, human history, And
within just a few days, President Trump, through his strength, leadership, diplomacy,
and vision, achieved the most secure border anyone in the

(16:23):
world has ever seen. When we recently went overseas to
the NATO Summit, I had senior staff and foreign governments
come up to me and ask me how he achieved
the Trump miracle on his border and could not be
replicated in their countries.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
That's very true, and Donald Trump has made amazing strides
as it relates to this particular issue. But of course
on the other side, there's always the whiners. They don't
want to talk about the two point five two point
eight million that Barack Obama deported and rounded up. They

(16:58):
was referred to, They used to call him the deporter
in chief. But you know, now Donald Trump is you know,
he's Hitler and all that. Well, they went to the
whole you know, this is this is a World War
two Germany rounding people up. It's concentration camp. Typical left
wing media bullshit.

Speaker 17 (17:18):
Have a lism, the location, the manner in which was done,
and the language right, the dehumanizing language employed by the
authorities here. There's nothing about this facility, about this detention
camp that is not cool and inhuman.

Speaker 18 (17:32):
The whole thing is extremely dehumanizing. Trump and DHS have
and Ron DeSantis frankly have treated immigrants and migrants in
a dehumanizing way, and I think that they definitely want
to scare people.

Speaker 19 (17:47):
He took the Comfy Couch hosts on a tour of
the concentration camp that he's building in Florida in order
to round up people, round people and throw them in
a camp.

Speaker 5 (18:00):
Joy read the moron formally of MSNBC. I have a
message for her for concentration camp. The facilities are not
too bad. They have they're obviously in a very very
warm climate. They have central air conditioning. They have laundered
sheets that are done once a week. They're given three

(18:22):
meals a day. They have twenty four to seven access
ready to attorneys that they must be provided they want
to speak to an attorney, so to a certain degree.
While they're in this concentration camp, they're getting to have
access to habeas, don't I don't think many Jews being

(18:44):
held at Auschwitz were offered offered all those things in
the fforementioned. They have access to clergy, to priests, ministers,
a religious service if they want to do. I love
how the media always takes to something like this and says, oh,
it's you know, it's I mean, I don't know. Are

(19:06):
they bringing in crates of zicon be to gas these people?
I highly doubt it. And just you know, just as
a prediction coming from me, at some point, somebody's gonna
float a false story about somebody being beaten or something
like that. There's no evidence of anything like that going on,
and I don't believe that sort of thing's going to

(19:27):
go on, and I don't support that kind of thing
going on. But these are criminals and they've been brought
to a detention center. They're being treated very humanely. They're
getting access to counsel, they're getting good food, they're being
well taken care of, they got fresh drinking water, and
they're just getting ready to get what deported. We just

(19:49):
got to process them there, so we have records of
all these people, so when they try to get back in.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
They can't.

Speaker 5 (19:56):
That's all concentration camp. All right, I'm German, lad. This
is standing ground. This is Mojo Viverradio. It is Thursday,
July tenth. When we get back this Jeffrey Epstein thing,
I don't know, guys. I ain't drinking the kool aid
on this one. All right, with that, talk to you

(20:16):
on the other side.

Speaker 11 (20:17):
Alligator Alcatraz, gator Gitmo. There's no shortage of school grade
like puns about Immigration and Customs Enforcement's latest stunt. The
Department of Homeland Security took to x Saturday, posting what
appears to be a joke, an AI generated picture of
four alligators sporting ice baseball cats Wind up outside of prison,
with the caption reading coming.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
Soon a scheduling note.

Speaker 20 (20:41):
Tomorrow, President Trump will travel to the Great State of
Florida to attend the opening of a new illegal alien
detention center located at Dade Collier Training and Transition Airport,
alongside Secretary Christinome, Governor Ron DeSantis, Congressman Byron Donalds, and other.

Speaker 15 (20:58):
State and local leaders.

Speaker 20 (21:00):
To see many of you there. The facility is in
the heart of the Elder Everglades and will be informally
known as Alligator Alcatraz.

Speaker 5 (21:08):
Alligator after the wild Buck.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
Say after about see you, Helena?

Speaker 21 (21:23):
Don't you know if that was.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
Weena pod?

Speaker 8 (21:26):
What you told me.

