Episode Transcript
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Seth Holehouse (00:13):
Welcome to Man
in America, a voice of reason in
a world gone mad. I'm your host,Seth Hullhouse. One of my
greatest concerns of the futureis not necessarily a communist
overthrow here in America,though I think we're kind of
well past that, unfortunately.But it's actually something that
people refer to as atechnocratic state or
(00:35):
technocracy. Basically, meaningthat we, the people, will be
ruled by technology and that wewill be put into some sort of
digital prison, similar towhat's happening in China right
now, where you have socialcredit scores, monitoring of
everything, and where we reallygive up all of our freedoms to
some sort of invisible AImassive massive data gathering
(00:57):
operation that is controllingevery aspect of our lives.
Right? In my opinion, it goesagainst the ideals that our
country was founded upon, namelythe constitution. So the news
right now, though, is about thiscompany called Palantir. Now
I'll be getting into a lot ofthe details behind Palantir and
Peter Thiel in my interviewtoday with doctor David Martin,
(01:18):
but I wanna just highlight alittle bit about what recently
happened and why it's caused somuch of an outroar. So here is
an article I'll bring up.
This is on Zero Hedge, talkingabout, basically, the Trump
admin tasks Palantir withexpanding US surveillance state.
So it says, The specter ofartificial intelligence has cast
(01:39):
its shadow over humanity,haunting it with nightmares of a
dystopian hellscape under theoppression of a technocratic
elite, which may be tooformidable to ever defeat. It
continues down here. Says, withthe near certainty that AI
integration will inevitablystrengthen the iron fisted grip
government has over its people,the end game of that tectocratic
(02:00):
revolution ultimately looks asif it will arrive at tyranny.
The weight of that proverbialsirs proverbial sword of
Damasolise hanging over theheads of America has become ever
more apparent following a NewYork Times report that the Trump
administration has tappedPalantir Technologies to use its
AI platforms to facilitate theintegration of databases across
(02:23):
disparate federal agencies.
In doing so, the federalgovernment is poised to build a
national database capable ofwielding unparalleled
surveillance powers overAmerican citizens. So that sums
up relatively well, basically,that as I understand it, that,
you know, Palantir will bebuilding some sort of
centralized database using AI topull in all the different data
(02:46):
points of the American people,you and I. We're talking bank
accounts, tax history, socialmedia. It's really a digital
system for tracking everythingabout us as far as I can
understand. And there's been,rightfully so, a lot of uproar
about this.
And this particular image righthere is the one that has been
(03:06):
shared. You see it everywhere onx right now. Trump taps Palantir
to create a master database onevery American. Now this brings
up a lot of questions. Is thisyou know, is there any potential
this is gonna be used for goodthings, or is this purely
something we should befrightened of?
What is the end goal of this?How does this tie into the you
(03:27):
know, Trump's goals of restoringthe the founding values of
America? How does it relate tobig tech in Silicon Valley? And
so my guest today, doctor DavidMartin and I, we're gonna be
diving deep into what isPalantir? How does it tie into
the, Alpha agencies?
Looking at Silicon Valley even,which is gonna be this is gonna
(03:49):
be some mind blowing informationabout going back into the
origins of Silicon Valley andasking the question, well, is
Silicon Valley a front for darkmilitary operations? Are people
like Mark Zuckerberg or, anynumber of these kind of famous
tech people that create thesemagnificent technologies in
their garages, are they just,you know, kind of front people
(04:09):
for government technologiesbeing built to surveil and
ultimately control us? Now inaddition to talking about
Palantir and the surveillancestate and everything surrounding
that, we're also gonna behighlighting a very disturbing
report that ties into all this.So I'm pull it up for you. And,
again, we'll be going to indetail in today's show.
(04:31):
So here's the file. It's thenational blueprint for
biodefense. So if you remembergoing into COVID when COVID
first happened and then eventtwo zero one, there's a lot of
discussion, especially among thethe kind of more truth channels,
talking about event two zeroone, which is a simulation of
what happened if a COVID, youknow, virus, you know, hit Amer
(04:51):
you know, hit the whole world,what would happen? And it was
really this giant war gamingscenario for what would happen,
and we saw that it actuallyplayed out. Well, so this is
frightening.
So David Martin, who usestechnology to scour the Internet
and search for things like this,has been the first person I've
seen bring this to light. Andthis report goes into a
biological attack happening onJuly 4 in 02/2025, so about a
(05:16):
month from now, that basicallykicks off you know, it talks
about killing a couple hundredthousand Americans and how this
is the beginning of this massivedisease and spreads, you know,
wiping out livestock, and it's apretty frightening scenario. And
so what David and I will bekinda talking about today is
merging the ideas and the,concepts behind big tech,
(05:37):
Silicon Valley, government ties,technocracy, how that ties into
Palantir, what's happening underTrump, the mRNA platform, and
how that then ties into thepotential of this event, right,
this scenario, where we're gonnahave another health scare. We're
already seeing it too. We'reseeing, now discussions of a new
COVID strain coming from China,and health officials are
(06:01):
recommending masking.
And so it's just this questionof, like, is this a pandemic two
point o that we're enteringinto? What do we do about it?
Who's behind it? And so muchmore. And so if you're familiar
with with doctor David Martin,he's someone that brings
receipts.
And what he's gonna do is helpus just sort through all this
information and paint thepicture of what's really going
(06:22):
on, but also help us tounderstand what we can do to
escape it, and how we canactually rise above it as,
humans created in God's image.So this is gonna be a pretty
important conversation. If ifyou're watching or listening, I
recommend, if you feel compelledto, to share this with your
friends and family. Because asDavid will point out in our
(06:43):
discussion, the more people thatknow about this, the more power
we have to not make it happen.So we have to get this
information out, which is whyI'm doing this show.
So just a few quick notes beforewe jump in, though. If you're
watching on Rumble or anyplatform where you can actually
like a video, please do so. Hitthe thumbs up and the like
button helps us to reach morepeople. Also wanna remind you
(07:04):
that every show that I do isdone as a podcast as well. So if
you like to listen instead ofwatch, just go to your favorite
podcast app like Spotify, ApplePodcasts, search for Man in
America, and you can listen tothe show on there.
Alright. Let's go ahead and diveright into this interview with
doctor David Martin. DoctorDavid Martin, it is such a
pleasure to have you back on theshow. It's it's been too long
(07:25):
since we did show together.
Dr. David Martin (07:28):
Seth, for some
reason, every time we do, we
seem to touch the lives of atleast a million or so people. So
here we go again.
Seth Holehouse (07:35):
Yeah, dude,
you're right.
