Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_05 (00:51):
Good morning,
peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofthe peasants' perspective.
It's like it's just us watchingourselves again this morning.
No, we got someone on YouTubewatching.
Genatakus, good morning, welcomein.
Welcome, welcome, everybody.
We're so glad to have you.
Okay, so we're gonna jump in anddon't forget today we're gonna
try to do a raid.
So everybody's gotta be reallypatient with us because we are
(01:12):
learning on the fly.
There's no training manual forthis.
It could go sideways.
It could go sideways fast.
Yes.
So uh just to follow up withthis story we've been covering
in Washington vis-a-vis all thefloods.
So Pacific was probably the mostsuburban neighborhood from what
I saw that got flooded.
Well, sort of.
I mean Auburn can't.
(01:32):
Okay, okay, a lot of places gotflooded.
But Pacific, right, got a gooddose of Pacific Northwest
communist uh government.
Not even 24 hours after thelevee was repaired.
The city of Pacific asked forvolunteers to put notices on all
homes that were flooded and hadto evacuate to make sure you get
a permit with the city beforeyou repair anything.
(01:56):
Am I the only one that's not afan of this?
So this is what they did.
During this difficult time, thecity of Pacific is committed to
helping residents navigate thenext steps and making sure your
home and property are safe aspossible.
Um, before doing any repairwork, please contact your
insurance company and reviewCity Pacific's resources page
where you can find helpfulinformation, including a survey
where you can report damage.
And then uh you must haveobtained a floodplain
(02:18):
development permit and a SDEdetermination from the City of
Pacific before you repair,alter, or replace any of the
following walls, siding,plaster, cabinets, boring,
electrical systems, plumbing,eating, foundation.
You must sustain a substantialdamage assessment before you
repair the buff.
Basically, they are gonna makeit hard to fix your property,
hard to get back into it, so thehotels will be full for a while.
Okay, this is the kind ofmadness it's like this might
(02:42):
expose me a little bit, but thisis shot or bullshit.
SPEAKER_07 (02:48):
Totally is bad.
You can't clean up your ownmess.
SPEAKER_05 (02:53):
You can't fix your
cabinets, like why get bad
walls?
I I mean, I I can kind ofunderstand foundation.
I can get there.
Oh shit.
I can get there.
I can get their electricalsystem, sure.
You know, they should have anemergency permit, get a licensed
guide and come fix it.
That should be enough.
SPEAKER_07 (03:09):
This letter, if it
went out at all, should include
only life safety items, youknow, things like electricity.
SPEAKER_05 (03:16):
Yes, yes,
electricity, uh things that
could kill you, yeah, not yourfence.
On this whole list here, I cansee foundation and electrical as
the only things that you shouldhave to get a permit for.
SPEAKER_07 (03:28):
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, but honestly, in thisstate, you can fix your own
electrical.
It's legal.
You can do it.
SPEAKER_05 (03:35):
As long as the city
approves the permit.
That's the problem.
You still have to have theirpermit.
Yes, if it's owner occupied, youcan do your own electrical.
I saw a really funny videoyesterday where an inspector was
looking up in a uh attic and hegoes, Who did your electrical?
And she goes, My nephew did theelectrical.
He's pretty handy.
And he goes, When did his houseburn down?
She goes, About two years ago.
(03:55):
Wait, how'd you know his houseburned down?
And it's all the electricalsetting.
The junction box are open.
Have you seen that video?
SPEAKER_07 (04:01):
Yes, I have.
That was so funny.
SPEAKER_05 (04:04):
When did the house
burn down?
About two years ago.
Wait, how did you know that?
Uh, another thing is the brownshooter ended up not being the
person that we had uh jokedabout it being.
The professor ended up beingsomeone else.
And uh turns out there was alsoan MIT prof uh physics professor
that was killed as well.
Turns out same killer, MITprofessor, and this guy went to
(04:25):
school together, so this wastargeted.
Oh, I'm gonna change my or who'sgot to change their sound?
Someone's got to change theirsound.
SPEAKER_07 (04:34):
Is it you?
Nope.
I'll throw you under the buttsreal quick on this one.
All right, here we go.
SPEAKER_23 (04:40):
Uh, attacks may be
linked.
And this is from multiple lawenforcement sources uh to both
us, our five investigates team,and ABC News.
Um, and that information aboutthis connection was developed in
the last 24 hours as detectivesworking on both cases.
So Providence Police taking thelead in Rhode Island uh and
Brookline Police with Mass StatePolice taking the lead here in
(05:00):
Massachusetts, um, they comparednotes, uh, and the sources said
investigators believe they areclose to identifying a suspect,
which would be a huge break.
Yeah.
And frankly, a sigh of relieffor the whole region.
SPEAKER_01 (05:11):
Uh absolutely.
And when you mention, you know,them comparing notes, you know,
we only have those enhancedimages of the person of interest
in Providence.
And as you mentioned, you know,in Brookline, these are both
pretty residential areas, right?
Very residential areas.
And we talk about what happenedto that MIT uh professor here,
Noodle Lerrero.
There are reports that peopleheard, neighbors heard the
(05:32):
gunshots that went off, andlikely were able to look back
and see if they had any uh videoor anything like that to go into
their investigation, hopefullyis leading police to figure out
if there is a possible link hereor not.
Our Emily Maha is in Providence,she's at Brown University.
She has been talking withprofessors there on hand,
talking with students therethroughout this investigation.
(05:54):
What are you hearing now?
This new update that's beencoming in.
SPEAKER_00 (06:00):
Well, Jessica, you
had mentioned this is kind of
the first really big updatewe've gotten in several days.
And people here, people in thecommunity, students, staff,
faculty, they're they're anxiousfor information.
They're anxious.
SPEAKER_05 (06:13):
Yeah, but so turns
out the shooter, turns out the
shooter is a Portuguese guy, notIslamic, probably.
Probably didn't shout AllahAkbar, Allah Akbar, uh in
prison.
I had to listen to that all thetime.
Oh boy, five times a day.
Allah Akbar! They'd like yelltheir prayers out for Islam.
(06:34):
Anyways, um it kind of sentchills down my spine every time
I heard it.
But uh apparently this probablynot Islamic, but he ended up
shooting himself in a storageunit up in New Hampshire.
So shoot her down.
Now, throughout thisinvestigation, we found out some
absolutely ridiculous things.
Brown University had basicallyturned off their entire camera
(06:55):
system, so they had no camerastuff.
Why?
Because they didn't want anykind of facial recognition or
anything tracking a bunch oftheir students that happened to
be illegal aliens there.
SPEAKER_07 (07:03):
Turns out we're now
finding out that other Which I'm
okay with, but if you're gonnado that, and that's gonna be the
policy, just take the camerasdown and don't lie to people.
SPEAKER_05 (07:11):
Yeah, let's go back
to 1962, you know what I mean?
So then the other thing, too, iswe're finding out other blue
jurisdictions were try have beenturning off their flock cameras.
Like, did you know that theflock cameras here in the state
of Washington are all disabledright now?
I don't even know what a flockcamera is.
Flock cameras are the trafficcameras that track license
plates and take pictures of youas you go under, you know, and
this is how they find kidnappersand silver alerts and amber
(07:35):
alerts.
Is these flock cameras areinstrumental in doing that?
SPEAKER_07 (07:38):
They're turned off.
SPEAKER_05 (07:39):
Yeah, they're turned
off.
So you know, the only ones thatare turned on are the ones
specifically designed to givetickets.
Can't stop the revenue, butabsolutely can stop anybody from
cracking ice or any othercriminal.
You can't tell me it's not aboutthe money.
Yeah, exactly.
So then uh Carlitz, goodmorning.
Pony Boy, good morning morning,Ferrazier, good morning.
(08:01):
Okay, so this is big, big news.
This is actually reallyexciting.
Changing the world big time.
The buses will be free.
We've said this for a littlewhile, right?
Well, this is one of the thingsthat's gonna make buses free.
SPEAKER_04 (08:15):
Nuclear fusion has
always been there.
It really is the holy grail.
It's like the sun.
Um but we haven't been able toharness that yet.
It just hasn't the technology,the science, but that's the
difference between TAE and allthe other nuclear companies out
there around the world.
This is the one that won't relyon rare earth elements, won't
have to rely on a bunch ofmagnets.
(08:36):
And it's the only company that'sactually built something.
Uh, that's what we were mostimpressed with was not just all
the scientists and all theengineers that had worked with
private funding, all privatefunding, I must say.
Uh, and now what they're lookingto do is they need a way to get
in and access the publicmarkets.
We provide that opportunity forthem to access the public
(08:57):
markets.
Uh, and I would just encourageeveryone to actually look at
this company.
I think when you when you lookaround the country, look around
the world, this is the world'spremier nuclear fusion company
without question.
Uh, and when we talk at TrumpMedia and Technology Group, what
do we want to do?
We want to acquire crown assets,crown jewel assets.
This is a crown jewel asset thatcould change the world.
SPEAKER_05 (09:19):
So, what this is, is
this is a small fusion reactor
that doesn't run on helium-3that you have to get off the
moon.
It runs on some you know, omega,whatever, and it's going into
production.
This is the solution.
This he's he he was talking on aon a different show with a
longer clip, kind of all thedetails.
But uh, Truth Social to save theday, like all these data centers
(09:43):
and all this demand forelectricity.
This is it.
It's like build the thing andthrow some chemicals in there,
and you've got the power of thesun.
Indefinitely free energy, Ron.
Like cheap, affordable energyright now, coming to market.
Truth Social just acquired thatcompany, and they're a
technology company.
You know, when they when theygot debanked and everything,
(10:03):
they went crypto, they wenteverything.
So they are on the front edge ofkind of this new tech wave for
companies to move into, and theyjust acquired that asset, and it
will hit the market pretty soon,and it's probably gonna solve
our electrical problems.
Sweet.
Like out of the blue, you know,oh, if working on fusion, I
remember one of my favoriteshows with the Saint, right?
(10:24):
And all the mathematics of thefusion.
Val Kilmer.
So here we are.
Here we are, the future hasarrived.
Like, it's another it's one ofthose things there are things
happening behind the sceneswhile we're all you know being
divided and you know, being toldthe economy's horrible and stuff
like that.
Real stuff is happening.
They just acquired a fusionmachine or a fusion power
generator, and they're going tobe taking it to market a lot
(10:47):
sooner than later.
Like, wow.
Wow.
So now our oil can just go intoour cars.
What I mean, can can we justmake plastics with it now?
You know what I mean?
Like, we don't, we're not gonnaneed it into the future.
SPEAKER_07 (10:59):
This is going to
Well, we really could have a
fleet of electric cars if we hadfusion power energy.
You know, I'm not anti-electriccar, I'm just anti-retarded
policy.
SPEAKER_05 (11:08):
Yeah, exactly.
I'm I'm anti-electric car if itmeans that all my light bulbs
have to be like, you know,fluorescent, whatever.
Okay, another good thing that'shappening.
Uh Elon Musk posted this.
He says the matrix has beenreprogrammed.
Doge really did tax the federalworkforce.
So this is total the number offederal workers has been
declining since Donald Trumpbecame president.
(11:29):
Whoa.
Right?
And you can see back here, Bidengets elected.
And then Trump.
Woo! This is the lowest levelsince going back to like the 90s
that we have federal workersemployed.
Wow.
That's nice to see.
Too bad they haven't fired mostof the FBI agents.
That's the only problem.
Another really good piece ofnews that happened yesterday,
(11:51):
and this kind of broke right aswe were breaking up the show,
but the inflation numbers camein.
So CNN had a nice Harvardprofessor come in, economic
economist, to try to uh showthat these inflation numbers no
credit to Biden, blah, blah,blah.
And it didn't go so well.
SPEAKER_28 (12:06):
I mean, I was
surprised.
It was a better number thananyone was expecting.
Uh, look, inflation's been veryhigh.
It's stayed high.
It has not been coming down.
But, you know, people wereexpecting it to be above 3%.
It was well below 3%.
I mean, I think uh the presidentwill take this as good news.
(12:27):
The investors will think thatinterest rates will get cut
more.
So, you know, it was a it was apositive news.
There's no other way to spin it.
Absolutely.
SPEAKER_07 (12:34):
Let's I mean, I
really no other way to spin it.
SPEAKER_05 (12:38):
On MS NBC, or uh
what's the what's the financial
one?
Not MS NBC.
That's MS now.
SPEAKER_07 (12:46):
Uh I have no idea.
SPEAKER_05 (12:49):
CNBC.