Speaker 4 (21:30):
My head? Well bad what you told me.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
My head.

Speaker 22 (21:38):
But the next time I'm gonna saw her, reminded what.

Speaker 4 (21:42):
You said.

Speaker 23 (21:47):
The wild rocking eye.

Speaker 4 (21:53):
After Wilding.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
You're listening to standing ground with Jeremy Lahy.

Speaker 24 (22:06):
Are you or your loved ones suffering from illnesses such
as TDS also known as Trump Derangement syndrome. Do you
dismiss or deny the current issues facing our country such
as historic inflation, illegal immigration, corporate corruption, World War three escalations,
and the chronic disease epidemic. If so you might be
struggling from TDS introducing independence. Independence allows you the freedom

(22:31):
to finally think independently once again. Instead of believing everything
you hear from the mainstream media, independence allows for constructive,
critical thinking.

Speaker 25 (22:39):
I used to hear people on the news say things.

Speaker 5 (22:41):
Like Donald Trump and the movement he is encouraged are
a threat to democracy.

Speaker 25 (22:46):
And I instantly believed it. With independence, I now realize
the media is run by the Democrat elite, who are
a corrupt oligarchy that sensors free speech, silences political opponents,
supports forever wars, and abandons democracy by annointing its candidates.

Speaker 24 (23:01):
Independence may not be for everyone. If you enjoy being
lied to about your president's cognitive abilities, support or will
in totalitarianism, or are excited about communist fiscal policy, independence
may not be right for you. Common side effects of
independence may include an awakening of rational thought, successfully identifying propaganda,

(23:21):
freedom of choice, loss of hatred, anti narcissistic behavior, and
love of democracy.

Speaker 26 (23:27):
I used to blindly hate whoever my party was running against.
I didn't care about facts or policy because I was
hopelessly indoctrinated. With independence, I'm much more interested in policies
that uphold democracy, and I truly care about the health
of our country and its citizens.

Speaker 24 (23:40):
Ask your doctor if independence is right for you, and
enjoy your freedoms once again.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Absolutely, you're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lahy.

Speaker 7 (23:53):
They don't know what the fuck they're doing.

Speaker 4 (23:55):
You understand that.

Speaker 27 (24:13):
A new Justice Department memo reveals that the Justice Department
has no evidence that convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein blackmailed
powerful people, or kept a client list, or was murdered
in prison. The memo, first reported by Axios, is a
sharp turn from the Trump administration's insistence that there was

(24:35):
much more to uncover. Even Attorney General Pam Bondi pushed
that theory while in office.

Speaker 26 (24:42):
Take a look, the DOJ may be releasing the list
of Jeffrey Epstein's clients.

Speaker 9 (24:47):
Well, that really happened.

Speaker 15 (24:48):
It's sitting on my desk right now to review. That's
been a directive by President Trump.

Speaker 5 (24:55):
Okay, welcome back to the program. I'm German, as is
Standing Ground. This is Mojo Fiber Radio. That's Pam Bondi
there at the end. Well, to me, that's pretty clear.
When she was John Roberts had asked her directly, is
this list going to be made public? She answered, you
just heard her verbatim. It's on my desk for review.

(25:20):
We all took that. I took that to be a
client list. At that time. She didn't say, well, I
don't know anything about a client list. I have a
file that I'm looking at. She heard exactly, She heard
exactly what he asked her in that exchange. Well, to me, now,
now the White House is saying sorry, the DOJ is

(25:44):
saying that there was no There was no client list,
and Jeffrey Epstein did commit suicide the second the latter there,
the suicide thing. I'm going to leave that one alone.
That one. I mean a lot of people can center
around that one. They can they can have theories about that.

(26:07):
The thing that I'm kind of looking at, looking to
the in the center of the nucleus is the DOJ
or Pam Bondi or even Kosh Pateel. I got some
audio of him. Kosh Pateel was telling us for a
long time that they had it and they were gonna
be transparent and they were gonna let us know who
are who were his clients because we knew politicians, actors, whatever,

(26:33):
and we were gonna, we were gonna, we were gonna
get this information. So I'm kind of pissed. I'm like, well,
wait a minute. This was a huge part of the
whole transparency thing. Very very strange. Anyway, here's Peter Doocy
the other day asking Caroline Lovett about this whole statement

(26:56):
that's been released that there's no client list.