Dr. David Martin (07:38):
One this one
is is of particular and
noteworthy interest. So thankyou for having me back. I always
am honored to spend time withyou. I do think that the nature
of our conversations brings outsome of the best of humanity. I
think, you know, I've had I'vehad some wonderful people like
Patrick Gintempo and a fewothers, Mickey Willis, who who
(08:01):
have the space and the capacityto hold open a broad
conversation, and I find myconversations with you to be
absolutely delightful.
I I leave them feeling betterabout life. So there you go.
Seth Holehouse (08:15):
Well, good.
Well, even though we're we're
hitting on some pretty darktopics today, I'm sure that
towards the end, we're gonnaround it out so that for people
that are watching, it's like,just stick through it. Right?
It's like it's like the moviewhere everything goes wrong, but
the very end, the hero'sjourney, there's something
positive. So we gotta we gottastick stick to the course.
Dr. David Martin (08:33):
We even
redefine what the hero's journey
is.
Seth Holehouse (08:35):
Here we go.
Dr. David Martin (08:36):
Let's do it.
Seth Holehouse (08:37):
So it's
interesting because, you know,
we we've been going back andforth with our schedules for
quite some time, and and Ididn't pick this particular date
for the interview based upon,hey. Something big happened in
the news, and I wanna get you tocome on and talk about it. It
just so happens that we coincidewith a few big things happening
right now. One of which is therecent announcement about
Palantir, which Yeah. You knowall too much about.
(08:59):
And then the other is theactually, I'll pull it up, which
we'll get into, the nationalblueprint for for biodefense
talking basically, it's an eventtwo zero one scenario about a
some sort of biological attackon July fourth of twenty twenty
five. So this is something thatis literally a month away, which
is obviously important for us totalk about. So I'll hand it to
(09:21):
you, and and wherever you wannastart, I'll just follow.
Dr. David Martin (09:25):
Well, in my
book, CUDA 12, Seth, I I talk
about a business plan slashsocial engineering exercise,
which is referred to asdisruption. And the reason I
talk about disruption is becausethat pays homage to the
(09:47):
framework that was adopted many,many years ago by a group of
people who decided that theywanted through commercial and
subterfuge interests to find away to dislodge what we think of
as democratic systems, what wethink of as democracies,
(10:08):
liberties, civil liberties, andso forth. And the idea was to
create a series of eventhorizons that was modified off
of the book that was written byLee Clough. Many people don't
know, but Lee Clough, who wasthe, significant influence
behind the marketing andadvertising agency, Shyatt Day,
(10:31):
which was and still remains, Ibelieve, and it certainly was
for a long time, the marketface, the front door of Apple,
Lee Clough and Steve Jobs hadcome up with this idea of
disruption as a approach thatwould allow people to achieve
(10:52):
large scale socialtransformation, where by virtue
of very subtle imaging, youcould get the public to embrace
a thing, which was inherentlydissonant with the ideas that
were being discussed, but theydid it in a very cunning way.
(11:12):
If you think about something assimple as the case example of
this, the iPhone or the iPod orthe iPad, ironically was built
around creating a consensusillusion where everybody was
losing their identity. It'sfunny that they actually had the
(11:33):
eye as a little eye. So so theywere taking this sense of
identity and and putting itinto, you're missing out if
you're not exactly likeeverybody else. Think about how
funny and ironic and tragic itis that you
Seth Holehouse (11:48):
have I'll put it
real quickly. Sorry. This is so
this is for people who don'tknow Lee Clown, which I used to
be in in do a lot of work inadvertising. I went to in design
school. He was one of, like, thelegends of design, and he was
one of the people he was thedriver behind.
If you'll remember, these werethe original iPod ads. What's
interesting, though, is thatthey were just a silhouette. It
was a faceless person Yes. Doingthis. Right?
(12:10):
These these original ads. Sorryto interrupt you, but
Dr. David Martin (12:12):
I wanted to
add that. Was the whole point
was to create this impulse thatsays, I have to have what is
going to erase the I. I mean, itit's it's somewhat funny. It's
almost the devil's propositionto Jesus. If you just bow the
knee, I'll give you the kingdomsof the world, but you forget
that if you bow the knee, you'reno longer you.
(12:33):
So, you know but anyhow, LeeClough was very instrumental in
this, by the way, and so creditwhere credit is due. Lee Clough
was part of this campaign andand very famously, most people
don't know, but he wasinstrumental in picking the what
would become president Obamathrough a series of marketing
(12:53):
tests, where hope and changeposters included the faces and
likenesses of many, many, manydifferent candidates. And
through market tests, presidentObama was ultimately selected as
the most electable canvas uponwhich others could paint and
others could influence. But thatwork that is almost an homage to
(13:17):
a an Andy Warhol like look hadback in the pre Obama voting
era, had a number of differentpossible faces that were going
to be run. And so it'sfascinating as as I mentioned in
the book.
You know, Peter Thiel was frontand center in all of those
(13:38):
efforts. And and the thecharacter that he plays in this
entire exercise is a characterthat understands what was
originally done, and this goesback in history, what was
originally done by a series oflife insurance companies,
(13:59):
companies like Swiss Re andMunich Re and others, who had
been collecting vast amounts ofdata. And if you think about
this, Seth, most people don'tunderstand what we currently are
supposed to fear as this modernusurpation of our individual
identity is actually what thelife insurance companies have
(14:23):
been doing since life insurance.What they're doing is tracking
behaviors. They're trackingpatterns.
They're tracking individualinformation. They're tracking
things like health records. Imean, how many people before a
life insurance policy wound uphaving to do a physical? And
where do you think that datawent? That went to these vaults
of information, largely inZurich and other parts of
(14:46):
Switzerland, and in Bermuda,where people would sit and
analyze the life profiles andultimately death profiles and
death actuarial plans for a vastnumber of people.
And so we're we're talking aboutit now because there's a
currency to this conversation.But this has been going on for
over twenty five years, wherelarge data, largely around
(15:10):
personal profiles of how peoplelive, how they interact, how
they both, you know, eithersupport endanger their life. All
this kind of stuff has beencollected for a long time, and
there once upon a time was acompany called SAIC.
Seth Holehouse (15:28):
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Dr. David Martin (16:46):
SAIC, for
those of you who don't know,
created things like the Chexassystem, Huntington Bank shares
that had the ability to trackevery single check cash between
every single party. Did you hearwhat I just said? And this, by
the way, years before anybodyknew that this was happening,
(17:07):
they also had a system calledSABRE, and SABRE was the uniform
program that allowed for peopleto track every airplane ticket
that someone purchased, everyhotel stay, all of the
information, which before we hadthings like Airbnb and before we
had things like Travelocity,Sabre was this unifying data
(17:33):
source that tracked the movementof everyone on the planet. And
these are all things, Seth, thatare 20 plus years old. And and
the vast majority of people sitthere going, oh, no.