On CNBC, they were they audiblygas because you know they're
live on air, and then all of asudden, here comes the uh the
announcement.
Oh, we got the inflationnumbers.
They were like two points lowerthan projected, right?
Another huge piece of news.
Yesterday, this happened at theDepartment of Health and Human
Services.
Okay, so these guys are incharge of all of our medical,
(13:11):
pretty much oversee everything.
Now, keep in mind, it was just12 months ago we had a
transgender woman who is a man,Richard Levine, that identified
as Rachel Levine, that was oursurgeon general.
SPEAKER_07 (13:25):
And they were
pushing you would recognize her
if we put up a picture.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_05 (13:29):
They were pushing
puberty blockers, chest binders,
dick tuckers, uh testosterone onlittle kids on little girls, the
whole thing, right?
Absolutely pushing atransagenda.
That has been completelyreversed.
These words were uttered atHealth and Human Services
yesterday.
SPEAKER_07 (13:51):
This isn't the onion
or something like that.
SPEAKER_21 (14:01):
Men can never become
women.
SPEAKER_05 (14:30):
Why did we vote for
Donald Trump?
That's why.
Right?
That's why.
Dr.
Oz went on to explain what waspushing all this transgender
nonsense.
And guess what?
It's just like the trafficcameras that they've left on in
Washington State.
SPEAKER_26 (14:48):
A vaginoplasty, a
procedure a child does not need,
cost$60,000.
Shockingly, a phaloplasty, thecreation of a penis, costs on
average in America, according tothis data, high quality,$150,000
per child.
I do believe, with doing somework, that these five these
(15:11):
prices have continued toincrease with increasing
manufactured demand.
And I must point out that thecreation of a vagina, in that
case of a phalloplasty or ascrotoplasty where you add
testicles, that's extra.
Vaginoplasty.
SPEAKER_05 (15:27):
I know it's a little
uncomfortable to hear that, but
uh this is like a big deal.
This was being pushed on kids.
We have that whistleblower outof that university in Texas that
did 1,500 of these surgeries andbasically one day woke up and
realized because they had apatient come back in and was
like, I didn't want to change mygender.
My parents told me to say I wastrans, and you just chopped off
and I'm seven.
(15:47):
Right.
And she's like, What?
And she realized they were notdoing any psychological work.
If the kid checked the box thatsaid trans, they went full steam
ahead, financed it, everything,right?
Irreparably harmed thesechildren's lives, giving
pubucesscent girls testosterone,right?
Uh unbelievable stuff.
It's over.
RFK went on to give speechesabout this and how basically
(16:10):
they took away all liabilityprotection.
Manufacturers who produce chestbinders, you know, sports bras,
that kind of stuff.
You sell that to a kid, youmarket to a kid, product
seizure, fines, all that kind ofstuff.
Uh they just passed through thehouse yesterday the trans bill
that Marjorie Taylor Green putout.
You do one of these surgeries ona kid, it's a felony offense,
long time in jail.
(16:31):
Oh, good.
This is a screeching halt.
Abuse, man.
It's a screeching halt to thisindustry.
Now, all those kids that are ontestosterone, all those kids
that are on estrogen, pubertyblockers, uh, from what I heard,
that ends today.
Their prescriptions aren't beingrefilled.
Now, one of the challenges withthis is we are going to see
(16:52):
violence.
We're going to see violence.
There have been studies done onparents of people who are
transgender.
They've murdered their children.
Right?
And they have to the cognitivedissonance of what they've done,
they cannot let you not believethat their kid is not doing that
right and they're not right bysupporting that.
And it's utter violence.
It's mama bear protection.
(17:13):
Don't you tell me my girl's nota boy, right?
So we are going to see uh anoutfall from this.
Now, this is a tiny, tinypercentage of our population.
But when you look at the numberof trans shooters, trans
violence, and stuff like that,like all the trans mafia and
trans TIFA.
This is they will not go quietlyinto the night, but it's over.
Like the regime is over.
(17:35):
So no more doing that with kids.
That is awesome, dude.
So sit back for a second.
We've had nuclear fusion in thelast 24 hours.
We've got the end to the transmafia going after kids, and no
more uh immunity bymanufacturers, Pfizer, all of
those people.
There it's like pull back rightnow in 24 hours.
(17:57):
It's a good day.
And inflation came down waylower than expected.
Okay, things are going prettywell, which is why the Democrats
are in such a tough position,which we'll talk about here in
just a little bit.
Hermeat Dillon was on with GlennBeck and she talked about what's
going on over at the JusticeDepartment Department and the
Civil Rights Division.
(18:18):
I have been wildly impressed byHerme Dillon.
Uh, I think she has done a greatjob.
In fact, if if we end up with anew attorney general at any
point, she's my number one go-tofor that.
She seems to really get what'sgoing on.
She's very proactive.
In the private sector, sheworked for Patriots and stuff
like that.
You know, she's been aRepublican.
In fact, she made her husbandchange his uh, she's like, I
(18:38):
won't marry a Democrat.
So she made him change his partyaffiliate.
Came around eventually, right?
That would be like her husbandpassed away a year and a half
ago from Parkinson's disease.
But, anyways, that was her longlove story.
You know, she's like, I loveyou, but I can't marry you if
you're a Democrat.
That's funny.
So, anyways, she was on withGlenn Beck and she talked about
what's been going on even in hercivil rights division and how
she's getting pushback from thequote deep state from within.
(19:01):
Now, they have cleaned house.
Two-thirds of her staff quitwhen she set the agenda, they
just walked out.
But of the staff that'sremaining, she has some people,
you know, hanging back doing notso great things, and she's aware
of it.
SPEAKER_25 (19:12):
Do you think that
the people at the FBI and the
DOJ in all levels realize thatuh because I know you do do they
realize how to the end theAmerican people are?
They're they're starting to losefaith if if we don't start to
(19:32):
see people at least charged andhave a fair trial.
I'm not even saying that they goto jail, hopefully they would if
they broke a law.
But you know, showing thesepeople 'cause we keep getting
investigation afterinvestigation after
investigation, and then it justsits there.
You know?
Um there's a story out todayabout, you know, the Clinton
(19:53):
Foundation and all theinvestigations, what they found.
I don't have any faith thatthey're there nobody nobody's
going to jail for that.
Nobody's gonna go for jail go tojail for that.
And we're at this place to whereit's up to the DOJ and the FBI
to do their job uh and thenstart bringing some justice
because if we lose intwenty-eight and you haven't
(20:18):
cleaned up and set clear rulesof the law does matter, all
these people got away with itlast time, it's going to be a
thousand times worse in 2028.
SPEAKER_12 (20:32):
No, I hear you, and
I I I'm I'm worried about it.
I'm a citizen that loves thiscountry, and uh I as you know,
I've donated uh countlessmillions of dollars of my
available time to uh beingengaged in politics.
And so here's let me just setsome expectations.
So you come into the DOJ.
I had about 400 attorneys plusworking in my department.
(20:53):
I have one-third of that nowbecause when I set the rules of
what we're gonna do here in thisdepartment, two-thirds of the
people pieced out and quit.
And some of the ones who areleft behind are leaking to the
press, what we are doing.
And so that's the fight in mydepartment, okay?
And then you look at where doesmost of this work occur?
When you look at the hundreds ofthousands, over a hundred
(21:14):
thousand people who work at theDepartment of Justice, a lot of
them work for the FBI.
Well, it's only the very top,top, top layer of that that is
politically appointed andcommitted to the president's
agenda.
I would say the vast majority ofthat agency is uh, you know,
legacy doing what they're doing,much of which was not good for
America, I'm gonna say.
SPEAKER_05 (21:36):
Yeah.
This is one of the challenges wehave with criticizing Pam Bondy,
Dan Bongino, who by the wayofficially resigned yesterday,
didn't even mention it, buthe'll be out in January.
This is one of the challenges wehave with criticizing cash and
all these people is they'retasked with doing whatever the
mission of the department is andreorienting it, like the FBI
going after the 764, whateveronline predator group.
(21:57):
That's a big deal.
You know, going into thesecities and arresting uh these
violent criminals, getting afterand arresting the America's top,
you know, top 10 most wantedpeople in a matter of a month or
whatever.
Like you you had to use what thetools you have to go after these
people, but at the same time,you really need to fire a lot of
these people.
Let me tell you how bad this is.
(22:18):
Okay.
So one of our one of my goodfriends, good morning, Doug.
How are you doing there?
Um, one of my good friends sentme a message yesterday.
I was just looking at the chatthere, and one of my good
friends sent me this messageyesterday, and he's a he's a
January 6er, and he said uh hegot a message from his son.
Now, he and his son were bothJanuary Sixers.
He goes, Hey, buddy, my soncalled me a little while ago,
(22:41):
told me the FBI case agent thatworked his portion of the case
called him.
So that so his son, both of themJ6ers, right?
So the FBI agent that worked hisson's case called him, told him
that the FBI had a newdirective, that they were
combating left-wing extremism,asked him if he knew any of the
anti-ICE protests, asked him ifhe was familiar with the
encrypted chat rooms.
(23:02):
He said he felt as if he wastrying to recruit him for
something.
This is bullshit, Taylor, onmany levels.
Told him to document that phonecall and email it to the
attorney.
They're up to their same oldtricks.
They've just changed theirtarget.
Yeah, it sounds like entrapmentowl of 2.0.
You want to be a CI?
You know?
Yeah.
Now, put this on the backdrop ofsome of the nonsense that Jake
(23:24):
Lang's out there doing, which,right, I try not to criticize
other J6ers, but Jake Lang, foranybody who's familiar with him,
he's the guy that was a J6er.
I was in solitary confinementforever.
I'll tell you right now, he wasin solitary confinement forever
because he doesn't play nice inthe sandbox.
Everybody hates him, right?
He gets up in your face and thenhe he's a provocateur, but he
makes sure you throw the firstpunch.
So I've met him twice, and bothtimes he came into the J6 pod,
(23:48):
he got thrown out of therewithin minutes.
Wouldn't tolerate him at all.
He took donation money, gave itto non-J6ers, gave it to other
things.
His dad owns Rotorooter.
He'd send people out to stalkanybody that kind of spoke out
against him.
Bad dude.
Bad dude, objective liar,objective liar, right?
But he's out there now holdingup pig's head with Koran's in
(24:09):
it, walking into Dearborn,Michigan, causing all kinds of
trouble.
SPEAKER_07 (24:13):
Oh, brother.
SPEAKER_05 (24:13):
Okay.
Provoc a tour.
That's the kind of stuff the FBIis out looking for informants,
out looking for people to go andinfiltrate these groups.
Oh, that's all fine and dandy,except I know what it's like to
be on the receiving end.
Do your work, FBI.
Do your own homework.
Don't go out and work withsnitches and get people to
create situations because that'sexactly what they're doing.
(24:34):
Oh, you lean a little left.
Oh, well, let's get you to go alittle further left, a little
further left.
Oh, now you've committed acrime.
Same thing.
Oh, you're a patriot.
You you're questioning theelection.
Okay, well, let's get you topush a gate.
Let's get you to, you know whatI'm saying?
Oh, now we've got you on that.
It's just disgusting.
The entire system is it's one ofthose damned if you do, damned
(24:55):
if you don't.
If we get rid of the FBI toprotect good people like me's
civil rights, we end up withonline predators and we end up
with all that stuff, right?
But if we allow them to go afterthe online predators and we give
them all these awesome tootools, oh, they'll just turn it
into a political agenda at onepoint or another.
So, on one hand, while yes, youneed to go over left after
left-wing extremism, and youshould go after right-wing
(25:16):
extremism as well.
The problem is the definition ofextremism.
Okay.
When it's when it's a movingtarget, who knows?
Liz Harrington was on Newsmaxtalking about Bon Gino resigning
from the FBI and kind of how thewhole institution is just
rotted.
These agents that went after JSixers are now being weaponized
to go after the left.
(25:37):
At the end of the day, you'reviolating people's civil rights.
Don't go looking for the crime.
The crimes are self-evident.
Just, you know, take the crimeand work backwards.
Don't walk into them.
SPEAKER_15 (25:49):
And also word that
it might be Andrew Bailey who
was brought in, the former AG,to take his place.
SPEAKER_14 (25:55):
Well, yeah, we'll
see what happens.
He's already co-deputy director,which I think was kind of a sign
that uh Dan Bongino was notgoing to stay in his role for
that long.
I really think that this is moreproof that the FBI needs not
really major reform, but to bedismantled and to be shut down.
It is inherently corrupt.
