Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
If you want to get the show early and ad free,
head on over to the peak Kinyonas show dot com.
There you can choose from where you wish to support me.
Now listen very carefully. I've had some people ask me
about this, even though I think on the last ad
I stated it pretty clearly. If you want an RSS feed,
(00:58):
you're going to have to subscribe your substack or through Patreon.
You can also subscribe on my website which is right there,
gum Road and what's the other one, subscribe Star and
if you do that, you will get access to the
audio file. So head on over to the pekan Yonashow
(01:19):
dot com. You'll see all the ways that you can
support me there. And I just want to thank everyone.
It's because of you that I can put out the
amount of material that I do. I can do what
I'm doing with doctor Johnson on two hundred Years Together
and everything else, the things that Thomas and I are
doing together on condinal philosophy, it's all because of you.
(01:40):
And yeah, I mean, I'll never be able to thank
you enough. So thank you. The pekan Yonashow dot com.
Everything's there. I want to welcome everyone back to the
pekin Yona show. Doctor j is here and we'll put
aside Solshansen for a day and doctor Johnson. How did
(02:02):
a Jewish woman get elected Mexican president?
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Well, the shock is why no one's really talking about it.
She isn't just a Jew, you know, with a blatantly
Jewish name. You know, she comes from a communist background,
and you know she's a feminist. Her opponent was a feminist,
not a Jew, but she might as well have been one.
(02:30):
How does that happen? You know? It was a bizarre situation.
And I found I think one article from lou Rockwell
on the topic. I think maybe one on like the
American Conservative, and that's about it. And I think when
I did this on Radular Albion, I said, why is
(02:51):
no one talking about her? The question is how does
a Roman Catholic country with men in the millions known
for their machismo come to elect a woman like this
where her big issues are, you know, fags and drag queens,
(03:14):
and claim that it's a fair election. How many Jews
are there in Mexico. There's about forty thousand, one hundred
and fifty million population. I remember hearing about her for
the first time. I said, how is this even possible?
And I figured what the fixes got to be in
and of course it was true. And one of the
(03:36):
ways I knew it was the media referring to her
early on well as a winner, and not only that
she's going to win by a landslide. This is long
before they knew anything about the election, and every newspaper
article uses the word historic and that she is the
(03:57):
first female or first woman president and the first Jew
in some combination of that. They all say the exact
same thing. Now, being the first woman doesn't mean anything.
Being the first Jew does mean something. So, in other words,
a huge in a landslide. Mind you, a huge number
(04:19):
of Mexicans voted a Jew leftist to be to be
president of their country. And she comes from you know,
this is she comes she's pure blooded as well, and
I actually, you know, I'm going to go into her
(04:41):
family background, which is very, very depressing. Her family comes
from the Communist party, not just in Mexico but also
Cuba and the USSRM. Now, the one thing interesting about
the way these elections go, This happens a lot in
(05:01):
Latin America. There's a lot of parties in Mexico and
they have a first round and then there's a runoff.
And you know, but the first round she got less
than forty percent to vote, which still is massive. She
was also mayor of Mexico City and in a suburb
(05:23):
Flopon for that she won not quite thirty percent. It
was in twenty fifteen. Was that, you know, a suburb,
suburban town. The very first round for actually first round
for Mexico City was fifteen percent. What am I saying
for flap On it was? It was? It was just
(05:44):
under thirty and of course won both elections massively afterwards.
So it's a runoff system given the large number of parties.
So given the given preferences in the system, she's about
fifteen percent twenty percent of the population at most, but
(06:07):
given the runoff system, somehow she wins. I don't think
it's a system. I think there's a lot more going
on here. Remember the Biden fraud. We see a lot
of the same things here, but it's not nearly as blatant. Now.
I don't claim to have the expertise in Mexico like
I do elsewhere, but I certainly know comparative politics, international relations,
(06:30):
and I certainly know fraud and deceit where I see
it now. This was last year, twenty twenty four. The
media declared her the winter long before the voting ended,
which is a very bad thing to do. It means
people aren't going to go. In fact, they was talking
about landslide victory. Why would you vote if the media
(06:53):
keeps saying she's going to win in a landslide if
you're opposed to her. The press was one hundred percent
behind her, and despite the laws which semi forbid this,
there was a massive amount of Jewish and leftist money
flootered into Mexico from abroad. And some of these articles
(07:17):
about her, remember it's like in ninety two ninety three
about Hillary, Hillary Clinton. They were just they were gushing,
they were so so absurd about her. You know, she's glowing,
She's this almost goddess. You know, she represents the national
regeneration movement, Marina. And not only did she get elected president,
(07:39):
but both houses of the legislature they have even super majorities.
And of course she's trying to stifle the courts. I'll
talk about that in a little bit, forget to it.
I find it interesting that she is a climate scientist.
I mean, could you get any more convenient here that
guarantees her tons and support. Now now the claim the
(08:03):
National Electoral Institute, which he's trying to get rid of
now said that she won almost sixty percent of the
vote in runoff, which is over thirty percentage points ahead
of her rival. So cheap, Galvez. I don't know how
they get so cheap out of Xochitl, which is a
(08:24):
woman's name down there, but that's how it's pronounced, I've
been told. But still even Al Jazeera said that the landslide,
even though local media was claiming this, international media wasn't.
And the landslide, although they were saying it was much
larger than people had expected. Remember, they were saying that
(08:46):
Biden had the most votes of anyone in American history,
even more than Obama second term. Same thing goes here,
the largest percentage of votes of any candidate in recent
history of Mexico, allegedly the follower of Lopez Obrador, the
former president, who himself is iffy about about this, and
(09:12):
it just doesn't make any political sense to me. She said,
I will become the first woman president of Mexico, she declared,
And that was before the elections, and claims of a landslide.
Now they keep referring to this, she's a first woman.
