Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_13 (00:57):
What are those
people?
What are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofthe Peasants Perspective.
And we're back in the homestudio.
Yeah.
It's not an apartment.
It's not a hotel room with mywife sleeping on the bed and
behind me.
My wife overheard me say on uh Ithink Saturday is like, I got
(01:19):
sleeping beauty behind me here.
And she's like, oh my gosh.
SPEAKER_29 (01:23):
She tried to lay
really still.
Huh?
Better give her a kiss.
SPEAKER_13 (01:26):
Yeah, she tried to
lay really still until like she
saw me play a video and then shegot up and jumped over on the
other bed.
Carlitz Grand Rising, y'all.
John Attackis, good morning.
And Ron, that's you, PeasantsPerspective, good morning.
So while we wait for people tofile on in here, we've got this
here.
Uh pretty good news.
Silver hits a record high of57.8 per ounce.
It's now up a hundred percentthis year.
(01:48):
Wow.
Best investment I ever made.
That is uh Tucker Carlson.
I'm going to over at1776live.us, please go there and
register for Ignite onThursdays.
I'm going to be doing a I'mgoing to do a little series for
people to self-study and get amacro picture of kind of the
(02:09):
state of affairs with theeconomy.
There's a Ray Dalio talk,there's two Tucker Carlson
podcasts, and I've got a coupleother things I want people to
kind of listen to just tounderstand money.
Right.
Like it's starting to get to thepoint where this matters to the
peasant.
It didn't matter 20 or 30 yearsago, right?
Just get dollars, whatever.
You can't spend gold or silver,but it's not that way anymore.
Like if gold silver's up ahundred percent in one year,
(02:32):
this is a this is a currency.
Like this is a this is money.
When gold's up four thousanddollars and your dollars like,
and you're like, why can't theybring down the price of eggs?
Because they can't bring downthe price of silver, you know,
and gold and these other assets.
So you you have to understandthere's a there's a correlation
between how much money is incirculation and the price of
(02:53):
things you buy at the grocerystore.
And the best measurement forthat is that money in
circulation priced againstweights and measures of precious
metals.
SPEAKER_29 (03:03):
Yeah, and I'm not
normally one of those guys
that's like, oh, go get yourgold, but when prices like
happening like this, it's likehard to ignore.
SPEAKER_13 (03:11):
Well, and Goldman
Sachs did a little survey
amongst all their biginstitutional investors, and it
was like 60% of them expect goldto go to five thousand or six
thousand dollars an ounce nextyear.
SPEAKER_25 (03:21):
Wow.
SPEAKER_13 (03:21):
And uh Tucker
Carlson had a podcast, and
again, over at 1776live.us, I'llput this together for people to
just do like, you know, justlinks of this, this, this, and
this, you know, spend the nexteight hours this week listening
to these, uh uh listening tothese podcasts and and uh
YouTube videos, and then by thenext week you'll be ready to,
all right, let's talk about yoursituation now.
(03:42):
Now that you've realized I don'twant to play that game.
And that's really what it boilsdown to.
It just boils down to what gamedo you want to play?
You know, who whose companystore do you want to buy all
your stuff from?
And uh yeah, if you think aboutnations in that regard as just
big employment firms, you canyou can kind of get the gist of
how they treat our economics.
(04:03):
I really believe we the people,especially people that were born
or raised by people that werepretty well established prior to
1971 when we officially came offthe gold standard.
We came off the redeemability ofgold in 1933, but to actually
come off the gold standard, youwere taught save money because
dollars saved was gold in thebank.
(04:24):
And so that advice has beenopposite.
When you go fiat like we did in1971, this is gonna happen.
Silver's gonna go up 50.
This was impossible prior to1971.
So that's the kind of stuffwhere you a lot of Americans are
playing a game that's a hundredyears old.
You know, you're playing adifferent board game.
This is the debtors-win,savers-lose scenario, and savers
(04:46):
lose, you know, the more moneyyou have in the bank, it's
depreciating.
Whatever you've had in the bankthis year, it's worth 50%, you
know, as as valued against uhsilver, which is our national
currency, by the way, gold andsilver.
SPEAKER_29 (04:57):
Yeah, and what I
would say about that is like
even if you're not interested inbuying metals and you're not
interested in crypto and you'renot interested in any of these
alternative, you know, financestreams, you should at least pay
attention so you know whateverybody else is doing.
SPEAKER_13 (05:11):
Safe havens for
inflation, right?
Think of it this way the FederalReserve note is the equivalent
of script from the East IndiaTrading Company.
You know, yeah, you can any EastIndia trading post, you can use
their and you can go barter itaround because someone's
eventually gonna have to make itaway to the trading post to get
the goods they can't grow ormake on their own, right?
(05:32):
That's what the Federal Reservedollar is.
It's essentially East Indiatrading script.
Yeah, and it's the corporationof the United States and its
affiliate, the Federal Reserveand those rich families, right?
Anyways, we uh it's hard.
I sometimes I think this is nota financial show, but it's a
peasant show.
And guess what?
A lot of peasants are waking upright now, driving to a job
site, driving to an office, andyou're gonna earn fiat dollars
(05:55):
that is actually worth less atthe end of the day than when you
started working.
You know what I mean?
Weights and measures don'tchange.
An ounce is an ounce, right?
In fact, I was looking at athing about minimum wage in
1971.
I've seen different stats, butit was basically saying, you
know, if we got paid for aweek's labor in gold, right,
1.81 ounces, a week's minimumwage in 1971, today it would be
(06:17):
like, you know, like$5,000 aweek, you know, would be the
equivalent.
And you when you think aboutthat and how people during that
expansive time frame were ableto buy houses and affordability
and things like that, it wasbecause the dollar was you know
by weight and measure.
Yeah, there was something itcouldn't you couldn't get so out
of balance between wages andcosts.
Whereas now, you know, becausethere's people at the front of
(06:40):
the supply chain that get freemoney, they can it's monopoly
money.
Oh my goodness.
SPEAKER_29 (06:44):
Yeah, okay.
SPEAKER_13 (06:45):
Moving on.
Okay, moving on, moving on.
All right, pony boy, goodmorning, Ferrazier.
Good morning from Cold Boise.
Yeah, I'm glad to be out ofIdaho.
It was so another thing, too, infake news, there's been this
report, and we talked about thisthe last couple days, about uh
Pete Heggs gave the order toshoot the first narco-terrorist
boat and you know, kill themall.
(07:06):
They shot, and then there was areport there were two survivors
swimming in the water, and allof a sudden your virtue kicks
in.
We need to go save them andbring them in and offer them due
process and return them to theirfishing booth.
Right?
And so allegedly it was orderstrike again.
You know, this is a kineticlethal strike, it's over.
Well, this is set off like afirestorm, and it pairs in with
the Seditious Six and theirwhole we need to defy illawful
(07:30):
orders and all that kind ofstuff.
So we're gonna talk about thatand the Seditious Six and that
running coup later in the show,but just to just to spell this
and put it off the table, DonaldTrump confirmed that Pete
Hegster said, I didn't order asecond strike, I said make it
lethal, like kill him, you know?
And uh and so Trump's like, Idon't even have to, he was told
(07:51):
a reporter on the plane, I don'teven have to think about it.
Pete Pete said he didn't do it,so to me it's a non-issue.
And the reason that they're ableto brush it off like that is is
from what Christy Gnome issaying here.
It's pretty simple.
It's coming from a fake newssource, anonymous again.
Oh, hold on.
It's not AI, not AI, John, notAI.
John in Alabama, he'll be happyto know that we're not AI today.
SPEAKER_16 (08:15):
Not today.
SPEAKER_13 (08:16):
Not today, folks,
not today.
SPEAKER_16 (08:18):
Okay, so so but let
me ask you about another
question.
During that period, there'sthere's a Washington Post report
uh that one of those Venezuelanuh boats that was uh attacked by
a U.S.
missile, uh alleged drug boats,uh, that uh a second missile was
launched uh because there havebeen two survivors clinging to
the wreckage of the boat.
(08:38):
Um, do you I know this wasobviously carried out by the
Defense Department, but is theadministration concerned here
that that may have violated uhthe laws of war?
I mean, was there an imminentthreat posed by those people
that were clinging to thewreckage of a boat that had
already been struck?
SPEAKER_12 (08:57):
Oh, John, that that
entire story is based on
anonymous sources.
So we see um the press and wesee that reg use anonymous
sources all the time to printthings that aren't true, that
are lies, that are completelynot based in reality.
So um I would not uh put anycredibility to that story, to
what was said.
(09:18):
Um I have full faith and trustin this president and in this
government to do the right thingto keep the American people
safe.
And I'm so grateful uh at theamount of work that has been
done to stop those deadly drugsfrom getting into our country.
Uh, just in in several offloadsthat we've been able to
interdict and to stop and toblow up in the Caribbean Sea,
it's been enough to save over 45million people.
(09:40):
45 million lethal doses werecompletely destroyed that people
will now be safer because of thework that the Department of War
and this president have done.
SPEAKER_13 (09:48):
This is now a
subject of investigation.
When I was in uh prison, youknow, I lived with a lot of drug
dealers.
And most of them were, you know,they were pretty much like,
yeah, I was selling drugs, itwas poison, you know, they they
knew the line they were supposedto say.
And uh, but I had one roommatewho just he was like pretty
unremorseful.
Like he was the system screwedhim pretty bad.
But uh he's one of those guysfrom Illinois, little small
(10:11):
town, destroyed by lack ofindustry, completely obliterated
by meth and then fentanyl,right?
So in his mind, and this is him,he's like, everybody in my town
did meth, everybody, schoolteachers, school principals,
like everybody did.
So to him, it was like, I can'teven believe they put people in
jail for this because they'dhave to put the whole town in
jail.
It's like, well, maybe they willeventually, you know.
(10:32):
I don't know.
It's like the public watersystem.
But his whole thing was there'sso many drugs in the country
already, nothing you can do canstop it.
So why even try?
He's like, You can stop all thefentanyl.
There's still enough fentanyl tokill everybody 400 times over.
I'm like, Yeah, I know.
That's why you gotta at leaststart somewhere, you know, and
clearly taking it off the streetis not gonna be enough.
You got to stop it from itssource.
(10:52):
So I found this video of JasmineCrockett back before she ran for
politics when she was just anambulance chasing attorney in
Texas.
Oh boy.
A couple things here.
First of all, she's way morerational in this video, but I
just want to point this out.
I had a conversation one timewith my defense attorney about
how lawyers have no North Star.
You know, because they're hiredto basically say untruths and
(11:15):
lie on your behalf, you know,and all these kind of things.
They'll lie for you, so youdon't have to, kind of thing,
right?
So just keeping that in mind asit is, there's some defendant
here that gets charged with, youknow, drugs or whatever, and I
don't know, is allegedlyassaulted these officers or
whatever, but just listen to herrationale.
SPEAKER_14 (11:33):
Fort Worth police
say they were dispatched
Saturday when Curry attempted toassault members of the fire
department.
SPEAKER_01 (11:40):
He did suffer from a
seizure, which is why EMS was
there in the first place.
SPEAKER_14 (11:44):
Jasmine Crockett is
one of Curry's attorneys.
SPEAKER_01 (11:46):
It seems as if he
suffered from the seizure and
woke up potentially disorientedwith what was going on.
SPEAKER_14 (11:53):
In a statement, the
Fort Worth Police Department
said what the video does notdepict is that it took three
officers and one supervisor toeffectively place the resisting
subject into handcuffs.
What if your client at somepoint that wasn't seen on video
was in fact resisting andpushing back with his hands?
That is a possibility.
SPEAKER_01 (12:12):
That that's
absolutely a possibility.
And I'm not denying that as apotential possibility, even
though my stance is that he didnot commit any resisting arrest.
SPEAKER_14 (12:21):
Now, for the record,
Miss Crockett does not have any
medical paperwork to back up herclaim that her attorney that her
client may have a history ofseizures.
SPEAKER_13 (12:28):
Just like the
Maryland dad.
We have no actual evidence thathe's a good dude.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's just like all thestuff.
Hey, listen, these migrants aregreat.
Do you have any evidence ofthat?
Because we're not really seeingthe greatness here.
You know what I mean?
Every small lead comes intoMinnesota seems to be on the
dole and doesn't seem to careabout the mass of corruption.
(12:49):
You know what I'm saying?
Like it there, there's nomedical paperwork to back up her
claim of how she's justifyingthis obscene act.
It's like, okay, again, lawyershave no North Star, and that's
just there you go, JasmineCrockett defending the
indefensible, right?
Now, everybody needs a gooddefense attorney.
I'm not saying that theyshouldn't do that, they really
should, right?
(13:10):
But, but, but a snake is asnake, a duck is a duck, a
lawyer's a lawyer, right?
An accountant's an accountant.
Don't hire an accountant if youwant an entrepreneur.
You know why?
Because their idea is to cutcosts until you have nothing
left.
Robert Kiyosaki says that,right?
A lawyer, same thing.
A lawyer is about riskmitigation.
(13:32):
Well, guess what?
You're never gonna make it bigif you don't take risks.
And the few lawyers that learnto take risks, they know that's
because the rules are made up byother lawyers like them.
All right, so here is anotherwoman.
This kind of has gone viral thisweekend, but this is exactly
what I have been trying to sayfor my whole adult life.
I clued into this in collegewhen I went to graduate and uh
(13:55):
went and met the uh she wasn'tVal Victorian, she was Valed
Victorian for our uh major,right?
So she, you know, was the top ofthe degree class that graduated
the year before me.
And I went to a riot zone, whichis just a carnival, right?
A little local carnival ineastern Idaho, and she was
selling tickets, minimum wage.
And I'm like, what are you doinghere?
I was like, I thought youthought you'd be working for a
(14:15):
senator or you'd be doingsomething big, right?
