Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
And when they went to
the queen To tell her Her
subjects had no bread.
Do you know what she said?
Let them eat cake here you takethe bomb.
Speaker 4 (00:15):
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 got to 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.
We're those people.
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofthe peasants perspective.
We're a couple minutes late,nobody notices.
Speaker 6 (00:57):
I mean come on, what
are you talking about?
Speaker 4 (01:00):
I think ron set a
record today.
He got in here and fired thisthing up in like two minutes
flat.
I was like man, if you couldjust get here by 628, we'd be
good.
Speaker 6 (01:09):
And there was no
hiccups either.
Look at this Audio works.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
I know what the heck.
Speaker 6 (01:15):
Is that first?
We should be late every day.
Dude, this is amazing.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
The show starts at
640.
Now, folks, apparently theinternet's less crowded at 6 30
maybe, I don't know well, theroads are more crowded.
Speaker 6 (01:27):
The roads are more
crowded, yeah yeah, as you get
close to that increment, thatferry definitely fills up my
estimate for how long it wasgoing to take to get here when I
was calling.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
Late was off a little
you know it's funny because,
depending on how you catch itright, I'll be driving down here
it's about a 20 minute drivefrom my house to this office and
cars will be passing me LikeI'm going 50 and a 50 and
they're going 82 and a 50.
And there's always like threeor four and it's like, oh,
they're all rushing to theBainbridge Ferry.
Speaker 6 (01:59):
Yes exactly Deadline
to get there, you're not going
to miss it.
Speaker 4 (02:07):
And then as soon as
you get like that rush, like
there's this window of time,wherever I'm at on the road, I
get you know it's like yep,that's the ferry rush.
Yep, it's hilarious when, onthe highway by the grocery store
at my house, when the ferrylets off, different ferry.
We live on a peninsula, so it'sferries everywhere, yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:23):
But there'll be a
steady stream, steady stream of
cars.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
We're like where the
heck, are all these people
coming from?
Exactly All coming from theferry.
All right, tulsi Gabbard, inher interview with Miranda
Devine, had a little interestingdiscussion about aliens.
Speaker 11 (02:40):
And there's been a
lot of.
My husband is in the corner,for the record, pumping his fist
right now that you're askingthis question so I mean, is
there anything?
Speaker 10 (02:50):
we've had some
declassification of some very
strange videos that look likethey are, you know, unidentified
flying objects.
Is there anything in the filesthat you think you could find or
you?
Speaker 11 (03:01):
have found um
nothing that I'm prepared to
talk about today so watch thisspace, watch this space um, we
are continue.
I'm just gonna say this um,yeah, we're continuing to look
for the truth, uh, and sharethat truth with the American
(03:23):
people.
Speaker 10 (03:23):
The truth is out
there, so do you believe that
there could be?
Speaker 11 (03:30):
aliens.
I honestly like my personalbelief.
I have my own views andopinions.
In this role I got to becareful with what I share.
Very interesting, I'm laughingmy husband's laughing in the
corner because he we have thesesame conversations and obviously
I don't share any classifiedinformation uh, outside of my
(03:53):
building with those who haveclearances.
But it's, it's, this is.
This is fun that he's here towatch.
Speaker 10 (04:00):
Cause it's so
interesting.
I think it's one of thoseburning things, Of course of
course, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 11 (04:05):
There are a lot of
questions and there's a lot
that's been put out there, andI'm still going through and
looking through.
What do we know and what is itthat we don't know?
Speaker 10 (04:20):
And the New Jersey,
the strange objects over New
Jersey were drones.
Speaker 11 (04:25):
I still have a lot
of questions around that.
I've heard what the publicofficial line is.
I just personally still have alot of questions that are
unanswered, because it wasn'tjust New Jersey, it was
happening in different parts ofthe country.
Oh really.
Speaker 10 (04:42):
And we had the
Chinese spy balloon.
I mean, who knows?
Speaker 6 (04:45):
so was it aliens long
time listener, first time
caller.
I saw lights every singleanswer that she gave was like
confirmation of a slow drip youknow like.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
Well, I can't answer
that one, it's coming yeah, so
there's so much to look at thealien thing is fascinating,
because it's a paradigm changerfor sure.
Yeah, like confirmation ofspace it's.
I think one of the big thingsthat you read about a lot is
it'll cause everybody toquestion whatever religion
you're in.
Speaker 6 (05:18):
And I think yeah, and
reality period.
Speaker 4 (05:20):
And reality period.
Yeah, and I think if you'revery dogmatic that'll be a
problem.
Of course they could also comewith new information, like hey,
it turns out the real God's nameis Jared.
Yeah, that's the great creator.
Jesus is his little nephew.
You know I could be somethingcrazy, you know.
So it's just again.
(05:42):
You know, more time you got tohold something that doesn't
quite square.
It intersects with the epsteinthing when the victims are like
he turned into a reptile andthen at that point I'm like I
don't know if we make reptilesregister on the sex affinity.
It's like I don't know how thisworks.
I feel like they have adifferent set of rules.
Like yeah, I feel like I shouldjust be grateful they haven't
eaten me.
Speaker 6 (05:57):
Yeah I don't know.
Let's see what we can get dogeto do for us.
Yes, you know what we can getsome efficiency here.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
All right.
So yesterday Robert Kennedy Jrwe announced played on the show
that he is terminating 22contracts into mRNA vaccines and
discontinuing them forrespiratory viruses.
They don't work.
Well, there's been a lot.
There was a lot of criticismyesterday.
Wow, these viruses work.
Here was a little bit of it onMSNBC.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
Dr Offit your
reaction to this latest move and
what does it mean for vaccinedevelopment going forward?
Speaker 12 (06:32):
It's a sad day for
science in this country.
We have mRNA vaccines saved ourlives.
You know the?
It was estimated that in 2021,you were 12 times more likely to
be hospitalized and die if youdidn't get a vaccine than if you
did in 2020.
Speaker 6 (06:48):
OK, I want to swear,
so bad.
Speaker 4 (06:52):
These again.
This goes to either you have adog in the fight or you believed
all the fake news, those statsaren't real.
Those stats aren't real.
Four years later, we're stilltalking about this.
I get it.
People died, things weredrastically affected.
The border got opened as adirect result of the chaos in
2020.
But the vaccine saved people.
Speaker 12 (07:13):
Two years, six times
more likely to be hospitalized
and die.
It's a phenomenal technologyand it was remarkably safe.
I mean, I'm on the FDA VaccineAdvisory Committee.
When we looked at those data inDecember of 2020, we were only
looking at 35,000 people who hadreceived that vaccine.
All of us were worried that theother shoe was going to drop,
that there was going to be amuch more serious side effect
(07:34):
that we would see when.
Speaker 4 (07:35):
And we found out they
could cancel those experiments
and gave the vaccine to all ofthe placebo group.
The control group, just so wecouldn't be able to
differentiate between thehealthy and the unhealthy
placebo group.
The control group, just so wecouldn't be able to
differentiate between thehealthy and the exactly millions
of people, now hundreds ofmillions.
And, by the way, that's inwriting in the the pfizer docs
yes, so there is no controlgroup there is no control group.
Speaker 12 (07:53):
You have no idea
what the compare contrast is, as
if people were vaccinated andthat wasn't true, although the
vaccine could cause myocarditis,meaning inflammation of the
heart muscle that was rare andthat one was so blatant it
literally created a diedsuddenly epidemic.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
Yeah, you had high
school athletes dropping dead at
a rate that was way accelerated.
Now some critics, like ScottAdams, has been like that wasn't
really happened.
It's always been happening.
You're right across the world.
There have been drop deadathletes consistently, and some
of the videos that got put inthe montages, yes, came from
years prior to 2020.
But you can't dispute the 80%increase for a two-year period
(08:33):
on died suddenly, includingsomeone who had a significant
heart event on the field in anNFL game.
Speaker 6 (08:40):
Well, the
acknowledgement by this
gentleman here is proof thatthey could just could not ignore
this part of it.
They could not ignore it.
Speaker 12 (08:48):
It was transient and
self-resolving and short-lived
as the same from the virus whichcould cause myocarditis, which
could cause you to behospitalized, go to the
intensive care unit and die.
It is a remarkable technology,and not only for COVID and not
only for infectious diseases,but also for cancer, for gene
therapy, and eliminating all ofthis research and development at
(09:08):
BARDA is a tragic mistake thatis not based on a science-based
decision.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Dr Offit, your
reaction to this latest move?
Speaker 4 (09:17):
So politics and
science have intersected.
Speaker 6 (09:20):
How much stock do you
got in mercury bro?
Speaker 4 (09:24):
I know it's nuts.
I always try to point this out.
It might sound like we'rebeating a dead horse.
Sometimes it's the internallogic of certain things.
Right, the system is set up insuch a way that we're the losers
.
It's going and gambling at thecasino.
The house always wins.
You might be in a jackpot fromtime to time, but you're going
to like the odds are wellstacked against you.
(09:47):
That's how it feels likedealing with an empire, a
government that's notaccountable to the people.
Here's an example of this.
There's a music background, soit's going to make the
background choppy, but he'stalking about how the government
basically plays you.
Speaker 8 (10:02):
Government comes to
you and says we want to go kill
people in the Middle East andsecure the oil lines and, by the
way, if we do that, you'regoing to have to pay 20% more in
tax.
