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August 14, 2025 56 mins

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The arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell sends shockwaves through our exploration of corruption at every level of American society. After months on the run, Jeffrey Epstein's alleged madam now faces justice, potentially exposing networks of power and privilege that have operated in the shadows for decades.

Corruption isn't just a high-level federal problem—it's festering in local governments nationwide. We uncover startling cases of city council members in Toledo accepting bribes for votes, a Colorado judge tipping off drug traffickers about investigations, election fraud in New Jersey where 20% of mail-in ballots were deemed fraudulent, and Los Angeles officials turning their districts into "money-making criminal enterprises" through developer kickbacks. These aren't isolated incidents but symptoms of institutional rot that directly impacts your daily life.

The dismantling of Seattle's CHAZ/CHOP zone reveals the consequences when law and order collapse, with residents describing feeling abandoned and held hostage in their own neighborhoods. Meanwhile, economic developments like the USMCA trade agreement offer potential bright spots, bringing manufacturing back to American shores and creating pathways for recovery. When corruption is exposed and addressed, and economic policies prioritize American interests, we glimpse what's possible when systems work as designed.

Join the movement to hold power accountable. Subscribe, share, and connect with us on social media as we continue exposing the corruption that affects us all. After all, we're the peasants—and it's time our perspective was heard.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
And when they went to the queen To tell her Her
subjects had no bread, do youknow what she said?
Let them eat cake here.
You take the bomb.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
We're getting screwed , man.
Every time we turn around we'regetting screwed.
Oh, the revolution's gonna bethrough podcasting for sure.
That's the only way we talk.
It's the little guys, thelittle guys that take the brunt
of everything.
It's gotta stop.
Peasants, man, we're justpeasants, every one of us.

(00:40):
You watch those old movies.
You see the peasants in thebackground with the kings and
queens walking around.
We're those people.
We're those people.
I have amazing news Welcome,peasants, welcome out again.
I just literally, as I washitting record like as I was
hitting record I got anotification for news.

(01:01):
You're not going to believethis, I'm sure.
Maybe by the time you've heardthis it's already broken.
Jeffrey Epstein's confidant,ghislaine Maxwell, arrested in
New Hampshire this morning.
Jeffrey Epstein's confidantMaxwell, ghislaine Maxwell, was
arrested in New Hampshire onThursday morning.
The FBI confirmed to Fox News.
Epstein's former girlfriend andaccused madam was arrested at

(01:23):
8.30 am in Brantford, newHampshire.
The charges against her arecurrently sealed.
Oh my gosh, I'm so excited.
This is amazing.
Obviously, jeffrey Epsteindidn't kill himself right, so
just got to squeeze that inthere.
I'm speechless.
I'm speechless.
This is one of the best piecesof news I have heard in months.

(01:45):
This is almost as good as whenJeffrey Epstein himself was
arrested.
So when Jeffrey Epstein wasarrested right, it was like he
got arrested the first time.
And, if you want, there's adocumentary on Netflix about
Jeffrey Epstein and about 50% ofit is true.
50% of that documentary is true.
The other 50% is just leftcompletely washed out and they
kind of brush, brush over thingsor they don't make the
connections where they need tomake.

(02:05):
Jeffrey Epstein was Mossad.
Mossad is essentially the CIAof Israel and he conducted honey
traps all over the world, theselittle blackmail rings where he
would videotape famous peopledoing all ranges of things and
that would be blackmail and he'dbe able to use blackmail.
Now, when you look at hisflight logs right, people always

(02:27):
look at his flight logs becausethere's a lot of malfeasance.
That happened on the LolitaExpress, which was his private
jet.
He had two private jets.
People say Trump flew on one ofhis private jets.
He did.
He flew on one of his privatejets back from LA or something
like that one time with a fewother people People who don't
know this, but people who ownprivate jets do a lot of jet
hopping.
So I actually had a friend orsomeone that I worked with slash
for that had his own privatejet company, which essentially
consisted of one single privatejet, you know like a 20 seater,

(02:50):
but he would rent that jet outto his neighbors.
He lived down in Arizona andhe'd rent that jet out to people
like Jenna Jameson, the rock oflove guy, what's his name?
He's the guy that's on that.
Anyways, he's a famous musician, was one of his neighbors
anyways they would.
So actually one time I went topick him up from Boeing
International Airport and heflew in on his private jet and
we had rented a limousine and wewere going to pick him up, this

(03:13):
famous guy anyways, it was likea former life of mine, but
anyways we picked him up and hepulled a bag out of the jet,
like there was like anundercarriage in the jet, like
there was like an undercarriagein the jet, like you'd unload
your own bag because it's hisjet, right?
And so they open up the littlehatch, kind of like a tour bus,
you know, they open up a similarthing like that.
It kind of opened up.
So he goes to grab the bag andhe pulls his bag out and he goes
oh, that's so-and-so's bag andit was the Rock of Love,

(03:35):
rockstar, it was a kind of alight brown leather bag really
nice looking bag, duffel bag andhe was pull it out, put it on
the ground, pull his bags out,put that guy's backpack in.
I'm just going to have to leaveit in there for when he rents
it again.
So, anyways, people who ownprivate jets, they do that right
, they'll.
They'll rent out their jetsessentially to just cover the
cost of owning those jets.

(03:57):
So Jeffrey Epstein participatedin that with his second jet.
His first jet, the LolitaExpress, was his personal taxi
and that's the one he used torun all over the place, and so
when you see people on hisLolita Express flight logs, it's
very highly suspect.
There's like Secret Serviceagents who have said that they
saw Bill Clinton doingquestionable things.
You know, at minimum it wasunsavory that he was even around

(04:19):
and at worst there was badthings going on.
I mean, we've got all kinds ofaccusations and when Jeffrey
Epstein got arrested the firsttime, they let him off easy.
I mean really truly let him offeasy.
Private security, leaving everyday, having girlfriends come to
even the prison or his officewhere he was going to work, is
just bananas.
But they arrested him again.
You're probably familiar withthe tale.
They arrested him again.

(04:40):
He ended up dying in jail,killing himself.
Slash was killed, slash whoknows what really happened there
and Ghislaine Maxwell, hismadame, his girlfriend, is out
gallivanting all over the world.
Now there's a bunch of funnythings.
I'm saying this all off the topof my head because I've
followed this for a while now.
Completely not what I hadplanned on for this show at all.
I literally was just droppingthe intro into the soundtrack

(05:02):
when this notification cameacross my phone.
So, anyways, ghislaineMaxwell's been at large and
there was at one point.
She was supposedly photographeddown in LA holding a book,
basically eating, just havingbreakfast at a breakfast table,
holding a book that was about aCIA spook.
And anyways, people were likewhy didn't you pick her up?
And then, supposedly she'shiding out in France and every

(05:25):
now and I'll go in and I'll do aTwitter search for her name
just to see if anybody's taggedher in a picture or what are her
whereabouts or if there's beenan indictment put out.
There wasn't even an indictmentput out here, so this was a
sealed indictment up until themoment they picked her up.
So that's really awesome.
And she was in New Hampshire.
What is she States.