You were like the thing.
Oh, I can't find a job.
Oh, really?
It scared me to death.
So I was like, I I, you know,I've got a family now and I've
got the same degree.
But she's got the best frickin'degree there is.
Yeah, it's she's at the top ofthe class.
Top of the class, I'm likeselling tickets.
Exactly.
I was like, oh my gosh.
Now, I had a political sciencedegree, which admittedly, you
(14:39):
know, it's one of the softsciences, like you know, maybe
it's a little more useful thanFrench literature or something.
It'll get you into law school,it'll get you into law school,
which was a goal, but then youlook at oh I don't want to be
like Jasmine Crockett.
Okay, but this is the problemhere.
So here's a young woman who, inan attempt to live the American
dream, this is what she's got.
SPEAKER_38 (14:58):
Okay, so how is
everyone buying a house right
now?
Because I just got off maybe oneof the most humbling phone calls
of my life, and I got quoted a6.5% mortgage rate.
Mind you, I do have an 808credit score.
I have zero debt.
(15:19):
I'm also a registered nurse, soI mean, in the state of Florida,
which I work in, it's not greatincome, let's be real.
Um yeah, I'm all I'm alsosingle, so one income.
How am I supposed to buy a housewith a mortgage rate that high?
One mortgage payment would bemore than one of my paychecks.
(15:44):
So yeah, that that's verydepressing.
What is everyone doing?
SPEAKER_13 (15:52):
Nothing.
They're doing nothing.
An entire generation ofhomeowners, just like this, have
been completely iced out ofmajor mortgage markets, major
housing markets.
Just iced out.
SPEAKER_29 (16:04):
It's hard.
I think my payment's about oneof my paychecks, so I don't know
what she's complaining about.
SPEAKER_13 (16:11):
Well, it shouldn't
be more than about 30% of your
income.
Sure.
Right?
So if it's one of yourpaychecks, assuming it's
bi-weekly pay, that's 50%.
I mean, you're you're beyond,you know what I'm saying?
It's beyond the pale.
SPEAKER_29 (16:21):
I'm I'm sorry.
I used to get paid weekly, soI'm sorry.
unknown (16:24):
Okay.
SPEAKER_29 (16:26):
You know,
construction, they pay weekly.
SPEAKER_13 (16:28):
Yeah.
So this is this is like uh a bigdeal.
It's hard for people that areolder, boomers, to really
comprehend what's happening tothe 20 and 30 year olds right
now with high interest ratesthat have been steady for four
years now, with uh increasinghome values because they've
inflated away the value of thedollar like crazy.
It's uh what is it?
(16:48):
How what's the phrase?
The buses will be free, right?
Like you can't continue this,which is why, on top of national
security risks, on top of allthe stuff, it's the fourth
turning.
All the institutions that wereour pride and joy back in the
day are just which ones working?
You know what I mean?
None of them are doing what theywere intended to do.
(17:09):
Department of Education, schoolresults are the worst ever.
FA F uh FHA, Fannie Mae, FreddieMac, why are why can't we afford
houses?
I thought you guys were createdto ensure we would be able to
afford a house.
But instead, you're almostmaking it so I can't, right?
Those institutions make it moreexpensive.
When we get towards the end ofthe show, we're going to talk
(17:30):
about the absolute economicmiracle that's happening down in
Argentina because they took achainsaw to all those programs.
So pray to heaven that thathappens here.
Here's another thing, too.
And this goes in now, there'slike a psyop going on.
Everything Trump has to do isgoing to cause an effect before
there's the recovery.
Okay.
This is, you know, you have tobreak it to fix it kind of
(17:52):
thing.
And you have to, you know, asyou do that, you're going to
expose some problems in thesystem.
SPEAKER_27 (17:57):
Okay.
SPEAKER_13 (17:58):
When Andrew Jackson
took on the central bank system
in the United States anddefeated it, it led to a
four-year depression, which wasthen followed by a 50-year
golden age, gilded age, right?
But it they had to redistributewealth naturally and allow the
supply and demand market to setin, and it took four years.
Okay.
(18:19):
This is the four years that it'sgoing to take to recover.
Because right now, as we takeimmediate action to fix national
security problems and to fix theacute issues with like Medicaid,
Medicare, Social Securitybenefits, all the, you know,
public housing, all that kind ofstuff, at the same time, you are
ripping people out of theeconomy that may or may not have
been working.
SPEAKER_19 (18:39):
For example, this.
Okay, it's official.
ICE is affecting my businessbecause I got a job site and I
got a ton of work to do, and Igot no guys to help me out.
SPEAKER_07 (18:49):
Maybe you should, I
don't know, stop hiring illegal
immigrants.
You think we're supposed to feelbad about you not being able to
complete your job because you'reundercutting actual hardworking
Americans?
SPEAKER_13 (19:02):
That's pretty much
the problem.
But he still's got to go findthose hardworking Americans.
And unfortunately, a lot of thepeople that would have been on
the roof helping this guy dothat job or doing whatever
construction job ended up in ajail cell, like my friend from
central Illinois, who didn'thave that job available to him
because the immigrants had movedinto his community when he was
(19:22):
young and they took the jobsthat he could have taken on his
way out of high school.
Does that make sense?
So it's gonna take a while forthose jobs to backfill and for
people to relocate where thereis work.
SPEAKER_29 (19:32):
Like five to ten.
I'm sorry, it was bad.
SPEAKER_13 (19:36):
Five to ten years?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Probably we'll get a Democrat in2028 and then they'll take all
the credit, right?
Okay, so now with this, there'sreal problems.
These problems are tangible forthe people who feel them.
You're a small business owner,you're an employer, like that
nurse down in Florida that can'tfind a house.
Your problems are tangible.
The solutions are painful.
(19:57):
The solutions are painful.
So what's happening right now,and Rasmussen and uh real
people's or people's pundit,they're polling has all showed
that this is the case.
Right now, the youngergenerations want a strong
authority figure to execute lawand order, to enforce the border
national security, and to takeon these institutions that are
(20:20):
holding them back.
Okay.
So because we're a country thatruns on elections, everything is
about messaging.
Snapshots and sound bites andmessaging, snapshots, sound
bites, and messaging.
If you say you're gonna dosomething, people will probably
give you a shot.
If you get into office and doit, they'll probably re-elect
you.
If you don't, you're gonna havea primary challenge and
problems.
(20:40):
You're gonna have primarychallenge and stuff anyways,
right?
But it's all about snapshots andsound bites.
Mandami up in New York, stillgetting ready to get sworn in,
still need your money, but he'sstarting to really do these
snapshots and sound bites againon what he's going to do to help
small business.
Now imagine us who have anideological difference with
(21:01):
Mandami, oppose almosteverything he stands for
culturally.
How do you defeat this?
Where is the messaging comingfrom the conservatives and from
the right and from the peoplewho want to preserve Americana
that is the equivalent of this?
SPEAKER_11 (21:16):
There's a lot of
things that make New York City
special.
For me, it's the delis andbodegas.
How do you could I get an eggand cheese on a roll with
jalapeno?
Ones don't want it specialcoming up.
Small businesses employ nearlyhalf of all New Yorkers in the
private sector to keep the cityrunning.
But the last four years havebeen hard.
We've seen the dollar slice goextinct, storefront after
storefront close, and had amayor and Eric Adams who has
(21:38):
ignored the struggles of smallbusinesses.
That's why, as mayor, I'm gonnamake it faster, easier, and
cheaper for small businesses toget started and stay open.
First, we're gonna cut fines andfees for small businesses by
50%.
Regulations are important, butsmall businesses have to
navigate more than 6,000 ofthem, with far fewer resources
than the big chains.
That's why as mayor, I'llappoint a mom and pop czar with
(22:00):
the clear goal of making iteasier to run a small business.
$1,000 isn't a lot to our citygovernment, but it can be make
or break for a small businesstrying to get off the ground.
Next, we're going to start aprivate competitive.
The mom and pop czar willcoordinate with agencies to
speed up turnaround times, cutred tape, and let New Yorkers
start businesses soon.
Because you shouldn't have tofill out 24 forms and go through
seven agencies to start a barbershop.
(22:21):
So most of all, we're puttingour money where our mouth is by
increasing funding for smallbusiness support programs with
500%.
We're going to invest$20 millionin our business express service
teams, which pair smallbusinesses with a city case
manager that helps them navigatepermits and regulations, as well
as connecting them with programsthat provide them with financial
and legal assistance.
Right now, only 3% of businessesare using these programs.
(22:42):
We want that number toskyrocket.
The only thing more in New Yorkthan an egg and cheese are the
small businesses that make them.
Together, we can not onlyprotect them, but encourage new
ones to make a home in our city.
SPEAKER_13 (22:54):
That is a dangerous
politician right there.
Whether he helps him or not.
That ad's out there now.
SPEAKER_29 (23:02):
Ah.
You want to hear an ad.
I got an ad for you.
SPEAKER_13 (23:06):
Speaking of small
business trying to make it.
SPEAKER_29 (23:09):
Dang it.
There's too many buttons.
Too many buttons.
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SPEAKER_13 (24:04):
Hey, you guys are
gonna have to let me know.
We ended up doing seven days ofbroadcasts last week.
Do you guys like that?
Do you guys like the everydayhaving something to come listen
to?
Because it wasn't that hard todo.
SPEAKER_25 (24:16):
Jeez.
SPEAKER_13 (24:18):
Or I could make
clips.
I gotta pick how to do my time.
New content or clips.
Okay, so here's another thing.
This happened, um, this happeneda little while ago.
This was out in Linwood, um,which is real local here.
Yeah.
So this was one of these Afghanmigrants that was resettled.
Now, recently we've had twoAfghan migrants, we've had three
Afghan migrants that wererelocated to Washington.
(24:39):
One of them traveled to DC lastweek, day before Thanksgiving,
shot two National Guardsmen.
One of them traveled to DC andshot a state trooper or on his
way.
So they know each other onlythrough the refugee program.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Okay.
And then there's and then therewas another one who um they
caught him while he was planningit online.
And then there's this guy.
(25:00):
He he this guy was local, so hedidn't travel and go kill an
authority figure.
But when we talk about cultures,we talk about not assimilating,
and we talk, you know what Imean?
Like Donald Trump put out atruth this week where some
former military member was like,I was in Afghanistan in the
what, you know, whatever valley,Kandahar Valley or whatever it
was, in in villages where if youhad the nicest, fanciest
(25:21):
Nespresso machine that made anexcellent cup of cappuccino and
you brought it out there andshowed it to them and made him a
cup of cappuccino, they'd callyou a witch and cut off your
head for it.
Yeah, great, bring him here,right?
That's and Donald Trumpretweeted that.
This is what he's talking about.
This was in Linwood.
This was in front of a highschool in Linwood.
This is a Muslim father who hadarranged a marriage for his
(25:42):
daughter in the United States ofAmerica.
She didn't want to do it, so hedecided he needed to do an honor
killing in front of her highschool in Lynwood, Washington.
This is it.
That's the man on top of hisdaughter with a knife trying to.
Oh gosh.
This is in front of her schoolin Linwood.
Okay.
(26:03):
This is an Afghan migrantbrought here during the
resettlement.
These bystanders, obviouslyseeing what's happening here.
That is his daughter.
Oh my gosh.
Yes, it's hard to watch.
I'm sorry, it's only a fewseconds.
That's horrific.
It is horrific.
Okay.
This is what when you hearextremists that say things like,
it's a zero policy, it's wecannot have it.
(26:26):
It's you guys can figure out howto live over there, but it there
is no amount of virtue thatallows that's going to allow me
to want to allow that to comeinto our society and spread that
nonsense.
Arranged marriages forunderstanding.
The daughter was 14, by the way.
SPEAKER_29 (26:41):
No, get the hell
out.
Just get it out.
SPEAKER_13 (26:43):
But yeah, you're
gonna you have people out there
that just that can't see that.
For example, here's the formermayor of or Seattle, still
technically the mayor, talkingabout crime and law and order.
Now, apply this attitude tocrimes like this.
Does it even matter thebackground at a certain degree?
I mean, if you pull the trigger,does it even matter why you did?
You did, right?
SPEAKER_20 (27:03):
The criminal system
has had a disparate impact on
black and brown communities.
Let me lead with that.
So when this person iscommitting six or seven crimes,
I don't know his or her story.
Maybe they were abused as achild.
Maybe they're bruised.
So my my remedy is to find theirlife story to see how we could
help first.
(27:23):
I have no desire to put them injail.
You can't read that manystories, Bruce.
And that's the calibration thatwe have.
SPEAKER_13 (27:31):
See, Bruce, the
problem is if you actually go
down that road far enough, youend up putting them in
reconcentration re-educationcamps.
Because if you're not willing tojust punish the behavior and you
want to change them and reformthem, then you end up doing
re-education camps.
And guess what?
All socialists and communistsultimately lead to that because
they got to control your mind.
Because what they're doing makesno sense.
(27:52):
Okay.
Again, this is the kind of stuffwhere when you see out there and
you have Donald Trump and otherstaking such hard stances with
immigration, such hard stanceswith drug and for drug
trafficking and things likethat.
It's because we're at the pointwhere we have to get to zero
tolerance.
Here's Seattle.
Again, I focused on Seattletoday.
DOJ immigrants are floodingWashington with fentanyl in a
(28:15):
massive DOJ takedown.
I don't want you to sell mypersonal information.
I just did this yesterday.
Okay.
Uh illegal immigrant runfentanyl rings busted across
Washington, massive DOJtakedown.
Two major drug traffickingorganizations pumping fentanyl,
meth heroin, and illegalfirearms into western Washington
were dismantled in October.
Groups federal authorities sayare tied to support uh suspects
(28:35):
from Ecuador and Mexico.
Okay.
Now, the attorney did a did aninterview.
