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December 18, 2025 87 mins

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Flooded streets, overwhelmed culverts, and aerial footage of whole valleys under water set the tone for a bracing tour through how systems fail when the baseline is already soaked. We walk through Washington’s flooding in detail—what storm ponds at capacity really mean for neighborhoods, why state and national coverage diverge, and how the true costs show up weeks later in insurance, work, and school disruptions.

From there, we zoom into a signature-table confrontation that turns physical and ask what it says about speech, safety, and the temperature of local politics. That thread ties to the backbone of the financial system: why our payment rails lag the century and how crypto-style ledgers could slash fraud while threatening privacy. Transparent transactions can hold institutions to account—but only if audit rights are fair and power isn’t centralized.

You’ll also hear a breakdown of the Venezuela frenzy: a breathless lead-up, naval optics on both sides, and a colder reality of sanctions enforcement over invasion. We connect the dots between cartel finance, oil revenue, and the strategic bet that cutting cash beats firing shots. Along the way, we explore where media influence actually lives now and why talking to massive digital audiences matters more than legacy TV victory laps.

Fraud cases—from ghost identities and offshore “remote workers” to eye-popping SNAP redemptions in tiny shops—become the through line. When oversight is soft, incentives invite abuse, and the public sees it. Campus cameras that go dark, court billing that stretches belief, and political postures that evade enforcement are all facets of the same problem: laws are only as real as the people willing to enforce them. We close with competing takes on Trump’s latest speech and what it will take to convert facts into action as campaigning accelerates.

If this mix of ground truth, policy mechanics, and media literacy resonates, follow the show, share with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find us. Your feedback shapes what we dig into next.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_14 (00:12):
Yeah, it makes a lot of people.

SPEAKER_08 (00:54):
What's the little movie?
Do you see the peasants in thebackground?
What are those people?
What are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
Glad to be back with you againtoday.
It's been a whole 24 hours.
22, really, because the show'slike two hours long.

(01:15):
So um, pony boy, good morning.
John Attackis, good morning.
Glad to have you with us.
That's awesome.
We got a couple local storiestoday.

SPEAKER_09 (01:23):
You know, to wrap up that what we were just talking
about, you know, I used to makethese tapes with music on them.
And my dad got a double tapedeck.
Uh-huh.
And so I was able to record.
You know how you're talking likeyou gotta wait, you know, Rig
D's top 40.
You're gonna be like ready tohit the buttons, ready, go.
Well, I didn't have to do thatanymore because I could just

(01:43):
record.

SPEAKER_08 (01:44):
Cross it over.

SPEAKER_09 (01:45):
Yes.
But then I learned all aboutdegradation as you record over
and over and over.

SPEAKER_08 (01:54):
Challenges that the Zoomer waffins will never have.
They just go to Apple Music anddownload the song.
We're over there listening tothe radio all day long to make a
mixtape for our littlegirlfriends.
They already don't even knowwhat Napster is.
They don't even know whatNapster is.
Yeah.
Oh, that's fun.
Well, uh, you know, to justcontinue to talk about flooding
in Washington, yeah.

(02:15):
Uh, which for us is kind of abig story.
Yeah.
Yesterday I was driving with mywife to Costco.
Finally, did a ran a littleerrand.
My life has been so busy lately,I don't get to do the fun things
like go to Costco.
And uh, you know, it was sunnybecause these these storms have
been coming in these bands,right?
So it'd been sunny for a littlebit, and we're driving in a
spot, and there's a s a newstorm drain like over by the uh

(02:37):
the Sonic that went out ofbusiness because he didn't pay
his taxes, right?
So there's the uh they just putin like new rip wrap and
everything, completely full.
It looked like a little riverjust rolling, right?
Going into the culvert.
It was more water than could fitthrough the culvert.
Oh okay, so it was backing upright there, and it was going
into the storm pond, which iscompletely at capacity, all the

(02:58):
way up to the the like above thedrain.
Like it's going as fast as itcan wherever it's going.
And uh, I look at my wife and Igo, look how full that is.
And then I go, and it's notraining.
Like that's for street runoff.
It's pulling that out of theground and it's just full.
It's like, wow, we aresaturated.
Up in the mountains, it'sstarting to snow, and uh, which,

(03:20):
you know, wet, wet ground,really heavy, wet trees, and
then you get snow on top of it.
It's just a recipe for badness.
So let's take a look at thishere.
This is uh a little aerialfootage.
I think highway 187.
Oh no, I don't even know whatthis is.
That's the Puget sound rightthere.

SPEAKER_09 (03:37):
Turn the sound off.

SPEAKER_08 (03:38):
Oh, you did great.
Yeah.
This helicopter actually flewover Kitsap yesterday.
I saw it.
They were flying around all overtaking aerial footage.
But you know, these are bigwarehouses.
Um, you know, there's a littlebit of farmland in here, but you
can see this is this wholevalley is just flooded out, and
it's not good.
And what's interesting there isthere's the Puget Sound.
I mean, this is it's not makingit over the hump.

(04:01):
It needs to drain.
It's just incredible.
Uh, the more incredible one isthis one here because you know,
sometimes we see farmland, we'relike, yeah, farmland floods.
No, these are neighborhoods.
This is Pacific Washington.
I flipped a couple houses downhere.
It's kind of the low ramp partof King County.
And uh, but it's again, this isworking class America.
There's the train there.

(04:22):
That's the little levee thatbroke.
Uh you can see the waters justrushing in.
But you know, look at this.
This is this is a neighborhood,these are neighborhoods.
Like these are you know, crackerjack box houses.
It's flooded out and wholestreets, and it just goes on and
on and on.
It's no bueno, my friends.
No bueno at all.
It's every every everywhere youlook, there's just more and more

(04:43):
flooding.
Uh I saw a picture of theSpokane River yesterday over in
Spokane.
It's roaring.
Roaring.
I've got lots of footage.
Um we don't need to go throughit all.
Suffice it to say, the nationalnews is not covering this, which
is I'm kind of I'm kind of likethis is like a huge disaster.

(05:04):
Like Washington will be dealingwith this for six months just
for cleanup, and then you know,some projects, roads, and
bridges that have gone downcould be surely there's probably
deaths that are attributed tothis too, as well.
Yeah, I haven't heard a deathcount.
I haven't either.
I haven't heard a death count.
You know, I don't know how rapidthis flooding is.
Like, I you know, this isn'tflash flooding necessarily.

(05:26):
Sure.
I think people have time to getout of the way.
Okay.
I don't know.
But yeah, we're probably gonnahear something.
Um, a couple days ago, down inPort Orchard, which is right
here in our county, that's justdown the road.
Hop, skip a jump.
15 minutes, just down the road.
It's our county seat, it's ourcounty.
Like we want a brave goingthrough gorse.
Yeah, this is this is ourhometown here, uh, Port Orchard.
Uh, this man right here wasgathering signatures for an

(05:50):
initiative that WashingtonState, you know, you gather
enough signatures and you cancreate an initiative bill or
whatever.
I don't even know.
Okay, sure.
You know, they're a ballot orsomething.
Concerning gathering signaturesthat go nowhere.
Like when we decided as a state,we overruled the legislature and
the governor, and we said we'regonna have$30 card tabs, and
they were like, uh, maybe not.

SPEAKER_09 (06:07):
I think we did it like nine times.

SPEAKER_08 (06:09):
Like nine times, yeah.
So there's like a movement nowto just not renew your car tabs.
It's like, well, what you guysare doing is illegal by charging
us these fees because wefollowed the constitution and
these are supposed to be$30.
Again, another example of thereare no laws, there are only
cops.
If they want to charge you thefee and they won't give you the
license without it, what are yougonna do about it, right?
Even though we'veconstitutionally uh eliminated

(06:31):
the high-priced card tabs inWashington.
So, anyways, this man right herewas getting signatures for uh a
bill, an initiative to basicallyfor parental rights, and it has
to do with the transgenderstuff.
And this guy right down here atthe grocery store, he was
wearing a Charlie Kirk freedomshirt or whatever.
He made, you know, shooting facesignals and stuff like that.
And uh, anyways, turns out he'sup from Woodenville, apparently,

(06:55):
or he was arrested inWoodenville.
Port Orchard Man arrested,threatening for shoot shoot,
threatening to shoot Let's GoWashington signature gatherer in
the neck.
So this is the guy, and this isone of the moments of this
altercation.
I guess it did get physical.
He like grabbed their boards andthrew them on the ground.
You can turn the sound on it.

SPEAKER_07 (07:12):
Okay, okay.
Were you threatening to shootme?
I'm not threatening to shootyou.
Oh, okay.
You said you said bot bot.
So was that a threat?
Watch her neck.
So you're threatening me.
You said you said bot bot.
So was that a threat?
Watch her neck.

SPEAKER_08 (07:26):
Were you threatening to shoot me?
So the guy that's talking is inwhite, and he was with the guy
collecting signatures, and thisguy basically started a big
fight, and ultimately he gotarrested.
Which in Washington, if the guythat's liberal that's
criticizing the Charlie Kirkturning point crowd, getting
signatures, is getting arrested,they had probable cause.
He started the fight.

(07:46):
So you know, I remember one timeI had a brother-in-law come up
to Washington and uh he waswearing a MAGA hat.
And we went up to the gasstation.
All right.
And he traveled all over thecountry, even all over the
world, and he wears his MAGA hateverywhere.
And he walks into the gasstation.
He probably even forgot he hadit on.
Yeah, he'd been in Washingtonfor you know all of three hours.
We go to the gas station, andfirst person he interacts with

(08:08):
this doesn't have a last name ofJohn Attackis, goes, Hey douche.
And he's like, What?
He's like, stupid hat, you know,and he's like, walks out, you
know, walks by him.
And my brother-in-law's like,I've been all over the world
with this hat.
I've never had someone saysomething.
I came to Washington for twominutes and already got
accosted.
I'm like, I know, bro, it'srough here.

(08:29):
Every day I make decisions aboutwhat I wear.
Should I wear the shirt with theflag on it?
I never wear a Make America hatagain out in public.
The only one I've ever worn outin public was like my black one,
because it draws a little lessattention.
And I usually only wear it whenI'm coming into the podcast and
I don't know I don't have tostop at a gas station to get
gas.
It's really, it's really sad.

(08:49):
Um, on just an interesting note,before not that we're gonna jump
into our content here, but thisit's a little out of place for
today, but I think it'simportant.
Uh, Donald Trump was talkingabout the financial system
changing over.
And this is just important forpeople to understand.
Things are changing in a big,big way.
So a lot of the economic stuffthat we cover, they're doing

(09:12):
things to basically re-monetizethe debt and kind of get a fresh
reset, restart, which you know,there's gonna be winners or
losers.

