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December 23, 2025 139 mins

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A booming GDP headline, a hot price index, and a sober question: who gets to define reality when institutions write the score and audit themselves afterward? We start with the data, then chase the incentives that shape what we’re told to believe—robots walking into restaurants to do dishes, SNAP dollars flowing through corporate balance sheets, and career bureaucrats leveraging process to overrule elected decisions. It’s less conspiracy than calculus: pay structures and perverse incentives that create the outcomes we keep seeing.

From Arctic maps to city halls, the theme repeats. Greenland gets pitched as national security as Arctic lanes crowd with Russian and Chinese ships. In Chicago, a resident stares down a board and says aloud what many feel: stop blaming ghosts when the power is in the room. The conversation threads through education standards, the corrosion of civic literacy, and the grit required to do the unglamorous work—homeschooling, local audits, showing up—to rebuild trust from the bottom up.

Election integrity anchors a long middle stretch: sworn testimony on remote connectivity and logging gaps, the seduction of ranked-choice voting as a “reform” that complicates audits, and the reminder that if you can’t verify it, you can’t trust it. Layer on a Secret Service charity probe, defense contractors preferring buybacks to factories, and homelessness budgets that fatten nonprofits while streets get worse, and a pattern emerges. Systems follow their incentives. If we want different outcomes, we have to realign the incentives and restore accountability.

We don’t stay in the doom loop. There’s a countercurrent of action: cartels pressured at sea and in their finances, fusion suddenly moving from sci-fi to strategy with a bet that could upend energy costs and industrial capacity, and a renewed insistence on transparency around archives that elites would rather bury. Through it all, we return to a simple compass: truth over narrative, process that can be audited, and citizens who refuse to outsource their conscience. If that resonates, subscribe, share this episode with a friend who cares about substance over spin, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Your support keeps this community sharp, persistent, and hard to gaslight.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_16 (00:00):
3.3%.
4.3%.
That is a nice jump.
And I know many may questiondata gathering, but on the
surface, this would be thestrongest quarter going back to
the third quarter of 2023 whenit was 40.

SPEAKER_21 (00:53):
We're just peasants.
Every one of us.
You watch the whole movies, yousee the peasants in the
background with the kings andkings walking around.
Where are those people?
Where are those people?
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
So glad to be with you guystoday.
Yesterday, I listened to apodcast with Hunter Biden and

(01:16):
Sean Ryan, and I wanted to throwmy phone at the wall at least 10
times.
That man is a liar.
So good morning, everybody.
Just before Hunter Biden is aliar.
Oh, revelation.
Yeah, sorry, a couple minuteslate.
Good morning, Frasier.
Glad to be here.
Yeah, so I don't know why Ijust, you know, my last clip I

(01:37):
pulled from Hunter Biden'spodcast with Sean Ryan.
I was like, this guy is nuts.
There is no laptop.
There was no laptop.
Oh, okay.
Out of your mind, man.
You are out of your mind.
Um, couple things happened justthis morning, literally, fresh
off the headlines.
You can't get this any soonerunless you're watching live TV.
Guess what, Ron?

SPEAKER_16 (01:58):
PP, second time around the block delayed, third
quarter numbers.
We're looking for 3.3.
Zoom, zoom, zoom.
4.3%.
4.3%.
That is a nice jump.
And I know many may question daythe gathering, but on the
surface, this would be thestrongest quarter going back to

(02:18):
the third quarter of 2023 whenit was 4.7.
This is strong.
3.5 on consumption blows awaythe 2.7 we were expecting.
That would be the best since thelast quarter of 24 on the price
index.
Here's some not good news.
3.8% on the price index.

(02:39):
That's much higher than 2.7 wewere looking for.

SPEAKER_31 (02:43):
Okay, so let's break that down.
So maybe the targets were alittle off.
Yeah, but the GDP four sounds sogood over 4% plus.

SPEAKER_21 (02:52):
Yeah.
Right.
Meanwhile, tariffs are going todestroy the economy.
Nope.
Consumer spending hasn't sloweddown one bit, right?
Uh what was it?
What was the other thing?
Oh, price index.
Price index is fluctuating.
It's up.
I don't know what that means.

SPEAKER_31 (03:04):
I think that that means that the prices are
actually probably real.
That inflation that we're seeingis real.

SPEAKER_21 (03:10):
Yeah.
Now, everything that was goingon during Biden's
administration, he mentioned,you know, there's some question
on the price, you know, on theinputs, the data.
Well, yeah.
I mean, the last four years wascompletely fake, and we caught
them being fake.
And so there is going to beconstant questions about it
being fake.
So when you're a governmentagency and you fake something,
you can't go, oops, fixed it,we're good now.

(03:31):
It's not how it works.
Every time.
Yeah, every time, really.
How many times have we fixed theFBI?
Every time.
Every time.
They put a new guy in there.
He's like, my FBI is perfect.
That's right.
Trump gave a uh pretty goodpress conference yesterday with
Pete Heggseth.
Uh, just all range of things,you know.
The real fireworks come in whenthey start talking about taking

(03:51):
questions.
And uh turns out, Ron, we'regonna have some competition for
our labor.

SPEAKER_32 (03:55):
You're gonna have robots, but you're gonna have to
have robots, but you're gonnahave to get somebody to start
those robots, and you're gonnahave to improve the robots, but
we're gonna have robotic uhfactories plus manpower.
So we're going to have enough.
We're gonna need the help ofrobots and other forms of uh I

(04:16):
guess you could say employment.
We're gonna be employing a lotof artificial things, but the
beauty is we're gonna have morejobs than we've ever played.

SPEAKER_21 (04:24):
They're coming, Ron! Residents on mouth, you'll be
working on a factory line nextto robots.

SPEAKER_31 (04:30):
You know, robots are not that new, you know,
especially in like uh automanufacture.
Everybody's seen the videos onthe news where they got the
robots going on, yeah, buzzingand stuff.
These are just a little bit morefancy robots.

SPEAKER_21 (04:42):
This isn't, yeah, these are gonna be robots that
walk and talk.
And and also do your drycleaning and walk your dog.
Like, these are not gonna beyour grandma's robots, you know
what I mean?
Like we are definitely steppinginto the future here.
Like when Elon talks aboutrobots, he's actually talking
about bipedal, walking-talking,LLM-brained robots.

(05:03):
Right, that have names.
That have names, yeah.
I was watching a uh videoyesterday.
They're training robots to dodishes in a restaurant.
Now, when when you and I thinkof robots, we think new factory,
somebody, you know, dishes go onthe tray and then they go
through like a go through theprocess machine.
Right.
No, they're going to hire arobot, it's going to walk into a

(05:24):
restaurant as it is and going todo the dishes like a human does
dishes.
Right?
They were they were training ithow to like wipe dishes and you
know, examine it forcleanliness.
Well, they have differentversions like aboila.
Yeah, abuela and aboela, abuelarobot.
Garlee's grand rising, allshantini, good morning, Tiff

(05:45):
Time, good morning.
Pray the Rosary Bailey, goodmorning.
John Attackis, good morning.
Dang, man, we are loaded.
You guys jumped right in today.
This is awesome.
Towards the end of my timeincarceration, after Donald
Trump was elected, we startedhearing a lot about Greenland,
right?
Greenland's gonna be anotherstate.
Greenland, we gotta take itover.
We need Greenland.
And I kept telling my wife, I'mlike, I don't think they're

(06:06):
upset with Jay Sixers inGreenland.
We should probably move toGreenland.
Like it's hard.
You know, it'll be like it'll belike a big boom, you know.
Well, Trump's still onGreenland.
And if you know the running jokein the cabinet is every time
there's a job opening, they putMarco Rubio on it, right?
So he's got like multiple jobs.
Have you seen that?
Every time someone quits oranything happens, there's Marco

(06:26):
Rubio on the White House couchlooking all depressed.
Michael Rubio just found outhe's the IRS commissioner.
Marco Rubio just found out he'srunning NASA.
You know, it's like every time.
Well, turns out Marco Rubio'sgot another job title.
He's going up to Greenland as aspecial envoy.