I don't what difference does that make. Female leaders have
(09:36):
not been different in a lot of ways than male
leaders have, and being Jewish that certainly does matter. I
guess she gets more NGO backing that way, ethnicity explains
quite a bit. Of course, they were both feminists, both
of these candidates, somehow, somehow in Mexico, those are the
two choices. And even beyond that, the Mexican right right wing,
(09:58):
which was very in disarray right now, started its campaign
a very confident in victory. But neither candidate was on
the right whatsoever. So it's not just until you know
it's deeper than just her winning the presidency. But I wonder,
you know, I have a book out on certain Latin
(10:20):
American dictators, so called military dictators and during the Cold War,
and there's a huge information block on the right wing
because even the Church supports the left in many places
down there, and the military leaders in so many Latin
American countries have just been condemned without any conception of
(10:41):
why they're there, what they were doing, And turns out
that the majority of them were very good men. That
the US did not support. I go through a lot
of them. I can't, of course, you can't go through
all of them. There are so many. But the Left
has such a tight control of information coming out of
Latin America any Spanish speak or Portuguese speaking country, that
(11:01):
it's really tough to get to the heart of the matter.
So one of these really bad articles I've found was
from Jacobin, you know, the French Revolutionary movement. The name
of the magazine came out in twenty twenty four, written
by Noah Manzer, romanticizing this woman beyond believed Menzer.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Is that that? What's that? Irish? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (11:27):
M A Z E R. Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, it's him that, Yeah,
maybe from it maybe seek yeah, from Banglade. Anyway, I like,
you know, Jacobin and Wikipedia at these places. I go
to them to see what the regime is thinking about something.
Wikipedia is very good for that. Now, the two people
(11:50):
who matter in her family history, these are the people
who founded Marxism in Latin America at least you know,
Mexico and Cuba. Her uncle, sorry, her grandfather and her
uncle Shane although this is spelt Chone somehow, and Solomon Sinbaum.
(12:11):
They were born in the Russian Empire, of course, Lithuania.
They migrated to Mexico in the early twentieth century. It's
grandfather and great uncle. He's a Communists and of course
manager of course, romanticizes them beyond belief. I couldn't even
read it after a while. And this gives a huge
(12:32):
a lot of information about her background and ideology. You know,
they were born and raised around the time we're talking
about with the Shultzanientsen thing. They left and I think
it was in nineteen thirteen they left for the US.
They returned to Europe a year later. They went to
Poland nineteen fourteen, then again Lithuanian nineteen twenty, you know,
(12:59):
going back and forth. We've talked about that. When the
chultzin Ethan thing, Tronsky did it. A lot of these
revolutionaries were moved from place to place, mobilizing Jewish opinion.
But given that they were of you know, there were Jewish,
you know, Jews living in Lithuania, going back to Lithuania
was a problem. The Communist Party was outlawed is after
(13:20):
the fall of the monarchy. After the Lithuanian Soviet War,
there were the very short lived Lithuanian People's Republic and
the leadership there's a bunch of Jews in it, but
the entire leadership, whether Jewish or not, were from the
land where they were. They were either landowners or very
powerful merchants, the upper crust of of the society. So
(13:50):
they tried to get to the United States again, and
apparently their way was blocked, or so Manser tells us,
they wound up. They wound up in in in Cuba.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Can I ask a question here? Okay, So my great
grandparents on my mom's side, where my grandmother came here
from the Galicia area in like nineteen ten and nineteen eleven, respectively.
They never went back. They couldn't afford to go back
(14:24):
if they wanted to. They didn't send money back. They
couldn't afford to send money back if they wanted to.
How the hell are these people going from from Russia
to New York, to Lithuania to Cuba eventually to Mexico.
How the hell? And these aren't huge names in like
(14:45):
the Communist movement. These are just probably foot soldiers. How
the hell are they doing this?
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Yeah, they were not from a poor family to begin with.
They're obviously not an oppressed minority as they'd love for
you to believe, could like you to believe that, but
doesn't explain where the money came from. And at some
point one of them becomes a jewelry merchant, like you
just you can't just become a jewelry merchant. They don't.
He doesn't ask where this money come from. You know,
(15:16):
Trotsky went wherever he wanted. But all these Jews go
back and forth because they're mobilizing people, they're bringing money back,
they're bringing men back. Trotsky was known for that. So
the Scheinbram brothers landed in Cuba instead of the instead
of the UN and helped form the Communist Party of
(15:36):
Cuba immediately. I don't know how. They didn't even speak Spanish.
It's like there's chunks missing here that these guys can
do this. The party even had a Jewish section, brand
new party in Cuba in nineteen fourth, nineteen seventeen with
a Jewish section. They didn't know Spanish, but somehow Jews
(16:03):
had a strong presence in the PC of the Communist
Party of Cuba. Four of the party's thirteen members founding
members were Jewish. I think it's more than that. There
were a few Chinese there too. Somehow there was a
large Chinese presidence in Cuba, But why would the party
have a Jewish section at all? Now the party was
(16:24):
outlawed in Cuba under Gerardo Machado military government made necessary
by Jewish revolutionary violence, including two attempts to assassinate him,
and they act like these people just took over because
they love power. He was a liberal at one time,
Machado was, but he moved to the right once the
Communists was, you know, trying to kill him. The left
(16:46):
became more brazenly violent, their aliases were, and they stuck
with him. The kind of makes me laugh. Shane became
Arturo Ramires and Solomon took the name Garcia Blanco and
eventually Machado had them deported to Mexico did the same
thing in Mexico. They land there joined the fairly new
(17:09):
Mexican Communist Party, and I have an outlawed at the
time for terrorism, but its leadership wasn't Mexican. There was
an Indian guy, Manibendra Roy, Indian leftist, Japanese journalist Katayama
San Katayama, and an American who was a newspaper editor
(17:30):
which I mentioned, Bertram Wolfe, also Jewish. Bertram Wolfe is
interesting because he became a supporter of Trotsky and is
one of the founders of the neo conservative movement. And
I say that because and his his intellectual trajectory is
precisely where the neocons came from. Once he perceived the
solemness completely taking over. Once Trotsky was axed, he became
(17:56):
so anti Soviet that he became an anti Communis all together.