SPEAKER_24 (09:20):
Many Americans are unaware that behind the scenes
the technical backbone of thefinancial system is decades out
of date, many, many years out ofdate.
You know that Paul and othersare straightening it out, but
payments and money transfers arecostly and take days or even
weeks to clear.
Under this bill, the entireancient system will be eligible

(09:42):
for a 21st century upgrade usingthe state-of-the-art crypto
technology.
Who would have thought we wouldhave been saying that uh two
years after uh many Americansare unaware that behind the
scenes the technical backbone ofthe financial system is it's I
can't I hate it when there arejust replays and there's short,

(10:03):
short short clips.

SPEAKER_08 (10:04):
I I uh okay, so that's just you know, a factoid.
Just put it out there.
Things are changing.
The the crypto blockchaintechnology.
The reason this is important,and we're gonna touch on this
quite a bit in the show today,is there's so much financial
fraud.
And this is a way to stop a lotof that fraud.
So, on one hand, for those of usthat are real liberty lovers and

(10:26):
we just want, you know, goldcoins and dollars that you know
provide the most privacypossible, this is going to
eliminate the uh ability for youto have privacy in your
financial transactions.
But simultaneously, thetransparency that cryptography
provides is going to make itvery difficult for the
government to commit fraud, solong as there's some kind of
check and balance to where wecan check the ledger, right?

(10:48):
That's one of the things aboutBitcoin.
It's like, yeah, you've got someprivacy, but everybody can see
the transactions.
So we know if you bought drugswith crypto, we just don't know
if it was you, right?
But the moment that we canconnect it to you, that's it,
right?
It's like, yeah, don't buycocaine with a Visa card.
Figure it out.
You know what I mean?
Like so that's uh that's prettyinteresting.

(11:10):
Yesterday, Trump gave his bigspeech.
He had announced it uh rightafter he put his Venezuela post.
He announced, tomorrow, comelisten to this speech.
And what happened was a bunch ofpeople and important
influencers, people like TuckerCarlson, had inside tips from in
the White House.
You know, I talked to someone,Trump will be addressing the
nation tonight about Venezuela.
I fully expected it.
That's you know, when I wasreading the tea leaves, that's

(11:32):
what I thought, especially whenthese people that had insiders
that were doing it.
This caused a huge frenzy.
You had Rand Paul giving aspeech on the Senate floor
yesterday, Thomas Massey, noregime change wars.
This is about oil, right?
Maybe it is.
By the way, I figured out whatDonald Trump was talking about
our land, our assets, and ouroil.
So we had contracts withVenezuela for you know oil

(11:53):
refineries and things like thatwith American companies.
And 20 years ago, theynationalized all that stuff and
basically just you know took itfrom the United States, which in
international law, thosecontracts are kind of set in
stone.
You know, you got a 99-yearcontract, it's a 99-year
contract.
Okay, Iran is still still valueto it.

(12:13):
Yes, Iran got kicked out of theworld order, or they kicked
themselves out of the worldorder when they nationalized the
BP oil fields.
Now, BP had really screwed overIran, gave them very little
royalties for the oil they werepumping out of the ground.

SPEAKER_09 (12:25):
But that is why Iran So they didn't feel like they
were losing, anyways.

SPEAKER_08 (12:29):
Yeah, and that is why Iran is kind of out of the
picture and nobody's allowed tobuy their oils because they they
violated their contract.
When you make multi-billiondollar investments, you know,
you enforce your contracts witharmies.
When we make little$10,000contracts, we enforce it with
the local magistrate judge.
You know what I'm saying?
So that's that's what is goingon there is they want they want

(12:52):
our contractual rights back.
Now, you could make an argumentwhether that's good or bad, but
you know, it is a lawful reasonwhy we could be doing what we're
doing down there to take thosethings back.
The other big thing about thatis it uh it really cuts off the
cartel.
That's all their financing.
So we'll talk about that.
This is Jack Basobiak talking toSteve Bannon about this info op

(13:14):
that the White House ran.

SPEAKER_21 (13:16):
Well, Steve, I I first have to say I I really
appreciate the White House'sability to run an information
operation on so much of socialmedia, putting all this
information out there as, youknow, sort of these strategic
leaks to make people think thatthis was going to be some kind
of speech about Venezuela, tomake them think there was going
to be some sort of you knowattack going on that's about to

(13:39):
come down.
When ultimately, many of us whohave close sources to the White
House, or at the White House uhearlier this afternoon, were
told that it was going to be anend-of-year speech, focusing on
what the policies were thatworked this year, announcing
some new initiatives, and then alook ahead to next year.
And that was always going to beand always meant to be the main

(14:01):
thrust of the speech, and that'sexactly what it was.
But there was this clearly adisinformation uh operation,
information operation run.
And I think a lot of people uh Ithink what'd you say, Steve?
They got some bad info.
I think they're realizing thatthey got you some bad info.

SPEAKER_08 (14:16):
Yeah.
So the people who had thesehigh-level sources, well, now
your high-level source ain't sohigh level, is it?
You got played and you kind ofmade a fool of yourself, which
is which is too bad because someof them was like, I didn't want
you to be made a fool of,Tucker.
So yeah, it's funny becauseDonald Trump, though he gets,
you know, he gets way moresupport from Tucker Carlson and

(14:38):
the people that Tucker Carlsontalks to than he does for Mark
Levine.
So it kind of makes you reallyscratch your head when he's up
there giving Mark Levine a hugand all that kind of stuff.
And it might just be agenerational thing.
You know, Mark Levine's a lotcloser to Donald Trump in
influence and age and ideologythan Tucker Carlson, even though
Tucker Carlson is the biggestadvocate for the most aggressive
policies that Trump could offer.

(14:59):
You know what I mean?
And so I there's a there's adisconnect there.
I think Charlie Kirk, his lossis is felt so much in this time
because Charlie was theconnection to the younger
generation.
Charlie was a connection to thepeople who really wanted him to
burn down the house and and fixthings.
And Charlie could have kind ofhelped him steer the nuance on
how to, you know, uh navigatethat so that you could satisfy

(15:20):
both the boomers and satisfy theyouth.
And I think that's just missing.
You know, I just don't thinkTrump has that same connection,
and uh it's causing someproblems in his messaging,
there's no doubt about it.

SPEAKER_09 (15:32):
So along with this Venezuela, there used to be a
thing where you know, evenenemies were gentlemanly, you
know, to the point of they couldgive each other a hug.
Is that is that um is thatbecause they were friends, like
a lot of people think?

SPEAKER_08 (15:47):
Yeah, or okay yeah.
I uh there's a book calledTransformation of America, it's
about the MK Ultra program.
And if you read that book, it'sit's relevant, it's uh
revelatory because you do seejust that.
You have people thatideologically in the public are
polar opposites, but they're bedbuddies, right?
I mean, they're just thatthey're completely in on it

(16:08):
together.
Hillary Clinton in the uhWikiLeaks dumps, and Donald
Trump talks about this in one inhis campaign speeches in 2016
and 20 in 2016, he talks about,you know, from the WikiLeaks
dumps, you literally haveHillary Clinton telling Goldman
Sachs, yeah, we have one policyto tell the public, but we have
another one that we actuallyenact, and it's for you guys,

(16:28):
right?
So they're connected by themoney, and that's something that
you know, now that we are morecognizant of the structure of
the cartels and how it'soperated around the world, it
really does call into questionif some of our favorite
politicians might be bought offby the cartels.
How do you have a guy likeThomas?
I can I can get there withThomas Massey on why he would go

(16:49):
with the Epstein Files, I canget there with Thomas Massey on
why he would do other things.
But why doesn't Thomas Masseytalk about elections?
You know, for all the digging hedoes into J6, and I greatly
appreciate it, does he notrecognize that J6 was about
putting a cap on the steel ofthe 2020 election?
He doesn't talk about the steelof the election, right?
And the why and why J6 evenhappened in the first place, how

(17:10):
it was kind of like the naturaloutflow of a stolen election.

SPEAKER_09 (17:13):
What makes you think he's in that camp because the
camp that he's getting he'sgetting a benefit from it, so he
doesn't want to talk about it.

SPEAKER_08 (17:20):
And it feels that same way with uh Rand Paul.
Now remember, Rand Paul'sco-senator, Mitch McConnell, is
clearly in bed with the CCP,which sounds crazy, except for
his wife's father-in-law is anagent of the CCP, and that's
where their wealth comes from,is these shipping companies,
right?
And so it's like, whoa, yeah,there's a direct connection
there.

(17:40):
And so it does make you kind ofwonder.
It's like, you know, these guyshave so many great things that
they do do, and they clearlyserve their constituents.
But when it comes down to thewire, the election, do you owe
your seat to the people whoactually run the algorithm or
run the fraud?
Does that make sense?
And does it just look like,well, you're in Kentucky, so you
have to be Republican?

(18:00):
You know, and I think that'sthat's something that I realized
a long time ago.
And I can't remember when I itwasn't, it was after I was in
college, but I was reading somebook, but it was basically
talking about how the twoparties have carved up America.
You know, South and North Dakotawill always be Republican, Idaho
will always be Republican, Utahwill always be Republican.
So then you just steer thecountry inside of that
framework.
It's the Overton window.

(18:21):
Let's go further and further tothe right, right?
The Democrats embraced gaymarriage years and years ago,
and the Republicans rejected it.
And then it became kind of partof our culture and the Supreme
Court decision, the Oberfell.
And now the Republicans, we havea gay treasury uh secretary of
treasury as a Republican, right?

SPEAKER_09 (18:39):
Nobody even cares.

SPEAKER_08 (18:40):
Nobody even cares.
It's like whatever.
But and so now the left ispushing the trans movement and
and uh Republicans are rejectingit.
But what's gonna happen in ageneration from now?
Because you do have transRepublicans out there.
There's a couple of seriousinfluencers that are trans that
are like Republican.
Milo addresses this.
He's like one of the things thathe regrets most in his life is
making it cool for Republicansto be gay, right?

(19:03):
That's a possible I I hate tosay all that stuff, but it's one
of those things where when wesit back and we go, what is
happening here?
How are these people somisaligned with things they said
in the past?
The Overton window has moved somuch.
When we're talking aboutVenezuela and we're talking
about drug boats being blown outof the water, it's a little bit
ironic that the person who'sscreaming the loudest at the

(19:24):
microphones every day is ChuckSchumer.
And he's just cannot stand thefact that they're going after
these narco-terrorists.

SPEAKER_04 (19:30):
Interesting fact, they're using his bill to do it.
This in front of me, this is theMaritime Drug Law Enforcement
Act of 1986, authored by amember of Congress in 1986, from
the state of New York.
His name, Chuck Schumer.
He wrote the law that passedalmost unanimously that makes it
legal to blow drug boats out ofthe water.
It happened in the 80s a lot, inthe 90s a lot.

(19:51):
Go ahead.
Look it up, folks.
Chuck Schumer, the author ofthis bill that made what we're
doing with Venezuelan drug boatsfully legal.
We don't need permission fromthe rest of the world.
Chuck Schumer gave us that in1986.