Speaker 28 (27:00):
So the FBI looks at the circumstances rounding the death
of Jeffrey Epstein. According to the report, this systematic review
revealed no incriminating client list. So what happened to the
Epstein client list that the Attorney General said she had
on her desk.

Speaker 20 (27:18):
Well, I think if you go back and look at
what the Attorney General said in that interview, which was
on your network on Fox News.

Speaker 28 (27:25):
Go ahead, and Roberts said, doj maybe releasing the list
of Jeffrey Epstein's clients? Will that really happen? And she said,
it's sitting on my desk right now to review.

Speaker 20 (27:34):
Yes, she was saying the entirety of all of the paperwork,
all of the paper in relation to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes,
That's what the Attorney General was referring to.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
And I don't buy it. I want to be clear
about something. I'm not accusing Carolyn Levitt of lying from
that podium because it's always been my rule. Well, it's
a fact, and that is a lie is something that
someone says that they themselves know to be false. She's

(28:06):
relaying something she might be, she's she might be be
the misled if you will, and she's just conveying information.
I find this whole story that all of a sudden,
out of the blue, there's no client list. Now, let's
go back about a year and a half to win Cash.

(28:26):
Pattel was on Joe Rogan talking about all this stuff.

Speaker 29 (28:34):
The reason people are pissed off about that is the
same same thing right twenty years ago or whenever it
was two thousand and six, seven eight. Ifstein gets a
sweetheart plea deal right after committing the most horrific client
crimes on planet Earth. Right, I wasn't in empowered there,
I wasn't in place there. You know, nothing to do
with it. But people were rightfully pissed. I mean, this
guy was committing the most grotesque asque acts you can

(28:56):
against children, and the media spins up about it. Many
in the media protected him. Why because of his relationships,
who he knew, who his bankers were, who his colleagues were,
who was on the island, and stuff like that. Some
pretty powerful human beings. And so when you peel back
the layer and then you and then what happened. The
Trump administration the last go round decided no, no, we're

(29:19):
not going to let that go.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
We're going to investigate him.

Speaker 29 (29:22):
Right, they charge him, they indict him, and he's awaiting trial.
And I've said it, Dan Bongino said, We've reviewed all
the information and the American Republic is going to get
as much as we can release.

Speaker 4 (29:35):
He killed himself.

Speaker 29 (29:36):
Do you think let's play out the logical conclusion of this.
Do you think that myself, Bongino and others would participate
in hiding information about Epstein's grow test activities.

Speaker 5 (29:50):
Fine, then let's see the list. I do not believe
that a client list did not exist. If it didn't,
what is Elaine Maxwell in prison for? She was the madam,
She had all the contacts, she knew. My general theory
is this I'm gonna play. There was an interesting exchange

(30:12):
in the cabinet room, uh with Trump, the media and
Pam BONDI was a very interesting colliloquiy. But anyway, it doesn't.
It doesn't. It doesn't make any sense to me that
all of a sudden, out of the blue, the White
House doesn't want to talk about Jeffrey Epstein anymore. In

(30:33):
my general theory, I'm sure's a lot of people out
there that have the same one, and that is, they
went theory underscore. They went through that list, and they
saw names of individuals that made them nervous. So it
doesn't unless someone can really prove to me, really prove

(30:53):
to me. Otherwise, I do not believe this White House
is being honest about the Jeffrey Epstein list. I just
I ain't drinking the kool aid on this one. All right,
here's Pam Bondy and Donald Trump in the cabinet room
just a couple of days ago.

Speaker 30 (31:09):
Your memo and released yesterday, and Jeffrey Epstein left some
lingering mysteries.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
One of the biggest ones is.

Speaker 30 (31:16):
Whether he ever worked for a American or foreign intelligence agency.
The former Labor Secretary, who is Miami US attorney Alex Costa,
he allegedly said that he did work for intelligence agency,
So could you resolve whether or not he did? And also,
could you say why there was a minute missing from
the jailhouse tape on the night of the step.