In fact, there were so many emigrats from Cuba that
they had their own organization in Mexico. Again, and there's
all these missing pieces. The brothers became members of the
Central Committee in the Mexico City branch. Solomon became the
(18:17):
head of the party finances somehow, and then it's it's
a propaganda section. He was editor of El Soviet, the
party newspaper. I love this. You just put led in
front of something and it's in Spanish. And apparently there
was a Even though there was a tiny handful of
(18:39):
Jews in Mexico, they were one of the most politically
dominant elements of the country at the time I left. This,
of course, the rise of Mexico's Jewish left. Manser says
like this is a normal thing to talk about. The
party was the Jewish left and they and they, you
know the ridiculousness. They created their Right Workers Center to
(19:02):
organize Jewish workers, Jewish workers in Mexico, as if there
were any such a thing. Now, the Radical Workers Center
was another one in there were no Jewish workers. There
was no Jewish poultariot. There was once were poltaria in
Mexico at all. And the exact same behavior occurred in
(19:24):
Mexicos that had in Cuba Emilio gil As he was
leaving office, they tried to kill him a few times,
broke off relations with the Soviet Union, He arrested the
leaders of the Communist party in Mexico. It was rioting
that paralyzed parts of the capital, set to the university.
The left tried to kill him on the inauguration day
of the new president, Pascal Rubio. So all the foreign communists,
(19:50):
the Italian Tina Mondonti, Juri Rasovski, of course jew from
Ukraine and Mexican ones were imprisoned. But Shane, though somehow
passed himself off as a Mexican Solomon didn't. I'm not
sure how that happened. Shane may have may have looked
(20:10):
less Jewish than Solomon did, but Shane rejoined the Central
Committee of the party's Mexico City unit. He eventually became
leader of the party in the Seventh Congress nineteen thirty nine,
and then, of course, under the president of lazarro Kardranos,
(20:32):
who was a leftist but not a Communist, he allowed
the party to be legalized, but they were not part
of his coalition. Leon Trotsky was still alive, and apparently
there was a huge amount of debate as to what
to do with this guy here. You know, there was
a there was an interest, great interest in Latin America
in the Communists international, but even the left forbade immigration
(20:58):
by Africans, on Japanese Asians, Soviet citizens, Gypsies and Jews
under Cardinas, so even the left had enough of this.
But under Stalinism, yeah, these two brothers grandparents of well
uncle and great Grant, a grandfather of the current Mexican president,
(21:22):
they kind of went with the flow. Whoever was dominant
they went with. They were not theoreticians. They needed to
unify the party under Stalinism, they even ford formed a
purging commission. Trotsky condemned them he said that they were
running a show trial on Moscow's behalf. That was in
March eighteen thirty nine. Trotzky was acted in November. Eventually
(21:48):
they even turned their guns on Shame. Solomon was the
release from prison, went to the Soviet Union no problem,
joined the Communist Party, and because he was in Latin
America for so long, he was part of the common
Terns executive committee there. He was expelled from the party
again in nineteen thirty six. So both brothers have been
purged in two different places. That's when Shane, after his expulsion,
(22:13):
moved to Jalisco and became a jewelry merchant. Somehow, somehow,
the cash was there. But you know, most of these
most of these Communist pleaders were very wealthy men, even
if they weren't wealthy before. So then and I say
that they just went with whoever was in power. Shane
wrote a very sniveling confession in nineteen fifty four, and
(22:35):
I had to do that. Please don't kill me. I'm wrong,
I did everything wrong. I'm so sorry. Please, And they
accepted him in nineteen fifty four. But then Manser is
very sad because, let me quote him directly, the Jewish
left in Mexico was experiencing a steep decline. Communists and
(22:55):
Buddhists fought bitterly throughout the nineteen forties, their movements weakening,
and Zionism because I mean the community's dominant expression of
ethnic activism by the nineteen fifties. The fact that Claudia
Shinbaum today appears to be neutral on Zionism might come
from this, but this is uncertain. Now. Shane didn't die
until nineteen eighty nine. The party eventually dissolved. It became
(23:17):
the Party of the Democratic Revolution in nineteen eighty seven.
His granddaughter Claudia, who was well aware of all of this,
was married to one of the founders of the Party
of the Democratic Revolution. So she clearly is in line here.
And like Marxism itself, was financed by the wealthy, the
big banks, and the Mexican Party, as well as a
(23:38):
Cuban party to a great extent, was founded and dominated
by foreigners Jews, among others. Now forrest Claudia is concerned.
She was well aware of this. She's proud of this background,
which is why this article came out in the first place.
She became a climate scientist. In other words, she and
this wasn't her initial academic purpose. It happened quite suddenly.
(24:02):
She went to California for this, and climate change apparently
is her but that's going to be the mechanism by
which what the left of Western civilization can be brought
under under control. Now something else happened, though, and it
was not It was a few years ago the Colombian president,
(24:25):
this was at a climate change conference at the University
of Mexico, said that Claudia was a militant and an
activist of the Colombian guerrilla MS nineteen. Now she didn't
deny it. She didn't see M for slander or anything.
That was the April nineteen movement there. And this would
(24:48):
make sense because this would this would follow her family trajectory.
So I don't know how could she be doing that
and getting a doctorate degree in Berkeley at the same time,
But that, you know, that was the claim, and it's
probably true. She wasn't just an intellectual, you know. MS
(25:09):
nineteen started from nineteen seventy four and allegedly ended in
nineteen ninety four, and that was not just in Colombia
but throughout Latin America. I think her connections there as
well as in the cartels, helped get her the presidency
in twenty twenty four. So that leads up to our situation.
