Episode Transcript
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SPEAKER_29 (00:52):
We're just peasants.
Every one of us.
You watch those little movies,you see the peasants in the
background with the kings andkings walking around, but where
are those people?
Where are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
If you got on a second ago andthere was a little glitch in the
Matrix, we don't know whathappened.
(01:15):
Anyways, I see in the chat, TifTime was already here.
Good, Merry Christmas Eve to youback.
Thank you very much.
I can't believe it's ChristmasEve.
I remember a year ago onChristmas Eve.
It was like every other day.
There was nothing special aboutit in prison.
So yesterday I had a, I don'tknow if I want to call it a
(01:37):
disturbing conversation, but Ihad one of those uh
conversations with my oldestdaughter who came up for
Christmas, who's been gone,right?
She moved out while I was inprison.
And uh she kind of started thequestion out.
So dad, are you still asovereign citizen?
SPEAKER_39 (01:51):
I was like, Oh boy.
SPEAKER_29 (01:56):
I was like, oh,
you've been reading the news.
I was like, no, I'm not asovereign citizen.
I never was.
It's funny because of all thepeople involved in January 6th,
there were a smattering ofpeople who actually claimed to
be sovereign citizens.
And I got the label.
They actually said the words.
(02:17):
Anyways, all very funny.
But it reminded me that again,this theme that I've said many,
many times, you can't vote yourway out of an indoctrinated
society.
Uh, during the conversation, Iwent to share a video of JD
Vance, and my daughter's like,Well, I can't trust him.
And I was like, I understand nottrusting a politician, but
that's not that I can't trusthim, because this was in the
(02:37):
context of her defending CPS.
When I say CPS to you, childprotective services wrong, you
get a warm, fuzzy feeling inyour heart.
Like, no, oh, they're takingcare of all the kids that's
parents or dirt-elect.
SPEAKER_31 (02:47):
That's not the
feeling we get.
I mean, they're that's whatthey're doing, and they're doing
the best they can, but it'sdicey.
SPEAKER_29 (02:54):
It's dicey.
I was like, anyway, so I we hada discussion about all the
different ways that you know youcould accomplish CPS's mission
without using CPS.
And you know, I was like, forexample, you know, if you're in
a local area and there's astrong church, community church,
that church could have anoutreach program, right?
How much better would it be if Igot in trouble and my kids
(03:16):
needed, you know, some care ifthe local sheriff reached out to
our local bishop and said, Isthere anybody in the universe of
people that are already familiarwith this family that can be a
good thing?
SPEAKER_31 (03:26):
Well, first you
start with family, yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (03:28):
And anyways, she was
like, Well, they're supposed to
do that.
I'm like, supposed to do that.
They're also not supposed totake parents away from kids
that, you know, are are loved.
So, anyways, this is Gad Sad.
He's a university professor.
Oftentimes he's you know quotedas one of these intellectuals,
intellectual, right?
And he's talking about why doall these bad ideas come out of
(03:51):
universities?
SPEAKER_41 (03:51):
How come almost
every single time bad ideas come
from universities?
SPEAKER_22 (03:55):
So Orwell answered
it one way.
It takes intellectuals to comeup with some of the dumbest
ideas.
Yes.
And I wholeheartedly agree withthat.
Now, why is that?
The academic who literally livesin the ivory tower is fully
decoupled from theautocorrective mechanism of
reality, right?
So, for example, I am housed ina business school.
In the business school, there isless parasitic ideas because if
(04:17):
you build an economic model topredict the economy that's based
on postmodernism, reality willtell you you suck.
Engineering schools also haveless parasitic ideas because if
you build the bridge usingpostmodernist indigenous
physics, then the bridge willcollapse.
SPEAKER_29 (04:32):
So postmodernist
indigenous physics?
That's where you get the incenseout and you get all the steel,
and you're like, if we putenough sage on it, it'll hold.
SPEAKER_31 (04:41):
I think that uh like
water dowsing falls in that
category sometimes.
What does?
Water dowsing.
SPEAKER_29 (04:47):
Water dowsing?
What's water dowsing explain?
That's where you grab the sticksand you walk around.
SPEAKER_22 (04:51):
Oh, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yes, yes, yes, yes.
Some disciplines have aninoculation against these
parasitic ideas, but in otherdisciplines in the humanities
and some of the social sciences,I could sit on top of my pulpit,
pontificate about nonsense.
There isn't an autocorrectivemechanism called reality, and
that's why I become thepromulgator of nonsense.
unknown (05:11):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (05:12):
And that's kind of
reminds me of Kamala Harris.
I could say things now.
I saw this clip, and I justthink it's an absolutely
wonderful clip.
And I want people to internalizehow serious of a problem we
have.
So this is Mark Mitchell.
This is from Rasmus's reports.
He says in 10 years, the averageboomer will be 80.
We've only seen a whisper of thefourth turning so far.
(05:34):
So what this is is the blue linehere is the generation Z, right?
This is younger generation, thegeneration after the
millennials, and this is thebaby boomers.
And as you can see right here,there's a pretty close
correlation, right?
You get a couple of the gener Zthat come over and vote for
MAGA, you know, it's like youcan you can see the comparison,
but this is going down rapidly.
(05:56):
And this obvious line is goingto stay strong for another 40
years or so, 50 years.
If this line is indoctrinated,if this line right here didn't
get civics class, believes welive in a democracy, does not
understand representativepolitics and constitutionality.
SPEAKER_31 (06:16):
You should be
walking your cursor along the
red line as you say the civicsare disappearing.
SPEAKER_29 (06:21):
That's just it.
Boomers got the lesson, right?
Boomers lived through Reagan,boomers lived through Carter,
they've kind of seen a little upand down, they haven't seen war,
they've paid for war, I haven'tseen war.
Right.
But very few in this generationsaw war.
But this right here, this isgoing to be the prevailing
voting block in the future.
(06:42):
So when you see people like AOCand you see kind of the younger
crowd and they're playingtowards the Bernie Sanders
policies, because guess what?
These people home own homes,these people never will.
Had that conversation last nighttoo.
It was like, I don't know howwe're, I mean, at what point
when we start earning money andhouse values, like where's the
(07:02):
where's the spot where we makeenough to buy a house?
And I'm like, there's not one.
There's not a spot where itintersects unless you leave the
herd, right?
You have to get out of the bellcurve to survive right now.
And and you know, for someonelike me who's always been
naturally entrepreneur,entrepreneurial, opportunistic,
I had to jump out of the barrelbell curve of my generation to
(07:25):
get to where I'm at, right?
I had to be like super peasantowning construction companies,
and you know what I mean?
Like I but but the avenue that Iwould have had to just, hey,
take your college degree and gowork for Gallup, and you'll make
60, 70 grand a year, you'll buya I'd still be working for
Gallup as a political scientistdoing polling, making 60 or 70
grand a year, somewhere wherethe median home price is 650
(07:46):
grand.
You know what I'm saying?
So this is the result of thisindoctrination.
So this is the interviewerinterviewing these two people
here.
These and the discussion here isabout genetic differences.
Okay.
Bad ideas, not rooted in realityor science.
We're gonna listen to thisdiscussion.
Now, some of you might want toblow your brains out, but you
(08:08):
don't.
It's important to internalizethis.
You can't vote your way out ofindoctrination, right?
When people are fixated onnon-true ideas and are not open
to correction or to newinformation and reinform their
opinions, you end up with this.
SPEAKER_37 (08:30):
They they they yes,
they have uh different fertility
windows, they have a higher rateof fertility complications, 50%.
SPEAKER_36 (08:36):
But there's no
scientific evidence to prove
that a black woman and a whitewoman are genetically different,
right?
This is like a lot of people.
Like literally, there are genesthat code for their skin color.
There are genes Again, this is Imean, this is like government.
This this is I mean, right?
This is the National Instituteof Health, this is an American
medical association, likethere's there is no scientific
(08:57):
evidence to prove that.
SPEAKER_37 (08:59):
Because a lot of
there's no scientific evidence
by this is like IQ differences.
Black people are geneticallydifferent from other
populations.
SPEAKER_36 (09:08):
I'll say that again.
There's it there is at leastthere is no scientific evidence
to prove that, right?
SPEAKER_37 (09:14):
And as people say,
No, no, I'm sorry, I'm saying do
you want to ask AI forscientific evidence to prove
that I want to ask you?
Humans are genetically diverse.
It's not a bad thing thathumans.
SPEAKER_36 (09:28):
I'm not saying it's
a better or a good thing.
I'm saying there is noscientific evidence.
SPEAKER_37 (09:32):
I'm saying that is a
fact.
Any saying that there isscientific evidence, there is
scientific evidence.
There is something scientificevidence.
This is like saying the sky isnot blue.
Like it is genes that they codetheir skin color, right?
Those genes are obviouslydifferent in them than they are
in us.
How is that not science?
That's just like a basic fact.
(09:53):
The genes that code their skincolor, their level of melanin
production are different from mygenes that make melanin
production.
SPEAKER_36 (09:59):
And that's precisely
why I was asking this question
because I think for some peoplethat do believe, like you, that
people are geneticallydifferent, that has historically
been used to promote racialhierarchies, right?
And that's why I'm asking you.
But so what did you do?
SPEAKER_31 (10:14):
I like the way he
looks around, like, am I crazy?
SPEAKER_26 (10:17):
They're a different
color.
It's a gene expression.
SPEAKER_29 (10:22):
That's science.
This is now it seems kind oflike, well, maybe they're
talking past each other.
They're not.
Uh, Joval Navari in the bookSapiens talks about this genetic
problem because we spent the thethe second the 40s, 50s, and 60s
telling people that genes don'tmatter, that everybody's equal,
(10:45):
that you know, look past thecolor of your skin, look past
any genetic differences.
And then one day we unlock thegene code and we found out oh,
there are significantdifferences.
Like, for example, if you'rewhite or Middle Eastern, you
have somewhere between two andfour percent Neanderthal DNA,
which is probably why youexpress white, right?
If you're Asian, you have up toseven percent Denisovian DNA,
(11:08):
which is why they have a certainappearance and a certain mental
capacity for things likemathematics and things like
that.
If you're black, you're the onlypure Homo sapiens left, right?
They're pure human, so we're allsomething else, and they're the
pure humans.
This expresses itself in othermanners, it expresses itself in
IQ.
(11:28):
This could be from centuries ofDarwinian survival of the
fittest.
If you're gonna be in a northernhemisphere where it's cold, you
better learn how to plan for thewinter.
SPEAKER_31 (11:38):
Well, that could
explain why Jesus is probably
black.
Could be.
SPEAKER_29 (11:42):
Who knows?
Who cares?
Right?
The idea here isn't that wedon't have differences, it's
that as far as subjective thingsgo, we shouldn't change, be
different, right?
When we're talking abouthousing, freedom of opportunity,
there's a bell curve.
Just because black people andAsian people and white people
and Middle Eastern, you know,all fit in some bell curve for
(12:03):
their society doesn't meanthere's not outliers.
Okay.
So you take everybody on merit,but to sit and be like, hey,
it's it's just there's noscientific difference.
Yoval Navari says this is thegreatest hot potato science has
ever dealt with.
Because again, what she pointsout is well, people have used
that to promote policies, youknow, uh over the genetics.
Yes, Hitler did that, no bueno,Pol Pot did something, you know,
(12:28):
North Korea does it if yourblood ancestors were a certain
way.
There's that's bad.
Okay.
But to deny the differences,when you deny truth, it comes
back with a club, right?
And that's the thing.
We have to be in alignment withwhat's true.
And the search for truth hasbecome more and more difficult.
(12:49):
I often say on the podcast,right, like we could have a real
discussion about tax rates andthings like that, but we can
both agree that fraud is fraud,right?
Can we just eliminate that fromour calculations?
That there's no fraud that isacceptable.
That's a good baseline.
Yeah, that's a good baseline.
So when we're having adiscussion about, for example,
CPS, if there's examples ofcorrupt CPS workers or things
(13:10):
like that, I'm like, can weagree that that's wrong?
And if we need to eliminatethat.
And if eliminating that means wehave to change the way services
are offered, right?
One of the other things that gotbrought up.
That's a great basic way to sayit.
One of the other things that gotbrought up was suicide with this
again.
My daughter is sweet as abutton.
There's no issue here.
She's totally on board.
(13:30):
She just, we were having adiscussion, right?
And she was making mention ofwell, a lot of CPS workers
commit suicide.
And and so, you know, they'rethey're underpaid, and that's
why they commit suicide.
Listen, honey, nobody commitssuicide because they're
underpaid.
They quit, they move on, right?
A mentally healthy person justquits and moves on.
And I said, I've talked topeople who have gone on to
(13:52):
commit suicide that were likepolice officers.
I've talked to people who are inthese stress positions that
commit suicide and things likethat.
And I've also read a couplestudies and just
observationally, the reason theycommit suicide has nothing to do
with being overworked.
Lots of people are overworked.
Right.
Go go ask any Christianminister.
He'll tell you he's overworked,right?
(14:13):
Everybody's got problems, andthey come to me.
The problem is cognitivedissonance.
When your values don't alignwith your actions, when a cop
commits suicide, it's usuallybecause something's happening on
the clock, something they did,something they observed, and all
of a sudden it doesn't alignwith their real beliefs.
Talk to a soldier.
SPEAKER_31 (14:34):
Then they can no
longer deal.
SPEAKER_29 (14:35):
Talk to a soldier
who signs up for the military to
protect free speech, protect theAmerican way of life, protect
democracy, blah, blah, blah.
And then he finds himself in ashootout killing teenagers over
a poppy field overseas in aplace where they don't want
democracy.
SPEAKER_31 (14:50):
Then he has some
questions, but because he's in
the military, he's not allowedto have questions.
SPEAKER_29 (14:53):
He's not allowed to
have questions.
Exactly.
That that cognitive dissonanceis often what gives rise to
those suicidal thoughts becausethere's no help.
You know, this is the thing.
If there's no good cops, thenthey must all by default be bad
cops.
If cops allow their own side tocommit crimes, that creates a
cognitive dissonance.
Why am I arresting the50-year-old grandma for some
(15:14):
ticky-tacky thing when I've gotXYZ officer over here that's
groping women on the side of theroad and getting away with it?
These are just examples.
There's no specifics there, butyou get what I'm saying?
Yeah.
The cognitive dissonance is whatleads people to that suicide.
And I would venture to guessit's a large percentage.
Now, there's other factors,health stuff, but it's not just
(15:35):
because you're overworked.
Otherwise, like, you know what Imean?
Like, that's not what it is.
It's lack of purpose, lack ofmeaning.
There's a lot of things that gointo that.
All right, let's jump into theeconomy here, but let's check
in.
But Razor, it's hard to talk ofsome it's hard to talk out of
someone's paradigm paradigm.
That is very true.
Right.
And that's that's one of theobjectives of this show, The
(15:56):
Peasants' Perspective, is I justwant to see it from the ground
level.
I want to see how it touches us.
I want to, I want to leave theethereal hypotheticals and go,
well, how does it work?
Right.
And we are at a current point inour history where there's a lot
of broken things.
So we can look at them and say,that's broken, that's broken,
that's broken.
That doesn't mean we can'tfigure out solutions.
SPEAKER_31 (16:15):
Well, and fraud is a
big part of it, like you brought
up.
And I thought that was a greatway to say it.
You know, it'd be just great ifwe could rely on the assumption
that fraud is not in the system.
And then if we do find a littlebit here or there, we could cut
it out.
We can cut it out.
SPEAKER_29 (16:30):
What's happening
now, and we're gonna get it.
SPEAKER_31 (16:32):
So we can get back
to the baseline assumption.
SPEAKER_29 (16:34):
Yeah, we have to we
have to agree on uh what where
the north star is.
SPEAKER_31 (16:38):
Right.
SPEAKER_29 (16:38):
Our compass has to
point in the same direction.
Right.
Hey, we can decide to take thesouth slope or to the north
slope, but the objective issupposed to be the same, right?
SPEAKER_31 (16:45):
And until that fraud
is cut out, however little it
is, you know, we can't have realpolicies policy discussions.
Exactly.
SPEAKER_29 (16:53):
And if we're not
talking about the correct thing,
for example, you know, this hasbeen commented many times with
Republicans.
Republicans opposed illegalimmigration because it was
illegal.
Right?
Not because they didn't approveof demographic shifting, right?
Because they didn't approve ofcheap labor.
Right.
SPEAKER_31 (17:10):
They did it was just
well, we're just and it seems
like the Democrats can'tremember that every time it's
brought up, it's like, well, howabout let's fix it so we can
make it better?