You, okay with that, you'regoing to go.
I don't want to pay 20% more intax and I don't want to kill
people in the Middle East.
Okay, well, they don't have themoney to do it.
Fine, we're going to do it.
We're just gonna deficit byprinting the paper.
(10:23):
Instead, we're gonna get the 20out of you either way, rob,
you're just, we're gonna do itto the back door.
We're gonna print the money andyour stake is gonna cross 20
more.
Yeah, instead of getting yourconsent, they do it without your
consent.
Ron paul said it's not acoincidence that the 20th
century was the century ofcentral banking and it was also
a century of warfare governmentcome.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
I had an amazing
discussion yesterday with a
bitcoin billionaire I don't knowif he's really a billionaire or
not, but a bitcoin guy okay,who keeps everything in bitcoin
and he sent me bitcoin yesterdayin a matter of seconds and you
know, from download the app tohere's five dollars in your
pocket.
I was like whoa, that was cool,very cool technology.
(11:07):
There is change a bruin,because this is the equation
that americans are waking up to.
You have traded wars that wedidn't have to pay for, but we
paid for it in through the backdoor, through rising prices.
When they control the printer,they control it all, and it's
like your savings means nothingto them, it's just money they
can take and move.
(11:27):
It is the craziest thing.
So I saw that and I was likethat is a great little example.
Katherine austin fitz talksabout george hw bush, or george
bush's contribution to the iraqwar was you can be good little
christians, just look the otherway while we do our business
over here and be like because itused to be, you had to.
There was like you couldn'tquite split the baby, and george
(11:48):
hw bush was like now let's,let's go.
Anti-abortion, pro-kill hajilike yeah, let's do that, and
that's something I pointed outin my writing.
Common sense applied today.
I was, like you know, for thefirst time because of the
hegelian dialectic, they'vesplit all the major issues.
If you're pro-life and you wantto support babies in the womb,
(12:08):
then you have to vote for theparty that supports bombing kids
overseas.
If you are anti-war, thenyou've got to vote for the party
that supports killing babies inthe womb.
So in your mind, you're like,well, I'm pro-life or I'm
anti-war, and they're like, no,you're pro-death.
Either way, you're getting thesame result.
And Donald Trump's the firstmajor politician in our
generation that has said no,we're not splitting the baby
(12:30):
anymore.
Right, we're taking all theissues.
We're doing what makes sense,common sense.
So we played a small part ofthis clip yesterday.
This is Devin Nunes talking tojust the news about the
Russiagate scandal.
This is a longer clip.
He kind of breaks it down alittle bit more and again, this
is like an everyday thing atthis point.
(12:51):
Every day we're getting newlittle tidbits of information,
new little bits of analysis, andwe want to absorb it, because
what happens is a lot of thisstuff will get memory hold.
There's the new media thatRussiaussia made up the fact
that hillary had paid for thedossier.
So the dossier is in factrussian information, staged to
look like it was not russianinformation.
(13:14):
You see what I'm saying.
So there's like they're doinganother, another play to try to
change the narrative, to make itbe like no russia did interfere
and they interfered by cookingup this clinton scandal, that
that she was trying to painttrump as a russian asset.
You see what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (13:30):
It's like I'm sure
that's the opposite of what you
said before was putting at thetable when obama was giving
those orders.
Dude, that's ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (13:39):
So we want to be on
this like a blood hound.
We want to know what the mostlatest breaking thing is,
because you never know when, allof a sudden, the headlines are
all going to come out.
There's total consensus thatbarack obama is completely
innocent and did nothing wrong,and it's all kevin klein's
misfault right, it's the guy whogot the misdemeanor.
It's all his fault.
You see like they can redirect.
(14:00):
So you need to know the truthso you can see through it.
Speaker 13 (14:02):
Remember you have to
start out with is there is no
media.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
The legacy media in
this country is solely owned by
the Democratic Party and sothere's one thing yeah, so we
know that we talk about itregularly, but again, they have
a lot of sway.
We still play clips from themedia.
Yeah, right, we put it throughour lens and our filter, but
they're broadcasting all daylong.
Speaker 13 (14:28):
And when I was in
prison I learned something.
There are people who watch thenews left and they're moving
farther and farther.
Economics has driven some ofthis where a lot of these news
channels are no longerprofitable.
It's very tough to make it inthe news business, and so you
had groups like Fusion GPS thatgot stood up and you had these
kind of alternative fake newsdevelopers and seeders.
(14:50):
They go out, they develop fakestuff, they seed it, they water
it, they grow it and then theypay kind of the media that's
left out there.
They're like the minions andthey go out and harvest it and
they just regurgitate it overand over and over again.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
So the Fusion GPS
group is one of these groups
that creates news stories.
That's the whole point is theyget enough background
information.
You know it's.
We got to create your fake ID,so we have to create a social
media account and make it looklike it's old, and you know
that's what they do.
That is what they do.
They create media products,intelligence products that then
the customer can do whateverthey want.
(15:25):
It's a political campaign,opposition research packaged up
in a certain way.
A couple victims, blah, blah,blah, boom, you've got a scandal
cooked up.
Speaker 13 (15:33):
They did that and,
of course, they took it into the
fbi and turned it into acriminal investigation what
you're seeing is is acombination of a lot of facts,
but basically it's the collapseof the whole media complex, and
that's why so we're bifurcatedin this in this country, with
what I would say real news andpeople trying to get to the real
news.
(15:53):
Ie, you know what you do, John,at just the news every day, and
then you have this cabal of ofjackals and people that are
being paid for, paid under thetable, people that are being
bought free dinners in order to,you know, promote a story.
Speaker 4 (16:10):
So, John, which, by
the way, nobody has taken me out
to dinner.
They're really co-conspirators.
I could probably be reallycheap in this.
Speaker 13 (16:19):
Now, when I say that
, does it mean that they are
going to be busted?
You know I doubt it, but theywere the recipient of illegal
leaks of classified information.
Point one, general Flynn thatwas a leak I originally, you
know, came out and said what thehell is going on here?
Back in early 2017, this isright before all the ICA, russia
(16:41):
crap, stuff happened.
So these are massive leaks.
What the hell's going on Like?
Why isn't every FBI agentaround in Washington DC, you
know, trying to track down howthese leaks of an incoming
administration are happening?
So they were involved in theseillegal leaks classified
information and in fact, theyjust continued.
Today, I mean even recently,just in the Trump administration
(17:01):
, you had illegal leaks from theintelligence agencies that were
designed to harm PresidentTrump.
So therein lies where we sittoday.
Thankfully, there is a grandjury investigation that that has
begun and hopefully I know thatthere was a strike force that
was stood up by the Departmentof Justice and and hopefully
(17:22):
justice will be served to thesecriminals.
This has been criminal activitythat has been ongoing.
If you want to go back all theway to Benghazi, right, I can
even take it as far back as that, but for sure against President
Trump.
It started in late 2015, forsure early 2016.
That was what our investigationuncovered was that it wasn't
(17:45):
just the steel dossier.
You may remember right, johnand amanda, through lee smith's
reporting, uh, he actually foundwhat we, what we nicknamed I
don't know if there's really aname for him, but they were
proto dossiers, yeah, and,interestingly enough, they
weren't tying trump to putin,but they were tying trump to
dirty oligarchs around the world.
Speaker 4 (18:07):
Oh yeah, the proto
dossiers you don't remember this
oh, basically they were writingthese articles tying trump to
different oligarchs and theywere like floating out the idea
and it was this it was again thesame guys at fusion gps and
then they basically kind ofrefined it for hillary clinton's
package.
But they were, they werefloating these things out there
and it actually goes back to themccain time.
(18:29):
These guys were trying to do itto mccain first during the the
uh, when mccain was runningagainst uh obama oh, yeah, they
had alreadysome of the accusations that
went to from trump were word forword.
All these old articles thatthey had published that were
smear pieces.
They just took out McCain.
It could have been Romney.
No, it was McCain.
(18:49):
It was McCain.
Speaker 6 (18:49):
I think you're right.
Speaker 4 (18:50):
They took out McCain
and they inserted Trump and it
was just like boom.
I mean, you know, a littleGoogle search, a little
ready-made scandal, exactly.
Speaker 13 (18:59):
All fake all
nonsense and once that kind of
failed and stumbled, then theyturned to weaponizing the FBI
and the CIA, as we know, inaround March or April of 2016.
And it culminates with the raidat Mar-a-Lago.
So they were targetingPresident Trump and have been
for a very, very long time.
These guys are doing is likethe Charles Manson of politics
(19:24):
and manipulation of intelligenceand conspiracy.
People have died, people havebeen, people have lost their
livelihoods, people have losttheir careers, people have not
been promoted, families havebeen destroyed, finances have
been wiped out, millions ofAmericans were kicked off of
social media.
News networks like RealAmerica's Voice were not allowed
(19:46):
onto the legacy media platforms.
This damage is far and wide andhas been ongoing for a long
time.
So so Nixon is is not even adrop in the bucket to what this
kind of two or three dozencriminals in and around the
Clinton operation operation, thednc and obama's operation, and
biden's operation for thatmatter uh, have been, have been
(20:09):
doing now for over a decade itis going to be fascinating to
see what comes of all of this.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
I'm like, seriously,
every day I'm like, I'm bated
breath, I'm waiting for anindictment to come out and I I
my expectations are low, butthey're high enough to expect
something, something, something,something.