(25:30):
It was a very bizarre situation June twenty twenty four,
two leftist women that was a choice Mexico had, neither
one representing Mexico in the slightest and all receiving foreign money.
It's funny because Sinbaum actually tried to pass herself off
as somewhat of a conservative roughly until twenty twenty one,
(25:50):
and then when she, you know, got more and more political,
she became a socialist, meaning she was just lying before.
And so Cheat Galvez, her opponent, was educated at the
World Economic Forum. In fact, they both were. They both
were part of the Dovos system, and it's hard to
find and so Cheat, it's hard to find a lot
of solid background information on her, despite her very unique name.
(26:16):
But they came out of nowhere. They were heavily scarred
by scandal. There was all kinds of ethics violations. But
people like you know, and the handful of people who
write on this, simply asked the question, ninety percent Catholic Mexico,
what are the odds that either of these socially liberal
(26:37):
secular candidates have garnered votes huge enough to not only
become candidates, but the muscle everybody out, and one of
them went in a landslide, and I guess and lou
Rockwell I agree with him. Here. In my book on
(26:59):
Milton Dictories of Latin America, I used the word banana
republic sort of as an insult, But a banana republic
refers to a weak democracy that simply does what they're told,
dominated by foreign capital, usually American capital, and it's sibodly
not strong enough to really fight back. But on the
(27:22):
republics usually that when they when they fall apart, is
when militaries take over, and their only job is to
export raw materials, so they're always going to be in
debt and of course drugs. So it didn't really matter
which woman won, but the Seinbaum thing just made it
all the more blatant. She's clearly backed by at least
(27:46):
one of the cartels, and in twenty just one year
before the election, twenty twenty three Supreme Court out of
nowhere legalized abortion at the federal level. The states had
decided of these things, it's quite an unpopular thing. Same
thing for the for fag marriage fat fag marriage. But
(28:08):
the point is these are two, you know, jet setters,
at least Sinbaum with these communist background Simmob was in
California or Columbia most of the time in the nineties.
She's in her sixties now, I think, and she gets
her I think she got her doctorate at Berkeley, she
finished it. Then she got a job at the Intrigovernmental
(28:29):
Panel and Climate Change at the UN. And when you
see these color revolutionary types, even though this wasn't really
a color revolution, they go from elitia's job to elitist
job without a problem. Worldwide, they get whatever they want.
This is both coming from DeVos. They have all the
connections in the world. But the last thing she knows
about is Mexico. She served as Secretary of the Environment
(28:53):
in twenty fifteen and then out of nowhere, she was
nominated to run for Mexico City from the Marina Party.
As I mentioned, she received very low percentage of the
vote and has many controversies, a lot of a lot
of ethical problems there and a lot of electoral irregularities.
So how long have it's name? Could she ever have
(29:14):
been elected in Mexico City? I mean Mexco City maybe,
but across the country in a landslide, that electoral interference
is is impossible. In the Open Society Foundation has a
huge office in the city, which she was a part of,
as does DeVos. Now there's more technical elements of voter fraud.
(29:35):
There was one study that I quote and it was
only taken from one polling place, section four two seventy
nine bidding Tuarez, just that one section that votes for
so she were given to Shinbaum and for that they
(29:58):
use a preliminary election results program. And what they do
is when the voting is finished and the accounting is done,
they put a poster out front so people can see it.
And the p a rep data and the poster data
are very different. And so the fraud someone moved numbers there.
(30:27):
This is an electoral commission was upset about this, although
they they eventually came to claim she was a legitimate winner.
But both her and her predecessor wanted to not eliminate
the Electoral Commission, but weaken it. They're trying to they're
trying to make they're trying to disallow the Electoral Commission
(30:48):
to have too much power to look over these things.
Oh and don't forget so cheat with the mayor of
Mexico City. Before Steinbaum, she was a senator too. She
was recognized for her leadership by the World Economic Forum.
She was invited by Brazil's Lula, the leftists, you know,
(31:09):
to participate in globalizations some of the DeVos. That means
her job. And both of them did, of course that
they're going to impose a great reset onto Mexico. And
we're supposed to believe that they were the only two
electable candidates. So DeVos and Blackrock are moving in another
one has any real international experience. They really don't have
(31:30):
any political experience except for this army. There were two
hundred NGOs functioning in Mexico, so someone has to guide
who whoever won, you know, Asso, Cheater or Seinbaugh. And
the irregularities within the two party nominations that was far
more severe. But it was NGO money that permitted Shinbaum
(31:53):
to get that because no one really in Marina thought
she was all that electable and the national level, but
they exist because of NGO funding. Now, under Mexican law,
a foreign government can't make donations to a political group.
Sovereignty issues, of course, but an NGO by definition, that's
(32:16):
what NGO is, non governmental organizations their corporate entities. At
one point President Oberdoor complained to at that time VP
Kamala that USAID has to suspend funding to Mexico because
they're interfering too much in elections. Open Government Partnership in
(32:39):
twenty eleven. They had a glumbo sovereign in Mexico in
twenty and fifteen, and that was the same almost a
coup the group that put her, that puts so cheat
in Mexico City, and then of course Seinbaum a little
bit later. The partnership is funded by the un Open
Society Suit Foundation in the British government. And I say
(33:02):
that they're going to make Mexico.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Just a.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
Raw materials exporter. Is that their agenda is to implement
the sustainable goals as set forth by the w EF,
the World Economic Forum, which is who trained them and
who had them elected. So she was a pre selected winner.
Remember her first husband, Signbong first husband went to jail
for electoral fraud. Clodia's entire platform was abortion facatory. You
(33:35):
know all that she pressured the university, Big university to
give her daughter a free run, and of course it
may not. You know, again I mentioned turnout was very low. Now,
the other big issue, this was the most violent election
in recent Mexican history, especially at the local level, especially
(34:00):
down south, threats, abductions, assault, assassinations. Mexico is a violent place.