SPEAKER_32 (06:42):
Louisiana, the Louisiana Purchase.
He said, I'm governor ofLouisiana.
And he said, I would love.
I didn't call him, he called me.
He's very proactive.
He's a great guy.
He's a deal guy.
He's a deal maker type guy.
And we need it for nationalprotection.
We need Greenland for nationalprotection.
They have a very smallpopulation.

(07:02):
And I don't know, they sayDenmark, but Denmark has spent
no money.
They have no militaryprotection.
If they say that Denmark wasthere 300 years ago or something
with a boat, well, we were therewith boats too, I'm sure.
So we'll have to work it allout.
But he um I love this.

SPEAKER_21 (07:20):
I love the spent so much.
Well, we were there with a boat,too.
I mean, if that's all it takesto claim the stolen land, let's
roll.
I was kind of like the Greenlandsmell.
We got boats.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_32 (07:31):
He felt very strongly for the boat.
We need Greenland for nationalsecurity.
Not for minerals.
We have so we have so many sitesfor minerals and oil and
everything.
We have more oil than any othercountry in the world.
We need Greenland for nationalsecurity.
And if you take a look atGreenland, you look up and down
the coast, you have Russian andChinese ships all over the

(07:51):
place.
We need it for nationalsecurity.
We have to have it.
And he wanted to lead thecharge.
So we're making him, Marco,today, a special envoy to
Greenland.
Greenland's a big I love it.

SPEAKER_21 (08:05):
You look pretty happy.
He's like, all right, we'll go.
We'll get Greenland.
That I I actually do supporttaking over Greenland as a
territory or whatever, whateverthey come up with.
I see zero reason why Denmarkshould be running Greenland.

SPEAKER_31 (08:20):
Well, they're gonna have to probably blow up less
boot boats.

SPEAKER_21 (08:26):
We we had boats.
Because they had a boat there400 years ago.
Well, we had boats.
I think it's so funny.
Okay, another thing too, inthere's a there's a movie coming
out called Age of Disclosure.
And so there's been a couplepromos.
And I just thought that thoughtthis promo was interesting,
mainly because when it comes toAmerica's secrets and when it

(08:46):
comes to really everything, thewhole government operates on a
need-to-know basis with itspoliticians.
And I think that's one of thethings that we as Americans,
especially us red-bloodedAmericans that believe that you
know the president is in chargeof everything, they don't know
everything.
And in many ways, secrets arekept from them too.
So when it comes to aliens,UFOs, all that kind of stuff,

(09:09):
they're on a need-to-know basis.
And this is Marco Rubio talkingabout it.

SPEAKER_01 (09:14):
I think there's this assumption that presidents can
walk in the Oval Office on dayone and say, All right, take me
to Roswell, show me the alienbodies.
I want to see the video of theautopsy, I want to see the whole
thing.
Open it up.
I think that really is a um a uhnaive understanding of how our
government works.
Even presidents have beenoperating on a need-to-no basis.

(09:35):
The rationale, the justificationwas the president shouldn't know
about these things because thatway the president always has
deniability.
All they need is a nod in thisdirection or in that direction.
But that begins to ramp out ofcontrol.
Frankly, I don't even know ifthe president would know who to
ask.
You could go to the director ofthe CIA, is uh the director of
national intelligence and askthem.
And even that person may notknow.

(09:56):
Because those people rotate, butthe people, three layers
underneath them that are therefor 30 years, to them, it's like
I've seen these people go.
And unless they ask, I have noobligation to tell them it
exists.
Age of disclosure.

SPEAKER_21 (10:11):
Yeah.
So that'll be fun.
Who knows what they're gonnadisclose?
Let me see the bodies.
What's going on?
That's actually an interestingthing, there, right?
That he's like the people threelayers below, they're there for
30 years.
There's a certain personalitytype that goes there.
These are the personality typesthat don't need a lot of you
know attention.
They they thrive on control,they thrive on process, they

(10:35):
thrive on using the process astheir ideity.
And what I mean by that isthey'll use the process to
punish other people.
Does that make sense?
Like they it's uh it's anauthority thing, and they're
everywhere in a government thatthat gets to the size of our
governments.
I mean, these people findyourselves in your local county.
Go walk into your local countyoffice and go find out how long

(10:58):
like the clerk recorder hasworked.
It'll be shocking.
Shocking.

SPEAKER_31 (11:03):
I'm going over three years.
I'm gonna guess here that mostclerks at our county it was
their first job.

SPEAKER_21 (11:10):
Yeah.
Yep.
And so we can vote in whoever wewant, and it's like very little
changes.
This is how we do it, this ishow we've always done it, and
this is how we do it when youleave.
Right.
That is that is the thing wheregovernment stops to be held
accountable.
And when the government startsto act that way, we just don't
have control.

(11:31):
And no matter what we do on thepolitical side, we find
ourselves on a need-to-knowbasis.
You know, one of the things thatreally stunned me, I was working
on a development out in ClawhamCounty.
It was an RV park.
It was good for everybody.
Every elected official wantedit, everybody that was anybody
was like, this is great, this isgood population for the county,
right?
But we were getting all kinds ofresistance from deep in the

(11:54):
bowels of the health departmentand the building department.
And it was people that even whoeven though I interacted with
them all the time, I didn't knowwho these people were.
And we had to like, you know, Ihate to say it, but we had to
like bludgeon them with theirown code to be like, look, you
can't just say no.
Right?
Like, you don't have a leg tostand on.
We had to like have specialmeetings where people that I'd

(12:16):
never met were like, well, thisisn't the way we do it.
It's like, well, it's not whatthe code says.
You know what I mean?
Like, and we ultimately got thepark put through, and it took a
long time, but we started tofind things like emails from
deep within the bowels of thecounty telling people that they
couldn't have um off-grid setupsbecause it's bad for the
collective.

(12:36):
That word was written by acounty official.
It's bad for the collective.
What collective?
Are we the Borg?
Right?
It's not good for our comrades,you know.
What are we talking about?
This is the United States ofAmerica.
We prioritize private property.
Like, I don't, you know, thewhole idea is I get to run
around naked on my property anddo whatever I want, right?
It's nothing to do with thecollective.

(12:58):
Anyways, stuff like that comesout all the time.
And a lot of times, ourdifferent programs, like for
example, the welfare program,when you think of welfare, food
stamps, snap benefits, what doyou think of?
What's the first thing thatcomes to mind?

SPEAKER_31 (13:09):
Uh, young, uh, brand new parents that just have a
brand new kid, they don't haveuh good income, and they just
need a hand up.

SPEAKER_21 (13:18):
They just need a hand up.
Okay, so you have a veryChristian mindset of what
welfare should be.
So I'm gonna play this clip.
This is from the Turning Pointuh Amp Fest this last weekend.
This is uh this is JD Vancetalking about what you're
saying.
Okay, because at the basis ofwhy you would support a
government welfare program isbecause of your Christian nice.