SPEAKER_29 (17:19):
We can so we can
bring in legals, right?
That's the point.
Like, I'm not saying I want togo pick almonds and
strawberries.
No, there is a division oflabor, there's other people that
are willing to do that.
I'm not gonna just be like, weneed to bring immigrants in to
do it.
No, there's somebody out therethat's willing to do it.
If they're not in this countryand they want to be here, let's
let them come here legally.
(17:41):
But let's not open the gates andlet 20 million people in because
for every almond picker, you getyou get three MS-13 gang
members.
All right, so the economy, evenCNN had to admit those GDP
numbers were something else.
SPEAKER_40 (17:54):
A new report shows
the US economy was much stronger
than expected in the thirdquarter.
GDP grew at the fastest rate intwo years.
SPEAKER_29 (18:04):
You have to keep in
mind the whole fastest rate in
two years.
Remember, two years ago, Bidenwas dumping green new money into
the system.
So that pumps the economy.
The other thing was is we werestill in COVID recovery mode.
So we lost all these jobs.
So anytime you say the bestsince 2023 or since 2022, or
some of these numbers, like youknow, recovery.
Uh, remember, we had the somewild drop.
(18:26):
Some of these numbers, if you goback before 2022, 2023, you're
going back like very far.
We're talking decades back tosee some of these numbers.
SPEAKER_40 (18:43):
A new report.
SPEAKER_29 (18:44):
Okay, so coffee's up
on that whole list.
The only thing that's up iscoffee.
Oh, we already watched that.
It was a 15-second clip.
Okay.
So Howard Lutnick said this too,and this is important to
understand because for us, it'seasy to be like, yep, we had a
great strong economy, but youhave to compare it to the other
(19:05):
countries in the world.
Listen to Howard Nut Lutnick andlisten to these third quarter
growth numbers of our biggesteconomic competitors.
SPEAKER_19 (19:14):
So just think the
whole world out there in the
third quarter, the UnitedKingdom grew 0.1, the European
Union grew 0.4, and Japan fell0.6%.
Fell 0.6%.
Donald Trump's economy grew.
The United States of America,the biggest economy in the
(19:35):
world, 4.3%.
What that means is thatAmericans, overall, the all of
us are going to earn 4.3% moremoney.
We're making a raise.
It's a simple way to do it.
We've got more jobs, lowerenergy costs, and lower interest
rates coming.
(19:56):
This is the golden age coming.
Forthcoming.
Is the golden age coming?
4.3% this quarter meansAmericans on average are making
more money, more money in theirpocketbooks.
That makes for a greatChristmas.
SPEAKER_29 (20:12):
It is almost
impossible to feel this because
under Joe Biden, prices went up30 to 35% across the board.
And it's there's a lead lag inthis.
It takes time for everybody tofeel that.
And they started to feel itright at the end of Biden's term
and now into Trump's term.
Those prices, for the most part,aren't coming down.
SPEAKER_31 (20:31):
Right?
You're not gonna buy a car.
I was gonna say this is gonnafeel more like a coupon.
SPEAKER_29 (20:36):
Yeah, but you're not
gonna you're not gonna buy a car
that was last year$30,000 andthis year, oh, it's only$22,000.
It's not gonna happen.
No.
They have to hold that pricefloor.
Otherwise, you know, otherwisethey devalue the inventory they
just let off the shelf.
Things that are consumables,eggs, food, yeah, those can kind
of go up and down becausethere's no longevity.
(20:56):
But if like car prices go down,you just destroyed everybody who
bought a car last year, right?
Which then puts into the mindsetof people, I don't want to buy
it.
SPEAKER_31 (21:05):
I think that's the
difference between durable
goods.
I think that's the term theyuse, is durable goods, yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (21:10):
Yeah, so that is
important.
The only way to rebalance thingsis for wages to grow up.
I used to say as a kid, becauseI lived in Japan, and you know,
you'd go buy a pack of bubblegumand it was like 25,000 yen.
It was like, wow, these arethese are expensive.
These are big numbers.
Turns out it was only 10 cents,right?
We are we will get there at somepoint.
(21:31):
I mean, we're already justyesterday, I was walking around
the store and I'm like, I can'tpay$4 for that.
I can't pay them for the thisshould be a 50 cent item, you
know, like a stick of beef jerkyfor$4.99.
Are you kidding me?
It's no one else.
SPEAKER_31 (21:44):
You know one of
these days you're gonna go to
the checkout and they're gonnago, that'll be$225,000.
SPEAKER_29 (21:51):
It's like, oh my
god, it was a rotisserie
chicken.
So on the Charlie Kirk show, thefill-ins there.
I don't even know who all thesepeople are.
I recognize all of them, I don'tknow their names, but they
address this issue of GDP growthand how significant this is in
dealing with our debt.
10.
SPEAKER_07 (22:07):
How good was this
news that broke this morning?
4.3 uh growth Q3 for GDP.
SPEAKER_24 (22:14):
Uh it's a really
good number.
It's a solid number.
I'd put it an eight or a nine.
Uh Trump wants 5% growth.
We're not quite there yet,although we could get there.
Incidentally, once you get uhabove 3.5% economic growth, then
the economy grows faster thanthe debt grows.
And so the burden, you know,because I know everyone
listening to the show isconcerned about our, you know,
(22:35):
massive debt.
And one way of lowering thatdebt is to grow our way out of
it.
So look, I'm super bullish onthis U.S.
economy.
It's been a really good 2025.
Uh, I don't care what the pollsare showing, then all of the
indicators show a very stronggrowth through Europe.
And I think we're gonna see aspeed up in 2026 because a lot
of people come up to me on thestreet and say, hey, Steve
(22:57):
Moore, I know you helped writethat beautiful bill.
Why did I why aren't I seeingit?
And I tell people, well, becauseit's yeah, it hasn't taken
effect yet.
For tens of millions ofAmericans, on January 1st, when
they get their first paycheckfor the month of January,
they're gonna start to see lessmoney withheld from their
paycheck, which is exactly whatAmericans want to see.
SPEAKER_07 (23:17):
Awesome.
Okay, well, let's play some ofthe reactions from the news
media here.
189.
SPEAKER_29 (23:23):
Third quarter
numbers.
We're looking for 3.3.
That's really good.
We're growing out of the dead.
Doug Wyatt says, MerryChristmas, peasants, enjoy your
goose.
Merry Christmas, everybody.
A Christmas goose?
Doug actually eat a goose forChristmas.
No.
Does anybody eat goose anymore?
SPEAKER_31 (23:45):
Is that even a thing
outside of like that?
It's still smiling at us.
SPEAKER_29 (23:52):
Is that uh uh the
Christmas story?
Yes.
Raw rah-rah.
They say genetic differences.
I I watched that show so manytimes as a kid.
Okay, so Canada, our 51st state,our friendly neighborhood.
So everybody got their thirdquarter numbers yesterday.
(24:13):
And let's listen to Canada.
SPEAKER_41 (24:15):
A new snapshot of
the Canadian economy released
today reveals it remains brittlein the face of trade tensions
and tariffs.
Statistics Canada says GDPnumbers.
SPEAKER_29 (24:25):
Look, Canadian
economy shrank by point three
percent.
SPEAKER_41 (24:32):
It's the biggest
decline in almost three years.
The manufacturing sectordecreased by one and a half
percent, while woodmanufacturing dropped over seven
percent.
In total, eleven out of twentyindustries experienced a
decline.
Stay with us.
You're watching stay withCanada.
SPEAKER_31 (24:50):
I guess Trudeau's
timed that right.
unknown (24:52):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (24:54):
I'm out.
Gravy chain's gone, I'm out.
Wow.
SPEAKER_33 (24:59):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (24:59):
I mean, have you
ever been on the highway and
like someone's driving fivemiles faster than you?
Eventually you can't see themanymore.
That's what's going on.
SPEAKER_35 (25:07):
Yeah right.
SPEAKER_29 (25:08):
We're we're we're
going four miles faster than our
competition here, and eventuallywe're gonna be over the horizon.
You keep that up long enoughbecause because of the tariffs,
because of the USMCA anddifferent things like that, the
our economies are not asconnected as they were, right?
And what we found under JoeBiden was he was violating the
USMCA.
He was allowing Canadian Canadato still grift off of our
(25:31):
economy.
Howard Lutnick, so excuse me,this isn't Howard Lutnick.
This is um one of the guys up inAlberta because this next year
they vote on a referendum tobecome an independent country.
Alberta wants to succeed fromCanada.
And polling is showing thatthey're likely to succeed.
In fact, it's so likely tosucceed that the U.S.
State Department is working withthem to get recognition.
SPEAKER_17 (25:55):
So one of the things
that could well happen after the
referendum is the United Stateswill recognize Alberta as an
independent country.
And in fact, there have beenongoing meetings between the
Alberta Prosperity Projectrepresentatives and the State
Department in the U.S.
And as recently as a few weeksago, where they continue to
(26:17):
dialogue on the situation inAlberta.
And it's clear that the U.S.
government is prepared torecognize Alberta independence
and if it occurs in a democraticreferendum vote, uh, it
recognizes the U.S.
has has a history of recognizingthat free people have the
(26:38):
ability to choose their form ofgovernment.
And so this is reallysignificant because it's
Alberta's largest tradingpartner.
They're our closest geographictrading partner.
And so it's very exciting tohave us going into 2026 with the
United States and its growingeconomy showing a willingness to
(27:01):
recognize Alberta.
How cool would that be?
Wow.
SPEAKER_29 (27:06):
Now, Alberta is the
strong economic part of Canada.
I'm not really sure whatSaskatchewan produces other than
wheat.
I don't know.
You know, um, Toronto, mostlyjust you know, big city rot.
Some movies get shot there,Columbia.
Um, I have a friend who justhopped up over into Vancouver
(27:27):
last week and he was likeChinese propaganda everywhere.
It's China, China, China, China,China, everywhere he looked.
He said he was like disturbed byit.
It was so much.
I thought, wow, that's reallyinteresting.
Howard Lutnick talks aboutCanada.
SPEAKER_15 (27:39):
So Mark Carney, who
might manage central banker, um,
you're gonna are you optimistic?
Can we make a deal with Canada?
I think it's really complex.
SPEAKER_19 (27:48):
I think this is
really complex because they have
been basically feeding off of usfor decades upon decades upon
decades, right?
They have their socialistregime, and it's basically
feeding off of America.
I mean, the president calls thatout all the time.
Why do we make cars in Canada?
Why do we do our films inCanada?
Come on.
(28:08):
So I think the president's gonnahave I think it's gonna be a
fascinating meeting.
I'm I'm glad I'm gonna be therelistening, but it's gonna be a
fascinating meeting tomorrow.
I just don't see how it worksout so perfectly.
SPEAKER_15 (28:17):
But you're not gonna
bust up US USMCA.
That deadline is next year forthe final review.
Correct.
So next year is coming.
So a lot of things are.
SPEAKER_19 (28:29):
I think for now it's
okay, but I think what you
should expect to see is a realrevisiting of USMCA in a year
because Donald Trump removed.
SPEAKER_29 (28:38):
So USMCA is what
replaced NAFTA and it's up for
renewal review next year.
So now that Trump's in, he'scompletely changed the game with
tariffs and everything, theymight do away or renegotiate the
USMCA completely.
They might go, you know, Canada,we're gonna treat you like we
treat Netherlands, you know, uh,since you know, you're useless.
(29:00):
But we're gonna recognizeAlberta as a country, and who
knows, we might even offer themstatehood.
John Attack says, uh, as far inreference to Doug Wyatt's
Wyatt's eating goose onChristmas, he says, better than
fish.
And he goes, I know a familyeats fish on Christmas,
referring to my family.
My wife has a family traditionof eating uh having a fish
breakfast on Christmas.
(29:22):
So do you want to know thestory?
Yes, I do.
What the heck is going on?
What kind of fish are we talkingabout?
Her grandfather, I guess, yeah,her grandfather grew up in Arco,
Idaho area.
And when they grew up, you know,my grandmother remembers when
electricity came to the valley,so it's like not even that long
ago.
Well, that was like in the 80s alittle bit before, just like so.
(29:44):
Anyways, as a child, they wouldgo out to Lost River and they
would fish, and that was justsomething they loved to do.
They'd come back with sometrout, and so they just loved
having a little fish fry fromfish that they caught.
It was like a big thing.
Well, the story when I got, youknow, engaged and came to the
first fish breakfast onChristmas morning and they had
all these fried fish, andthey're like, Well, they were so
(30:07):
poor that they went fishing andthey gave fish to each other for
Christmas, and that started thistradition of fishing.
So I was like, Oh, that's cool.
Well, a couple years later, Igot a hold of great grand, you
know, grandpa's autobiographywhere he wrote about it, and he
writes about fish breakfast,Christmas breakfast.
And he just goes, Oh, we justliked fish.
And he tells a story, we justwent catching fish and we liked
doing it.
They never did it as kidsChristmas breakfast.
(30:28):
It was something he started asan adult because it was
reminiscent for him of catchingrainbow trout in the creek,
right?
So I read this to mymother-in-law about her dad, and
I was like, So no fishbreakfast.
And she was like, like thisfamily tale.
You broke yeah, I broke, I brokethe family, you know.
They still do fish breakfast,it's a great tradition.
(30:50):
But yes, I married into a familythat does fish breakfast.
It's just breakfast, you know,mostly sausage.
You get like a piece of troutfor fun, but yeah, it is a
little bit different.
Okay, so the other thing, too,going on here is the Greenland.
So here let's let's hear from uhJeff Landry.
He's the former governor of ofLouisiana who is heading up to
(31:10):
be the special envoy ofGreenland.
Now, I said yesterday it wasgoing to be Marco Rubio.
Marco Rubio is involved, he'snot the special envoy.
Apparently, there was actuallymisreporting.
The news actually reported itwas going to be him, but it was
Jeff Landry.
So he talks about that.
SPEAKER_03 (31:24):
Well, one thing I
can tell you, Greg is everyone
in Louisiana now wants to go toGreenland for the summer.
It gets real hot in Louisiana,and everywhere I go in Louisiana
now, the question I'm asked iscan you take me to Greenland
with you, governor?
When do you go?
Please let me know.
I want to go.
Uh, it really is.
And you know what's amazing isover a year ago, no one was
talking about Greenland.
(31:44):
Okay.
The whole time Russian subswould circle Greenland, the
whole time the Chinese wouldpluck rare earths out of the
Western hemisphere.
Then all of a sudden, we havethe election of President Donald
Trump.
He comes in and says, you knowwhat?
The Monroe Doctrine is a realthing.
We need to protect America'sinterests and those countries
(32:04):
and territories in the Westernhemisphere.
And again, Europe's justignoring Greenland at the time.
I mean, they don't even havefirst-class status at the UA.
SPEAKER_29 (32:13):
This is an
opportunity for Greenland to be
invited.
So if you see this map here, Isaw a map that showed the
northern, like, you know, theearth is flat, right, Carlito?
So anywhere you look at theflat, the horizon's always flat.
And it was it was a view of theglobe from the north, right?
So like you know, Russia and umCanada are not very far apart.
(32:34):
And Greenland, we always Ialways look at Greenland over
here northeast.
SPEAKER_35 (32:38):
Uh-huh.
SPEAKER_29 (32:38):
It's not, it's it's
like if you rotate this map,
Greenland is the buffer betweenRussia and Canada.
Like Russia's right.
I'm pointing at the you know,Russia is right here.
Yeah, okay.
So Greenland, like the way wewould perceive this is Greenland
is you tilt it on its axis, likebring this out here, drag that
back.
SPEAKER_31 (32:59):
You just need to
look at a different map.
SPEAKER_29 (33:00):
Yeah, anyways, let's
continue to listen here.
SPEAKER_03 (33:03):
It's an economic
table with the United States,
the strongest, most advancedeconomy in the world, and we
care.
We care about them with thefastest security route, uh, to
give them the security and theprotection.
Uh we it's about an hour awayfrom the United States, where
it's three or four hours uh fromthe European continent.
Uh, I think there's a greatopportunity here.
SPEAKER_20 (33:25):
So I guess my my
main question to you is what
argument will you make to theDanes who seem to be totally
opposed to letting the U.S.
come into a territory thatthey've had autonomous control
of going back hundreds of years?
What was the case that you'llmake to them?
SPEAKER_03 (33:43):
Well, I think our
discussion should be with the
actual people in Greenland, theGreenlanders.
What are they looking for?
What opportunities have they notgotten?