So during the twenty twenty one elections, one hundred and
two politicians were killed. It doesn't necessarily people who are
holding office or running for office, but people who are
you know, big big ways in parties and all this
(34:22):
thirty six were nominees or candidates for public office. So
before the campaigning period started in January, that number shot up.
So the government tried to They provided security guards to
five hundred and sixty candidates and also twenty seven thousand
armed forces a National Guard personnel were deployed to secure
(34:45):
the electoral process. By May, just one month before the election,
the death toll went up to thirty seven. That's actual
candidates running for office, and it will increase after that
and not just politicians now, So from twenty eighteen to
(35:05):
March of twenty twenty four, people running for office, the
number of murders and attacks is oney seven hundred and
nine and very few of these are ever prosecuted. Now
here's what Breitbart had to say about it, and again
this is one of the few Breitbart didn't really challenge
the election, but they did say that by the time
(35:29):
this was published, twenty six candidates have been killed throughout
the electoral process, culminating with the elections, according to Mexican government.
Now that's a low number because there's a local consulting
agency Intragralia, who said it was thirty four candidates for
office murdered before the election took place, but two hundred
and thirty one were murdered when factoring in officials, former officials, politicians,
(35:54):
former politicians, family members, et cetera. And that's probably a
low number. So what does that mean. First, it keeps
turned out very low. It creates a sense of instability.
It gives a sense that the government can't protect them,
which it can't. Who wants to volunteer as a poll watcher?
(36:15):
A lot of these acts of violence in this past
election as well in decades ago, they destroyed voting machines,
especially in the southern States. Mexico has lost all control
of its territory. So the only people who can possibly
benefit from this violence are those who are beneficial to
the cartels, including the current president, and all the threats.
(36:38):
These are very underreported, so it didn't matter if there
were twenty seven thousand men, It didn't stop any of it.
There's a tremendous psychological pressure exerted on candidates, far greater
than with the data show the left is the primary
beneficiary of this. Although to be fair, there were a
couple of Marine candidates who were killed, but overwhelmingly it
(37:02):
was their opposition, so that creates a totally different story.
I'm not sure you can have an election when you
have a slaughter of candidates and politicians and they're timed
connected with elections. I didn't even realize that until fairly recently.
(37:24):
I knew that it was violent, but I did something
on I did a show not too long ago on
why the Mexican's Mexican Army has lost the lost the
fight against the cartels. But at this level, these assassinations
not just you know a lot of abductions, kidnappings, you
(37:44):
know that kind of thing. Apparently Scheinbaulm had a lot
of protection. She's connected with Jewish real estate, real estate
tycoon Daniel Cabba's close ally, who have financier. Now I
should know, and a lot of people noticed this at
(38:05):
the time when she was in Mexico City, this was
a huge scandal. She hired a que a crew to
demolish a building. I don't know why, but it just
so happens that it was a wall next to a
church and accidentally destroyed the church. The parish priest said
(38:26):
that he wasn't even given notification of the demolition. I
think it was a test seeing how far she can go,
and that was elected in the landslide. This doesn't make
any sense to me. She of course is a you know,
being part of the Party of the Democratic Revolution, which
(38:50):
was part of the communist party that her family founded,
touted by the Wilson Center Politico Bloomberg. Now, I think
the election of Trump was was bad for her, but
when you have the former I just wonder how close
she was to the former president, who was a leftist
(39:11):
but not like her. He wants to he wants the
NGOs to be tightly limited, but Putin has done in Russia.
There's two in particular, Mexican's Against Corruption and Impunity and
a group called Article nineteen. They're all a MacArthur Foundation
bill Gates n E d usaid, and they made sure
(39:36):
that only left as females vetted by Davols would be
selected as candidates. His position has always been, you know,
very strange. He's not quite like he's not a communist.
As I said before, he and his and Scheinbaum want
to destroy the National Electoral Institute. In other words, they
(39:59):
want to make sure that they stay in power. They
could stuff ballot boxes and have no one looking over
their shoulder.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
Well, Mexico is really the best place to do that.
I mean, it's a narco state. It's pretty well known
that either she is has a lot of influence over
the cartels or the cartels own her. I would think
it's probably the second one, or a combination of both.
(40:29):
The murder rate in Mexico City went down incredibly, mostly
because when the cartels killed people, they would get rid
of the bodies instead of leaving them. And two, they
just stopped recording the crime. And apparently that was from
that was from the car the cartels were basically running that.
So I think the reason she is there is is
(40:52):
to keep the narco state going and pretty much that's it.
Speaker 2 (40:58):
Yeah, when the minute she was elected and I have
to go around here because of the super majorities. No, no,
you got me thinking. Now, she clearly is in the
Cartel's pocket because, you know, especially once Trump was elected,
she wants changes to the country's constitution that will block
(41:21):
any investigation or any action by a foreign that is,
American law enforcement agency and anyone who as system in
Mexico would be criminally liable. Now that was right after
this is you know, and it came a little bit later.
But when Trump designated the six Cartels as foreign terrorist organizations,
(41:46):
which of course they are not entirely so, but they are,
and wanted to eradicate them, all of a sudden, Scheinbaum
is outraged, and she justified this in public. She tried
to she suddenly as a nationalist. Now we don't negotiate sovereignty,
she said, we don't want the US to invade our
(42:08):
sovereignty over and over again. And her critics, I wish
now there are many are claiming she is shielding the Cartels.
That would be Article forty, adding wording to the Mexican
Constitution that there will be no interference, intervention, or any
other foreign act that would quote damage the nation's sovereignty,
(42:33):
which says, any prosecution of alleged criminals in our country, Mexico,
the express authorization and collaboration of the Mexican state. That
was right after Trump said what he said, which is
no obviously not a coincidence. Now you talked about the
(42:59):
car tells on April twenty first, it was a Sunday,
Claudia Seinbaum in her motorcade was stopped by men and
hoods at a checkpoint during her campaign tour in Chiapas.