(26:17):
And when you bring in peoplewith good intentions uh that try
to change things from the top,it's really difficult if you
don't change all the people atthe bottom.
And you still reportedly havesix members of the FBI who were
on the get Trump operation,Arctic Frost, as it's called,
uh, that are still working withthe FBI.
(26:38):
You have the lead prosecutor onthe so-called pipe bomber case
who literally tried to framePresident Trump for January 6th.
Uh, when you have the FBI tryingto arrest him, arrest him and
imprison him to make prevent himfrom running for office.
So these people are still at theFBI and they're running the
show.
(26:58):
Exactly.
It's not going to be reformed ifthat remains to be the case.
SPEAKER_15 (27:02):
You know, this is a
really interesting take.
Um, and it probably did weighheavily, you know, we could just
imagine on all right.
SPEAKER_05 (27:11):
So they have to
dismantle the FBI, but the
problem is just that.
How are you going to, you know,fulfill the mission of the FBI
while at the same time uhdismantling it?
I looked up yesterday just toconfirm the FBI does not have a
charter, like the Marshalls, theATF, the DEA.
They tried to get a charter backin the 70s, though, but they
were declined, uh, not givenone.
(27:32):
Probably a little bit becausethey'd spent 12 years spying on
Martin Luther King for noreason.
Okay, so we are about ready toget started with the raid.
The the the channel has raided.
Stop scrolling the media.
We'll never show you this video.
Oh, yes, we have raided someonein Rumble.
So are we there?
Is that what we're doing?
Did it do it?
(27:53):
Okay, guys, start chatting.
You gotta you gotta go talk.
We're talking on somebody else'schat right now, I believe.
I think the channel has beenraided.
I mean it's did it did it justkind of go through the way guys,
we're we're learning on the flyhere.
Enter raid, paste copy joural,enter initiate, enter, press
(28:14):
enter to initiate the raid,confirm the details, and notify
the viewers of the raid.
Okay, so is it can you scroll atall or is that it?
Okay, so somebody jump in andsay if they can see the raid.
Enter raid into the chat box.
It looks like it's raid.
(28:36):
This is kind of interesting.
There should be like some kindof join button.
SPEAKER_08 (28:46):
Here, look, I'll
show you here on the screen so
you can copy the live rate.
SPEAKER_05 (28:58):
Frasier got kicked
out of the channel.
Well, that's just too bad.
So it did take you guys into theother channel.
So we don't go into the channel,they do.
Is that how it works?
SPEAKER_07 (29:07):
Oh, I don't know,
but maybe the other channel
didn't want us around.
SPEAKER_05 (29:11):
Did you get kicked
right out or did they kick you
out?
Because I sent it, I sent itinto like a conspiracy show.
SPEAKER_07 (29:17):
We're back.
SPEAKER_05 (29:20):
Back?
SPEAKER_07 (29:20):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_05 (29:21):
So you got so you
went in and then got booted out.
Is that how that works?
SPEAKER_07 (29:26):
Because we don't
know.
SPEAKER_05 (29:27):
Yeah, we don't know.
We just kept we just keep doingour thing here.
So is it is it one of thosethings where we just send our
chatters into the other channeland we don't go with them?
I think so.
That's kind of that's kind ofrude, isn't it?
It's kind of weird.
It is weird.
Oh, that's kind of interesting.
Oh, that's cool.
Well, fun.
Well, I have so can we I thinkwe can only do one right to
(29:49):
advertised.
What does he what do you meanright to advertised?
SPEAKER_07 (29:51):
I'm not sure.
SPEAKER_05 (29:53):
I'm gonna need a
paragraph explanation here.
I need to fully understand thisprocess.
Uh like we joined late.
We joined late.
Like you joined late into hischat, but it did go into that
chat.
Is that how is that correct?
I wonder if that show was over,maybe.
SPEAKER_07 (30:15):
Oh, maybe.
SPEAKER_05 (30:17):
Is that possible?
Yeah.
No, he's got 15.
Oh, look, no, Pony Boy was intheir chat.
Look, I'm showing his show.
Pony Boy comes in and says,Hello.
Peasants Perspective has raidedthis stream.
Yeah, you guys are probably ableto chat in there.
Oh, that's cool.
Well, we did it.
We did a raid.
This is I I don't know who thisguy is.
(30:37):
Do they appreciate?
They've got about our they'vegot about our viewership.
This is awesome.
See, this is this is this iscross-pollination, you guys.
Uh, this is great.
SPEAKER_07 (30:46):
They did, he does
got some Oh, oh, your channel
stopped.
Then we started a new channeland went through two
advertisements.
Uh okay.
SPEAKER_05 (30:54):
But I see Pony Boy
made it into their chat.
That's cool though.
Okay, uh, I'm gonna say bye-bye.
SPEAKER_07 (31:03):
Oh, you're gonna
talk to him.
SPEAKER_05 (31:04):
Love you guys.
Thanks for letting us raid you.
There you go.
That's kind of fun.
We did a raid.
Love you guys.
Thanks for letting us in.
There you go.
Okay, well, that's fun.
All right, everybody.
Please feel free to chat overthere and say hello to our
friend the Kalono.
SPEAKER_07 (31:27):
Tell me what they're
all about.
SPEAKER_05 (31:28):
Tell us what we're
all about.
Uh, that's fun.
Okay, cool.
Well, we did something neat.
That's really fun.
Okay.
Did a raid.
All right, we'll just move onwith our own show since we don't
really get to participate in theraid that much.
Okay, another thing thathappened yesterday is Laura
Loomer broke this little news,and this is the National
Security Administration.
Uh, uh, at the request of one ofour listeners, Robert McPeasant,
(31:50):
I started watching the showPerson of Interest with John
Cavizel.
Oh, it's such a good show.
Excellent show.
And it's a show that well.
SPEAKER_07 (31:57):
I would say season
one, watch every episode.
Yeah, after that.
SPEAKER_05 (32:02):
Well, they have to
develop the plot and bring in
extra characters, and that'spretty much what destroys all
good shows, right?
So I'm I don't know, I'm in likelate season two or whatever, and
my wife and I have reallyenjoyed it.
Now, back when we first gotmarried, we used to watch the
show Alias with JenniferGardner, and that was the last
show we watched together.
It's been 20 years.
It's the last show we reallywatched together and enjoyed.
Every other show has either beenme compromising, like watching
(32:24):
Downton Abbey with her, or hercompromising and watching the
first 10 minutes of Game ofThrones and movie four, right?
So we kind of have differenttastes in movies.
So we've been able to watchPerson of Interest together,
which has been really nice.
Yeah, we just watched TV.
Yeah, it's so, anyways.
But in that show, right, they'vegot the data collection where
the AI is watching them all thetime, which by the way, 10 years
(32:46):
ago was like, oh, that's kind ofunimaginable.
Now it's like that's happeninghere.
Fall out of here.
You know what I mean?
Like, turn off Alexa.
You know what I mean?
Alexa, play peasants'perspective.
So, or Siri, call dad.
All you guys are calling yourdad right now, right?
It's just invasive how thetechnology is.
But in that show, I don't evenremember where I was going with
(33:08):
this.
SPEAKER_07 (33:08):
Uh in the I can't
remember something to do with
data collection or overwatchers.
Overwatchers, yeah, I don'tremember.
SPEAKER_05 (33:15):
Data collection.
Oh, oh, NSA, that's right.
Laura Loomer.
Okay.
So the NSA is that, right?
It's it's able to collect allthe data.
Now, prior to I don't know whatpoint they got to be able to
scan through it all, but it wasjust data collection, right?
It's just sitting on a harddrive somewhere, and if they
ever have to reverse engineer aterror attack and figure out
what's going on, it's somewheredeep inside those hard drives,
(33:38):
right?
Well, with AI, it can listen inlifetime, interpret, pass on
leads and stuff like that.
So this is an incrediblypowerful agency.
It's a it's an agency that hasthe power to know everything,
basically.
NSA sabotage illegal takedown ofPresident Trump is underway.
Sources tell me that Tim Kostibihas been selected as deputy NSA
uh director despite a longhistory of deep state and
(34:00):
anti-Trump affiliations.
It's disturbing because Kosebais very much aligned with former
FDI director Chris Ray, as Ihave previously exposed.
Does Tim Koseba support killingFISA 702?
Does Tim Koseba support thedecision to strip NSA director
Paul Nakason of his securityclearance?
Why do these guys all have likedifferent names, right?
(34:21):
Is on the record praisingNakason, who helped China get
away with meddling in the 2020election, to fraudulently
install Joe Biden and HunterBiden in the 2020 election was
stolen from President Trump.
I told Kirk Olson, is is theperson who gave President Trump
Kosiva's resume.
Does Kirk Olson support placingChris Ray supporter in the
position of deputy NSA director?
Does Kirk Olson support uhKosiva said it was an honor to
(34:44):
work with former CISA directorJohn Easterly, who persecuted
MAGA for Joe Biden and coveredup foreign meddling in the 2020
election.
Easterly also led censorshipcampaign against Trump
supporters.
Kosiva also praised April FalconDas, who illegally stripped
Michael Ellis of a securityclearance.
Kosiva, who praised former NSADirector Millie and Allah and
General Haw, who was fired byPresident Trump in April.
(35:07):
Clearly, Kosiva is a horriblejudgment.
He's definitely not MAGA.
President Trump needs to knowabout Koseba's worship of
Christopher Ray.
Kosiva will weaponize NSAagainst President Trump and all
of his friends, like all of hisfriends did.
Who is trying to set up Trump?
Look at my receipts and tell meI'm wrong.
So she she posts obviously lotsof different receipts, you know,
of them posting publicly, oh, Ilove you, I support you.
(35:28):
Uh that kind of stuff.
Anyways, that is discouraging.
But, you know what you gonna do?
I mean, only no only so manypeople know how to deal with
that stuff, I guess.
So I guess they're all leaningto the left.
Another thing that happened uhyesterday is there was a uh DC
court where um there was a DCcourt that uh did a injunction
(35:53):
against Donald Trump or a rulingagainst Donald Trump, and of
course it went up to appeals,and this kind of ended up being
a slap in the face.
These are our judges, okay.
So we're gonna I'm gonna showyou something.
This is an old lawyer who's kindof dissecting this appeals
decision, and he talks aboutstanding in jurisdiction and how
this district judge just seemedto forget the entire like first
(36:16):
year of law school.
SPEAKER_18 (36:18):
In their motion for
a stay, Trump did not object to
the district standing.
Article III courts, of course,have an independent obligation
to verify their own jurisdictionand authority, permitting the
District of Columbia to sue thepresident and other federal
officials based on a sovereigninjury is unprecedented and
(36:42):
likely at odds with the uniquelegal status of the District of
Columbia.
In subsequent proceedings, thisimportant procedural question
should be given furtherconsideration.
In other words, this whole thingis bullshit.
This is all bullshit.
This suit should never have beenallowed in the first place, and
(37:03):
trial judge Giacob does not haveArticle III authority to hear
this case.
Because the District of Columbiadoesn't have Article III
standing to bring this case.
It's like a parent suing theirtheir, it's like a child suing
their parent over parentalauthority.
Crazy stuff.
(37:25):
From the unelected black robetyrannical, and that'll be up.
So they're not making an order,a ruling on that.
They're not saying on the meritsthe District of Columbia can't
sue, but what they're saying islisten, we're a majority of the
panel.
We don't see how DC can sue.
So uh when we send this back toyou again, now that we've
(37:46):
reversed your preliminaryinjunction, you're gonna you're
gonna start looking at this onthe legal merits, Judge Giacob.
Just keep in mind, it's ouropinion.
There's no jurisdiction here.
So you better look at thatclosely, or we're just gonna
reverse you on that basis.
SPEAKER_05 (38:02):
So the District of
Columbia, which is a creature of
the federal government, it's aspecial district, sued Donald
Trump, its owner, its sovereignleader.
Okay, like you can't do that.
Kids suing their parents overyou can't have parental rights.
Uh, excuse me.
(38:23):
Yeah, I can.
He goes on to further explainwhat's going on with a lot of
these judges that just happen tobe illegal immigrants.
SPEAKER_18 (38:30):
I'm covering Trump's
push to redefine who counts as
an American.
What we're talking about here isTrump's announced that he's
going to increase efforts toidentify naturalized American
citizens who should bedenaturalized, typically by
committing fraud at some pointin their naturalization process.
So this is going to be themembers-only show.
(38:51):
We're going to cover this topicin detail.