This is a new thing. AI is doingthis. Computers are doing this.
No. This has been going on for along time.
And in my book, I lay out all ofthe reasons why this was so
(17:56):
critical. But the idea was thatwe need to get the human race to
stop seeing itself as sovereign.We need to take this beautiful
manifestation of life calledhumanity, and we need to crunch
it down into a very small packetof consumption to extinction
(18:17):
oriented events. You are not aperson. You are a consumer until
you die.
And the life insurance, theSAICs of the world, the the
banking systems of the world,all of these systems were built
to build a massive networkinformation set, which would
(18:37):
then be used to traininformation and giant surprise
companies like Oracle founded byLarry Ellison, but most people
don't know that that came out ofthe classified CIA project,
which was also called Oracle atthe Ampex Corporation. People
don't know that Oracle, everydatabase that was ever built,
(18:58):
was a front door data harvestingmechanism for the backdoor of
figuring out the map ofhumanity. And just like we saw
with SAIC, just like we saw withOracle, Palantir, a company that
very, very, very few people haveever really examined. And that
(19:18):
in part because Peter Thiel, asa phenomenal operator, is a
savant when it comes tointellect. He is truly a
remarkable mind.
And kind of like Elon Musk, onlymuch more private, much more
measured, Peter Thiel is savantto the level of expediency. And
(19:41):
what that means in my definitionis that in the interest of what
makes sense to him, he becomeson the edge of amoral. And I am
very precise to say amoral, notimmoral, and we can argue
whether the things he's doing isimmoral. I'm not making that
(20:02):
argument right now. I'm sayingthat expediency becomes the only
thing that matters.
And so giant surprise to all thepeople who were wildly
enthusiastic about Trump beingelected, what you didn't see was
the size of the checks PeterThiel wrote, not only to get
Trump elected, but to make JDVance in the first place. JD
(20:24):
Vance is an unknown, and he is acanvas of Peter Thiel's. He was
paid for by Peter Thiel. PeterThiel was extremely motivated
around making him the phenomenonthat he was in politics. And lo
and behold, when it came time topick a vice president, I can
assure you Donald Trump did notmake that choice.
(20:47):
He didn't. He was handed who thevice president was going to be.
So is it a wonder that duringCOVID, the company that was
behind so many of thesurveillance programs and the
company that was behind so manyof the monitoring systems to
figure out whether people weregoing to take the shot or were
(21:08):
going to comply with orders orwere gonna do any of those
things, behind those were,that's right, Palantir.
Government contracts left,right, and center. And then is
it any surprise that since Trumphas taken office, Palantir has
received more governmentcontracts than probably by
growth anybody else in terms ofany particular industry player.
(21:29):
Now, we can sit here and pretendlike all of that just happens to
be coincident. But here comesthe problem. This was an
architecture set in motion backin 1998. You heard the date
correctly.
Seth Holehouse (21:46):
'98.
Dr. David Martin (21:47):
'90 '8.
Seth Holehouse (21:48):
Well, one thing
I'll throw out just quickly in
terms of date is as I pulled upI didn't quickly see you may not
have seen it, but this righthere is a, a CIA document. This
will go back to 1975 for projectOracle
Dr. David Martin (22:01):
Yep.
Seth Holehouse (22:02):
Where it
discusses the, obviously, some
of it is redacted, but thedesign of the Oracle mass
storage system. Yep. Storagecontrol processors through
transport. You know, basically,you can see it's a massive tech
project for for storing andharvesting data, and this is
1975.
Dr. David Martin (22:22):
Yeah. This is
why this is why I always love
for when people tell me thatthat, you know, the Silicon
Valley phenomenon was somehowthis brilliant bunch of guys
sitting in garages. Nothingcould be more nonsensical and
distant from truth. This wascovert operations that were
masked under the guise in thecase of Ampex Corporation to do
(22:43):
a number of things, which weresocial behavior monitoring. Most
people don't know that the AmpexCorporation also was the
inventor allegedly of Dolbysurround sound.
Now everybody loves to haveDolby surround sound in their
house, but very few peopleunderstand that that was an
acoustic program for behaviormodification.
Seth Holehouse (23:04):
Just sit with
that. Hold on. So Dolby. Right?
Like, I've got Dolby, you know,Dolby five point one, six point
one.
Dr. David Martin (23:11):
Yeah. There
you go.
Seth Holehouse (23:12):
So that that was
run by so Ampex. Right? Data
which is a data systemscorporation. So you're saying
that Dolby was part of abehavior modification program.
It wasn't just, hey.
Let's let's build a great soundsystem for the IMAX theaters.
Dr. David Martin (23:28):
Ampex
Corporation was Operation
Paperclips recipient. A. M.Pontiov was the guy who
harvested all of the Germanengineers as the reprisals for
the second World War. AmpexCorporation has always been a
front for dark ops that weresocial engineering dark ops and
surveillance and all this kindof stuff.
So giant shock that you have abehavior modification acoustic
(23:52):
system, which is in everybody'shome, so that that's right. We
can have our minds altered byvirtue of the sound that we have
both explicitly, and moreimportantly, the implicit
frequencies in those sounds. Andif you go back and look at the
early Ampex engineering, you seethat most of them come out of
covert ops for mind control. Sothere's those little tiny
(24:14):
details that people don't liketo talk about. And the reason we
need to go into this history,Seth, is is the baton handoff
between these covert operatorsis seamless, because no one
bothers to point this out.
We don't we don't bother tolook. When we get an Dolby
(24:34):
surround sound system, wecelebrate it. We go, oh my gosh.
Great sound, and it feels likeI'm in the theater where I'm
feeling the vibration of the jetengines when I play Top Gun.
Well, you are feeling that, andyou're also getting a lot of
other stuff.
But but what we're notunderstanding is this
disruption. Remember, this isthe Steve Jobs phenom that that
(24:57):
has truly ruled the world forthe last two decades. If you go
back and look at all of thatstuff and you go back and ask
the question, what was going onwith Steve Jobs and Robert
Friedland? The name nobody talksabout. Robert Friedland, also
known as toxic Bob in someheadlines, one of the greatest
(25:19):
conflict metals proliferators onthe planet.
Why were they together at anashram in India? Why were they
doing the things that they weredoing, which ultimately gave
rise to the preeminence ofApple? These questions are
questions we don't even botherasking, and we sit there
pretending like an eventhorizon, like what is being
(25:40):
proposed for 07/04/2025 is agiant surprise. The answer is
it's not a surprise. It's noteven remotely interesting from
the standpoint of this is yetanother time when the public has
been hypnotized into thiscomatose state of believing,
(26:02):
yeah, we had the COVID thing,I'm sure we're done with that.