Sapphire Patriot on YouTube.
Good morning peasants and weed,and boys as well.
Sapphire Patriot, I got sentyour YouTube channel yesterday
and I was cruising around ittaking a look.
It's pretty awesome.
(20:34):
Glad you're here with us everymorning.
Ok, so this is a January sixerwho has become a huge advocate
for criminal justice reform.
And then, of course, just goingafter all the J6 nonsense, this
is Trennis Evans with LauraLogan, and we're going to listen
to this because this again isthat effect.
This is what this weaponizationof the government and the
(20:57):
lawfare led to, some stuff thatyou know.
January 6th, we got to see thejudicial corruption Still being
exposed.
Speaker 6 (21:04):
Up front and close.
Speaker 4 (21:05):
Yeah, Buffering.
It's always nice when we getthe spinning circle perfect
transition.
Speaker 9 (21:17):
Here we go in the
united states of america, we are
the country number five in lineper capita of actually
imprisoning the most citizens.
Number five around the world.
Number five the land of thefree imprisons more citizens
than per capita than any numberof nations that you would look
at and think that it would be adeplorable thing to look at.
(21:38):
Right, that should disturbpeople.
And we start looking at thejudiciary.
This is the beauty of January6th to me.
This is what I say is this hadwe have not had a look through
this lens that magnified thejudiciary as it did for January
6th, had we have not had thislook, had it just been the
one-offs like the Michael Flensand others and Ted Stevens and
(21:58):
the stories we can relate toback through history, but when
they did it in mass, when theygot greedy, they did it in mass
and they did it to so many, itbecame apparent.
Now it's abundantly apparent tothe American citizen that our
judiciary is a corrupt andcaptured operation that has to
have a total reform.
We saw what they did toPresident Trump.
We've seen what they've done toothers.
(22:19):
If you don't take thisopportunity, what happened in
January 6th is a total loss.
There can be some good comefrom this, a silver lining, and
that is the reform of ourjudiciary through impeachments
and holding these peopleaccountable.
That operated with bias, thatoperated with impropriety.
We know what happened.
It's right there on the record.
Two different judges that werenot my judge suggested that I
(22:41):
took part in an insurrection.
Insurrection is a crime, a UScode.
You don't have somebody in andtry them for jaywalking and then
call them a murderer, becausemurder is a different crime.
That judge can say you'restupid.
They can say you're a moron.
They can say all kinds ofthings in sentencing, but you
can't use the words.
You can't accuse them of a crime.
They've never been charged.
Yes, and that's exactly whatthey did.
(23:02):
They called it an insurrectionand it became the narrative.
And that's the problem.
These judges know that theycan't do this.
That's impropriety, and you'vegot to set an example and you've
got to strike down this kind ofassault or affront to our
judicial system.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
Yeah, so this is
exactly what I'm talking about
with them.
There are still people in thiscountry including I have family
members that you can't show themthe truth and get them to
accept it anymore.
I mean, they still are like ohyeah, it was an insurrection.
It's like what are you talkingabout, dude?
Speaker 4 (23:38):
so.
So I was filling out a uhpassport form so I needed some
data.
I needed to make sure I didn'thave my parents birthday and
stuff wrong.
So I was.
While I was waiting for a textback from my mom to confirm a
couple things, I'm embarrassedto say, I couldn't just rattle
off my parents birthday, I endedup having it all right, by the
(24:00):
way, I got their birthdays right.
But because I felt like I wasguessing, I was like I've got to
confirm this.
So, dumb Mom, when's yourbirthday?
Where were you born?
I should know that anyways.
But while I was doing that, youknow, I did a Google search.
I'm like, well, maybe I can youknow, maybe there's a quick
marriage certificate or whateverinformation I needed.
(24:20):
Do you guys have safe words?
No, in fact, let me just showyou this.
Oh, no, showing.
So if I put in, if I just putin my name, right, john Attack
is oh, I put it, it went into X.
Right, john attack is oh, I putit, it went into X.
(24:41):
I want to go to.
Now I have no screen.
What happened here completelylogged me out.
Okay, so if I go to Google,right, and I put in my last name
, now keep in mind.
You know all my family has mylast name, but my boys
especially have my name.
As you go through here, it'sall J6.
I mean you can get to like, hey, Jay, it's still J6.
Look, let's just keepeverything.
(25:03):
It's every hit for John.
Attack is just nonsense.
And then I found this.
Let's see, I found this to beagain.
I used to see stuff like thisand I'd be like, oh, like it
would really kind of get get me.
But this did not like for thefirst time in.
I don't know, it's not likefirst time ever, but it's like I
(25:25):
just don't care.
All right, so you come here, Iagain my name popped up here
criminal proceedings in thejanuary 6 united states capital
attack.
So I was going through here, youattacker, and I mentioned in
here I like have my own section.
Oh really, yeah, did you fillit out?
No, I fixed it.
So here is a aggravated bypolice assault.
Speaker 12 (25:50):
So this is this is
crazy.
Speaker 4 (25:52):
Uh, exempt from us.
Now there were multiple peoplewho actually made claims that
they were exempt, that thejurisdiction didn't cover you
know, the sovereign citizenfolks.
They're not included in here.
I get included.
I did not do that, taylor James.
John Takis said he acceptedfull liability for leading a
crowd of rioters but did notplead guilty, and then media
claimed that he was a sovereigncitizen to whom the US law did
(26:14):
not apply.
Although Mr John Takacs nevermade that claim, a judge later
sentenced him to more than sevenyears in prison, saying this
cannot become normal.
Speaker 6 (26:23):
So I got my own
section there.
Speaker 4 (26:25):
Then I was mentioned
in notable sentencings.
I had my own little sectionhere.
Anyways, just kind of like Ijust I think it's funny because,
like, my co-defendants didn'tget mentioned and one of them
even got a longer sentence thanI did.
But yeah, that's that.
So this is peter devaro.
Uh, anyways, point is lots ofdamage, insurrectionist.
(26:49):
My, you know, my media profileall lies like nobody got
anything accurate, no one, Imean.
I guess after I wasincarcerated we didn't have like
, the atlantic magazine came anddid an interview with my wife,
but you know that's because herwife, her wife was on my jury so
that's why she was aware of meand was like wow, when they
(27:11):
found out seven years the jurorfelt guilty.
Like oh, that was a lot for that, like I didn't realize it would
be that much.
It's like that's why they don'ttell you the sentencing,
because you realize there'soften a disparity from the
things that happened and thethings the time you serve.
So this is Peter Navarro, whohimself went to prison over just
the entire narrative here andhe's got.
(27:31):
He's got some something to sayabout George Soros, soros.
Now let me just really shiftgears radically.
Speaker 14 (27:37):
Um, because I want
to talk a little bit about uh
the russia hoax, the brastleyreport and the durham annex uh
which came out um last week.
I I had been working with uhsenator brastley's office.
Uh, I gotta give him three,three uh cheers because he's
been working relentlessly to getout the information about uh
(28:01):
the russia hoax.
And here's what I want to say Iwent to prison.
I went to prison, as did stevebannon for defending the
constitution, but there isn't asingle person associated with
the russia hoax that's been heldaccountable.
And the list is a long one.
It goes Obama, clinton, fbiDirector Comey and the people.
(28:24):
Other people worked there, likePage and Struck.
It involved the intelligencecommunity and Brennan and
Clapper.
And the importance of theDurham Index, the annex.
The importance of the Durhamannex is that ties it all
together and brings also inGeorge Soros and his son, alex,
(28:44):
and the Open Society Foundation.
And there is just.
This is the most sophisticatedpolitical scandal that's ever
been engineered.
One's been held accountable.
Good for Attorney General PamBondi for pursuing that.
And, the most important thing,I can tell you, if people are
(29:07):
not held accountable for theRussia hoax, they will do it
again.
If people are not heldaccountable, they will do it
again, and that's what I'm mostconcerned about.
Okay, that is my biggestconcern too.
Me too.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
So yesterday I was
talking about talking to the
Bitcoin guy I hope to introducehim to this audience and he was
talking about the truckers up inCanada and how they had their
bank accounts shut down and theystarted using Bitcoin and it
was a viable alternative and Iwas like, bro, that happened to
me.
I had my bank account shut down.
I was like it did.
It's like, yeah, like it's notjust happening in Canada, it's
(29:43):
here, like everything you thinkis possible and third world.
They're doing openly.
They just have a better mediaapparatus, you know.
And when Sri Lanka does it,it's you know, the media just
remains silent.
And everybody knows the mediais in the tank anyways.
It's like they say in china,the difference between a chinese
person and american person.
And they'll tell you to yourfaces you think the news is real
(30:04):
.
We know we're beingpropagandized.
They know the opposite.
The dam is safe, it's notbreaking.
Run, evacuate now.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
You know what I mean
like they.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
They have a different
percent.
Russia felt the same way.
Right, they understood thatpravda was fake.
It became known there wasn't.
You couldn't deny it, nobodyyou know.
You only ran the party linewhen you knew there was trouble.
You never, never believedpravda.
But yet people still believethe news.
People like this norm isom,norm, isom isom.
He is one of these manipulators.
(30:36):
He doesn't't hold governmentposition, although he has been
an ambassador to Czechoslovakiawhere he was having Justice John
Roberts.
Come and be close friends inhis home.