Speaker 31 (31:40):
Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy's been
talked about for years. You're asking we have Texas, we
have this, we have all of the things, and are
people still talking about this guy? This great, that is unbelievable.
Do you want to waste the time? And do you
feel like answer?

Speaker 4 (32:00):
I don't mind answering.

Speaker 31 (32:01):
I mean, I can't believe you're asking a question on
Epstein at a time like this where we're having some
of the.

Speaker 13 (32:06):
Greatest success and also tragedy with.

Speaker 31 (32:10):
What happened in Texas. It just seems like a desecration.
But you go ahead, sure.

Speaker 5 (32:16):
Sure.

Speaker 15 (32:16):
First to back up on that, in February, I did
an interview on Fox and it's been getting a lot
of attention because I said, I was asked a question
about the client list, and my response was it's sitting
on my desk to be reviewed, meaning the file along
with the JFK MLK files as well. That's what I

(32:40):
meant by that. Also, to the tens of thousands of
video they turned out to be child porn downloaded by
that disgusting. Jeffrey Epstein, child born is what they were
never going to be released, never going to see the
lighted day to him being an agent. I have no
knowledge about that. We can get back to you on that.
And the minute miss from the video.

Speaker 32 (33:01):
We released the video showing definitively the video was not conclusive,
but the evidence prior to it was showing he committed suicide.

Speaker 15 (33:15):
And what was on that there was a minute that
was off the counter. And what we learned from euro
of Prisons was every year, every night they redo that
video as old from like nineteen ninety nine, so every
night the video is reset and every night should have
the same minute missing.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
So we're looking for that video to.

Speaker 15 (33:33):
Release that as well, showing that a minute is missing
every night.

Speaker 4 (33:36):
And that's it on.

Speaker 5 (33:37):
Epstein, total one, all American USDA approved political spin. When
they went in, when they went into that quote file
that she's talking about, they found stuff. My opinion, they
found stuff that they that they realized if they released

(34:00):
is gonna hit them. I'm not saying that I know
who might have I don't. I'm just saying is that
Epstein was running this perverted empire, and you're telling me
that everybody on the list is all just liberals, and
I mean he that was who he kept company with
a lot. We know Bill Clinton was on the on

(34:21):
the Lolita Express. We know he was down there, and
I think guy have an opinion as to what he
was up to. There's others that have acknowledged they was
they were down there, like Alan Dershowitz, but says I
didn't do anything illegal. I acted totally within the bounds
of the lot. Alan Dershowitz would be somebody who would
know exactly what he can do and what he can't do.
But anyway, not trying to not trying to ridicule the

(34:43):
abuse of these young women. It is terrible, and this
has been like the huge story. Now all of a sudden,
the White House just wants to wants to plug the
hole and say that's it. Jeffrey Epstein, nothing to see here.
Let's move on. We got other things. Don't buy it

(35:05):
all right with that? When we get back, I've got
some really really kind of amusing audio of a transgender,
binary whatever individual being pulled over under suspicion of DUI.
I thought it was a deep fake, and then I
found out that it was not, And You guys have
got to hear this all right. I'm Jeremy. This is

(35:27):
Standing Ground. This is Mocho VIVR Radio quick Break.

Speaker 15 (35:29):
Right back in February, I did an interview on Fox
and it's been getting a lot of attention because I said,
I was asked a question about the client list, and
my response was it's sitting on my desk to be reviewed,
meaning the file along with the JFK MLK files as well.

(35:51):
That's what I meant by.

Speaker 33 (35:52):
That, wos up must come down.

Speaker 5 (36:04):
Spinning wheel cut.

Speaker 34 (36:06):
Togo round talking about your troubles. It's a crying sin,
a painted pony let, the spinding wheel spinner. You got
no mo name, you got no home, spinning wheel all
on a home talking bout your truples, and you you

(36:31):
never learn ride a painted pony let the spinding wheel turn?

Speaker 35 (36:39):
Did you find the directing side on the street and room?

Speaker 1 (36:50):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy. Lady, how is the.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
Election made you feel?

Speaker 36 (36:55):
On a scale from one to ten, with ten being
Nazi Nazi?

Speaker 15 (36:59):
Na.

Speaker 36 (37:00):
My name is doctor Nick Peterson and I specialize in
those suffering from TDS. Trump Derangement Center. Hello, I'm doctor Peterson,
how are you well? Donald Trump is a felon.