He said, when asked directdirectly whether all the
suspects were American citizens,Floyd said no.
In fact, it looks like part ofthe group has ties to, I
believe, Ecuador.
It's fair for the public to knowthe Trump administration is not
wrong about the fact that manyof the people that are here
illegally are committing crimesand very serious ones.
(28:58):
Many of the people that are hereillegally.
How come this is the first timeI'm hearing it from above?
You know, it's one of thosethings where it's finally
starting getting cool to say.
The conservatives andspecifically Republicans, or
MAGA, MAGA Republicans, arefinally getting to the point
where they take the stuff thrownat them and they package it up
and they throw it right back.
Right?
Yeah, we're racist.
Why?
Because we don't want ourdaughters killed in front of
(29:19):
their schools.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, we're racist.
Why?
Well, because many of theimmigrants here are committing
crimes.
You know, like matter of fact,prove me wrong.
I think it's a fair narrative toget out, Floyd said, of
disclosing immigration status.
The counter narrative iscertainly being pushed.
Now keep in mind, this is anattorney that had to get through
the blue slip program where ourDemocrat senators had to approve
(29:39):
him.
So even he is saying this.
Um the counter narrative, thecounter narrative that all
migrants are fine and we shouldjust help them.
And they're just one off isbeing pushed.
He then goes on to talk abouthow they don't investigate based
on uh immigration status andthey don't even ask DHS the
immigration status of thetargets they're doing.
But during the course of theirinvestigation, they often find
it find.
(30:00):
Out.
Agents, he said you follow theevidence where it takes you,
emphasizing that illegal statusof several suspects became clear
only in the course of theirinvestigation.
So, anyways, he just goes on totalk about more and more of what
he's taken.
But bottom line is, you know,the illegal immigrants, uh,
there was another politicianthis week, and it was like, Oh,
it was Jasmine Crockett.
(30:21):
We know that illegal immigrantspermit crime at a much lower
level.
No, they don't.
It's not even, it's like noteven, we're not even taught, you
know.
We know that the sky is purple.
We know that for a fact.
No, we don't.
It's not even observable.
You know what I mean?
SPEAKER_28 (30:37):
It's a totally
absurd thing to even say.
SPEAKER_13 (30:39):
And it's one of
those things where it's like,
okay, you've got this Afghanshit, you know, Afghan guy that
drives across the country to DCto shoot these National
Guardsmen.
But for you know, the lastcouple of years, he's been
quietly sitting in his apartmentin allegedly, according to news
reports, in the dark, you know,hardly talks to anybody.
They're so nice.
It's like, yeah, they're they'rereally assimilating quickly, you
know.
(31:00):
Um in Singapore, they have oneof the strictest justice systems
when it comes to drugs.
Right.
And so this is the uh presidentof Singapore.
And I don't know when this wasrecorded, it doesn't matter, but
they've got a pretty goodattitude about it.
This is Li Kwan Yu versus drugtraffickers.
And I think in it's so hard forme to want to like throw these
(31:23):
judicial bombs and be like,everybody's gotta go to jail.
I hated jail.
I don't want to, you know what Imean?
Like, I don't, I don't, I don'treally wish it on my worst
enemies, but at the same time,one of the cognitions I came
through there, it was about sixmonths before I realized, oh,
this place is necessary.
SPEAKER_28 (31:37):
Yeah, some of these
police, some of these people
need to not be here.
SPEAKER_13 (31:41):
Like, and honestly,
there wasn't questions like
would just would killing themreally be the worst thing ever,
you know.
I mean, like, these areunrepentant people, they will go
out and do it again.
In fact, uh, one of the one ofthe things that came up uh
another January 6th was inresponse to this, you know, the
two shots to kill the narcoterrorists in the water.
Well, if they if they werealive, shouldn't we have
(32:02):
captured them and like to givethem due process?
And I was like, no.
Here's why.
First of all, we have nojurisdictional or we have no
jurisdiction over them oranything like that.
Second of all, they'renarco-terror, they're
narco-traffickers, they knowexactly what they're doing,
they're not fishermen from avillage, whatever.
They know exactly what they'redoing when they get bar on board
a boat with a bunch of drugs.
Yeah.
And I'm like, and the thebiggest thing about this that
(32:25):
people don't realize we have ouryoung men and women that sign up
for the military.
Remember, my gang's bigger thanyour gang, and they'll go spend
18 months overseas multipletimes, multiple deployments,
away from their family, but youknow, their family gets paid,
and it's just part of the game.
You don't think these cartelsview a prison sentence as a
deployment?
Because they deal drugs inprison, they just become a
(32:46):
different a different end of theequation.
They still maintain all the samecartel allegiances, their
families still get theirpaychecks.
SPEAKER_29 (32:53):
Going to prison,
it's like the boat exploded and
they landed in the water, stillalive.
Do you think they wondered whathappens next?
SPEAKER_13 (33:00):
But the point is,
it's like this idea that you can
take these directly connectedcartel guys, especially the ones
that are straight up foreigners,like they're it's not your
street drug dealer and you putthem into prison.
They're key, they're theirpeople are there.
That's a deployment for them.
They've signed up for this.
That's part of their life plan.
It's not a deterrent.
SPEAKER_29 (33:21):
I know that you
don't want to talk about this,
but going back to that guy thatwent from Bellingham to shot
those two guys, did you hearwhat he used for a weapon?
Uh 357 Magnum, I thought.
Yeah, revolver.
SPEAKER_13 (33:32):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (33:32):
It's a six shot.
SPEAKER_13 (33:33):
It wasn't even a
semi-auto.
I know they're they're makingthey're gonna start using bulk
actions and stuff because theywant to take away all guns.
Right.
You don't want it to just beassault rifles with high
capacity.
So was this like a Democrat PRpiece?
Is that what's going on?
If you ask General Flynn, hethinks it's straight up
orchestrated by the CIA becausethis guy was a CIA.
Hell yeah.
Yeah, he he operated on theirdeath squad in Afghanistan, our
CIA death squad.
(33:54):
Yeah, they call it zero,whatever.
Should have never been in thiscountry.
When a person overseas fightsagainst their own country,
right?
They're fighting for liberty andfreedom there.
When you bring them over here,they're not fighting for our
values, they were fighting fortheir values.
He was fighting to bring hisversion of Islam back to his
Islamic country, right?
SPEAKER_29 (34:15):
When you go and you
shoot two people that have guns
with a revolver, oh they don'tthe National Guard didn't have
guns.
Oh, okay.
Because they're they're just onthe street just to But even if
even then you got a revolver,bang, bang, bang, bang, bang,
bang.
You're out of bullets.
Now what?
Oh, this is the same.
What's your plan?
What what do you what was hisfinal plan?
This to die?
SPEAKER_13 (34:36):
This no, just go to
prison.
Okay.
It's e listen, if you are havinga hard time paying your bills on
the outside and you understandthat you got three mils in a
cot.
SPEAKER_17 (34:45):
I'm just all right,
leak one of drug traffickers.
All right, yes.
That's for drugs.
That's for drugs.
Because you think drugs deserveto be treated with the maximum
punishment.
If we could kill them a hundredtimes, you would because you
destroy the whole families.
SPEAKER_18 (35:04):
It's it's terrifying
to see.
Because you are you are thendrug dependent, you steal, you
cheat, you rob your own parents.
I mean, it's it's so destroying.
And they come in knowing thatthey are found with this codes
(35:25):
on them.
The rewards are so great.
You do they try very veryunusual people, wetmen from
Africa, big mammies come to sellclothes, and in between the
clothes, uh kilos of heroin.
SPEAKER_17 (35:41):
And if you say if
you bring heroin into Singapore,
you hang you hang.
You hang anything beyond 10grams, you hang.
Below 10 grams, if you areconvicted of bringing in more
than 10 grams of heroin, youhang.
You hang.
That's right.
After a jury trial.
Yes, of course.
No, no jury trial.
Judge.
Judge listen to the evidence.
SPEAKER_13 (36:01):
What's the point?
Jury trial.
We have all countries.
SPEAKER_17 (36:04):
You bring in the
drugs.
Presented?
Yes, of course.
And if he says you're guilty,you hang.
You hang.
And you're still gone.
Unbelievable.
Well, do you believe capitalpunishment is a deterrent or
not?
SPEAKER_18 (36:17):
Uh without capital
punishment, our transshipment
rate as a drug center wouldquadruple.
Or quadruple.
Because you're right on thepassage.
Yes.
And our internal consumptionwould go up by a multiple of
ten.
SPEAKER_13 (36:34):
I I can't wait to
get a year down the road when we
start finding out how muchTrump's activity has decreased
the overall overdose volume ofdeath and stuff like that.
Yeah, it'll be reallyinteresting.
I know your family was affectedby this.
You know, do you do you want toshare?
Uh my brother died of a fentanyloverdose.
Brother died of a fentanyloverdose.
(36:54):
Wouldn't it have been nice totake care of the dealer before
it ever got here?
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (36:58):
Yeah, I guess so.
SPEAKER_13 (36:59):
When when I was in
prison, there was a guy that was
in there, his name was Vince.
And he was a good guy.
Yeah, he's a good guy.
He's a good guy.
Um, he was definitely foundhimself in prison, you know,
connected with Christian, youknow, spirituality and
Christianity and stuff likethat.
But he was a drug dealer, andwhat he would do is he'd dress
up in a cop uniform and he'd gorob drug dealers.
(37:21):
Anyways, but uh when he wentinto prison, his son was 12
years old.
And he had a 15-year sentence,and I think he's been in eight
years, so he's got a couple moreyears left.
He's getting close because ofuh, you know, good time.
But uh his son was 19 and oneday Vince and I became pretty
good friends.
Walked on the track a lot, hewas in the dog program, and one
(37:45):
day he just looks like a mess.
I'm like, Vince, how you doing?
He goes, My son died.
Like, what?
And he had written a book fromprison called Letters to My Son
by Vince, and he never put hislast name.
You can go find it on Amazon,Letters to My Son, right?
And it was from prison, and itwas trying to encourage his son
to grow up and be a good guy andstuff like that.
And his his wife, uh, theythey've she visited every week.
(38:09):
His son, as he became ateenager, dad wasn't there.
So he was rebellious and havinga hard time.
And it just, you know, it's thestory of teenagers, but no dad,
dad's in prison.
Gets involved with a girl, getssome drugs, overdoses.
SPEAKER_25 (38:22):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (38:22):
So here's Vince
sitting in prison with a son
who's just overdosed fromfentanyl.
And he's in his block, there'sguys in there that are there for
distribution of fentanyl withdeath.
And they're like, Oh, we want toget out, we're in a set, we're
not really, you know.
And he's like, One of you guysjust killed my son.
You know, you don't imagine howhard that is.
(38:45):
So why we want to kill the boatscoming across the this ocean?
Why we don't care if two extraguys get popped off in the ocean
that we're on the boat, it'sbecause it saves us from having
to incarcerate dealers andhaving to bury our kids.
SPEAKER_29 (38:57):
That's why.
And it's a deterrent to keep theboats from coming.
SPEAKER_13 (39:00):
It is a huge
deterrent.
And I hate to say this, butsometimes you can't trust the
system per se.
So this is a DOJ DOJ pressrelease, and I'm just gonna
cover this because again, I Ialmost hate uh covering uh uh
law enforcement malfeasance,right?
Because it creates this like andI and I'm I mean some people are
(39:21):
like, dude, you're alwaysrailing against the cops.
I know because when you have uhan authority like that, you have
a high you have a high duty,okay?
But this was a police chief inuh let's see, he was Houston,
Texas, uh Houston police chiefcaptain, federally indicted for
raping a 12-year-old girl 85 to100 times after targeting her
online.
(39:41):
So this is a police chief thatwas a child targeter online.
You always have like I alwayssay when in Rome, do as the
Romans.
We follow the laws, we do ourbest to follow all the rules,
but you always have to checkauthority.
Do not assume just becausesomeone has an authority badge
that they are a moral authorityor an ethical authority or are
(40:03):
any different.
You have to walk your own walks,stand tall, be sure of yourself,
you know, because these are someof the people that will come and
try to enforce things on you.
So you can't make it about it'snever about them or whatever.
You know, if that guy arrestedsome drunk driver, that was
still a drunk driver.
But at the same time, we have tobe cognizant.
There's a cultural and moral rotthat's happening that allows
(40:26):
people like that to find theirpositions of power.
And it also enforces this samething here, too, because on a
national scale, right, that's alittle micro-level horrible
thing, and probably noinvolvement with others.
It's not like the MississippiRiver Delta where they arrested,
you know, sheriffs and stuff,and it was a long coordinated
conspiracy.
This probably is just a pervert,okay?
And and it doesn't even matterin, you know, locally for me.
(40:50):
It's just another one of thosesad things.
But this is uh something that'sinteresting here.
So, with regards to the LetitiaJames and the James Comey um
dismissals, there was somethingthat happened there that this
Sam E.
Anter at Sam Anter on X, I'llgive him a shout out.
He says, obstruction of justice,47 leaks, nine newsrooms, one
(41:10):
coordinated operation.
And so what he's saying here isthat um who inside the
Department of Justicecoordinated with Letitia James,
legal teams, Reuters, ABC, CBS,CNN, NBC, MSNBC, and the
Washington Post, Wall StreetJournal, and New York Times to
sabotage their own prosecution.
So basically what it's saying isthat you go down here and let's
show you that I'll show you thischart and kind of walk you
through it.
But essentially, Letitia Jamesgets indicted.
(41:33):
So you have this defense networkthat is formed of her attorney,
Abe Lowell, Daga, Ally, Schumer,Garcia, and they start
exchanging with DOJ Insiders,career and prosecutor senior
leadership, and with media.
And what happens is they'restarting to shape the narrative.
And they put that narrative intocourt filings, and then DOJ leak
insiders leak to reporters.