Why haven't they gotten theprotection that they actually
deserve?
Look, the United States hasalways been a welcoming party.
We don't go in there trying toconquer anybody, trying to, you
(34:03):
know, take over anybody'scountry.
We say, listen, we representliberty, we represent economic
strength, we representprotection.
Look, no one knows that betterthan Louisiana.
My family has been in Louisianafor over 300 years.
We've lived under more flagsthan anyone living in the
continental United States overthe history of America.
(34:25):
We ended up settling under theUnited States of America's flag.
And for that, Louisiana has beenso much better.
The country has been so muchbetter.
But again, that's a discussionfor us to have with the
Greenlander.
It's true.
SPEAKER_31 (34:38):
One thing I can tell
you because everyone Louisiana's
changed hands a couple times.
How old is this clip?
Because he was talking about itbeing so hot.
And what was it's always hot inLouisiana, Ron.
Even this time of the year?
SPEAKER_29 (34:49):
Yeah, it's hot all
year, man.
It's like 70, 80 degrees downthere right now.
It's swampy.
Yeah.
Yes.
Okay, so so look at this here.
So this is a view of the globefrom the northern hemisphere.
So I always think of Greenlandbeing like out here, right?
When we like that previous map,but it's not.
I mean, it's literally like anisland up here.
It is the buffer to the Arctic.
(35:09):
So when Trump says, you know,they're sending their
submarines, they're this isRussia, they're coming down like
this, right?
It is a big deal.
Like pew.
So uh Greenland is clearly verystrategic, and we just don't
view the globe the right way.
Carlito is out there being like,it's not a globe.
(35:30):
Okay, let's go, Ron.
What do we got for us?
SPEAKER_31 (35:33):
Oh, I got a little
uh remember how we were talking
about coffee was up?
I was like, oh, it's a perfectopportunity to sell some coffee.
Still haven't tried 1775 coffee.
Now's your shot.
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(36:13):
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Go to 1775coffee.com slashstudio and grab your starter kit
before they're gone.
Bold beans, clean fuel in amorning routine that stands for
something just like Rumble does.
SPEAKER_29 (36:32):
The problem with
coffee is I go through it so
fast.
I don't have time to orderbecause I need coffee right now.
So Carlite says it's definitelynot a curved spinning ball of
water hurling aimlessly throughspace.
Ha ha ha ha.
Yeah, well, I can't say it'snot, Carlito.
That's the thing.
I can't say it's not.
But we can both agree thatGreenland is the ice wall.
Can we agree with that?
(36:52):
That we need the, you know, weneed to protect the ice wall.
Because beyond the ice wall, foryou Game of Thrones fans are the
white raiders.
Oh, I thought it was the water.
Otherwise known as the Russians.
Okay, so what are the other hugeconcerns we have to have as
Americans?
These are things that are notgoing away quickly or quietly
into the night.
We we have to watch ourindoctrination of the younger
(37:16):
generation and ourselves too,frankly, right?
We get indoctrinated throughmedia sources, but our younger
generation is doing it long forthem through college professors
and their ivory towers.
It's a big deal.
It's not a small deal.
You cannot outvote anindoctrinated society.
Can't do it, right?
So the other thing we have toconsider is the infiltration of
(37:36):
Islam.
I have no problem fundamentallywith different religions.
I have no problem with Islam.
Obviously, any religion canproduce extremists that can
cause amazing amounts of damageto a culture, civilization, or
even your local skyscraper.
Okay.
Big deal.
Extremism of all floor formswhere you take that absolute,
(37:58):
you know, my God says to killyou.
I love uh Pat Patton, who Idon't love very much for his for
many reasons, but he does have areally funny comedy bit about
the dessert wars.
Have you heard this?
SPEAKER_31 (38:08):
No.
SPEAKER_29 (38:08):
He's basically, you
know, he makes this comedy bit
where he's this imaginarysociety and they all believe
they're gonna get cake inheaven.
And then someone's like, I don'tlike cake, I want cookies.
So he starts his own cookiecold.
And then next thing you know,they're having wars over, you
know, what kind of dessert thatyou're gonna get in heaven.
And you know, you know, we don'tget cake in heaven, we get
baklavad! It's like it startedthese whole wars.
(38:30):
Anytime that your religionencourages you to kill someone
in cold blood, you've gone toofar.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
That's where you blossom.
Can we agree fraud is fraud andmurder of the innocent is murder
of the innocent?
Can we agree?
Okay, so here we go.
Um, this is this is talkingabout the history of Islam.
We know what happens when Islamshows up.
SPEAKER_38 (38:51):
So they say that by
2030 there will be a majority
Muslim population in Europe, andthey'll just flat out vote in
Sharia law.
And uh it won't just be no-gozones where they take over
entire neighborhoods in Paris oraround Belgium and uh London.
No, they'll take over entirecities, and and people forget um
(39:13):
Egypt was completely Christianfor six centuries, it's not
anymore.
Um, all of North Africa wascompletely Christian for six
centuries, it's not anymore.
All in Turkey, all sevenchurches mentioned in the book
of Revelation were all inTurkey.
And it's it's uh they were alltaken over by the by the Muslim
Turks.
Constantinople was the largestChristian city in the world, and
(39:35):
uh the largest Christian churchin the world um for hundreds of
years was the Hagia Sophia, andit got turned into a mosque.
And um, and so they want to dothe same thing with the Vatican.
Um, and recently they allowedprayer, Muslim prayers in the
Vatican, so we see that's headedin that direction.
Wow.
And the tremendous number ofburning of churches uh in
(39:57):
Europe.
And if you talk about this.
SPEAKER_29 (40:00):
Yeah, if you talk
about this, you get ostracized
and called a racist and axenophobe and an Islamophobe.
Well, the problem is it'sactually happening.
Like we know what's going on upin Minnesota with the Somalis,
who's, you know, whateverflavor.
They're Sunni Muslims, but um,we know what's going on up
there, and we can blame it onjust Somali, third world
hellhole.
Well, there's Muslims comingfrom much more educated,
(40:20):
sophisticated countries.
There are, right?
Well, this is Patterson, NewJersey, and uh they just had
their Ramadan Hilal lighting tomark the uh uh lighting of
Hilal, and they've got the mayorof Patterson.
SPEAKER_26 (40:36):
Salam Olaiko,
Ramadan Mubarak, mayor.
Patterson is proud to have thelargest Muslim population in the
state of New Jersey, and we area better city because Muslims
call Patterson home, and as youcan see here in South Patterson
(40:57):
on Palestine Way, we are proudto light the Hilal.
Something that has inspiredother cities.
As a matter of fact, over 50cities now in this state light
the Halal, and I'd like to think60, I stand to be corrected,
over 60 other municipalities inthe state of New Jersey light
(41:20):
fenus or halal, and I'd like tothink that Patterson has
inspired all of these cities andtowns.
But I want to brag aboutPatterson first.
SPEAKER_29 (41:36):
Patterson by the
way, this isn't Dearborn,
Michigan.
This isn't Minneapolis,Minnesota.
This is Patterson, New Jersey.
Just add it to the list ofcities that are voting in
Sharia.
SPEAKER_26 (41:52):
So much so that we
are one of the few cities in the
country where children areafforded a day off for both eat
holidays so they can celebratewith their families.
Patterson is one of the fewcities where children in schools
can have halal food on their intheir cafeterias.
(42:18):
The children should be clappingfor that one.
Yeah, right.
Should they?
Should they off and halal food?
SPEAKER_29 (42:24):
Come on.
Yes.
Really?
I mean, we've had kosherforever.
And I've never clapped and beenlike we have kosher.
No, but they're what no, theywant they off, right?
SPEAKER_26 (42:37):
They want to do it.
Anyway.
Also, the Adan, the call toprayer, thanks to the city
council and the administration,can be heard in the city of
Patterson when it is time topray.
And I also would like to statethat since taking office, we
opened up the doors of City Hallfor the first time in
(42:57):
Patterson's history to have acommunity iftar to break fast in
Patterson.
This year, the sheriff will joinus.
That will be on Thursday, March13th at 6 p.m.
And also, Patterson is probablyone of the few municipalities
where you have not one, not two,but three Muslim city council
(43:21):
members as a part of ourgoverning body.
SPEAKER_29 (43:24):
And there's only
five.
And that goes on for another 15minutes bragging about that.
SPEAKER_31 (43:30):
This is how is this
happening in America?
I just I'm I didn't envisionthis thing being a thing for
America.
SPEAKER_29 (43:38):
Yeah, it wasn't on
your bingo card?
SPEAKER_31 (43:40):
No.
SPEAKER_29 (43:40):
Well, this is what
happens, bro.
This is what happens when youstop praying to the Christian
God in school and you just don'tpray at all.
Pretty soon the more dominantaggressive religion comes in and
goes, Well, we want prayer fivetimes a day.
And it must be heard audibly inthe city.
Do you see what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_31 (43:58):
How is it that we
don't want prayer at all, but
we're gonna have five of them.
SPEAKER_29 (44:02):
Which by the way,
just so everybody understands, I
just saw the statistic.
It's like 95% of Muslims in thiscountry immigrated here
post-9-11.
SPEAKER_31 (44:12):
Whoa.
SPEAKER_29 (44:15):
They're taking over.
They're invading.
9-11 was just the opening shot.
And we all went over there anddefended poppy seed fields and
overthrew a uh a sectariangovernment because we wanted
their oil and gold, SaddamHussein.
Right.
And so what are they doing?
Well, they're taking overPatterson, New Jersey.
They're taking over Dearborn,they're taking over Houston and
(44:36):
all these other hot spots.
They're definitely in the prisonsystem.
I can tell you right now, bevery, very afraid of Prislam,
right?
And what's coming out of theprison system.
SPEAKER_31 (44:46):
I I shouldn't say
that.
Okay, I just picked up my phoneand I got an ex post that says
USA News, Muslims gatheredtogether in Town Square to tear
down the Christmas tree.
SPEAKER_29 (44:57):
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
SPEAKER_31 (44:59):
What the frick?
SPEAKER_29 (45:00):
Oh yeah, oh yeah,
that was going on yesterday.
I guess I should have includedit in the show today.
Yeah, it's open and hostile to aChristian way of life and to a
sectarian way of life, right?
When you really get in and studya little bit of Islam and how
that whole system works.
SPEAKER_31 (45:16):
I don't know how
much more I need to know.
You know, I think I'm at thepoint already.
I think I have enoughinformation to form an opinion,
and I don't think I want youinto my country.
So what do you do?
SPEAKER_29 (45:26):
So I don't know
policy time.
Okay, policy time.
SPEAKER_31 (45:29):
Okay, all right, so
can we have policy discussion?
Have we got to the spot where wedon't have fraud?
SPEAKER_29 (45:35):
Well, forget that
because you know, so so policy
time.
Hey, we don't want prayer fivetimes a day.
What are you, a religious bigot?
We don't support otherreligions?
Well, I'd I'd like to stopimmigration from these countries
that don't have our values.
What are you, a freakingxenophobe?
Are you Islamophobic?
You don't you don't believe inthe religion of peace, that they
can be peaceful people?
You think they're all terrorist?
Okay, what what other argumentswould you do?
(45:57):
You know, hey, I don't know ifwe should be voting them into
our councils.
Well, this is a democracy,right?
I mean, if there's enough peoplethere that vote for them and
they've got good ideas, whywouldn't we put them in?
Right.
SPEAKER_31 (46:05):
I don't know if we
should pass Sharia law.
SPEAKER_29 (46:07):
Well, I don't know
if we should use the U.S.
Constitution.
Why don't we just vote on it?
They weaponize your virtue andyour Christian nice against
them, right?
When we're the majority, it'sreally easy to let in a few
minorities.
But when you start feeling theheat and the pressure, you've
got Patterson, New Jersey, andother cities where they're doing
the prayer call five times aday.
You're like, um, I thought weseparated church and state.
(46:29):
Why are the city councilspeakers blasting out call for
prayer?
We've lost the plot and wecompletely misunderstand our
enemy.
Taken over without firing asingle shot.
Osama bin Laden was brilliant.
He just opened the door.
Hey, here's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna attack them.
They'll come over here, and thenthey'll feel bad about it, and
they'll start taking therefugees.
(46:49):
And then not only that, willthey take refugees, but they'll
pay for it.
SPEAKER_02 (46:53):
Because they don't
want to offend that population.
And and the early numbers thatthat I'm getting in on the
Somalis in Minnesota is 75% ofthe Somalis in Minnesota are on
full government assistance.
That's full welfare.
The whole reason that theDemocrats left the border open
during the Biden administrationwas to allow people to come in
(47:15):
and what they said would wouldprovide jobs, you know, because
there's a shortage of workers.
And I agree there's a shortageof workers, but you've got a
massive population in that onestate, and the overwhelming
majority of that population's onMedicaid, and then uh and and
other types of governmentprograms, even when Democrats
say there are no illegals onMedicaid, uh, I think that's
(47:36):
that that's gonna be proven tobe positive.
SPEAKER_29 (47:38):
Fucking Minnesota,
right?
75% of the smally populationcoming over is on Medicare,
Medicaid.
I have a video played a whileago about a Muslim being like,
we make money, we lie on theapplications.
We're taking your money.
We know what we're doing.
You're paying for us to be here,and we're gonna ride this gravy
train until we vote out thewhite people, vote out the
(47:58):
Christians, and then we're justgonna take your houses, we're
gonna take it for free, like wehave everywhere else.
There's a legitimate Muslim justgoing off about this in their
little synagogue where it's safefor them to talk that way,
right?
But yet we in our churches arelike, don't talk politics over
the pulpit, Johnson Amendment.
SPEAKER_31 (48:15):
Yeah, right?
SPEAKER_29 (48:16):
Don't push
Christianity on anybody, even
though we're supposed to preachthe gospel to all the world,
right?
No, no, no, no.
But we'll let them in.
And in the name, look, we're so,we're so not racist.
We voted for a black president.
Look, we're so not religiouslyoriented.
We vote for Muslims just becausethey're Muslims.
What what's this mandami thingin New York?
Break that down for me for aminute.
(48:38):
Help me understand what's goingon there.
I can't we I didn't play thisclip because it was a little bit
longer and I didn't know howmuch I wanted to go down this
road.
It probably would have been moreappropriate today.
But a couple days ago, one ofMandami's new staff members
wrote about basically murderingJews and you know, supporting
October 7th in Israel and justvery, you know, disgusting type
(48:59):
of language because again,innocent people died, right?
And uh he goes, Well, there's avariety of political viewpoints
in my cabinet.
You realize people have been runout of the Republican Party and
other parties for much less, butyet here in the Democrat Party,
you just you have an attorneygeneral in Virginia that said
that he wanted to kill, kill hispolitical opponents, kids, wife,
(49:23):
and you know, the whole the textmessages that got released that
I'm talking about.
We've reached this insanity.
And it's and it's in Minnesotais kind of our microcosm right
now.
They're under the microscope.
The um well, let me yeah, let meplay this.
This is Brandon Gill.
We're gonna play uh Brandon Gilltalking about the fraud in
(49:45):
Minnesota and what they'retrying to do from it at a
federal level.
SPEAKER_21 (49:47):
Well, this is a
multi-billion dollar fraud
program that is still beinguncovered.
Now it estimates are estimatingthat it's about$9 billion of tax
money that has been looted fromyou, the American taxpayer,
that's been looted from theTreasury.
I think that Congress has a rolein ensuring that our welfare
programs are not abused byleft-wing governors like
(50:09):
Governor Walls, who is usingthis to fund what is virtually a
patronage system of takingAmericans' hard-earned tax
dollars and giving it to hispolitical allies by turning a
blind eye amidst widespreadrampant welfare fraud that he
knew was going on.
That's a huge problem.
I think that this act is thefirst step in clamping down on
(50:31):
welfare fraud.
SPEAKER_29 (50:32):
I think we have So
they're gonna try to clamp down
from the federal side, and onthe state side, they're uh this
is what this is what we're gonnalisten to two mayors in
Minnesota that are just lividabout this.
SPEAKER_10 (50:45):
Minnesotans have
been fleeced to the tune of nine
billion dollars.
These are this is done fromfraud right out of the Minnesota
Capitol in St.
Paul, as well as the policiesthat are being championed and
brought across the finish lineby the legislature.
Both the legislature and thegovernor are at fault for the
fraud and the constant policiesthat are taxing Minnesotans.
SPEAKER_01 (51:06):
You know, let's put
up Minnesota's rank among key
growth indicators, um, veryanemic and devastating growth
numbers actually across thestate that have happened under
this governor.