(05:46):
That is almost as mind-bogglingto me.
I wonder if the coronaviruslockdowns made it hard for her
to get out of the country.
I would not be surprised if thecoronavirus lockdowns made it
hard for her to get out of thecountry.
Oh man, oh, she's arrested.
That is awesome.
Now a couple other things,salacious things.
So I've heard testimony anddepositions recorded,
depositions of Epstein victimswho claim that Bill Clinton is

(06:07):
bisexual and maybe prefers theboys a little bit more and she
had participated in some things,and then Hillary Clinton's
participated in those things.
Obviously, prince Andrew fromthe UK is highly involved in all
of this.
There's pictures, there's lotsof evidence.
He's toast.
Who knows if we're ever goingto be able to get him?
Because, remember, the monarchin Britain is the sovereign

(06:28):
right, the person that is aboveI don't have the Kung Flu the
person that is above the law isthe monarch, and Prince Andrew,
up until you know, recently, wasin line for the crown.
Okay so, oh man, what great news.
I can't even tell you this isamazing.
I mean I literally, like lastweek I think, I was listening to

(06:51):
a podcast talking about theEpstein situation and basically
saying you know, it'sessentially a lost cause at this
point.
There's been no movement, no,nothing.
Epstein's a state, you know,there's just been kind of a big,
big show.
I've also heard the reason I wasbringing up the Bill Clinton
was.
I've heard that Bill Clintonwas also enamored with Ghislaine
Maxwell, that that was kind ofhis, his muse.

(07:12):
He hung out with JeffreyEpstein in a lot just to get to
Ghislaine Maxwell.
Anyways, there's, there's somewow, wow, they got her.
I mean that's, that's as big asgetting Epstein.
Really, I mean she's theEverything Epstein did.
She did, I mean they weretogether for years.
Her dad had a state funeral inIsrael, even though he was a

(07:34):
British citizen, which makes nosense other than the fact that
we know now that he wasintelligence, he was a media
mogul.
Oh, look, another one of thosemedia moguls that's out there
doing bad things.
Man, what great news I can'teven tell you.
Well, also, Donald Trump, rightnow, as we speak, is doing a
press conference.
We got great employment numbersthat came in.

(07:56):
We added oh, you got to seethis we added tons of jobs.
It was 4.7 million jobs broughtthe unemployment rate down to
11%, which we were up higherthan 14%.
That's a huge number.
This is great news.
People working is always greatnews.
This is phenomenal for ourrecovery.

(08:21):
I'll just share with you mythoughts on the economy.
I get asked this question a lot.
I have no expertise.
I don't know anything otherthan what I know.
As you know, if you've beenlistening to this podcast, you
know that I don't know anythingexcept for what I know.
So, anyways, my outlook on theeconomy is this Yesterday, usmca
went live, so we finally noware going to start having the

(08:42):
results, the net results of thenew trade deal.
So we'll see how good it worksout for us.
Nafta has been replaced.
This is great, great, greatnews.
Usmca is now in place.
Usmca dictates things like, forexample, on cars.
I can't remember the exactpercentage, but it's like 70% of
car parts must be manufacturedin the United States, including

(09:02):
their components.
So just because we assemble thecar in Michigan doesn't mean
the car is really made inMichigan If all of the parts of
the car are made overseas.
Which is what was happeningalternators are all made in
Mexico, all the axles are madein China, all of this are made
in China, and then they ship inall of these incomplete parts
because then they don't have topay such a large tax when they
come in, depending on whatcountry, what tariffs, et cetera

(09:24):
, et cetera and so and they getcheaper labor as a net, and then
they just assemble itessentially with what looks like
robots in a factory in Michigan, right?
So that's been kind of like theway that NAFTA broke down.
Our auto industry is itoutsourced?
All the manufacturing of allthe parts and in some cases, the
whole car?
Well, usmca reverses a lot ofthat.
It forces the parts to bemanufactured here in the United

(09:44):
States.
So you're going to start seeingmanufacturing right, the magic
wand that Barack Obama said thatTrump couldn't have.
Manufacturing comes back becausethe alternator plant is coming
back.
That's feeding the Ford factorybecause the air conditioner
pump plant is coming back.
That then goes into the GM cars.
So those things all come back.
It also affects food production.
It affects a whole lot ofthings and it's a very I've

(10:10):
heard different things.
It's a huge bill, so it's not.
I personally haven't read everyword of it, I've just read
excerpts of it, but from what Ican understand is it's very
America first.
But it also guarantees thingslike certain labor rights,
minimum wage laws to be enactedin Canada and in Mexico to help
balance out the labor, which isgoing to greatly, greatly

(10:31):
benefit them.
They're still obviously free tosell parts all over the world,
so that also encourages placeslike Mexico to convert that
alternator plant into analternator plant that then sells
cars elsewhere.
It's great, great news.
So USMCA goes live.
That's going to have a littlestock market bump because now
we're going to see the moneystart to reverse.
So instead of the money flowingout of our country with the

(10:52):
NAFTA trade deal, it's going tostart staying.
I wouldn't necessarily sayflowing into our country, but
staying in our country, and thenet effect of money staying in
our country is huge.
If you remember, in a previousepisode I talked about the
research project we did ineastern Idaho where we looked at
a dollar that came into arestaurant that was being built
on the side of the highway atApplebee's.
And if a dollar came into thatrestaurant, right, it went to a

(11:13):
tip to the waiter.
The waiter went and spent it atWalmart.
The Walmart employee goes andspends it at the hairdresser.
The hairdresser goes and spendsit at the vending machine.
The vending machine guy whopacks the vending machine is a
local employee.
So anyways, we did this littleresearch In this little town.
There's like an equation whereyou have the population and the
size of the service industry andyou can figure out how many
times that dollar that comesinto your community circulates

(11:35):
around the community.
So we did it.
It was like 27 times thatdollar got spent 27 times in the
city before the dollar left thecity.
And so anytime when you're doingcity planning metrics, things
like that, you want to put, forexample, restaurants that bring
people in from off the highway,right on the side of the highway
, gas stations.
All those things are vital to alocal economy, believe it or
not.
That's point A for money comingin.