They're not going to do thatagain. Well, remember they did
it with anthrax in 02/2001, Andwe didn't learn. And then they
did it with bird flu, and thenthey did it with MERS, and then
they did it with, oh, that'sright, SARS two point o. And and
here's the problem. The problemis people think that SARS is now
(26:24):
and COVID is is now kind of thisthing in the past, but here
comes the little nasty secret.
If you go back to Austrianphilosopher von Hayek, who made
a very important observationthat the abuse of public health
as the means of terrifying apopulation becomes a principal
(26:46):
agency of suspending libertiesthat ultimately never are
recovered. So this is a youknow, you create a little inch
of the problem, and you take amile, and then you create
another inch, and you takeanother mile. And, well, they
are going to tell us that we'renot social distancing, so things
are better now, and we're notmasking. So things are better
(27:08):
now. The fact of the matter isevery one of these things is a
power grab.
Every one of these things is anability to suppress liberty more
and more and more. And we sitback in this stunned mullet
silence of going, clearly,they're not gonna do it again.
Well, bad news for everybody.Tom Ridge, that's right. The
(27:30):
secretary of homeland security,when it was first established
under the Bush administration,collaborated with a group of
people to come up with ascenario in which they are
calling for, and listencarefully to what I'm gonna say,
the death of 02/14464 Americanson 07/04/2025.
(27:50):
In one month from today, thereis a plan that involves the
murder of 280,000 Americans on asingle day. And the best part of
it is they're gonna blame aforeign actor for it, except for
a tiny little problem. Yeah. Ifyou hop down to page nine of
that national blueprint forbiodefense, Seth, and highlight
(28:13):
the first major paragraph underthe US House of Representatives.
Let's let's go ahead for thesake of everybody on here, make
sure that we read it.
We were attacked, and we don'tknow who did the attack. But the
infectious agent they usedkilled two hundred and eighty
thousand Americans and infectedat least four hundred thousand
(28:35):
throughout the country on asingle day, in addition to two
hundred thousand dead and eighthundred thousand sickened
animals. Now if you scroll upfor a moment, Seth, and keep
going until I tell you to stop,just keep scrolling. Scroll up,
scroll up, scroll up. Whatyou're going to find when you
get to the this page oh, thereyou go.
(28:56):
Look at ex officio members. Ifyou look at the ex officio
members of this particularcommittee, there are two names
that I wanna call your attentionto. Gerald w Parker and George
Post. Those names are names thatpeople should be familiar with,
but they are not. These areveterinary scientists and gain
(29:18):
of function scientists who havedone an enormous amount of work
in a variety of pathogens.
George Post famously was verymuch involved in Arizona
contribution to the gain offunction research that brought
us COVID nineteen and all ofthose kinds of things. And here
we have the same actors. In thiscase, we have the ability to go
(29:39):
into their research and find outwhat kind of pathogen would go
after humans and animals on thesame day. How how do we figure
out what that is? And it turnsout that there are a bunch of
options.
Nipah virus is what they referto in this scenario, but equine
encephalitis, which is a huge,huge, huge gain of function
(30:00):
problem, is something that thatthese guys have been familiar
with. And there are severalother pathogens that these guys
have been working with. And thefact is that they're telling us
that on July 4, on thecelebration of the the two
hundred and forty ninth year ofAmerica in its formation, we are
(30:21):
going to allegedly have abiological weapons attack. And
do you realize, Seth, that not asingle person in law
enforcement, not a single personin the White House, not Bobby
Kennedy at HHS, not a a TulsiGabbard at the DNI, not a single
person is actually taking anaction to interdict the actors
(30:42):
that I'm talking about. This isnot a problem that happened
during the Biden nonpresidency.
This is a a thing that is astatement of intent to once
again take advantage of humandynamics So Where we are going
to appeal to fear, we're goingto appeal to this notion that
(31:04):
somebody out there attacked us,where we know already who the
actors are, we have a highprobability of knowing what
they're gonna say the pathogenwas. And remember, these are not
pathogens. These are weaponsdeployed against humanity. And
as I've said many times, we cango back and look at the likely
delivery mechanisms, which arerocket propelled grenades that
(31:26):
had a blast resistant pathogenconcussive devices that allow a
pathogen to be spread over astadium, over a park, over any
one of a mass gathering event,where you wouldn't know the
difference between a fireworkgoing off and a pathogen
ballistic device spreadingtoxins across a crowd. In fact,
(31:49):
if I were going to do it, Iwould actually do it during the
firework celebrations.
So so we know that this isactually a fully planned, fully
baked, like you said, event twozero one kind of thing. And
yours truly is the only one thatstarted talking about it. And,
unfortunately, now this is thethird show where there's been a
(32:13):
conversation about thisparticular topic.
Seth Holehouse (32:17):
Alright. So
there's a lot to unpack here. I
I wanna I'm gonna bookmark thediscussion I wanna have shortly
about big tech and and SiliconValley, because that's a whole,
like, that's a whole can ofworms. That's a Pandora's box.
Right?
But just focusing on the I'llpull this document. So,
basically, this document righthere is a similar to event two
(32:41):
zero one was a scenario. Right?Where they they overwent they
they did a a kind of war gamingscenario of this biological
attack. Now I wanna I just wannaread that particular paragraph,
because now that you mentionedthat the pathogens could be
spread, that they're blastresistant, so you could have a
(33:02):
firework that's preloaded withpathogens Yep.
That would be released to alarge crowd gathering. I I just
wanna look at this reallyquickly, just read this
particular paragraph, which youhighlighted earlier. The chair
says, I call this first hearingof the joint inquiry to order.
Nine weeks ago, some nation orterrorist group, we still don't
know who, attacked the nation'scapital and other US cities with
(33:26):
biological weapons as wecelebrated Independence Day. The
infectious agent they usedkilled at least two hundred and
eighty thousand Americans andinfected at least four hundred
thousand throughout the countryin a single day, in addition to
the two hundred thousand deadand eight hundred thousand
sickened animals.
These numbers will increase asthe disease spreads. Many of our
(33:47):
own colleagues and staff here incongress fell ill and died.
Coordinated attacks in alliednations in the days that
followed killed tens ofthousands more. So continue,
actually. So we are now hearingthat the terrorists conducted
smaller scale attacks inAmerican cities and localities
prior to the July 4 incidents totest our defense and gauge our
(34:09):
responses.
These smaller scale attacks werewent largely unnoticed.
Laboratory tests confirmed thatNIPA virus caused the disease,
but we still do not know whatmethods or adversaries used to
infect humans, etcetera,etcetera. So this is like if if
we could go back in time beforeCOVID hit, and you and I could
sit down at that event two zeroone scenario meeting Yeah. Which
(34:30):
I've played on on shows over andover again, and we said, wait.