But Mayor Zupancic, let me askyou about something that Mike
Emmanuel reported at the endthere.
This question about whether ornot the governor looked the
other way on potentially$9billion of fraud because he
(51:30):
didn't want to point out thatthe majority of those who were
accused and then convicted inthese in these cases were from
the Somali community.
What do you say to that?
SPEAKER_29 (51:40):
We're gonna listen
to what she says about that
here.
Next clip.
SPEAKER_42 (51:46):
Well, I don't
understand what difference that
makes to um anyone else.
How would anyone else beapproached or confronted if they
stole money from someone?
They would all be acknowledgedand have to go forward with the
consequences of their actions.
You know, we're sitting herebearing the brunt of everything:
tax hikes, gas taxes, propertytaxes, boating taxes, gas taxes.
(52:10):
We can't go anywhere, we can'tgo fishing, and he he's afraid
to offend someone.
Well, what about me?
I know my town, we're alloffended that we're paying for
all of this fraud to go on andit's just coming out now and
they've known about it foryears.
What's gonna happen now?
And let's just call it what itis.
It's stealing.
It's not it's stealing.
You're stealing from the stateof Minnesota, you're stealing
(52:30):
from the taxpayers that makethis state the great state that
it is, and how are we gonnarecoup from that?
SPEAKER_29 (52:38):
It was obvious to
the whole world that Tim Waltz
was a retard with Kamal Harris.
It was pretty obvious, but moreand more he just looks like a
complete retard.
Like he is so bad.
I I I've really watched him andI'm like, okay, what's going on
(52:58):
here?
It's an unintelligent, it's anunintelligent man that has
certain points where he's got ahigh competency, he has a high
empathy level, he has a high umkind of a personal charisma when
you're with him.
He's jovial and kind of funny.
I'm sure he makes great personalconnections.
Like if we met with himone-on-one, he'd be like, How
(53:18):
can I help you?
You know, that kind of thing.
But he's absolutely complicitand turned a blind eye to all of
this fraud in this state becausehe didn't want to be the bad
guy.
To me, it made him look like apuppet.
He didn't want to be the puppet.
And so he put on the suitwillingly.
You know what I mean?
He he it's like he's like, Well,if I can't beat him, I'll join
(53:39):
him, kind of an attitude.
And it actually makes me thinkmore and more the Kamala Harris
president itself campaign.
Remember, she was didn't run aprimary, nobody voted for her to
be the presidential candidate.
She picked Tim Waltz over JoshShapiro, presumably because Josh
was was uh Jewish, but now I'mlooking at it, I'm like, no, I
(54:00):
think Kamala Harris and TimWaltz planned to take the
country to the cleaners.
You know what I mean?
To be like, hold us upside downand shake us out for everything
we had.
Could you imagine what wouldhappen if Tim Waltz got a hold
of the federal government'scheckbook?
You think Biden was bad?
You think Obama was bad?
Look at what Tim Waltz is doing.
(54:22):
You know, Obama never ran anybudgets.
I mean, he little whateverlittle budget he had, but Tim
Waltz knows how to be anexecutive.
Like he knows how to sign a billand how to initiate it and stuff
like that.
Oh my goodness, this guy wouldhave been doing open, open
policies and bills with big,huge holes in it for you to
drive mac trucks of fraudthrough.
SPEAKER_31 (54:43):
And it wouldn't be
billions, it would be trillions.
SPEAKER_29 (54:45):
Billions, not
trillions.
So here's an example on theground.
Again, the peasant'sperspective.
What does this look like on theground?
You're telling me there's moneygoing to businesses that aren't
really in doing business as theysay.
You've got snap benefits runningthrough little 150 square foot
botegas with no inventory to thetune of a million dollars a
year, right?
You've got you've got childcarecenters that are getting paid
(55:08):
for kids, but here's one inMinnesota.
An example of one of these.
This look at this sign here.
Quality Learing Center.
Quality Leering Center.
Okay.
SPEAKER_11 (55:19):
Here in Minnesota,
massive fraud is taking place
within the government and theSomali population.
Here, this building alone,Quality Learning Center, is a
daycare, yet they spelledlearning wrong.
And they said learning.
This daycare alone in 2025 hasreceived$1.9 million from the
(55:40):
government.
And the strange things aboutthese childcare centers is
there's no one here right now.
It's midday on a weekday.
If you were to try to go inside,it's completely closed, and the
windows are all blacked out.
No one's working.
Midday children should be inhere.
And this place is licensed for99 children, and this is the
(56:01):
outside.
There's no windows, no nothing.
And like I said, they literallyspelt the word wrong on their
sign.
This is open and blatant fraudtaking place here inside of
Minnesota.
The government is complicit withthis, and this is just one of
the hundreds of child daycarecenters here inside of
Minneapolis being ran by theSomali population.
(56:21):
It's sad that it's happeninghere in Minnesota, and it stinks
that it's happening and it'sbeing labeled on the Somali
population.
However, that's just the factsof what's happening here inside
of Minnesota.
$1.9 million for this daycarecenter that can't even spell
learning right.
SPEAKER_29 (56:36):
Here in Minnesota,
mock you for everything you have
when they realize that yourempathy comes with an open
paycheck.
An open checkbook.
This is a judge.
This is this is from Mike Davis.
This is one of the most lawlessand dangerous orders yet.
Biden, D.C.
U.S.
judge Amir Hatim Mahadi Ali, thefirst Muslim and Arab D.C.
(56:57):
judge, so he's in the D.C.
circuit, ordered the president'saides to ignore his executive
order revoking a securityclearance.
Something that you think thepresident would have complete
and total autonomy over.
Like you can't even challengethat.
Judge Ali, who is still aforeign citizen from Ethiopia,
uh Egypt, previously ordered thepresident could not perform
(57:18):
national security review of a$2billion in foreign aid package.
Judge blocks attempt to stripsecurity clearance from
whistleblower lawyer Mark Zaid.
Judge Amir Biden says the movemay violate the Constitution's
ban on bill of attainers.
What?
No connection.
There you go.
That's the face of it rightthere.
Oh, jeez.
So they're in the city gates, myfriends.
(57:39):
They're in the city gates.
Do you know how the Soviet Unionactually fell?
How they actually kind of wentout of business?
It's because we beat them withmissiles.
SPEAKER_31 (57:47):
No, I think it had
more to do with money.
SPEAKER_29 (57:49):
Yeah, more to do
with money.
Like we outspent them, right?
We outspent them and they triedto keep up and they had their
Chernobyl incident and thatdrained all their resources.
People don't understand howsignificant Chernobyl was for
them, right?
They could go toe-to-toe with usmilitary technology, military
spending until Chernobyl.
Chernobyl, all of a sudden, theyhad to spend a ton of money to
(58:10):
prevent a worldwide disaster.
And they cognized it.
Go watch the HBO seriesChernobyl.
It's revelatory.
Okay.
Really good series.
That broke the bank.
So then going forward, everytank America made, Russia was
like, we can't really make atank because we spent so much
money in Chernobyl.
So the only way out of that isto inflate and it just fell
(58:33):
apart.
Right.
So that's how the Soviet Unionwas defeated.
A chance happenstance withChernobyl could have been, you
know, cheap electricity fortheir Soviet Union instead of it
being it, it ended up being ablack hole for money.
And then turnaround couldn'tkeep up with us.
Within years, half decade,Berlin falls.
1991, 1989, the Berlin Wallcomes down, massive constriction
(58:56):
of the Soviet Union.
Well, the United States justwent through something like
Chernobyl called COVID.
You know, we spent about thesame amount of money on COVID as
they did then.
Right?
I mean, we dumped money into thepeople, we dumped money into all
these, you know, too big to failbusinesses.
Now, this is on the backs of, ofcourse, the 2008 financial
crisis where we bailed out ourbusinesses, which is why silver,
by the way, hit$72 an ounceyesterday.
(59:18):
Okay, and all these differentthings, right?
We're we're seeing the moneybeing printed away.
Donald Trump's trying to stopthat with tariffs, change the
plan, but we printed the moneyanyways.
So now we have a problem.
We spend way too much on ourmilitary equipment.
Way too big of a cost oninvestment and time to make it.
(59:38):
And our enemies know that.
This is the uh, I can't rememberhis name or but his uh company
here.
SPEAKER_31 (59:44):
He does this guy's
future for military.
SPEAKER_14 (59:48):
Yes, military
defense contractor.
Let's listen to what he says.
Look at how we beat the SovietUnion.
It wasn't actually just withmilitary power, it was actually
primarily financially.
We forced them to spend alltheir money trying to keep up
with us military.
Militarily and we bankruptedthem.
I'm concerned that we're on apath to do that in the United
States because our weapons areso expensive, so overpriced.
We're spending millions ofdollars per missile.
(01:00:09):
We have aircraft carriers thatcost many billions of dollars
per aircraft carrier.
And a lot of these weaponsystems are things that can be
destroyed by things that cost athousand times less, right?
What happens to America if weliterally can't afford using
every dollar we have to producemore than a few weeks' worth of
wartime expenditure againstChina?
If that happens, then we're asitting duck.
If China knows that we're gonnarun out of weapons after two
(01:00:32):
weeks of warfare, which is whata lot of the war games predict,
and if they know that we don'thave the ability to restockfile
that and to rebuild our arsenal,we're just a two-week
distraction at best in theiraims of conquest.
China has real ambitions ofinvading Japan.
They want to take Japan, theywant to take the Philippines,
they even want to take Vietnam.
I started Androil because Iwanted to build systems that
(01:00:52):
were actually affordable enoughthat you could build them at a
scale that would be relevant tomodern warfare.
I have a very different businessmodel, by the way, for Androil.
Most defense contractors arepaid on what's called a cost
plus basis.
They get paid for their time andtheir materials and then a fixed
percentage of profit, whichactually means they make more
money when they go over budgetand overschedule.
That's why you hear about allthese programs going on for
years and years.
That's how you end up with theF-35 program being a trillion
(01:01:12):
dollars.
Jesus.
A trillion dollars.
And what Andreil does is use ourown money to build a product and
then we sell it to thegovernment.
It's a radically new businessmodel, but it gets to that point
of like, are we gonna get bleddry under our current model
where we do cost plus?
Like, absolutely.
But Andrew is really aboutmaking sure that America doesn't
bankrupt ourselves trying toprotect our allies around the
world.
I love it.
(01:01:33):
Look at how we beat the SovietUnion.
SPEAKER_29 (01:01:34):
It wasn't on the
shelf for the government to come
by like retail.
Well, you need a drone?
We got 34 of them.
It's like Amazon.
It's like it's a boot todeliver.
Now, you know, I hope they staypatriotic Americans and we don't
get outbid, but he makes areally clear point there, right?
We overspend on our militarybecause of this majesty and
might.
(01:01:55):
And you do need you needicebreakers, you need things
like that for the Arctic andstuff.
Sure.
But Ukraine and Russia havetaught us Ukraine went
toe-to-toe with Russia.
Toe-to-toe.
And how'd they do it?
Drones, fiber optic cables, youknow, um hypersonic missiles,
stuff that, you know, you canhave the best radar in the
world, but when you got a droneflying 15 feet above the ground,
(01:02:16):
you ain't catching that.
You know what I'm saying?
If you've got a hypersonicmissile that's flying at a
hundred foot elevation, yourradars aren't picking that off.
Uh and that's one of the things.
It's not small arms fire that'skilling people, it's drones.
It's literally grenades beingheld up by a drone and dropped
on a guy that's trying to runfor cover.
Where do you run?
We've seen the images of all theuh fiber optic.
(01:02:38):
That's the future there.
A little thousand dollar dronecould knock out a tank, and
that's what they did, which iswhy it's not a tank war anymore,
like it was in the beginning,right?
In the very beginning, what dothey say?
You always fight the last war?
SPEAKER_31 (01:02:50):
Yeah, right.
SPEAKER_29 (01:02:51):
In the beginning, it
was tank on tank, and we've
really found out quickly thatall the tanks Europe was
producing and the Abrams tankare useless, useless, useless.
They're made for the desert,they're not made for the mud,
they're not made for theconditions that were there.
They were way too easy, andworst of all, the supply chain.
You couldn't fix them.
(01:03:12):
You couldn't fix them.
A little thousand dollar dronewould blow a track off.
A tank's a piece of paperweightout in the yard.
It's yard art now.
SPEAKER_31 (01:03:20):
Well, it's it's
worse than that.
It blocks the road.
SPEAKER_29 (01:03:23):
It blocks the road,
yeah.
Now, the Russians, I rememberwatching videos way back when
the conflict started, and theRussians were like, listen, our
tanks are like, you know,repairable.
Like we can fix them in thefield.
And he's like, you know, theirstuff is crap.
All these expensive Leopoldtanks and stuff like that.
They don't have they don't haveparts to fix them.
And that's something we'vetalked about before, too, about
like little repair parts thatare like 3D printed for$3, but
(01:03:44):
they cost$30,000 and they wantyou to replace the whole
assembly.
SPEAKER_31 (01:03:47):
Well, they got to be
mill spec.
SPEAKER_29 (01:03:49):
Mill spec, yeah.
So, anyways, uh Andrew here,changing the way military
contracting's done, which is agood thing, uh, because the way
it is right now is so bloatedand we are running for
bankruptcy.
You can't pay for the Somalisand new battleships.
Like, you gotta take a pick.
You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_35 (01:04:06):
Yes.
SPEAKER_29 (01:04:08):
It's it it is scary
where we're at when you just sit
back and go, what are the trendlines telling me?
Right?
When you've got 60 cities nowdoing the Muslim thing, pretty
soon that's 120, 400, 500.
Next thing you know, everythingeast of the Mississippi five
times a day.
Oh right, you got the prayercall.
That, by the way, the prayercall I never got comfortable
(01:04:30):
with in prison.
Never got comfortable with it.
Never liked it, didn't like it,did not like it.
SPEAKER_31 (01:04:36):
Yeah, I'm not gonna
be putting up with that.
SPEAKER_29 (01:04:39):
Well, what do you do
to stand against it?
SPEAKER_31 (01:04:42):
I was just I would
just have to move to where?
I don't know.
Space.
SPEAKER_29 (01:04:47):
Northern Idaho,
Greenland, let's roll.
SPEAKER_31 (01:04:49):
I'm with Elon.
We're going to Mars.
SPEAKER_29 (01:04:51):
We're going to Mars,
I'm out of this place.
These are tough questions.
SPEAKER_31 (01:04:54):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (01:04:55):
Because where do you
decide to take a stand?
Right?
You remember all those peoplethat barked and barked when they
took prayer out of schools andwere like, they're a little
extreme.
They want to pray.
Well, now we're like, the peoplethat were like, get the
Christians out of school,they're like, but for you guys,
we'll pause it five times a day.
What?
SPEAKER_31 (01:05:13):
Yeah, no.
SPEAKER_29 (01:05:15):
It makes it really,
really difficult.
Stand up when you can stillstand.
SPEAKER_31 (01:05:19):
The other thing
about that politician is uh, can
you please just speak English?
You know this is America, butspeak English.
It'd be nice.
It'd be nice.
SPEAKER_29 (01:05:31):
I sent one of our
listeners, Mary, a clip where
some guys are like, we gotmarried because the government
wants us to.
It's too many.
Like, we're doing have I playedthat clip?
Oh my goodness, it's worth it.
Give me just a minute.
Okay, I'll find that clip.
It's totally worth it.
It's totally worth it.
Okay, but first we're gonnalisten to this about Act Blue.
Donald Trump officially, I don'tknow how many times they
(01:05:53):
officially have to decide toinvestigate Act Blue, but in in
since the midterms are justaround the corner, maybe it's a
good time.
SPEAKER_23 (01:06:04):
This is a democratic
donation platform, and the focus
as the allegations about aillegal straw donors and foreign
contributions.
Mark Meredith is live inWashington with more.
This has been brewing for awhile, Mark.
What what do we need to know?
SPEAKER_08 (01:06:20):
Dana, for years,
you're right about this, but
this is a big development.
The White House is directing theattorney general to investigate
the Democratic Party's topfundraising platform.
It's called Act Blue, and thepresident says he wants to know
if foreign money is beingdonated to the group and then
utilized to sway elections.
Democrats are calling this probea dangerous abuse of power.
Act Blue is an enormousoperation in democratic
(01:06:40):
politics.
It's raised more than$16 billionsince 2004.
You may have seen the text popup from candidates saying please
donate, go to the Act Bluewebsite.