(11:56):
Another place for money to comein is when a house gets built
right.
You get a 30-year mortgage, theFederal Reserve creates the
money, they give you the moneyand that money goes into the
local economy through all thecontractors and stuff like that.
So that's outside money comingin.
Anytime you can have outsidemoney coming in, that's great.
So the USMCA goes live,employment numbers are dropped

(12:18):
or unemployment numbers dropped.
That's great.
So these are good signs.
I have predicted for a long timethat as the America First
movement rolls on, supply chainscome home from overseas, Our
immigration issues get undercontrol, we're looking at a real
potential boom in our economy.
I think it's going to be alittle bit of a surge because
it's a buildup surge, so asfactories are being built,

(12:41):
there's wages getting paid, thenthey get online, so there's a
whole growth section that'sgoing to come.
If everything stays good, ifeverything stays normal in our
country, then we probably aregoing to have a really great
recovery and we're going to goup.
I think that up is going tolast for about 18 months is my
personal prediction.
I have nothing to base that offof other than just literally my

(13:03):
gut feeling on where I thinkthe narrative is going to go,
with different things.
But I think we're going to goup for about 18 months and then
we'll start to plateau, and alot of this obviously depends on
what happens around the world.
If other civilized nations cutChina off game changer, they cut
China off, it's a game changer.
But you cut China off.
The other game changer too isChina's not going to be easily

(13:25):
controlled.
Okay, well, ghislaine Maxwell'sarrested in New Hampshire.
I can't even.
I'm still.
I'm still shocked it changes.
It changes so many things tolook at.
Epstein is a foundation piece ofso much of the corruption in
the government, so much of thecorruption in the government,
and I wanted the title oftoday's episode Corruption

(13:47):
Chronicles because I've beenhounding, like yesterday I
played those videos of the citycouncil members getting yelled
at the city council.
The mayor these are the peoplethat are.
They are the front line, rightas far as political goes, in
telling us what to do.
They're the ones making themask, mandates, shutting
businesses down.
These are the people that youhave to go to to get building

(14:07):
permits.
Like, local government holds aton of power and I've got my own
personal stories about localgovernment overreach.
Local government can be some ofthe worst.
Some of the worst because itgoes unchecked.
It goes almost completelyunchecked because it's not.
There's not a huge news mediachasing around your local city
council.
There's not.

(14:27):
You know, there's not a lot.
There's no investigativejournalists there's just.
Once you get on a city council,you almost work in the shadows.
I mean, nobody's reallywatching you all that closely.
So I want to go through acouple things here.
One thing Chaz Chop got brokendown yesterday.
There was one of the mostemotional 20-minute segments or

(14:55):
longer I've ever seen on TV lastnight on Sean Hannity, he had
the father of one of the firstvictims in the Chaz Chop that
was shot and killed and died.
He was 19 years old.
He told the whole story.
He cried on air.
It was unbelievable and I can'tplay it all.
It's too long.
I would love to if it waspossible to play it all.
I'd love to break up littlesegments of it, but let me tell
you some key points that he hiton.

(15:15):
So he hit on the fact you knowhe's a black father and his kid
died in this chast chop.
They talked about law and order,that every single person Asian,
black, mexican, white, jew,muslim, everybody they want
every single parent wants safetyand security so that they don't

(15:36):
have to worry about their kids,they can raise their kids, they
have safety and security andthey want accountability.
Those are the foundations ofWestern civilization right,
equal, justice under the law.
This guy talked about how noone from the city, the police,
no one has notified him.
He found out through friends ofhis son that his son had died
and it's been two weeks that hisson has been dead and he's
finally getting to bury his son.
He didn't get to even see hisson's body for a week.

(15:57):
So the city dropped the ball onnotifying him, talking to him,
doing anything as far asnotifying next of kin.
So, anyways, he talked aboutthe safety, security,
accountability.
He talked about God, a lotabout his belief in God.
It was a beautiful segment andhe had a person with him who I

(16:20):
missed exactly his relation.
It felt like a brother, but Ithink it was maybe an attorney
or a pastor or a family friendof some familiarity.
That was fairly literate andastute, well-spoken and one of
the things he said at one pointas this interview was kind of it
wasn't dragging on, but it waslong I mean cable news hits are
two minutes right and they gavethis guy 20, 25 minutes to tell

(16:44):
everything he wanted to tell toAmerica, everything.
This man became the spokesmanof every peasant.
This is a normal person who'sunheard of, who no one cares
about.
That's one of the things hetalked about.
I remember this when my sonpassed away.
The world just keeps moving andyour world has stopped.
The world has stopped rotatingfor you.

(17:06):
When my son passed away, I mean, I felt senses of loneliness,
emptiness, a void that justcannot be filled, and you get
this sensation that nothing willever be the same.
It's as if the sunlight hasgone out and you question how
you're going to proceed the nextday, how you're going to

(17:29):
proceed the next minute.
Nothing seems clear, everythingseems blurry, obscured, and you
have so much tunnel vision.
That's how it feels to lose ason or a kid or someone that's
super close to you.
Some of you who are listeningto this have felt that feeling,
that emptiness in your soul.
It's hard to feel that.
And he talked about those rawemotions.

(17:53):
And this was a peasant.
This was just a normal guy, anormal guy who's never, ever, in
any other circumstance, goingto get his 15 minutes of fame.
He's never going to get to talkto millions of people and tell
them how he felt about his sonand how his son was taken from
him because of theirresponsibility of the city of
Seattle.

(18:15):
Residents, now that it's beentaken down, are speaking out.
They are super upset about whathappened.
They felt abandoned, they feltheld hostage.
There were people on differentnewscasts yesterday that didn't
even want to speak out butdecided they had to.
They're afraid of being killedby the Chaz Chop protesters.
And they still don't want tospeak out because they're afraid

(18:37):
of being targeted.
What happened in Chaz Chop can'thappen in this country.
It was a complete breakdown oflaw and order and it happened in
a that particular area ofSeattle is not an unsafe area.
That's the Capitol Hill area.
That's a high-rent area ofSeattle and it became a war zone

(19:00):
.
I mean, it became a third-worldcountry overnight.
That's what happens when lawand order goes away.
Scores were settled in there,all kinds of things happened.
This is Carmen Best, our policechief, and listen to what she
had to say about it.
So now that it's all over right, now that it's all over, now
they've taken it down, nowthey're like oh well, let me
tell you what happened in ChazChop, because, remember, in

(19:21):
Seattle it's fairly liberal andthere's still a lot of liberal
people.
I mean, I don't know who theyare, I can't, it's hard for me
to.
They must not think forthemselves, but nonetheless
there's a whole bunch of Seattleresidents that still support
the mayor, still support theliberal agenda, and so now
they've got to kind of flextheir muscle and be like, okay,
we took care of it.
See, we took care of it.
So this is Carmen Best talkingabout what was going on in Chaz

(19:41):
Chop while it was outside oftheir supervision.
Yeah, we don't even know howmuch trauma was happening.