This is actually gonna happen.
Yeah. Like, how how did you comeacross this? Because I only
heard about this thing throughyou, and I saw the Shannon
Joyner view that you did. Yep.But but it's not something
everyone's talking about.
It's not like there's a bigbreaking talking about.
Dr. David Martin (34:50):
No one has
talked about it.
Seth Holehouse (34:54):
How'd you find
how did you find this? How'd you
become aware of
Dr. David Martin (34:56):
this? It's
like everything else, Seth. I
have machines that scour theuniverse for interesting
information. And when I sawGeorge Post's name, because he's
somebody I flagged a long timeago as somebody of great
interest, and I have his workgoing back to the early 2000s,
and a bunch of my gain offunction triggers that I have on
(35:20):
my systems. You know, when youhave the Secretary of Homeland
Security as a member of theplanning committee, and you have
George Post as a member of theplanning committee, there is an
alarm bell that I have that mysystem set off.
And this happens to be one ofthose things where, to be
(35:43):
perfectly blunt, when I firstlooked at the scenario, I failed
to see that it was talking abouta forward event horizon called
07/04/2025. And and when you doa simple little numerology
reduction on that, you get nineeleven. And that's where the
(36:06):
machine intelligence that I haveadded to the just human
curiosity that I have kind ofcoalesced, and I thought, oh,
you know what? This is a mirrorof nine eleven. They're they're
doing another one of theirlittle plans.
And once again, I've said manytimes, having this conversation
(36:27):
lessens the likelihood that ithappens. If we had had these
conversations in ahead of eventtwo zero one, COVID would be
unlikely to have happened, butthe problem is nobody was
interested in having theseconversations, and despite the
multiple times since 02/2023,where I started briefing these
issues, the public was not eveninterested in hearing them. So
(36:51):
so we're in a different phase,and in many respects, we are in
a much more hopeful phase rightnow. Because as your listeners
share this content, what happensis we decrease the risk of this
happening, because literallyspeaking about it pushes the
likelihood of the event down.There was a recent interview
(37:14):
that made it onto social mediaabout a hearing where in a
congressional hearing that therewas a discussion about the
appropriateness of puttingvaccines into edible vegetables,
and people were losing theirmind.
And I got tons of people sendingme the video of, did you see
this guy saying that they havevaccines in in vegetables? Well,
(37:36):
it turns out that in 02/2005,when I was in Tehran, Iran, and
I met the head of thebioengineering program from the
Jerwal Nehru University inIndia. He was celebrating at
that event the fact that theyhad successfully put vaccines
into tomato plants so that youcould get a tomato at the
(37:59):
grocery store, and you would beeating a vaccine. They have been
doing that with the mosaic viruson tobacco for a very long time,
and tobacco has been veryeffective vector to manifest all
kinds of vaccination orientedtechnologies. But tomatoes as a
broadleaf plant are susceptibleonce again to a mosaic virus
(38:23):
construct, and that mosaic virusconstruct lets the tomato plant
produce vaccine.
Now, I don't know how many ofyou realize that there is no
current legal standard in TheUnited States prohibiting even a
Whole Foods that allegedly hasorganic produce. There's nothing
(38:45):
that says that they can't put avaccine into your salad. And I
don't know how you feel aboutthat, but I know that the reason
why Kim and I love to
Seth Holehouse (38:55):
have our
Dr. David Martin (38:55):
own because I
like to know that the only thing
that's infecting our salad is alot of sunlight, in our case, a
lot of alpaca poo, which is verygood because we have a neighbor
that has a lot of alpacas. Andit turns out that, you know, we
like to know what's in our food.We don't like to have the
(39:16):
Darwin's grab bag of anygenetically modified anything
that goes into our body. And solast night, my salad did not
have a vaccine in it becausebecause I picked it out of the
garden and had to compete withthe deer to get it. But but the
point is that that we're in asituation right now where the
(39:38):
incredulity that most peoplehave, where they go, well,
clearly, they're not gonna dothat again, or clearly, they're
not gonna do that.
Well, the answer is not only arethey going to do it, and once
again, they have names. They dohave names like Tom Ridge, like
George Post, like the people inthis particular document. And
(40:00):
and they do have names like theparticipants in event two zero
one, and they do have names likethe patent holders on blast
resistant pathogen dispersalagents at the United States
Army. Seth, do you think that ablast resistant pathogen
distribution agent does thatsound like public health? Does
(40:20):
that sound like DARPA's justtrying to make sure that we are
safe as a population?
Or does it sound when you say ablast resistant munition? Does
that sound like a weapon?
Seth Holehouse (40:32):
It sounds like a
weapon. Like, so is that this
right here? This is one exampleperhaps, a novel blast resistant
gene.
Dr. David Martin (40:42):
Yeah.
Seth Holehouse (40:44):
What's
interesting here, it looks like
this was developed in China. Ifyou look at all the the names
Dr. David Martin (40:48):
on it. But if
you look if you look at all of
this stuff and you go down inany level of detail, you're
gonna find a US funding source.
Seth Holehouse (40:56):
You'll find a
Patel lab and right?
Dr. David Martin (40:59):
So It's it's
it's disgusting. It's turtles
all the way down.
Seth Holehouse (41:04):
There's I got a
million questions. I'm gonna try
my best to to focus them. So ifwe're looking at Silicon Valley,
by kinda tying this alltogether, I've done some deep
dives into the history ofGoogle, Facebook, Twitter. I've
I've, on my own, you know, cometo the conclusion similar to
what you've talked about thatthese were basically DARPA.
(41:27):
These were military budgetoperations that, you know, had
some face to them.
This Mark Zuckerberg, this guywho built this in a garage.
Right? You know, that wholestory of the unicorn company
becomes the, you know, thetrillion dollars, you know,
global social media company thatso, basically, kinda tying us
all together, so much of what wesee in Silicon Valley is just a
(41:50):
they're just disguised therethere's lipstick on a pig, and
what the pig is is militaryblack budget population control
mechanisms.
Dr. David Martin (41:59):
That's exactly
right.
Seth Holehouse (42:00):
Data harvesting,
mass you know, like, Edward
Bernays would be, like, justdoing backflips in his grave to
see what kind of socialengineering could be done with
with the modern technology.
Dr. David Martin (42:09):
Absolutely.
You're exactly right.
Seth Holehouse (42:11):
So that you had
this, you know, big tech, right,
in in in Silicon Valley, whichis really a front for CIA,
DARPA. You know, I'm sure thatMossad, you know, Israeli
intelligence, all these cominginto that. So then when Trump
gets back in, you have all allof a sudden, all of these major
big tech CEOs, Jeff Bezos, MarkZuckerberg, you know, list goes
(42:34):
on, Peter Thiel, that have allof a sudden now backed Trump,
you know, huge donations,etcetera. You've got J. D.