And fraud, especially amongthird-world migrants, is rampant
at every level of their culture.
I firmly believe that if we wereto look at every naturalized
American citizen from India inthe last 10 years, fewer than
one in 10,000 would be found notto have committed fraud at some
(39:16):
point in their naturalizationprocess.
I think these are all fraudulentnaturalized American citizens.
They're fakes.
That's what I expect.
That's what we're going tocover.
And then it occurred to me youknow, if we're going to be
looking at naturalized Americancitizens, we've got a bunch of
(39:37):
judges.
We have a bunch of federaljudges who are naturalized
American citizens.
I wonder what we would find.
I wonder what we would find ifwe looked at their
naturalization process.
Because keep in mind, becoming anaturalized citizen is a long
process with many steps, manyincremental phases.
(39:58):
Maybe you come here in a Touristvisa or a student visa or a work
visa.
Maybe you have to renew thatvisa.
Maybe you apply for a greencard.
Maybe you get a temporary greencard.
And then maybe that that'sturned into a permanent green
card.
You're a permanent residentalien in the United States.
And then you want to become anaturalized citizen.
(40:19):
So you apply through thatprocess.
And all this time, you'resharing all your background
information, your credentials,your degrees, everything.
I wonder how many naturalizedfederal judges we have.
And I wonder if any of themcommitted fraud at any step in
that process and should bestripped of their citizenship.
And therefore removed from thefederal bench.
(40:42):
Because you can't be a federaljudge if you're not an American
citizen.
I wonder if that might beanother way.
Another way to remove some ofthese feckless, unelected, black
robe, tyrannical, inferiorfederal district trial court
judges, other than impeachment,other than firing them for
failing to serve during goodbehavior, that they are in fact
(41:04):
not legitimate Americancitizens.
SPEAKER_05 (41:10):
So they did a little
they did a little digging on
some of Joe Biden's judicialappointments, right?
Because they they clearly arestarting to, you know, pull at
the edges of the sweater, right?
Pull on some of these strings.
And they found judges that JoeBiden appointed to Article III
positions that he didn't signtheir commission.
It was stamped.
Not autopin.
Stamped, like in block letters.
(41:32):
They used a stamp in lieu of asignature, which means Joe Biden
probably had nothing to do withthose commissions.
What do you do?
There's no precedent for this.
There's no precedent for this.
You have dozens of judges thathave stamps on their
commissions.
Now, if you go back and you lookat their like in the DC circuit,
(41:52):
I think there's like 16 judges.
It's like six of them areforeign-born.
Okay.
It's like pretty significantnumbers.
This issue goes all the way backto the border.
Closed border, you never getanybody coming over like that,
right?
Because you got to come by air,come through the port of entry,
and the process startscorrectly.
But when you get into thecountry and then you're reverse
(42:13):
engineering your naturalization,which is what was happening,
especially the last four years,right?
You get here, you show, youknow, somehow you get across the
border, and then you show up andyou're like, Oh, I need asylum.
And they're like, Here's asocial.
Right.
So they uh uh Secretary Berghamtransferred a bunch of land near
the border to the United Statesmilitary.
So it just used to be, I don'tknow, BLM land or whatever it
(42:36):
was.
And they just transferred it allover to the military to create a
military installation, whichgives the military pew-pewing.
SPEAKER_27 (42:44):
This is uh not the
first transfer we made, but one
of many uh from the Departmentof Interior on a temporary basis
to the Department of War.
Uh Theodore Roosevelt in theearly 1900s, before Arizona was
even a state, uh, came up withwhat's now called the Roosevelt
Reservation, which gives us theability in law to transfer a
little strip of land right alongthe border.
(43:04):
Roosevelt, Theodore Rooseveltcame up with it with his the
words in his his order were tostop illegal smuggling into our
country.
And of course, what do we havewith human trafficking, drug
trafficking?
And so uh across thesouthwestern border, 41% of the
distance between the Gulf ofMexico, Gulf of America, and the
Pacific Ocean uh is was interiorland.
(43:26):
And so we've been in the processof transferring that to the
Department of War.
If someone steps on that, uhthey're entering a military
installation.
It helps with us having theauthorities to help make sure we
keep our border secure.
SPEAKER_05 (43:38):
They're entering a
military installation.
So you might not be met byborder guards, you might be met
by M16 rounds.
You know what I mean?
Like it's it changes thecalculation just a little bit.
Uh and this is why, right?
All the way up in Oregon, therewas just this indictment that
was released yesterday.
Four Mexican nationalsunlawfully residing in the
United States accused ofillegally possessing firearms
(44:00):
with false statements.
Now, you know, when we talkabout not trusting institutions
and we talk about bureaucraticrot, here's a great example of
it, right?
We've entrusted our governmentto keep us safe.
We've entrusted our governmentto make sure that whatever laws
we pass, that those things getexecuted, that if you have a
form or something that requiresa background check, that a
background check is actuallydone.
(44:20):
Well, apparently that hasn'treally been the case.
In Medford, Oregon, four Mexicannationals unlawfully residing in
the United States made theirinitial appearance today after
allegedly making falsestatements on their application
to purchase firearms forillegally uh and for illegally
possessing firearms.
Samuel Rodrigo sent Melo Santos,27, Samuel Amagor Ortega, 23,
(44:42):
Aldo Melo Amador, 23, and OscarAmador Ortega, 21, have been
charged by criminal complaintwith alien in possession of a
firearm and making falsestatements on ATF Form 473.
I was in prison with a ex-policeofficer who made a false
statement on this same form.
He checked one of the boxesincorrectly.
(45:02):
And they put a cop in prisonbecause he filled out this form
improperly.
And otherwise, in every otherway, he was a legal citizen.
I don't know what box he checkedincorrectly.
I have no idea.
But he was a cop legally able tocarry a firearm and he went to
go buy a firearm for personaluse and they rolled him up.
Okay.
Wow.
According to court documents, inJuly 2025, so this year, Bureau
(45:24):
of Alcohol, Tobacco, andFirearms and Explosives, ATF
investigators, a part of acompliance inspection, began
reviewing ATF Forms 4473, knownas the Firearms Transaction
Records on Federal FirearmsLicense in Cave Junction,
Oregon.
ATF blah, blah, blah.
So then it goes on to say uhmust be completed by the person
who is purchasing a firearm.
During the inspection,investigators observed repeated
(45:46):
sales of the same make and modelof firearm by a group of
individuals sharing the sameaddress in O'Brien and Medford,
Oregon, indicate indicative offirearms trafficking.
As of July 22nd, 2025, OmadorOrtega has purchased 25 firearms
from the FFL in Cave Junctionand two other FFLs located in
(46:07):
Southern Oregon since April 4th,2025.
So it goes on a total of 16firearms for one of them, 36 for
another of them, uh, 91.
Santos purchased 91 firearms.
SPEAKER_07 (46:19):
So they're real
enthusiasts.
SPEAKER_05 (46:22):
A little more.
Okay.
They amassed what was what doesthat end up being?
100 and something totalfirearms?
SPEAKER_07 (46:29):
Two total gun
lewies.
SPEAKER_05 (46:30):
200 firearms, some
insane number.
On ATF Form 773, defendantswrote Mexico for place of birth,
but they check the box next tothe United States for country of
citizenship.
An immigration query into thesepeople uh concluded they have no
legal status in the UnitedStates and are residing
unlawfully in the United States.
So yeah, I was born in Mexico.
(46:51):
Oh, U.S.
citizen.
Uh I thought that when youfilled out that form, it like
went somewhere and they likelooked at it and like examined
it and like checked the makesure that so too.
Okay, so you know when they talkabout like they get all ticked
off because rednecks go to gunshows and all they'll go to the
loophole.
The loophole is the ATF itself.
(47:12):
Who's background checking this?
SPEAKER_09 (47:14):
I don't know.
SPEAKER_05 (47:15):
You know what I
mean?
Don't give me no crap because Iwant to sell a gun to a redneck.
You know what I mean?
This is like obviously theseguys are coming in, they're
illegal.
They uh you know, probably thestate of Oregon issued them a
driver's license.
There's no record of them evercrossing the border, they're
completely illegally, and theybought a couple hundred guns.
SPEAKER_07 (47:31):
Yeah.
I wonder what happened to allthose guns.
SPEAKER_05 (47:37):
These are not
consequence-free actions.
These are not enthusiasts thatjust happen to live out in
Oregon and moved up from Mexico.
They're clearly probablydistributing these guns to gang
members, to others, you knowwhat I'm saying?
Like they've become straw buyersfor some organization.
It doesn't even mention any gangaffiliation or anything like
this.
Um, this is absolutely insanity.
(47:58):
What do we pay the ATF orwhoever processes these
applications to do?
What are we doing here?
SPEAKER_07 (48:06):
I don't know.
But in the letter.
SPEAKER_05 (48:08):
I gotta let the city
of Pacific know that I'm
replacing some wet cabinets andI gotta get a permit and go
through a process, but I canjust go down to a gun
chealership, tell them I'm bornin Mexico, check the box
citizen, and they're like, hereyou go, bro.
That's 23 of the same model gunyou've bought this month.
That's incredible, you know whatI mean?
That's incredible.
(48:29):
But I can't, but I can't it's myfavorite.
Yeah, I love this AR15.
I really like black AR-15.
Can I get a couple bump stocksand silent to go with it?
Oh my goodness.
Oh, we did it, we did an audit.
Listen.
You push my card.
There should be no complianceinspections by the ATF because
every application I assumed wasbeing checked.
SPEAKER_09 (48:52):
Right.
SPEAKER_05 (48:53):
Apparently, they
just they just like, yeah, hold
on, we'll uh we'll go run yourapp.
And they walk into the backroom, have a cup of coffee, take
a smoke out the back room, putit back.
SPEAKER_07 (49:01):
You heard me, but
when you read the letter, it
says right in there, we decidedto look in the record.
SPEAKER_05 (49:05):
So I was like, You
can do it.
What's with the application for?
But you'll nail my the cop up inPhiladelphia for probably doing
sudden, like, you know what Imean?
Like, oh man, he probably putthe wrong, you know, I was born
in a city that's kind of twocities, North Bend, Coose Bay.
And my whole life I grew upthinking I was born in North
Bend, because that's wheregrandma lived.
(49:27):
I was born where grandma lives.
It wasn't until I was like 17 Irealized I was born in Coos Bay.
Okay, that'd be like, you know,uh, I was born in Seabec, and
it's like, well, no, you wereborn in Silverdare, your parents
lived in Seabec, you know what Imean?
Like, yeah.
Now, there was Judge Dugan.
Pray the Rosary Daily mentionedthis earlier.
This is Judge Dugan out ofWisconsin, now in Milwaukee.
(49:49):
Remember, she is the judge thatassisted illegal immigrants who
were on trial in her courtroomto escape and flee ice who had a
detainer and were waiting forhim in the hallway.
She dragged the other judge outthere with her in their robes,
which is totally unusual.
She told the ICE agents to gotalk to the chief justice to buy
time.
She ran the defendant out thedoor that the jury comes in and
out of.
It's not for public use.
(50:10):
And there was one ICE agent whodidn't go to the chief justice
and followed the guy into thestreet and ended up chasing him
down, right?
Well, she went on trial and wasconvicted.
SPEAKER_22 (50:20):
For the first time,
we're seeing Judge Hannah Dugan
outside her courtroom April18th, wearing her black robes,
appearing to confront severalfederal agents there to arrest
Eduardo Lorez-Ruiz, a Milwaukeeman and Mexican national charged
locally with three counts ofdomestic battery.
I wonder if he has any guns thathe bought with ATF-4473.
(50:41):
You know what I'm saying?
Who's charged with obstructing afederal investigation concealing
Flores Ruiz, allowing him toleave her courtroom by a
different door after sending theagents to speak to the chief
judge?
Flores Ruiz, dressed in blackwith his attorney, is seen in
(51:01):
several of the videos leaving bythat other door.
One prosecutor says it was usedby jurors and not open to the
public.
As he leaves, though, he is seenin the hallway, followed by
another agent.
As Flores Ruiz gets into theelevator to leave, the agent
slips in as well.
According to the criminalcomplaint against Dugan, that
agent followed them down.
The agent seen here followingout of the building downstairs.
(51:24):
And once backup arrived, theytried to arrest Flores Ruiz, who
another video shows, ran northin front of the courthouse for
nearly a block before agentscaught up with him and arrested
him.
Federal agents arrested Duganherself a week later.
SPEAKER_06 (51:39):
Eduardo Flores
Ruiz's domestic violence case is
moving through the MilwaukeeCounty Court.