(41:53):
They had a total of 47 leaks,all went one direction.
Right?
All went one direction.
Shocking.
The media publishes thosestories and calls it evidence.
And then what happened is allthree streams converge and lows
November 17th, 2025 motion todismiss.
And what happened is the thejudge then cites those leaks,
which were all going onedirection.
(42:15):
The indictments were dismissedon a procedural technicality,
the appointments clause, not theevidence, not vindictive
projection, uh, not vindictiveprosecution, a technicality.
I expect DOJ would return andsupplement it.
But what they said was basicallythey all laundered it in, and
the judge just took it and itcreated the doubt, and then they
let it off on a technicality,right?
And that's how they launderedthat information into there.
(42:36):
And they're going, DOJ insidersmade 47 leaks.
47 leaks.
That's like a it's like an openbucket.
SPEAKER_29 (42:44):
That's pretty that's
pretty free.
More than a full-time job,somebody.
SPEAKER_13 (42:48):
Yeah, yeah.
Um yeah, anyways, that's justcrazy.
Another thing, too, kind ofchanging topics here is Tucker
Carlson had on uh let me justmake sure I've got this.
Tucker Carlson had on Costronand self-respect on Alex Jones.
(43:09):
And in his conversation withAlex Jones, he started talking
about generals in the militaryand you know them being woke and
stuff like that.
What's interesting about this isDonald Trump is clearly leaning
on the military right now.
Right?
He's got active activities goingon in Venezuela, a little bit in
Somalia.
He's you know, leaning on thatmilitary might and strength.
(43:30):
And Donald Trump has alwaysreally touted the generals, but
then he's go, they have these TVgenerals and they're woke and
stuff like that.
Uh, we know from my friendMatthew Lohmeyer that communism
has infiltrated the ranks bigtime, specifically the
leadership, the generals,secretary of defenses, those
kind of things.
They've, you know, the militaryis kind of a communist
enterprise, like you know,admittedly, but that they've
(43:51):
kind of really taken on thismantle.
And what uh Tucker Carlson isobserving is a lot of these guys
that come through here andbecome military generals are not
your general patents.
These are not yourbattle-hardened soldiers, right?
And this is, I think, a littlebit of the problem where our
military kind of misses the boata little bit and why we've had a
a struggle the last coupledecades with you know the
(44:12):
obliteration of don't ask, don'ttell, where it's like, tell us
and we'll promote you.
Okay.
And stuff like that.
Here we go.
SPEAKER_09 (44:20):
A lot of them are
sociology professors with
nuclear weapons.
I mean, they're they're scary.
And I know that just from livingin DC.
I wouldn't know that if I hadn'tspent my life in Washington.
The Pentagon's right there.
The neighborhood I grew up in inGeorgetown was, you know, the
chairman of the joint chiefslived like one house over from
me.
They're just always circulatingthrough because they all
circulate through DC.
So I would have, you know, go todinners or duck hunts or
(44:42):
whatever.
You're with these people andyou're like, wait, you're like
stupid, totally incapable oflike creative or independent
thought.
And you're a lefty big time, andlike self-hating white guys and
like crypto gay and like alllike they're sociology
professors.
A lot of them.
I've met a lot of them.
A lot.
Why do you think DEI sweptthrough the military?
(45:05):
Because the flag officers wantedit.
And why did they want it?
Because they hate themselves.
Because they all got, you know,master's degrees at Fletcher or
whatever.
It's some, you know, they allgot indoctrinated by higher
education, as as you explainedat the outset.
So, like, man, you have to makesure those people are loyal to
the Constitution.
And you need to go throughsystematically.
SPEAKER_05 (45:23):
By the way, do you
think Trump finally knows that
he thought the brass for thesebadass John Wayne guys are
literally the enemy?
SPEAKER_09 (45:29):
Well, apparently
everyone says that the the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs islike a really good, a good,
solid raisin cane American.
That's correct.
Dan Cain is a is a great guy.
So I mean, I think there are alot of great people.
Yeah, there may be many left.
But look, there are many bad MSLforever.
Many bad, many bad.
And the left used the COVIDvaccine to weed out the men,
(45:53):
guys with testosterone andself-respect, who were like, I'm
not doing that.
I'm not gonna poison myself.
And so they left.
But that was the point of theCOVID vax was to get decent to
purge the men so it's all likebetas and women who can be
controlled and are sort of eagerto worship false gods.
And you have those people withguns.
I don't know.
(46:13):
It's really scary what justhappened under Biden.
And has it been corrected?
SPEAKER_13 (46:18):
So one of the things
I would say to Tucker is they're
making a huge effort to correctit.
That generation of militarypeople, right?
When he's saying, you know, theyweeded out the men, okay, well,
let's now assume we have a bunchof sheep.
Okay.
Guess what?
Sheep will be fed.
So you gotta start feeding themthe agenda you want, the
Americana you want, the Americanexceptionalism.
(46:38):
If they bought off on DEIbecause that's what shoved down
their throat, guess what?
You gotta start shoving downtheir throat now.
What was it about re-educationcamps?
Guess that's what that's whatboot camp is, right?
It's a re-education camp.
You are no longer a freeAmerican, you are now a
contracted soldier, right?
All right, what do we got here,Ron?
We got some some GK publishing.
SPEAKER_29 (46:57):
I don't even know.
We'll find out here in a second.
SPEAKER_13 (47:00):
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A powerful look at the cult ofpersonality, MKUltra, and mind
control tactics seeking tocontrol your world view.
(48:10):
These books wake people up, theystrengthen conviction, they
prepare you for the battle thatwe're already in.
Go to gatekeepersonline.com, hitthe bookstore, and use promo
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That's code Rumble for BOGO atgatekeepers on
(48:30):
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Get equipped while you stillcan.
SPEAKER_13 (48:35):
That is one heck of
a publishing company.
We got some MK Ultra books, wegot everything.
That is awesome.
I was laughing with my wife lastnight because I uh I was like,
you know, Ron told me that hisstandard answer to the question
that starts with, have you everread the book?
And the answer is no.
Have you ever started questionout with have you ever read?
(48:56):
It's like just no.
No.
SPEAKER_28 (48:58):
No.
SPEAKER_13 (48:59):
It's not King James
Bible, no, I haven't read it.
SPEAKER_28 (49:01):
I mean, there's a
few exceptions, but the easy
answer is no.
SPEAKER_13 (49:05):
Generally, no.
The few books that you haveread, you're like, and you
wouldn't be asking about them.
Right, exactly.
Sci-fi book when you were ateenager.
Anyways, I've had quite a fewfriends who are, you know, like
that.
You're really intelligent, Ron.
I mean, somehow you've picked itup.
SPEAKER_29 (49:20):
I mean, if you have
to, if you ask me if I've ever
read a Louis Lemour book, Imight have to think about it.
SPEAKER_13 (49:26):
Maybe half of one at
some point.
SPEAKER_29 (49:28):
I've read a lot of
Louis Moore books.
SPEAKER_13 (49:30):
Have you?
Okay.
Louis Lemoore.
But uh, you have read a lot oftechnical manuals.
SPEAKER_29 (49:36):
Oh, yeah.
Well, I read when I have to.
SPEAKER_13 (49:41):
All right.
So this is Mel K.
Mel K was a huge uh supporter ofJ6, so I really appreciate
everything she's gotten.
She's another one of thesereporters that's out on the
leading edge of things, um,which is actually not so
different than us.
If you're listening to thispodcast, you're getting things
as soon as it's available in therealm of things we're talking
about, politics, policy,economics.
You know, um, I follow enoughpeople and I've kind of through
(50:04):
my adult life kind of figuredout, you know, who is at the tip
of the sword and who's breakingthese little news stories that
germinate over time.
And what I've noticed is somestories break and it takes
years.
For example, we were on top ofthe Venezuela connection to
Smartmatic and Dominion back in2020, right?
And just now it's starting tobecome like Alex Jones has got
(50:25):
people coming on and they'restarting to really like, yeah,
the machine barely getting intothe zeitgeist.
Exactly.
So we were way ahead on that.
In fact, I served a prisonsentence because, well, I would
have served it regardless,probably, but I wasn't going to
back down because I could seethe evidence.
So this is Mel Kay.
She's talking about Obama andhis congressional, his library,
presidential library, as well assome of the other stuff he's
involved in.
(50:46):
This is big.
Okay.
This little breaking story whereshe's getting it in these news
sources, what's being published,is going to germinate over the
next probably couple years.
Which, by the way, there's ahuge connection with the CIA and
after the church committee andthey went and hit out in Kenya
right around the time thatnobody was born, that eventually
became a president of Venezuela,bragged about putting in Braun
(51:10):
Bryant.
There's a lot there.
Okay, there's a lot to the Obamastory yet to be told.
SPEAKER_23 (51:14):
Um Chaos erupted on
the Capitol when Senator John
Kennedy unleashed a blistering47-minute takedown during a
Senate appropriations committeehearing saying that the Obama
Foundation was operating what hecalled the slickest money
laundering operation sinceCapone War's vets.
So basically, what Kennedy foundis that the Obama, with freshly
(51:36):
declassified IRS audits andwhistleblower documents, the
Obama Foundation has over 500million in donor funds that
vanished into undocumentedglobal initiatives with zero
paper trim, 740,000 annualsalary to Valerie, Valerie
Jared, while the presidentialcenter has built for eight
(51:58):
years.
Okay.
Only 1 million deposited intothe promised$470 million
taxpayer protection fund meantto cover cost overruns on the
public park land where Obama puthis um whatever he's building
there that looks like the Towerof Babel.
93 million in consulting feedspaid to firms linked to Obama
(52:21):
campaign bundlers.
Kennedy said, this isn't afoundation, folks.
This is a personal ATM disguiseas a charity.
SPEAKER_13 (52:38):
So Kennedy, you
know, Kennedy kind of broke that
story that's been beingfollowed, but no one else is
talking about that.
But given all the conversationswe're having about money
laundering and all thesedifferent things, it's coming.
I feel like I was watchingJersey Shore.
Because of her accent, or justis she from Boston?
I don't know where she's from.
Uh, she came down to the prisona couple times, pretty sure it
(53:01):
was her.
So there's the other thing, too.
Okay, now we're gonna Imentioned that we were gonna be
talking about the Seditious Six.
This is Slokken and Mark Kelly,and you know, those guys lock
them all up.
So this is from uh Bad KittyUnleashed.
Bad Kitty Unleashed is aresearch account.
There's a handful of theseaccounts out there that do deep
dive research, you know.
(53:22):
And these are these are the whatthese are the Mike Benzes of the
world that go into all thesedocuments and they read speeches
and they watch hours of thesesummits that you know, these
World Economic Forum summitsthat people go to.
These people provide anunbelievable service to people
like me.
SPEAKER_29 (53:36):
They read it so we
don't have to.
SPEAKER_13 (53:37):
They read it so we
don't have to.
Okay, so what I'm gonna show youhere, this is uh Alyssa Slock in
on October 29th, 2005.
And we played this clip where uhuh Melissa Slockin says that
there's going to be an attack onguardsmen soon in a number of
weeks, and then two weeks later,boom, we have an attack on
guardsmen.
Isn't it interesting?
He's a CIA guy, she's CIA.
(53:58):
You know, it's like okay.
So this uh bad kitty, is thather name?
Yeah, bad kitty unleashed, wentthrough this this article here,
and she's uh not an article, buther whole speech, and she
summarizes it.
OMG, you guys.
I just dug into the epic file Ifound, the transcript of Senator
Alyssa Slotkin's speech at theBrookings Institute night forum
(54:19):
on October 29th, 2025.
Who is the Brookings Institute?
The Brookings Institute was atthe center of the Russia Gate
scandal and the Ukraine Gatescandal.
They're one of these think tanksthat pushed out all these fake
news narratives and created allthe legal justifications, you
know, the ones with all thegreat ideas.
They're yeah, an idea shop.
Yep.
And it's a total and they'revery associated with the
(54:40):
intelligence on the left.
I mean, like this, you know, allthis Ukraine stuff, Brookings
Institute.
They had multiple people thatwent and testified.
And it's a total game changer.
This thing is like a crystalball predicting the future,
dropping bombshells left andright, and it's got all the
drama.
Let me break it down for you inthe most hyped up way because
this is straight fire.
First off, timing is everything.
The speech dropped on October29th, 2025.
(55:02):
That's a whopping three weeksbefore the infamous November
18th, Don't Give Up the Shipvideo that went viral.
Slockin was out there laying thegroundwork, sounding the alarm
bells way ahead of time.
It's like she knew exactly whatwas coming and decided to rally
the troops early.
Mind blown.
And this gets, and get this thevideo's name is right there in
(55:22):
the speech at the very end.
She wraps it up with thepowerhouse closer.
Don't give up the ship.
Bam! That's the exact title ofthe video where she teams up
with Mark Kelly and the crew tourge military folks to refuse
illegal orders.
It's not a coincidence.
This speech was the blueprint,the origin story.
She even ties it to thehistorical perseverance uh
perseverance, shouting outgenerations who fought for
(55:45):
rights.
So inspirational.
I'm getting chills.
Now, the celebrity cameo alert.
Victoria Newland's husband wasthere.
Yes, Robert Kagan.
The powerhouse foreign policyexpert was Stephen and Barbara
Friedman, senior fellow at theBrookings.
Victoria Newland testified inthe Obama, in the Russia Gate,
um not Russia Gate, Ukraine Gateimpeachment.
(56:07):
She's was the ambassador toUkraine at one point.
She was considered, um, she'sbeen basically deeply involved
with Obama and then and thenBiden.
She's at the center of all kindsof stuff.
Color revolutions, she's likethe State Department connection,
right?
The Powerhouse foreign policyexpert that Stephen and Barbara
Friedman, senior fellows atBrookings, was a panelist at the
(56:27):
event.