(13:42):
So let's listen to JD Vance,because this is the root of our
nation.
This is the core of who we are.

SPEAKER_03 (13:47):
If you go to almost any food pantry in this country,
you will find Christians feedingthe poor.
If you go to addicts whosefamilies won't even speak to
them like my mom was at acertain point of her life, it's
often the Christian ministriesthat stay with them at their
very lowest moments.
You'll find Christians sittingpatiently beside hospice beds

(14:09):
and in recovery rooms and in allthe places of the world where
people have given up on otherpeople.
And this is the moral truth westrive to center in our work in
the Trump administration and inthis great movement of ours.
A true Christian politics, itcannot just be about the

(14:30):
protection of the unborn or thepromotion of the family, as
important as those thingsabsolutely are.
It must be at the heart of ourfull understanding of
government.
Why do we penalize corporationsthat ship American jobs overseas
because we believe in theinherent dignity of human work
and every person who works agood job in this country?

SPEAKER_49 (14:55):
Why?
Why have we worked without thehelp of Congress to restrict
H1P?

SPEAKER_21 (15:03):
Okay, so he goes on to explain some other policies
and how they're how, as a youknow, Christian base, like these
are supposed to help the people.
That's why we don't ship jobsoverseas because then Uncle
Clyde is unemployed and he's gota little problem with alcohol.
You know what I mean?
Like there's real-world effectsto this stuff.
This is what I want to show youhow our government weaponizes

(15:24):
our virtue, our Christianknights, they weaponize it
against stuff.
So when we think of the welfareprogram, we think of orphans, we
think of widows, we think ofsingle moms, we think of you
know in actual need.
Do you know what?
You know what it's actuallydesigned to be?

SPEAKER_36 (15:37):
Snap is not so much about feeding the people that
maybe need it, but it's it'sFrito Lay, it's Pepsi, it's all
the guys making the junk foodthat Walmart, it's the
distribution system and theproducer itself.
This is why when the Snapbenefits get talked about, it's
not it's not uh alliances ofpoor people up here knocking on
doors.
It's the biggest lobbyist intown because Snap drives, I

(15:58):
think, 20% of Walmart'sprofitability.
And it's it's but basically 40%,I think, of the operating income
because what they're selling isthe ultra-processed food that
has these super high margins.

SPEAKER_21 (16:10):
While we view our tax dollars going to welfare
being something that goes andhelps the poor, what it does is
it makes them fat and whateverand props up Frito Legate
Subsidies, it's corporatesubsidies.
Walmart is the biggest pusher ofminimum wage.
You know why?
Because when they push minimumwage, and I know this because I
had a guy who actually worked HRat a at a grocery store, a big

(16:32):
chain here that is everybodyloves this chain.
Okay, it starts with a W, let'sput it that way.
And it's not W A, it's W I.
So you deduct.
But he worked in HR, okay, andhe'd worked at that place for
many, many years.
He'd actually had a coupletransfers and they love it.
It's you know, they talk aboutit being employee owned and all
this stuff, but I was like, sowhat's your job?
He's like, Well, when somebodygets hired, part of the

(16:53):
onboarding that I do is I applyfor government benefits for
them.
So part of your wage in theirmind is SNAP, is chip, is uh
section eight.
Okay.
They do that, and Walmart hasthe same thing, right?
Yes, yes, keep wages low, butgive us some benefits, which by

(17:13):
the way, mostly get spent herein our own stores.
Do you see what I'm saying?
That was his whole job, Ron, wasto onboard employees into
government benefit programs.
Oh no, right?

SPEAKER_31 (17:27):
This is that third tier of people who are gonna be
here for 30 years.
People should only be getting onthe enrolling in the program on
a need basis, not on aprogrammatic basis.

SPEAKER_21 (17:38):
Should be.
Should be okay, should be.
I'm gonna show you this here.
This is both funny anddevastating.
Okay.
I was a high school debater.
I loved debate.
I did policy debate.
Policy debate requires you to doa ton of reading, a ton of
research, and you basicallydevelop these viewpoints or
these arguments.
And when you start a debate,it's like one person goes on

(18:00):
offense and one person's ondefense, one person presents a
case, the other person has tobreak it down, and it's supposed
to be policy oriented, right?
Lincoln Douglas can make it morepersonal and kind of more, you
know, rhetorical.
But policy debate is like achess game.
Let me put facts on the board.
Dissecting the argument.
Dissecting the argument.
And it's done very quickly.
Like people say I talk fast.

(18:22):
This comes from my high schooldebate days where you have to
read pages of information.
As fast as you can possibly readthe pages of information that
you gotta get out, you gottaread all the information, right?
Just read it as fast as you canbecause it's not about
coherency, it's about theargument.
So, this right here, the captionis this is not an essence else
kit.
This is DEI in action.
You prepare your son or daughterfor an actual debate, and they

(18:44):
lose to this.
They ask you what happened, howdo you respond?
So, this was the debatechampions, and it shows a clip
of their debate.
Now, there's a little bit ofN-word in here.
That's okay, though.
It's so this is not SNL.
This is not SNL.
This is an actual policy debate.

SPEAKER_40 (19:02):
Palestine University's debate team wins,
claiming an historic win.
They are the first all-blackwomen's team to win the
cross-examination debateassociation's national
championship.
This morning we have two of theteam members here.
We have Amina Ruffin and CoreyJohnson both here to talk about
the major victory.
Ladies, way to go.
Congratulations.

(19:23):
You've made so many people proudin this area.
Now we want to pick your brain alittle bit as we admire your
huge trophy, by the way.
That's ridiculous.
But I'm gonna ask you first.
We'll start with you, Amina.

SPEAKER_26 (19:32):
What was the topic?
Um, the topic was restrictingpresidential war powers,
authority.

SPEAKER_27 (19:36):
They say the nigga's always already queer.
That's exactly the point.
It means that the impact is netthat that is an impact turn of
Okay.

SPEAKER_21 (19:43):
So, this is this is how a policy debate looks.
You got your big box with abunch of papers and you talk
really fast.
They won.
This is who won.
Okay, this is their debating.

SPEAKER_27 (19:52):
That is an impact turn uh to the affair that that
it is a case turn to theaffirmative because we uh we are
saying that queer bodies are notable to survive the necessary.

SPEAKER_26 (20:02):
Um we got the topic in the body.
Um and we started doing ourresearch then.
We've been supplementing ourresearch throughout the season.

SPEAKER_12 (20:23):
It's like the trauma representation that turns it to
the black shops, the bottom thatthe bottom of the story to the
white shops are like the whiteman, the black man, so when you
start preparing for a nationalcompetition, once you know the
topic, what's next?

SPEAKER_40 (20:38):
Well, you do a lot of research.
Arguing it.
Talented university's debateteam wins, claiming an historic
win.

SPEAKER_21 (20:47):
They are this I I don't know if I'd be more upset
at this or a a boy winning agirl's swim meet.
You know what I mean?
Like that sounds increincredulous.
Like, what do you mean how'dthey win?
Well, they won because somebodyhanded it to them, right?
Somebody is destroyingeducation, destroying
competency, and it seemsintentional.

(21:08):
This is Dr.
Ben Carson at the TPSA eventaddressing just this.
What would you do if you wantedto bring down America?
Some of the smartest kids inhigh school participate in
policy, policy debate.
Some of the smartest kids inhigh school.

SPEAKER_31 (21:25):
Typically.