SPEAKER_08 (20:04):
It's kind of like the Biden crime bill that put
all the kids with crack cocainein prison, and then Biden's the
one that has to pardon thembecause they're all serving
extra time because him, right?
And then you got Chuck Schumerwho authorized the blowing of
rugboats out of the water, andhe's over here.
Can't be fair.
That's not okay.
Douglas Wyatt, good morning,pony boy.
That flooding is insane.

(20:24):
I know, right?
It's almost as bad as theflooding that was coming over
the border a couple years agofrom the south.
Except, yeah.
Uh but an easel warm morninghere.
So glad.
Madam Inn, good morning.
Pray the Rosary Daily, goodmorning.
Carlitz, hey, hey, hey, fellowpeasants.
Uh Carlitz, we don't trustMassey or Rand Paul any more
than MTG.
You know, I don't trust any ofthem, to be completely frank.

(20:47):
And I don't trust Donald Trumpeither, but I I do.
I have to.

SPEAKER_09 (20:52):
You missed the be kind rewind.

SPEAKER_08 (20:54):
Be kind rewind.
Yeah.
I had a uh Alex Jones wastalking yesterday, and he's
like, you know, Trump, Trump ismessing up on things, but you
know, what do you want me to notsupport Trump?
Then we get the Democrats andthey're gonna kill me.
Like, I have no choice but tosupport Trump.
I'm trying, you know, like,yeah, that's how I feel too.
Like, he's protecting me and myfamily right now.

(21:14):
Like, I'm on the shit list.
You know what I mean?
Like, like he set the precedentto reverse pardons.
Do you know what that says tome?
Like, that's scary stuff, youknow.
When you abuse the pardon power,Joe Biden, and then they decide
to take away the pardon power bysome constitutional amendment or
something like that.
I get hosed in the process.

(21:35):
They had that confidentialmeeting the other day, and Clay
Higgins, who is one of myfavorite uh representatives, he
is a no kind of guy.
You remember Clay Higgins?
His claim to fame was uh down inLouisiana.
He's standing there, many drugdealers come in my county.
You know, you better be packing,we're ready to go hot.
So Clay Higgins said, I observedand you know where to find us.

(21:58):
We're not hard to find.
Not hard to find, yeah.
Clay Higgins said, I observedvery, very carefully for an hour
in a top secret H A S C briefingtoday, as Admiral Bradley
maintained unwavering militarybearing, despite being berated
by maniacal Democrats whoapparently really like cocaine
cartel boats almost as much asthey liked illegals getting
dumped across our southernborder for four years.

(22:20):
Dems essentially support thebusiness model of cartel drugs
and cartel thugs rampagingthrough our republic.
Unreal.
They've lost their collectiveminds.
It is so bad their resistance tothings that are so obviously in
the American citizens' interest.
You have to start askingquestions.

(22:42):
Whose payroll are you on?
There is no American ideology,libertarian or otherwise.
You know, I understandlibertarians are like, yeah, let
the guy smoke some weed, youknow, he's growing grass in his
basement, whatever.
I get it.
But not cocaine coming up acrossborders, not fentanyl being
shipped from China to Mexico andsmuggled on the backs of kids

(23:04):
that are being human traffickedacross the border.
There's no amount oflibertarianism that goes, well,
it's just the free market.
I'm sorry, Rand and Thomas.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, that's not what we'redoing here.
This is poison.
It's an outright attempt.
You wouldn't have to smuggle itif it was the free market.
Yeah, you wouldn't have tosmuggle it.
You'd pay your taxes.
I mean, these are guys thatliterally they do not approve

(23:27):
things like again, right?
The cartel.
If you're above board and youjust want free markets, then tax
it.
They don't propose taxing it,they propose ignoring it.
If the if the cartel is in factcontrolling our election
systems, it explains so much.
Oh, yeah.
It would explain so much whysomeone who has no business uh

(23:49):
denying United States citizenstheir rights and benefits and
putting their lives and familiesat risk by allowing drugs and
thugs into the country toapprove of that unless they're
being paid or blackmailed orsomething otherwise.
Now, with Venezuela, Trumpannounced a full-on blockade of
all oil ships, right?
And he's got this huge armadasitting down in the Caribbean to

(24:11):
do it.
And the strategy here is prettysimple cut off the funds, cut
off the cartel.

SPEAKER_22 (24:17):
The president is about to address America in just
a few hours from the OvalOffice.
What do you think happens next?
And with will it be militaryaction on the ground in
Venezuela?

SPEAKER_08 (24:26):
Now, the assumption here, everybody in the news was
thinking this speech was goingto be about Venezuela.
So everybody's tune in, tune in,tune in.
You know, Trump, the anti-warpresident, is now gonna go to
war and it's gonna be great.

SPEAKER_22 (24:38):
To oust communist Maduro and take out drug cartel
operations.

SPEAKER_12 (24:42):
I don't think there's a very big chance at all
there will be on the groundmilitary operations.
The goal is to squeeze Maduroand take away all his sources of
revenue, which is the onlyreason he's still in power.
And we started with his drugrevenues, which were killing
Americans.
Now we've moved on to the bigone, which is the oil revenue.

(25:02):
And I think stopping that isgoing to be enough that one or
more of his generals are goingto decide that Maduro is more
trouble than he's worth andtruss him up and deliver him to
the to us, drop him on a dock,or maybe go old school pinochet
style and give him a helicopterride.
But in the end, this is not awar where the U.S.
is going to invade.

(25:23):
This is a pressure operationthat stops Maduro's revenue and
turns his people against him.

SPEAKER_08 (25:29):
I think the difference between Donald Trump
and our former presidents isthey were in on the drug trade.
They were in on the grift.
Donald Trump does not appear tobe in on the grift.
He wants the oil for Americanoil companies that are publicly
traded.
You know what I mean?
He doesn't want a backdoorpayday.
He doesn't want some money to gointo black projects that are not
accountable to appropriationsand stuff like that.

(25:49):
Think of Iran.
Trump's gonna start a war withIran.
Oh my gosh, he just sentbombers.
Oh no, no, no.
The panickants went out.
Oh my god.
Have you heard have we heardanything about Iran other than
their ties to Venezuela?
Nothing, right?
Because we're we don't care.
Regime changed, it's for theIranian people to do.
But what we're not going toallow is for them to pursue
nuclear weapons.
And they're, you know, Trump hasstiffened the sanctions on them

(26:12):
and not giving them anybreathing room.
Same thing here with Venezuela.
Trump seems to understand how towin a war without fighting a
war.
He understands there can't theycan't fight without those
ill-gotten gains from oil.
And on paper, we have everythingwe need to have an embargo, a
blockade.
Those boats are alreadysanctioned.
It's not something that we haveto redo.
It's been done.

(26:32):
We just have to enforce it.
Again, there are no laws.
There are only cops.
A law unenforced is not a law.
It's a piece of paper.
If you sanction ghost boatsshipping oil, and then you let
them to continue to ship oil for10 years with impunity.
Do you really have a law?

(26:53):
Right?
Or you know what I'm saying?
Or are you giving them licenseto break the law because they're
funneling back some cash?
These are questions that are$30car tabs.
Yeah.
These are questions that arevery real.
Why can't we get our car tabsdown?
Well, Jay Ansley's got somefriends that are on some, you
know, that are making licenseplates or whatever.
I don't know.

(27:14):
So this is some propagandavideos because yesterday,
because the assumption was thatTrump was going to make some
announcement about going to war,on top of the fact that he did a
full-on uh embargo of allshipping dealing with oil and
drugs coming out of Venezuela.
Let me let's just play thepropaganda videos that got put
out yesterday.

(27:35):
Okay, so this is the UnitedStates propaganda video.
Because the the deal with thisis well, let me just read this.
This is from uh Mario Nafall.
Uh Maduro calls Trump's bluff.
Venezuela Navy now escorting oiltankers through the blockade
zone.
So blockade's on, and thenVenezuela, okay, well, we're
gonna escort our boats withmilitary ships.
Okay.
Hours after Trump announced atotal complete blockade of the

(27:56):
sanctioned Venezuela oiltankers, the Venezuelan Navy
began escorting vessels out ofthe country, according to ship
tracking data and sourcesfamiliar with the matter.
Several ships carrying oilbyproducts sell from Venezuela's
east coast between Tuesdayevening and Wednesday morning
with military escorts bound forAsian markets.
Venezuela's state oil company,PDVSA, issued a defiance
statement.
Ships are containing continuingto sail with full security,

(28:17):
technical support, andoperational guarantees in
legitimate exercise of theirright to free navigation.
A U.S.
official in Washington said isis aware of the escorts and
considering various courses ofaction, but declined to provide
details.
Roughly 40% of the tankers thathave transported Venezuela crude
in recent years are under U.S.
sanctions already.
This sets up a potentialconfrontation between American

(28:39):
Venezuelan naval forces in theCaribbean.
So this is the America'spropaganda video.
Carlitz, you're gonna love this.
We got big equipment, bro.
Little Macarena music.

SPEAKER_09 (29:12):
Aren't these just fishing boats?

SPEAKER_08 (29:16):
Aren't these just fishing boats?
How dare Venezuela attack ourfishing boats?
Wow.
You know, I'm I I you know.
What are you just fishing for?
Just like any red-blooded male,this just makes me be like,
enlist me now!

SPEAKER_09 (29:36):
Yes.
Oh, oh, this reminds me.
Funny story.
Over the weekend.
Over the weekend, I'm uh no.

SPEAKER_08 (29:46):
Let's we gotta see Venezuela.
So go ahead and tell the storywhile we watch Venezuela's maybe
because they put out their ownpropaganda video.

SPEAKER_09 (29:55):
Sweet.

SPEAKER_08 (29:56):
Not as impressive.
No.
There's the American boats rightthere.
Floating states.
You guys gotta see this.
There's there's the Americanboats right there.

SPEAKER_09 (30:10):
There's their boats.
So we're just sitting here athome over the weekend minding
our own business, and all of asudden a couple of F-15s fly
over, and it's like, holysmokes! And they were close.
Yeah.
I was yes, I was outside whenthat happened.
And then a couple minutes theyfly around again, and then a
couple minutes later they flyaround again.
We keep running outside to lookat them, and a couple of times
they got so low, it's like,dang, you could almost wave to

(30:32):
the pilots.
And I was like, what the heck isgoing on?
Seahawks game.
Well, yeah, I didn't know, butwe looked it up.
This is this has happened to mebefore because I'm not a
football guy.
When these planes start flyingover, I start getting on the
internet, like, how come thosejets flying over Seattle?

SPEAKER_08 (30:52):
I did the same thing.
I was like, oh, I was like, didthey scrambling?
You know, is North Korea finallycoming in?
Is it Red Dawn?
Nope, it was a Seahawks game.
So uh Donald, uh Alex Jones gotthis advice for Donald Trump.
And I agree.
Donald Trump is making onecritical error.
He's talking to the TV thatactually has the smallest

(31:12):
audience.
He needs to be talking to thepeople that have hundreds of
millions of people listening.
Audio.