He dropped wisdom on domesticpolarization as a massive
security quack.
Quick shout out, Kagan is indeedmarried to Victoria Newland, the
former Under Secretary of theState for Political Affairs,
power couple vibes.
Having fun in the mix adds theextra layer of gravitas.
It's like the event was stackedwith heavy lifters who know the
global stakes.
Epic networking moment.
But wait, the key points on thisspeech.
(56:48):
Oh man, Slotkin goes fullthrottle critiquing Trump's
national security pivot tohomeland defense, defined as one
man alone.
She's like, hold up, this couldmean using lethal force against
domestic enemies.
She drives into the Caribbean,strikes.
14 ships hit, 57 plus killed,plus zero transparency on who
we're fighting.
Shady much.
Secret domestic terrorist liststargeting anti-Trump views and
(57:10):
federal forces, turning U.S.
cities into training grounds.
She's warning aboutauthoritarian playbooks.
Accumulate power, crushopponents, and rig the system to
never lose elections canceled.
Martial law, limit limitation atpolls.
She's popping flares left andright.
This is not a drill, people,because they're projecting.
They're telling you what Trump'sgoing to do, and it's what
they're trying to get done.
(57:31):
They want him to use thosepowers so they can usurp them.
If he creates those powers anddeploys into the streets and
martial law, and then one day,pew pew and now the person in
charge is not the guy weelected.
You see what I'm saying?
This is a Nixon.
How'd we get Gerald Ford, theunelected president?
(57:54):
You see what I'm saying?
This is how you do it.
They uh allowed Nixon to createa weaponization scenario.
They painted it on him, broughtin Gerald Ford, and then they
just continued to weaponize thegovernment.
Everything that Nixon wastrying, that they alleged Nixon
was doing, essentially trying tocover up a scandal that he
wasn't involved in, is what theycontinued to do for the next 60
(58:15):
years.
Then calls to action.
Pure adrenaline.
She urges Congress to reclaimpower, introducing her to No
Troops in Our Streets Act.
Yes, Queen.
Tells the military to fuseillegal orders and choose the
constitution over loyalty to oneguy, rallies veterans to speak
up, and even says, DM me to gettheir band together,
foreshadowing that video squad,pushes the state leaders to
(58:35):
protect elections and fires upeveryday Americans to organize
peacefully.
It's a blueprint for resistance,drawing from her own January 6th
barricade in the office trauma.
She ends on that high note don'tgive up the ship because
democracy needs us now.
This file is a treasure troptreasure troose of foresight and
fire.
If you're not pumped afterreading this, check your pulse.
Thank you, Grok, for typing mysentiments in my excited style.
(58:56):
I'm sleepy.
This could work.
So, anyways, she made it sound,you know, all hyped up, but
that's where you see thisconspiracy forming.
Formed well before that.
She wrote the speech.
But one of the things I I can'tremember who said it, but he was
like, everybody thinks the deepstate operates in the deep, like
in the dark.
And maybe occasionally they do,but the reality is these people
(59:18):
are spread all over the globe.
They're all over theseinstitutions.
They have FOIA requests, youknow, they have limited what
they can communicate.
And if they do communicate andget caught, it causes problems.
And they found over time that99.9% of people don't pay
attention to anything.
So they can just get up and givea speech and tell you what
they're going to do.
That's an energetic thing, Iwarned you.
And then when they do it, youcan't be like, it was in the and
(59:40):
was sneaky.
They're like, We told you openlywe were gonna do this, right?
It's like over and over and overagain they do this.
And that's where Alex Jones islike, I don't have to read a
conspiracy.
I'm reading their own whitepapers, I'm reading their own
publications.
They don't keep secrets as wellas we think.
We are just ignorant of theirstuff.
You know what I mean?
While we spend our time.
With bread and circus, theyspend their time reading each
(01:00:03):
other's press releases andinterviews and stuff like that.
And that's why on TV you see somuch signaling from these
people.
When they get out and do aninterview and they run talking
points, right?
They're signaling to otherpeople.
This is the talking point.
Certain characters, as ScottAdams calls them, the designated
liars, when they come out to dotheir song and dance, you know
that they're setting talkingpoints for the next guys.
That's how they were able tolaunder those media hits into
(01:00:26):
the courtroom to get LetitiaJames and Comey's cases
dismissed.
What do you think about that,Ron?
SPEAKER_29 (01:00:33):
I hope my kids in
school.
SPEAKER_13 (01:00:35):
You hope your kids
in school hasn't problems.
Carlit says, My kids lost twofriends to fentanyl.
Our family supports the quicktrial, Trump refers to.
I remember when I was sitting inprison and Trump did the
interview.
Everybody in prison loved DonaldTrump.
And then he did the interviewwhere he told Sean Hannity he
wanted the death sentence fordrug drug uh dealers.
Oh and all the white drug dealerguys were like, oh it's gotten a
(01:01:00):
little close.
I I oppose the death sentencefor drug dealers for domestic
drug views.
Like I think these are our theseare our sons and daughters.
If they commit murder or havesomebody die, you know, you got
to do what you got to do.
But uh you got you know, therehas to be justice.
But at the same time, you know,I don't think some of the guys I
knew deserve death penalty.
They definitely deserved aprison sentence, and they but
they definitely also need someform of rehabilitation, they
(01:01:22):
need some form of opportunity tocome out to.
And that's I think the problemis this becomes so cyclic that
you almost think the deathpenalty is the only solution.
Maybe it is, maybe it is theonly thing, but anyways.
SPEAKER_29 (01:01:34):
Well, especially the
guys that are doing it just for
the money.
SPEAKER_13 (01:01:36):
Yeah.
Speaking of just for the money,this is Elon Musk.
This is back from the campaign.
Yeah, I thought it shouldn'tsurprise me at all, but he's
talking about taxes and apublicly uh maybe this isn't the
one where he talks about havinga publicly owned corporation,
but when you run a publiclyowned corporation, it's just
that you work for the public,right?
(01:01:57):
So you're obligated to all thesetaxes and stuff like that.
Pretty interesting.
Highest taxpayer ever in thehistory of the planet.
SPEAKER_21 (01:02:03):
Yeah, and for what
it's worth, I'm the the the uh
the largest individual taxpayerin history.
So I I paid uh ten billiondollars in tax, over ten billion
dollars in tax.
Well you're welcome.
Like I I I sort of thought maybethe IR IRS would like you know,
send me like a little trophy orsomething.
You know.
Like one of those, likeexpensive.
(01:02:25):
It could be like, you know, oneof those like like things you
get for when kids win a karatecompetition.
Like a little plastic goldtrophy or something like that,
or a cookie or something, but Idon't get anything.
I was like, you know.
And uh but I was happy to paythe taxes, I don't mind, you
know.
Um stock market's wild, wild uhsort of roller coaster.
(01:02:50):
Um you know, I think WarrenBuffett's got a good good uh a
lot of good sayings actually,but what one of his sayings I
believe is like you know, havinga publicly traded company is
like having someone standoutside your house and yell
house prices all day.
It's still the same house.
And you're like, why is thisperson yelling house prices at
me all day long?
(01:03:10):
And that's what it's like beingin a publicly traded company.
It's just they just yell stockprices at you all day long.
And it's like, well, it'sactually still pretty much the
same company as yesterday.
Um so um this is a great videoin a publicly traded situation.
Um but anyway, I think we shouldwe should simplify the tax code,
(01:03:33):
uh get rid of a lot ofexceptions and loopholes, um,
and make it easy to Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (01:03:39):
He's doing like a
like a stand-up comment.
It's like a small video.
SPEAKER_28 (01:03:42):
That's what I was
gonna say.
It's like you're watching Elonbomb right now.
SPEAKER_13 (01:03:48):
Highest taxpayer.
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
I should get a trophy.
So I'm actually gonna use thatin one of my lessons at 1776
Live because we're gonna talkabout you know the different
types of entities.
You know, you've got publiclytraded businesses, S-corps,
LLCs, trusts, certain types oftrusts, and how as you go across
the spectrum, they havedifferent obligations.
(01:04:08):
When you're a publicly tradedentity, you're public, right?
You're owned by the public,you're just running the public's
business that you sold to themvia stock, right?
And so therefore, the governmentgets to regulate it in the
public interest because thepublic are affected as owners.
So it creates this hugeregulation scenario.
So, anyways, fun stuff there.
The other thing, too, is theAmerican people are super
(01:04:29):
resilient.
We have major economic problems,clearly.
We have a huge housing crisis,clearly.
We have a huge jobs problem,clearly, because of the
misallocation of who's gettingjobs over the last half decade
to decade, to 20 years, really,for quite a while.
And but even regardless of allthat, I remember hearing Scott
Bessant say the Americanconsumer has been wildly
(01:04:52):
resilient.
We survived the dot-com crash,then we survived the 07-08
housing and financial marketcrash, and then we survived
COVID.
And every time we, the peoplehave come out on top, despite
the naysayers, despite thepeople that think we wouldn't.
According to Catherine AustinFitz, there's been a concerted
(01:05:12):
effort to try to get uhessentially financial and
monetary policy out of theUnited States, but because we
are such a resilient market,we're the bully.
We're the ones who have thespending power and the capacity.
We also have theentrepreneurship, which is when
when people analyze around theworld, they're like, that is the
one thing that America is justwildly entrepreneurialistic.
(01:05:34):
Okay.
And what that does is it givesus an edge.
So even despite some of thequote, economic bad news and
things like that, there are someindicators that you look at and
you go, that is something thatyou can go, that's a real thing.
Black Friday and Cyber Monday orwhatever has always been one of
those metrics by which you canmeasure the real strength of the
economy.
How much are willing peoplewilling to spend on
(01:05:55):
discretionary holiday spending?
SPEAKER_08 (01:05:57):
Turns out this year
was another one of those
records.
The fact is that we just had thebest Black Friday that we've
ever seen.
Wow.
And it's not just because peopleare out there, you know, taking
debt on their credit cards, it'sbecause incomes are way up under
President Trump.
They dropped about$3,000 aperson,$6,000 a family under Joe
Biden, and it's up$1,500 aperson so far this year.
(01:06:19):
And with all that extra moneyand with the government shutdown
over so people feel comfortablegoing back to stores, that we're
seeing a really blowout uh, youknow, Thanksgiving and Christmas
coming our way.
I think all the retailers expectthat both online and in-store
sales are going to be thehighest we've ever seen.
And the point is that that'shappening, even though inflation
is way, way down uh underPresident Trump.
(01:06:42):
You know, it was five, 10% underBiden, and right now it's
running at about two and a halfpercent.
And it's not uh it's way lowerthan wage growth.
And so people's incomes aregoing up by way more than
inflation, and that's why we'reseeing this these blowhouse
sales factors.
SPEAKER_13 (01:06:57):
There is a relation
there.
There is a relation therebetween wages.
So that's good news.
That means again, everything isdriven by demand, right?
Supply and demand.
If there's a supply ofsomething, is there a demand for
it?
So the fact that there's still ademand for all the trinkets and
goods, all we have to do is nowmake them in the United States
because we'll buy them, right?
That's the message here.
If nobody ran to Walmart becausethey're like, oh, I'm super
(01:07:19):
excited for the new China TVmodel.
I'm just excited for the TV,right?
So that shows there's a consumerdemand.
As long as there's a consumerdemand, we can drive this
economy forward.
And if we can eliminategovernment spending and get the
taxation and all that kind ofstuff under control, we can set
ourselves up for really anothereconomic miracle.
(01:07:40):
Over in Britain, they had a uhKamala uh Tomini, her on her
show, she had the chiefsecretary of the treasury, James
Murray on, and he was he was uhshe he was being asked about I
can't remember who her theleader is of there that they
weren't gonna raise taxes on theworking people, right?
And she kind of pins this guydown and she's like, uh, you're
raising taxes.
But I found this interestingbecause the ideological debate
(01:08:03):
here, one person is like, ifyou're raising money and working
class people pay taxes, you'veraised the class on the working
class people.
And he's like, Well, we didn't.
We just raised taxes oneverybody.
She's like, including workingclass people, right?
Because you've put taxes up,haven't you?
What?
No.
SPEAKER_02 (01:08:20):
Are you for real?
Yes.
You told you told the people inthe manifesto, the Labour
manifesto, that you are onlygoing to put taxes up by 8.5
billion.
You've actually, between thelast budget in this budget, put
it up by 66 billion, including26 billion on Wednesday.
And you're telling me you didn'tbreach the money.
SPEAKER_06 (01:08:42):
That's exactly what
we've done.
SPEAKER_02 (01:08:55):
That you're not
taxing working people in the
budget.
SPEAKER_06 (01:08:58):
No, we are asking
working people to be able to do
that.
SPEAKER_02 (01:09:00):
So you want to keep
working people.
SPEAKER_06 (01:09:02):
We are asking
working people to manifest.
No, can I can let me justexplain it really clearly,
right?
I think we were clearly that youare looking at the skip.
Can I respond to it?
Because what we said in thebudget, what the Chancellor was
really up front about, is thatwe are asking everyone to make a
contribution through theextension of the freezers to
thresholds.
But we were also clear that weare keeping the tax burden on
(01:09:23):
working people as low as wepossibly can.
Extraordinary fudge of thechanges that we've made.
SPEAKER_02 (01:09:30):
So you're saying
that you can honour the
manifesto commitment because youhaven't directly put taxes up on
working people, because youhaven't actually put up income
tax, even though she floated theidea on November the 4th,
despite knowing that she had 4.2billion in the coffers.
And you're saying no, it's nottechnically a tax rise because
we're doing it by stealth, byfreezing the thresholds for
(01:09:50):
another three years.
No, absolutely.
SPEAKER_06 (01:09:56):
There's nothing,
there's nothing there's no
stealth tax if you say it therein Parliament what you're doing.