He is, however, in federalcustody on his immigration
arrest.
The FBI arrested Judge Dugan atthe county courthouse one week
later on April 25th.
She pleaded not guilty in afederal court last week.
Judge Dugan, your response.
SPEAKER_05 (52:03):
Okay, so she got
convicted.
She she had two charges.
One was a misdemeanor charge,count one, count two was a
felony charge.
She got she got the count one,the misdemeanor was she was
acquitted of by the jury.
Count two, she was found guiltyof the felony charge.
It carries up to a five-yearprison sentence.
So I asked Grock, what are thesentencing guidelines?
Because often, you know, I had20-year max sentencing.
(52:24):
Sentencing guidelines weren't 20years, okay?
She's looking at between zeroand two years in prison.
If they add any enhancements, itmight be like one to three years
in prison.
I wouldn't be surprised if shegets zero time in prison.
No criminal history, blah, blah,blah.
This is atrocious, right?
When you put on that black robe,you have the high, you're a
(52:45):
you're a king in your courtroom,right?
You have a high amount ofauthority.
You have a high duty.
I don't care that you had nocriminal record.
The point of being there wasthat you don't commit crime.
You betrayed the high duty.
You betrayed that high duty.
In my opinion, they should maxout five years.
The judge who does this says,You have disgraced my robe.
SPEAKER_07 (53:03):
Yes.
SPEAKER_05 (53:04):
Right?
My judge said it was his sacredduty to put me in prison.
And that even though in mysentencing memorandum and
everything, you know, criminalhistory, family, eagle scout,
they took all of the things thatI consider credits in my life,
they flipped it on its head andsaid, because of how good he is,
you have to overpunish him.
They wanted above sentencingguidelines to send a message.
(53:25):
We're saying this to deter, todeter you, Ron, and other good
law-abiding citizens from evereven skirting close to the line.
They wanted a hundred and ninemonths to send a message.
And he said that.
He wrote it in the sentencingmemoir.
SPEAKER_07 (53:41):
He wrote it in my
the response letter to me, too.
SPEAKER_05 (53:43):
Yes.
He wrote it.
So this judge, we need to send amessage to other judge, as far
as I'm concerned, 40 years inperson.
Max it out.
Max it out.
Because that is the high youhave betrayed.
This isn't a matter of you madea mistake, you've lived a good
life.
No.
You knew precisely what you'redoing.
You told the other judge toleave their robe on.
(54:05):
You walked that guy out the backdoor.
You defended a criminal.
Extrajudicial.
He's not even part of your courtwhen he walks out of.
That's a completely separateissue.
She misdirected you have nojurisdiction.
SPEAKER_07 (54:16):
She misdirected
other officials.
SPEAKER_05 (54:19):
Yes.
This now we will wait and hearwhat the sentencing is.
There's a judicial coup.
Bukelli warned us when Trump waselected.
He came to CPAC and he said, Youmust impeach corrupt judges,
otherwise, they will form ajudicial cartel and they will
defeat this whole thing.
Now, that is happening in theDistrict of Columbia.
This is, I'm very familiar withthe District of Columbia.
(54:40):
Okay.
Wow.
DOJ has a big problem.
Over the past eight weeks, thedismissal rate of criminal
complaints in DC, this is whenthey take a complaint and they
try to go get an indictment.
Okay.
They bring it before a grandjury, has risen to 21% compared
to 0.5% over the last decade.
Indictments have been likerubber stamps.
(55:02):
You know, oh, you can indict aham sandwich.
Yeah, you can.
It's really easy when it's anon-adversarial procedure.
So how are you getting a 21%failure rate on getting an
indictment when you'vetraditionally you've had a 0.5%
failure rate?
Because the judges are forming ajudicial cartel.
And they are making politicaland ideological condition uh
(55:23):
decisions.
They are influencing grandjuries based on that.
That is how you're doing that.
This is a huge, huge deal.
It gets worse, right?
How is this happening?
First uh first assistant U.S.
attorney Joe Thompson says$18billion had been paid out in 14
flagged and high-risk programsand fraud in Minnesota.
(55:45):
Thompson says suspects had asignificant portion of the$18
billion was fraud.
The fraud is not small, it's notisolated.
The magnitude cannot beoverstated.
It's staggering industrial scalefraud.
It's swamping Minnesota andcalling everything we know into
question about our state.
All of this, a lot of thisfraud, there were complaints
that were brought prior, and thejudges were dismissing them.
(56:06):
And then Trump gets in, puts ahighlight on it, and it's like,
well, what all these other caseswe can't do double jeopardy.
SPEAKER_07 (56:13):
Oh, come on.
No way.
SPEAKER_05 (56:16):
Judicial cartel.
Judicial cartel, right?
It is it is what we're upagainst.
Now, how does this judicialcartel extend?
Well, we've been covering theelection fraud, especially from
a machine angle.
Roger Stone was on with uh AlexJones, and Robert Roger Stone
has a lot of inside connectionsin DC.
He's a swamp monster, okay.
(56:38):
No doubt about it.
Okay, but he knows the ins andouts of DC.
And he was basically saying thatSusie Wiles has been presented
with irrefutable election fraud,and it's starting to come out.
And we got a big drop yesterday.
SPEAKER_11 (56:50):
People in the
election integrity uh community
uh and other patriots uh whohave uh technical backgrounds uh
arranged to show Susie Wilesabsolute indisputable proof uh
that both the Venezuelans andthe Chinese have manipulated
voting machines to interfere inour elections.
(57:10):
That's without even getting intopaper ballots.
It was her decision to take themto the president, it was her
recommendation to the presidentthat he approve her plan.
SPEAKER_05 (57:19):
I remember this
right putting up the paper on
the windows.
Scott Adams made a comment.
He's like, There's nothing youcan say that says it wasn't
fraudulent when you have tocover up what you're doing.
That right there, that pictureright there tells you that that
election was not fair.
There's no chance it was fair.
Zero.
SPEAKER_11 (57:37):
And to appoint a
working group under Tulsi
Gabbard, but including othersfrom other uh important agencies
to examine all the evidence andcome back with a report.
Now we know from sources uh thatthat working group has already
seen uh the evidence of bothVenezuelan uh involvement kind
of oh yeah, because it's totallynormal to pull ballots out from
(57:59):
under a table or to get ballotdumps, you know, late at night
from a delivery van.
SPEAKER_07 (58:05):
After everybody's
gone home.
SPEAKER_05 (58:06):
After everybody's
gone home.
Totally normal.
Yeah, this this is just routine.
This is what we do.
Come on, involvement and onlinemanipulation of numbers.
SPEAKER_11 (58:13):
Boxes of them, look
at that.
We know what they conclude aboutmailing ballots.
Oh, do you see the stuffingballots?
Right?
Stuffing ballots, uhinvolvement, I mean it's Chinese
involvement and onlinemanipulation of numbers, and
that's before we know what theyconclude about mailing ballots
because they're still continuingtheir work.
But the important thing here isnot just proving what happened
(58:36):
in 2020 and probably 2026 to acertain extent, but being sure
that it does not happen again,and therefore the president's uh
I think menu, which is correct,paper ballots like they have in
France.
If the French can count 38million paper ballots in one
day, surely Americans can.
Yeah, because we definitely arebetter than the French.
SPEAKER_05 (59:00):
So this came out
yesterday, and this was posted
all over the place.
I chose to use Amuse.
Uh, Fulton admits, so FultonCounty, Georgia, has been at the
center of a lot of this electionfraud stuff, right?
And remember, this is whereFannie Willis charged Trump with
election interference because hecalled Raffensburg and he said,
Look, you know, there's 11,000votes separated me from Joe
Biden, and there's all theseallegations of weird things
(59:23):
going on.
Go find the votes, like go checkthese ballots.
Okay, no, we can't do it.
And they put all the ballots ina box, and they had it's just
been non-stop.
So five years later, FultonCounty told Georgia State
Election Board on December 9thit does not dispute that
tabulator tapes for roughly315,000 early votes in 2020
lacked required poll workersignatures.
(59:44):
County attorney Ann Brombaughacknowledged it was a violation
of a rule, a a rule of the rule.
A Georgia sec a GeorgiaSecretary of State investigation
summary later substantiated that36 of 37 advanced voting
precincts failed.
To sign tabulation tapes asrequired by statute, yet the
totals were still folded in toGeorgia's official election
(01:00:06):
results, giving Biden the win.
Now, what's significant aboutthis, Joe Biden won by 11,000
votes, and we know that 315,000votes that were processed
through the system have noballots.
There's no ballots.
That's why Fulton County won'tgive up the ballots to Harmeet
Dillon.
They're 315,000 raw ballotsshort of the numbers they
(01:00:29):
reported.
The tabulators are what go up onthe TV screen.
And they were unsigned.
You know why they were unsigned?
Because they were fraudulent.
36 of 37 precincts, the machinesgave a number that didn't match
the ballots.
So they had to basically, thisis why these poll things were uh
they talked about them being uhhacked or whatever.
(01:00:50):
Oh, but they were just practicepoll.
Well, if the practice poll tabswere hacked, don't you?
That was the whole thing, right?
They did the machine fraud andthen they backloaded it with
fake ballots, which is why theywere bringing them in in the
middle of the night because theycame up with what their numbers
needed to be, and then they hadto bring ballots out from under
tables, into vans in the middleof the night.
(01:01:11):
You guys, Georgia's adictatorship.
Brian Kemp is not governor.
Nobody in that state can claimto have been elected at all.
Every law that's been passedsince 2020, dubious.
Every 36 out of 37 counties justgenerated 315,000 extra votes
that got tabulated?
(01:01:33):
Do you think your do you thinkyour local school board might
have gotten a few of these uhwhat do they call them?
Coattail votes from Biden?
This is this is atrocious.
This is atrocious.
And it's repeated in state afterstate after state.
Who the hell knows what's goingon in Washington?
(01:01:54):
Right.
Who freaking knows?
Right now, Fannie Willis, in herlittle deposition thing
yesterday with the state ofGeorgia or two days ago, was
telling him that she nevercooperated or talked to uh the
White House.
Unfortunately, her onlinecheckbook that the county has to
do that she doesn't really haveanything to do with.
It's just like, you know, theyhave an online checkbook where
people can go and see where themoney's being spent, kind of
outs her.
(01:02:14):
Look, her billing.
DA family winnis, White House,meet VP of U.S.
Dexter Bond, White House, MeetVP of U.S.
Robert Brown, White House, MeetVP, Security Detail to do it.
Thomas Ricks, White House, MeetVP.
These are all people that werepart of a prosecutorial sling.
They went up to the White Houseand met with the VP as they were
(01:02:36):
getting this uh trial for Trump.
They were getting direction fromthe White House.
Hey, Fanny, we need you to, weneed you to create this
prosecution and we need to, youknow, blame Trump for looking
into it because we're hiding allthese fake ballots.
The guys, they were totally inon it.
Totally in on it.
And Brian Kemp, I mean, youknow, Lynn Wood called it best.
(01:02:58):
You know, he's like, he's acommunist.
Okay.
This is scary stuff.
Uh, one of the things that MikeLindell points out pretty
frequently is Florida is just asbad, right?
They've just allowed Florida togo one way, basically, but
they're they're getting the twocandidates.
We had this problem here in uhin Kittsap County.
And I know I hate to say this tothrow my fellow Republicans
(01:03:19):
locally under the bus, but youknow, we know for a fact our you
know, Republican countycommissioner got Democrat money
because he was the lesser of wehad a jungle primary, and it
just so happened they ran toomany Democrats, and so two
Republicans were on the ticketfor one seat.
Okay, so they backed one of theRepublicans.
The Democrats threw money athim.
We we we believe that.
(01:03:40):
I don't I don't have evidence,hard evidence, but it's it's
been stated, and it makes youkind of go, huh, right?
How's that gonna work out?
There, there was um this issuewith the seditious six, right?
And their whole don't you needto disobey lawful orders.
Well, between that andeverything else that's gone on,
(01:04:01):
intelligence whistleblowers haveconfirmed, yep, the CIA is
running a color revolution onthis country.
SPEAKER_16 (01:04:08):
So I talked to two
CIA officers who said that this
is a part of a larger hoax.
And what they're doing here isthey're trying to condition the
country to prepare for somethingbad that's about to happen at
the hands of Donald Trump.
It's straight out of the CIAplaybook.
It's a destabilization operationwhere you get people to mistrust
each other.
(01:04:29):
And you do this because she's ananalyst.