And this is one of the southern states, extremely violent.
(43:21):
They belonged to the Sinaloa cartel because they had like
patches and tattoos and stuff that clearly pointed to that.
One't even had an image of Ismael Zambada, the head
of it. And it was filmed and recorded. They asked
her to remember them if you were elected into office.
They knew and the audio goes I'm reading it directly here.
(43:44):
It says, we just want to tell you to remember
the mountains down here and the poor people. When you're
in power. We're not against the government. Keep that in mind.
We're not against you. You don't want any more problems.
We want you, your president, do us a favor of
cleaning up down here because we can't travel down here.
(44:05):
And what, of course they meant was getting rid of
the military. They tear us the little pieces if we
passed through a certain section. Now, she remained in the
vehicle throughout the entire thing. She made eye contact. She
just nodded along with these guys, and her critics went nuts.
How did these guys get so close to the motor cator.
(44:28):
Why was nothing done as they're speaking to her, This
was a conversation. It was very obvious who they were.
They were in a very violent place. I don't know,
Chiapas has the highest rate of I'm not sure one
hundred percent, But they didn't mention it and breaking bad
so I don't know. So clearly, the fact that they
(44:53):
could do this, that they could speak to her, the
requesting to get rid of law enforcement, that she wants
this in the constitute now, and on top of all that,
the extreme violence throughout the campaign. You had a mayor
candidate shot in the middle of a campaign rally. Right
in the back of the head at point blank range
(45:14):
was Alfredo Cabrera and Guerrero to get another southern state.
Nothing ever came of it. No one was ever arrested.
Most of the murdered down there, and the number is
far higher than reported. They were usually running for town
councils or mayor. They're easier to assassinate the course, they
(45:34):
don't have security around them, and they're important for the cartels,
taking advantage of small towns rather than rather than cities.
So clearly there's a connection here. You can't convince me
otherwise now, because they were both both candidates trained at Davos.
(45:58):
She's a climate scientist. I just can't get enough. You know,
it's so bizarre, of all things, it's the most trendous
thing you could possibly be. And suddenly, very suddenly, she
decides to do this. She wants to turn Mexico into
a green society of windmills and solar panels, and if
you know anything about that, they could never provide the
(46:21):
energy needed for a country as large as Mexico. There's
massive blackouts all over the country, sometimes for weeks. The
future water, the dirt roads, that's not important to her.
No one voted to her for her unless they were
live to or told to. Media was talking about her
being a feminist in a mostly macho country. Well, that
(46:41):
means that they didn't vote for her. And is it
the case that Mexico's female voters tend to be more
Catholic than the men. So who is she appealing to exactly?
Cartels are in alignment with the Ngones. And as I
(47:02):
mentioned before, you had one hundred million Elbal voters in
Mexico the previous election had a turnout of sixty three percent.
In her election it was sixty percent, so very low.
Now I don't know if that's out of fear or what,
just because no one represented them. Now the opposition parties
(47:23):
which apparently were nowhere to be found, the National Action Party,
the Institutional Revolutionary Party, Citizens Movement, all of these two
hundred and forty challenges against the election results. They allege
widespread fraud, very much as Trump did, not just for president,
also for the legislative elections. They exceeded campaign spending limits.
(47:49):
They have evidence of vote buying, voter intimidation most certainly,
and regularities we've mentioned already. And so it's not just
a matter of recounting the votes, it's the system itself.
So this is why both the previous president and her
wanted to destroy the Electoral Commission. Now I want to
(48:13):
give you a quote from so cheat who really is
it weirdo? You know it's trained by Davos, but it's
all over the place depending on who she's talking to.
She condemns the results of the elections, not just because
she lost. This is a tweet from her. I know
the results surprise us, and we have to analyze what happened. Well,
(48:35):
how could they be surprising if the polls showed her,
you know, and as everyone said, Pole showed her winning
a landslide election. Then she said, we all knew we
were facing an unequal competition against the entire state apparatus
dedicated to its favorite candidate. We all noticed how much
organized crime was president, threatening and killing dozens of candidates.
(48:57):
It doesn't end here. Yeah, will present challenges that prove
what I'm saying, what we all know to be true,
and we'll do it because we can't allow another election
like this ever today, more than ever, that to defend
our republic, checks and balances, the separation of powers remain
at risk. Now, it's a strange way to speak. It's
(49:24):
she's being very careful not to mention any names or
any groups. She's very vague, but she keeps saying that
you guys know what I'm talking about. It's very guarded
and the fact that she mentions organized crime, this is
something that we know and that was supporting her. We
(49:45):
know the US supports Cineloa, There's no question about that.
The Cineloa cartel probably the largest, I think in Mexico,
backed by the US. They come in through Arizona and
New Mexico, Laredo, Texas, and there they're One of their
(50:06):
source points is the Philippines, which is why I am
very interested. You know, years ago in the territory's presidency there,
I was a big fan of his. Wherever a government
like his smashes the drug trade and he was very successful.
The US condemns it. Same thing for El Salvador. He
(50:28):
has smashed the gangs. The US wants him sanctioned, at
least under under Biden wants him sanctioned and destroyed. The Philippines,
of course, you know, has been under CIA control since
the forties. Uh and Manila is really it's it's it's
Southeast Asia headquarters. So there's a connection between you know,
(50:53):
Southeast Asia and in Mexico and showing this and as
if things couldn't get any worse, the Marina Party, and
they're supposed to be. They want austerity, they want the
IMF to come in and you know, balance the budget
(51:14):
and cut everything.
Speaker 1 (51:16):
And yet.