Republicans use somethingsimilar called Win Red.
There was a new memo signed onThursday directing the attorney
general to investigate ifforeign nationals are using the
Act Blue platform to bypasscampaign finance laws.
(01:07:01):
Trump wants a report out in sixmonths.
SPEAKER_29 (01:07:05):
So we'll see.
Here's my assumption with ActBlue.
You have every foreign interestfrom Kair to um you have every
foreign interest that theDemocrats to trade.
Hey, funnel a billion dollarsinto Act Blue so we can spread
it around everywhere we need tospread it.
Any Democrat is eligible to getAct Blue, right?
Put a billion dollars in andwe'll make sure that we have
(01:07:25):
prayer five times a day.
SPEAKER_31 (01:07:26):
Yeah, or uh we'll
we'll throw some money your way
using USAID.
SPEAKER_29 (01:07:31):
What I believe, I
believe has happened because I
saw it in the prisons,Christianity is majorly
downplayed.
No Bible studies, no support forthat, nothing.
But if you're Muslim, like haveI told you about trying to get a
Bible in prison?
Have I told you my story aboutthis?
I couldn't get a Bible inprison.
I requested a Bible, it's likethe only thing I ever requested
from the prison ever.
I want a Bible.
(01:07:52):
Can't get one.
Put in a request for a prayermat.
30 minutes later, you got aprayer mat.
SPEAKER_31 (01:07:57):
Wow.
Yep.
Huh.
SPEAKER_29 (01:08:01):
It was it was crazy.
Want a Koran?
I can get one real quick.
I want a Bible, nope.
Can't get like it just notavailable.
If you can't find there floatingaround, just find one.
SPEAKER_31 (01:08:11):
That's weird.
SPEAKER_29 (01:08:12):
They're coveted.
It wasn't until I got into theJ6 pod that I finally saw a
Bible.
And it was because, you know,they had had them sent in.
Uh I don't know if I can findthis video.
It I sent it and I went to gopull it off the text and it says
not available.
Somebody was clearly offended.
But it shouldn't be offensive.
It was freaking hilarious.
(01:08:33):
I'm sure it still lives on theinternet.
I just don't know where.
Mary, if you can find it, ifyou're listening, try to send
that link.
Drop it in the chat if you stillhave it in your text.
Because when I when I pulled itup, it it tried to disappear on
me.
Anyways, it's funny.
Okay, when we get to it, it'llbe funny because everything's
funny.
Okay.
(01:08:53):
This next thing, too, is Trump'smaking some significant plays
here, right?
As it affects us uh on theground.
For example, every time I get onthe road, I drive by
semi-trucks.
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:05):
Immigration and
customs enforcement have
arrested 101 illegal aliensemi-truck drivers and seize
their commercial driver'slicenses in a California
operation called OperationHighway Sentinel.
Most of the arrests took placeon highways and ports throughout
the state.
Democratic California GovernorGavin Newsom has rejected the
Trump administration's effort toarrest illegal migrant truck
(01:09:26):
drivers.
Immigration and customsenforcement have arrested 101
illegal aliens.
SPEAKER_29 (01:09:45):
And then in
California, they've got 100.
Line up all these semi-trucksand all these drugs.
Yeah, except we're testing theirEnglish competency and their and
their citizenship status andstuff like that.
All right, what do we got here?
Gold?
Absolutely.
SPEAKER_31 (01:10:00):
Yeah, I hope so.
Let's see.
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(01:10:21):
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Yes.
SPEAKER_29 (01:10:32):
In our private chat,
we're going to be going over
what's going on with silver.
Because obviously gold is on therise, but silver is meteoric.
And there are fundamentalreal-world reasons why that's
happening.
And they they blew past the$70price floor and maintained it.
So, you know, a lot of times yousee a peak and a sell-off.
There's no sell-off happeningright now in silver.
And the reason is is becausephysical delivery.
(01:10:54):
So we're going to be hearingabout that in private.
G.
Perezer says, and when books ormagazines were sent, they only
have actually got to that istrue.
I got quite a few books thatnever got delivered to me.
And I knew they were in thefacility.
Like we had confirmed delivery.
And I would get little notessaying, this contains extreme
info.
Like somebody sent us some kindof I don't know.
We'd get these notices saying weweren't allowed to get books,
(01:11:16):
you know, because of what theycontained, and we'd be like,
send in a mark.
SPEAKER_31 (01:11:20):
You're gonna get
radicalized.
SPEAKER_29 (01:11:22):
Yeah, you won't send
in like stuff like that.
40-year-old Holocaust survivorsays, Good morning! And I want
to know how you survived it at40.
Breath of the Rosary Daily.
Okay, let's Bron, can you grabthat link?
SPEAKER_31 (01:11:35):
Uh let me try, yes.
SPEAKER_29 (01:11:39):
Can you play from
your end?
SPEAKER_31 (01:11:40):
I don't know.
SPEAKER_29 (01:11:42):
How do we do this?
You can drop it to me inTelegram.
That'll work.
We have a cool littlecommunication thing called
Telegram.
Which by the way, those of youthat join us every single day in
the chats, if you reach out tome privately, and most of you,
if you know me, you know how toget a hold of me, I will add you
to the living room where we havegreat discussions.
Okay, so this is um this is theagain, very funny.
(01:12:12):
See, this is what was happeningto me.
They took it away, they hid itfrom us.
SPEAKER_28 (01:12:18):
It was too good.
Can I make it play in here?
It won't let me play it.
SPEAKER_29 (01:12:28):
It was too spot on.
It was too spot on.
It was too good to stay on X ofall places.
Okay, this is RepresentativeBurk talking to Matt Gates, and
he is saying, listen, we're justa series of votes away from
totally losing the country.
And you've got to understand themomentum of what has been done
from the left and theinfiltration and invasion of the
(01:12:50):
country with illegalimmigration, the uh adoption of
Islam in our institutions andthings like that, these are
trends that are, if we don't capthem and stop them and reverse
them, they will break thecountry, encompass us, right?
We will wake up one day in aplace like Silverdare,
Washington going, I thoughtnobody here went to church.
(01:13:12):
Why is there prayer calls fivetimes?
SPEAKER_25 (01:13:14):
How would you answer
this kind of simple question?
Like, what will a return of aRepublican majority in the
Congress do to improve people'slives in 2027 and 2028?
SPEAKER_39 (01:13:27):
I would hope um some
economic uh common sense would
take place.
I would hope some reduction inspending.
I would hope that the uhreduction in bureaucracy and
freeing up our energy and makingus less reliant on foreign
foreign groups and building ithere in this country.
And I would hope that um thetariffs would eventually take
(01:13:49):
take hold that that would couldhelp us.
You know, the bill that Iactually proposed another bill
that the money that we wouldgain from the tariffs would be
supplied to Americans via not a$2,000 check to everybody, but
just a reduction in your taxesbecause the people that pay
taxes should get something back.
The people that aren't working,that aren't paying taxes don't
(01:14:11):
deserve anything like that.
So I would hope that we couldembrace some of those things.
I had a real heart to heart witha speaker uh right before we
left.
And I said, you know, this isthis is for everything.
This isn't just you beingspeaker, this is for the future
of our country.
Reagan said we're one generationaway.
Matt, we're one boat series awayfrom losing our country.
SPEAKER_29 (01:14:32):
Yeah, so long far
gone is the one generation away.
I've heard boomers quote thatmany times.
I've myself have quoted it, andguess what?
We're one generation.
They didn't stop it, they didn'treverse the trend.
This is Matt Gates talking onTucker Carlson about his
expectations.
SPEAKER_38 (01:14:49):
What's gonna happen
in the next two election cycles?
SPEAKER_25 (01:14:52):
I think we are uh
headed for a bloodbath in the
midterms for a few reasons,primarily history.
Uh you the president's partyloses seats during the midterms.
I don't think I'm breaking anynews there.
Um and I I think that uh theother side is just really worked
up and they they have anorganizing principle.
The organizing principle of theleft in America today is we hate
(01:15:15):
Trump.
And they don't really need anymore than that.
And there's something elegantpolitically about using that to
activate voters.
Yeah, totally.
Whereas we're trying to tellpeople And who are these voters?
SPEAKER_29 (01:15:26):
The Ivory Tower
voters, the people that their
empathy has been weaponized, thepeople that we're a nation of
immigrants and we live on stolenland.
It's the people of, you know,yeah, we can we Christians are a
majority, so we can totallypersecute them, but let's open
the doors to Islam.
Those are the voters.
The organizing thing is whateverTrump is, we don't like it.
We're not gonna look at thepolicies, we're not gonna look
(01:15:47):
at the results, we're not gonnalook at the GDP, we're not gonna
look at the debt, we're notgonna look at anything.
SPEAKER_25 (01:15:51):
We just don't like
the orange man to reward us for
securing the border.
And voting is rarely an exercisein rewarding prior conduct, it
is always about new promises.
Uh, what are the new promisesyou're making?
And right now, a lot of peoplehave economic anxiety around the
cost of living.
(01:16:11):
And I think the Democrats,again, have an elegant
presentation to make, which iswe're going to take the things
that cost you a lot of money andhave the government provide
those to you.
And then those things won't costyou a lot of money.
And uh we try to make anargument about economic theory
that doesn't always land withthe same poignance.
SPEAKER_38 (01:16:29):
So midterms in a
year very tough.
SPEAKER_25 (01:16:32):
Yeah, we I think I
think Hakeem Jeffries becomes
the speaker.
I think that uh they will thenbecome the problem is the candy
becomes the poison for thembecause uh when they do this big
elect us so that we can uh useall these tools to fight Trump,
then once once they get thatpower, they're gonna be pressed
(01:16:52):
to continually use the silliestones.
And think about what they'vealready used.
They've already used like thethe attempted application of
criminal law, that backfired.
They already used theimpeachment process, that
backfired.
And so what I what I thinkDemocrats believe, or or what
they've recently beenconditioned to believe, is that
shutdowns are good for themunder Trump, that that's good
politics.
(01:17:13):
So my prediction is Democratswin the midterms, they execute a
series of ransom-like shutdownsuh on Trump.
The country gets weary of thatand probably elects JD Vance
president in 2028.
SPEAKER_29 (01:17:26):
What's the
hopefully, I mean, hopefully we
can get him in 2028 on on ourside?
SPEAKER_14 (01:17:32):
I mean, I'm just
assuming that there will be, you
know, Ted.
SPEAKER_29 (01:17:36):
So he goes on to
explain explain, you know, Ted
Cruz and he believes SteveBannon is gonna run for
president.
What?
And that Steve Bannon will runon an Elizabeth Warren package,
take from the rich and give tothe poor.
Which will, you know, and we'renot talking the five million
dollar rich, we're talking theuber wealthy rich, right?
Which Steve Bannon talks abouton his show regularly.
I wouldn't be surprised if hedid that, because giveaways
(01:17:57):
produce votes.
Now, something that did happenyesterday, which is really
significant, was EU went aheadwith a fine against both Apple
and X for EU uh Italy did theone against Apple, and I think
England, Britain did the oneagainst X.
And so the State Department isgetting involved here, and
they're saying, listen, we haveto support freedom of speech.
(01:18:19):
This is a marked difference fromState Departments of the past
who actually had ministries oftruth buried inside of them that
were censoring Americans.
SPEAKER_12 (01:18:29):
And I emphasized
this earlier, but I want to say
it again.
Um, it's misguided andunfortunate to apply that law in
Britain, but applying that lawextraterritorially, uh, which
means applying it to speech thathas nothing to do with Britain,
does not occur in Britain, is onAmerican platforms by American
users, on American politicalissues, um, purporting to censor
(01:18:50):
Americans in America is a dealbreaker.
It is a non-starter, it is a redline.
And that's what Ofcom has triedto do with the Online Safety
Act.
And that's one reason uh theAmerican government is
concerned.
SPEAKER_00 (01:19:01):
Okay, but will your
government then take legal
action against Ofcom if they tryand overreach in the way you've
described?
SPEAKER_12 (01:19:08):
Well, there's
already formal action proposed.
SPEAKER_29 (01:19:10):
There is a Okay, so
she's talking about a bill
called the Granite Bill, whichwill help shure up uh this the
government's ability tobasically stop other countries
from censoring speech inside theUnited States.
And yesterday, Marco Rubio wentthrough with one of these things
that they could do.
Rubio imposes visa restrictionson European officials who
attempted to censor Americanfree speech.
(01:19:31):
The Trump administration will nolonger tolerate these egregious
acts of external censorship,Rubio posted on X.
Today the State Department willtake steps to bar leading
figures of the global censorshipindustrial complex from entering
the United States.
We stand ready, willing, and toexpand this list to others if
they do not reverse course.
So they censored fivebureaucrats in England, who I
(01:19:54):
think there's one or a couplenames that have been released
from basically entering theUnited States.
This is a big deal.
Because these bureaucrats aren'tlike low-level people.
These are policymakers.
This is the first time in mylife that I've seen a sanction
against someone that was, quote,non-criminal in one of these
countries.
SPEAKER_31 (01:20:12):
Makes it so they
can't really do their job.
SPEAKER_29 (01:20:14):
Well, it's not
economic sanctions, it's just
passport sanctions.
They can't come to America, butit's a huge shot across the
city.
SPEAKER_31 (01:20:20):
But how do you visit
America to work on policy if you
can't get there?
So that's Yeah.
SPEAKER_29 (01:20:25):
It's a problem.
It's a problem for them.
Speaking of free giveaways, thisis Trump's uh plan for health
insurance.
The only health care I willsupport or approve is sending
the money directly back to thepeople with nothing going to the
big, fat, rich insurancecompanies who have made
trillions and ripped off Americalong enough.
The people be will be allowed tonegotiate and buy their own much
(01:20:48):
better insurance, power to thepeople.
Congress, do not waste your timeand energy on anything else.
This is the only way to havegreat healthcare in America.
Get it done now, President DJT.
SPEAKER_31 (01:20:58):
And remember, you're
only supposed to like pay
attention to the capitalizedpart.
SPEAKER_29 (01:21:05):
Get it done now,
right?
All of it.
So this is pretty significant,right?
This kind of splits the baby.
We want free health care oraffordable health care that we
can universally afford.
But when you pay the insurancecompanies and there's no
connection to services, theyjust charge whatever they want
and the government writes thecheck.
That's why we've seen insurancepremiums go up, coverage change,
(01:21:27):
denying service for expensivecare, but you know, you can have
all of the Crisco you wantthrough subsidies and things
like that, and which we're goingto talk about here in a second.
And so Trump's saying, no, giveit to the people.
Just give everybody a thousanddollar check a month and let
them go buy insurance.
And then that becomes theceiling.
Everybody nobody wants to spendover what the government pays
them to buy insurance and itforces the insurance companies
(01:21:49):
to compete.
It's a big deal.
This is like this is howcapitalism keeps that market in
check.
It should have always been thisway.
Should have always been thisway.
We should have never paid directto insurance companies.
Thanks, Obama.
Thanks, Obama.
Now, the reason we paidinsurance companies direct is
because they did the same thingthat has happened time and time
(01:22:10):
again in a system like ours.
They lied.
They lied.
And people with money canmanipulate things in such a way
that they get it to be accepted.
So, for example, this is comingfrom Samantha Hole or Sam Hole,
1907.
Electric lights replace candles.
Wow, that's so good for America,right?
But Proctor and Gamble's candlebusiness collapses.
(01:22:31):
They had a pretty big Gandalbusiness because that was how
people lit their homes.
They pivot to soap, but animalfats are expensive.
They need cheaper alternatives.
Enter cottonseed oil.
Cottonseed oils, uh, cottonseeds contain oil, but it's
toxic to humans.
Gosapole, a natural pesticide.
The seeds are agricultural wastefed to cattle in small amounts
(01:22:52):
or discarded.
But chemically extract the oil,heat to extreme temperatures,
hydrogenate it with pressurizedhydrogen gas, and you get a
solid white fat that looks likelard.
It costs pennies.
The patent in 1907 launched,Crisco 1911, crystallized
cottonseed oil, industrial wastetransformed into a soap
(01:23:13):
substitute.
Except they don't market it assoap, they market it as food.
The problem, nobody wants to eattextile manufacturing waste
processed with industrialchemicals.
Your grandmother cooks with lardand tallow like humans have for
thousands of years.
I don't even know where to buytallow and lard.
Solution convince Americans thatanimal fats are killing them.
(01:23:34):
Procter Gamble spends millionson marketing, cookbooks, radio
shows, free samples.
They target Jewish communitiesadvertising Crisco as kosher,
neither meat nor dairy.