SPEAKER_21 (21:26):
Yeah, typically.
Um and if that's your winner.
It wasn't me.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_06 (21:31):
Couldn't do it militarily.
I think you might think aboutour education system.
Could we possibly infiltrate theteacher unions and the public
schools so that we canindoctrinate the children?
Could we gain control of themedia of Hollywood so that we

(22:00):
could change the culture of thepeople?
Should we do everything we canto destroy the American family?

SPEAKER_21 (22:12):
He asked the great questions because if you wanted
to bring down America, that'sexactly how you would do it.
And when I watch that DEIdebate, and when I see so many
of the things that happened,it's like, how is this
happening?
Like, you know, what did nobodyever take civics class?
Does nobody understand anything?
And the answer is, yeah, theydon't.
Right?
I mean, when I was a kid, thecriticism of public education

(22:34):
was it was teaching you to get ajob.
You know, you're just they'rejust trying to make you into a
factory worker.
Well, now it's like they're noteven like, yeah, they're still
trying to make you into afactory worker, but they're
actually trying to make you aloser.
They're trying to make you thinkyou can't win in life.
The deck is stacked against you,that you need to judge people
and yourself based on the colorof your skin.

(22:54):
Right?
These problems, thatindoctrination, we cannot vote
our way out of.
Because, in a fair vote, if halfor more of the population is
legitimately indoctrinated, weare in some serious trouble.
Okay.
And that is again why we have tostand up and fight back in every

(23:14):
single way we possibly can.
Here's a lady um in a Chicagoschool board, and she's talking
to Mayor Johnson and all thecommissioners there.
And clearly Chicago has beenlike a wild war zone, right?
Good morning, Doug.
I see you over there in thechats.
It's been a wild war zone.
And one of the things that theyconstantly push on the black
community in Chicago is somehowthis is the white man's fault.

(23:36):
This is the white man's fault,right?
I'll never forget being in theDC jail.
I saw one singular whiteemployee the entire time I was
there.
Okay.
There was one guard who worked anight shift twice on my block
that was white.
Now, presumably there might havebeen other whites that I didn't

(23:57):
see, but 99% of that prisonstaff is all black, right?
So you can't blame, you can't bein prison and be like, this is
racism.
It's not coming from whiteguards.
You know what I mean?
Like a white guy might be ableto claim something, but the
black on black, it wasn't reallyan argument, right?
But they knew what was going on.
I'll never forget one of theguards was telling me we were

(24:17):
having trouble getting books inthere.
And he goes, Well, have yourpeople on the outside call up.
And he goes, I'll tell you onething.
When someone calls up from theoutside and it's that articulate
white voice, these people willjump around because they know
you guys know how to complain.
And he goes, I'm actuallygrateful you guys are here,
being the J6 pod, because of allthe complaints you guys have
made.
He's like, Things have actuallychanged in the jail.
This is this jail's been aroundfor 30 years and ain't a dang

(24:39):
thing changed until you guysshowed up.
So speaking up does make adifference, right?
There is an element when youbang bang loud enough and start
saying the right things, ifthey're in the wrong, they're
going to be compelled to makesome changes to get back into
compliance.
This is an example of that.
This woman is pointing out, youknow, you guys have been
complaining about the white man,the white man, the white man,
but I'm looking up at this boardand it's all black people.

SPEAKER_23 (25:02):
The Democrats hate black people, the Democrats want
our property and replace us withillegal aliens because you all
come in these meetings talkingabout the invisible white
person, but we don't ever seehim, but we see all of you all
here.
And then you sit here, all theseblack faces, you sit here, all
Democrats, and you sit here allarrogantly, like your seats are

(25:27):
secure, like we are not comingafter these seats.
Just like I told Brendan Johnsonover there the first time I
spoke on that mic.
I said the same thing that'smaking y'all laugh in here is
gonna make y'all cry, and thenyou see what's happening.
Same thing here.
Now I'm giving y'all warningright here.
The same thing that's makingy'all laugh in here is gonna
make y'all cry.

(25:48):
Mark my words.
See, y'all sit here toocomfortably, thinking that
everything, you know, blackpeople stupid, that we don't
understand what's going on, thatwe're gonna vote blue no matter
who, and all y'all gotta do isuse the race card.
All y'all gotta do is call whitesupreme, the white man.
But we're in a heavilydemocratic city from top to

(26:09):
bottom.
State and city, all Democrats.
So it can we say that theDemocrats are racist white men
or white women?
What who is it?
Because this is what y'all aretelling us.
So I'm letting you all knowChicago flips red.
We are not paying these taxes,we're calling for a boycott on

(26:30):
these taxes.
Nobody is playing this game nomore.
We won't pay our taxes until weget a forensic audit on where
all our money is going.
We're demanding that.
We're asking President Trump tosend the feds here.
30 seconds.
The DOJ here.
We need a forensic audit onwhere our money is going.
We are not paying another noproperty taxes, and we are

(26:53):
calling for a boycott, and we'regoing around to every ward in
the city and calling for it.
You all gonna learn to stopplaying with us, and you all
gonna learn that you all workfor us, and none of these seats
are secure, and we're coming forthose seats, and you can sit
there like you sitting there,like you unbothered, all of you
all, yeah.

SPEAKER_21 (27:10):
But you getting up out of next speaker is the one
thing the the thing that thegovernment cannot calculate, and
while they try to take advantageof it, to great success, by the
way, is your Christian nice,right?
Because one thing that goes withthe Christian is while we will
let you take our money in theform of taxes for welfare to

(27:31):
help out the needy, that youknow, in my neighborhood,
everybody's fed and nobody'sstarving.
So, you know, I want to help thepoor.
So, okay, yeah, take some of mymoney and you can give it to the
inner city, or you can give itto, you know, you know,
Ukrainian or uh starving kids inSudan.
You know what I'm saying?
Like you're weaponizing myChristian nice.
But once we realize that we'vebeen taking advantage of, this
is the other uniquecharacteristics about

(27:53):
Christians.
Yeah, the truth will set youfree, even if it means your
death, right?
That is the thing thatgovernments hate about
Christians, is they are wildlyresilient.
And it's not just Christians,it's people who have that
Christian attitude, right?
It Christianity is a broadstroke, it just means you
believe in truth.

(28:13):
Like I when I read thescriptures, the Christian God is
truth.
Whatever is objectively true, heowns it.
And that's what we uh uh strivefor.
Does that make sense?
So, one of the things about thatis when Christians see an
injustice, and when they reallyknow it in their bones, they
stick with it.
And one of the things in 2020that so many good Americans saw

(28:35):
that paid attention in highschool civics, right, and
actually understandrepresentative government and
democracy and things like that.
They saw an election that didn'tgo right.
And five years in places likeGeorgia, this is what Steve
Bannon's talking about, like adog on the bone, they've been on
it and now they've uncovered allof the fraud.
Nobody can look at that Georgiaelection now with their own

(28:56):
admissions and say that 2020 wascertifiable or that even Joe
Biden won.

SPEAKER_36 (29:01):
And this populist movement is people that prepared
to roll their sleeves up andcommit.
What's your task and purpose?
Well, it's to save thisrepublic.
This republic will be saved.
The heroes in Georgia, and theyare heroes.
Folks, this has been five years.

(29:21):
Five years.
You know how easy it is to quit?
You know how easy it is to say,I just can't do this anymore.
I gotta walk.

SPEAKER_21 (29:27):
Not for a Christian.
Because our God didn't quit andhe carried his burden to the
cross.