Keep in mind, this is as farleft Democrat corruptocrat as it
gets who's you know?
Buddy, buddy with Supreme CourtJustice John Roberts.
But he's talking aboutessentially bragging on PBS
about the operation they've hadto go after Trump.
(30:57):
It's a longer piece, but this isone of the brains behind all of
this.
This is one of the guys that'senabled this incredible amount
of lawfare.
He's at the center of a lot ofit and he's buffering.
He's got a little bit of anannoying voice.
We're taking calls from theWest Coast.
We're taking calls from theWest Coast.
Right calls from the west coast.
(31:17):
Let's see tiffany and carlito.
Hey, hey, you're here.
Hi, tiffany, smash that likey'all.
Smash that like y'all yes smashthe like button.
Smash the like button.
Smash the follow button.
Share the show with 22 peopleyou know.
Post it on your social medias.
Yes, grow the show.
This afternoon we have theIgnite presentation at 1776.
(31:38):
If you haven't registered forthat, go check out 1776liveus
and register for the webinar.
It'd be great.
Okay, here's Norm Eisen.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
My organization, the
State Democracy Defenders Fund.
We were born out of the successin stopping the attempted coup
of 2020.
And I kind of got the peoplewho I admired the most.
I worked representing multipleparties fighting in court, but
(32:08):
also in the court of publicopinion, in that unsuccessful
effort to reverse the legitimateoutcome of the 2020 election.
I got the best people togetherwho I thought.
Speaker 4 (32:21):
I love how, as an
attorney, to reverse the
legitimate outcome of the 2020election, you just protest too
hard, my friend.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
We're the toughest,
the smartest and who won a lot
in 2020.
And we added in building ourorganization.
We started this immediatelyafter this work started, on
January 7th.
This new work 2021, right afterthe coup failed.
When the violent insurrectionthat Trump inspired on January
(32:56):
6th was defeated, I startedcombining the most successful
coup fighters that I came acrossin my work in 2020 with experts
who had helped study or defeatautocracy internationally.
So we went to places over theintervening years, like Hungary
(33:21):
and Turkey, where the effort tooust an autocrat failed.
Why did it fail?
What did they fail to do?
But we also looked at placeslike Poland, brazil, czech
Republic the country where Iserved as ambassador where there
were successful ousters inrecent years of autocratic
regimes, and we came togetherover that four year period with
(33:45):
a plan to defeat autocracy.
Speaker 4 (33:48):
It's not just
litigation, ok litigation is
legal, like literally like yougo to court, you open a case.
It might be annoying, but thejudge can either throw it out,
extend it, that's at leastthat's like where you're
supposed to go.
He is admitting to a grandscale conspiracy here.
It's international and we knowsome of these countries he's
(34:11):
mentioning had CIA involvementin these alleged ousters.
Speaker 6 (34:15):
Kind of funny the way
he's framing.
He's like looky looky.
Look at what I did, dude.
He had CIA involvement in thesealleged ousters.
It's kind of funny the way he'sframing it.
Speaker 4 (34:20):
He's like looky looky
look at what I did, dude.
He's like he's bragging,literally talking about an
international conspiracy tooverthrow elected leaders and
he's bragging about it.
Not just the legal way, throughlawfare, it's more.
We do litigation, but there'smore.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Litigation is very
important in our peaceful,
lawful, vigorous effort.
Think of litigation, the courts, as the first guardrail.
Donald Trump has been loudlybanging into that guardrail in
this over 150 cases where we andothers have had so many wins.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
Ok.
One small group led by this manhas filed 150 cases against
Donald Trump.
Just keep in mind, that's like80, 90% of the cases against
Trump.
I mean, the ACLU's got one hereand whatever he's doing, all of
it it's anti-Trump by nature.
It has nothing to do with thepolicy.
It has to do with not givinghim a win.
(35:14):
That's all that has to do withit.
Slow down.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
Because we've been
winning.
That guardrail is holding, butthat loud banging is waking up
to other barriers that lie, toother guardrails that lie on the
other side of litigation.
The next one is politicalleadership, where we've seen in
the United States that electedofficials, mostly at the state
(35:41):
levels, like the state AGs,they've been going to court but
they've been talking, holdingtown halls, speaking to the
American people.
Now Congress is starting to getin the act, so that's a second
layer of protection.
The third, and maybe the mostimportant, and this is the
difference, this is whyautocracy was defeated in poland
(36:02):
and why it is he's given youthe keys to kingdom here.
Speaker 4 (36:06):
This is exactly.
We got to hold them at thecourts, whatever that takes.
Judges, whatever, whatever.
Then we got to get uh, the?
What was the second one he justmentioned?
Speaker 6 (36:17):
Well, and when he's
mentioning it the whole time
he's got this wicked smile onhis face like man.
I'm just so happy.
Speaker 4 (36:24):
Then the third thing
is going to be the public
opinion.
They're the political class,getting the political class
compromised and not givingcredence on the block in Hungary
, the block in Hungary, thepeople.
Speaker 1 (36:43):
When you awaken the
American people, which that loud
banging in the first guardrailhas done, do you know that
there's twice as many protestsin 2025 as there were in 2021?
2021 was covered as the era ofbig protest against donald trump
.
Speaker 4 (36:58):
there's actually been
more 2021, what wasn't it 2020?
It seems like 2021.
Pretty much no protest afterjanuary 6th.
Am I missing something there?
Well, what biden?
Speaker 6 (37:09):
was in office.
Speaker 4 (37:10):
People were
protesting trump while biden was
in office.
I don't remember any of that In2025,.
Speaker 1 (37:16):
Another thing we've
done is we've incubated an
independent publication atDemocracy Defenders.
It's called the Contrarian.
Jen Rubin quit the WashingtonPost, I quit the CNN and we
started the Contrarian.
In two months we've got 600,000subscribers.
We're the first publication inAmerica to have a beat on the
(37:40):
democracy movement where wecover all of these protests,
sometimes hundreds a week.
It's everything from town hallswhere people of both parties
are telling congressmen andsenators why are you going along
with authoritarianism?
That's hurting us.
It's hurting the Americanpeople.
The veteran services are beinggutted.
(38:01):
People are angry about that.
Schools are being gutted.
Safety for our air and waterand our vaccines.
There's the measles epidemic.
The people are angry, but alsosmaller protests, like
spontaneous in front of Tesladealerships and one of my cases
(38:22):
I got had a case locking ElonMusk out of the Treasury
Department.
I was getting ready to go tocourt.
I turned on the television and aspontaneous protest had erupted
in front of the TreasuryDepartment in support of my case
.
Keep Elon Musk out of Treasury.
We did get that order blockinghim out of.
Protests had erupted in frontof the treasury department in
support of my case.
Keep elon musk out of treasury.
Speaker 6 (38:38):
We did get that order
blocking him out of like.
I can't believe it.
And then a protest came out.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
Suddenly the members
of congress are showing up for
the protest, because they didn'twant to be left out.
So those are the next.
But the American people, thegrassroots, and when those three
things combine together,authoritarianism and autocracy
(39:05):
doesn't have a chance, and Ithink you're going to see a
wipeout at the ballot box, forexample with the House of
Representatives in 2026, becausepeople just don't like this
autocratic regime.
Donald trump is very unpopular,most unpopular president,
except for trump won at thispoint in his tenure and elon
(39:27):
musk, his co-president, isabsolutely hated by the.
Speaker 4 (39:32):
Oh geez sorry, sorry
that was I, was hard to get
through.
It was full, that's all my goshmetal is good.
Yes, his voice is irritating asit gets.
Speaker 6 (39:44):
Uh, yeah, our
vaccines I apologize to the
audience for letting that clipcontinue to play no, we got dude
I know, but dude I, I had ahard time listening to that
myself I.
Speaker 4 (39:57):
I had the realization
when I was sitting in prison,
as I'd had some confrontationwith a case manager and I was
like these people are idiots.
I was like they are idiots.
I just I had no otherexplanation.
I'm like they are highfunctioning, smart idiots.
They either choose to drink theKool-Aid or they're drunk on it
(40:19):
Like I don't understand somethings.
Norm Eisen is another one ofthose guys where it's like
there's something elsemotivating it.
Speaker 6 (40:28):
It's not just
political dissent because the
closer we got to the end of thisclip, the more and more it
seemed like the lies got biggerand bigger.
Speaker 4 (40:35):
It's like it's also
that these guys strategized it.
They laid out, you know, we'vegot to do the lawfare, we've got
to do the oh yeah cover, we'vegot to get the people.
Oh yeah, now you get thestories planted.
Oh, it wasn't a hillary thing,it was russian information for
the whole time and trump wasweaponizing the fact that he was
claiming that it came fromhillary.
Really, you know, oh, we'vethrown these autocratic regimes
(40:58):
in other countries and, by theway, I'm involved with the state
department because I used to bean ambassador and I've got the
judges coming over to mymansions and, uh, this sounds
like a conspiracy yeah, he'slike well, there's a new measles
epidemic.
Speaker 6 (41:11):
It's like yo, there's
a few cases out there.
That's not an epidemic.
Speaker 4 (41:14):
People, people hate
this the lowest ratings ever.
Yet Harry Enten's like he justkeeps getting par popular.
You guys are so wrong, you knowit's like wow, he's getting the
best turnout in Texas.
We've got to fact check.
That Turns out it's true.