But the genius move, 1948, theAmerican Heart Association has
$1,700 in their budget.
Procter Gamble donates$1.7million.
(01:23:54):
Study the AA AHA has funding andinfluence.
Suddenly, the AHA has fundingand influence.
And suddenly they're interestedin dietary causes of heart
disease.
1961, the AAH, American HeartAssociation, issues the first
dietary guidelines.
Avoid saturated fat fromanimals.
Replaced with vegetable oils,recommends oils, Crisco, Wesson,
(01:24:15):
and other seed oils.
Who benefits?
Procter and gamble.
Who funded the ACH?
Procter and Gamble.
The conflict is blatant.
Nobody cares.
Never mind that humans ateanimal fats for millions of
years without epidemic heartdisease.
Never mind that seed oilsoxidize rapidly and integrate
into cell membranes, creatinginflammation for years.
I grew up believing heartdisease was the number one cause
of death in America.
(01:24:36):
And it was.
Okay.
And it was.
SPEAKER_31 (01:24:40):
I did just recently
buy some tallow because I like
to cook with that.
And damn, is it expensive?
SPEAKER_29 (01:24:46):
Yeah.
Industrial cottonseed waste isnow heart healthy, and butter is
artery clogging poison.
1980s.
Trans fats are discovered to becatastrophically unhealthy.
They directly cause heartdisease.
Procter and Gamble's responsequietly reformulate, keep
selling seed oils, neveracknowledge that a heart healthy
product spent nearly 70 yearsactively causing disease.
(01:25:06):
No apologies, no compensation,just free formulate and
continue.
Modern research showed seed oilscause oxidative stress,
inflammatory cascades,mitochondrial dysfunction,
increased cancer risk, andneurogenitive diseases.
Your body requires exactly zerograms of cottonseed oil.
They didn't exist in human dietsuntil 1911.
(01:25:28):
But Procter and Gamble needed tosell soap alternatives and
accidentally created the largestdietary change in human history.
We traded animal fats, but thatbuilt civilizations for factory
waste that causes disease.
The soap company won.
Crisco frying nature's deliciousfood flavors unchanged, no
smoke, no odor.
Strain Crisco, use it again andagain.
(01:25:52):
For frying, for shortening, forcake making.
I say we stop sending money toSomalia and start sending
Crisco.
One of the things that happenedyesterday.
Someone's calling me fromBainbridge, Georgia.
Wonder who that could be.
One of the things that happenedyesterday is there was a court
(01:26:13):
ruling against Trump withregards to sending the National
Guard to Illinois.
And what it says in here, let'sjust read a couple parts here.
At this preliminary stage, thegovernment has failed to
identify a source of authoritythat would allow the military to
execute the laws in Illinois.
The president has not invoked astatute that provides the
exception to the Posse ComatatusAct.
Instead, he relies on inherentlyconstitutional authority that,
(01:26:34):
according to the government,allows him to use the military
to protect federal personnel andproperty.
But the government also claims,consistent with long-standing
view of the executive branch,that performing such protective
functions does not constitute,quote, executing the laws within
the means of the Posse ComatatusAct.
So then in the dissent, sobasically they uh oh, I guess
Kavanaugh concurred with thejudgment.
(01:26:55):
So basically they said you can'tjust go use the National Guard
to go in and enforce the lawunless you declare an
insurrection.
One apparent ramification of thecourt's opinion is that it could
cause the president to use theU.S.
military more than the NationalGuard to protect federal
personnel and property in theUnited States.
So what this Supreme Courtdecision did is it set up the
Insurrection Act.
(01:27:16):
Clandestine, who makes somegreat posts, says, holy boop, I
think it's actually happening.
I am reading through the SupremeCourt ruling in Trump versus
Illinois, and they ruled thatTrump needs to invoke the
Insurrection Act in order tosend troops into Chicago.
Kavanaugh in his dissent saysthat his ruling could cause the
president to use the militarymore than the National Guard.
The Supreme Court just admittedthat Trump has the authority to
(01:27:37):
invoke the Insurrection Act tobypass Posse Comitatus and send
troops to Chicago and any othercity he wants.
Trump tried to exhaust everylegal avenue possible before
resulting to the resulting tothe insurrection act, but the
Dems resisted and refused tocooperate.
Sounds to me like Trump just gotthe green light, invoke the
insurrection act.
(01:27:58):
When we talk about the Rubiconthat Trump has to cross, the
Insurrection Act is one of thoseRubicons.
Once he invokes the InsurrectionAct and Insurrection Act, and
other presidents have, badthings happen who are on the
other side of that insurrectionact.
Okay, because it's an unfetteredauthority.
There's an insurrection thegovernment is given unchecked
(01:28:18):
power to put it down.
SPEAKER_05 (01:28:20):
George Washington,
Abraham Lincoln, Grover
Cleveland, George Bush, andothers who all use the armed
forces to keep domestic orderand peace.
Many of our leaders used themilitary to keep peace.
Now they like to say, Oh, you'renot allowed to use the military.
And you know what the peoplesay?
The people in those cities wherethey're being raped and shot and
(01:28:43):
beat up.
You know what they say?
We love the military.
You ever see where theyinterview the people on the
street?
I've never seen somebody saythey don't, unless they're
radical and paid off because alot of these insurrectionists
are paid by false.
Whether it's Soros or otherpeople, but they're paid by the
radical left.
So today I want to thank everyservice member, from general to
(01:29:04):
private, who has bravely helpedus secure the nation's capital
and make America safe for theAmerican people.
It's amazing.
The whole world is watching.
George Washington, AbrahamLincoln, Grover Clean.
SPEAKER_29 (01:29:16):
So if he has to use
the Insurrection Act, he will.
Other presidents have, and itstarts to get bad because then
bad in someone's perspective.
It starts to get bad becauseRon, what constitutes an
insurrection?
Could fraud against the UnitedStates government that is so
rampant and so large that itthreatens the economic and
(01:29:38):
financial stability of entirestates, could that be considered
an insurrection?
SPEAKER_31 (01:29:43):
I would say yes.
SPEAKER_29 (01:29:44):
I would say yes,
right?
There's a lot of things.
Here's James O'Keeffe talkingabout an act of insurrection
that he uncovered.
And he says if they don't getlooking into it and get criminal
indictments, he's going to startinvestigating the prosecutors.
SPEAKER_27 (01:29:57):
Um, I think the big
story of the year for us was
exposing the um the thegovernment subcontracting DEI
fraud.
And I wore that ridiculous wig,and I met with these people that
were getting hundreds ofmillions of dollars from the
Treasury and SBA, and they toldme that none of the money goes
to minorities, it just goes toline their pockets.
SPEAKER_29 (01:30:21):
Well, that sounds
like an insurrection.
I mean, you're overthrowing thegovernment by wasting our money.
Are you not?
Is our not is our government notintricately tied with its
financial support?
SPEAKER_31 (01:30:31):
Well, it's wasting
money on a level that it affects
GDP of the country.
SPEAKER_27 (01:30:35):
It affects our price
of eggs.
So even if you support theseDEI, even if you think, oh, it
should go to the NativeAmericans, it doesn't go to the
Native Americans.
We went to California andinterviewed the Native Americans
and they want all these peopleto go to jail.
SPEAKER_34 (01:30:48):
There's only so much
we can do as journalists.
SPEAKER_27 (01:30:50):
Yes.
SPEAKER_34 (01:30:51):
We can expose it all
day long, but if nothing gets
done, what what are we doing?
SPEAKER_27 (01:31:00):
So I think it's
important for us to try to hold
the people to account that holdthem accountable.
My vision for 2026 is we needarrests.
We need people to go to prisonif they break the by the way.
I would go to prison if I didthis.
So um the year in review nextyear, our work will lead to
(01:31:21):
arrests.
And if it doesn't lead toarrests, I'm going to
investigate the prosecutorsthemselves.
SPEAKER_29 (01:31:29):
Yeah.
So if they don't fix the system,could Trump use the insurrection
act to go after that?
It's a big fat open door.
A random, a random independentsays, How are you all slurping
on Trump this fine, Steve?
And Ron responds, giant icylevels of slurping.
Thank you very much.
Yeah, a random Patriot.
We are slurping on Trump forsure.
(01:31:50):
In fact, slurping so much thatI'm even going to play this clip
just for you.
Did you know Rudy Giuliani backin 2020 was right about
everything?
I just want to say one thing.
SPEAKER_04 (01:31:58):
Andrew Giuliani, so
his father is Rudy, the greatest
mayor in the history of NewYork.
I think by far.
He took a ravaged city, a citythat was really under siege.
Probably most people thought itwas going to survive.
He turned it around.
He was a great, great mayor.
And uh then they uh treated himvery, very unfairly.
Uh, you go back and tell yourfather all of the things that
(01:32:20):
have come out over the lastcouple of months through Tulsi
and through uh all of thepeople, cash, everybody.
Uh they've proven your father100% correct.
His father was treated sounfairly.
Your father has been 100%correct.
And uh tell him we all love him.
Okay?
He's been amazing.
What he had to go through was uhvery, very unfair.
(01:32:43):
Nasty.
These are bad people.
SPEAKER_29 (01:32:45):
Uh and you know,
he's talking about all the 2020
election stuff.
Rudy Giuliani has been proved tobe right time and time and time
again on that stuff.
I remember when I was arrested,sedition hunters posted, you
know, our ire doesn't go to me.
He's a good man, family man, buthe was he was uh, I can't
remember the use they were,deceived by Rudy Giuliani,
Sidney Powell, and Trump and hisassociates.
(01:33:07):
To them, we direct our ire.
Well, you bankrupted RudyGiuliani.
Ruby Freeman, who herself was apart of this fraud and then was
scared that the Democrats weregoing to throw under the bus.
She ended up getting aCongressional Medal of Freedom,
along with some J6 people, theCapitol Hill P Capitol Hill
police that were bad news bears,right?
Uh, he was right abouteverything.
Wins the vindication.
(01:33:27):
Was that not an insurrection?
They accused me of insurrection,so I know that they know what
the word means, right?
I know that that that's whatthey were trying to paint me
with.
So what happens there?
How about our secretaries ofstate who manipulate the
election systems?
Could that be considered aninsurrection?
SPEAKER_30 (01:33:43):
Why are Michigan's
voter roll so bloated?
Going into the 2024 election,Michigan had 500,000 more
registered voters than we havevoting age adults.
Michigan is a slow or no-growthstate of 10 million people.
So how did Jocelyn Benson find750,000 new voters just between
July and October?
(01:34:04):
Shout out to Anna Hoffman forthat report, by the way.
Well, she's done it before.
This might be a case of historyrepeating.
You remember Eric, theElectronic Registration
Information Center, officiallystates joined Eric to compare
their voter rolls and eliminateduplicates.
In reality, Eric finds eligiblebut unregistered adults in each
(01:34:25):
state, and member states arerequired to reach out to them.
We've sent Jocelyn Benson Foyerfor the eligible but
unregistered reports that Ericsent to Michigan.
Despite calling herself thetransparency candidate, Benson
has denied them.
In September 2020, using Ericdata, Benson sent postcards to
700,000 eligible butunregistered adults in Michigan.
(01:34:46):
That was almost 10% of the votetally in a high turnout
election.
In four months of 2025, Bensonhas added almost 10% of new
people to our already fat voterroll.
Michigan is shrinking, butJocelyn Benson's voter rolls
keep growing.
Maybe she should have led thepopulation study.
The purpose of the system iswhat it does.
(01:35:07):
Air doesn't trim voter rolls, ithelps inflate them.
Until the ecosystem for voterfraud is killed off, the
potential for stuffed ballotboxes will hang over the
Michigan governor's race like adark cloud.
SPEAKER_29 (01:35:19):
So they open the
door to the insurrection act,
because how is that not aninsurrection?
Right?
Uh in random independence says LM-A-O, right about everything,
but somehow loses 60 plus courtcases.
The level of delusion andslurping is pathetic.
Well, a random independent, youapparently trust the government
and you trust these judges.
And I don't because I've seenhow they act.
(01:35:39):
I've seen them in person.
I've watched them shit theirpants on the stand in a diaper,
my judge.
Okay.
I've watched them need help outof their walking chairs.
And all those 60 plus casesyou're talking about, they were
all dismissed on principles oflatches and standing, which
means no evidence was actuallylooked at, which is part of the
problem in all of this.
So I appreciate the feedback,but you're wrong.
(01:36:02):
Okay.
And I put my word when my mouthis I went to prison over and I
wouldn't back down.
And I would have.
You know how easy it would havebeen to do to take a plea deal
and trim a few years off mysentence?
You know how easy it would havebeen to go to a nicer prison
instead of a Mac security adminfacility because I bent the knee
and said, Yeah, you're right,Giuliani's scumbag.
I don't care about Rudy Giulianiand his freaking black, you
(01:36:22):
know, hair dye running out hisface in a press conference.
But he was right.
That's the problem.
He was correct.
Okay.
Was there a good strategy to doit?
Running all over the countryholding press conferences with
Jen Ellis?
No.
Right?
Was that a good strategy?
No.
But you had a judicial coup.
You really did.
Look at Bukele down in ElSalvador and what he says if you
(01:36:43):
don't impeach the corruptjudges, they will form a
judicial cartel.
How look at what Judge Boseburgis doing.
Look at that judge Emil righthere.
You can't deny someone secretsecurity clearance.
The president of the UnitedStates has exclusive
classification and securityclearance power.
Right?
If he can't revoke a securityclearance, who can?
(01:37:04):
All right.
It is time for us to jump overinto private, and we are going
to be talking a little bit aboutEpstein.
Something really funny aboutEpstein.
So they released all theseblacked-out documents, but they
just put a black box over thePDF.
So people are just going and cutand pasting the text and putting
in a Word document, and you haveall of the redactions.
So slowly but surely people areposting the redactions.
(01:37:25):
Some of them are absolutelyhorrendous, the stuff they
blacked out.
I mean, we're talking likedescriptions of abuse and stuff
like that, names, associates,where bunny money went.
We're going to look at one inprivate chat today, which just
again goes to show how bad thesystem is.
We're going to be talking aboutsilver.
We're going to be hearing fromuh one of my friends from
prison, uh Maccabees.
(01:37:47):
We're going to be hearing fromhis wife, Sarah Macabe.
She was on GB News talking aboutJanuary 6th and kind of how it's
been working out for thedefendants.
And but before we do that, we'regoing to leave with something
that is actually pretty goodnews.
It's something we can work withwhen we're talking about our
civilization.
Okay.
And that is that ourcivilization is not let yet
(01:38:07):
lost, but it's weak.
The church is weak.
So we're going to hear fromRichard Barris.
Every year he does a Christmaspoll to find out just how much
of America are actuallybelievers.
So before we jump over intoprivate, we'll listen to this.
SPEAKER_18 (01:38:20):
A couple days before
Christmas, a lot of people,
there were impossias, but a lotof people kind of punched out of
the news and are doing thingscloser to home.
But you've always got your umyour uh Christmas poll.
Uh you're revealing it now.
Can you walk us through it, sir?
SPEAKER_09 (01:38:36):
A little late this
year, Steve.
It's usually about a weekearlier, but you know, things,
you know, the calendar, thecalendar calls, right?
But every year we ask we ask aseries of questions.
Number one, do you celebrateChristmas?
And then various ways thatpeople do.
We even ask what their favorite,you know, color scheme,
Christmas color scheme is theclassic red and green, right?
The red and white candy cane,which is all really fun.
(01:38:57):
But I think the highlight fromthis poll is that this year,
well, first of all, 92% of thecountry still celebrates
Christmas, which is incredible.
Um, but when this year wedecided, we always had this
question, which asked peoplewhether or not they how
religious do you celebrateChristmas?
Is it a strongly religiouscomponent for you?
Somewhat religious, not reallyreligious.
(01:39:19):
And this year we wanted toexpand on that.
So we asked straight up aboutbelief in God, and that's not
just to everyone who said yes,they celebrate Christmas.
That's everybody and belief inGod, about eight in ten
Americans believe in God.
Um, as a testament to this beinga Christian nation, 93% of them
believe that Jesus Christ wasthe Son of God, which is
(01:39:42):
something else that we asked,which I just thought is huge.
Somebody's got to point blankask this.
We'll ask about the resurrectionwhen we get around to Easter.
But we really wanted to ask thatpoint blank to people, and that
number was massive.
Of the 10%, Steve, another bigone of the 10% who Told us that
they were unsure about whetherthey believed in God.