SPEAKER_31 (29:35):
All the way.

SPEAKER_21 (29:36):
All the way.
And that is the thing theycannot calculate.
That is the reason thatgovernments, plural, over time
have hated true Christianity.
Because there is no price that'snot worth paying.

SPEAKER_36 (29:51):
I want to play golf, I want to play pickleball, I
want to, you know, take uppickleball, I want to do
something.
But I can't do this anymore.
I can't do it on my spare time,and I'm putting money in for
travel and all that.
I can't do it.
Georgia, which has this bigRepublican apparatus, you got
the RNC, you got all these fatcats running around, and they're
this, they got titles, they'regoing to these conferences,
they're talking, you know, on TVand talking.

(30:12):
No.
This populist movement goes backjust like in the revolution.
It goes back to a collection ofpeople that are just too honry
to give up because they saidthis is not right.

SPEAKER_21 (30:29):
That was and on that alone.
This is not right.
It's like what JD Vance says.
When everyone else gives up, theChristian shows up at the
attic's bedside.

SPEAKER_30 (30:39):
Right?

SPEAKER_21 (30:39):
When everyone else else gives up, this isn't right.
The golden rule.
Do unto others as you've hadthem do have as you would have
them do to you.
That was cheating.
It's not right.
Well, you benefit from it.
You won office.
It's not right.
Well, you benefit from it.
Look at all the jobs that campis bringing in, and you know,
now we've got Hollywood 2.0 overin Atlanta.

(31:00):
I don't know if I want that.
It's not right.

SPEAKER_36 (31:02):
The that's what drove Trump to come back.
And as imperfect as we aretoday, and everything that we're
working on, I realize people arevery frustrated.
It's at least directionally weare moving in the right
direction.
We're not getting enough done,we're not getting enough done
quick enough, and there's somany other problems.
I got that.
But this republic is being savedby the work of these heroes in

(31:27):
Georgia.
If you watch the Fonnie Willisthing over the last couple
weeks, it's it it and it's notgetting any coverage.
Okay, because the mainstreammedia doesn't want to touch it,
because then you're going to theheart of the system.
It's jaw-dropping.
And think about it, she wassending Trump to prison, but she
broke so many people.
Hell, it's one of the reasonsRudy went bankrupt.

(31:48):
Rudy's beautiful, I don't know,16-room apartment in New York
City.
He I think he had to sell anddidn't take any cash out of the
deal because he had to pay itoff to other things.
You folks in Georgia, we'regonna you're simply heroes.
You're exactly like those thatrevolutionary generation that
has come down and had the backof Hamilton and had the back of

(32:11):
Sam Adams and had the back ofJefferson and Washington and the
militias and the smallcontinental army.
It's just incredible.
And it's when you look at whatwent on, it is so awful on so
many other levels.
And that's why just with HarmieDillon, these guys, I realize
you gotta go to court andthere's rules and send the

(32:32):
frickin' marshals down there andjust grab the ballots.
It's time now you gotta takehard action.
These people are five years havebeen hammered away.
You people are heroes, you'reAmerican heroes.
You tie directly back throughevery patriot's grave to the
revolutionary generation.
That's simply what's gonna savethis country, not TikTok, not

(32:54):
influences, not no, no, no, no,no.
You this is the this is themanifestation of populism.

SPEAKER_21 (33:04):
It's the manifestation of populism,
specifically Christian populism,right?
We are a Christian nation.
Whether or not you're a churchattender, whether or not you
have any dogmatic beliefs oranything like that, it's just
simply an allegiance to thetruth, which is the avatar of
the Christian God.
That's the point.
It's the creator incarnate, it'struth itself, right?

(33:26):
Above all everything else, abovenation, above tribe, above
family.
You know, I come to dividefather against son and sister
against mother, right?
It's like he comes because truthis a sword.
That is what we have to takeinto account, each and every one
of us.
What can you do today?

(33:46):
I don't know.
Maybe homeschooling your kids.
Maybe that's the answer.
Pull them out of theindoctrination so you don't
contribute in mass to societalcancer, right?
Maybe um reevaluate how you payyour taxes, become really good
at tax avoidance.
You know, I don't want toencourage tax evasion, right?

SPEAKER_31 (34:04):
But we're seriously considered not putting our
daughter in school because wewitness and recognize that she
is full of life, has such avibrant spirit, and we just know
that the kids just get broken.

SPEAKER_22 (34:18):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_31 (34:18):
They get broken like you break a horse.
One of the people go throughthat system.

SPEAKER_21 (34:22):
One of the things I am most proud of is the fact
that we have homeschooled ourkids.
And I'm one of the most thingsI'm most grateful for is that
the people, plural, literallyhundreds of people, came to my
wife's aid while I was in prisonso that she could continue to
homeschool while I was there.
And I know because people sentmessages like that's more
important, you know.

SPEAKER_31 (34:42):
Yeah, so I might need some notes for me on how to
do that.

SPEAKER_21 (34:45):
Yeah, well, she's the one to ask.
I'm I I just pay the bills.
But again, you know, what canyou do?
I don't know.
Find your truth, find the thingthat you're willing to take to
the end and go do it.
Um, one of the things that'sgoing on, you know, in regards
to this big, huge grandconspiracy case, right?
This treason on America is uhJohn Brennan is the target of

(35:08):
this grand jury down in Florida.
Well, his attorneys are big mad.
They don't like it.
So they wrote a letter to uh,let's see, who'd they write the
letter to?
Judge Cecilia M.
Altonega, who is a judge thatwas appointed by George W.
Bush.

SPEAKER_30 (35:24):
Okay.

SPEAKER_21 (35:25):
Dear Chief Judge Altonega, we write you this
letter to uh to honor to yourhonor, in your capacity as Chief
Judge of the United StatesDistrict Court of the Southern
District of Florida.
And then it says, uh, on behalfof our client John Brennan, the
former director of the CentralIntelligence Agency, we have
been formally advised byprosecutors of the United States
Attorney for the SouthernDistrict of Florida that

(35:46):
Director Brennan is the targetof a grand jury investigation in
the Miami Division, which isexamining the circumstances or
surrounding the production ofthe 2017 intelligence community
assessment about Russian effortsto interfere in the 2016
presidential elections.
As explained below, it's becomeclear that a regular activity is
taking place now.
When you can't go after thefacts, what do you do?
Go after the venue, go after thejurisdiction.

(36:08):
This is the James Comey play.
Oh, Halligan was not lawfullyappointed, therefore the whole
case gets thrown out.
Gosh, wouldn't I have loved tohave that enterprise in January
6th?
Yeah.
Hey, I'm not from DC.
You don't have jurisdiction.
Yeah, right.
Right, is taking place inconnection with the grand jury
investigation, which isaffecting our clients' rights to

(36:28):
a fair and partial treatment bythe criminal justice system.
One example is the violation ofgrand jury's secrecy rules by
the information about theinvestigation as being leaked to
the media.
All big sad, because you becauseyou guys never leak nothing to
the media.
Oh no.
Another example of irregularactivity, which is even more
troubling and potentiallyharmful to our clients' rights,

(36:48):
relates to the government'sapparent effort to manipulate
grand jury, the manipulate grandjury and case assessment
procedures to ensure that theinvestigation and any resulting
prosecution will be overseen bya particular district judge of
its presence.
I thought this wasn't possiblein our system, Ron.
I was told for years, every timeTrump got indicted, well, a
grand jury did it.