She was completely upfront aboutwhat she was doing.
The manifesto said we wouldn'tincrease the rates of income tax
and national insurance onworkers.
We didn't do that.
What the manifesto also saidwhat the manifesto also said is
we would keep the tax burden ofworking people as low as
possible, and that's what we'vedone.
SPEAKER_02 (01:10:14):
In Britain, who pays
tax?
SPEAKER_06 (01:10:17):
Uh well, people pay
it on all sorts of things.
People pay it on their work,people pay it on property
income, people pay it ondividends, people pay it on
savings.
SPEAKER_13 (01:10:23):
So working on you
just said people pay it on
savings.
So you earn it, you pay taxes,you save it, you still pay
taxes.
SPEAKER_02 (01:10:33):
We agree on this one
thing
If the tax bill has gone up by26 billion, workers are being
taxed, aren't they, Mr.
Murray?
SPEAKER_06 (01:10:43):
Yes.
We are asking everyone to make acontribution.
No, because the manifesto saidwe would not increase those
rates of income tax and nationalinsurance for working people,
and that we would keep the taxburden on working people as low
as possible.
SPEAKER_02 (01:10:55):
We have a breach the
manifesto.
Look how they have this codedlanguage.
SPEAKER_13 (01:10:59):
We're asking
everyone, we're asking everyone
to make a contribution.
No, you're forcing everyone tomake a contribution.
This is not a negotiable thingwith you guys.
You're not asking for a littleextra.
Okay.
We're going to talk a little bitabout asking.
The next couple minutes, okay,the next 10 minutes of the show,
which is going to be the end ofour public program.
(01:11:19):
Everybody who's listening,please stay with us because I'm
going to wrap this up withagain, the actual solution to
all our problems.
Undeniable solution to all ofour problems.
I'm going to read you a storythat is the blueprint forward, a
true story.
Okay.
This is how we fix all of oursocietal ills, all of them,
(01:11:40):
without exception.
But you need to follow methrough here.
Okay.
Taxing, everything we cover onthe show, ad nauseum,
corruption, tax money, griffs,it's because it's out of our
control.
Right?
It's because our charity hasbeen delegated to a government
that has ulterior motives.
Okay.
(01:12:02):
Javier Millet down in Argentinais a libertarian and he
campaigned on slashinggovernment spending, slashing
government services, everything.
And there's been a littleeconomic miracle in Argentina
over the last couple of years.
So we're going to listen to aJohn Stossel piece.
This is a couple minutes long.
It's worth every minute.
John Stossel does great piecesanyway, right?
And then I'm going to come backaround and we're going to talk a
(01:12:23):
little bit about some dogespending and how that's how
we're basically doing a similarthing to what Javier Millet did
down in Argentina here.
And then we're going to get tothe solution.
So I need you guys to stick withme.
It's going to be worth it, Ipromise.
In fact, some of you might evenbreak down in tears.
Because when you realize thesolution, we can fix our
problems like today.
SPEAKER_32 (01:12:43):
A year ago, this man
screaming about liberty was
elected president of Argentina.
How has that worked out?
Well, Javier Millet is alibertarian who promised to
slash government spending.
So of course, reporters calledhim far right, radical.
SPEAKER_22 (01:13:02):
Far right, Javier
Millet.
SPEAKER_32 (01:13:04):
Far right, Javier
Millet.
Why, far right?
The far right wants to ban mostimmigration, ban drugs, ban sex
work, wants to impose tariffs.
But Millet is a libertarian.
He supports free trade.
(01:13:45):
But the country's big governmenthad already hurt people more
than it helped.
SPEAKER_38 (01:13:49):
People in Argentina
are struggling with one of the
highest inflation rates in theworld.
SPEAKER_30 (01:13:53):
Argentina is really
like a warning and an example
for the United States.
Ian Vasquez studies LatinAmerica.
Argentina was one of the richestand one of the freest countries
in the world.
And then it started down a pathof greater and greater
government intrusion.
It's the case study of a countrythat was once rich and became
poor.
SPEAKER_07 (01:14:14):
Jabier Millet has
become elected president.
SPEAKER_30 (01:14:17):
When Millet came
into power, there was a 40%
poverty rate.
There was annual inflation ofover 200%.
The media said Malay can't fixthat.
SPEAKER_32 (01:14:26):
He's a snake oil
salesman, a TV pundit with no
government experience.
He'll fail, they said, like hispredecessors had.
But Malay is an exception.
A politician who told the truth.
SPEAKER_30 (01:15:58):
There was no way to
avoid that because of the mess
that the previous governmentshad left.
The question is, what's the bestway out?
And Millet has said from thevery beginning, the best path
out is through freedom.
SPEAKER_13 (01:16:10):
This is incredibly
important, right?
There will be tough times.
It's the Andre Jackson lesson.
You go after the central bankand you destroy whatever that's
destroying us, and there's a youhave to now stand up.
You have to now start doing itfor yourself, right?
That thing they were trying toimpose on you and do for you,
you've got to do yourself.
Four years of depressionfollowed by a gilded age, right?
(01:16:33):
So, yes, right off the bat, youcut these services, cut this,
cut that.
There's gonna be pain.
You cut snap benefits, you cutwelfare benefits, there's gonna
be pain.
But then the freedom kicks in,then the entrepreneurship shows
up.
SPEAKER_32 (01:16:48):
Malay's big cuts
worked, and now a few in the
media even admit that.
SPEAKER_31 (01:16:52):
And what he's been
able to achieve in a very short
time ought to be inspiring.
At first, this analyst trashedMillet.
He has no experience and not hedoes not have an economic team.
Um, so he's gonna fail.
But eight months later, heacknowledged his radical plan to
save Argentina's economy, seemsto be working.
SPEAKER_30 (01:17:11):
A lot of the
international press in the last
month has come out and said,we've got to take this guy
seriously.
This stuff is working.
SPEAKER_23 (01:17:18):
Those changes have
led to a budget surplus, the
first in 15 years.
SPEAKER_30 (01:17:22):
Inflation is down,
the economy started to recover
in the second part of last year,way before what most people
expected.
SPEAKER_13 (01:17:30):
I have to say, I
have to say, the night before I
was remanded into incarceration,Javier Millet won his election.
Wow.
What a turnaround.
Took four years, five now,right?
But instantly they started tosee the the right trends, and
you know, but there's still thecrash that you gotta kind of
(01:17:51):
recover from.
But now it's a South Americaneconomic miracle.
SPEAKER_30 (01:17:55):
Millet is showing
that his libertarian policies
are working.
What does libertarian policymean?
Miley got rid of nineministries.
He cut government spending by30%.
He fired thousands of governmentworkers and cut handouts.
SPEAKER_35 (01:18:10):
He slashed energy
and transport subsidies,
government spending on thingslike pensions.
SPEAKER_32 (01:18:15):
His deregulation
ministry shut down 200
government offices.
Two deregulations per day sincehe's been in office.
That's remarkable.
Sometimes the results were goodimmediately.
Rent control in Argentina hadcreated a shortage of
apartments.
SPEAKER_30 (01:18:30):
When Millet lifted
uh rent controls, the supply of
apartments in Argentina tripledand their price fell by about
half.
SPEAKER_32 (01:18:38):
Which libertarians
keep saying, Hey, America!
SPEAKER_13 (01:18:41):
Hey, America! Rent
controls maintained a higher
price than the intention, butbecause it discouraged other
people from entering the rentalmarket because they would be
regulated.
And rents actually went downsimply because the market took
(01:19:02):
over.
SPEAKER_32 (01:19:16):
Still hot.
There's lots of poverty.
And Argentina's tariffs makeconsumer goods expensive.
This$800 iPhone costs almost$3,000 there.
SPEAKER_30 (01:19:27):
Argentina still has
a long way to go.
And that's why Millet recentlysaid that what's coming is the
deep chainsaw, meaning much lessgovernment.
SPEAKER_32 (01:19:38):
What if we could
have that in America?
Basically, we're on a path tobankruptcy.
Elon Musk and his Department ofGovernment Efficiency want to
make Millet-style cuts in theUnited States.
We have to cut governmentspending, um, or we're just
gonna go bankrupt, just like aperson would.
SPEAKER_21 (01:19:52):
And Musk watched
what Millet did.
He's making all the right moves.
SPEAKER_14 (01:19:56):
Ministerio de
Publico y Deporte.
SPEAKER_32 (01:19:57):
Apuera.
Malay has showed that cuts arepossible.
And as Malay cut government, heactually gained popularity.
Freedom can work if only ourpoliticians will learn from
Javier Millet.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:18):
Long live freedom,
damn it!
SPEAKER_29 (01:20:21):
I get I get the
continued impression that our
politicians do understand thisand they just don't want us to
have freedom.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:29):
Well, of course.
And Elon Musk explains exactlywhy.
So there's a rumor that Doge hasnow been shut down.
That's not true.
Doge is continuing on, it's nowembedded in the different
cabinets or in the differentdepartments.
But Elon Musk explains when yougo to take that deep chainsaw
cut, things happen.
People start squeaking, right?
(01:20:50):
This is important.
And remember, please stickaround for because after this
video, we're going to then I'mgoing to show you guys the
solution to all of our problems.
All of them.
Okay?
And it's a powerful one.
SPEAKER_25 (01:21:06):
What did Doge teach
you if you learned one thing?
SPEAKER_21 (01:21:10):
Well, it was like a
very interesting side quest, you
know, because I just got to seelike a lot of the inner workings
of the government.
Um and uh You know, there'sthere's been quite a few
efficiencies.
I mean, some of them are verybasic efficiencies, like just
adding in requirements forfederal payments that that any
(01:21:32):
given payment must have anassigned congressional payment
code and a comment field withsomething in it that's more than
nothing.
Like that that trivial trivialseeming change.
I my guess this probably savesuh hundred billion dollars or
even two hundred billion dollarsa year.
Um because there were all sthere were the massive numbers
(01:21:54):
of payments that go were goingout with no no congressional
payment code and with nothing inthe comment field, which makes
auditing the paymentsimpossible.
So if they're like why can thedefense department, or now the
word department of war, why canit not pass an audit?
It's because the information isnot there.
It doesn't have the informationnecessary to pass an audit does
not exist, is the issue.
(01:22:15):
So um a bunch of things dogethat were just very common sense
uh b things that would be normalfor any organization that cared
about financial responsibility.
That's that's that's most ofwhat was done.
Um it's and it's still going on,by the way.
Doge is still happening.
(01:22:36):
Um But it turns out when youstop uh fraudulent and wasteful
payments, the the forces don'tyou know you know uh confess to
to this.
They actually start yelling allsorts of nonsense that you're
you're you're you're stoppingessential payments to neat needy
people.
Um But actually you're not.
(01:22:57):
Um you know, I I we we get thisthing like saying, Oh, you've
got to send this thing forwhatever, you know, it'd be like
this is going to children inAfrica.
And I'm like, yeah, but then whyare the wiring instructions for
Deloitte Institution inWashington DC?
Because that's not Africa.
So can you please connect uswith the recipients of this
(01:23:19):
money in Africa?
And then there we get silence.
Like, okay.
You know, we're we just want toliterally talk to the
recipients.
That's it.
That you know, and then we'relike, oh no, it turns out for
some reason we can't talk tothem.
Like, well, we we're not gonnasend the money unless we can
talk to the recipients andconfirm they will actually get
it.
(01:23:41):
But you know But you know,that's sort of fraudsters
necessarily will come up with avery uh you know, uh sympathetic
argument.
They're not gonna say, give usthe money for fraud.
That's not gonna be what theysay, obviously.
They're gonna s they're gonnatry to make these sympathetic
sounding arguments that arefalse.
(01:24:01):
They're gonna start an NGO andthen Yeah, they're gonna see
NGOs.
It's gonna be like the Save theBaby Pandas NGO, which of like
who doesn't want to save thebaby pandas?
They're adorable.
Um but then there's no it turnsout no pandas are being saved,
okay, in this thing.
Um it's just going to a bunch ofit's just corruption,
essentially.
(01:24:21):
Um and you're like, well, canyou send us a picture of the
panda?
And like, no, okay.
Well, how do we know it's goingthrough the panda then?
That's all I'm saying.
SPEAKER_13 (01:24:32):
Can you send us a
picture of the panda?
No.
All right, guys, we are justabout there to the solution, the
actual solution to all ourproblems.
But before we get there, we gotone more ad to read.
SPEAKER_29 (01:24:42):
Yeah, I love these.
SPEAKER_13 (01:24:45):
Oh no, come on, come
on, come on, come on.
Do it, do it.
We gotta hit refresh again.
Stick with us, guys.
This is gonna be worth it.
When you guys hear this story,you're gonna recognize the
connection.
Do we just need to skip it?
SPEAKER_29 (01:24:54):
Uh I guess.
SPEAKER_13 (01:24:56):
Hit refresh and then
redo it.
That's usually what has tohappen.
SPEAKER_29 (01:24:59):
Okay.
SPEAKER_13 (01:25:00):
And then just pick
it.
You guys gotta stick around.
Trust me, it's totally worth it.
Just a few more minutes.
Boom.
SPEAKER_29 (01:25:08):
Come on, come on.
Oh right.
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SPEAKER_13 (01:25:59):
Nice.
Okay, guys, here's the solution.
I watched a video one time yearsand years ago where uh it was
Beth Stuokie, stocky stookie.
She's kind of a femaleconservative pundit.
And she said, What is thesolution to hunger?
And she said, I am.
(01:26:20):
She says, What is the solutionto uh you know a bunch of other
stuff?
She goes, I am.
And I've had this phrase in myhead for a long time that it's
intolerable for me to see abrother or sister suffer and
struggle.
Right?
It's my duty to relievesuffering and pain in my
presence.