SPEAKER_03 (31:20):
I think Trump maybe once every two weeks, you know,
goes to a key battleground,helps Mike Lindell or whatever.
No, he needs to be doingaddresses.
You know, he cares about 60minutes, he cares about stuff
with no viewers, he cares aboutJimmy Kimmel with no viewers.
He went on Elon Musk's show andhad a billion listeners.
He goes on your show, it'sexciting, 100 million viewers.
He needs to be flooding thezone, going back on all the big

(31:41):
shows, going on Joe Rogan, goingon those programs, and talking
directly to the people and notthen going to CBS and
complaining that they edit it.
What do you think?
It's like he's like the frogthat's swimming across the
river, and the scorpion says,Give me a ride.
He goes, We're gonna steamingthat.
He goes, No, I won't.
He takes him across, thescorpion stings him, he's dying.
He says, Why'd you do that?

(32:01):
He goes, I'm a scorpion.
It's like Trump's snake story.
Why is he taking the beautifulsnake up to his breast?
Trump, you're 79.
I respect you.
You're way smart in many ways.
But let me explain.
Baron explained it.
And you know, Steve's old likeme, but he knows the numbers.
There are medium-sized showswith more viewers than CM.

(32:21):
Stop giving them power.
They're dead.
Let the dead bury the dead.
Dust this, dust off your feet.
Stop it.
Engage with us.
Talk directly to us, write tous, and say, I need you, and
it's over.
That is the holy grail.
That is the Excalibur.
That is the sphere of destiny.
That is what he must do.
It almost be directly to us.

(32:43):
I need you.
I need you.
The minute he does that, nothingbut victory.

SPEAKER_08 (32:48):
I agree 100%.
It is stupid that Susie Wileswent and spent 11 days talking
with Vanity Fair.
It was such a she said ElonMusk.
11 interviews.
Oh my God.
Elon Musk, she said Elon Muskhas just hopped up on ketamine.
She talked, you know, she'sstupid.

(33:11):
Okay.
When you are a mediapersonality, everything you say
is gonna be recorded, choppedup, so you become conscientious
of it, right?
Apparently, she's not a mediaperson, she doesn't talk much to
the media.
She's a lobbyist, she does thebackground stuff.
So when she went and did this,she's saying things.

SPEAKER_09 (33:27):
She was like the smartest female on the whole
planet, right?

SPEAKER_08 (33:30):
Yeah, she's saying things that shouldn't be said to
a reporter.
They're not on your side.
You're never going to win themover.
I agree 100% with what he'ssaying.
Starve them out.
Make C CNN report on Joe Rogan.
Does that make sense?
Don't go to CNN and make JoeRogan report on CNN.
Don't make Alex Jones have toplay MS Now clips.

(33:52):
Make MS Now have to play AlexJones clips.
That's the difference.
Alex Jones has an audience.
He has probably the largestaudience.
Maybe not in the world becauseyou got a couple countries with
billions of people, but he'sprobably got the largest
audience in the United States.
He's syndicated on AM, FM, he'sgot the internet show.
He's got a huge, huge audience.

(34:14):
Um, it's you know, and you know,he gets thrown away, he gets
thrown out as just being a rawconspiracy theorist, but he's
not at all.
He's like this show.
He just wants to talk about thethings he actually sees that are
actually real.
One of the things that that wehave a problem with in America,
and this has been my beef formany, many years, is the deal's
not fair, right?
If if being a U.S.

(34:35):
citizen means I'm entitled tosome benefits, why do I pay?
And I see deadbeats getting thatthat money.
I see deadbeats getting thefruit of my labor via food
stamps, via subsidies, viasection eight, all those kind of
things.
Every time.
But when I want to go apply forthings, oh, I'm sorry, you're a
male, you've got to look forwork.
Well, why doesn't the black malehave to work for work, look for

(34:56):
work, right?
And it's becoming more and moreobvious.
On top of that, you have thisinvisible fraud that we can't
see.
So they just indicted a womanfrom Arizona who was
participating in a scheme to getdriver's licenses and things
with no people behind it throughthe state, and then she was
selling them to North Korea, whowas getting snap benefits and

(35:18):
housing benefits through thesefake ID cards.
Okay, and this is Janine Pierobeing interviewed to talk about
this.

SPEAKER_23 (35:25):
She is saying she didn't know anything about it.
She is claiming that she knewthey were overseas workers, but
didn't know they were NorthSharia.
And I want to say something.
Her own messages make it clearthat she knew she was working
for enemies of the UnitedStates.
Example, I just found out from alawyer, July 1, I can get in

(35:46):
some serious legal trouble fordoing this.
620.
I can go to federal prison forfalsifying federal documents.
I don't buy this innocence.
It's her own words that deep sixher.
And it is a very simple thingfor American companies to start
checking on who is working forthem.

(36:08):
They've got to make sure that ifthey have remote workers, are
they really remote Americanworkers?
Are they working in the UnitedStates?
Are they who they say they are?

SPEAKER_08 (36:19):
Yeah, so she was procuring these IDs, right?
Probably started out, hey, canyou get an ID for some worker
pulled on the empathy card?
They're illegal, but we need anID card.
Next thing you know, she'srunning laptop farms, all this
stuff.
And she's claiming, oh, I justan innocent bystander.
You know what I mean?
If you have a stay-at-home momthat's doing pretty well, it's

(36:39):
one of two things, apparently.
It's either OnlyFans or foreignfraud.
Okay.
This is endemic, right?
The system is being takenadvantage of.

And here's the problem (36:49):
like we say before, there are no laws,
there are only cops, right?
So this is out in Minneapolis.
This is the chief of police inMinneapolis.
They had some type of event in achurch, and he goes into this
church.
Listen to this.
This is a man who's in charge ofenforcing the law.
This is a state that has beenoverrun with Somali fraud of all

(37:09):
flavors, everything from commonlaw crimes to financial crimes,
right?
It's and it's horrible.
But listen to him defend thesystem and pull on your
Christian empathy.

SPEAKER_25 (37:21):
Good morning.
Thank you, Mayor.
Uh, my name is Brian O'Hara, andI am the Minneapolis police
chief.
First off, thank you, PastorSergio, um, for inviting us back
into this sacred space here.
Um we know this has been a very,very difficult time for our
communities here in the city.

(37:43):
The fear that people areexperiencing is real.
As our mayor has said, um it'sbeen sad to drive down Lake
Street and to see so many of ourbusinesses either closed or
empty.
Um it's hard to see the impactthat this is having on everyone

(38:06):
in our community.
It's especially personal to me,having been raised a Catholic to
be in a Christian church thismorning as we are approaching
Christmas.
And I cannot help but think ofwhat is happening in our city

(38:27):
today, and how that echoes withhow outsiders have been treated
for thousands of years, how Maryand Joseph themselves were
considered outsiders and forcedto stay in a barn.

SPEAKER_08 (38:44):
That's what we're No, it was tax season, and they
were going to participate in thecensus, and all the hotels in
town were full because everyoneelse was going into town too.

SPEAKER_09 (38:54):
Yeah.
They were not immigrants intheir own land.
If there was an opening, theywould have got it.

SPEAKER_25 (38:59):
They would have got it, yeah.
So my goal and our goal as theMinneapolis police is to try and
do what we can to reduce fear,to reduce anxiety, and to try

(39:21):
and help provide for publicsafety and uphold human dignity.

SPEAKER_08 (39:27):
The entire apparatus of the state of Minnesota was
turned around and weaponizedagainst legacy Americans,
typically white and blackAmericans, in favor of Somalis
and other immigrant groups.
All those empty businesses thatyou're talking about, some of
them were 150 square footbodegas that were bringing in
tens, if not hundreds, ofthousands of dollars a month.

(39:50):
As shown by an indictmentyesterday.

SPEAKER_19 (40:00):
Large-scale SNAP benefit trafficking, a scheme
that turned a program designedto feed families into a
multi-million dollar criminalenterprise.
SNAP benefits are also known asfood stamps.
The defendants are charged withone count of food stamp fraud.
As alleged in the chargingdocuments, these men abused one

(40:21):
of the government's mostcritical safety net programs for
their own financial gain.
This is a tax this is taxpayermoney meant to keep people from
going hungry.
These defendants decided to takeit for themselves.
These defendants exchanged snapbenefits for cash, which they
pocketed.
Bonner, a national a national uhnaturalized US citizen from

(40:44):
Haiti, owned the Jesuela VarietyStore.
Elise May, a lawful permanentresident also from Haiti, owned
the Saul Mache Mixay store.
These two businesses wereco-located within a single
storefront in Boston.
To be certain, these were notsupermarkets.
They were not full servicegroceries, so it would be a huge

(41:07):
stretch to even call themconvenience stores.
In fact, the only thingconvenient about these stores
was how easy it was to commitsnap benefit fraud.
To put this in perspective, theJesuela variety store is less
than 150 square feet in size,smaller than some bathrooms.
The Sao Mache Mixei store wasapproximately 500 square feet in

(41:31):
space.
By contrast, a supermarket canbe 20,000 to 60,000 square feet
in size, have a dozen or moreregisters, and employ numerous
employees.
Both the Desuela Variety and SaoMache Mixay stores had one
register, no carriages, nohandbaskets, and very little

(41:51):
food for sale.
One legitimate supermarket inthe same area as these stores
redeems approximately$80,000 inSNAP benefits per month.
Over the last 20 months, theJesuit variety store was re
redeeming between three and sixtimes that amount monthly.

SPEAKER_08 (42:16):
Whoa.
Stolen out of our pockets.

SPEAKER_09 (42:19):
So I pay that's not fraud.

SPEAKER_08 (42:21):
I pay and they win every time.

SPEAKER_19 (42:24):
With nowhere near the space, inventory, customers,
or infrastructure to support it.
Simply put, there is noplausible way that Snap eligible
food could have been purchasedfrom these stores for this long.

(42:48):
Yet these two stores are allegedto have illicitly trafficked
nearly seven million dollars inSnap benefits.

SPEAKER_08 (42:55):
Seven million dollars in Snap benefits and
essentially no food.
Wow.
And it was Boston, by the way.
I missstook when I saidMinnesota.
But let's go to now Illinois.
So this is the mayor of uh whattown is this?
It's it's a town that's uh it'sa common name of a town.

(43:17):
It's not a Springfield, but it'scommon name of a town.
This is the mayor of that town,right?
So again, who are hisconstituents?
Who does he think is voting forhim?
Who's buttering his bread, so tospeak?

SPEAKER_06 (43:29):
So a few minutes ago, a bunch of Iceland C BP
agents were here.
I stood face to face with FredBovino right here.
And he threatened us, said he'sgonna continue the enforcement.
Of course, what he said was he'skeeping us safe from violence,
but what we know Oh, okay, I'mgonna keep you safe from
violence.
Threatening me.
Okay.
No, it's just the violence isbeing perpetrated by federal

(43:49):
agents.
Uh they had a conversation withour police chief.
It sounds like they planned tobe here throughout the rest of
the day.
I'm delighted to say there weretons of rapid responders, there
were people pushing back.
The tragedy is that I saw withmy own eyes two people who they
abducted, and I'd been toldthere may be more.
It's not clear yet.
I don't want to say anythingunless I'm sure it's true.