And as an analyst, she wouldmake sure what propaganda
operations were successful,which ones weren't.
So she knows what works.
So the first part of the video,you establish authority.
I'm CIA, I'm military, you needto trust us.
Second part of the video, theyintroduce the threat.
(01:04:52):
And the threat's not foreign,the threat's domestic, the
threat's Donald Trump.
And then at the end, theyintroduce the solution.
What's the solution?
You resist, you say no, but theydon't give an option.
They say this is an obligationfor you to do.
Now, she is being run becauseshe didn't come up with this
herself.
She's a Brennan acolyte, and youusually don't have congressmen
(01:05:14):
and senators doing anythingtogether.
They kind of hate each other.
So, in order to organize this,this had to have had some sort
of handler telling her what todo.
And it was risky because nothinglike this has ever been done in
the history of the country.
And you can even tell becausethe media was skeptical and they
couldn't answer the question.
(01:05:35):
So they hadn't even been read inon the operation.
You see them fumbling andstumbling.
And I'm glad that the USmilitary is now investigating
this guy, Kelly, because this iswhat we expect from Donald Trump
2.0.
You can't have the deep stateinterfering with a duly elected
presidency and get away with it.
You got to draw the line in thesand and you have to make
(01:05:55):
examples out of people.
SPEAKER_05 (01:05:57):
Yeah, you do have to
make examples out of people,
just waiting for a few of thoseexamples.
John Solomon had somethingsimilar to say about the entire,
entire resistance to DonaldTrump.
SPEAKER_24 (01:06:31):
Now, that is a
senior intelligence officer with
more than 30 years ofexperience, a patriot who served
in some of the most dangerousparts of the world, and he
understood that the tactics ofmaking something fake look real
were ripped right out of ourintelligence communities.
Our intelligence agencies notonly harmed Donald Trump, they
were harming the Americanpublic, the national security
(01:06:52):
interests of the AmericanAmerican.
Yep, yep, yep, yep, and it'slike old news for us.
SPEAKER_05 (01:07:00):
So the other the
other thing, too, is uh Senator
Kelly wrote a letter toSecretary Heggseth, and or his
attorney did, I should say, moreaccurately.
So they have elevated Mark theinvestigation into Mark Kelly
because he's a retired military,so they can recall him to active
duty service.
They've elevated it to, what dothey call it, a command uh a
(01:07:22):
command investigation.
In the military, a commandinvestigation is the equivalent
of a grand jury, right?
So that's where they are goingto look at the evidence, and
then they're going to decide ifthey're going to press charges
or what their further action isgoing to be.
So that's kind of theequivalent.
Mark Kelly has basically onlyfound out about this through the
media.
For the most part, I guess hehasn't been contacted.
So they're asking, you know,they're asking him, has the
(01:07:43):
department commenced a vancommand investigation?
And uh they're they're makingthe argument that because
Senator Kelly is a is a senatorand he was acting under the free
speech clause and debate clausethat the senators have, that you
can't come after me.
I don't really think that'sgoing to be the case.
I sure hope they make an exampleof him.
Um and not just because I don'tlike Mark Kelly and because he
(01:08:05):
took a Chinese.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:06):
Well, it's the same
thing as the judges in black
robes, so you have a higherduty, you know?
SPEAKER_05 (01:08:11):
Yeah.
It's not just that he took acommunist flag into space uh,
you know, when he was workingfor the U.S.
It's not just because hesupports policies that I don't
like, it's because of just that.
You have a higher duty, man.
You know, like this is mycountry.
Like if you're a trait.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:25):
In a lot of cases,
officers take O's.
SPEAKER_05 (01:08:28):
I I want to
distinguish this.
There's the country and there'sthe nation.
I can't say this enough.
The country is the land and herpeople.
From dust you come to dust yougo.
We are a product of this land.
I cannot separate myself fromthis country.
It is the it is my land ofnativity.
My where my feet stand is a holyplace.
It's where God planted me.
(01:08:49):
Okay.
Then I have the nation.
The nation is an artificialstructure created by men and
women of the country who createda political association, drew
borders, and said, okay, this iswhat we're going to defend as
our country.
Okay.
What is the difference betweenBellingham, Washington, and
Victoria or a British and uhVancouver, Washington?
(01:09:11):
Very little.
Right?
If it weren't for thatartificial line drawn, it would
just be two neighborhoods,right?
It'd be like SilverdaleBremerton.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, so a nation is anartificial structure.
When you have people who goagainst the nation in name of
the country, I don't considerthem traitors.
(01:09:32):
Edward Snowden is an example ofthat.
He let us, the country, knowthat the nation was committing
treason against we, the people.
Okay.
That is not a traitor.
He might be in violation ofnational laws, he might have to
be on the run.
That's that, but I won't callhim a traitor.
Does that make sense?
Because he let me know that mynation was doing something
(01:09:54):
against me.
Mark Kelly has a duty both tothe nation, which the military
enforces, and to the country.
So when you encourage militarymembers to defy lawful orders,
and those lawful orders mightinclude something like stop
illegal aliens from comingacross the border, stop drugs
from coming across the country.
Impact the citizens.
You're impacting the country.
(01:10:16):
The people who have to live herethat cannot separate themselves
from the land, the peasant folk.
So there's a clear distinctionthat you have to see there,
right?
We can love our country and hateour government.
That's not unusual.
They're not one and the samething.
(01:10:38):
Is there overlap?
Of course, because thegovernment is for we, the
people, especially here in thiscountry.
Vanity Fair ran that hit pieceon Susie Wilde, and Liz
Harrington makes this comment.
She says the Vanity Fair hitpiece reads like a blueprint for
how they want to impeachPresident Trump after they steal
the midterms.
Was this a setup?
Why would you ever talk to areporter who does documentaries
on the CIA for a year and thensay things like this?
(01:11:01):
It's not retribution, it'sjustice and accountability.
If we don't get it, our countryis lost.
Lost to who?
Our government.
Right?
Anyways, Susie Wiles said somestupid stuff like this in
quotes.
There is no evidence BillClinton visited Epstein's
Island, according to Wiles, asfar as as for whether there was
(01:11:22):
anything incriminating aboutClinton in the files, the
president was wrong about that.
So she's basically sayingletting Clinton off the hook
there, at least that's whatthey're implying.
Um Trump say, uh, look, this isnot supposed to be a retribution
tour.
Yes, I do, she replied.
We have a loose agreement thatthe score settling will end
before the first 90 days areover.
In late August, I asked Wiles,remember when you said to me
(01:11:44):
months ago that Trump promisedto end the revenge and
retribution tour after 90 days?
I don't think he's on aretribution tour, she said.
A governing principle for him isI don't want what happened to me
to happen to everybody somebodyelse.
And so people that have done badthings need to get out of the
government.
In some cases, it may look likeretribution, and there may be an
element of that from time totime.
Who would blame him?
Not me.
Uh, okay.
(01:12:04):
So let's talk, let's so so allof this talk I said about
accusing Letitia James ofmortgage fraud, well, that might
be one retribution.
Excuse me, Susie?
What?
Everybody who's analyzed this islike this is a black and white
crime.
You should filled out multipleforms that were incorrect.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you so you haven't called himout on that or said anything.
Hey, wait a minute.
(01:12:24):
No, no, not on her, Wiles said.
Not on her.
She had a half a billion dollarsof his money Wiles left, the
massive civil fraud penalty.
Um, so you're joking that, well,maybe with Letitia James.
Now I could see in aconversation, you know, oh, it's
not retribution.
Well, maybe Leticia James.
It's kind of like, oh, RosieO'Donnell, right?
Don't say those things.
She committed a real crime.
(01:12:46):
Don't say, oh, well, jokingly,well, maybe for her it's
retribution.
No.
Because if Donald Trump does itlike that, he's no better than
them.
SPEAKER_07 (01:12:54):
Well, it clouds the
crime, too.
SPEAKER_05 (01:12:56):
Right.
Hell, how about this one?
I mean, people could think itdoes look vindictive.
I can't tell you why it wouldn'tthat you wouldn't think that
while said of Trump.
I don't think he wakes upthinking about retribution, but
when there's an opportunity, hewill go for it.
Well, Donald Trump sucks atretribution.
Yeah, he does.
Oh my god, goodness.
(01:13:17):
Now, one of the things that'sbeen going on here is MAGA has
kind of been, you know, MAGA'sin a civil war.
I don't really know that MAGA'sin a civil war per se, but
there's this big amp fest for TPUSA.
And I want to point some thingsout here.
So Erica Kirk gave her speech,and TPUSA has its agenda.
SPEAKER_01 (01:13:39):
We are going to get
my husband's friend JD Vance
elected for 48 and the mostredundant way possible.
SPEAKER_05 (01:13:50):
Okay, so turning
point is endorsing JD Vance.
That's their marching orders.
Unfortunately, there's peoplelike Ben Shapiro who spoke there
who don't necessarily feel thatway.
Now, this clip, Ben Shapirodoesn't talk about JD Vance, but
Ben Shapiro does not support JDVance.
Ben Shapiro totally supports umRon DeSantis.
But he had this to say about uhwell, I actually think this is
(01:14:13):
pretty good.
SPEAKER_16 (01:14:14):
So when Candace Owen
says, I don't know no, but I
know that is retarded.
And we are all more retarded forhaving heard it.
SPEAKER_08 (01:14:32):
There's too much
clapping in that speech.
SPEAKER_05 (01:14:33):
He goes on to
basically say, you know, we have
to have real evidence to makedeclaratory statements, and
people who sit in the backgroundgo, I'm just asking questions,
I'm just asking questions.
They're doing all this damage.
Here's my problem with BenShapiro's approach on that.
My problem with Ben Shapiro'sapproach on that is A, asking
questions is how you get to knowthe truth of things.
Okay.
And B, Ben, I understand thatyou're in a huge position where
(01:14:56):
you can't just ask questionsthat really go nowhere.
You want to have some evidence.
But this is the problem.
If I see them putting upconstruction paper in a window
while they're vote counting, Ican say, why are they doing
that?
And I can either go, A, becausethey don't want people to look
at them, or B, because they'recommitting crimes behind the
paper in the window wherethey're counting my vote.
(01:15:18):
Does that make sense?
Ben won't ask that question.
Because, well, I don't haveevidence they're stealing votes.
I know, because they put upconstruction paper.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I don't know, I'm not whenJocelyn Valentine's in charge of
a J6 case.
I'm just asking questions.
Why is she still working at theFBI?
Well, what do you do you haveany evidence that she did
anything wrong?
Well, yeah, I do.
(01:15:38):
Have you actually looked intoany of them?
That's why we're askingquestions.
Right.
And and for me as a peasant, I'mlike, well, that's all I can do.
Ask questions.
Now, do we sit and ask questionsthat lead nowhere?
No, because usually if you ask aquestion, you get one step down
the road, it leads nowhere, youabandon the question.
Right?
Anyways, I just thought that wasreally interesting.
(01:15:59):
This amp fest down in inArizona, I think it's in
Arizona, is where it'shappening, is clearly showing
there's camps within theRepublican Party.
Tucker Carlson came to speak,and then you had speakers that
were criticizing Tucker Carlson,you know, back and forth and
back and forth and back andforth.
And so Erica Kirk has decided JDVance is her man.
She's going to be putting TPUSAbehind that.
(01:16:22):
TP USA, as far as theRepublicans go, have the largest
get-out-to-vote operation, andthey're five times bigger than
they were the day Charlie Kirkwas murdered.
Right.
In fact, I'm going to a TPUSAmeetup tonight.
In Kingston, Ron.
Wow.
In Kingston.
SPEAKER_07 (01:16:37):
Wow.
SPEAKER_05 (01:16:37):
I went to one a
couple weeks ago in Polesbow,
just up the highway here.
They just had one in so have youever seen TPS USA events in
KitSAP, Washington?
SPEAKER_07 (01:16:46):
No.
SPEAKER_05 (01:16:46):
It's happening.
And multiple of them, right?
So that's JD Vance is the guy.
But you're going to see a lot ofpeople really come out against
that.
Um, specifically the DaveRubens, the uh Ben Shapiro's.
There's a bunch of them that aregoing to get behind Ron
DeSantis.
Okay.
And there might be some othersthat run.
(01:17:07):
Apparently, Christy Noam, a lotof people think she might run
for office.
To me, the obvious ticket isgoing to be JD Vance at the top.
Probably Marco Rubio as a VP.
Maybe Christy Noam as a VP ifshe wants to go that route.