(20:06):
They were thanking the officersprofusely.
Now, if you've been watching CNNor MSNBC for the last couple
weeks, you thought that this wasthe summer of love, like you
thought that this was just anice street fair, it was no big
deal.
As you can see, it wasn'treally the case.
So I want to go through acouple different things that
have been happening around thecountry that have to do with
this corruption, but also thefact that there is some law and

(20:29):
order, and I believe Bill Barris really trying to clean up the
DOJ.
The DOJ is corrupt and I don'tbelieve that the DOJ is.
I think the DOJ needs a realclean-out and I've seen a lot of
people get fired at the verytop levels a real clean out, and
I've seen a lot of people getfired at the very top levels.
But I also know that there'speople who are FBI informants

(20:50):
who say that their informantsare, you know, adamant Trump
haters and I just don'tunderstand how you can be in one
of those political positionsand be so politically charged
and make it known to the peoplethat you're taking information
from like informants.
It's mind boggling to me.
Okay, so this is one.
Five charged in Toledo CityCouncil bribery and extortion
scheme.
So this is June 30th 2020.
So this is two days ago.

(21:10):
So everything I'm talking aboutis very recent.
I don't have to reach far intothe past.
I just went and pulled like arandom smattering in the last
week or so of low-levelgovernment cases.
So five charged in Toledo CityCouncil bribery and extortion
scheme.
Four sitting Toledo CityCouncil members arrested.
Four sitting Toledo CityCouncil members and one local

(21:35):
attorney were charged in acriminal complaint for their
participation in a bribery andextortion scheme that encouraged
soliciting and or acceptingcash checks, money orders or
other things of value from localbusiness owners in exchange for
their votes on city councils.
It has the names.
I don't really care.
You don't know who they arebecause I don't live in Toledo.
All defendants were charged viafederal criminal complaint in

(21:57):
the Northern District of Ohio Areceipt of bribe by agent of
organization receiving federalfunds and Hobbs Act extortion of
the color of official right.
Additionally, defendant Harperwas charged with interstate
communications and intent toextort Quote.
As alleged in the complaint,four Toledo City Council members
and a local attorney have beenengaged in a pay-to-play scheme
involving bribes for citycouncil votes.
Us City Attorney Justin HerdmanQuote maintaining the public's

(22:20):
trust in elected officials inone of the Department of Justice
core responsibilities thatyou've been neglecting since.
About, oh when was Kennedyassassinated?
The residents of Toledo shouldknow, as should every other
resident of the NorthernDistrict of Ohio, that there are
allegations of publiccorruption and kickbacks.
We and our federal partnerswill be there every time.
Where there are allegations ofpublic corruption or kickbacks,

(22:42):
we and our federal partners willbe there every time.
Get busy, folks.
It's all over the place.
Elected officials are electedby the people to serve the
people, not to serve their ownfinancial self-interest.
Fbi agents said the FBI willcontinue to effort to root out
public corruption.
So what these guys were doingwas they would so in April 28th.
A local business so here's one.
From May 28th 2018 to April of2019, a local businessman.

(23:09):
Source one applied for a specialuse permit.
So a special use permit is like, say, for example, I have a
residential property, so I'vegot three acres and I want to
put my construction yard on thatthree acres.
So what I have to you know,because here locally I'll just
use our local laws I knowexactly what it is If you have
more than 10 pieces of equipment.
So if you, if you count up allof your excavators, dump trucks

(23:29):
and trailers and it adds up toover 10, then you have to be on
a commercially zoned property.
They don't want you having 25dump trucks and excavators in a
residential neighborhood.
It's a zoning law.
Everybody agreed to it a longtime ago.
Okay, fair enough.
So to get around that, you canget what's called a special use
permit, because obviously, ifI'm a contractor, I don't have a
storefront.
People aren't coming to myplace, all I'm doing is parking
my equipment.

(23:50):
So if I have enough land and Ihave enough space, it seems
reasonable that since I've paida ton of money for this land and
space, I should be able to useit, you know, to park stuff.
So no big deal.
I go down, I apply for aspecial use permit.
Special use permit has achecklist of requirements.
So here locally it would saythings like okay, if you're
going to have what's called acontractor's lay down yard, then
you have to have a fence, youknow, so your neighbors can't

(24:11):
see all your garbage because youknow you could get pretty messy
.
If you're a contractor andyou're dropping stuff all over
there, okay, got to have a fenceor a view block, you have to
let your neighbors know.
They have to all say it's okay.
And if they don't, then youhave a public hearing and then
they get to air their grievancesand then ultimately ends up
with the city council voting toallow the special use permit.
And obviously the more impactthe use permit would be, the

(24:34):
bigger deal it is so normallyit's due process.
Fourth amendment all laws mustapply equal.
So it's a shall issue.
If you qualify for the specialpermit, you shall issue it.
These guys were or no?
It's not a shall issue, excuseme.
Special condition use permit isby the vote.
So it's not just anadministrative thing.
It's not like you apply for itand get it.
It kind of has to go through aprocess.
So the city council votes arecritical.

(24:56):
So these guys were paying forthem.
How does that make you feel?
So me, as a business ownerthinking the world's fair, if I
want to get a special use permit, I go apply and then you know,
coming up on the vote, myengineer or attorney or whoever
I'm having represent me, help medrop all the paperwork comes
and says, hey, these guys havesaid they'll do it, but you got
to cut them all $1,000.

(25:16):
Check, there's 16 of them for16 grand.
Give them all 1 a thousandbucks, they'll vote your way.
How fair is that?
How fair is that?
Wouldn't they vote for itanyways?
Right, it's not fair.
And to say it's not fair, it'snot fair Like it affects
businesses, people.
I'm sure that if they weretaking bribes, it means in order
for the bribes to be effective,somebody had to not get their
permit approved that didn't paythe bribe.

(25:38):
So that means there's probablya whole trail of people who
didn't pay for bribes thatdidn't get their permits
approved.
How many people who did gettheir permits approved?
Maybe this is an all-the-timething, right?
This was just the informant,the guy who turned them in so to
get the vote, they paid $2,000of other items in value for
return for the council member'ssupport.

(25:59):
April 2018, another localbusiness Source 2, applied for
an SUP for the rezoning of aninternet cafe business in
Holland-Sylvian Road.
Source 2 bribed CouncilmanTyrone Riley $1,000 in return
for the Councilmember's supportof the rezoning SUP.
On October 23, 2018, riley andthe rest of the City Council
voted in favor of the Source 2'sinternet cafe From 2018 to

(26:20):
2020,.
Source 2 solicited a bribe fromcity council members, yvonne
Harper, through local attorneyKeith Mitchell, to support
another internet cafe.
So you can see where this isgoing here.
Here's another one.
They took another $2,800 bribe.
So you go through all this.
Four of these city councilmembers were involved with this.

(26:40):
These all are people who gotelected independently, who did
this over a series of years.
So this is Toledo, toledo,toledo, just you know, isn't
like Toledo, the city that wealways say is like way out there
, that we never, you know, backin Toledo or whatever.
Toledo, ohio, okay, next one,colorado.
Here's a judge this is fun.