(01:40:03):
Um, because our results showthat this unbelief or the rise
of the nuns is probablyexaggerated.
It's more like we have a bunchof spiritual or would be
spiritual people who want tobelieve in God wandering around
in the wilderness because churchleaders are too busy, you know,
shilling for their favoriteforeign policy or whatever it
(01:40:23):
is.
But we were told by these peoplethat the reason why they said
unsure is that they think thatGod probably or likely exists.
60% of them said that, and thatthey're just they just have
doubts.
So you have this massive numberof people that we just consider
to be unbelievers, really notunbelievers.
(01:40:45):
They're celebrating Christmas,they want to believe, they just
have doubts, they havequestions, and they don't know.
And I I honestly think everyyear the Christmas bowl, it's
great, it's fun, but it doeshighlight that the church has
some real problems.
And this year, when we prodded alittle bit more, now we know
why.
People are not answering theirquestions.
(01:41:06):
Only about 40% of those who saidthey were unsure said that it's
likely in their minds maybe Goddoesn't exist, but they still
even doubt that.
Nobody, almost none of thepeople who said they're unsure
say that uh, you know, God justjust doesn't exist.
That's amazing to me.
Think about that.
SPEAKER_18 (01:41:28):
I mean, I'm gonna
interrupt you because I want to
go back and just make sure wegot nomenclature right.
When you say nuns, that'sn-o-n-e-s.
That's people that don't uh uhdon't depict an affiliated
religion at all, whether it'sHindu, Muslim, or Christian, and
even and then don't define itfrom there.
(01:41:50):
So walk me back through thatmath again, and particularly
how's it trended over time?
You do this every year, you kindof take the temperature of the
American people during one ofour holiest seasons.
How is this trended over timeand how the the because
everybody Time magazine, theyall talk about nuns, and people
are not affiliated.
How is that trended over time?
SPEAKER_09 (01:42:09):
So that has so the
rise of the nuns, as they always
like to call it, has flatlinedand somewhat reversed.
And we've measured this yearover year, like you said, and
every year it appears to bemarginal, but those nuns have
fallen from a high of 24 to nowaround 19, 18.
So it's on the decline.
(01:42:30):
It's just that these peopledon't know where to go.
That's what it comes down to.
SPEAKER_29 (01:42:34):
They don't know
where to go, so they don't know
who to ask, they don't knowwhere to pray, they don't know
where to go observe, they justthey they feel like they have no
idea and they have a deep in aworld where we took prayer out
of schools, where we'vemarginalized the voice of the
church.
No wonder people don't knowwhere to go.
Okay, it's interesting how thatworks out.
(01:42:55):
They're still believers, we'restill a Christian nation.
People still believe, they justdon't hear any voice.
There's no shepherds that arereally calling.
SPEAKER_09 (01:43:07):
There have been, you
know, various scandals over the
years that have that have hurtreligious identification pretty
badly.
All of the all of the researchshows that.
Um, but it doesn't mean theydon't want to believe, and it
doesn't mean there's thisincredible explosion of
secularism.
There was, is what I'm trying.
There was once upon a time.
Now that has reversed.
Um, in as far as just the numberof people who celebrate
(01:43:29):
Christmas, the number who's whosaid they have no religious
affiliation but celebrate thisyear is actually up about four
points from last year, which youknow, these things don't happen
in huge blocks, but we do watchthe trends.
And I think this again, I mean,the the highlight of this poll
every year is that I thinkchurch leaders need to remind
(01:43:51):
themselves what their primaryfocus is.
Steve, if you're a Christianlike you or I am, right, you
believe in the eternity of thesoul and you believe in
salvation, especially if you'rea believer in Christ.
And if you said, if any of theserespondents said, Yes, I believe
that Jesus was the Son of God,then you have a duty to go out
and get those people and savethem, right?
(01:44:13):
I mean, that's what this is allabout.
And not every person takes it asseriously as maybe they should
if they're Christians, but youknow who should every day?
Church leadership.
And they're too busy at thisevent, you know, talking to this
what you know, this lobbyinggroup, this I mean, they're all
over the place.
Let's get real.
They're all over the place.
Well, we and they need torefocus on what the primary
(01:44:36):
mission is save souls.
SPEAKER_29 (01:44:38):
I think that is one
of the big challenges.
And I've seen this in my ownchurch, is the emphasis went
away from saving souls and itwent away to preserving the
institution.
And they do that throughcensorship, they do that
through, you know, whitewashinghistorical events, they do that
through changing moralitystandards.
That's another thing I've seenin my life, right?
And obviously, I came from akind of a high demand religion,
(01:45:00):
which you still go to, which isfine, right?
There, but there is an elementof the and one of the big things
that I've found was the plot gotlost, right?
Like I thought this was abouttruth.
And when you're lying to me, andit's an objective lie, then I
start to question the truth ofsalvation because you're lying
to me about a simple historicalevent.
There's no need to lie about it.
(01:45:21):
You can just chalk it up tohuman frailty.
But when the church endorses thelie now that and the church is
saying, hey, I've got theauthority to provide some method
to salvation, it becomes anirreconcilable difference.
And I think a lot of people seethat.
They see corruption in theCatholic Church and they see the
scandals that happen there, butthe Catholic Church claims
authority and to stand inbetween God and the people,
(01:45:44):
right?
So it is one of those thingswhere there's lots of really
well-intentioned churches.
Speak louder, man.
I'm like all for it.
Go for it, go save souls, butkeep that as the emphasis,
right?
Change people's moral compass.
Okay, we're gonna get ready togo into private.
And to do that, but before we doit, for those of you that aren't
gonna be joining us over inprivate on uh premium only,
(01:46:05):
we're gonna send you off into araid.
And we're sending you somewherefun today.
It's conspiracy TV, okay?
Carlino, you're gonna love it.
Okay, you're gonna you're gonnabe over here.
They're talking about aliens andspace.
I'm I'm watching a little bit ofit right now.
Look at what they got going onover here.
They've got mushroom clouds,nuclear explosions right up our
alley.
Okay, so go join the raid here.
We're gonna send you guys over.
(01:46:26):
We'll wait a couple minuteshere.
Yes, Birkenbine.
Please remember to click, like,subscribe, and repost.
Please, please, please.
We would love that.
Helps us the show grow.
Go ahead, send them on over,Ron.
Initiate raid.
SPEAKER_31 (01:46:38):
Oh, I gotta hit the
uh other button when it kind of
raiding coming.
I'm just letting them know.
Did you do it?
I did.
SPEAKER_29 (01:46:46):
Did it not go?
SPEAKER_31 (01:46:48):
No, not sure.
SPEAKER_29 (01:46:51):
I remember years ago
when we were going through all
this news, you're like, oh, Ithought this was a conspiracy
show.
And I was like, This is a newsshow.
SPEAKER_31 (01:46:59):
Well, it shouldn't
work.
SPEAKER_29 (01:47:00):
Sometimes the truth
is stranger than it's raid and
then forward slash.
SPEAKER_31 (01:47:04):
Oh that's why I got
it wrong.
SPEAKER_29 (01:47:09):
Head on over, ladies
and gentlemen.
SPEAKER_28 (01:47:16):
These guys have like
raids turned off.
SPEAKER_29 (01:47:47):
Oh no, Carlitz went
over there.
He made it.
You've been raided, Carlitz isover there.
You've been rated.
Hello, Carlitz.
You see the satellite imagethere just real quick a second
ago?
Totally fake, right?
I love I love hearing Carlitzand his uh uh flat Earth.
He's adamant, and you know, Imean he's been in a helicopter,
he's been a lot higher than Ihave, so same things I haven't
(01:48:08):
seen.
Carlitz says it worked.
We got him.
We got him.
All right, conspiracy TV overthere.
I can see their viewershippoking up just a little bit.
Cool.
You know, at least Carlitz madeit over.
Awesome.
Okay, guys, we are gonna jumpover into private.
Please hang on.
If you're not able to follow usinto premium, go ahead and hang
out over there for a fewminutes.
I'll be monitoring the chats andjumping in with you guys.
(01:48:31):
And uh, yep, Birken Bine BirkinBine, I can see you over there.
Raid, hello.
Our lovely, um, lovely peasantsperspective listeners want to
love a good conspiracy truthshow.
(01:48:53):
It's funny.
I'm gonna have to yeah, I'mgonna have to spell check some
of these words I typed.
It's pretty bad.
How fun.
So there we are.
Yes, you guys made it overthere.
We've bumped up theirviewership.
That was fun.
It's funny.
This morning I got a noticeabout our friend on the cooking
show yesterday because Isubscribed.
(01:49:15):
So always, always, alwaysencourage them to you guys hit
follow for them and and uhencourage them to hit follow for
us.
Okay, guys, we're gonna jump onover into private now and we'll
talk to you guys.
We'll I'll have something foryou guys tomorrow on Christmas.
So I don't know how we'll do it,but we'll have something for you
on Christmas tomorrow.
All right, see you in a minute.
(01:49:37):
And the minutes up.
Okay, we're here.
Okay, so I did want to show thishere.
This is the Epstein reveal.
So Epstein also threatened toharm victims and help release.
So what's going on here ispeople can just cut and paste
right through the redacted, typeit into a doc, and boop, there
it is.
So here's the attempted uh uhwe'll just read through this.
Defendants also activelyobstructed law enforcement by
(01:49:58):
denying investigators access toLittle St.
James beyond its boat dock.
And then this is what's blockedout.
Defendants also attempted toconceal their criminal sex
trafficking and abuse conduct bypaying large sums of money to
participant witnesses, includingby paying their attorney's fees
and case costs in litigationrelated to this conduct.
Epstein also threatened to harmvictims and helped release
(01:50:21):
damaging stories about them todamage their credibilities when
they tried to go public withtheir stories being of being of
being trafficked and sexuallyabused.
Why is that redacted?
I don't know.
Like that's the thing.
As I go through a lot of thisstuff, I'm like, I thought like
there's no victim informationhere.
I guess it's it's bad to thevictims because they took a
payoff and they're lawyers.
(01:50:42):
Is that what's going on?
Is are we protecting victims bysaying that because they got
money, they're not victims orsomething somehow?
Yeah, and I'm not kidding you.
There are there have been, Idon't know, a hundred of these
that are posted.
And every a couple of themyou're like, oh, I yeah, I can
see why they redacted that.
There's literally a name inthere.
But on a couple of them, it'slike this where it's like, why?
Why is this redacted?
What what about this?
SPEAKER_31 (01:51:03):
Is maybe it's this
uh coupled with a bunch of other
documents that somehow makes apicture clear that shouldn't.
I don't know.
SPEAKER_29 (01:51:13):
Maybe, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_31 (01:51:14):
I don't know.
SPEAKER_29 (01:51:14):
And one of the other
things I noticed here too, for
those of you that um hang outwith us over at 1776live.us, I
want to point something out hereon why it is trusts are so
discouraged, right, for normalpeople, is because it produces a
lot of asset protection and iteliminates the opacity of public
corporations and publicentities.
(01:51:35):
Look down here.
Defensive defendants alsoconcealed their fraud on the
government in obtaining unearnedtax benefits by providing false
testimony and submitting falseand inaccurate reporting to the
Economic Development Commissionto prevent detection of
defendant Southern Trust Companynon-compliance with requirements
concerning the nature of itsbusiness and the residency of
(01:51:56):
the persons it employed.
So people like Epstein usetrusts to operate for years and
years and years and years.
And I've explained this over at1776live.us.
Trusts are such a powerfulvehicle for wealth creation, for
privacy, um to pass wealth onfrom one generation to another.
They've been used by nefariouspeople because of those
(01:52:19):
advantages that makes it almostimpossible for investigators and
stuff to find out what's reallygoing on.
When you're making payouts,presumably what was happening
here was they created a trustand then made the beneficiaries
the victims.
And so they could pay thevictims without ever showing
that they were paying thevictims, right?
And they could they could do allthis basically money laundering
and obfuscation of trueownership of the interest in
(01:52:43):
those things.
So I I talk about that over atuh 1776 live pretty frequently.
One of the other things that'sgoing on is silver, silver,
silver, silver, silver.
Uh let's just check on the spotrate of silver.
Spot silver rate.
Let's see.
APMX.
So silver's at 40, 71.44.
(01:53:05):
Now, if you look at the one yearon this, look at this.
Ron, I was telling you backhere, what were we, February?
I was like, you should get somesilver.
It's at 30 bucks.
We're at 71.29 right now, and itpeaked, it peaked yesterday at
like 72 something.
Uh, let's compare it to the USdollar.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm thinking the dollar might bea little better.
Let's compare it to the DowJones.
(01:53:26):
Yeah, I'm thinking better there.
Let's compare it to the SP.
Yeah, I'm thinking that's let'scompare it to crude oil.
Oh, yeah.
Let's compare it to Bitcoin.
Yeah, pretty sure I was right.
I don't think I think Bitcoin isa long-term play, 100%.
And silver is a long-term playtoo.
Uh, but this this is somethingthat you can't look away from.
(01:53:47):
This is an absolutely importantthing for us to but I can't buy
it now.
It's like super high.
Are you crazy?
You can't only you can buy itnow.
Well, let's listen to this andI'll tell you why you should be
buying it now.
SPEAKER_16 (01:53:57):
Silver cost is
sixty-seven dollars per ounce.
Within 90 seconds, tradingalgorithms at eight major banks
simultaneously triggeredemergency protocols, not because
of the price itself, but becauseof what sixty-seven dollars
means under a rule change mostpeople have never heard of.
The next seventy-two hours,these banks have three options.
Post$891 billion in cashcollateral, begin forced
liquidation of$421 million theydon't actually have, or trigger
(01:54:21):
the first banking crisis of 2026before Christmas even arrives.
SPEAKER_29 (01:54:25):
The countdown Okay,
so what's going on here is the
price of silver and the papersilver, right?
Fractional reserve lending andmargin and stuff like that.
These banks have been basicallyshorting the silver supply,
which has kept the price low fora long time.
But there's a rule in place thatsays once the price hits like,
and he's going to explain it somany times the reserves, they
(01:54:46):
have to have a hundred percentsilver reserves in the bank to
pay.
You can't have a you can't havenothing to deliver.
This is a commodity market.
Okay.
And so they were seeing that thepaper was getting out of control
on silver.
So they put that rule in placeand they ain't changing the
rules.
SPEAKER_16 (01:55:03):
Here's what you need
to understand.
This is not about silver goingup because people want it.
This is about a mathematicaltrap that was set three years
ago.
A tripwire buried in commodityexchange, rules that nobody paid
attention to, and eight of theworld's largest banks now caught
in a position theymathematically cannot escape.
The invisible tripwire sits atexactly sixty-seven dollars and
twenty-five cents per ounce.
Let me show you why that numbermatters more than any other
(01:55:24):
price point in financial marketsright now.
Back in March 2023, ChicagoMercantile Exchange, that's
ComX, where Silver FuturesTrade, quietly implemented
something called Rule 4.07B,Enhanced Margin Liquidation
Protocol.
You can find it buried insection 4.07B, subsection three
of their rule book.
The language reads like legalsedative, but here's what it
actually says.
(01:55:45):
When volatility adjusted pricemovements exceed two hundred and
eighty-five percent fromweighted average short position
entry points for systemicallyimportant participants, one
hundred percent margincollateral is required within
seventy-two business hours.
Translation for normal humans.
If major banks shorted silver attwenty-two to twenty-five
dollars per ounce, betweentwenty twenty and twenty
twenty-three, and the price hitsthree point eight five times
(01:56:07):
their entry point.
They're forced to post full cashcollateral or automatically
liquidate their positions withinthree days.
Why did Comics create this rule?
Because they're still haunted byMarch 2020, when retail
investors on Reddit and WallStreet Silver nearly broke the
entire commodities exchange.
They almost succeeded in forcingphysical delivery that Comics
couldn't fulfill.
Regulators watched that neardeath experience, decided they
(01:56:27):
needed automatic circuitbreakers to force early
liquidation before positionsbecome too big to unwind.
The irony is almost poetic.
The rule designed to prevent asqueeze now guarantees one,
because it forces all eighttrapped banks to buy at exactly
the same time.
Here's the math that created thesixty-seven dollar kill switch.
The average bank's short entryprice was twenty-two dollars and
forty cents per ounce, weightedfrom CFTC bank participation
(01:56:48):
reports between twenty twentyand twenty twenty-three.
Two hundred and eighty fivepercent above that entry point
would be eighty-six dollars andtwenty-four cents.
But these banks didn't shortsilver with cash, they used
margin leverage, averaging aboutthree point two to one.