I don't think Ron DeSantis has ashot in 2028 unless the swamp
gets behind him, which I want toremind people, my opinion on
(01:17:30):
DeSantis has always been thesame.
He is a creature of the swamp.
He's a great governor, he'sdoing a really good job.
But at the end of the day, youcan look into some deep
background on him, and it doesnot encourage me to trust him.
I have a hard time trustingsomeone who stood over people
being tortured and laughed.
(01:17:51):
And there's documented evidenceof that.
I have a hard time with that.
Like if you can't see thesuffering of someone that
ultimately gets declaredinnocent and gets sent back
home.
Oh, let me just finish thestory.
So in GitMo, right, one of thethings that was going on in
Gitmo is they take all theseterrorists down to Gitmo, they
hold them there for 10 years,torture them, do all kinds of
horrible things, and then theylet them go and they send them
back home and give them$20million.
This is happening like aconveyor belt.
(01:18:13):
Okay, so we were self-fundingradicalized terrorists as we
take them into Gitmo, couldn'tcharge them with anything
because we were just holdingthem as enemy combatants or
whatever.
And then when we release them,we'd give them a payday and we'd
release them in countries not oftheir origin.
So a lot of them were gettingdropped off in Lebanon with
cash.
I actually ran into a guy inprison who was Lebanese who
(01:18:34):
worked for the CIA.
Remember, they sent me to a maxsecurity facility, an
administrative facility withdeath row inmates, all the way
down to guys that like me thatshould have been in a camp.
I got to meet some interestingpeople, like you know, somebody
who was in the cell block withJeffrey Epstein.
Okay, so I met a guy who workedfor the CIA, was a Lebanese
(01:18:55):
citizen, and the FBI rolled himup and he kept trying to say,
Well, I work for the CIA.
And they're like, Yeah, I know,but you're running drugs and
guns.
He's like, I know for the CIA.
And they're like, Yeah, butyou're a loose end.
Okay, and he got a lifesentence.
No murder or anything, but hegot a life sentence.
He's another one of these extrajurisdorial jurisdiction guys.
(01:19:15):
I have a problem with someonelike Ron DeSantis, who is a part
of that machinery.
Right?
I have a problem with RonDeSantis as part of that
machinery.
I also have a problem becausehis family, the black family,
his in-laws, are a part of theswamp too.
So, anyways, Ron DeSantis is agreat governor of Florida.
I would definitely considermoving there.
But I don't know that I want himin charge of, you know, the NSA,
(01:19:36):
the military, et cetera, etcetera, et cetera.
But his hurricane relief effortsare just bar none the best.
Steve Bannon had on uh PaulNolan talking about this MAGA
civil war that really isn't one,but it's another one of these
psyops to get us all divided.
SPEAKER_10 (01:19:51):
You've got to get
everybody in MAGA because
everybody in MAGA is not alignedwith this right now.
You got the hardcourse, the realAmerica's voice, kind of the
dead enders, right?
We're here talking about itevery day.
Our audience wants to do it.
But when guys, I'll throw itopen.
We got a few minutes.
Uh, when does he make thatspeech?
And how does he enlist thesupport of not not the war and
(01:20:12):
posse your audience, the rapaudience, they're there.
But the broader context of whatthe 80 million people that voted
for him.
SPEAKER_24 (01:20:19):
Paul Nolan talks
about this all the time, Paul.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:22):
Well, for me, uh,
you're talking about for one, we
see MAGAs getting splintered inevery direction.
We see uh the conservative, uh,we call let's call it even a
PSY-op, to destroy MAGA at everylevel and splinter it to pieces
with the divide and conquer uhagenda throughout the social
media and the news.
You know, Trump is up againstglobalists, he's up against on
(01:20:42):
the ground, he's up against theMarxists and the Islamists.
And the media never stopsspinning everything against him
in such a way.
Um, I think if you hearken backto COVID, everybody was talking
about globalism and Agenda 21,which ended up being Agenda
2030, which ended up being thegreat reset.
(01:21:03):
Everybody has heard of this.
So if he comes in a full assaultat this point, there are so many
alternative media out here likeus who could then get it onto
the ground.
If he comes with astraight-ahead agenda, we are
taking on globalism, we aregoing full force at sovereignty
for the American people and theAmerican nation that every one
(01:21:25):
of these nations have plunderedour wealth through USAID and
NGOs.
At this point right now, I thinkhe could come full on and just
explain this to the nation andlet the people on the ground
have the argument in the streetvalidate it.
Because every time you try tobring these things up on the
ground, what do you hear?
(01:21:45):
Oh, you're a nut.
No way, you're a conspiracytheory.
But I don't believe that's thecase at all.
I think there are more of us onthe ground who are willing to
fight that argument in the warof um uh you know, the mines or
the info war, if you will, as aas an Alex Jones guy.
Uh, I think we can make a hugedifference, especially between
now and the midterm, because weare up against this is the last
(01:22:07):
window to stop globalism andcentralized currency.
In my opinion, the the BritishEmpire is now the British
banking system, which is thecentral banks, which our
ultimate enemy.
And you you look at thatcollusion of power.
Why do you think they keepwanting to fund this Ukrainian
war?
They have to.
But why do you why do we have toVenezuela?
(01:22:29):
Because there's an endlessamount of narco money keeping
and propping up these fiat moneyin this fiat currency globally.
SPEAKER_10 (01:22:37):
Can you have that
conversation with us if you got
so many tech bros around?
Well, I'm Noland.
Uh Delgado left.
SPEAKER_13 (01:22:44):
He had to uh go hug
his tech on Hey Steve, one last
thing, and then I want to give Iwant to just Well that's the
that question is great, though.
With the tech bros around, Imean, I would love to touch that
subject.
Well, for me, I don't know howyou stop uh hit it.
Well, we got the right, we havethe PayPal mafias, it got a
great deal of control.
(01:23:05):
Uh, where do we go with thisfrom here?
How do you combat that?
SPEAKER_05 (01:23:08):
I think you got to
combat that now before it's
impossible to uh Steve Bannonreally doesn't like the tech
bros.
Of course, Elon Musk is alwayssaying Steve Bannon's gonna go
back to prison, so those guyshave a little bit of an issue.
The British banking system is aproblem, but this divisive war
with MAGA, a lot of it isartificial, and a lot of it is
people that were never MAGA, BenShapiro.
(01:23:30):
He absolutely campaigned forTrump.
But remember, he didn't endorsehim in 2016, campaigned against
him, basically didn't doanything in 2020.
He was like, oh, better of twoevils.
And then in 2026, he's like,Kamala Harris sucks.
He finally got behind Trump, buthe's not MAGA.
There's many other people likeDave Rubin and many others that
are not MAGA, they never havebeen, they never will be, but
(01:23:50):
that's the party in power.
And people don't realize this.
Okay, though if you watchmainstream news and the way they
push these stories and they talkto their audience, they're
talking to a smaller and smalleraudience.
Out there in the real world,people are over the moon for
things like getting rid oftransgender stuff for kids.
People are over the moon forclosing the border, people are
(01:24:12):
over the moon for massdeportations, people are over
the moon for calling Tim Waltz aretard.
Okay, all this stuff is excitingfor real MAGA, which is showing
up in the polling.
So despite all the doom andgloom, the midterms are lost.
He'll never win.
It can't be done.
MAGA's dead.
Don't believe a word.
SPEAKER_20 (01:24:31):
And the minds of the
American public are lower than
the Dead Sea.
What are we talking about here?
Well, let's take a look.
The net approval rating forDemocrats in Congress, you said
a cake Baldwin, the lowest ever.
Look at this.
Overall, they are 55 pointsunderwater.
Their approval rating is southof 20%.
It's even worse when you look atindependence.
Look at this.
(01:24:52):
Negative 61 points.
That means that their approvalrating is 61 points lower than
their disapproval rating.
Quinnipek has been polling thisquestion for the better part of
the 21st century.
They have never found Democrats,at least those in Congress, in
worse shape than they are rightnow.
SPEAKER_05 (01:25:10):
Oh, but they're
gonna win the midterms.
They're not gonna win themidterms.
The only way they win it is ifthey steal it.
And the only way to prevent themfrom stealing it is if you get
fueled up, get a good meal inyour belly, and go vote.
And one of the good meals youcould get is Chicago State
Company.
SPEAKER_07 (01:25:25):
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still scrambling for a Christmas
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(01:25:47):
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It's the call to the kitchen foreveryone.
Spend$229 and they'll throw insix free ribs plus free
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(01:26:10):
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They they crack it open, vaporrolls out instant.
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Give them something they'll askfor next year.
Don't wait on this.
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SPEAKER_05 (01:26:32):
Now, I always want
you to go buy anything we
advertise, right?
Because it looks good to us.
But please go get some of thesesteaks.
Okay.
If there's anything you ever buythat we advertise through
Rumble, these steaks are one ofthe things you should go get.
We want to make sure we can keepdoing their ads.
We like them a lot.
Um, I'm actually in the processover at uh 1776 Live, we have an
(01:26:54):
Epic Trust, and we're in theprocess of I can't, I don't want
to use the word acquiring, but Idon't know if there's a better
word for it, acquiring a162-acre farm out in Wisconsin
where we will be able to run ourown cattle herds.
Oh, yeah, by members of thatfarm association with not
organic, grass-fed, non-GMO uhbeef.
(01:27:14):
So if you want to hear any moreabout that, get over at
1776live.us.
But until we have our own beefto pitch to sell, please get
involved with Chicago SteakCompany.
Okay.
Uh, we are gonna jump over toprivate where we are gonna be
hearing about um we're gonna behearing, oh, by the way, let me
play this here.
This is Tucker Carlson talkingabout JD Vance.
(01:27:36):
Now, again, there's a schism.
This is a real schism, okay?
The JD Vance crowd, the DeSantiscrowd.
This is what they hate aboutTucker Carlson.
All the people that criticizeTucker Carlson, watch.
They're gonna come out for RonDeSantis.
You watch Mark Levine and thatwhole Israel APAC crowd is gonna
come out for Ron DeSantis andnot for JD Vance because J.D.
(01:27:57):
Vance is young, he's 42 like me,and he sees Israel as just any
other country.
Why would I give Israelpreferential treatment over
Saudi Arabia?
They both sponsor terrorism.
SPEAKER_19 (01:28:08):
I say one thing
super quick.
JD Vance is the future.
Period.
And I've never you'll never hearme say nice things about
politicians.
I know them all.
There are very few I like.
George Schmidt's one of them, bythe way, just for whatever it's
worth.
He's very decent man.
Mike Lee is a very decent man.
(01:28:28):
I'm sure there are a few others.
There are a ton, honestly.
They're mostly great.
But uh most of them are kind ofwhat you think they are.
Actually, they're way worse thanyou think they are.
And that's their wives, youknow.
Um, but but JD Vance is the bestI've ever met.
Ever.
The combination of intelligence,decency, wisdom, emotional
(01:28:52):
self-control.
Like I don't have that.
It's incredible.
He's incredible.
And um genuine affection and forTrump and loyalty to Trump is
not opposed.
He actually likes Trump.
I think Trump's an amazingperson.
Not like it's not fake.
And so that's just thrilling forme that there's someone like
that.
Um we the Republicans have nothad that.
(01:29:14):
I don't know how many peoplewere sort of betting on Mike
Pence.
Sorry.
Uh, but they don't tend topoliticians don't the the the
big politicians, they don't wanta rival near them.
You know, it takes a lot.
Like Trump has changed a lot tohire someone like JD Vance,
who's 40 years old and reallysmart.
It's incredible.
(01:29:35):
Um, so anyway, I don't knowexactly what I'm saying, but
that's just something to bereally happy about, hopeful for.
SPEAKER_05 (01:29:40):
Yeah.
And you will see this, you willsee again the DeSantis JD Vance
divide, and we'll go along thelines of the Trump DeSantis
divide.
So beware of that.
Okay, we're gonna jump over toprivate and we're gonna be
talking about what's going on inEurope.
Farmers are revolting again,throwing shit all over their
parliaments.
Okay.
So we're gonna look at a coupleimages of that.
We're gonna talk a little bitabout what's going on with
(01:30:01):
British military recruiting.
Um, pretty hilarious, what'shappening in Britain, and we're
going to touch a little bit onRob Reiner, another one of these
old roasts that from BillCrystal that was pretty
revelatory.
Um, the other thing, too, I'lljust mention in the public, this
didn't really fit into our stufftoday, but the question has been
asked about regime change inVenezuela.