(27:03):
Former Colorado judge pleadsguilty to obstructing task force
investigation on a drugtrafficking organization.
Aye, aye, aye.
A former Colorado judge pleadedguilty today to obstructing a
federal task force investigationon a large scale drug
trafficking organization.
It just breaks my heart.

(27:24):
It just breaks my heart.
I mean, you're a judge.
How many people have come infront of you because of drug
problems that you know that ifthe drugs just flat out.
Weren't present, these peoplewouldn't be in front of you.
But yet here he is obstructingjustice into a drug traffic
investigation.
Man truck traffic investigation.
Man Beginning in January 2019,.

(27:47):
Kamada is the judge.
No US District Judge William JMartinez oh.
Kamada served as a districtcourt judge.
Where's the name here?
According to admissions, kamadamade a connection.
Okay, so I guess his name'sKamada Served as a district

(28:08):
court judge from the 19thCircuit District of Colorado.
While serving as the quoteon-call judge, one evening in
April 2019, kamada received aphone call from a task force
officer who was seeking a searchwarrant related to the
investigation into a drugtrafficker.
The task force officer pointedout to Kamada that he was
associated with a drugtrafficker on social media.
So they called and they let thejudge know hey, on social media

(28:32):
you've got connections to thisdrug trafficker that we're
trying to get a warrant on.
As a result, kamada recusedhimself from the case.
That seems reasonable, butearly the next morning Kamada
called his best friend, jeffreyKaykun, who had also known the
drug trafficker since childhood,and Kamada told Kacon that law
enforcement was watching thedrug trafficker's house, car and
phone.
So he told him about thewarrant.

(28:53):
So he had to recuse himself.
But then he went and gave hisbuddy a heads up and instructed
Cacon to stay away from the drugtrafficker.
C-h-a-c-o-n.
Chaconacon subsequentlyinformed the drug trafficker
about the warrant and Chaconmodified his own behavior in
order to avoid law enforcementattention.
The information from Chaconprovided to the drug trafficker

(29:13):
also caused the drug traffickerto change his pattern of conduct
and substantially interferedwith the task force
investigation.
After Chacon relayed theinformation that he received
from Kamada to the drugtrafficker, chechon destroyed
records of his communicationwith the drug trafficker in
order to impair efforts by lawenforcement to tie Chechon to
this drug trafficker.
In November 2019, chechon pledguilty in federal court to one

(29:34):
count of destruction of recordsin the intent to obstruct a
federal investigation.
So this was released on June30th when this came out.
So they must have gone throughwhatever appeals and now he's
taking a sentencing.
Man, oh, man.
Or his sentencing is December4th, so they're announcing it at
the time of the sentencing.
So he's already pled out andeverything but man, what the

(29:55):
heck?
So you got a judge drugtrafficking, hey, you got a
connection.
Okay, so he warns his friend.
His friend then warns theactual drug trafficker.
Guys, it's like horrible.
Okay, here's a.
This is not another one, thisis just a random thing, but you
know, there's, our lawenforcement is critical.
Uh, this, this article here isfederal agents seize more than
10,000 assault weapons at aLouisville port.

(30:17):
Um, these were headed.
They were, uh, they went fromChina to Melbourne, florida, and
then they were headed toLouisville and they were
mislabeled as steel pin samplesand they were assault weapons
10,000 assault weapons fromChina being sent into our
country.
Now I have to ask myself whereare those assault weapons going?
You can go down and buy anAR-15 right now at the gun store

(30:37):
, not very hard, little piece ofpaper.
Background check, depending onwhere you live.
Might be an background check,depending on where you live.
Might be an instant backgroundcheck, might be a three-day wait
, might be a 10-day wait 10-daywait where I live.
Nonetheless, you're pretty muchgoing to get that gun if you're
not a felon.
Where are these 10,000 assaultweapons going?
And think about an army of10,000 people.
You know you give one assaultweapon to per person, 10,000

(30:57):
people.
That's a pretty big assaultforce.
You imagine these loots andriots.
Imagine if some of those momswere at were armed.
So there's that.
Uh, you know, wow, okay.
Next one Um, okay.
So this one here is aboutelection interference.
Give me just one second here,okay.

(31:18):
So this next one is voter fraud.
So this is another one thatbroke this last week.
So this has to do with theelection that just happened in
New Jersey.
So this is vote-in-mailer fraud.
So New Jersey Democrats chargedwith mail-in voter fraud.
Two Patterson New Jerseycouncilmen the two men linked to

(31:39):
a councilman's campaign and twomen linked to a councilman's
campaign have been charged withelection fraud, mail-in voter
fraud and illegal possession ofmail-in ballots.
So this is this election cycle.
That just happened.
These guys just got electedlast week and New Jersey was one
of the first states toinstitute that whole COVID thing
with all mail-in ballots, sothey got rid of the voting
machines and went all in mail-inballots.

(31:59):
They announced an electionCOVID thing with all mail-in
ballots, so they got rid of thevoting machines, went all in
mail-in ballots.
The announced election fraudcase against Patterson City
Councilman Michael Jackson funname and Councilman-elect Alex
Mendez.
Shaquem Khaliq and Abdul Razinthat really makes me nervous.
Now, I hate to say it like that, but those last two names for
the people that weren't on theballot, yeah, those are foreign

(32:20):
names, okay, so Shaleen Khaliqis the brother of Patterson City
Councilman.
Shaleen Khaliq, the electedofficial behind the city
allowing an Islamic call Look, Icalled it, I didn't even read
this part.
An Islamic call to prayer.
That's not in any of the othernews.
So this particular article Ipulled from Breitbart.
Only Breitbart would have theguts to actually call these guys

(32:41):
out as Islamic.
They're the elected officialbehind allowing an Islamic call
to prayer in the city council.
These guys called it out.
Now, I had a handful of otherarticles Epoch Times, things
like that.
They all left that out, butsome of them were behind a
paywall and so, because Icouldn't get the full article, I
used Breitbart.
It was the only reason I wentto Breitbart and I called it
from the names, like oh, thosenames make me nervous and they

(33:05):
folks infiltration.
It's not an invasion, it's aninfiltration.
Okay, again, again, oh my gosh.
Okay, we're going to have to gotouch on another, another video
that you know what.
No, we're doing it right now.
I got to find it.
Give me a second, okay, so thisvideo is from it's 2016, 2015.

(33:26):
And what it is?
It's?
This was a little conferencethat some Muslims had, and we'll
just listen to it that you arepowerful.
You can make no difference this2016.

(33:46):
You can change the reality ofour time.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
This is the time for us, as American Muslims, to be
in the front, not to retreat,because all of you are leaders.
Your votes are your negotiatingpower in the year 2016.
Turn your centers, islamiccenters, mosques into
registration centers for voters.