Vance with massive ties,obviously, to, you know,
Palantir to Peter Thiel. So aswe're then heading into this
July 4 scenario with a lot ofthese same actors, you mentioned
that the numerology points to aa similar actually, the
(42:54):
identical numerology of 09/11.Right? Yep. And tying that
together.
Now the nine eleven, in myhumble opinion, was a false flag
to bring in the Patriot Act.This massive prewritten bill
that was just waiting for theright opportunity to say, oh,
here we go. Here goes all yourcivil liberties. Constitution,
what's that? Right?
So that was nine eleven. So doyou think, kinda putting
(43:17):
everything together, you havethe recent announcements of of
the funding for these Palantirdatabases with the Trump
administration. You have LarryEllison and Sam Altman coming
out, like, on what day two orthree of Trump's president
presidency announcing projectStargate. Right? It's half a
trillion dollar.
Dr. David Martin (43:34):
Amplifying
mRNA and yep.
Seth Holehouse (43:38):
Yes. And so how
does all do you think that
what's what's kind of behindthis closed wall is this massive
surveillance system? Yeah.Massive population control,
technocracy in its truest sense.And, of course, you got Elon,
right, the guy who's puttingchips in people's heads, and
everyone loves him because hewears a MAGA hat and and, you
(44:00):
know, talks about theconstitution.
But if you look at thetechnology he's building, I
don't trust anybody who'sbuilding, you know, brain chips
and all these things, I think,to me, represent the the
evolution as seen by man, whichis man merging with sea with
with with machine to becomeYeah. You know, god and and and,
you know, this this god. So isdo you think that how does that
(44:21):
tie into this July 4? Like, whenyou look at it all, do you see
this massive elaborate plan thatspans decades
Dr. David Martin (44:28):
Yes.
Seth Holehouse (44:29):
Leading us into
technocracy?
Dr. David Martin (44:32):
Yeah. And and
we need to be very clear on the
fact that we decided a long timeago, as a society, we decided
that the extended life lithiumbattery that makes our back then
Walkman play longer was worththe life of lithium miners in
(44:54):
South America who had an averagelife expectancy of half of a
normal person's life. Do do youhear the comedy and the irony in
that? Extended life batteriesonly cut the lives of the humans
in half. But we didn't careabout that because we wanted to
be able to listen to, I don'tknow, Shania Twain, or we needed
(45:16):
to to to hear, you know,somebody croon more on our
Walkmans and more on our radiosback then than we cared about.
Seth Holehouse (45:28):
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So looking at the lithiumbattery example. Right? It's
it's just this example wherewe've said, oh, okay. Well, my I
can now listen to Nirvana forsix hours straight while
(47:01):
someone's now living to, youknow, 30 years old on average
instead of 60 and down Brazil orwherever they're mining this.
And think that that's that'skind of highlight the reason you
brought that example that as Isee is it highlights this bigger
picture of complacency in herein America.
We'll trade almost anything forcomfort and security. And
Dr. David Martin (47:20):
Right. And and
and this is where I think we
have the challenge with thesescenarios when we have a
tabletop exercise that assumesthat the public will fall again
for the same charade that's beenwhat it falls for. You ever
since we were told to fearnuclear fallout by hiding under
incineratable school desks.Right? How ludicrous it was to
(47:43):
do a duck and cover drill.
But what did it do? Ithabituated this idea that
someone somewhere out there,some tech wizard, some defense
wizard knows better than we do.And our little minds when we
were eight or nine or 10 and wewere told to hide under the desk
to prepare for the Russiansbombing us, became hypnotized
(48:06):
into believing that there was agovernment that was looking out
for us, and somehow or anotherthat government was our savior,
and all we had to do is crawlunder a desk and be compliant,
and then suddenly we'd be fine.Well, what we don't understand
is that the epigenetic effect,and I literally mean epigenetics
here, the epigenetic fear ofnormalizing a external authority
(48:29):
that tells you to be afraid,then it tells deprive yourself
of logic. Right?
Any one of us could haveexamined how dumb the idea of
there's a nuclear strike, andwe're supposed to hide under a
desk. Really? Like, that islaughable. But we still somehow
(48:51):
were able to be coerced intosomething that on its face was
nonsensical and at its heart wasinsidious. Because what it was
doing was conditioning us toexpect a expert telling us what
to do, and without anyconsideration, we could just
fall into line.
And and so whether that's forour benefit where we're told,
(49:13):
well, we're gonna have socialmedia, we'll use a term, by the
way, is the most antisocialthing we've ever invented, but
we call it social media. So wehypnotize ourself no different
from when we use the termvaccine to allegedly help
prevent a disease, but it's thething that's actually
perpetrating the death anddestruction, but we call it a
(49:35):
thing, and it's exactly theopposite of it. And I think
Seth, we've been doing this,this what I refer to in my blog
is inverted alchemy for a longtime. What we're doing is we're
taking this idea that humansrespond to fear, and they
respond to demands foracquiescence, and they respond
to these hideous impulses. Andthey're so predictable that they
(49:59):
can be told there's going to bean attack on July 4, and we
don't even blink an eye.
We don't even stay hold woah.Woah. Hold on a minute. How
could we callously say twohundred and eighty thousand
Americans lose their lives andthat's acceptable so that we
can, what, promote a law thatwants to have total invasion of
(50:24):
our privacy, total invasion ofour personal space, total
surrender of this sovereignty ofour own own information, our own
communications. And by the way,that's exactly what this kind of
an event horizon would do.
And if you go back and look atwho was the person called into
being the SWAT team toinvestigate this thing, it's the
(50:46):
Department of State and theDepartment of Defense. You know
what's not mentioned? TheDepartment of Health and Human
Services. In this scenario,respondents are intelligence,
defense, and communications. Howhow bizarre for a public health
event where we don't even havehealth referenced in the first
(51:08):
response.
Seth Holehouse (51:09):
It's like it's
just a military operation.
Dr. David Martin (51:11):
It is a
military operation because it's
not like a military operation.It is a military operation, just
like COVID and operation warpspeed were. So, you know, are
there lessons to learn?Question. It comes to that
deeper question, which is thequestion that you and I have
explored many times, and, youknow, ironically, one of the
things I'm doing in a couplemonths, because I fully intend
(51:35):
by the way to survive July 4.