(44:10):
But what I would say is thisstay alert, stay active, keep
yourself safe.
If you're trained in rapidresponse, be out and about, and
always remember the ICIRRhotline 855-435-7693.
We need to keep each other safe.

SPEAKER_08 (44:26):
And he also goes on to say, and don't forget to use
your whistles to let thecommunity know that ice is you
notice he had a whistle.
You know, notice he's got hisrape whistle right here around
his neck.
Who are his constituents inEvanston, Illinois?
Who is he protecting?
Okay.
Now, this woman right here, sheis um she's a Mexican immigrant

(44:48):
living in America, and she justspills the beans, guys.
She spills the beans.
But before we hear what she hasto say, let me get to the chats
here.
Uh Harleet says, makes me wish Iwas back in the game in
reference to the Navy videos.
He's an old, he's an old uh uhCoast Guard uh pilot.
Thank you for your service.
Uh DollarsvoteLouder.com.
Don't forget to visit it.
In 2020, fake news spent all oftheir credibility on the COVID

(45:10):
narrative cred uh credibility.
Bankruptcy TV is trash now.
Citizen Journalists, Podcasts,and Peasants Perspective are
where it's at.
Well, thank you.
Yes, it is.
Pray the Rosary Daily.
There's something sus aboutSusie doing those interviews.
I don't know if it's just badjudgment or what, but either
way, they had to do a whole op.
They had to get all the cabinetsecretaries to come to Susie's
defense.
But it's like, dude, she justthrew you guys under the bus.

(45:31):
Uh Birkenbine, Mary and Josephwere Roman citizens and were
abiding by the laws put down byRome.
Yes, they were.
They were not immigrants.
Uh Pray the Rosary Daily remindsus it's Evanston.
Thank you very much.
Okay, so this woman from Mexicois spilling the beans on why
they really come here.

SPEAKER_17 (45:48):
Let me hold your hand when I say this.
We do not move to Americabecause we think it's a better
country.
We move here because it's alittle less worse than our other
countries.
Because you're stupid to thinkthat we move to this country for
some hot dogs and some baseball.
We have better vibes, music,food, culture, history,

(46:11):
literally all of the above.
We just move here because we arelooking to make more money and
offer a better chance for ourfamilies.
Did you know that the minimumwage, a day, not an hour, a day
in Mexico is not even 15American dollars.

(46:31):
Not even 15 American dollars.
Right now, with$15 in San Diego,I could go maybe buy a matcha
and half of a granola bar,honey.
You support ice, you supportpeople getting destroyed, if you
support families gettingdestroyed, I hope you rot in
hell.
And I will see you there, babes,for sure.

(46:52):
Well done, Brad.

SPEAKER_08 (46:53):
Hey, I hope you get denaturalized and deported.
And second, the reason thematcha is$15 is because you keep
sending the money back toMexico.
Okay, that's the problem.
We are supporting the entireworld.
All of our profits get robbedand sent overseas through
remittances.
And hey, you're right.
If you can come up here and youcan get a good job and you can

(47:15):
live in the spare bedroom andput 25 people in a house,
totally destroy theneighborhood, play your music
too loud, drug guys coming inand out, some EBT fraud, you're
right.
Now your family down in Mexicodoesn't have to be industrious.
They don't have to beentrepreneurial, they don't have
to provide value in order to getcompensation.
You're right.

(47:35):
I can see why we've created amagnet here by our success.
But you come here not for ourculture, not because you're
trying to come to a betterplace, not because you believe
in America.
No, you're coming for one reasonand one reason only.
Money.
That's it.
You're not paying into thesystem, you're taken out of the

(47:57):
system.
You are the cause.
That and immigration is like asillegal immigration goes up, all
the other problems go up too.
That it's like it's like icecream and shark attacks.
It's like somehow they're justdirectly correlated, right?
So yesterday I mentioned theletter from Secretary McMahon to
Tim Waltz, and I misquoted, Isaid$12 billion.
It happened to be uh$12 million.

(48:19):
But here's what she says here.
She goes, We have called thefraudsters Ghost students
because they were not IDverified and often did not live
in the United States, or theysimply did not exist.
In Minnesota, 1,834 GO studentswere found to have received 12.5
million taxpayer-funded grantsand loans.
They collected checks from thefederal government, shared a
small portion of the money withthe college, and pocketed the

(48:41):
rest while attending whilewithout attending college at
all.
To stop GO students, we at theDepartment of Education
implemented enhanced fraudcontrols, such as mandatory
identity verification, forfirst-time student applicants.
Our new fraud prevention systemnow blocked more than one
billion in attempted financialaid theft by fraudsters,
including coordinatedinternational fraud rings and AI

(49:02):
bots pretending to be students.
Even one of your state's topelected officials, Congresswoman
Ilhan Omar, has sought to takeadvantage of the federal
taxpayer by advocating for broadstudent debt cancellation, which
she has publicly acknowledgedwill benefit her directly.
She borrowed tens of thousandsof dollars to attend college as
a politics major, and now shedoes not think she should have
to repay despite her generoustaxpayer-funded salary.

(49:25):
My colleagues in other federaldepartments have uncovered the
massive scandal of welfare fraudin Minnesota, where you have
done absolutely nothing asgovernor to stop this criminal
behavior.
Scammers have gotten rich, afederal government housing,
education, food stamp, and smallbusiness programs, even
defrauding assistance for eldercare and autistic children.
Joining these criminals in theirschemes have been Minnesota
politicians who benefit.

(49:46):
How do they benefit?
Votes, donations.
And from fraudster support, likethe radical Islamic terror
groups overseas who receivedMinnesota money to kill American
service members.
Minnesota's political elite hasturned a blind eye and even
helped facilitate the launderingof money that was meant to help
America's least fortunate.
Shame on you, Governor Waltz,for allowing this to happen and

(50:07):
for benefiting from it.
Stop defrauding Americantaxpayers.
No politician is above the law,and my department, alongside
every other agency, under theleadership of President Trump,
will continue to ensure that youwill not be able to dodge
accountability for your actions.
Given your dereliction of officeentrusted to you by Minnesotans,
I implore you to resign and makeway for more capable leadership.
Imagine the bullet we dodged bynot having Kamala Harris and Tim

(50:33):
Waltz as our president and vicepresident.
For real.
If you think what Kamala Harrisdid in California as the
attorney general was bad, right?
Keeping guys in jail longer thanthey were supposed to, locking
up people smoking weed while sheherself was smoking weed,
climbing the political ladderwhile standing while kneeling on
her knees, if you know what I'msaying, right?

(50:53):
I was in prison with a guy thatwas directly involved with
paying bribes to Kamala Harris.
This is one of the interestingthings about my journey.
I got to meet people who aredoing time for other people's
political crimes.
Right?
So this is the guy that gotcaught with 80 tons of cocaine
on a boat and was running the uha Pacific cartel, draft drinking

(51:16):
drugs to the Pacific Islands.
Ended up JP Morgan Chase's son,came in and took over the
cartel.
Now we played, we showed theclip how JP Morgan boat got
caught with a bunch of cocaine.
Yeah, that's his cartel.
He's in prison.
Now he was they were givingpayoffs to Kamala Harris in
California.
I heard it from his mouth.
He's no real reason to lie.
He's literally on oxygen anddialysis.

(51:38):
He's dying in prison.
And he's just like, yeah, KamalaHarris is corrupt, like they all
are.
Like to him, it wasn't even thatbig a deal because that's just
the modus operandi, right?
So she was involved with that.
Look at what Tim Walsh was doingin Minnesota.
It's like unbelievable.
Donald Trump, in his speech lastnight, pointed this out.

SPEAKER_24 (51:55):
American-born citizens, 100%.
In the end, government eitherserves the productive,
patriotic, hardworking Americancitizen or it serves those who
break the laws, cheat thesystem, and seek power and
profit at the expense of ournation.
Look at Minnesota, whereSomalians have taken over the

(52:18):
economics of the state and havestolen billions and billions of
dollars from Minnesota andindeed from the United States of
America.
And we're going to put an end toit for so long as before my
election, the vast majority ofgood and decent Americans were
forced to watch as corruptpoliticians plundered the halls

(52:38):
of power.

SPEAKER_08 (52:40):
That is the truth.
The more you become aware of it,the more you just become
sickened by it.
And you feel like I have to paymy taxes or they'll put me in
jail.
Well, apparently they don't dothat.
For you know, you should just,you know, just I remember the
old video, the guy, I'm headingdown to the Mexican border so I
can come back north and get freehousing and free benefits.

(53:00):
I'm gonna abandon all of myidentification down there and
come up and be Pedro, you know.
That's the truth of the matter.
Now it's getting so ridiculous,right?
We mentioned how the Overtonwindow is changing and how like
the system is no longer set upto benefit the nuclear family.
That's just kind of like apersonal decision on if you want
to do that or not.
Okay.
This guy, I I listen to this,and you guys are gonna laugh.

(53:23):
Please hear hear this man out.
He's making not a bad point.
I mean, given the state ofaffairs and how things are, I
wouldn't be surprised if thisstarts to become something a
little bit more in vogue.

SPEAKER_02 (53:34):
Okay, so I've decided I'm looking for a
husband.
Hear me out.
Hear me out.
I'm looking for a straight manthat would like to get married
to another straight man.
You can date any woman you wantto, you can have many girls you
want to.
I don't care.
I'll never bitch about it.
I don't care.
I just want a joint two-incomehousehold.

(53:57):
Honestly, I'll remodel thehouse.
I'll make it have two masterbedrooms.
I don't care.
And as far as I'm concerned, youyou can have the master bedroom
now.
I'll remodel the house and thentake it when it's done because
we'll have two incomes.
We can afford it.
A couple things would be nice.
It'd be nice if you like had aboat.
You know, that'd be cool.
But if not, don't care.
We'll buy one.
You and I, buddy, you and I, wewill buy one together.

(54:19):
We'll have some nice shit.
That's what we're gonna do.
Guess what?
Holidays roll around, you don'thave to buy me anything.
Nothing.
Not for my birthday, not forValentine's, Christmas, nothing.
Let's just go have a couplebeers.
Doesn't that sound nice?
Doesn't that sound really,really nice?
No bitching, no complaining?
Holidays roll around, let's goget a couple beers.

(54:39):
You know?
Anything.
Anything you might you don'thave a motorcycle?
You could buy one of mine.
I don't care.
We'll go get you one.
We can afford it.
It'd be nice if you cleaned uparound the house.
That'd be cool.
But you know what?
Don't care.
We can get a maid.
We can afford it.
We'll pay a little extra andhave her clean topless.
Wouldn't that be nice?
That'd be nice.
Guess what?
No bitching.