And if everybody does that, thenwe can eliminate it around the
(01:26:41):
world.
This is the concept ofvolunteerism.
It's who is your neighbor?
My neighbor is not someone inAfghanistan.
My neighbor is who I see.
We're not supposed to separateourselves by tribe.
Right.
Now, obviously, this isn't thebackdrop of all this immigration
stuff and blah, blah, blah,blah, blah.
But that's the problem.
We're trying to top down tosolve all of our problems.
(01:27:01):
We're trying to delegate to ourleaders to solve the problems
that we should be solvingourselves.
So here's an example.
There's always a struggle tokeep houses warm.
There's always a struggle to umyou know to deal with poverty.
Yes, exactly.
So this is this is from uh Mr.
Pitbull07 on X.
My name's Hank.
(01:27:22):
I'm 66.
I deliver propane to homes,rural routes, farms, folks off
the grid.
I fill their tanks, check theirconnections, drive to the next
house.
Most customers just sign theslip, barely look up.
I'm just the propane guy.
But last February, during thatbrutal cold snap, I noticed
something at the Miller place.
Pulled up to fill her tank,gauge showed empty, completely
(01:27:43):
dry in 15 degree weather.
I knocked on the door.
Miss Miller answered.
Three kids bundled behind her incoats inside the house.
Ma'am, your tank's bone dry.
How long have you been withoutheat?
Four days.
Her voice was steady, but herhand shook.
Bill's due Friday.
We're waiting on my husband'spaycheck.
Four days, three kids, 15degrees.
(01:28:04):
Ma'am, I'm filling it right now.
I can't pay until I I'll mark itas a delivery error.
Computer glitch, nobody willknow.
She started crying.
Why would you do this?
Because those kids are wearingcoats inside.
I filled the tank, circled thefurnace, checked the furnace,
made sure the heat kicked onbefore I left, drove away
thinking about what I'd seen.
Kids doing homework in winterjackets, a mom choosing between
(01:28:28):
heat and food.
Started paying attentiondifferent after that.
The elderly veteran whose tankwas 10%.
He was rationing, keeping oneroom warm.
The single dad whose payment wastwo weeks late.
He'd been burning the firewoodhe couldn't really afford.
I started doing something Ishouldn't.
When I saw someone struggling,someone who'd run out, someone
rationing heat, I'd add 50gallons.
Mark it as a meter calibrationor pressure test residual.
(01:28:50):
Small amounts enough to get themthrough.
Didn't it did it 11 times thatwinter?
My boss noticed thediscrepancies, called me in.
Hank, we're showing extragallons delivered, but not
billed.
I told him the truth.
Everything.
He stared at me for a long time.
Then said, My daughter was asingle mom once.
I chose between heat andgroceries every winter.
(01:29:12):
I wish someone had helped herhelped her.
He didn't fire me.
Instead, he created somethingcalled Warm Hearts Emergency
Fund.
Customers could donate.
We'd match it and use it forfamilies in crisis who couldn't
afford propane.
But here's what broke me.
Mrs.
Miller came to our office inMay.
She'd gotten a better job, gotcaught up on bills, and she
handed me an envelope inside$200for the next family.
(01:29:36):
The one you'll find in February,four days without heat, trying
to be brave for their kids.
She grabbed my hands.
Hank, my youngest has asthma.
Four more days in that cold.
I don't know if she couldn'tfinish.
Last winter, the Warm HeartsFund helped 23 families.
Not with handouts, with heatwhen they had none.
With dignity when they feltbroken.
(01:29:57):
And here's the thing otherpropane companies.
Heard about it, started theirown programs.
Now there's an emergency heatfunds in six states.
But the moment that destroy uhin six states, but the moment
that destroyed me happened lastmonth, got a call to deliver to
an adnes.
I recognized the miller place.
Miss Miller answered, Hank, comein, please.
Inside, warm, kids doinghomework at the table, laughing.
(01:30:20):
She handed me a paycheck.
Full payment plus a check, fullpayment plus extra for the fund.
But also, she pulled out adrawing her youngest had made a
stick f a stick figure man witha propane truck.
Captioned in cran.
Mr.
Hank, my hero.
She asks about you every winter.
Is Mr.
Hank making sure people arewarm?
(01:30:41):
I'm 66.
I delivered a propane to housesnobody notices.
But I learned this.
Cold doesn't wait for paychecks,and no child should do homework
in a winter coat inside theirown home.
So if you deliver anything, oil,propane, firewood, and you see
someone struggling, someoneempty, someone rationing, find a
way, market wrong, call yourboss, start a fund, do something
(01:31:03):
because heat isn't a luxury,it's a survival.
And the difference betweenfreezing and living shouldn't be
whether your paycheck arrived ontime, but the reasons but the
reasons your paycheck arrived ontime be the reason someone stays
warm.
Let the story reach more hearts.
That's the point.
You are the solution.
We don't need the government, weneed each other.
(01:31:25):
We don't need the route, ourcharity and our virtue through a
third party's that could griftand take it from us and use it
for their own purposes.
90%.
This is why when my family wasaffected by my incarceration and
my children's uh social thingswere being restricted, sports
and things like that.
My wife decided to be the changeshe wanted to see in the world.
(01:31:48):
A family member told her she'dpay for my children's sports and
rec you know activities while Iwas gone.
And that was the impetus tocreate left behindandwithout.org
to help other children to haveincarcerated parents, currently
serving over a hundred kids tothis day.
I've been out for you knowcoming up on a year next month
in January, because we're inDecember, still helping kids,
(01:32:10):
just like that relief fund,right?
We can be the solution and wecan be the change we want to
see.
We don't need the government.
What Javier Malay is doing inArgentina is freeing up the
people to be the solution totheir own problems.
That is what can change theworld.
It's when we the peasants takecontrol of our own destiny and
we do not allow suffering tohappen around us without doing
(01:32:32):
something to aid of our own.
SPEAKER_29 (01:32:36):
Yeah, and especially
do not rely on and on the
programs that are available forto help people.
The programs programs don't helppeople.
People help people.
SPEAKER_13 (01:32:51):
Because these are
funded by individual donors like
this, it's a real need scenario.
It's not an enablement program.
It's not all of your energybills paid for a year by the
government for someone whochooses not to work in order to
keep the benefits.
Right.
These are people aspiring tohelp themselves that just need a
neighbor.
Who is my neighbor?
That's it right there.
That's the Samaritan that paysfor the medical bills for the
(01:33:13):
man that was beaten on thestreet.
Right.
SPEAKER_29 (01:33:15):
That they all put
their eyes.
People need people who care, andprograms don't care.
Yep.
SPEAKER_13 (01:33:21):
So that is what I
wanted you guys to stick around
to here.
It's that's the pattern.
This is the future.
This is how we fix our problems.
Find the thing you can do tomake a difference.
All right, guys, that's it forthe public.
We are gonna head over toprivate and finish up.
We're gonna be hearing a littlebit from Alex Jones about making
a big difference.
We're gonna be here from MarkMullins.
(01:33:42):
We're gonna be talking someVenezuela stuff here.
And we're also gonna be talkingabout uh China is finally
getting the boot when it comesto American real estate.
Uh, this is coming from thelabor secretary, and then we're
gonna be talking a little bitmore about the control grid and
what's coming and why it's soimportant for us to be the
solution.
They want to implement thecontrol grid so that they can
(01:34:03):
extend the welfare state.
It's that simple.
You can go listen to RFK talkabout every totalitarian has
wanted to do this, and they willpitch it to you as the way to
help that lady get her housewarmed in the winter by putting
on the control grid and takingyour resources to redistribute.
But we know the truth.
They never redistribute.
(01:34:24):
Okay, we're jumping over toprivate.
We'll talk to the rest of youguys tomorrow.
Bye.
Okay, and now we're in privatewith the unoffendables.
So Tucker, uh, Tucker Carlsonhad Alex Jones on, and he had
this to say about kind of whatdrives him.
And Alex Jones truly is one ofthe most persecuted man, men out
there.
Lawfair, you know, but he's justa he is like a dog on the bone.
(01:34:48):
He's gonna say what he's gonnasay.
And he reveals the reason andwhat gives him the strength to
keep pushing on.
SPEAKER_05 (01:34:55):
And so that's really
where it all is.
And it comes down to yourspiritual inclination.
But I just recommend peoplepersonal relationship with God,
praying to God, saying, I wantto be good, I want to recognize
truth, I want to know what truthis, I want to open myself up to
you.
I'm imperfect, I repent for whatI've done, and I want you to
cleanse me and then show me thetruth, and then show me how to
(01:35:15):
be a better person, and thenshow me after that what you what
the mission is you have for me.
And literally, if you do thatthrough a process, it may take
days, it may take months, maytake years, then the adventure
begins, and then all of a suddenyou're being given like intel
and stuff, like and likeliterally just you have to learn
to go with it.
It's never wrong.
And it it's it's God and it'sthere, and it's your personal
(01:35:38):
relationship.
And then obviously people getthis relationship, they all want
to teach other people it andit's the pay it forward.
SPEAKER_13 (01:35:45):
When you have a
connection to God and truth, you
end up being like that propanedelivery man who finds his
mission and his purpose.
God will sanctify you, right?
Whatever that is.
It's it's amazing.
Okay, now jumping over toVenezuela.
I I really love that story aboutthe propane salesman, guys.
Thank you.
Those of you that are in ourprivate chat with us that stuck
around to hear that, that wasawesome.
(01:36:06):
I hope we it could be a lessonlearned.
Now, one of the things withVenezuela is I firmly believe
the primary reason we are downin Venezuela and basically just
going hardcore at the Cartel delSos, Trend de Agua, and Maduro
himself is because they've beendelivering drugs into this
country.
But even bigger than that isthey've been interfering in
democracies and other countries'elections going on 20 years.
(01:36:27):
That's what it is.
The number is 72, right?
Yeah.
But this is why I'm saying it inthe private, although I'm sure
I'll say it in the public.
You can't.
Our elected officials havebenefited from the stolen
elections.
We have people sitting onCapitol Hill, whether they know
it or not, have been selected bythe cartel to do these things
because at least at a minimumthey have the per-election to
continue the drug trafficking.
(01:36:49):
You know what I mean?
Who knows?
Compromise, blackmail, boughtoff, self-interested stock
options and companies that arebeing that are laundering money
from drug cartels.
Who knows the reasons?
SPEAKER_29 (01:36:58):
And this is why it
has nothing to do with party.
SPEAKER_13 (01:37:00):
So the moment Trump
comes out and says it's because
of the elections, they're gonnado the whole, oh, the elections
weren't stolen.
Oh my gosh, another electiondenier.
Even though Trump literallyposted the interview with Laura
Logan and Gary Bernstein talkingabout the Dominion election
fraud in Venezuela, apparentlymainstream media still hasn't
figured out.
Mark Wayne Mullins kneweverything about the Venezuela
election fraud.
(01:37:20):
He actually helped save thecountry, if we are to be saved,
because he made sure that theevidence about Venezuela's
smartmatic and dominion got tothe right people, including
Susie Wiles, Donald Trump, andothers.
So when he gets on TV here andhe says it's all about
Venezuela, he knows it's or he'sall about it's all about drugs.
He knows it's not all aboutdrugs.
He knows it's about somethingelse.
(01:37:42):
Drugs are just the reason thatmakes the Democrats, right?
If he says, well, we're killingdrug drug dealers and
narco-terrorists, the Democratsare like, but do process,
because they can't argue, don'tkill the drug dealer.
You see what I'm saying?
But if he are if they argueelection, they could be like,
well, that means that you'rebelieving elections are stolen.
What are you trying to do?
Steal them?
SPEAKER_03 (01:38:01):
You see what I'm
saying?
And so President Trump has hastried to do this uh through
closing down internationalwater.
Uh they continue to ship drugsout.
Now they're starting to fly theminto the United States uh uh
through uh through tell numbersthat are being disguised as
either commercial flights orprivate flights.
And so the president's made itvery clear he's shutting down
the airspace.
(01:38:21):
And and by the way, we gave uhMaduro an opportunity to leave.
We've said he could leave and goto Russia or he could go to
another country.
Uh and the Venezuela peoplethemselves have also spoken up
and said they want a new leaderand restore Venezuela as the
country they used to be, a avery hot, prosperous country,
but Maduro has absolutely rentthat country.
(01:38:43):
And so President Trump.
SPEAKER_13 (01:38:45):
So we're going in
just because Maduro ruined it
and they're selling drugs.
Yeah.
Now, another counter narrative,another narrative here.
This is uh Maria Salazar.
She's a representative fromFlorida, and I can't remember
her nationality.
I don't think she's Cuban, Ithink she's Colombian.
I don't know.
I can't remember.
Either way, um, she is aRepublican, and uh, but she has
(01:39:05):
been, it's interesting for lastcouple weeks.
SPEAKER_28 (01:39:08):
What you're like, I
don't know if she's Cuban or
what, but she's a Republican.
Isn't she an American?
SPEAKER_13 (01:39:17):
If she's a
Republican, uh yeah, yeah, I
mean the answer is yes to that,but she has a very strong she
said no, you cannot runpolitically speaking.
Okay, so that to me is you knowa strong accent, okay?
She has a lovely accent.
Okay.
But, anyways, she has been shewas really big on we're not
gonna do anything to Cuba, we'renot gonna do anything in
(01:39:39):
Venezuela, and now the tune'schanged a little bit, and now
now it's about the oil.
SPEAKER_10 (01:39:43):
She says, No, you
cannot run.
Politically speaking, accordingto this law, that other law said
you had corruption charges,whatever.
And that says, Okay, no problem.
I'm not running as president.
Let me put this nice gentlemanin Mundo Gonzalo.
How long before this happens?
What is your prediction?
Before Christmas?
Inminent, imminent, imminent,before we're on the verge.