(37:09):
Well, you know, I mean the rulesare so perfect.
I mean, the whole system'sdesigned to avoid any
shenanigans.
There can't be judge shopping.
Oh, I don't know how JudgeBoseburg gets all of these
illegal immigration cases, evenwhen he's not on duty at 3 a.m.
I don't know how that works.
It's crazy.
Given our corrosive effect ofjudge shopping on the perceived

(37:31):
fairness and impartiality of thecriminal justice system,
particularly when conducted by afederal prosecutor, we wish to
alert the court to the evidenceunderlying our concern and as
counsel to the identified targetof the investigation who has
legal standing to challengequestionable, questionable
prosecutorial conduct and thehandling of the investigation.
We request your honor tocarefully consider the evidence.
And then it just goes on tobasically say, please, please,

(37:53):
please shut down the grand jury.
Matt Gates addresses this entireRussia-Gate thing in a very
articulate way here.
There's a couple pinch points.
Okay.
A couple things had to happenthat when you understand them in
their context, you go, just likethe people down in Georgia,

(38:13):
that's not right.
Like something's wrong aboutthat thing that had to happen.
Something had to happen thatisn't right.
There's a handful of thesemoments through the Russia Gate
and then onto Ukraine gate andonto the can't quite put your
finger on it.
You can't quite put your fingeron it, but you're like,
something had to not bepatriotic.
Something had to not be true.
Something's wrong here.
And Matt Gates points out one ofthese things with regard to a

(38:36):
guy named Professor Misfood,who, if for those that are deep
into the Russia Gate thing, youknow he was kind of one of the
ones that was letting certainpeople know that there was uh
some hairiness with Russia andTrump.

SPEAKER_22 (38:49):
And how did he know those things?
I had a recent conversation withCIA director John Ratcliffe,
where and I like John, but I Ichastised him for not answering
some of these like fundamentalquestions.
Joseph Miffsod was thisprofessor who was drawn into an
intelligence operation againstthe United States.
He was drawn into that operationeither by the United States or

(39:10):
one of our allies.
How do we not know the answer tothat question?

SPEAKER_21 (39:13):
Now, one of the things about Misfoot is he
disappeared.
He went into the wind.
This guy that was easilyaccessible Cambridge University
professor just gone.
Like for four years, nobodycould find him.
No private investigator can findhim.
But people thought he'd beenkilled.
Did he retire?

SPEAKER_22 (39:30):
No.
He was in hiding.
This was the this was the keything that that uh we said we
were gonna uncover when we gotpower.
And uh I know they got a lot ofwork to do to keep the country
safe, but I would encourage thedirector of the CIA to really
tell us the CIA's roles.
What's the answer?
Do you think?
Well, I believe that uh some ofthis crowd in the Obama

(39:52):
administration knew that theirdirect management of an asset
against the Trump administrationwould create paperwork,
payments.
You know, complicating thingsthat could be found out.
And so they went to other uhother European countries and
said, you know, you do us afavor, we do you a favor, but
the favor we want from you isactually to go against our
country, our presidentialcandidate, Donald Trump.

(40:14):
And that is treasonous.
That is straight treason to askanother country to attack your
country.
Uh, and I think that occurred.
And I think that if we knew uhwho had authorized that, we we
would have a person to be at thecenter of this Prater Rico
conspiracy.

SPEAKER_17 (40:31):
Yeah.
And it traditionally it's beenBritain and France who play that
role.
Um huge intel presence in Italyas well.

SPEAKER_21 (40:38):
Which is where it actually came from.
That's where Mystic was out of.
So what's the consequences fortreason?
I've been told this many timesonline, because you know, I was
I don't know, but I would assumeit's death.
It's pretty gnarly.
Yeah.
Death is on the table, right?

SPEAKER_31 (40:54):
Okay.

SPEAKER_21 (40:55):
So our government, somebody in the intelligence
agencies asked somebody toattack our country on behalf of
a political narrative, not inthe interest of the United
States.

SPEAKER_31 (41:07):
Obviously.

SPEAKER_21 (41:09):
Good reason to go into hiding, good reason to
disappear, good reason to bark,bark, bark, good reason to stick
with the story till the endbecause you can't just go, oh,
Mia Koopa, sorry.
That's just a little lighttreason.
We do it every day.
We were also doing it againstHillary, Ted Cruz, and others.
Like, do you see what I'msaying?

SPEAKER_31 (41:25):
Locale treason.

SPEAKER_21 (41:26):
Yeah, it's just local, it's just low, whatever.
You know, it's not like me whereI'm like, I was trying to
redress my grievances at theCapitol with elected officials
where they're at, right?
Oh, no, that's treason.
No, I was trying to exerciseFirst Amendment.
This dark alley stuff going overto another country and getting
their intelligence apparatus tobe weaponized against the United
States.

(41:46):
That's like, huh.
I wonder, I wonder what BenedictArnold would have to say about
this.
You know what I'm saying?
Another situation, too, andagain, you know, keep your
friends close and your enemiescloser.
Uh, this is Todd Blanche, who'sthe number two at the Department
of Justice.
He's the deputy director of theDOJ.
And there's been a lot ofcomplaints with from people like
Peter Ticton and Patrick Byrneand many others that Todd

(42:09):
Blanche is kind of holding up alot of accountability.
He literally became a Republicanafter Trump was elected, right?
Like he's been a Democrat hiswhole life, but he defended
Trump up in New York, which alot of people say, yeah, that's
the one where he got convicted.
And then after he was convicted,well, my client is a convicted
felon now.
It's like, you're in appeals.
You're never supposed to saythat, right?
So there's kind of some thingsthat kind of make you go, that's

(42:30):
a little weird.
And as Peter Ticklin said, therelationship that a defendant
and a defense attorney get ummight be giving Trump some blind
spots.
Who knows?
But one of the things that'scome out now is Todd Blanche
happened to work for SequoiaCapital.
Now, does that name soundfamiliar at all?

(42:50):
Yes.
Some of Sequoia Cap some ofCapital's China's problematic
public, publicly knownpartnerships with Chinese
companies, which are set tocontinue even after the split,
include investments in EverSec,a Chinese company developing AI
for the People's LiberationArmy, warning platforms, helping
raise$700 million for FourParadigm, a Chinese company
building AI PLA platforms,investments in DJI, a Chinese

(43:11):
drone maker that facilitatesCCP's surveillance and genocide
of Uyghur Muslims in China'sXinjiang region, investments in
D Glint Deep Glint, a Chinesefacial recognition firm
blacklisted by the U.S.
government, investments infundraising for Bite Dance,
TikTok, and as many as 40investments in Chinese
semiconductor.
And here it is.

(43:31):
He worked for Hogshan Capital,formerly Sequoia Capital China,
controversy centers oninvestments in sensitive tech
firms, AI drones, and all thisother kind of stuff.
So you've got national securityrisk, human rights risks, lack
of transparency, support to CCP,and Todd Blanche was their
attorney.
And by the way, Sequoia Capitalis where Dominion voting

(43:55):
machines came from.
They were the precursor toDominion, kind of like Liberty
is now the you know what I mean?
So that's the number two at theDOJ.
That's the one who doesn't wantJ6ers to get compensated.
That's the one that doesn't wantto that wants to kind of slow
roll Tina Peters getting out.
He's got tie-ins that should belooked at.

(44:16):
We should at least be aware of,you know what I mean?