When you factor in thatleverage, the effective trigger
point drops dramatically.
22, 40 times, 3.85 divided bytheir 3.2 leverage ratio with a
(01:57:09):
2.5 regulatory buffer gives you$67.25 per ounce.
Silver hit, the tripwirecrossed.
Now let's talk about the eightinstitutions currently trapped
in this mathematical device.
According to the December 2025CFTC Bank Participation Report,
here's what we were looking at.
JP Morgan Chase holds ninetyseven point three million ounces
short with losses at sixty-sevendollars four point three five
(01:57:31):
billion.
HSBC Holdings has 78.6 millionounces short, 3.51 billion in
losses.
Scotiabank sits at 62.1 millionounces, 2.77 billion underwater.
BNP Parabas holds 51.4 millionounces with 2.29 billion in
losses.
UBS Group has 44.8 millionounces short for 2 billion in
losses.
Bochabank carries 39.2 millionounces, 1.75 billion underwater.
(01:57:54):
City Group holds 28.7 millionounces with 1.28 billion in red
ink.
Goldman Sachs has 18.9 millionounces short with 843 million in
losses.
Add it together, you get 421million ounces of short
positions, with current lossesof 18.79 billion dollars.
But that's just the surfacedamage.
These short positions aren'tisolated pets.
(01:58:15):
They hedge much larger gold andsilver derivative books.
The total notional value oflinked derivatives across these
eight banks, eight hundredninety-one billion dollars.
If the silver shorts fail, thecascade affects commodity index
funds, pension inflation hedges,sovereign wealth fund commodity
allocations, and mining companyhedging contracts.
This isn't just about silver,it's about interconnected
financial plumbing that spansthe global banking system.
(01:58:36):
For four years, these banks havesuccessfully contained silver
through a pattern so consistentyou could set your watch by it.
Whenever silver threatened tobreak higher, especially
approaching month end or optionexpiry, banks would dump massive
paper contracts.
Not physical silver, justpromises to deliver silver to
crash the price.
It worked because they couldcreate unlimited paper silver
through futures contracts.
They were shorting somethingthey never intended to deliver,
(01:58:58):
but they could always rollpositions forward and suppress
the price indefinitely.
Then something changed.
In December 2025, physicaldemand overwhelmed paper
suppression.
The banks can't suppress whatthey can't deliver, and they
just discovered that physicaldemand now exceeds their paper
manipulation capacity.
Which brings us to the 72 hourcountdown and the impossible
choice.
And I need you to understand whynone of them work.
(01:59:19):
Option A Post$891 billion incash collateral.
This requires liquidating otherassets to raise cash, treasury
bonds, corporate debt, equityholdings.
The problem is obvious.
Selling$891 billion in assets in72 hours crashes those markets.
It creates what's called a doomloop.
Forced selling drops prices,which triggers margin calls
elsewhere, which requires moreforced selling.
(01:59:41):
We saw this in March 2020 whenthe treasury market froze and
the Fed had to intervene withtwo point three trillion dollars
in emergency liquidity.
That was for a fraction of theselling pressure we're talking
about now.
Option B forced liquidationthrough buying four hundred and
twenty one million ounces toclose short positions.
Here's where the math becomesimpossible.
Only forty seven point twomillion ounces exist in
competition.
Registered vaults as of December18th.
(02:00:02):
That's 11% of what they need.
When demand is nine timessupply, historical squeezes show
eight to fifteen times pricemultipliers.
SPEAKER_29 (02:00:16):
Every analyst I've
seen who understands the silver
and talks this way is talking$200 to$1,000 per ounce.
Oh my god.
$200 on the low end.
$200 on the low end.
Most of them are around thisthree to five hundred mark.
So no, it is not a bad time tobuy silver.
In fact, the call I got fromBainbridge, Georgia was my
(02:00:36):
silver broker saying, hey, youput a double order in to sell.
Because we did sold a littlesilver yesterday, paid a bills.
And uh apparently, I don't know,we're gonna have to fix that.
But that was who was calling mefrom Georgia today.
Get in.
I put the link, my referral linkfor Liberty Dollar Financial or
Liberty Dollar.nl.
You see the link there in thechats with Peasant.
(02:00:57):
You can open an account, it'sreally easy.
You gotta send in your ID.
Buy silver, guys.
Even if it's just, you know,you've got whatever is in your
savings account, the dollar'snot going to increase in value
at all.
And silver is not gonna dropsignificantly.
Okay.
If anything, you have theupside.
Best thing I ever did this yearwas put any income that I earned
into silver because I'veliterally watched it go up time
(02:01:19):
and a half in ten months.
SPEAKER_16 (02:01:22):
67 times 15 equals
1005 per ounce.
The realistic range for forcedbuying over 10 trading days 380
to 720 dollars per ounce.
SPEAKER_29 (02:01:31):
We can see that in
ten days.
We can see that in ten days.
SPEAKER_16 (02:01:35):
Wow.
Option C negotiate an emergencyextension.
This requires the CFTC to issuean emergency order.
Suspending rule 4.07B.
Uh CFTC emergency orders requirea 48-hour public comment period,
which doesn't fit the 72-hourwindow.
Even if they waive thatrequirement, the market impact
is devastating.
Suspending forced liquidationrules signals the market is
broken, which triggers investorpanic and a surge in physical
(02:01:55):
buying.
CFTC has never suspended forcedliquidation rules in its history
because doing so would destroymarket credibility permanently.
Control demolition.
Banks negotiate with comics andthe CFTC for quarterly
liquidation over thirty daysinstead of three partial cash
settlement, partial physicaldelivery, partial contract
rollovers.
Price still explodes to the$150to$250 range, but it's stretched
(02:02:19):
over a month instead of a week.
So here's where we are.
Eight banks are trapped in 421million ounces of short
positions they can't cover.
In a market with only 47 millionounces available.
Unlike 2008, there's no printmoney in bail them out solution
because you can't print silver.
(02:02:39):
72-hour countdown is running.
Every option ends in a priceexplosion.
The only question is how fastand how high.
SPEAKER_29 (02:02:51):
It is a function,
right?
It has to happen becauseotherwise, if you can't deliver,
what do you do?
And key, you have to understandthis is not currency.
This isn't trading in fordollars, and it's not what it
is.
This isn't like LIBOR under youknow overnight bank rates to
create reserves.
Samsung and another big companyare releasing extended batteries
(02:03:12):
for EV cars or chargers, excuseme, that are silver.
Like they require a massiveamount of silver to rapid
charge.
SPEAKER_31 (02:03:20):
Highlighting that
it's really a commodity.
SPEAKER_29 (02:03:23):
All of these AI
mainframes, all these data
centers, massive amounts ofphysical silver go into them.
So there's an actual functionand utility in at an industrial
scale for silver on top of thefact that it's used as a
currency and a store of value.
So silver, not a bad play.
Highly recommend people get intoit.
It's right there in the in thelinks.
We're gonna be hearing moreabout this as silver continues
(02:03:45):
to climb.
Right now, I'm I can sell mysilver at over$71 an ounce.
Instant, no fees, no fees atLiberty Dollar.
You pay a fee when you buy it,right?
But you don't pay anything.
I mean, you're gonna recoverthat fee probably pretty
quickly.
And uh so highly recommendpeople to jump over and get into
that.
Okay, last thing for today,we're gonna be talking about J6.
(02:04:07):
And we're gonna be hearing fromSarah.
Oh, where's the tab?
We're gonna be hearing from umSarah Maccabe.
Now she is with Stand in the GapFoundation.
Her husband, I believe his namewas Ronald.
We called him Maccabe in prison.
Um he was in prison with me.
He was a sheriff's deputy inTennessee and went to J6, and
(02:04:28):
he's one of the ones that gaveRosen Boylan mouth-to-mouth CPR
on the Capitol steps.
SPEAKER_33 (02:04:32):
Okay.
SPEAKER_29 (02:04:32):
Um there's nothing
about his story that wouldn't be
you or I, Ron, if we weresitting there.
Right.
I mean, this is a sheriff'sdeputy, his first responder.
In fact, he's yelling at thecops like he's wearing his vest
and says deputy.
I'm a cop, like help me, I needhelp.
And then they grabbed his armand you know, tug back and forth
and that kind of thing.
So this is her her his wife.
Um, she started the Stand in theGap Foundation, who helped a lot
(02:04:55):
of January 6ers.
She's being interviewed by GBNews.
SPEAKER_43 (02:04:58):
Not only Americans,
but the world thinks that when
President Trump pardoned theseindividuals January 20th this
year, they just walked back intothe life that they had.
And that is just simply not thetruth.
The majority of them spent fourplus years in solitary
confinement.
They didn't see their familiesfor over two years.
They did not give them haircuts,nail clippers, access to their
(02:05:18):
discovery.
When they went into court, itwas a kangaroo court.
It was something you have neverseen in America.
And President Trump did eithercommute or pardon every single
individual.
But the punishment continuesbecause even though they have
been pardoned, their recordstill shows up because they were
not exonerated.
So these individuals try to goget jobs and their record still
(02:05:39):
pulls up at the bottom.
It does say pardon, but thenthey already have that
preconceived notion that theywere involved in January 6th.
You search their name online,all kinds of articles pop up and
the media was against them.
And so there is a lot of workthat has to be done here in
America to write this wrong.
It was one of the biggest coups,if not the biggest coup in
(02:06:00):
American history.
SPEAKER_44 (02:06:02):
Okay, so that
explains things.
So it says on their record inthe charges or whatever with
January the 6th, but theyweren't pardoned, but the
employers will still see it.
So there will be people watchingthis in America and Great
Britain who will say,predictably, yeah, but this was
an attack on democracy, andloads of people died.
I mean, the only person who diedwas uh was it uh Ashley Bevett,
(02:06:24):
who's uh uh shot by the cops.
Um this was an attack ondemocracy, they should be
punished, blah, blah, blah.
What's your response to that?
SPEAKER_43 (02:06:32):
So this was a
complete setup by our own
government.
If you go and look at thenumbers, there's a reason they
didn't release the 44,000 hoursof evidence to the general
public, because if they did,they would realize that it was
the police that shot into apeaceful crowd.
It was the police that beatprotesters, it was the police
that shot individuals.
In fact, four American citizensdied that day.
(02:06:54):
Ashley Babbitt was shot by aCapitol police officer, Michael
Burt, who still to this day.
SPEAKER_29 (02:06:59):
I might be somewhere
in the scaffolding here.
This guy right here testified inmy trial, and I should be like
right down here.
No, she This is a very quickclip.
But he's the guy that Ifollowed.
So I wouldn't I think I put yourhat on.
SPEAKER_43 (02:07:21):
Uh I had a red hat
on live TV.
Rose Sam Boylan was crushed inthe tunnel and wasn't given aid
by the Metropolitan PoliceOfficers.
In fact, she was beaten over thehead three times by Metropolitan
Police Officer Lila Morris.
Again, Lila Morris was notinvestigated nor charged with
attempted murder.
And then two individuals, KevinGreeson and Benjamin Phillips,
(02:07:45):
those individuals supposedlydied of natural causes, but
there's been no investigationinto their death.
Yet the media said five officersdied that day.
That is not true.
One officer died the followingday due to natural causes.
What we have heard is that thepeople in his chain of command
knew that he had a stroke, butdecided to send him a home
instead of getting medicalattention.
(02:08:06):
And it's the biggest coup inAmerican history.
Nancy Pelosi is on tape sayingshe should have had the National
Guard there and that she takesresponsibility.
You saw the sham show in July of2021, where they had select
people in the government to doresearch, to show the American
people what happened on January6th, but they didn't bring in
one January 6th defendant toshow them what they had done.
(02:08:29):
They locked them away insolitary confinement in a gulag
in their own nation's capital.
SPEAKER_44 (02:08:35):
Um, the special
counsel report, though, I mean,
let me get your take on this.
There was apparently beforeTrump became president, there
was enough evidence, accordingto the special counsel, that he
would have been convictedcriminally for January the 6th.
SPEAKER_43 (02:08:48):
No, that is also
fake news.
They just tried to push thisnarrative.
They called every single January6th defendant an
insurrectionist.
None of them were charged withinsurrection.
They called every single one ofthem terrorists, none of them
were charged with terrorism.
In fact, they've interpoled theFBI, put them on domestic
terrorist watch lists for fouryears.
They were on quads, theycouldn't fly, quiet skies, they
(02:09:11):
were canceled by companies likeBank of America and American
Express, uh, Airbnb, all ofbefore they were even tried.
I mean, you're talking abouteveryday American citizen law
enforcement officers.
Seventy-two percent of January6th defendants were either
veterans or first responders.
SPEAKER_29 (02:09:28):
And the government
72% were veterans or first
responders.
SPEAKER_43 (02:09:33):
The best of the
best, Ron.
The best of the best.
SPEAKER_29 (02:09:47):
This is the thing
nobody right.
Look, this is this guy died.
Right?
And is the crowd on top of him?
SPEAKER_43 (02:10:07):
They got scared.
They didn't know what to do.
They had this coup on theirhands.
They truly do have blood ontheir hands, and there needs to
be justice for theseindividuals.
SPEAKER_44 (02:10:16):
Uh January 6th, of
course, was all about um
President Trump's claims thatthe 2020 election was rigged,
and he said, I think it wasyesterday.
Giving them defibrillator or theday before.
He has some, how did he describeit?
Some bombshell evidence that hesays the public will soon get
that that election was rigged.
SPEAKER_29 (02:10:32):
Um I think that
right there, that's the woman
that is allegedly the CapitolHill pipe bomber that the Blaze
story.
SPEAKER_44 (02:10:38):
I was just gonna say
that's I do wonder where Twitch
is being votes when next timeround uh from the Dems, but
we'll see.
Uh Sarah, just last word to youon um the January the 6th, is
trying to get jobs.
Is there any kind of support forthem?
Is there a charity um that cansupport them whilst they look
for jobs?
And also, is it not simply justagainst the law?
(02:10:58):
Is it not discrimination?
Have you not got some sort ofanti-discrimination laws in the
US?
SPEAKER_43 (02:11:03):
Yes, you would think
it's just very hard to prove
something like that when youdon't have evidence when it's
just somebody in HR that says,Oh, I don't politically agree
with you.
They don't they didn't say theirbeliefs, they just deny their
applications.
Yes, there is um, we run anonprofit called Stand in the
Gap.
It's 501c3, where we helpJanuary 6th defendants rebuild
(02:11:24):
their lives from scratch.
They lost their homes, they losttheir cars, they can't get jobs,
their families fell apart, theygot divorced, they were away for
four years.
And mind you, in 2020, we hadthe summer of love where BLM and
Antifa burnt cities down,federal buildings, killed
people, and none of them werecharged.
Yet you showed up to the Capitolon January 6, 2021, and they
(02:11:47):
threw you into solitaryconfinement for four years and
tried to put you away fordecades.
SPEAKER_31 (02:11:52):
Preach.
Yeah.
I mean, how come we haven'tplayed her before?
SPEAKER_29 (02:11:57):
Well, we don't the
ones that get the media
attention are not the people Iwant to play because I know who
they are.
SPEAKER_35 (02:12:04):
Okay.
SPEAKER_29 (02:12:04):
But uh, it is
unfortunate that it's being
covered by GB News and not byCNBC.
This is the time that we're at.
If you stand up against thegovernment, this could happen to
you.
It happened to me.
I know what she's I know the youknow, I wasn't four years in
solitary, but her husband was.
SPEAKER_31 (02:12:20):
I know.
You know exactly what she'stalking about.
SPEAKER_29 (02:12:22):
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, guys.
That's it for the show today.
Thank you so much.
We will be back again tomorrow,one way or another.
We'll figure it out.
And uh I appreciate you guys forsticking around.
We had great viewership today.
Thanks for all theparticipation.
SPEAKER_31 (02:12:35):
Merry Christmas,
everybody.
SPEAKER_29 (02:12:37):
Merry Christmas.
And that's it.
Just Merry Christmas.
Holy holiday while I'mcelebrating at my house.
We'll talk to you guys againtomorrow.
Bye!
SPEAKER_06 (02:13:10):
Matt, sorry.
What do I give them that card?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37, I'm not old.
So I can't just call you Matt.
(02:15:41):
Now we see a violence in thesystem.
Help, help! I'm being repressed!Oh, what a giveaway! Did you
hear that?
Did you hear that?
That's what I'm on about.
Do you see it repressing me?
You saw it, didn't you?
SPEAKER_31 (02:15:59):
I gotta get back.
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