Yeah, Debbie B on YouTube sayswhere does he get his
information?
He makes it up.
He's the source, bro.
(41:35):
The source there's no.
I get my information.
He makes it up and then heexpects the media to back him up
.
Yeah, it's the it's the whole.
Hey, here's some evidence.
They publish it and then theytake the publication yahoo news.
They go to court and they'relike, hey, yahoo news got a tip
and it's like, well, we don'thave to disclose that it's, it's
information laundering.
This is getting it into thepublic norm.
(41:56):
Isom does an interview likethis and I promise you the
executive producers at cnn andmsnbc and the staff writers at
political all tuned in, oh yeah,because, okay, what direction?
What's the playbook?
okay, here we go, it's itdoesn't even have to be directly
communicated, it's directional.
Yes, which direction do we needto be looking, as long as we're
all kind of marching that way,right?
Okay, trump is bad.
(42:17):
Everything he does is bad.
Okay, oh, these lawsuits aremaking him unpopular.
Okay, there's more protests.
Speaker 6 (42:22):
Okay, got it.
Now we got the story.
Speaker 4 (42:25):
I don't remember any
in 2021.
So it's like a low bar.
I think 2020 might've been whathe meant to say, I don't know,
but but either way, you knowrandom spontaneous protests just
breaking out randomly in aTesla dealership.
That went away quick, didn't it?
Oh, these ice facilities arresta few protesters.
That went away quick, didn't it?
I mean again, how spontaneousare these?
Speaker 6 (42:46):
You know we just had
a local election.
I don't know if you're aware ofthat.
Speaker 4 (42:49):
I was.
I did some dialing for it.
Speaker 6 (42:52):
Oh, ok, so I went and
we submitted our ballots.
The oh okay, so I went and wesubmitted our ballots.
The only drop box forSilverdale is at the Kitsap
County Sheriff's Office and Iwas like, hmm, hmm, I wonder how
many people aren't going todrop their ballots because
they're going to have to go tothe sheriff's office to do it.
Well, hopefully a certainsector of them.
Speaker 4 (43:12):
Exactly.
I'll tell you what.
There is some action happeningon that front.
Did you know ICE dropped theirrecruiting age down to 18, and
what was that, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (43:24):
But they also got rid
of the cap on.
This is one of the things thatI'm so excited about, because
we've seen our ice officers beterrorized by activists, by
violent people who want to dothem harm, and they have
continued to go out bravely anddo their jobs and make sure that
they're upholding the rule oflaw, and so our recruitment
efforts to hire 10,000 new ICEofficers has been extremely
(43:46):
successful, lawrence, as oftoday, we have over 80,000
applicants for those 10,000positions already.
People and patriots across thiscountry that say say we want to
join, we want to help and be apart of this effort.
It's overwhelming to see theamount of response and support
that our ICE officers havegotten and people who want to
join their ranks.
So I would tell everybody go tojoinicegov and go there and
(44:10):
sign up.
Be a part of this team that ishelping make America safe again
with President Trump.
And the other thing, lawrence,I would say is we've removed any
of the age barriers.
We no longer have a cap on howold you can be, or you can
continue at age 18,.
Sign up for ICE and join us andbe a part of it.
We'll get you trained and readyto be equipped to go out on the
(44:31):
streets and help protectfamilies.
This is one of the things I'mso excited about.
Speaker 4 (44:35):
I'm like, ah, I'm in.
What a great job.
We've got millions of people tohaul out of here.
I've been hauled.
I know what it's like to bechained up.
I'll put the handcuffs kind ofloose.
I know what it is.
I wonder what the training islike.
This is Homeland Security.
Speaker 6 (44:57):
We're taking
father-son bonding to a whole
new level.
No age cap, join ice.
You know what I thought was alittle bit funny.
I mean, I'm sure this is not athing, america needs you.
I'm sure this is not a thing,but the 80 000 number was just a
little convenient.
It was like huh, didn't we havelike 80 000 people that they
just hired in the irs and fired?
I was like and gave them gunsyeah, yeah, it's like are they
all working for ice?
Speaker 4 (45:14):
now.
I love these amer Americanneeds.
You join ice now, like WorldWar Two recruiting posters, like
they're totally doing it.
This is, this is.
Speaker 6 (45:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (45:25):
I don't know, man, I
don't like the idea of like
people getting rounded up, butit makes me giddy, I don't know.
I have a huge cognitivedissonance about it.
Trump orders a new census thatexcludes undocumented migrants
and immigrants.
So Donald Trump on Thursdaysaid he has ordered the US
Commerce Department to create anew US census that excludes
people who are in the USillegally.
(45:46):
The new and highly accuratecensus will be based on modern
day facts and figures and,importantly, using the results
and information gained from thepresidential election of 2024.
Trump wrote in a truth socialpost People who are in our
country illegally will not becounted in the census.
Guys, this is huge.
They are absolutely going afterthe election infrastructure.
(46:07):
They have made voter rolls comeoff.
They've established a wholebunch of federal guidelines that
then pigeonhole the states tohave to do some modicum of voter
id and whatnot.
They've won quite a few casesin court dealing with this, and
this is a big deal this isextremely important six years
early census shouldn't havehappened again until 2030.
(46:28):
It's every 10 years yeah, sothey're prematurely doing it
because we believe the lastnumbers were cooked and they
said it openly when it washappening.
Remember he tried to have aquestion on there are you a you
and and citizen or not?
And the court wouldn't allowthem to have that question.
Speaker 6 (46:42):
Well, some they've
since litigated that and now
they can you could almost tagthis as the new reset dude, you
know you know there's this issuewith all the gerrymandering one
of the big reveals here is thatyou have this wrong.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
Sorry, this won't
pause now, but one of the big
reveals here is all the states,the democrat states, have
already gerrymandered to death.
They have nothing left togerrymander.
Like, illinois can't produce anextra seat, they've already got
one district that goes likethis through the state, one that
you know.
The only ones that haven'tgerrymandered to the max are New
York and California.
They can peel a couple seats,but even Indiana can gerrymander
(47:20):
for the Republicans and gaintwo seats.
Indiana's got Democratrepresentatives right.
They split those districts doneover.
So they're saying that if theRepublicans do this and decide
to gerrymander in a similarmanner, we're up 15 seats On top
of that.
(47:41):
Change the census.
You might not win New York orNew Jersey.
Now, yeah, like legitimately,you might have Democrat
districts.
Take away 20,000 immigrantvoters, 30,000, whatever the
number is, it's a lot higherthan we think, it's, not fives
and tens.
Take away those numbers and allof a sudden you flip the whole
state.
In New Jersey you got aRepublican governor and
Republican senators.
You know, flip, flip New Yorkcity, and all of a sudden
Mandami is not not the mayor,it's some no-name Republican,
(48:05):
because they won't run a realpowerhouse.
You know what I mean, but it'sthat significant especially in a
place like New York wherethey're openly brag about 40% of
the city's not legal.
Speaker 6 (48:14):
Wow.
Well, how long has Washingtonbeen Democrat, like fully
Democrat.
Washington DC no state.
We've been Democrat for like 30years.
Speaker 4 (48:25):
Yeah, it could make a
big difference here.
Here, I don't think it'sactually the illegals that are a
problem, it's the mail-inballot infrastructure.
There's a lot of problems here.
That's my opinion.
Oh, by the way, way, we gotsome news on that in fulton
county.
So, just so you get, I'll putthis up here first.
Okay, so fulton county.
Great news in fulton county.
This is from garland favorito.
The judge took a judge outsidefulton county to uphold the
(48:47):
meaning of shall.
If all fulton judges wouldrecuse themselves in election
cases, justice would be servedmore.
So this is what it what it isan order granting writamus.
Writ of mandamus is you must doLike.
If you don't sign the order,this order stands in place Like.
You must do this.
There is nothing in the statuteto support.
So basically, they didn't wantto.
Let's see.
(49:08):
Well, it explains it in thisorder.
There's nothing in the statuteto support the BOC theory that's
the something of elections orwhatever Theory that the county
commissioners can veto thechairperson's nominees, other
than for failure of the nomineeto meet two qualifications and
one restriction be a countyresident, be an elector and
cannot be a holder of electedoffice.
That's the Board ofCommissioners, board of
(49:29):
Commissioners, yep.
The court finds that shall asused as mandatory and the BOC
does not have discretion toapprove or otherwise an
otherwise qualified nominee.
The court grants petitionersrequest of a writ of mandamus
directing the board ofcommissioners to comply with the
statute.
The board shall appoint twomembers as nominated by the
county executive committeechairperson.
These those nominees are jasonfrazier and julie adams.
(49:49):
The court notes that this courtdoes not view this ruling as do
as doing anything other thancomplying with the statutory
mandate to appoint the personsnominated.
The general assembly placed thediscretion in the county
executive committee chairperson.
It is up to fulton countycommission to follow and honor
that law.
That person's nominations, thewrit of mandamus is granted.
(50:10):
Basically they weren't followingthe law.
The commissioners or the judgesin fulton County and an outside
judge is like shall mean shall?
We're not really decidinganything here.
Just comply with it and thenyou can go make a lawsuit.
But you can't just block it outof the gate.
Like what's the point of havinglaws passed and rules voted on
if they just don't get followed?
(50:30):
Which again goes to the wholecovid stuff with the suspending
the constitutions to change thevoting apparatus without any
notification to the people thatthat was happening.