(55:00):
Don't care.
You won't care?
I won't care.
It should be nice.
It'd be nice to have some nicethings and not have to deal with
all the shit that goes alongwith a normal marriage.
I'm okay with that.
I just want the tax benefits.
I want the due income householdand none of the problems that
come along with marrying someoneof opposite sex.
You can, like I said, datewhoever you want to as many, as
many as you want to.

(55:21):
You bring them over, guess what?
Pow.
High five.
Good for you.
She's a pretty girl.
Guess what?
Pow.
High five.
She's an ugly girl.
Don't kill.
Don't care.
Kills a kill.
That's the way it works out.
Don't care what you do.
I don't.
Stay at all night long.
Drunk as shit.
Don't care.
Come home whenever you want to.
Don't care.
Don't come home.
Don't care.
Don't care.
I'm not gonna burn your stuff.

(55:42):
I'm not gonna get jealous.
I'm not gonna mess withanything.
Just it's just gonna be nice,isn't it?
Now he's hearing me out a littlebit.
Doesn't I sound like, well, youknow what?
He's got a pretty damn goodpoint.
You know what?
You wanna wash car parts in thedishwasher?
Don't give a shit.
Don't care.
I'll understand it.
Like, you know what?
They gotta be clean.
You gotta put them on.
He's gotta be right before youput that motor back together.

(56:02):
Guess what?
I'll help you.
You know what?
I'll do the weed eating.
You do the mowing.
Or vice versa.
Don't care.
Most of the time, I have to doall of it.
All of it.
Both as a man, we know we haveto do all that shit.
Guess what?
We'll split it.
We'll split it.
Or we'll hire a lawn service.
We get the motor down.
Doesn't that sound nice?
You're starting to come aroundon my side of this, aren't you?

(56:23):
Anyways, very soon I gotta getmy affairs in order.
I'm gonna be looking for ahusband.
So I'll put a post out there.
Get with me.

SPEAKER_09 (56:32):
Uh oh, you had me right up until the kissy face.

SPEAKER_08 (56:39):
You guys, we've lost the plot of America, okay?
We've incentivized all the wrongthings, okay?
You give tax breaks to marriedcouples, but you disincentivized
everything about being married.
I'm just looking for a straighthusband.
She's a pretty girl, high five.
She's not.
That's okay.
Kills a kill.

(57:00):
You want to watch car parts inthe dishwasher?
Not a problem.
Makes sense to me.
I'll help you.
I'll weed eat you mow.
Normally I gotta do it all.
It's pretty funny.
That's our little comedy break,but we have reached the point
where, you know, that's prettymuch uh that's not fraud, that's
legal, and it's the right way toget ahead.
And unfortunately, it's probablygonna be an incentive for some

(57:22):
people.
Oh my goodness.
We're ready to have a little uhwhat do we got going on here?
I don't know.
The Providence, Rhode Island uhsituation is really crazy.
Okay, so now that they'vereleased a lot of the Oh, this
is Brown.
Yeah, Brown University, to myknowledge, has released no

(57:43):
footage.
It's doorbell cameras fromaround Brown University that
have been released.
And apparently, this suspectthat we know is the suspect
walking.
We played it yesterday.
It really looks like this Mufasaguy, allegedly.
Okay, but he had someaccomplices.
There were some other peoplewalking around with him.
So here's a picture of oneperson of interest wearing a
hijab, of course, probably afemale.
So this is pretty interesting.

(58:05):
And they got criticizedyesterday because turns out
Brown, as part of this mentalmind virus, trying to prevent
ice from coming around because ahuge portion of their student
body are illegal aliens,basically, you know, uh,
disabled their cameras.

SPEAKER_15 (58:20):
The camera and that building the Brown put up
because the San Juan City lawthat we have.
You don't want to be calledillegal immigrants, and you
don't want to provide thefootage to the FBI or
immigration and solid.
One camera and that people comeup with your detectives, they
are friend of mine, they'reangry at this investigation that

(58:41):
these people are brought to theperson, put a camera out that
can't identify that person.
You imagine how the family wantsto go through?
We show the proof this.

SPEAKER_08 (58:49):
Okay, so he's saying you guys haven't provided
footage to the FBI because youdon't want the FBI to use the
footage to identify illegalaliens.
This is a Providence, RhodeIsland news broadcaster that's
asking this question.
I apologize, it's hard to hear.
He's got a strong answer.

SPEAKER_15 (59:01):
So the media here.

SPEAKER_20 (59:04):
We heard from both the Brown police chief and the
provost at Brown who have sharedthat they have been fully
cooperative and shared uh beenforthcoming with all uh data and
evidence that they have uh citycomedy.

SPEAKER_08 (59:17):
The problem is they actually turned off the cameras
so they don't have it.
They don't have it.
Yep.
And who would know that?
Who would know that the camerasare missing?
Would maybe a faculty memberknow that?

SPEAKER_20 (59:29):
Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_08 (59:31):
So sus.
Have you ever heard ofassemblyman Lyle Culpepper?
No.
So Lyle Culpepper is justeverywhere, okay?
And Lyle Culpepper was part ofthis press conference here, and
and he's one of these guys thatjust says the quiet part out
loud.

SPEAKER_11 (59:46):
We're asking the public to please stop referring
to him as the brown shooter, asthis has an inherently
Islamophobic connotation.
And we brown because thebrownie.
Diversity, not because of thecolor of skin.
Right, right, right, right.
We are also asking the public toplease stop posting photos of
Mufasa Karmack.

(01:00:08):
Um, we would for the sake ofdiversity really like to pin
this on uh a different ethnicitybecause it is unfair to keep
blaming Islam for every violentact they commit.
Let's do better.

SPEAKER_08 (01:00:22):
It's satire.
But it's kind of convincing fora minute, isn't it?
Like, what in the heck is goingon right here?
Satire.
But that's like actually what'shappening here.
Uh please, please, guys, we'rescrubbing our website.
Yes, we're taking all this stuffoff.
Uh, but he's not the suspect.
Stop posting his name.
Um, in fact, yesterday, somerepresentative of this of this

(01:00:45):
Mustafa guy was calling aroundto people who'd posted online.
If they could track your numberdown, they were calling, please
take it down or you'll be getsued.
The guy's like, Why would I getsued?
I mean, it's a dead match.
And I said allegedly, he's like,Well, we need you to take it
down.
So they're doing some kind of PRto get out in front of this.
But it's the web, it's the uhBrown University themselves that
have been taking, you know,they're the ones who outed him
by removing his stuff off thewebsite, which made people go,

(01:01:07):
Why are you updating the websitein real time like this?
And then you go, Oh, that guy'sgot a little pot belly, about
the right skin tone.
Oh, hey, that guy's got a littlepot belly wrapped about the
right skin cone.
Oh, he's got the same gate.
Oh, he's got the same gate.
It's like, huh, huh, BrownUniversity?

SPEAKER_09 (01:01:19):
Crazy coincidences.

SPEAKER_08 (01:01:21):
You kind of pointed the finger to this guy, you
know.
It's almost maybe like somebodyinside Brown University off
camera knew who it was who shotthe guy.
Oh, and by the way, did you knowthey haven't interviewed any of
the witnesses yet?

SPEAKER_09 (01:01:31):
Hmm.
What?

SPEAKER_08 (01:01:32):
Yeah.
They haven't interviewed any ofthe witnesses yet.
But they will be, don't worry.
You know, a week later.
They'll get to it.
Guys, this is a cover-up of epicproportions.
A faculty member at BrownUniversity who is in violation
of all the DEI anti-DEIs.
That's like a cover-up.

SPEAKER_09 (01:01:48):
Stupid proportions.

SPEAKER_08 (01:01:50):
This is this is horrible.
Like, this has the potential toactually destroy the university
system.
Like, it's that big of a dealwhen you get down to the
underlying, like, they'recovering up a massive crime
targeting a piece againstconservative.

SPEAKER_09 (01:02:07):
Unless we continue the pushback.

SPEAKER_08 (01:02:10):
Exactly.
Now, some things are just beyondbelief, right?
So yesterday, Fanny Willis hadher little moment in the hot
seat in Fulton County, Georgia,where she had to be held to
account for how much she spenton this trial against Trump and
why why she hired Nathan Wade.
Nathan Wade was her boo.
It was a boyfriend, right?
And she paid Nathan Wade.
Nathan Wade had never tried afelony case ever.

SPEAKER_03 (01:02:30):
Ever.

SPEAKER_08 (01:02:31):
And now he's trying the president of the United
States on some specious charges,okay?
So she was confronted yesterdayabout Nathan Wade's billing
because it turns out Nathan Wadebilled 160 hours a week, okay,
which provided him an incrediblyhigh income.
And when Fannie Willis wasapproached by this, being like,

(01:02:52):
hey, here's the you know, hisbilling.
Did you know he was billing 160hours a week?
And this is what she had to sayabout it.
Now the audio is a little loudbecause she was screaming.

SPEAKER_16 (01:03:02):
I don't review those documents, so you're asking me
to look at documents that Ihaven't for the first time.
What I can tell you is that I'llallow it.

SPEAKER_08 (01:03:09):
Okay, so here he is billing 160 hours a week.
Okay, 160 hours a week.
And by the way, you see thisinvoice here?
This is like an Excel invoice.
He's not even using QuickBooksnow.
Mr.

SPEAKER_16 (01:03:20):
Wade to bill 160 hours a week.
And then Mr.
Wade would be the first one inthe office making sure that my
staff arrived.
He corrected their behavior.
They thought that 8 30 meant 830.
He taught them that 8 30 means 745.

SPEAKER_08 (01:03:34):
He's going to review those notch.
Okay, so he's getting in theoffice at 7 45.
Okay.
And based on 160 hours ofviewing, uh 160 hours of
billing, he probably left theoffice at about 5 a.m.
What's that?
I don't know.
Is it flicking when it's likeflicking for me?

(01:03:55):
I don't like kind of weird.
So Mike Davis had this to sayabout Fanny Willis's fat butt.

SPEAKER_07 (01:04:03):
Uh I would say that poor Nathan Wade.
Uh apparently Nathan Wade had tobuy her that fake rabbit fur
coat that she wore into thecourt uh to the to this uh
Georgia Senate hearing today.

SPEAKER_08 (01:04:16):
She went in there.
Well one of the things she oneof the things she complained
about she was wearing this bigwhite rabbit coat when she came
in.
It was like and she was carryinga Louis Vuitton bag that's
shaped like a fan.
It's a ten thousand dollar bag.
Okay, and she had it out on thetable, and she starts
complaining about how districtattorneys are underpaid, Ron.
They're underpaid, grosslyunderpaid.
We can't even hire people.

(01:04:37):
She got a ten thousand dollarbag on the table.
Bad look underpaid, okay.