Speaker 2 (37:12):
Nope, I asked how you were doing.

Speaker 36 (37:14):
The majority of Americans can mentally handle election results on
both sides of the aisle. However, there's this small, albeit
growing group of I don't want to say Americans, but
people that are just disconnected from reality. Fascist, and honestly,
it makes diagnosing these people a whole lot easier.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
I just check their social media.

Speaker 36 (37:38):
Gone are the days when you just search your symptoms
on WebMD at home by yourself. Now they record their
symptoms and post them for the world to see. The
haircut is also a dead giveaway. So what brings you
in today?

Speaker 8 (37:51):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (37:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 36 (37:52):
Maybe it's the orange democracy, destroy and putin love and dictator.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
All right, so mental illness.

Speaker 36 (37:59):
They are completely blind to the fact that their abserted
actions and ideologies were a big factor in their party's loss.

Speaker 2 (38:07):
Let me ask you this, do you even know what
democracy is? Follow up question? Do you know how Kamala
Harris became the nominee?

Speaker 36 (38:16):
I know you're a deplorable Nazi fascist bigot Okay. Needs
turns out that calling half the country Nazis for four
years was not a winning strategy and yet somehow, not
even Cardi B could save them. Do you realize what
I'm going through?

Speaker 2 (38:36):
Yep, delusions.

Speaker 36 (38:37):
I am losing my right to vote on where you
get in your information will be Goldberg. Well what's the remedy,
you might be wondering. Well, if you ask me, it's
a history lesson in Jesus. But the pharmacy doesn't offer
those I prescribe them a brain and I send them
to trybrain dot com.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
For more information. Well, i'll show you.

Speaker 36 (38:57):
I'm moving to Canada. That'd be great, and I'll be
shaving my head. Oh that's no. And one last thing,
I'm going on a sex strike.

Speaker 3 (39:06):
You're a loss.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
Oh no, you're listening. Just standing ground with Jeremy. Lady,
I thought.

Speaker 22 (39:17):
I told you never to interrupt me while I'm working.

Speaker 28 (39:40):
Now, with your right foot, place it in front of
your left and heel the toe touching manner, with your
arms by your side, just like this.

Speaker 4 (39:45):
Man, Not call me man, please, I'm trying my hardest. Okay,
that means a lot to me.

Speaker 11 (39:51):
I'm trying my hardest. I feel like I'm okay, it's
kind of triggering right foot in front of.

Speaker 36 (39:56):
Your left No go back.

Speaker 21 (39:58):
I'm say that's the whole man thanous.

Speaker 4 (40:01):
I apologize. Let's see if we can move forward from it.

Speaker 16 (40:03):
You have zero questions.

Speaker 21 (40:06):
No, but I just want to tell you that he
suffered from really bad anxiety, especially with generational trauma and
pts around white people and claps.

Speaker 11 (40:19):
It's just I'm gonna speak with you right over here.

Speaker 4 (40:22):
Okay, go ahead, play your hands by back.

Speaker 9 (40:25):
Don't don't please.

Speaker 4 (40:27):
Don't make it hard.

Speaker 1 (40:28):
No, you're you're going to get a resist dude, You're
gonna get it.

Speaker 9 (40:32):
I don't don't resist, don't listen to me, don't resist.

Speaker 21 (40:37):
Don't you're being a white man.

Speaker 5 (40:39):
I followed over, like.

Speaker 4 (40:44):
You guys, You guys are scary.

Speaker 9 (40:47):
There's nothing to be afraid of.

Speaker 5 (40:51):
Generation generational trauma. I'm telling you that I didn't know
that what existed, generational trauma? What does that mean? I mean,
I'll speak for myself. I was a seventeen years old
when the Challenger exploded. Very sad, very tragic. But I

(41:13):
have moved on. I have moved on from nine to eleven.
I've moved on from COVID, I've moved on from a
lot of horribles that were thrown in front of me
in my life. But I don't go into a doctor's
office or if I ever pulled over on a suspicion
of driving under the influence, claim that I suffer from
generational trauma, and he's scared of white people and all