Fully intend to be on my farmhaving a beautiful time on July
4. But, you know, a number ofus, in fact, this started with a
conversation on my farm withJoel Salatin, who who is a
phenomenal visionary in terms ofthe potential of the human agro
(51:59):
agroeconomic and agronomile kindof future. You know, Joel came
out, and he was doing a reviewof my farm and seeing how Kim
and I could turn it into kind ofits own little Eden, which we're
doing in slow motion. And, hesaid, wouldn't it be fun to to
put together an event thatdidn't talk about the problems,
but talked about solutions? Andso what we're doing is realizing
(52:23):
that if we don't change thenarrative and start talking
about how humans can rise totheir full vitality and to their
full potential, and to see thelimitless and boundless nature
of their wonder, we're part ofthe problem.
So what we're doing, RejuvenateHealth Summit, August at
(52:46):
Polyface Farms in Staunton,Virginia. A number of us are
getting together, and what we'regoing to do is talk not about
all the things that are wrong,but we're going to sit with
several hundred of the mostbrilliant people and the most
compassionate loving humanity,and talk about how we
reintegrate into a world thatsays that the world is not our
(53:09):
enemy. Nature is not creatingpoisons to kill us. You know,
these are all man made fearmongering stories and
narratives. And we're going tohave an amazing time with
amazing people showing thatthere's a better form of
humanity that is not respondentto fear, not respondent to
(53:32):
acquiescence, not willing tobend the knee, but to stand tall
and say, are fearfully andwonderfully made.
We have unbounded potential ifwe allow ourselves to simply
step into humanity. And thebeautiful thing is, Seth, by
doing the conversation we justhad, we decrease the likelihood
(53:52):
of the evil having its day, andwe increase the likelihood of
humanity having that littleglimmer, that little tiny ember
that's still glowing inside ofall of us, and it is in all of
us. That ember, if we simply fanit into flame, can reignite a
humanity that does not respondto the whims and the willful
(54:19):
inhumanity of big tech, of theartificial of artificial
intelligence, of all of thethings that have been set into
motion to hijack and to suspendus from our full potential. And
it turns out that that flame canthen light the forest fire that
then can engulf the world with alight. And that light is the
(54:43):
light of life, and that lightcan surround us.
And I can tell you, I am moreoptimistic sitting here today,
recognizing that the hundreds ofthousands or millions of people
who will watch your show aregoing to then share this
message. And every time somebodyhits share, they decrease the
(55:05):
likelihood of an adverse eventhorizon happening and increase
the likelihood that humanitywill once again stand against
the tyranny of darkness.
Seth Holehouse (55:16):
One thing I
oftentimes go back to with this
as we're as we're wrapping up, Iwish we had another three hours,
is if you look at a lot of thesepeople, the technocrats, I would
say that there's one thingthat's pretty congruent amidst
them is that they're atheist.Right? The the whole idea of
merging man and machine as andis the next it's this belief in
(55:38):
evolution, and that the humanrace evolves through technology
and the merger of the flesh andthe microchip, basically. But to
me, if my enemy is ever anatheist or someone that is or or
worshiping Lucifer or some otherdark entity, it's like we we've
already won because we are madein God's image. And if, like, if
(56:01):
someone doesn't believe in Godor believe in the the in the
divine spark within all of us,and they think they can become
God through technology andthrough deception and through
mass programming and everything,they have underestimated the the
greatest foe they will everhave.
And that that is, in a lot ofways, what gives me hope is that
we're still here. They've beentrying to exterminate us for a
(56:24):
long time, but we're still herebecause God needs us here.
Dr. David Martin (56:27):
Well and and I
think, you know, that I've been
examining this. If you if youlook at the we just passed a
couple days ago, the seventeenhundredth anniversary of the
Nicene Creed. Most people don'tknow that, but those that's a
that's a that's an anniversarywe should mark. And the Council
(56:48):
of Nicea, which unfortunatelyturned our notion of the divine
into a creation in man's image,which is actually quite a tragic
thing. Constantine was trying tojustify an empire, and he was
trying to justify his own divinenature where he was usurping the
(57:09):
idea of divinity to be somethingthat is in absolute and
unambiguous clarity that saidthat he was above all else.
And to do that, what he did washe elevated a version of God,
which oddly enough at the time,if you go back and look at both
(57:31):
the Hebrew tradition and theearly Christian tradition, was
actually a desecration of thedivine. The reason why we were
prohibited from having idolatrywas because God was too big to
put into a form or a name. Ityou weren't supposed to even
mention the name of God. Why?Why?
Because the minute you shrink itinto a form, technology, it
(57:55):
ceases to have its unboundedunlimited space. And so
ironically, seventeen hundredyears ago, we set this
particular process in motion.And and it is time for all of us
to examine why did we allow Godto be defined by man, rather
than stepping into arelationship that says,
(58:19):
shouldn't we go back and examinewhat it means to be a loving,
caring, compassionate,generative, infinitely unbounded
by perspective, divine presence?And and what we have done is
ironically made God in man'simage. And then what the
technocracy has done is said,well, if you're already willing
(58:41):
to give up on divinity, we'lltake it the rest of the way.
And so as I've said in manypresentations, and I know
there's a lot of people in theevangelical movement that get
upset when I say this. But Ithink that before we actually
look at the, you know, kind ofthe speck in our brother's eye
to use, you know, Christterminology, let's look at the
(59:03):
plank in our own. Have we havewe sold ourselves and
ultimately, have we solddivinity short by putting God in
the box that happens to be thething that we've decided to
label? And is it possible thatif we lived out a more perfect
version of what we are meant tobe, we are meant to be salt and
(59:26):
light in the earth. We're notsupposed to sit there just
throwing stones at ourneighbors.
In fact, we're not supposed tothrow stones at our neighbors at
all. Maybe, maybe we have notdone our job in keeping our
lamps tended and our wickstrimmed. And maybe because we
(59:47):
have failed to do that, we havecreated a vacuum into which the
darkness is more than happy tomove. And so my view is simple.
Let your light shine.
Not wait for somebody else. Letyour light shine. What is your
light? What is your essence? Letyour light shine.
(01:00:09):
It doesn't have to come in theform that somebody told you it
had to come in. It has to be theauthentic expression of the
divine within you. You must letyour light shine, because if you
do, what does it say? Thatglorifies your father. And I
think that seventeen hundredyears ago, we made a mistake.
(01:00:31):
We decided to not let our lightshine. We decided to begin a
pathway of saying, god is inthis box. And you go back to
that creed and go, does thatcapture all of the essence of
the divine, or is that somethingwritten by an emperor who wanted
to then say he was divinelyappointed to be emperor? And it
(01:00:53):
turns out that that questionbecomes a very, very dangerous
one to ask because the answer isvery uncomfortable. And so I'm a
huge fan of once again, gettingback to the soul and the essence
of what it means to be human,what it means to be in this
divinely created order.