Speaker 2 (51:19):
Their leadership, like Ricardo Monreel, who was a coordinator of
the Deputies, the Chamber of Deputies, she was He was
in Madrid five star hotel. Mario Delgado, Secretary of Public Education,
the most exclusive hotel in Lisbon in Portugal, five star,
(51:40):
no doubt. Enrique Navarro, the youngest deputy in Mexican history,
was in Leo, the very high end night club at Abiza,
very expensive and the hotel connected to it is very expensive.
Arena Secretary of Organization, was at the hotel. Were in Tokyo,
(52:01):
five star property, whole bunch of congressmen there with him.
They showed him with a bottle of champagne that was
two thousand euros. There was a place called Concer del
Sogno later on, a place only accessible by sea. And
yet Scheinbaum, who now is bizarrely very wealthy. I don't
(52:24):
know where the money came from. She demands austerity. It
will be imposed in the country through the imm and
it doesn't even matter that these displays of arrogance and
opulence undermine the party's image. It doesn't matter, but it
also shows money from the outside sources like cartels. They
(52:46):
don't deny it happened, but they say that well, they
were privately funded. In other words, they're trying to deflect saying, well,
the state didn't pay for it. But that's exactly the problem.
No one's ever saying it was because government funds. Who
did pay for it? And how did you get so
wealthy all of a sudden, So the party has been
exposed as a fake, just sand denieces. When they took power,
(53:07):
first thing they did is move into the mansions in
the wealthiest areas of the capitol. All these people on
the left, they demand austerity for everyone else, and the
left takes over. They live the high life. But I think,
I think when she was stopped by these men down
(53:28):
in Chiapas, I think that showed something she hasn't seen.
Seemed to be scared. I saw, I saw. I saw
a part of the video on rumble. I didn't see
it on YouTube. I don't remember now, and it was
(53:52):
only they didn't have a translation. But what shocked me
I'm watching this that why is she has a she
has a substantial security force. These are cartel guys. Why
you're not doing anything. There's like walked up to the
to the truck. So you have people in her own
party now all over the place saying she's a cartown president.
(54:14):
And you know, is she a puppet of the cartels?
You had the Columbian president saying that she was. Yeah,
of course she was. She was part of the narco
revolutionary movement down here. That's why I spend so much
time talking about her family. Wealthy communists like the rest
of them. The agenda is the same, and the Jews
(54:35):
are at the center of it. Even in a place
like early twentieth century Cuba. My lord, this and this
is what gets elected by a massive landslide. I don't
need the technicality of vote fraud. There's no way that
could happen. Of course, there's a vote fraud. You know,
(54:57):
there's no way this could you know, you would have to.
I don't know how this could possibly be, and I
don't know why no one's talking about it. I see
the name Shinebaum, Mexican president. I start laughing. That's a
Mexican name. They voted for someone with a most blatantly
non Mexican name, no problem, how can that possibly be
(55:17):
as the country gets.
Speaker 1 (55:18):
Poorer and poorer.
Speaker 2 (55:20):
The only thing is, you know, Trump's election was a
disaster for her, and that's why these new constitutional changes.
We're not going to cooperate in the constitution. We're not
going to cooperate with any American law enforcement acts against
the cartels in this country. Well, we know what the
hooded men said, don't forget us down here, and I
(55:40):
guess she didn't. So that means you have the alliance
of at least you know back then, this is June
of twenty four, that administration, the NGOs pretty much all
of them DeVos, the cartels, and the media or working
together to make sure that she is worshiped as a
(56:05):
deity and she gets elected. Clearly it was a coalition
and parties like an actual National Action Party were nowhere
to be found. But filing two hundred and forty challenges
they can't do that without reason. They don't want to
(56:26):
make fools of themselves, not making making stuff up. Now.
I don't speak Spanish, I haven't read the the their
initial filings. All I know is that they allege widespread
fraud at all levels, and that this is connected with
the extreme violence. Violence is one of the ways that
(56:48):
they stuff ballot boxes to keep people from voting. They
know exactly what they're doing, and it benefits Morena, it
benefits Sinbamb and her. That's that's how she got the
numbers that she had. And I think I'm just scratching
the surface here. I'm not an expert in Mexican politics
by any means, but we have some people I'm pretty
(57:08):
sure who might be who could really take this intro
and expand it. I think there's a lot more going
in here than we realized. The low turnout is only
a part of it. And the fact that no one
is talking about her, that Shinbahm becomes president of Mexico
(57:28):
and I'm all all my right wing book marks, but
I'm searching for who it's me and lou Rockwell. Isn't
it weird that why is no one talking about her?
Speaker 1 (57:40):
It's hard to get information, you know, if her background was,
if her you know, one side of the family was
like diamond merchants or something like that. You know that
set money to palace. You know, they sent money to
Palestine to get the new Jewish state up and running. Sure.
The fact that she just comes from evolutionaries is just
(58:01):
like you know, chef's kiss. It's so perfect. It's like
you couldn't if you wrote this, people would say it
was anti semitic.
Speaker 2 (58:10):
Yeah, I think I mentioned when I first mentioned this
issue to you, I said, it sounds like I wrote
it like I'm like, I'm writing my first attempt to
at fiction a new protocol.
Speaker 1 (58:22):
It's so low you know, it's so Yeah. There are
a lot of people who don't like the term low
IQ anti semitism anymore, but come on, it is. It's
just it's like this kind of fiction where you know,
at the at the end, someone rips a wig off
and there's horns. Yeah, I mean it's but yeah, I
(58:42):
mean these ties her going to her being a climate scientist,
all of this, I mean, it's just and none of
this would be concerning if it wasn't on our southern border,
if we didn't, yeah, if we didn't have a narco
state on our southern border, that that is now being
run by somebody who is obviously in the if not
(59:06):
in the employee, but of the same ILK as the
sorows Is and the WF of the world. I mean,
it's just it's like you said, we couldn't Julius, you know,
Julius Striker couldn't have come up with this.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
It's so blatant. You know, her family founded the communist
parties of two of Mexico and Cuba, or at least
we're right there when it was founded. And she comes
from this long line. And the Colombian president's comment was
never refuted by anybody. She was a part of this too,
(59:43):
and not just not just as a politician or intellectual.