(41:37):
this kind of thing that is a I don't know
what they are non buying it because they he said, ma'am,
and I guess that didn't that upset her him whatever,
And I just thought it's so funny because in that
one traffic stop moment that I just played with that individual,
it kind of encapsulates everything that's going on in our

(42:00):
society with all these new titles and new names and triggering,
and to me, it kind of it's kind of it's
now beginning to affect me in my stupid I just
a generational trauma. That's a new one. I don't know
what that is. But in all fairness to the officer,

(42:23):
to the patrolman, he he went, okay, you know, all right,
you know, do you want me to call you kitty cat?
Or he could have said that, you know, do I
wan want to call you a puppy dog? There was
one that got out. I don't have it with me
I don't have time to go find it, but it's
out there somewhere. And there was a guy that was

(42:44):
pulled over and he had on kiddie cat ears and
whiskers and he identified as a cat and cop the
cop pulled him over if he had busted tail light
or something, and the guy cats, guy said stop calling
me that I'm a cat. And he says, all right, well,

(43:05):
you know what, it's not legal in this state for
cats to drive a car. But I'm not going to
call for backup. I'm just gonna call the animal control officer.

Speaker 8 (43:14):
And he didn't.

Speaker 5 (43:17):
Do put him in the animal control. Sorry, this is
this stuff. Let me tell you where did it all start,
all of it, all this insanity. Well, it started in
the nineties on the left with political correctness, and they
took that shovel and they never knew when to put

(43:40):
it down. And now they've dug themselves a hole they
can't get they can't get out of. It's like I
was watching, is it not Michael Knowles? I forget his name,
but anyway, he was speaking at it on a panel
at a panel discussion. And so you preferred pronouns, well,

(44:01):
I mean pronoun is a is a type of grammar.
So can we have a preferred adjective? You know, I
want to be referred to as brilliant, handsome, and sexy.
That's my preferred adjective. I have a doctor's appointment coming
up next month. If he goes there with me, and

(44:22):
that's what my preferred pronouns are, I will be tempted
to get up and walk out of the office, just
you know, I feel like like lifting the lifting that
thing they put on you, that little cover, and then saying, hey,
look down here, take a wild guess. So it is it,
it's it's it's out of control. It's out of control.

(44:45):
I mean, I guess now I can identify as being
eighteen if I want, right, I mean, is age identification?
I mean age affirming care? I don't know what. I
guess we could we could go there so anyway, I
know it's kind of random at the end there, but
I saw that and I had to share it with you.
All right with that, I'm Germanly. This is standing Ground.
We'll be back to you probably this coming Monday. Okay,

(45:10):
thanks for tuning in. Don't forget my email. Standing Ground
seventeen seventy six at gmail dot com, standing Ground one
seven seven six at gmail dot com, or follow me
on Twitter at Leahy l e A h Y Jeremy
at leahy Jeremy j e r e m Y Talk
to you again soon.

Speaker 21 (45:25):
But I just want to tell you that he suffered
from Philly bad ex adisp please with generational trauma and
PTSC around white people, and cos.

Speaker 11 (45:39):
This is I'm Lenna speak with you right over here.

Speaker 4 (45:42):
Okay, go ahead, pussy.

Speaker 1 (45:44):
Back, don't please, don't make it hard.

Speaker 11 (45:47):
No, You're you're going to get a resist dude, You're
gonna get it.

Speaker 4 (45:52):
I don't don't resist, don't listen to me, don't resist.
Don't you're being a white man. Hi over silent.

Speaker 13 (46:03):
Like he was.

Speaker 9 (46:07):
There's nothing to be afraid of.

Speaker 4 (46:10):
Generally, don't smaller.

Speaker 23 (46:17):
FAMI us to talking about my generation.

Speaker 4 (46:22):
Just be Charles.

Speaker 23 (46:23):
We get around talking about my generous a doing awful generation,
baptized before I get old, my generation? Why don't shop family,

(46:47):
don't shot dig what we all says.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
Cal's a big sensortion.

Speaker 5 (46:57):
She's talking about my.

Speaker 21 (47:06):
No, but I just want to tell you that he
suffered from really that anxiety, especially with generational trauma and PTS.
Around white people and class

Speaker 1 (47:17):
Like this is standing Ground has been a production of
Lahy Media Set PJ Set
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