You're saying within days we'regonna see she's saying regime
(01:40:04):
change because this is what wedid with Iran, that we gave
ample notice to the commercialairlines, do not overfly the
Venezuela.
That's exactly what thepresident has done.
And now it's it's this is notgoing to be hard.
80% of the Venezuelans voted forthe opposition.
You have 8 million Venezuelansin exile.
(01:40:26):
We're talking about the largestreserves of oil in the world
that will be doing business withthe American oil companies.
That is something that I madevery sure that they understand.
American companies in Venezuelafor the next 100 years.
All right, well, you areimminent in just days.
Uh, Congresswoman Maria Salazar,thank God for small shit.
(01:40:47):
Her eyes are huge right here.
SPEAKER_29 (01:40:48):
Dude, she is so
tall.
Look at her.
I know she.
SPEAKER_13 (01:40:52):
So American oil
companies in Venezuela for the
next hundred years.
So it's about drugs.
No, it's not.
Oh, we're now we're gonna go getthe oil.
Pump the brakes.
You know what I mean?
This is a narrative.
It can be weaponized against us.
Oh, we're just doing it for theoil because we're greedy
capitalists.
That can be weaponized againstus, or we could actually do
(01:41:13):
that, which will just lead tomore chaos in the future, right?
We're just hunting the problemdown the road.
Freedom is the solution, toquote Javier Millet.
All right.
China has bought a lot of landaround the country, a lot of
farmland, a lot of strategicland near military bases, as
well as well as privateproperty, you know, private
residences and things like that.
Department of Labor has endedup, or excuse me, the Department
(01:41:36):
of Agriculture is trying to turnthe tide.
SPEAKER_33 (01:41:38):
But today we are
taking this purpose and our
American farmland back.
American agriculture is not justabout feeding our families, but
about protecting our nation andstanding up to foreign
adversaries who are buying ourfarmland, stealing our research,
and creating dangerousvulnerabilities in the very
systems that sustain us.
(01:41:58):
Restoring and near-storing ourfood and agriculture supply
chain is essential for ournation's security.
In coordination with the WhiteHouse, the Departments of
Treasury, Defense, HomelandSecurity, and Justice, as well
as state governors, stateagriculture commissioners,
local, tribal, and territorialgovernments.
Today, we announced the USDA'sNational Farm Security Action
(01:42:23):
Plan.
This plan includes seven keyaction items, and there's a lot
of people here that I want youto hear from.
So I'm not going to go one byone, but just very quickly, it's
on our website.
The press has got a preview ofit, and we can ask some
questions once we finish themain uh program.
But very quickly, and perhapsthe most important, the first of
the seven, is securing andprotecting American farmland
(01:42:45):
ownership, actively engaging atevery level of government to
take swift legislative andexecutive action to ban the
purchase of American farmland byChinese nationals and other
foreign adversaries, standing onthe shoulders of great
governors, three of whom arestanding behind me, who have
already been leading the way onthis issue.
And at the federal governmentlevel, working to do everything
(01:43:07):
within our everything within ourability, including presidential
authorities, to claw back whathas already been purchased by
China and other foreignadversaries.
Additionally, working with theTreasury of the uh Secretary of
the Treasury along with ourDefense Department on
memorandums to ensure thatmoving forward, there is a much
(01:43:29):
more intentional look at who isbuying what in this country and
from where they are in theworld.
SPEAKER_13 (01:43:37):
Pretty good.
I like that.
I think land ownership is one ofthose things.
It should be, I mean, I'm almostlike the Mexican model where you
have to be a national or aUnited States citizen in order
to buy land here.
Like I'm borderline at thatlevel of, you know, like, nah,
you got land somewhere else youcan go buy.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm I'm borderline there.
(01:43:58):
Like, I don't like the idea offarms and things like that being
owned by foreigners because, youknow, as we found, like with the
pork industry, it all goesoverseas and we pay a little
more than we should.
Again, with anything, if thosefarms are, you know,
undercutting the market fromlegacy farms, those these new
Chinese farms, etc., then as weget rid of them, food prices are
(01:44:19):
going to go up for a little bit.
You know what I mean?
It's that you're gonna have togo through a little bit of
toughness because we're there.
We're we're getting the cheapgoods because it's China buying
it.
Once we kick China out, there'sthe price is gonna go up, but
it's more sustainable.
You know, I mean, it's literallyour survival.
You're you know, saving a bucktoday to die tomorrow when
(01:44:40):
you're letting them control thefood supply.
SPEAKER_29 (01:44:42):
Well, the money that
you spent, it's just like it's
just like uh the old buyAmerica, you know, it's the same
argument as just buy America,because when you buy America,
those monies, the dollars, theyget reinvested and they
recirculate in the Americaneconomy.
SPEAKER_13 (01:44:57):
As soon as you buy
anything else that's not
American, those dollars who nowto replace that dollar, you have
to print it, which it makesoverall inflation.
Yes, it's a deadly cycle.
Yes, and that deadly cycle getsworse and worse when you start
getting into the control gridand the digital currencies and
you know the social creditscoring and everything like
this.
SPEAKER_29 (01:45:15):
And especially if
you got to have enough money
left over for all the grift.
SPEAKER_13 (01:45:18):
Yes, which is why uh
Glenn Beck had Whitney Webb on,
and that's what they talkedabout.
So let's listen to that becauseshe's talking about Keith
Ellison and how essentially,unfortunately, Donald Trump, and
this echoes what CatherineAustin Fence has expressed is in
the name of getting immigrationout, everybody needs real ID.
In the name of voter ID,everybody needs to get real ID.
I'm so disgusted that theRepublicans in Washington are
(01:45:40):
pushing a bill in order to, youknow, basically requiring voter
ID for mail-in voting.
Okay.
So you require voter ID toregister to vote or whatever,
but the voter ID is supposed tobe real ID.
Pump the brakes, right?
I don't like that at all becauseit's just another incentive to
get real ID.
It should just be ID.
Don't even put real ID as anoption.
Like they're leading, they'reputting that as the lead.
(01:46:01):
Okay, so this is Whitney Webbtalking about that.
SPEAKER_04 (01:46:03):
Devil's advocate
that you hear every time, every
time we take a bad, bad steptowards more digital
surveillance.
Well, I don't have anything tohide.
I don't really care.
I don't have anything to hide.
Why, why, why is that, you know,a kindergarten answer?
SPEAKER_36 (01:46:22):
Well, I would argue
because a lot of these uh
companies that are engaged inthese uh mass surveillance, or
the contractors really that areengaged in in mass surveillance,
don't ultimately have justwatching what you're doing uh as
being enough for them.
They're ultimately interested inthings like predictive analytics
and predictive policing.
So, based on your behavior nowand your behavior in the past,
(01:46:44):
they want to use artificialintelligence to determine what
you may do in the future.
And in the case of predictivepolicing, that would be well,
we've determined that you maycommit a crime in the future.
And so we're going to uh, youknow, uh send you to uh a
court-ordered physician or, youknow, uh detain uh issue house
arrests to protect to stop crimebefore it happens, essentially.
(01:47:08):
Um, is where a lot of thesecompanies, well, yeah, uh
unfortunately it is that.
And there's a lot of companiesthat have uh made um massive
inroads uh in in that type oftechnology, even though it's
been hugely discredited, um,there's several companies.
I think the most notorious uh atthis point is called or was
called Predpole.
They've since rebranded, butthey were uh less accurate than
(01:47:31):
a coin toss, and people werebeing uh you know deprived of of
their liberty uh because of anof an algorithm that was hugely
inaccurate.
Uh and ultimately, you know, ifyou look in the UK, for example,
some of these algorithms forfacial recognition have been
rolled out, even though they'vebeen shown over there too, to be
hugely inaccurate.
And there's no interest inchanging uh vendors, even when
(01:47:54):
this inaccuracy is demonstrated.
So to me, that says that theirgoal is to have us uh induce and
be obedience by the fact thatyou're being washed all the time
and anything you may do uh couldbe used against you, even if
you're not doing anything wrongnow.
Um, an algorithm could determinethat uh certain you know errant
behaviors uh warrant you beingadded to a list of some type.
(01:48:17):
And actually, Larry Allison ofOracle, who is one of the main
founders of Tony Blair's uhinstitute, that's one of the
biggest pushers for digital IDuh in the UK, said this at an
Oracle uh shareholder meetingthat you know we're recording
and surveilling everything, andcitizens will be on their best
behavior because they have to,essentially, paraphrasing.
SPEAKER_04 (01:48:36):
The fact that Donald
Trump is listening to that guy
is terrifying to me.
I mean, he is he has put somepeople around him on this tech
board that are not friends offreedom and liberty, they're
just not.
Larry Ellison is leading thatpack.
SPEAKER_36 (01:48:55):
Yeah, a lot of them
are are, you know, I would argue
overtly and also covertlyglobalists.
Um, you have people uh, youknow, in that network you just
mentioned, uh serving, forexample, on the steering
committee of the Bilderberggroup, uh, which is you know uh
a well-known closed-door meetinguh globalist conflab.
Um and unfortunately, um, youknow, I think they've been, some
(01:49:18):
of them anyway, have been ableto characterize their policies
as uh libertarian, for example,uh, even though some of those
same oligarchs are on recordsaying that the free market is
for losers, uh, if you want toget rich, build a monopoly.
And build monopolies, uh, theyhave, unfortunately.
Um, but I think again, this iswhat uh I was saying earlier
(01:49:39):
about um the World EconomicForum.
You know, there's an effort tosell this uh since they couldn't
sell it from the left.
Uh, the goal now is to try andsell it somehow uh from the
right, uh, and to try and frameit under metrics and dialectics
that'll be more appealing uh tothe group that was most against
these policies just a few yearsago.
(01:50:01):
Um, and unfortunately, you know,with AI and all of that, it
potentially could happen, itcould happen if people aren't
aren't vigilant.
SPEAKER_13 (01:50:09):
One of the
interesting statistics was some
poll came out that it was like60% of people under 40 uh
support essentially AIalgorithmic pre-crime stuff.
SPEAKER_28 (01:50:20):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (01:50:21):
Because what they
see is streets full of drugs,
okay, all these fraud, grift,everything.
And they're like, strong man, weneed a strong man, someone needs
to fix this.
SPEAKER_29 (01:50:31):
I know, but you just
need somebody to you know deal
with the current crime.
You don't need to deal withpre-crime for that.
SPEAKER_13 (01:50:38):
But again, it it oh,
and the other stat was uh
Christians.
Christians support this in ahuge rate, which is like
mind-blowing.
But it's because it thependulum's gone too far.
Pendulum's gone too far.
So people are like, well, I havenothing to hide.
Well, you know, we're we're overhere being like, right now, you
know, wait until you're inBritain where your Christianity
(01:50:58):
and praying at an abortionclinic becomes the reason you're
getting arrested.
You're like, Well, I thought Iwas doing something good.
You know, it was shocking to mehow the prosecution in my J6
case used things like being anevil scout and a good dad with a
you know uh stable economicenvironment, which I created for
myself, by the way.
And they use that against me,and they were like, we have to
teach him a lesson.
So other good, solid Americanslike this don't stand up against
(01:51:21):
us.
Like they pretty much said that.
I just paraphrased it, but youoh yeah.
I need to pull the paragraphbecause it was like I read that,
I was like, we have lost theplot, you know.
I wanted to read that to kidsthat were 12 years old.
I'd be like, Don't join the BoyScout, start doing drugs right
now, you know.
Like, go ahead and just be badbecause then you'll get all the
mercy and grace.
It'll be like our Seattle mayorthat's like background.
(01:51:44):
Were they abused?
You know what I mean?
I don't want to throw thatperson in jail, but heaven
forbid you live a good life.
Yeah, anyways.
All right, guys, thank you somuch for sticking around.
I like going in the private.
We get a little bit of thesekind of in the in the weeds
topics, but you kind of got tolay them down because they come
up.
This control grid and the youknow, AI infiltrating our bank
accounts and all of our privatecontracts and stablecoin and
(01:52:06):
CBDCs and all that.
This is the future.
Total transparency economically,probably a lot of transparency
in your personal life.
You're walking around with a spydevice in your pocket, but at
some point we have to take oursovereignty back, our individual
sovereignty.
You know, I'm not sayingsovereignty citizen stuff, but
literally like I have to beresponsible for my decisions and
I have to turn things off.
I have to find my my livingability.
(01:52:26):
I need to go connect with myneighbors, like that propane
tank delivery guy, right?
That's the solution, not thecontrol grid.
That's not the solution.
The solution isn't for AI tomonitor your propane tank and
then dispatch and then chargeyou.
The solution is for charity.
The solution is for good peoplehelping other people.
And when you're blessed withabundance to help somebody
that's in scarcity in themoment, because when you read
(01:52:49):
the scriptures and you listen toJesus' word, the poor you have
with you always, becausesometimes the poor are there to
test the rich.
That's why.
This is a much bigger game we'replaying on this planet.
It's not just about dollars andcents, it's about what we do to
each other as living beings.
Because in my belief, when thislife is over, you're not over.
SPEAKER_29 (01:53:11):
Well, then when this
life is over, it has nothing to
do with dollars and cents.
SPEAKER_13 (01:53:14):
It has nothing to do
with dollars and cents, exactly.
All right, guys.
Thank you so much.
We'll talk to you againtomorrow.
Bye.
SPEAKER_15 (01:53:44):
Matt, sorry, what
time I lived in that castle?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37, I'm not old.
Well, I can't just call youMatt.
You could say Dennis.
I didn't know you were calledDennis.
I didn't say sorry about the oldwoman.
(01:55:53):
Supreme existing powers derivesfrom money from the message of
something called.
But you can't expect to wheelsupreme existing powers.
Just because of water sources,all my rounds.
Just because some voice has asimilar mistake, we should have
(01:56:19):
a system.