(34:11):
Black Lives Matter is ourmatter.
Black Lives Matter is ourcampaign.
Basically, you are the newblack people.

Speaker 2 (34:24):
This is Kalia Sabra and she is a representative who
appears before the Department ofJustice Executive Office for
Immigration Review Board andBoard of Immigration Appeals.
So she's an attorney.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
People of America.
If we don't stand, you will seeMuslims murdered in the streets
.
We are the community thatstaged a revolution across the
world.
If we could do that, why can'twe have that revolution in
America?

Speaker 2 (34:53):
Okay, that was 2016 when that came out.
Why can't we have a revolutionin America?
Black Lives Matter is ourmatter.
So now back to New Jersey.
These are Islamic peoplerunning for your city councils.
Who is it that pulls the policeback?
Who is it that pulls the policeback when they're rioting and
looting?
It's the city councils and themayors.
They're the ones in charge ofthose departments.

(35:15):
They're the ones telling themnot to enforce the laws.
Equally right, and they're andin this particular case, I would
just assume there's aconnection here right?
These politically activeislamists in our country are,
you know?
I mean, you're religiouslybound.
I'm not.
I'm personally not making anydirect connection between these
two.
I'm just showing you that islamlong ago identified that black

(35:38):
lives matter was their cause.
They're Marxist.
They're Marxist.
If you understand the Islamicreligion, it's a theology that
demands a theocracy, which iswhat you got in Iran and Saudi
Arabia.
It's bad, okay, interesting,all right.
The charges allege that Jacksonviolated state election laws
when he collected mail-inballots from voters in recent

(35:59):
city council elections anddelivered them to the Passiac
County Board of Elections.
Jackson, according to thecharges, did not identify who he
was when he dropped off theballots.
In one case he took an unsealedballot that had not been filled
out and delivered it, sealed,to the Board of Elections.
Okay, one ballot.
Jackson, 48 years old, has beencharged with third-degree fraud
in casting mail-in vote,third-degree unauthorized

(36:22):
possession of ballots,third-degree tampering with
public records and fourth-degreefalsifying and tampering with
records.
Mendez, the charges allege,violated state election laws
when he too collected ballotsfrom the voters and delivered
them to the election officialswithout ever identifying who he
was.
Mendez, 45, has been chargedwith second-degree election
voter fraud.
Same thing, likewise chargedwith voter fraud.

(36:43):
Now here's where it gets really, really juicy.
So they face five years inprison, 18 months, $250,000 in
fines.
The charges come as Patterson'sall-mail-in ballot election was
allegedly ripe with fraud, grewRoll.

(37:05):
The FBI agent confirmed thatalmost listen to this 20% of the
mail-in votes cast were thrownout by the Board of Elections.
20%, almost 20% were thrown out.
Recent data has not shown acompelling public health
justification for mail-in voting.
In Wisconsin's April election,only 52 of more than 400,000
voters and poll workers wereconfirmed to have contracted the
Chinese coronavirus.
Okay, so 20% of the ballotswere fraudulent.

(37:28):
So these guys were involved inthat.
Now this brings me to what youknow again.
We've been going through thiswith our president is, you know
he wants to get rid of themail-in ballots and it seems
like you know there's one sideaisle thinks it's a good idea,
one side of the aisle thinksit's a bad idea.
So this is Justin Clark, seniorcounsel for the president, and
as he explains on 60 Minutesthis last weekend specifically

(37:50):
about mail-in ballots it's lesssecure than voting in person.

Speaker 5 (37:53):
We have countless instances this year of ballots
that were mailed to differentplaces.
I mean, how many times have youhad a birthday card or a
Christmas card that didn't makeit to somebody?
Add on top of that, trying tolayer this in four months before
an election, and you have arecipe for disaster.
The president votes by mail.
The president votes absentee.

(38:14):
That's different.
If you are absent, you're ill,you're out of state, you name it
.
There needs to be a mechanismwhereby people can get their
vote cast and, by the way,president Obama did it,
president Bush did it.
It's not uncommon.
Exactly.
It's not uncommon.
Absentee voting.
Universal vote by mail is verydifferent.
It's a very different thing.
Sounds like a distinctionwithout much of a difference.

(38:36):
The difference is the volume,the volume of live ballots being
mailed out to people withoutthe signature check, without the
signature match, without thesigning of the outer envelope.
Vote by mail is less secure.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
So, additionally, with that, when you are absentee
, you register, you have to goand request the ballot.
So you go and say, hey, I'm notgoing to be able to vote on
voting day, send me a singleballot.
When you just mass mail thesethings out, you don't know where
people are.
I mean LA County.
Los Angeles County had 1.2million people on their voter

(39:11):
rolls that are dead or no longerlive there, and it was Judicial
Watch that filed lawsuits thathad to have these people thrown
out.
At the 2018 midterm elections,there were multiple districts
where the percentage of peoplethat cast votes approached a,
for example.

(39:31):
Usually voter turnout is like30% to 40% of registered voters.
It's just the reality of whereit is.
You had areas where voterturnout was 70%, 80%, 90%, but
when they go in back and do pollsurveys, they can't find 70 or
80, 90% of registered voters whoclaim to have voted.
So what that implies isessentially voter fraud.
They ran up the tally and justkept the tally under the number

(39:51):
of registered voters, but it gotto such an obscene percentage
of registered voters.
It triggers all kinds of redflags and it's hard to prosecute
and hard to track.
So I really congratulate theDOJ for getting these guys,
especially in the like.
You know, these guys just gotswore in, so that's pretty good.
We've got the judge that didthe drug trafficking Okay.

(40:13):
We've got, okay, another oneBig Supreme Court win this week.
This deals with George Soros,which is why I really want to
touch it.
Supreme Court rules thatforeign Soros-backed operatives

(40:34):
do not have First Amendmentrights.
Kavanaugh wrote the decision.
They voted 5-4, of course, buthe said basically what it is is
these foreign organizations arelegally separate from the
American organizations andbecause foreign organizations
operate abroad do not possessconstitutional rights, those

(40:56):
foreign organizations do nothave first amendment right to
disregard the policyrequirements.
So what the policy requirementis is for federal funds to come
through them for whatever theywant to do.
Let's go back up and read here.
It says the Alliance for OpenSociety International hoped to
soak up federal funds earmarkedto stop HIV AIDS throughout the
world, so they would get federalmoney to go out and fight HIV
AIDS.
Guys, this is a corruptionracket.