And the minute we do that, Ithink the technocracy fails
(01:01:16):
because we realize we don't needanything.
Seth Holehouse (01:01:20):
That's it.
That's absolutely it. Well,
Dave, I know you've got a flightto catch. I do. I wanna just
I'll bring up this website onelast time.
I'll put this link in thedescription. Gonna try to be
there as well. You know, theopportunity to come to Joel
Salatin's farm and hang out withyou and Joel Salatin. To me,
it's just like, how can I not gothere? So this is Well, yeah.
Dr. David Martin (01:01:41):
And, Seth,
it's it's important to realize
one of the things that Isuggested when we organize this
is that we're gonna do somethingvery unusual. The the speakers
are usually seconded off intheir VIP green rooms and
everything else, because this isat Polyface Farms, because Joel
and his team are creating all ofthe catering for the event. The
(01:02:02):
speakers are actually going tobe serving the people who
attend. And so this is this isgoing to be modeling a model of
how humanity ought to run, wherethe greatest among you is the
servant of all. And so I don'tknow what's on the menu, but I
do know that you'll see me, andyou'll see Kim and you'll see,
Australia's Super Chef PeteEvans, and you'll see these
(01:02:25):
amazing people, Tanda Cook andand and Katie Collier and
others.
You're gonna see all thesepeople, Eric Napudi. You're
gonna see these people who whoare are fabulous human beings
doing fabulous work and so manyothers, and and you're going to
not just see them on stage asexperts, and you're not going to
see them in an elevatedposition, but each and every one
(01:02:47):
of them has agreed to be theservant of all two. This is
going to be a form of humanitythat you should at least
witness. Because as you witnesswhat is possible with humanity,
nothing but greatness comes fromit.
Seth Holehouse (01:03:03):
Well, I'm
looking forward to you serving
me some goat meat meat loaf,some regeneratively grown goat
meat loaf.
Dr. David Martin (01:03:10):
There you go.
Alright. Well,
Seth Holehouse (01:03:11):
I'm looking
forward David, thank you so
much. It's it's such a pleasurespeaking with you. Thank you and
safe Always
Dr. David Martin (01:03:17):
an honor, and
thank you so much. It's
delightful to spend time withyou, and I am looking forward to
getting this out to as manypeople as can hear it so that we
push back the darkness.
Seth Holehouse (01:03:27):
That's the goal.
Thank you so much, David. Well,
I hope you enjoyed theinterview. If enjoy is the right
word, but I hope that youlearned something from it. And
perhaps you're even compelled toshare it with your friends or
family, because we have to getthis information out.
But I always enjoy how DavidMartin is able to take a very
dark topic like that, and thenend up on something that gives
us hope. And I do have hope. Ireally, really do, because I've
(01:03:48):
got faith. And and I guess if Ihad no faith, I'm gonna like, if
I was an atheist, I'd have nohope right now. I'd think, okay,
the world is screwed.
We're gonna be living in digitalprisons in the next couple of
years. You know, there's nofuture for my kids, but I
actually am full of hope becauseI do believe that there is that
divine spark in all of us, andthat that divine spark is
something that the robots andthe technocrats, they can't
(01:04:10):
create that. They can't controlit. Now, what's interesting is
that, just a couple of days ago,I did an interview, a separate
interview, talking about,digital privacy and how to
protect ourselves from the thedigital surveillance state. I
interviewed a guy named, GlennMeder, who or sorry, Glenn
Meder, who is the founder of acompany called the Privacy
Academy.
Now the timing is perfectbecause we've actually got next
(01:04:33):
week, we're doing an entire freethis is free. Okay? It's a free
webinar on how to protectyourself from the digital
surveillance state. Now, we hadthis interview before the
Palantir news came out, which iskinda odd timing, but there's
gonna be a link in thedescription to this show where
you can go on there and registeragain. I like I said, it's a %
(01:04:53):
free.
Okay? So it's just to educatepeople. They've got other things
that if you wanna continue withother education, there's more
options for that. But this isgonna be a detailed webinar and
a q and a with someone, Glenn,who is a an absolute master when
it comes to privacy and securityin the digital era. So in this
webinar, we're talking about,how brands like Apple use
(01:05:15):
privacy as a selling point, eventhough it's not true.
How big tech companies likeMicrosoft and Apple collect data
on you at all times with theiroperating systems, how the new
Windows and Apple AI updates arespecifically designed to make a
profile on you and what you doon your computer, how you can
move to Linux based operatingsystems without being a tech
geek, private alternatives tomainstream apps like, Microsoft
(01:05:37):
Word, and again, live q and a.So if Internet privacy and
digital privacy is important toyou, and you don't wanna be
tracked on everything and haveevery move you're making and
every word you're typing andeverything that's happening in
your computer being fed intosome sort of digital
surveillance state will be usedagainst you, I highly, highly
recommend you attend this freewebinar. So again, it's the date
(01:06:00):
is right here. And if you missthe exact date, you can still
access to the replay of it. Butif you're on there for the live,
webinar, then you you're able tothen, ask questions live and
everything like that.
So it's gonna be next Thursday,June 12, at 11AM central. That's
12PM eastern. So again, so it'snext Thursday, June 12 at 11AM
(01:06:22):
central. And so if you want toattend that live, I'll be there
in attendance. Glenn and EricMeter from the Privacy Academy,
they're gonna be in theirattendance.
We're gonna be coveringeverything about basically how
to stop this digital state fromspying on us in every aspect of
our lives. So I highly, highlyrecommend you attend it. Again,
it's free. And if you miss sayyou're working at that time,
(01:06:44):
you'll still get access to areplay of it. It's gonna be so
detailed.
It's gonna be really teachingyou the fundamentals of how to
basically protect yourself andprotect your digital identity,
not just from governmentsurveillance, but also from
hackers, from, scams, etcetera.So the link for that will be in
the description to the show. Andalso, in the next day or two,
(01:07:05):
I've got the full interviewcoming out with Glenn, where
we're gonna be talking about,kind of deep diving into the,
the entire privacy onlineprotection, and how to, you
know, keep ourselves safe.Alright. Well, again, thank you
for joining me for theinterview, and thank you for
David David Martin giving usthis time.
And as a reminder that if youenjoyed it, please make sure
that you share this with yourfriends or family, because this
(01:07:25):
is a very real threat. As muchas I wanna think, hey, the
world's great. We're enteringinto the golden age.
Unfortunately, whether it's theFDA, you know, FDA still rolling
out mRNA technology, or the veryclose relationship with our
current government, and bigtech, and the, you know, the
digital surveillance state.These are things that concern me
(01:07:46):
greatly, and so I'm doingeverything I can to protect my
family.
So thank you, and I'll see younext time.