She was part of the MS nineteen, very different organization
down there. So and he said this at a climate
change conference right after she spoke, by the way, people,
I have some news for you. So and and how
(01:00:07):
much did you really get her doctorate in climates? I
don't know. I don't know if climate science is an
actual thing. I don't know what that would actually be
called academically speaking. Did you really do it? Are they
saying she did it? So?
Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
What they're saying? What it says on Wikipedia, if you
want to believe anything on Wikipedia. She earned an undergraduate
degree in physics at the UNA M that's a United
and what is that them? Looking for her education? National
(01:00:43):
Autonomous University or something, Yeah, National Autonomous University or something
like that. And then it says she completed the work
for a PhD thesis between ninety one and ninety four
at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. While working for
the laboratory, she analyzed energy for use in the Mexican
transportation sector and published studies on the trends in Mexican
(01:01:04):
building energy. So she came to the United States worked
at a national laboratory in California so she could she
could analyze energy use in the Mexican transportation sector. I
assume she's using the resources of taxpayers to do this
so that she can go back and what make Mexico
(01:01:28):
their energy, their transportation sector more streamlined or yeah, I
mean that's pretty much.
Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
Another non existent and to the point where, yeah, and
of course Mexico runs by his oil industry, she has
to be at war with them. And being a climate
scientist by definition, she's a huge part of the global
warming thing. And now she was promoted in that by
the DeVos group. Black Rock was already investing down there.
(01:02:00):
But again, you know, I don't care if they coat
the place with panels. You can't that that won't create
enough energy to you know, for industry. Maybe a small
percentage of it that's good for small applications, but it's
simply not not possible. So it's and the sustainability goals
(01:02:22):
she's personally dedicated to essentially reduced Mexico to just as
the raw materials exporter, so fourth World doesn't have to
be that way. And they're all coming on the NAFTA.
Speaker 1 (01:02:36):
Very quickly. What South Africa is turning into because it's
always been a raw mater you know, a raw metals
kind of place. Yeah, precious metals.
Speaker 2 (01:02:46):
Yeah, yeah, it didn't you know, but at one time
it was industrial. But once another group of people took
over in the nineties early nineties, now that's all they do,
and they don't even do that well.
Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Well, but what is that They say that there is
no black sub Saharan nation in Africa that has a
word for maintenance in their language. I think that's actually true.
So there's this guy, mister Beast, who goes and he
(01:03:19):
raises all this money to go and build wells in Africa,
and within a year and a half two years, the
wells don't work anymore because they leave there and when
the white people leave, there's no word for maintenance. They
don't know what maintenance is.
Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Yeah, yeah, this was a problem also with Shell. Nom
no fan of the oil firms for a whole bunch
of reasons. But Shell invested massively in Nigeria, Nigeria swimming
and oil. Why are they dirt poor? And the violence
and the total lack of personnel. It wasn't it wasn't
profitable for them. They left. It didn't make any difference.
(01:03:55):
You know, there could be another you know, you know,
you can't really compare them to Saudi Arabia. There's a
hell of a lot more people there, but all the
warfare and the ignorance loy Q, what are you gonna do?
They you know, Shell couldn't control. They needed some local
input and so they pulled out. And now the equipment
has fallen apart and it's flooding the area. And now
(01:04:19):
uh and this is a few years ago. Nigeria wants
to sue Shell in a in a British court because
this is their fault, like they want to destroy their
own investments and make no money. I'm not up on that.
I don't know what came of that, but but yeah, zero,
the same thing. Why isn't Nigeria a much wealthier place?
(01:04:41):
And with with all of that, and not just oil too.
They have many minerals that they have, They have gold,
huge you know, the huge River. There's so much that
they could But now the tribal warfare, the corruption, and
when shell says we can't do it anymore, we're leaving
(01:05:02):
and they dump everything, that's the That's a pretty serious thing.
The Beyondferds has something to do with that too. I know,
that's how I found about about it in the first place.
So it's a it's the same kind of thing. And
this is what you know, and she's she's turning Mexico again.
It does also has a lot of oil, which she
(01:05:24):
can't possibly be in favor of into what will be
a fourth World one party state controlled by uh Marina.
Even even she she has a Supreme Court, because she
has these alleged super majorities in both houses, a Supreme Court,
(01:05:45):
she says, we're gonna she gonna make sure the Supreme
Court can't challenge any of these The Court can't challenge
any amendments that they promote for the Constitution or any
law of hers kind of like that Yahoo did in
Israel prior to the war, and that's being talked about
much less than things like the violence or anything else.
(01:06:09):
So she really wants to create what Jelenski did in Ukraine,
slowly but surely. And then you have even leftists NGO
is saying that this is outrageous. So you can't, you
can't do this, You can't do it so blatantly. And
yet the media is so tight, you know, so tied
(01:06:29):
up there. We're getting no alternative information. The right wing
either doesn't exist or they're so divided they can't do anything.
We have two leftist candidates, and whether it be Spanish
or or English language media all saying the same thing.
She's a woman, she's a Jew. Everything's gonna be wonderful
in Mexico.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
That's a perfect thing to end on, because I know
you have personal steps to do it. It's it's yeah,
just a perfect sentence to end on. All right. Let
me remind everybody I'm gonna put in the show notes
just like I do at the end of all the
two hundred Years Together episodes. UH links to doctor Johnson's
UH where you can donate to him, the Patreon and
(01:07:14):
there's a bunch of other places, one offs and places
like that, so please go donate to doctor Johnson and
we'll be back in a couple of days with the
next two hundred years together episode. Thank you friend, Yes,
thank you to them.