(41:17):
If you can't tell, it's acorruption racket, whatever.
Okay, this is obviously acorruption racket, but they were
getting federal money to go fixaides.
However, they hit a snag due tothe, due to an act of Congress
banning any group that supportsprostitution from taking these
funds.
So if you're an Americancompany, you've got free speech
and you can say and supportanything you want.
But if you're a foreign companyand you're going to get

(41:38):
American taxpayer dollars, thenyou have rules to follow.
You don't have First Amendmentrights guaranteed, so you have
to meet our rules to get themoney.
George Soros and all of hisorganizations are
pro-prostitution.
You ever wonder why there'smore streetwalkers walking
around in your inner cities andwe talk about all these DAs,
district attorneys and peoplewho are supported by George
Soros at the local level andthey're not prosecuting those

(42:00):
crimes.
That's why that's theideological bent, that's the
money behind these people, andso this case effectively ends
that those foreign organizationsthey're separate, they don't
get the money.
So in some plaintiffs' foreignaffiliates are foreign
organizations and foreignorganizations operating abroad
possess no rights under the USConstitution, so they don't get

(42:22):
the money.
This is great Great news.
Great news that disrupts acorruption racket for sure.
Okay, here's another one.
This isn't a city council, butthis is just kind of an
interesting thing.
Ten defendants charged in.
Listen to this.
This is unbelievable.
And listen to this.
This is unbelievable.
1.4 billion in rural hospitalpass-through scheme.

(42:46):
10 individuals, includinghospital managers, laboratory
owners, billers and recruiters,were charged in an indictment
unsealed today for theirparticipation in an elaborate
pass-through billing scheme,using rural hospitals in several
states as billing shells tosubmit fraudulent claims for
laboratory testing.
The indictment alleges thatfrom approximately November 2015

(43:06):
through February 2018, so ittook them two years to do this
from when they you know thistime frame the conspirators
billed private insurancecompanies approximately $1.4
billion for laboratory testingclaims as part of this
fraudulent scheme and were paidapproximately $400 million.
Gosh, and we wonder whyObamacare doesn't work.

(43:26):
Rural hospitals they were usingrural hospitals.
You know what I say is comingto a neighborhood near you?
Well, rural hospitals, gosh,good gravy.
Okay, now for the big one.
This one came out June 23rd andthis one is going to have
far-ranging repercussions.

(43:48):
This story's not over.
The FBI charges member of LA LosAngeles City Council in a
corruption probe.
The FBI on Tuesday arrested LosAngeles City Councilman Jose
Huizar on racketeering charges.
After a long-running corruptionprobe.
Hulizar, a 51-year-old Democrat, was accused of taking for it

(44:25):
Chinese billionaire with a hotelin his district.
The FBI said the city councilstripped Hulizar of his powerful
chairmanship after the FBIraided his home in 2018.
The case pulled back thecurtain on rampant corruption at
City Hall, said Los Angeles USAttorney Nick Hanna.
Councilman Huizar violated thepublic trust to a staggering

(44:47):
degree, allegedly soliciting andaccepting hundreds of thousands
of dollars in bribes frommultiple sources over many years
, using the power of his officeto approve or stall large
building projects.
Who is our work?
Through a web of other corruptcity officials, lobbyists,
consultants and developers toline his pockets and maintain

(45:07):
his hold on Council District 14,which he turned into a
money-making criminal enterprisethat shaped the development
landscape in Los Angeles.
These council members can be sopowerful, so powerful.
It shaped the developmentlandscape in Los Angeles.
The complaint says that, afterbeing sued for sexual harassment

(45:30):
by a woman on a staff who hasaccepted $600,000 in funds from
Chinese billionaire to settlethe lawsuit this is so.
It's even got a sexual elementto it.
Go figure, right?
Go figure, now, people who arefrom LA, adam Schiff, who I've
mentioned on this podcast, right?
If you're operating illegallyin these cities, you're
operating with these guys is,you know, okay?

(45:52):
This is unbelievable.
It's unbelievable.
It really puts things into aninteresting light, and it puts
things in an interesting lightand it brings videos like this
into perspective.
So this is a city council inflorida and they're opening for
a meeting.
Now, you know, lots of citycouncils will open with a prayer
.
It's pretty normal in america.
We've been doing that for, youknow, 200 plus years.

(46:12):
So they're going to open with aprayer and they invite people
from wherever to come and givethe opening prayer.
Well, they invited someone togive the opening prayer and,
right when it happens, there area few of these council members
that just get up and leave theroom.
So I applaud them, but the vastmajority of them stay there.
So just listen to this prayer.

Speaker 6 (46:29):
Prize for the invocation, followed by the
Pledge of Allegiance, led byVice Mayor Scott Maxwell.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Okay, so a couple people bail out of the room.
They know what's coming, whichmeans this isn't the first time
this has happened, which is alsointeresting.
Right Like?
These are our elected officials.
They represent the majority ofthe people.
How did we get here?
Take a look.

Speaker 6 (46:55):
Duly noted Our collective atheism, which is to
say loving empathy, scientificevidence and critical thinking
leads us to believe that we cancreate a better, more equal
community without religiousdivisions.
May we pray together.
Mother Earth, we gather todayin your redeeming and glorious

(47:19):
presence to invoke your eternalguidance in the universe, the
original creator of all things.
May the efforts of this councilblend the righteousness of
Allah with the all-knowingwisdom of Satan.
May Zeus, the great god ofjustice, grant us strength
tonight.

(47:39):
Jesus might forgive ourshortcomings while Buddha
enlightens us through his divineaffection.
We praise you, krishna, for thesanguine sacrifice that freed
us all.
After all, if Almighty Thor iswith us, who can ever be against
us?
And finally, for the bounty oflogic reason and science.

(48:04):
We simply thank the atheists,agnostics, humanists, who now
account for one in fiveAmericans and growing rapidly.
In closing, let us, above all,love one another, not to obtain
mythical rewards for ourselvesnow, hereafter, or based on

(48:27):
superstitious threats of eternaldamnation, but rather embrace
secular-based principles ofmorality and do good for
goodness sake, and so we pray.
So what?

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Thank you, pastor.
You know it's mostly justtelling about who these people
are.
Right.
Now, again, you've got to letpeople have their First
Amendment.
This guy has every right togive that prayer, as we see.
But it says a lot about who,and you know when this kind of a
person gets invited, he'smaking a complete mockery on the

(49:05):
foundation of our Westernsociety.
He's making a complete mockeryof it.
You know he thanks thehumanists and those people, but
those people stand on theshoulders of religionists,
people who, you know, figuredout the purpose of our soul and
put together a framework bywhich we can all be free have
that law, order and security.

(49:26):
And so, anyways, it just says alot.
Right, the city council justkind of crazy.
Okay, I wanted to play thisvideo here because it's going to
well, this is Hillary Clintontalking about China, asking
China to interfere in theelection.
We'll pass on it.
It definitely fits in a lot ofareas, but anyways.