SPEAKER_07 (01:04:42):
Bad look.
She was defiant.
She was telling the Georgiasenators that their questions
were so-called dumbass, uh, andsome other things that Big Fanny
was saying.
Big Fanny is a train wreck.
Uh, she's always been a trainwreck, and she clearly committed
crimes with her bogusprosecutions of President Trump

(01:05:06):
and his aides and his alliesrelated to their lawful
objection to the 2020 election.
Again, which is permitted by theElectoral Count Act of 1887
along with the First Amendments.
Big Fanny uh she got into bigtrouble on this prosecution
because she hired her dumb,unqualified boyfriend, Nathan

(01:05:28):
Wade, who who she defendedtoday.
She paid him it was like$250 anhour,$700,000 in Fulton County
funds.
She took these lavish trips.

SPEAKER_08 (01:05:41):
Hang on one second.
We're gonna hold through thebreak.
I know you're busy.
She laundered the money throughher boyfriend.
Okay.
She hired a boyfriend who isunqualified to do anything with
felony cases at that scale andlevel, right?
Paid him$250 an hour, allowedhim to bill$160 a week, and then
went on vacations with him onhis dime.
She laundered personal benefitthrough a boyfriend, knowing

(01:06:04):
this case was bullshit, knowingthat eventually the Biden
administration would have herback and that she would never be
held to account for this.
Okay.
Utter, utter depravity.
It's no better than illegalimmigrants taking advantage of
you.
You know what I mean?
It's like you can see themspending our money.
Like that uh, and then and thento turn around and complain and

(01:06:25):
tell the tell them that thegovernment that they need more
money because you're underpayingthe DAs.
Well, how do you afford thatpurse?
Oh, is it oh, it's a gift fromNathan.
Got it.
Okay, yeah, no, I get it.
I understand.
It's a gift from Nathan.
Yeah, okay, fair enough.
Fair enough.
Uh Trump's speech last nightneeds Trump needs to go more
hardcore.
Okay.
There's two takes on Trump'sspeech last night.
The first thing is NewtGingrich.

(01:06:46):
So Newt Gingrich had this to sayabout Donald Trump's speech, and
I agree with him.

SPEAKER_01 (01:06:52):
To watch President Trump give a 19-minute
disciplined speech that coveredthat many facts was worthy of
Ronald Reagan.
That was a good speech.
It was an important speech.
Someday people will say it wasone of the most important
speeches of his career becauseit set the table for the entire
debate over the next year andlaid out what Biden did to make

(01:07:16):
the country a disaster, whatTrump has already done, and
where we are going in general,and why that's the right
direction.
I think it's a very, veryimportant speech.

SPEAKER_08 (01:07:26):
It was the starting gun for the midterms.
Trump ran the info op to getpeople believed that it was
going to be Venezuela.
He had the news channels allhyping it because, oh, look, the
war, you know, Trump's trying totake us to war, regime change,
it's about oil.
Total Psyop.
And then he gets up there and hejust, here's our success, here's
our success, here's some charts,illegal immigration, blah, blah,

(01:07:48):
blah.
And they're like, and Venezuela,and Venezuela, and Venezuela,
and Venezuela, Somalia's been,you know, Minnesota's been taken
over by Somalians, and we'regonna get to the ball, you know.
And then that was it.
Like it totally faked out allthe media who'd hyped it, and it
was the opening gun of themidterms.
100% for sure.
That's what that was yesterday.
They're gonna start going hard,they're gonna start campaigning.
Now, then you've got so that'sthe boomer take.

(01:08:10):
Okay, that's the new Gingrichboomer take.
Now you get the Alex Jonesthing.

SPEAKER_03 (01:08:14):
Thanks, Steve.
Uh, great analysis by you andyour crew.
We've been just simulcasting thelast hour, and I agree with it
all.
But you were you were askingdifferent reporters and
journalists today and an analystwas it was it too hardcore, was
it too dense, was it tootechnical, because we all know
the facts.
I mean, it was all true whatTrump said.

(01:08:34):
And overall, I'd give it like aB minus.
And I'm not criticizing thepresident.
He needs to create absoluteexistential threat, which is
what it is, total urgency, andget ten times more hardcore and
say the globalist NGOs, which ispublicly happening, are trying
to crash the U.S.
They're working with theChinese, they're trying to take

(01:08:56):
everything you've got.
We've already cut energy pricesby 30 to 50 percent, we've
already cut all these otherprices.
I'm doing everything I can, butI'm facing major headwinds.
I need your help.
He needs to enlist us to getbehind him and support ICE
that's under attack and explainthat this country is in a battle
for its life.
He conscripts us with thatmessage, it's game over for

(01:09:19):
them.
We are in a historical crisis.
We need George Washington, weneed Abraham Lincoln, we need
President Jackson right now,Andrew Jackson.
We need to just straightthrough.
So I know they're telling him,be nice, you know, you know,
don't take scalps for the DOJ,blah, blah, blah.
All of that is what happenedeight years ago.

(01:09:42):
Things are better now.
He's way more hardcore than hewas then.
So, you know, let's say onhardcore he was a two before,
now he's a five.
We need a twelve.
We need a fifty, you know, aboveten.
It's like Spinal said, we need11.
We he we he just needs todirectly tell us what we need to
do.
Directly tell us what we're upagainst, because those of us
that study it know thetentacles.

(01:10:03):
He's got the Federal Reserve todo what he's supposed to, though
a little bit late.
He has won the tariff issues.
There'll be some pain up front.
But overall, America surrendersover.
You want to get out from underthe globalists, you want jobs
back in America, you you wantlaw and order.
In the areas I can control, likethe border, we're down 96%.
Uh, you know, basically nobodycoming across.

(01:10:24):
We've saved and already found60,000 of the kids.
And just so I wish the speechwas an hour long.
Great that it was focused ondomestic, but also explain that
domestically we're under attack.
So my only message to Trump isdamn the torpedoes, go straight
at them and speak directly tothe people and say, look, you
elected me to stop the deepstate.

(01:10:44):
And you see what we're upagainst.

SPEAKER_08 (01:10:48):
That's it.
When you're talking to theyounger crowd, which Alex Jones
talks to, uh, and thedisaffected boomers, this is
about the deep state.
There's a lot of things thatTrump's doing that are great,
and they are excellent.
I mean, absolutely excellentthings.
But if you can't take care ofthe deep state, they'll just
unravel it.
They'll keep allowing fraud,they'll keep being bought off,

(01:11:09):
it's not gonna stop.
You have some things that arehuge symbols.
Ilhan Omar, for example, beingin Congress as someone who
committed immigration fraud tobe naturalized, took advantage
of the system, is completely hasno allegiance to the United
States.
She openly says, you know, youhave a Somali representative in
the United States Congress.
And what does that do?
It creates air cover for them tocommit the fraud they've

(01:11:31):
committed.
This is Andy Ogles, who hasseems to have woken up, seems to
figure it out.
The new right moving forward hasto have a much stronger backbone
and has to do the hard things.

SPEAKER_05 (01:11:43):
The temptation to be purely reactionary is real.
Every day my work is dictated bya news cycle that
sensationalizes sound bites,snippets, likes, and shares, and
then simply it simply moves on.
Congress responds by slappingband-aids and passing empty

(01:12:04):
resolutions on America's worstissues and problems, and then
moves on.
What has it gotten us?
38 trillion in debt, a culturein decline, we're always playing
defense.
And if Donald Trump has taughtus anything, is if you're
playing defense, you're losing.

(01:12:25):
The second A and MAGA is a veryimportant term.
Make America great again, itmeans to actively resurrect our
government, our traditions, andour faith.
For example, if dubiouslyelected or rather naturalized

(01:12:50):
illegal immigrants are pollutingour politics, the new right must
have courage to deport them.
We don't just complain about howbad things will get.
We must act.

SPEAKER_08 (01:13:03):
And that is what has to happen.
There has to be actions.
Just pointing out that Ilan Omarmarried her brother is one
thing.
Putting her in prison for isanother.
Denaturalizing her is another,and deporting her is another.
It must be done.
You must take illegals off thestreet.
I don't care the sob story theygive you.
You paid a cartel member to behere.

(01:13:24):
You poisoned our sons anddaughters.

SPEAKER_09 (01:13:26):
And if we allow one Ilhan Omar, it's only a matter
of time before there's 100 ofthem.

SPEAKER_08 (01:13:32):
Exactly.
Exactly.
Uh getting into the chats seemslike three to four days,
Birkenbean says, to get to uhthe grainy ring uh ring camera
video.
Yeah, uh-huh, no.
Pray the rosary daily and theCPI came in at 2.7.
That was a big win.
And don't forget to donate, uh,Pony Boy says, don't forget to
donate to Left Behind.
It's Christmas.
Yes, they're doing their bigChristmas drive.

(01:13:52):
My wife's been taking calls umfrom families and they've been
doing Christmas lists and stufflike that.
So yeah, please, you know, putit on your Christmas list to
make a donation to Left Behindand Without.
Literally every dollar counts.
Like, you know,$25 can make aChristmas present for a kid.
It's pretty significant.
So we love that.
All right, guys, we're gonnajump over into private and we're
gonna be hearing from CandaceOwens talking about Bridget

(01:14:13):
McCrone.
You're not gonna want to missthis.
It is salacious and fun.
Just talking to Piers Morgan.
And we're also gonna be hearinga little bit from Kamala Harris
and doing a little bit ofanalysis on that.
So join us over on private anduh we'll we'll see the rest of
you guys again tomorrow.
Tomorrow, no matter what, wehave to do a raid.
So just so you know that we'regonna have the full show.

(01:14:34):
We'd love for lots of chatters.
Be prepared.
I think we'll try right at seveno'clock to do a raid.
Okay.
So we've got to figure that out.
And what we have to do is ourchat, we're gonna go to another
show that's live streaming whereour chat is gonna go into their
chat and we're gonna interact.
Okay.
So we want you guys to put onyour best face.
You know, you're representingthe peasants.

(01:14:55):
Your peasants are arriving.
Don't bring your pitchforks,right?
Bring your plates of cookies.
Maybe someday we'll do peasantsarrive with pitchforks and we'll
visit like a rival podcastthat's you know on the left or
something like that.
But tomorrow's gonna be nice andfun.
We'll find a podcast, we'll goin and make some friends, and
you guys can refer the show,tell them how great it is, and
let's see if we can grow theaudience.
So we have to do five raids thismonth as part of our creator

(01:15:18):
program.
We've never done it, neverthought about doing it.
We have been raided, however.

SPEAKER_09 (01:15:21):
We don't even really know how to do it.
Don't even really know how.

SPEAKER_08 (01:15:23):
It looks so complicated.
Probably isn't complicated, it'slike three clicks.
But either way, we got to dothat tomorrow.
We'll target right at 7 a.m.
So please, please, please try tobe here for that.
Okay, we'll talk to you guysover in private.
Premium.
Premium.
All right, guys.
Welcome, welcome.
I really like that that AndyOgle speech.
He's, you know, it's kind ofgrowing on me a little bit.