(01:30:22):
And this is uh Jesus EnriqueRosas, he's from Venezuela.
Uh his account is out of Europe.
I think he had to flee Venezuelaalong with uh, you know, a lot
of their political dissidents.
But he says, I am Venezuelan.
90% of us want full throttleagro crank, agro crank on the
pressure gauge.
Both the old, sternly wordedsanctions and con and
(01:30:43):
conventional diplomacy have beenas effective as politely asking
a tapeworm to spare your hotpocket.
There will be no war withVenezuela for the sole reason
that the Maduro regime lacks anysort of military capacity.
And why should we care aboutVenezuela, you might ask?
Well, since Hugo Chavez, sincethe Hugo Chavez years, my
country has become the safehouse for everything from Hamas
to Hezbollah, under theblessings of Russia and China,
(01:31:06):
pumped to the eyeballs withCuban intelligence.
Even if Maduro is anillegitimate president, leading
to narco-tyranny, drugs could bethe least of the U.S.
problems.
Having a terrorist safe haven intheir own backyard is.
Why haven't Venezuelans doneanything about it?
We have done everything.
Unarmed protests became meatgrinder under Maduro's
paramilitary forces.
(01:31:27):
Elections have been rigged sincethe early 2000s.
We have been murdered,disappeared, and exiled.
We have literally nothing leftto lose at this point.
But you can't see that the U.S.
of the government, but you can'tsee that the U.S.
government is after your oil.
If it was up to me, help us getrid of Maduro, help us secure a
legitimate government, and I'dgive the U.S.
50% of whatever is in our soilfor 20 years.
(01:31:49):
I'm sure many Venezuelans feellike this.
China and Russia are not goingto do much.
They'll look the other way.
They have their own troubles,and Venezuela is no longer as
useful as it used to be.
Just a reminder (01:31:59):
whoever says
that the regime change word is
wrong, 70% of us already choseEdmundo Gonzalez Uresia as
president in 2024.
Maduro simply stole theelections and won't concede.
But since these criminalscontrol everything from the
military, the judicial system,the electoral system, the
National Guard, and literallyevery other institution, we have
(01:32:20):
no more options left.
So yes, I approved the shipblockade and vaporizing any drug
boats with overkill rigor.
This is the only language thatthese bastards understand.
Yep.
All right, guys, we're jumpingover into the private and we're
gonna see some funny things.
All right, we'll talk to you ina minute.
unknown (01:32:38):
Phew!
SPEAKER_05 (01:32:39):
All right, so this
image is from Greece.
Look at these farmers headprotesting.
It's not a small number oftractors, Ron.
Oh man.
There's a wall jam on there.
SPEAKER_07 (01:32:54):
We have that many
tractors around here.
SPEAKER_05 (01:32:56):
Good gravy.
You couldn't even round thatmany tractors up in this whole
county.
SPEAKER_07 (01:32:59):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_05 (01:33:00):
So these are these
are Greek farmers heading in to
protest at their parliament.
And simultaneously, what's goingon down in uh in Brussels?
This is farmers have showed upin force in Brussels, dumping
tires, fires, dumping manure,haystacks, too.
SPEAKER_07 (01:33:16):
Cleaning out the
barn.
SPEAKER_05 (01:33:27):
Um, I don't know how
they get away with this just
with my own experienceprotesting in the United States.
Some of these guys, just whatI'm seeing in some of the
highlights, you know, someheroes.
Yeah, go ahead and turn thesound off.
(01:33:48):
It's all just crowd noise.
But you know, you got there'sthe burning tires when they were
dumping.
There's that hay bell theydumped.
Big crowds, a lot of themcarrying patriotic flags for
different nations.
Okay, then uh you go here,here's them, you know, some
trough of manure they're pullingaround in downtown Brussels.
They're getting sprayed,chemical sprayed.
(01:34:12):
20 years in jail.
20 years, oh, through a rock,that's life in prison.
SPEAKER_07 (01:34:16):
Oh, jeez.
SPEAKER_05 (01:34:17):
Okay, come down.
I'll find a couple more here.
Here is uh this is all happeningyesterday.
Okay, this is a big sewagespraying the their government
building, dumping more blockadestuff.
Man, if Americans protested.
These guys know how to party.
(01:34:38):
Absolutely.
You think George Floyd was bad.
I don't know if I have any more.
Anyways, I I I got to the pointwhere I was like, I don't have
any more to show here.
Oh, along with uh fraud.
This didn't make the show, butthe FBI raided one of these
healthcare places in Minnesota.
Yeah.
(01:34:58):
They're us they are suspectingof all the services that
Minnesota's been offering, allthe different social services,
over 50% of it is illegal andfraudulent.
They just found out, and again,this number is accurate.
18 billion went to Saudi Arabia.
So you've got money going toSomalia, you've got money going
to Saudi Arabia, basicallyeverywhere else.
SPEAKER_07 (01:35:19):
That's your in my
pocket money.
SPEAKER_05 (01:35:20):
Yeah.
Uh this is the roast from RobReiner.
I kind of wanted to leave thistopic, but somebody posted that
when the truth about Rod Reinercomes out, we'll find out he's
one of the most vile humanbeings ever.
Now, keep in mind, we heard theother roast where it was alleged
that Rob Reiner himself wasabused, right, by his dad.
And uh here's Bill Kristol kindof implying that Rob Reiner
(01:35:44):
might have continued thetradition.
SPEAKER_02 (01:35:49):
Tell me.
I'll tell you.
Do you know why?
Why?
Tell me.
I'll tell you.
It's because of your films.
Films that make you think.
They make you think, what thehell am I doing here?
Rob has always been compared tothe great directors, always.
When he directed me and then andall the great casts and Harry
(01:36:09):
and Sally, they compared him toWoody.
When he did Misery, theycompared it to uh Brian DePom
and Alfred Hitchcock.
And when he began workingclosely with children, they
compared him to Woody.
And but what I respect mostabout Rob is his deep, almost
suspicious love for kids, and hefreely gives them his time, his
(01:36:31):
money, whatever it takes to getthem into the van.
But you know.
Revenge.
Do his works for kids.
Rob has become a major, major,wonderful political political
activist, which is a code namefor unemployed movie director.
He's now Mr.
Inside Politics.
You see him all over doing greatthings.
(01:36:52):
He calls the president Bill, hecalls a vice president Al, and
he calls Domino's five times aweek.
SPEAKER_05 (01:37:01):
Compares him to
Woody Allen.
Anything he has to say to kitthe kids in the van.
Hey guys, these roasts arepretty interesting.
Go listen to Donald Trump'sroasts.
They don't mention any kids.
This is a uh a British citizenthat just decided to join the
army.
Ron, this is kind ofinteresting.
SPEAKER_03 (01:37:18):
Today I signed up to
the British Army to help defend
the UK from Russia.
And this is why you should too.
A major conflict is actuallyhighly likely.
So if you want to defend valuesthat you believe in, like
equality, diversity, andinclusion, now is the time to
sign up for the army and defendthem throughout the world.
The website was actually superinclusive and ultra accessible,
and I felt totally safethroughout the application
(01:37:39):
process.
It even allowed me to upload myPXT essay on critical race
theory and decolonialization.
Being in the army is actuallyperfectly suited to deaf-leaning
people who value positivechange.
And if more progressive leaningfolks from all genders and
backgrounds fill the ranks, wecan permanently change the
stagnant demographic of theBritish Army.
Trying to reclaim the armedforces as a progressive force
(01:37:59):
for positive change throughoutthe world.
I've already got my girlfriendand her boyfriend to sign up,
and these are the students fortwo weeks.
It just goes to show that onceyou engage and inspire people to
see a different kind of armythat can fight war in a
different kind of way, a lot ofpeople will want to sign up.
(01:38:22):
If you're ready to make theultimate sacrifice for what you
believe in, join the army todayat jobs.army.md.uk.
I'll see you on the front line.
SPEAKER_05 (01:38:32):
You might have
picked up on the I already got
my girlfriend and her boy.
SPEAKER_07 (01:38:35):
Yeah, I like the uh
I like the I felt totally safe
during the application process.
SPEAKER_05 (01:38:40):
Yeah, so just FYI.
This is a pat uh a parody andsatire comedian level 9000
troll.
So it's pretty funny.
Here's this one uh decolonizingthe countryside.
SPEAKER_03 (01:38:52):
Today I'm
decolonizing the countryside.
If you're installing theseIndonesian batak sculptures to
create a roadblock to the localfarm, I then removed all the
exclusionary local signage Icould find and replaced it with
more inclusive open boardsensitive.
I then performed the stolenlanding organs before
recontextualizing the air withthis berual oop spray.
In order to decolonize thelivestock, I used
anti-capitalist literature whichI read aloud to the farm animals
(01:39:13):
for 20 minutes.
I then diversified theirfertilizer by seeding tropical
island palm trees tore-indigenize the local flora.
To decolonize woodland areas, Iconstructed a safe space using
branches and an ethnic blanketfor rain protection.
This Madagascar rug made theperfect carpet for getting cozy.
I then added a Mayan face maskto the doorway and some Moroccan
camel carvings to encourageintersectional allyship.
And this neurodivergent-friendlysign for maximum accessibility,
(01:39:35):
before decolonizing the spacefrom my own whiteness using
Sudanese incense and a healingcrystal.
I was pretty thirsty at thispoint, so I cracked open a soy
mill to celebrate this amazingnew build.
Forest lacked representation, soI added biodegradable gender
inclusive bunting to the traits,as well as multiculturally
empowering mini flags tocelebrate global solidarity.
I then organized a group ofactivists to cut down all the
England flags in the local area.
(01:39:55):
To finish up, I liberated my dogTrotsky from human ownership and
enacted a 24 hour lie down.
SPEAKER_05 (01:41:20):
When I saw the first
one, I was like, I'd
underestimate the EQ.
Uh funny stuff.
I love these parody accounts.
Yes, these guys do seem to havetoo much time on my hand.
Oh, look at this fighter,fighter tattoos.
People got their vaccines.
Oh my god, the vaccine stufftattooed.
Oh my goodness, what a mistake.
(01:41:41):
All right, guys, that's it forus today.
Thanks for joining us.
I appreciate it.
We'll talk to you guys again onMonday.
And thanks for doing the rave.
Bye-bye.
SPEAKER_17 (01:42:14):
What night lives in
that castle over there?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37.
I'm not old.
Well, I can't just call you man.
You could say Dennis.
I didn't know you were calledDennis.
Well, you didn't bother to findout, did you?
I did say sorry about the oldwoman, but from behind, you
don't.
What I object to is youautomatically treat me like an
inferior.
Well, I am king.
(01:42:36):
Oh, king, eh?
Very nice.
How'd you get that, eh?
By exploiting the workers.
By hanging on to outdatedimperialist dogma which
perpetuates the economic andsocial differences in our
society.
If there's ever going to be anyprogress, how do you do, good
lady?
I'm Arthur, King of the Britons.
(01:42:57):
Whose castle is that?
King of the British Britons.
We all are.
We are all Britons.
I am your king.
I thought we're an autonomouscollective.
You're fooling yourself.
We're living in a dictatorship.
A self-perpetuating autocracyand which the working class is.
(01:43:18):
That's what it's all about.
Only people, please, goodpeople.
I am in haste.
Who lives in that castle?
Then who is your lord?
We don't have a lord.
What?
I told you.
We're in a narco-syndicalistcommune.
We take it in turn to act as asort of executive officer for
the week.
But all the decisions of thatofficer have to be ratified at a
(01:43:40):
special byweek immediately.
I order you to be quiet.
I'm your king.
The lady of the lake.
(01:44:01):
Her armed clad in the purestshimmering samite held aloft
Excalibur from the bottom of thewater.
Signifying by divine prominencethat I asked was to carry
Excalibur.
That is why I'm your king.
Listen, strange women lying inponds, distributing swords, is
no basis for a system ofgovernment.
(01:44:21):
Supreme executive power derivesfrom a mandate from the masses,
not from some farcical aquaticceremony.
But you can't expect to wieldsupreme executive power just
because some watery tart througha sword at you.
Shut up! I mean, if I went roundsaying I was an emperor, just
because some moistened bitch hadloved a simitar at me, they put
(01:44:42):
me away.
Shut up, will you?
Shut up! Now we see the violenceinherited in the system.
Shut up! Now we see the violenceinherited in the system! Help!
Help! I'm being repressed!Bloody peasant! Oh, what a
giveaway! You hear that?
You hear that, eh?
That's what I'm on about.
Do you see it repressing me?
You saw it in you.