(49:47):
So I just wanted to go throughtoday and kind of go through,
like the local corruption is areal thing and it's really being
investigated all over, and itgoes through the headlines like
nobody the headlines and it justblows through.
Nobody knows.
La City Councilman reshapeddevelopment in LA Taking bribes.
Imagine me as a business ownerdecides I want to relocate to

(50:09):
sunny Southern California and Iwant to do a little development.
I've got some land I'minheriting.
You see how this plays out on avery simple level.
I've got some land I'minheriting from an uncle 15
acres kind of on the outskirtsof town, but it's with.
You know, it's been annexed.
It was part of the city limitsnow and I think I can put a
little subdivision on five acresand maybe there's some street
frontage, a couple of gasstations.
So I'm going to need someplanning and zoning.

(50:29):
You go down, you fill out yourapplications, you do all your
stuff.
You hire a planning and zoningattorney that's got some
expertise.
You pay them a bunch of money,you get all your applications
filled out and you go down tothe city council and they run
the clock out.
They just delay, delay, delay,delay it.
Because what are they doing?
They're sitting there withtheir hand out waiting for a
bribe.
How is that fair?
How do you know they'resupposed to take a bribe?
Or then you turn in yourapplication.

(50:51):
Then you walk out of thebuilding and someone comes, taps
you on the shoulder and say hey, you know, we could really rush
this through.
If you grease the wheel alittle bit, here's a little bit
of money.
Guys, this is third worldcorruption.
This is the kind of crap thathappens in Ukraine, where the
language of corruption is allthat's there.
When Donald Trump got elected tooffice, he met with business
leaders around the world.
One of the things they said wasstop the corruption.
We just want a fair playingfield, because when there's

(51:16):
bribes and things like thathappening, you don't know what
your competition's doing.
So it's not about your product,it's not about your efficiency,
it's not about being effectiveat delivering a product to
market or a high quality productthat people want.
It's about corruption.
So you can put a crappy productto the market if you paid off
the council member.
So imagine doing like asubdivision or development.

(51:38):
But you've got to put a hundredthousand dollars in bribes
probably more than that.
So you're not going to put thatinto the houses to make a
better quality product, soyou're going to skip.
Do you see how this startshappening?
So we, the people, the peasants, get screwed by the developer,
who get a lesser quality product.
He's getting screwed becausehe's got to pay the bribe and
he's participating in the wholedirty system because it's so
dirty he'll never be able tobuild if he doesn't pay the

(52:00):
bribe.
So they hold him hostage.
It's extortion, it'sracketeering, the whole thing is
messed up.
You've got city council membersin New Jersey, 20% of the
election was of, the votes werefraud.
20%, 20%.
I mean imagine that.
So if Donald Trump wants to winin 2020 and those numbers hold

(52:23):
true, then he needs to win byabout an 80-20 landslide in
order to just make the thinglook, because it's going to end
up being 60-40 or 51-49, right,he's got to win 70% just to make
up for the fake votes, the fakeballots.
Oh boy, oh boy, you got ruralfraud.

(52:43):
It's all over.
I mean, if you spend enough timeand you take enough time,
there's really no state, there'sreally no region that's not
affected by this kind ofcorruption.
And who's got to hold themaccountable?
We do.
We have to back the blue, butwe have to demand that they
follow the rules.
We can't I mean, it's aconstant theme when these
institutions are cracking undertheir own weight.

(53:05):
We've got to take a step back,get rid of the problems and just
reinforce this thing.
One of the things that Istruggle with is the time frame
of justice.
You know, I understand it takestime, but, gosh, there's got to
be a way to shorten this up.
I mean some of these people likeGhislaine Maxwell.
I could have had her dead torights a long time ago just from
open source information, butwhatever, okay, so that pretty

(53:27):
much wraps us up.
Pretty much wraps us up.
And you can find me on Twitter,at ThePesant'sPod, on Parler,
at Peasant'sPod, at Facebook atThePesant'sPerspective, and my
email at Peasant'spod atgmailcom.
I'd love to hear from you guys.
I appreciate it very much.
Share the show.
It's really the only way I grow.
I thought you know when youpost, I post the show up on

(53:50):
Facebook.
Most of you probably found itthrough Facebook or Twitter or
whatever, but anyways, it alwayssays you know, do you want to
boost this post?
Boost this post.
So I thought you know I'm goingto boost.
I put I'll just put like $5 onjust to see.
See what kind of response I get.
Now the ad got rejected, ofcourse, because I've been
flagged.
So we only grow organically.
So please share the show if you, and I really appreciate it.

(54:15):
Also, I do have a correctionfrom yesterday.
I said Mark Twain wrote CommonSense.
It was Thomas Paine that wroteCommon Sense.
It was just kind of a flip ofthe tongue.
Mark Twain came off a littleeasier than Thomas Paine.
But Thomas Paine wrote CommonSense.
All right, thanks, guys, I'lltalk to you tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Who are the Britons?
We all are.
We are all Britain and I amyour king.
I didn't know we had a king.
I thought we were an autonomouscollective.
You're fooling yourself.
We're living in a dictatorship,a self-perpetuating autocracy,
in which the working class is oh, there you go, bringing class
into the gang.
That's what it's all about.
If only people would Please,please, good people.

(54:51):
I am in haste.
Who lives in that castle?
No-one lives there.
Then, who is your lord?
We don't have a lord.
What I told you.
We're an anarcho-syndicalistcommune.
We take it in turns to act as asort of executive officer for
the week.
Yes, but all the decisions ofthat officer have to be ratified
at a special bi-weekly meeting.

(55:11):
Yes, I see, by a simplemajority in the case of pure
internal affairs, be quiet, butby a two-thirds majority in a
case of being quiet.
I order you to be quiet.
All right, I think he is.
I'm your king.
Well, I didn't vote for you.
You don't vote for kings.
Well, how do you become kingthen?
The lady of the lake, her armclad in the purest, shimmering

(55:33):
samite, held aloft Excaliburfrom the bosom of the water,
signifying by divine providencethat I, arthur, was to carry
Excalibur.
That is why I'm your king.
Listen strange women lying inponds distributing swords is no
basis for a system of government.
Supreme executive power derivesfrom a mandate from the masses,

(55:55):
not from some farcical aquaticceremony Be quiet.
But you can't expect to wieldsupreme executive power just
because some watery tart threw asword at you.
Shut up.
If I went round saying I was anemperor just because some
moistened bint had loved ascimitar at me, they'd put me
away.
Shut up, will you Shut up?
Now?
We see the violence inherent inthe system.

(56:16):
Shut up.
Come and see the violenceinherent in the system.
Help help.
Violence inherent in the system.
Shut up.
Come and see the violenceinherent in the system.
Help Help.
I'm being repressed, bloodypeasant.
Oh, what a giveaway.
Did you hear that?
Did you hear that?
Eh, that's what I'm on about.
Did you see him repressing me?
You saw it, didn't you?
© transcript, emily Beynon.
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