Okay, new Gingrich is talkingabout a huge event that happened
yesterday.
Trump is winning, winning,winning.
We can't keep up with it.
We got an hour and 20 minuteshow plus some private time.
(50:52):
We can't keep up witheverything Trump's doing.
It Cannot do it.
Okay, this guy.
Some private time.
We can't keep up witheverything trump's doing every
day.
Cannot do it.
Okay, this guy.
It is a 24-hour news coverageto keep up with him.
Yesterday, huge announcementfrom apple, which we'll be
discussing here in a coupleminutes.
Speaker 5 (51:04):
But this is newt
gingrich describing exactly
what's happening in thepolitical world look, I think
what's changing everything isthat you have this rock standing
in the middle of history calleddon J Trump and he's saying you
want to do it my way or youwant to be crushed.
I prefer you do it my way, butyou know, if you have to be
crushed, it's okay, and sorational people like Tim Cook
(51:27):
are going oh gee, do I want todo it the way the president
wants?
Would I like to be crushed?
And they go.
You know, I've always wanted tobe part of the team, and you're
seeing this happen, not just inthe United States, but you're
seeing it happen all around theworld.
I mean, the Saudis show up andsay could we buy $400 billion of
Boeing airplanes and, by theway, could we also invest $400
(51:48):
billion in the United States tocreate new jobs?
And Trump graciously saysthat'd be fine, I'm so grateful.
And then he goes to the nextcity and next country and they
say the same thing.
I mean this is the most I.
I think he's really now moving.
If he can sustain this, he'smoving into a league that, other
than washington and lincoln,nobody has gotten the level of
(52:11):
energy drive effectiveness thatwe're seeing with trump I.
Speaker 4 (52:15):
I shook Newt
Gingrich's hand, I touched that
man.
I went to the 1996 RepublicanNational Convention in San Diego
and I met Newt Gingrich.
Speaker 6 (52:28):
Just don't say you
touched that man again.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
He gave me the fish
handshake, the loose hand, the
politician Hi, let me shake yourfingers.
I was a young boy and that wasmy first foray into a political
environment.
I thought it was the coolestthing ever and I got a couple
buttons.
I had a vote newt or an electnewt sign in my room forever
that you get.
So Newt Gingrich has got his ownscandals and whatnot, but he's
(52:54):
kind of proven over time to be adiplomat, you know diplomat.
His uh wife, who is, I think,was his secretary he was having
an affair with when his wife hadcancer.
She became an ambassador toitaly, and so he's, anyways,
he's still in the game.
He's a historian by trade orwhatever, and so when he says
something about donald trumpbeing he's kind of approaching a
(53:14):
league of his own, he's beingpretty serious about it.
It's pretty, pretty seriousabout it.
I mean, this is the net effect.
We got the jobs numbers outthat were bad, which, again, are
they even realistic?
But this one is a real earning.
S&p 500 quarter earningsrebound.
Speaker 15 (53:30):
Here's a look at
earnings expectations.
What a chart this is atearnings expectations.
What a chart this is.
It's been a very strong quarter, despite tariff uncertainty,
with 82% of S&P 500 companiesbeating estimates so far.
That's the highest rate since2021.
Here's a look at earningsexpectations.
What a chart the business worldis booming.
Speaker 4 (53:48):
They're all expecting
new factories.
They've got the tax cuts right,tariffs making very little
difference, and we'll explainthat.
You know these companies arefiguring out how to get around
the tariffs.
It's called produce in Americaand it's happening at a pretty
big scale.
Polte put this out about JeromePowell.
He said and he posted a LanceLambert and got like three
(54:08):
people got to talk about hereRedfin, us housing market now
five hundred and eight thousandseven hundred and fifteen more
home sellers than homebuyers.
That's the most home sellers.
That's the most home sellers.
That's the most home sellers ofoutmatch home buyers in over a
decade, according to Redfin.
So you can see the chart here.
This is where you're at.
During most of the Obamaadministration you had more
buyers than you had sellers,which is why you had a strong
(54:29):
price increase.
Speaker 6 (54:30):
Can you point out
what the blue and the gold there
is?
Speaker 4 (54:32):
The blue is sellers.
Speaker 6 (54:34):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (54:34):
And the gold is
buyers.
So, more buyers equals aseller's market, higher pricing
right.
More buyers or more sellers,less buyers.
Prices start dropping to get itdown into parity.
This is a big deal, like areally big deal, yeah, and this
is something.
There's a lot of factors itcould be.
(54:55):
You know, illegal immigrantsgoing home, a million of
self-deported, another 100,000ish have been deported by force.
Those people all livedsomewhere.
Those people all were rentingsomething some of its inflation.
So some of that opens that up.
Another big part of it is youhave interest high interest
rates.
So a lot of buyers aren't gonna.
They're not gonna even shop,they're waiting for interest
(55:17):
rates to come down.
They can't qualify for the homethey want because of where
interest rates at.
So there's a fabricatedsuppression through the interest
rate and on top of that youhave an elevated supply because
of deportation and that's goingto be localized, like in this
county.
We still don't have enoughinventory, not even close.
No, not even close.
Values will not be droppingsignificantly in this county.
(55:37):
It's going to be only relatedto the interest rates.
As interest rates go down,people's affordability goes up,
but the demand is there.
But you go to other places likedallas, parts of florida, many,
many places.
They have a huge oversupplywashington has had well.
Speaker 6 (55:52):
Our locale has had
less than a month of supply for
a very long time and that's ahuge deal with building
regulations.
Speaker 4 (56:00):
What it?
takes to get a new house built.
Yes, so another thing happenedis tom cotton sent a letter to
everybody you know cc'd a bunchof people, I'm sure and he was
basically exposing the fact thatthe president of Intel has way
too many ties with communistChina, way too many.
So Intel shares slippedThursday after President Donald
(56:20):
Trump called for the chip makerCEO to resign immediately.
The Truth Social Post, trumpsaid, and Intel chief executive
Li Butan is quote is highlyconflicted and must resign
immediately.
There is no other solution tothis problem.
Wow, intel dropped thepre-market in the back of that
post last night, trading 5%lower.
Intel did not immediatelyrespond to the request for
(56:43):
comment.
Tan was named Intel CEO in Marchas the chipmaker tried to
rebound from declining salesunder the stewardship of Pat
Gelsinger.
This week, tom Cotton, arkansas, requested Tan's ties to
Chinese companies, questionedTan's ties to Chinese companies
and referred past criminal caserevolving Candace Design, where
Tan was CEO until 2021.
Cotton wrote the Intel chair toexpress concern about the
(57:03):
security and integrity ofIntel's operation and its
potential impact on the USnational security.
Intel is required to beresponsible steward of American
taxpayer dollars and to complywith applicable security
regulations regulations.
Cotton wrote mr tan'sassociation raised questions
about intel's ability to fulfillthese obligations.
So, basically, he's just had aton of association, including a
lot of money passing back andforth between him and the
(57:25):
communist party, and he runsintel, which is, like you know,
the backbone of most of yourinfrastructure.
There's a couple of companiesthat own the infrastructure that
all the other companies sit ontop of Cisco, at&t, intel, sun
microsystems.
They own the switchboards.
Speaker 5 (57:44):
They own the highway.
Speaker 4 (57:45):
What's inside?
Yeah, they own the highwaysthat the infrastructure is built
on.
So the fact that a company likeIntel who's makes chips when
you even peek behind the curtainfor one second about what's
possible with doing like youknow two routers in a computer
and you know shadow things, andit's scary they've got to be
loyal to the country.
(58:05):
It starts at the top, like ifthe, if the ceo is taking money,
he's not going to stop he'scompromised yeah, he's
compromised.
Um, let's see, we've got quite abit of chatting going over on
youtube.
Let's catch up.
So metal is joy.
Jumped over there she's sayinghi to sapphire patriot.
Hello, beautiful joy, hi, deb,uh, joy, I'm big time.
(58:27):
Now, taylor saw my channel.
Sweet sapphire, I think I'm, Ithink you're big time.
I went and saw your channel.
It's bigger than my channel.
Goodness, gracious Medalist Joylove it.
Sapphire Patriot, he will enjoythe road trip.
Howdy, debbie B.
Well, I love you.
Guys are chatting with eachother.
This is awesome.
Of course, I know you know eachother Debbie B, joy and Dem
Boys.
Yes, he will joy as well.
(58:59):
By the way, way, our youtubechannel viewership is surpassing
our rumble channel viewership,whoa, which I guess that's kind
of cool.
I don't know.
We get more benefit at rumble.
We're supposed to be housed atrumble.
We stream through rumble, okay.
So yesterday we've alreadymentioned tim cook coming in and
making a big announcement, andnewt gingrich was basically
pointing at that as another oneof these wins.
Again, so much stuff is comingout in the news you almost
can't't keep up with it and I'mnot sure what's the most
important accountability for theRussia-Cape plotters or new
trade deals?
I feel like they're both twogood things To make 19 billion
(59:20):
chips for.
So this is Tim Cook making hisannouncement of investment in
the United States, and Tim Cook,in my opinion, I mean he's
clearly a needly.
He clearly has some mannerismsof being very refined, which I
don't know if that should besurprising or not, but he sounds
like he genuinely appreciateshis own words, like what he's
(59:44):
doing.
It sounds like it has a senseof pride.