(01:15:45):
He's given a couple really goodspeeches.
He gave a speech on the uh housefloor, basically talking about
deporting everybody.
Gotta do it.
It's a sad state of affairs.
This is the pendulum swinging.
You know, if we'd have gotten ontop of this, Barack Obama
deported a lot of people.
We should have just let him keepgoing.

unknown (01:16:01):
You know?

SPEAKER_09 (01:16:02):
Well, if we'd cleaned house back in the 80s,
it would have been a lot easierand we just kind of let it go.

SPEAKER_08 (01:16:07):
Yeah, one of the other things we didn't talk
about, but they're starting upinsane asylums again.
Uh, this coming from thehousing, uh the housing
department, they're like,listen, part of our homeless
problem is mental illness, andpart of our housing problem is
also mental illness.
And he's like, Some of thesepeople need actual care, they
don't just need subsidies andcrackpipes.
You know what I mean?
We they actually need help in afacility.
So they're they're doing whatthey can do to reinstitute

(01:16:29):
places where they can be takencare of.

SPEAKER_09 (01:16:31):
That can't be a bad thing.

SPEAKER_08 (01:16:32):
It can't be a bad thing.
Now, it was abused, okay.
In the 60s and 70s, it wasabused.
People, it's like red flag laws.
I don't like my husband, so I'mgonna claim he's mentally ill
and check him into an insaneasylum, and then you're in a
trap, you're right.
So hopefully there's guardrailsand things like that, I would
hope.
But in truth, yes, rehab andmental health facilities are

(01:16:52):
needed, and that's how we'regonna deal with our homeless
crisis that's domestic.
Can't deport someone who wasborn here, okay?
So this is Kamala Harris, andshe's talking with Jimmy Kimmel.
Alex Jones made a good pointabout Jimmy Kimmel.
He told Donald Trump, stopcriticizing your enemies.
They're dying already.
News media is already dead, CBShas low ratings, everybody's got

(01:17:13):
low ratings.
But when you show up, you pumpthe ratings for a few days,
right?
They love having you on becauseit creates controversy and they
take you out of context andstuff like that.
Well, Jimmy Kimmel's ratingswere so low, they were like
suspending his contract.
And then when he went out andcriticized uh Charlie Kirk, I
mean, he was pretty much done.
But because Trump jumped in, itgave Jimmy Kimmel a shot of
life, right?
It gave, well, let's let's useJimmy Kimmel as a bulwark.

(01:17:35):
And now his show still isn'tdoing great, but it's got more
ratings than it had before thebig incident.
You know what I'm saying?
So stop criticizing yourenemies, start building up your
allies.
So this is Jimmy Kimmel talkingwith Kamala Harris, and she says
something that we we can readone of two ways, and I'll tell
you about how we can read that.

SPEAKER_26 (01:17:53):
Why didn't the Biden administration release those
files?
Was that something that theyfelt would look bad uh while
they're uh running against thisguy, or why didn't they come out
during your administration?

SPEAKER_18 (01:18:05):
To give you an answer that will not satisfy
your curiosity, I will tell youwe perhaps to our damage, um,
but we strongly and rightlybelieved that there should be an
absolute separation between whatwe wanted as an administration
and what the Department ofJustice did.
We absolutely adhered to that,and it was right to do that.

(01:18:30):
The Justice Department wouldmake its decisions independent
of any political or personal uhvendetta or concern that we may
have.
And that's the way it worked.

SPEAKER_08 (01:18:42):
So obviously, she's baking a shot at Trump, you
know, getting retribution andyou know, directing the FBI.
But the Biden administrationtried to create this facade that
the DOJ was a separate agency.
It was a fourth branch ofgovernment that operated on its
own.
Again, no laws, only cops.
So the DOJ gets to decide whichlaws we enforce, not which laws
Congress write, or not thepresident who's supposed to

(01:19:02):
enforce the law.
So either A, they did that, theytried to enforce this idea that
the DOJ is a fourth branch ofgovernment, or more likely, in
my opinion, she's completelylying and she's saying what you
know what they wanted the peopleto hear, but we know from all
the released information thatthe White House was directly
involved, directing MerrickGarland, directing Jack Smith,
directing Fannie Willis,directing Alvin Bragg, directing

(01:19:25):
Letitia James, they were goingdown and meeting with him.

SPEAKER_09 (01:19:27):
By the way, another more likely.

SPEAKER_08 (01:19:29):
Yeah, more likely.
Another little piece ofinformation I found out
yesterday with the Rob Reinersaga, which I'm kind of like
done with now.
It's like, okay, that was coolfor a minute.
It's very revelatory, but he'sdead now.
But did you know his cell phonepinged around Barack Obama 500
times?
In I can't remember what theperiod of time was, but again,
your cell phone is commerciallyavailable.
People can track you, you know,they can just hire a PI and they

(01:19:51):
can figure out where you'vebeen, right?
500 times they pinged together.
Wow.
500 times.
And he met with uh Clapper andBrennan, and I think it was
either 17 or 27 times, which isa lot to meet with you know spy
agencies.
He clearly was the director ofRussia Gate.
He was the one that was takingall the tidbits that they could

(01:20:14):
provide.
Here's, you know, okay, we'vegot uh Jake Sullivan said that
the Russians were pinging TrumpTower, and we've got this here,
and he's the one who kind ofpackaged it all and created a
narrative that is really whatresulted in Jack Smith's, right?
He he packaged that narrativefor a decade.
So rest in peace.

(01:20:34):
Okay, this is uh Candace Owenswith Pierce Morgan.
This is freaking out.
The reason I tell you now, asyou know, can't this Candace
Owens you read?

SPEAKER_09 (01:20:45):
No, but yeah, okay.

SPEAKER_08 (01:20:47):
So Candace Owens, uh, I don't, you know, I don't
follow her, I don't listen toher show, I've never listened to
a full episode of her show, Ijust get clips.
And for the most part, postCharlie Kirk's death, she's kind
of just went insane.
Apparently they're like bestfriends.
And I know they were bestfriends before Charlie got
married, and they're stillreally good friends.
So she's kind of taken um, justlike anybody who loses someone

(01:21:09):
close, you're grasping foranswers.
Okay.
She met with Erica Kirk for likefour and a half hours, they
presented some things, got somethings cleared up, who knows,
right?
But before that, she had comeafter Bridget McCron, which is
who is Emmanuel McCron's wife.
Right now, they have like a20-year age gap.
She was his babysitter, there'sjust so many like things.

(01:21:31):
Well, one of the things that'sinteresting about Bridget is,
you know, while she has somekids, a lot of people don't
think they're her kids.
And obviously Bridget's statureis not super feminine and blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
Well, it turns out the McCronesdecided to sue Candace Owens
over slander and and werewilling to provide evidence of
Bridget McCron's sex pictures.

(01:21:52):
Well, Candace submitted a motionthat said, well, just provide a
DNA swab.
Like, I don't want to see yourjunk.
Just provide a DNA swab.
It's like we can find out whatyour sex is.
Nope, won't provide it, won't doit, won't do it under any
conditions.
Okay, so then they dropped thecase.
So Bridget McCron, or so Candaceis on with Pierce Morgan and she
makes some pretty bolddeclarations.

SPEAKER_13 (01:22:11):
The reason I told the Alex Jones story is he did
he did incredibly well at asandy hook with his
investigations.
But as was established in thecourt case against him, brought
by the families eventually, andI think we're gonna see the same
thing with Bridgete Macron andyou is that he was weaponizing
deliberate lies for money.
And I think you Brigitte Macronhas a penis.

SPEAKER_00 (01:22:32):
I really want you to know that.
Brigitte Macron has a penis.
I'm sorry.
Okay, did she get it removed?
Yeah, you you you you you canhave adoptive children, you can
call somebody, but BrigitteMacron was born a dude named
John Michel Trog.
No, and I just feel I want youto know that.
I want you to know that BrigitteMacron probably stands peeing

(01:22:53):
up.
Probably pee standing up, iswhat I want you to know.

SPEAKER_13 (01:22:55):
The beauty is we have a pigback.
We have a pickback, and we'regonna find out because you're
going to court.
And you know, you you will losethat court case.
I think you know you will.
Oh boy.

SPEAKER_08 (01:23:06):
She didn't lose the court case.
Oh my goodness.
Now the French have a hit out onCandace Owens that the FBI is
officially looking into.
I wonder why.
You know, a DNA swab couldresolve all of this.
Bridget McCrone has a penis.
No, Bridget McCrone has a penis.

(01:23:26):
I just want you to know.
She probably stands peeing up.
Stands up the pee.
Wow.
Wow.
We are in weird times, Ron.
Weird times.
All right, guys, that's it forthe show today.
Thanks for sticking around.
Yes, pony boy.
That would be great if you couldtuck your shirt in for the raid.
We gotta put on our best, bestbehavior.
All right, guys, thank you somuch for joining us.
We will talk to you againtomorrow and be ready for a raid

(01:23:48):
at seven.
Bye.

SPEAKER_14 (01:24:13):
Man, son it.
What night lived in that castleover there?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37.
I'm not old.
Well, I can't just call you man.
You could say Dennis.
I didn't know you were calledDennis.
Well, you didn't bother to findout, did you?
I did say sorry about the oldwoman, but from behind, you're
not what I object to is youautomatically treat me like an

(01:24:34):
inferior.
Well, I am king.
Oh king inferior.
How'd you get that, eh?
By exploiting the workers.
By hanging on to outdatedimperialist dogma which
perpetuates the economic andsocial differences in our
society.
If there's ever going to be anyprogress, how do you do, good

(01:24:55):
lady?
I'm Arthur, King of the Britons.
Whose castle is that?
The Britons.
We all are.
We are all Britons.
And I am your king.
No, you're the king! I thoughtwe're an autonomous collection!
You're fooling yourself.
Why living in a dictatorship?
A self-perpetuating autocracy inwhich the working class is.

(01:25:18):
That's what it's all about.
These good people.
I am in hate.
Who lives in that cast?
No one lives there.
Then who is your lord?
We don't have a lord.
What?
I told you.
We're an anarcho-syndicalistcommune.
We take it in turn to act as asort of executive officer for
the week.
But all the decisions of thatofficer have to be ratified at a

(01:25:40):
special byweight meeting.
If I think by a civil majorityin the case of your internal
affairs, be quiet or by atwo-thirds majority in the case
of being quiet.
I order you to be quiet.
I'm your king.
The lady of the lake.

(01:26:01):
Her armed clad in the purestshimmering samite held a lost
Excalibur from the bottom of thewater.
Signifying by divine providencethat I asked was to carry
Excalibur.
That is why I'm your king.
Listen, strange women lying inponds, distributing swords, is
no basis for a system ofgovernment.

(01:26:21):
Supreme executive power derivesfrom a mandate from the masses,
not from some farcical aquaticceremony.
But you can't expect to wieldsupreme executive power just
because some water is tartthrough a sword.
I mean if I went round saying Iwas an emperor, just because
some moistened bitch had lockeda simitar at me, they put me

(01:26:42):
away.
Shut up, will you?
Shut up! Now we see the violenceinherited the system.
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