SPEAKER_31 (44:18):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_21 (44:19):
Um here is down in Georgia.
This is last year.
There was a lawsuit.
So this is 2024.
This is not new, Liz Harrington.
Um it's not new.
This is from 2024.
And this was again all thosepatriots down in Georgia that
just would not give up this 2020election stuff.
Where did these ballots comefrom?

(44:39):
Where did the tabulators comefrom?
And for a long time, the peoplewho have been into the machine
fraud have been told to shut up,right?
Paper ballots, insecure mail-inballots, those are the places we
need to look.
Well, when you understand howthe machines sit at the pinnacle
of it, all the other ways theycheat are just ways to update
the paper to match the cheat.

(45:00):
Does that make sense?
Yes.
Well, these are two computerscientists in their capacity as
expert witnesses as well asauditors that came in into
Georgia and looked at things,and they have some pretty
revelatory things to say aboutthe system.
Imagine voting on systems thateverybody looks you in the eyes
and tells you are just totallyfine, above board, not connected
to the internet.
Don't worry about it.

(45:21):
I mean, how hard is it totabulate?
Imagine being told that and thenhearing this.

SPEAKER_07 (45:27):
And it's your understanding that Georgia
Dominion equipment is notconnected to the internet,
right?
That's incorrect.
So you believe Dominion votingsystem components in Georgia are
connected to the voting?

SPEAKER_39 (45:40):
Some unrelated Dominion documentation.
I can specifically tell you thatthere was there is connection.

SPEAKER_07 (45:48):
Which county in Georgia was there a connection
for to the internet of Dominionequipment?

SPEAKER_39 (45:54):
It would be Gwyneth if I'm remembering correctly.
There were several statesinvolved.
And which time period are youreferring to?
This was 2020.

SPEAKER_07 (46:04):
Before or after the election.

SPEAKER_39 (46:07):
During the election.

SPEAKER_50 (46:11):
In your examination before or after during any of
these dominion systems, uh, haveyou seen any indication of
non-election personnel remotelyaccessing a Dominion system?

SPEAKER_47 (46:30):
Yes.

SPEAKER_50 (46:31):
Can you tell us about that?

SPEAKER_47 (46:32):
I too have reviewed a uh a series of emails uh
produced by Dominion in whichthey're discussing promoting
into Gwyneth County, Georgia.

SPEAKER_07 (46:43):
You also mentioned Dominion remotely collect
connecting to election systems,but you don't have any evidence
that occurred in Georgia,correct?

SPEAKER_39 (46:53):
There was one county.
I've seen a lot of Dominionemails.
I've had to translate Dominionemails from Serbian to English
to verify the technicalquestions I was being asked
about them, to verify that itwas translated properly.

SPEAKER_07 (47:07):
So it's your testimony that there is there is
evidence of Dominion remotelyaccessing Georgia election
equipment?

SPEAKER_39 (47:18):
Yes, on the one county.
It was included with stuff thatI was researching and reading
through, considering Colorado.
Michigan was also involved, andthere were other ones.

SPEAKER_50 (47:29):
To your understanding, is Dominion able
uh to remotely connect to theseelection systems?

SPEAKER_39 (47:40):
Yes.

SPEAKER_50 (47:41):
Are they able to do that without detection?

SPEAKER_39 (47:45):
Yes.

SPEAKER_50 (47:46):
And are you aware of any instances in which that has
occurred?
Yes.
Can you identify thoseinstances?

SPEAKER_39 (47:57):
One would be the Denver Colorado server.
Was granted or requested togrant Belgrade, only Belgrade.
I did search.
There is a Belgrade, Montana,again, while so Belgrade,
Serbia, obviously, right?
When Montana need to connectinto a Colorado file transfer

(48:18):
server as part of the electionsystem.
And there are other componentsand things that were done in the
background concerning thedatabase and the configure of
the database server that stilldo not have an engineering
change order because if somebodyworks in an operational
environment for a lot ofdifferent things, but I will
tell you is sometimes thingsbreak or you have a problem and
you have to fix it.

(48:38):
And you you submit a changerequest, or in this case an
engineering change order that'sretroactive, right?
Like I work.
You want to go back and makesure that you record the process
so that you have changemanagement and integrity of the
system.
If you do not record changes,you lead yourself down a very
bad road.

SPEAKER_21 (48:58):
And they didn't record the changes, but they saw
the changes.
We the the election thing is oneof those topics that's so big
that you couldn't cover it.
It's too big to cover, right?
40,000 affidavits in one state,20,000 in another, witness
testimony like this.
I can't even remember whatcounty this was in, but there

(49:18):
was some small precinct thathad, you know, 179 registered
voters.
It's one of those precinctswhere you go vote at the vote go
vote at the local elementaryschool gymnasium, right?
There's 179 voters, and there'slike a town council and a
husband and wife, one of them isrunning for one of these
offices, and they both voted forthemselves or whichever who was

(49:40):
ever running.
Sure.
And when the election tally cameout, they had zero votes.
And they're like, Well, we knowthat our cousin and our
neighbor, they all promised tovote for us, and we're damn
certain we voted for ourselves.
So they went to the county andthey said, Hey, we voted, and
we're showing a zero on the onthe tabulator.
And so they said, Oh, so theyran it again, and it still ran
zero, but it gave it a differentoutput again.

(50:02):
So then when it gave a differentoutput than before and zero, and
they confirmed there wereballots with their name checked
off, then they did a hand countand realized that they had won
the election.
Not zero votes, Ron, won theelection.
Yeah, I kind of think that's howall of them are going.
And it was a tiny little county,right?
And it was a tiny little countywhere the election officials

(50:23):
were like, we can just countthem right now.
And they did, and they werelike, What are these machines
doing?
Right.
It was that there was DanPerino, OAN used to be on cable
news.
One American News Network, OANN,was on cable news.
It was on Direct TV, DishNetwork.
I could tune in at my house.
They showed Matt Perino up inMichigan with a machine, and he

(50:45):
put in 10 ballots and he got outa result that was different.
The next day, their licensinggot pulled, and they lost their
contracts with DirecTV and DishNetwork and Comcast, and now
they're an internet streamingservice.

SPEAKER_31 (51:00):
Crazy.

SPEAKER_21 (51:03):
Everything doesn't matter.
Nothing matters in ourgovernment.
Everything is fake if theelections are rigged.
Everything is fake.

SPEAKER_31 (51:13):
And I tend to believe that if we did a hand
count in every county, we wouldhave very similar results.

SPEAKER_21 (51:20):
We want to believe that, right?
But we have to be conscientiousthat this has been happening so
long.
And this is why we have familymembers who have TDS syndrome.
This is why we see people still,five years after COVID, wearing
masks in their cars alone.
Well, they've been gaslit.
We cannot outvote anindoctrinated society that

(51:41):
thinks that whatever this is isgood.
Right.
Or that that whatever we'redoing to fight the system is
somehow making the system notwork correctly and be perfect
and utopic.

SPEAKER_31 (51:50):
Some of us have been gaslit to death.

SPEAKER_21 (51:52):
Yes.
We've been gaslit to the pointthat we don't trust our own
shadow.

SPEAKER_31 (51:56):
Yes.

SPEAKER_21 (51:57):
Right?
Which is why, as peasants, I saysometimes, when is it a good
time to fight and die for Rome?
The answer is never.
There was never a good moment inhistory where it was honorable
and you went to heaven becauseyou died in Rome's name.
It is always a good time tofight for truth.
Those are the names that echothrough history.
It is always a good time to sitdown with your family, to build

(52:18):
connections, right?
To be a peasant.
It is always a good time to workthe land.
Okay.
Those are noble, honorablethings.
When we're talking about thegovernment, we need to bring the
government back into shape.
And how do we do that?
By being persistent, bycontinuing to talk about this
stuff.
There's another story just uh,this was just yesterday.