He gave Donald Trump an awardyesterday, a little thing, and
he's like.
This was designed by a MarineCorps corporal that retired.
Now he works for Apple and hedesigned this glass thing for
you like a little plaque.
He sounded like he genuinelywas really like, sincere about
all this?
Speaker 7 (01:00:03):
so you tell me to
make 19 billion chips for apple
in 24 factories across 12different states.
Second, we're committed tobuying American-made advanced
rare earth magnets developed byMP Materials, which will become
part of Apple's devices shippedaround the world.
Mp is the only fully integratedrare earth producer in the
(01:00:28):
United States and with thispartnership, they'll be
significantly expanding theirflagship facility in Fort Worth,
texas.
We're also thrilled to worktogether on a cutting-edge rare
earth recycling line in MountainPass, california.
And third, in Kentucky, we'veworked with our partners at
(01:00:48):
Corning to build the world'slargest and most advanced
smartphone glass production lineand I'm pleased to announce
that very soon this is for thefirst time ever every single new
iPhone and every single newApple Watch sold anywhere in the
world will contain cover glassmade in Kentucky.
(01:01:09):
In addition to the Americanmanufacturing program, we're
also significantly growing ourinvestments in AI, including
expanding data center capacityin North Carolina, in Nevada, in
Iowa, in Arizona and Oregon.
So we're going to keep makinginvestments right here in
America, we're going to keephiring in America and we're
(01:01:31):
going to keep buildingtechnologies at the heart of our
products right here in America.
Speaker 4 (01:01:39):
Pretty cool.
So rare earth minerals,exclusively buying from the
United States, includinginvestment in a recycling of
rare earth minerals, all theglass going on their screens for
all their products are going tobe made in the United States,
specifically Kentucky.
Screens for all their productsare going to be made in the
united states, specificallykentucky.
Yep, he also talked about whichhe didn't mention here it must
have been either before or afterbut an end-to-end silicone
processing and manufacturingthing so we can do everything
(01:02:02):
silicone end-to-end, includingchips and stuff like that huge
investment in america which, bythe way, not been apple style.
Speaker 6 (01:02:10):
So yeah, so big deal
like really big they have
dedicated facilities that joerogan talks about all the time
where the suicide rate is sohigh.
They put nets around thebuilding to keep people from
jumping off that ain't gonnahappen in the us and it's kind
of.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
It's kind of funny to
talk about or think about, but,
dude, people are really jumpingoff those buildings I've got to
say there's been studies intothat it's not just because
foxconn has bad work relations,it's also those guys can't get
girlfriends because they'reoutnumbered like three to one on
the men women ratio.
(01:02:49):
There's a whole bunch offactors going into that yeah,
for real part of it is justliving in china.
Yes, anyways, oh yeah.
Uh, debbie b says cool kentuckyneeds more jobs.
Yeah, jobs across 12 states.
On a not so great news,apparently we have a maga person
who apparently has some realissues.
(01:03:10):
Miss united states files arestraining order against GOP
rep Corey Mills.
So this is Corey Mills Forthose of you who don't recognize
him does do quite a bit of newshits and apparently Lindsay
Langston, a Florida Republicanstate committee woman and
reigning Miss United States, hasfiled a restraining order
against Florida Republican repCorey Mills after reporting him
to the local and state lawenforcement for harassment,
(01:03:30):
threatening to release sexualvideos and harm to future
boyfriends.
Local and state law enforcementfor harassment, threatening to
release sexual videos and harmto future boyfriends.
So he's got videos that he sentto her of them engaged in
sexual activity and he wasthreatening to release them to
future boyfriends.
The evidence covers months ofinteractions, include text
messages with Mills, who says heseparated from his wife in 2022
.
Warren Langston he posed athreat to anyone she wanted to
(01:03:52):
date in the future Strap upcowboy, he said in one text, and
threatened to release privatemessages shared in the context
of the relationship.
Langston submitted the evidenceto back up the incident report
she filed with the columbiacounty sheriff's office gosh,
don't be a skis dude I know manit's skis.
Mills is now in a secondcongressional term.
He styled himself a megarepublican and vocal ally of
president donald trump,appearing alongside fellow
(01:04:12):
diehards at the press conferenceoutside Trump's hush money
trial last year, he alsoexpressed ambitions for
statewide office, tellingPolitico in January that he
planned to run for the Senateseat formerly held by Marco
Rubio, now Trump's secretary ofstate.
Last fall, mills, aninternational arms dealer and
former Army medic, told peopleclose to him that he was running
for Trump's secretary ofdefense.
Anyways, trump signed a new lawcalled take it down, which
(01:04:34):
makes it federal crime topublish or threaten or publish
intimate material for thepurpose of intimidation,
coercion, extortion or thecreate mental distress.
Mills voted in favor of thetake it down act.
Mills has not been charged witha violation of the act, but it
sounds like he's flirtingawfully close to the line.
So just more nonsense fromanother politician Cause more
(01:05:02):
nonsense from another politician, because sometimes it just
feels like they're all the same,democrat or republican, they're
all kind of skeezy.
Yeah, again, we all have issuesin our closets, every single
person, if you think for onesecond someone else is perfect.
They're not right and we have tolower our expectations for
public officials with stuff likethis.
Speaker 6 (01:05:13):
That's why, you know,
ye without sin cast the first
stone.
It's why that worked.
Speaker 4 (01:05:18):
I do not say this.
It's like well, we have to havehigh quality, more moral people
in office.
Yes, we do.
But you also have to havepeople that have no shame, right
, and that don't get embarrassedby and guess what.
Those qualities usually comewith nonsense like that their
voting card matters, theirvoting card matters.
Those are not people we want totrust in certain positions, but
(01:05:38):
you know we can dilute them inthe House.
I'm not making justifications,I'm just saying lower your
expectations.
Folks Dirty on both sides ofthe aisle.
If you become a anti voter ofsomeone like I'm going to vote
against him because of that, theperson you voted for is almost
guaranteed to have the samescandal.
Yeah, you've got to look at thevoting card because you're
surrounded by vipers, yeah.
(01:05:58):
So here's Tulsi Gabbard againin her interview with Miranda
Devine.
Speaker 11 (01:06:07):
And she's got some
more to say about the Russiagate
scandal.
I remember, as I was runningfor president in 2020, at one of
the I think it was one of thedebates that we had I talked
about bringing the DemocraticParty wanting to revive kind of
a new Democratic Party thatwould bring it back to our roots
of fighting for the people, offighting for free speech, and I
(01:06:28):
was ridiculed.
I was ridiculed at thatDemocratic event for having the
audacity to say such things andthen that was, you know, five
years ago.
Now you look at where we aretoday.
The Democratic Party hasrapidly become far more extreme.
Why?
What happened?
What went wrong you?
(01:06:51):
can point to a lot of differentmoments, but really
fundamentally the DemocraticParty is not rooted in the
Constitution.
Speaker 4 (01:07:07):
I heard a guy who
does a lot of debating with
leftists online and stuff likethat.
You see him in clips all thetime on random podcasts going
after OnlyFists online and stufflike that.
And you see him in clips allthe time on random podcasts
going after like only fans starsand stuff like that.
But one of the things he sayshe talks about debate and he's
like the leftists they have,they have, they weaponize the
Christian worldview.
Don't judge, do this right,they've weaponized it.
(01:07:29):
They've even adopted it.
But then they want to introduceall the degeneracy and he's
like they've gotten really goodat debating Christians and
basically taking the high groundof virtue and whatever and
weaponizing the worldview.
And he says so the way todefeat them.
He says they have no moralstandard, they have no North
Star, they've taken yourworldview and they've
manipulated a little bit.
He's like what you do is youtake away the worldview from
(01:07:50):
them.
So he's like I'll come into abait and I'll come into debate,
into a debate, like I'm afascist.
And he's like when they're like, well, you're doing this and
that's racist and bad, he goes Idon't have a problem with that.
I think it's excellent.
We should definitely besegregating our societies and
they're like because remember,the whole democrat thing is, we
(01:08:11):
don't want to force segregation.
We want the blacks to segregatethemselves, we want them to
have their safe spaces.
Two different drinkingfountains for two different
races is segregation.
I don't care if one'svoluntarily like well, I want my
own drinking fountain.
You've just weaponized, youknow what I mean.
You've just made it so they askfor themselves, so he'll change
the game, and then they don'thave a reason why segregation is
(01:08:34):
bad.
They just have a reason whywhen white people want
segregation you see what I'msaying and when you take that as
a bad thing away, because theyweaponize the Christian
worldview against you, and youtake that bad thing away, they
completely lose everything.
And he was giving multipleexamples and that's what she's
saying here.
They're not rooted in anyprinciples.
Speaker 11 (01:08:51):
They adopt your
worldview and then they
weaponize it against you and youhave people in positions of
power within the DemocraticParty and if you look at their
ideology and you know theirrefusal, for example, to accept
that there is such a thing asobjective truth and this is an
often used example For men andwomen, exactly, it's an often
(01:09:14):
used example because it's suchan obvious one that we have
people in the Democratic Partyalmost everyone who accepts this
or promotes it and propagatesthat there is no such thing as a
man or a woman.
And then you take that a layerdeeper of how is it that these
(01:09:36):
people really don't believe thatthere is such a thing as
objective truth and many of theother positions that they
espouse?
And fundamentally, it's aspiritual problem where they are
putting themselves in theposition of believing that they
are God and therefore they areputting themselves in the
position of of believing thatthey are God and therefore they
(01:09:56):
are the ones who designate whatis true and what is not, what is
right and what is wrong.
Speaker 4 (01:10:04):
And unfortunately
they're not deep thinkers, right
.
So that's why they don't createtheir own worldview.
They weaponize your worldview.
Everything's through through alens of critique instead of a
lens of exploration andunderstanding.
It's always I'm going to takewhat you have and I'm going to
critique it.
Listen, we all live in a falsereality.
We are walking, walking animalsof delusion.
(01:10:25):
So many of the things you doevery single day are tradition,
culture, societal expectation,family training and programming.
I mean, if you weren't raisedferal, you're living in a Truman
world.
You know what I mean.
Like, it's just the way thatyour concepts of good and evil,
your concepts of rights, theseare all made up.
(01:10:46):
The ones that last are the onesthat are rational, the ones
that have a logical utility,right.
Those are the myths and legendsand stories we can tell each
other that last through time andspace.
It's because they work.
These people don't haveanything that works right.
(01:11:07):
Homosexuality, despite what youfeel individually, and love is
love all of those are valid.
It destroys societies.
Why?
Because it has no utility forreproduction.
There's nothing complicatedabout this, it's just the facts.
It's just the facts.
There's this verse in the Bible.
(01:11:28):
I don't know where it's at, butit says better a man's seed
fall in the belly of a whorethan on the ground.
That's talking aboutpropagation of the species, Like
if you got to pick, at leastmake a kid.
You know what I'm saying.
There's a utility about ourworldview.
There's a utility about aconsistent Islamic worldview.
I'm not saying I agree witheverything.
(01:11:50):
I'm not saying I agree with myown worldview of everything, but
it works and has utility.
Be wary of people who try toweaponize things that work, that
have full biological, societalpeace and well-being utility.
Be very wary of those people.
Right, If their logic doesn'textend to a logical, utilitarian
(01:12:11):
conclusion, those things haveto go the way of the dustbin and
they will cause pain.
Speaker 6 (01:12:16):
Get those people.
Speaker 4 (01:12:16):
They will cause pain
and suffering until we eliminate
it from society.
The people that can't identifygender right, oh, and we have
individual choice, whatever.
Speaker 6 (01:12:25):
Whatever?
Speaker 4 (01:12:25):
I'm always going to
say you do, you boo, but you're
not helping the greater cause.
Yeah, just keep it at home, I'mhesitant to be like well, the
collective needs you to expressgender in a certain way.
I'm not saying that at all.
I'm just saying you're a deadend.
You're a genial, you're abiological dead end.
Right, the messing with gender,all the things they're doing.
Again, there's no principlesand if you just take their
(01:12:48):
worldview away from them, you'resomeone who's debating you on.
You know, gender picking.
Be like well, I identify as acat.
What are you gonna do aboutthat?
I can scratch your face, it'sjust been my nature.
Well, you can't do that.
That's assault, cat.
No, that's not assault, youknow, you start to just twist
them around.
They've?
Oh, yeah, no, we want yourworldview with our degeneracy.
Trump said this.
(01:13:08):
Uh, excuse me, trump.
Trump officials will discussepstein strategy at dinner
hosted by vance.
I want to point this pictureout, this picture here that you
see pretty often, of delainemaxwell and jeffrey epstein,
which it's funny because somepeople are like well, they
weren't really a couple.
I'm like that looks prettycouple-y so this is a cabin in
england that belongs to theroyal family, so there's a
(01:13:30):
picture of queen elizabethsitting in this exact spot oh,
wow exact spot, same nod in thething, and people are like, uh,
these people were high up, likethis is a private cabin, so
interesting.
Anyways, they're going to havedinner to discuss, uh, what to
do about epstein.
They're thinking about sendingjd vance to go on the joe rogan
show to explain things a littlebit.
I actually think that'd begreat.
(01:13:51):
That would be assuming theydon't bury that, bury the whole
thing even more.
But I think it would be worthhim coming out and trump in an
act of magnanimity said thisabout elon musk on that subject
a
Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
new gallup poll says
that elon musk is the most
unpopular public figure in thecountry right now.
I'm wondering do you misshaving him around the white
house, or is that, paul,accurate?
Speaker 5 (01:14:14):
I don't know that
Paul's accurate.
I think he's a good person.
I think he had a bad moment,really bad moment, but he's a
good person.
I believe that.
President Trump, are you eatingthat?
Speaker 4 (01:14:25):
up Again.
I still believe in the pincermove.
I believe that Elon and Trumphad a calculated split.
Speaker 6 (01:14:33):
A faux spat.
Speaker 4 (01:14:34):
Yeah, a faux spat,
yeah, a faux spat.
The big thing was elon calledtrump a pedo and what this?
What this did was it reallymade it so the elon was persona
grata and the left circles arelike, oh hey, you know, maybe we
can do something here.
And then the america firstparty, which is kind of flamed
out to nothing, and now he'sextremely unpopular in the polls
.
So it's like he justdemonstrated again trump is the
(01:14:57):
immovable rock.
No matter how popular you thinkyou are, you are in the shadow
of trump.
That's a big deal.
That that is signaling to thetim cooks of the world.
You think you think elon hascharisma and might have been
able to move the needle.
He couldn't.
He was popular with trump.
Clearly that was the trump basesaying yeah, if elon's on board
, we're on board.
As soon as he got off boardtotally unpopular and he burned
(01:15:18):
some of his existing climatechange friends.
I still see, like the bumperstickers you know, no elon on
tesla people put duct tape overtheir tesla logos oh yeah, all
the tesla morons all right, guys.
That's it for the show today.
I made it through all the tabs.
We don't have any privatestreaming.
Today this afternoon I'm doingthe Ignite presentation for 1776
(01:15:41):
Live.
You can go to 1776liveus andregister for the webinar and you
can get onto that presentation.
I look forward to seeing youall there.
And then don't forget to visitleftbehindandwithoutorg.
Every day my wife gets a phonecall from different families
that are looking for help whiletheir spouse or parent you know,
parent of the children isincarcerated.
(01:16:01):
And it's been really impressive.
You know like my wife will openthe mail and there's a regular
supporter that sends a hundreddollar check every month.
That a hundred dollar check ispaying for a cheerleading
program for a kid.
You know that that reallywanted to do.
It's a big deal, so everylittle bit counts.
My wife works with the YMCA.
(01:16:21):
She gets the kids hooked upwith YMCA memberships and she
has a waiting list of kids thatwant to do more things that are
just getting like the YMCAmembership Cause that's what's
left in the funds to be able todo and stuff like that.
So please consider making evensmall donations you can go to
left behind and without dot org.
It's for a good cause.
I promise you everything isgoing to help those kids.
It's incredible to watch.
(01:16:43):
My wife's got college internsthat are taking time to come and
work with the, with thenonprofit it is.
It is the coolest thing.
I have no involvement other thantalking about it on the show,
but it just like there aremoments where I'm like that's
the most important thinghappening in this house right
now.
The thought that there's ahundred kids out there getting
(01:17:03):
some support while they're goingthrough a very hard phase in
their life is just incredible.
Yeah, regardless of the parents, that sin does not pass on to
the children and we as societyhave to do our part.
You cannot leave it to thegovernment.
It's us, we, the people, whohave to do it.
By supporting those parents andguardians and helping those
kids.
We are doing everything we canto try to break the cycle of
(01:17:26):
incarceration in this country.
So, okay, that's it for today,folks.
I'm glad you joined us andwe'll talk to you again tomorrow
.
Bye, that's it for today, folks.
Speaker 2 (01:17:43):
I'm glad you joined
us and we'll talk to you again
tomorrow.
Bye, old woman, man, man, sorry, what night.
Lived in that castle over there.
I'm 37.
(01:18:04):
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
looked.
What I object to is that youautomatically treat me like an
inferior.
Well, I am king, oh, king, eh,very nice.
And how do you get that?
Eh, by exploiting the workers,by hanging on to outdated
(01:18:28):
imperialist dogma whichperpetuates the economic and
social differences in oursociety, if there's ever going
to be any progress.
There is.
There's some lovely filth downhere.
Oh, how do you do?
How do you do?
Good, lady, I'm Arthur, king ofthe Britons.
Whose castle is that?
King of the who, the Britons?
Who are the Britons?
Well, we all are.
(01:18:48):
We are all Britons 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.
I am in haste.
Who lives in that castle?
(01:19:10):
No-one lives.
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 ananarcho-syndicalist commune.
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.
Yes, I see, by a simplemajority in the case of purely
internal affairs, be quiet.
(01:19:31):
But by a two-thirds majority inthe case of more major, be
quiet.
I order you to be quiet.
Order.
Who does he think he is?
I'm your king.
Well, I didn't vote for you.
You don't vote for kings?
Well, I can become king.
Then the Lady of the Lake, herarm clad in the purest
shimmering samite, held aloftExcalibur from the bosom of the
(01:19:52):
water, signifying by divineprovidence that 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,
not from some farcical aquaticceremony.
(01:20:13):
Be quiet.
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 lobbed ascimitar at me, they'd put me
away.
Shut up.
Will you Shut up?
Now?
We see the violence inherent inthe system.
Shut up.
Come and see the violenceinherent in the system.
(01:20:34):
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 you?