(52:39):
FBI rated Secret Service AgentHome and Tax Frage probe.
Now, you know, anybody who knowsme, I'm not like pay your taxes.
But here you go.
FBI rated uh Secret Serviceagents home in a tax fraud case,
allegation smack of similarfraudulent charitable ploy to
help poor youth as in Minnesota.
So some Secret Service agent isat the center of this.

(53:00):
This is bigger than the 2012Colombian prostitution scandal,
one source told RCP.
Now, one of the significantthings is this person happened
to be on JD Vance's protectiondetail.
So we're trusting someone toprotect a guy that's a heartbeat
away from the presidency withhis protection and care, who is
committing fraud on thegovernment.

(53:21):
So where do his real interestslie?
Self-preservation, maybe?
If somebody came to him andsaid, hey, it'd be really sad if
uh, you know, JD Vance didn'tget assassinated because you
know your taxes might get leakedor something like that.
Do you see how bad this gets?
Right?
You talk about a PraetorianGuard in Rome and how the

(53:41):
Praetorian Guard picked who theRoman generals were because they
were the ones who could protectthem.
Well, if your Praetorian Guardis corrupt, if your elections
are bogus, if you've got deepstaters that won't tell us about
aliens and UFOs.

SPEAKER_31 (53:55):
Your foundation is built on sand.

SPEAKER_21 (53:56):
Your foundation's built on sand, exactly.
So, anyways, uh the allegedscheme, the agent accepted
donations for a charity thatpurports to help inner city
youth and victims of domesticviolence, but didn't provide the
services it reported to the IRS,according to several
knowledgeable sources in theSecret Service community.
The raid, which took place on onor around December 8th, was the
culmination of more than a yearof work by the joint FBI IRS

(54:17):
investigation services, um ofwhom contributed to the
nonprofit at the center of theprobe, which is run by an agent
on Vance's DTEL.
The Secret Service has placedthe agent on unpaid
administrative leave andsuspended his security
clearance.
Signs that the agency considersthe potential crimes and
misconduct extremely serious,even though the individual has
not been arrested, according tosources familiar with the case.
So somebody on JD Vance'sProtective T Tell was taking

(54:42):
money from for charity and notusing it for charity.
What is that called, Ron?
Fraud.
Uh-huh.
It's also called a payoff.
It's a payoff.
Okay.
Hey, I've got I've got a way toget you money.
And since you don't have toactually use it on charity, it's
just a bookkeeping entry, butit's a payoff, it's a bribe.

(55:03):
This guy's in secret service.
There is no government entityyou can trust, man.
Now, something that reallybreaks my heart and is part of
the reason why charity sittingdown in a hole.
Stairs totally sinks over time.
One of the things that happened,uh, Douglas Wire says, I prefer

(55:26):
to suffer on the side of truththan to benefit from a lie.
Yeah, I think we would all liketo say that until we run into
it, right?
Until it, until the truthactually requires you to take
affirmative action.
That's when the real siftinghappens.
Right.
It's easy to support people, butto actually be in the arena.
Okay.
So here's a guy, Kyle Seraphim.
Now I've got beef with KyleSeraphim for one reason or

(55:48):
another, but I recognize him asa fellow fellow warrior.
I've got beef with Dan Bongino,but I recognize him as a fellow
warrior.
Dan Bongino got a position ofpower.
Cash Patel got a position ofpower.
And despite some of my, youknow, uh huh, I've seen where
they go.
Like Dan Bongino would not talkabout 2020 election, wouldn't
talk about it.
Came around on the pipe bomberissue, but wouldn't talk about

(56:11):
the 2020 election.
You see what I'm saying?
For some reason.
For some reason.
For some reason.
It could just be because, hey, Iwant to keep my show.
I want to stay on the air and Ican do more good not talking
about it than talking about it.
I accept, I accept those things.
I recognize our show is small,probably because we venture into
these topics.
There's other J6ers that aredoing podcasts.

(56:32):
I saw one guy up on stage withSteve Bannon, and I was like, if
only they knew who that personwas.
And I'm like, huh.
But who am I to judge?
Right?
Because we're all imperfectvessels.
I've got, I mean, I'm in aperfect vessel.
Anyways, Kyle Seraphim uh istalking is going to be talking
about Steve Baker.

(56:52):
Steve Baker's the guy whoreleased the Blaze story,
pointing the finger at a CapitolHill police officer as possibly
being the pipe bomber.
A couple weeks later, we end upwith Brian Cole, the nearly
blind, autistic kid with shortlegs and no limp, sitting in
prison, fingered for the pipebomb story.
And obviously, this starts tokind of set people like Steve

(57:13):
Baker and others who were onthis story and really thought
they had it down, and even hadintelligence services of one
flavor or another saying this isone of our guys, right?
And this is going to be a bigdeal.
And all of a sudden, FBI snapsto action and we got a guy.
And you get Piro and Bondi andCash and Who am I missing?

(57:34):
Bongino Bongino, all on stage.
This is our man.
You guys are happy.
What a great birthday present toDan Bongino, right?

SPEAKER_31 (57:40):
And then uh me and you are both like, what?

SPEAKER_21 (57:42):
What?
What?
What exactly?
Well, Steve Baker's in thehospital this morning.

SPEAKER_11 (57:48):
Oh.
Second, and we're running alittle bit late here on the
program.
So I appreciate your patience.
If you're watching live and ifyou're listening in the replay,
you didn't know any better, butwe're about 20 minutes late.
And the fact of the matter is,is I woke up this morning and
had a message from about 4 a.m.
local time, my time, that wasfrom my friend out on the East
Coast, my buddy Steve Baker,who's been investigating the

(58:10):
pipe bomber case and uh tryingto get to the truth about
January 6th, which we do believewas a real and uh it was a real
serious conspiracy.
And there were a lot of plepeople in play in various
different parts of it.
And he's now in the hospital.
He called me on Fridayafternoon.
I don't even know if he wants mesaying this, but I'm saying it

(58:32):
anyway, because this is thedeal.
He called me on Friday, he wasworried about his own safety,
said he was heading home to hisfamily, and uh he got some
disconcerting news, which Iwon't be real specific about for
now.
But Steve knows things, Stevehas information that is going to

(58:52):
rattle, but has rattled peoplethat have been trying to keep a
story quiet for the last fiveyears.
The FBI has been complicit incovering it up.
The people that are so loved atthe top of the FBI are complicit
in covering this thing up.
They've been aggressive andactively going out there to
silence voices, including mine,including Steve Baker's,

(59:13):
including Steve Friends.
And I want you to considersomething.
They hired and fired my friendsspecifically because we think we
interviewed in a jointinterview, the American Radical
Podcast and the uh the KyleSerafim show joint interview
with Joe Hanneman, talking aboutthe the inability of the federal
government to go and try to pinthis all on a training exercise

(59:35):
after all these years, and thencoming out with a real suspect
who's now worked for the secondfederal agency and now moved
into the intelligence community.
If you think this stuff is notrelated, that's on you.
That's fine.
I don't believe in coincidences.
I don't think they happen.
Certainly not at this.
I don't think my friend calls meup and says that he's concerned

(59:57):
about safety, and then turnsaround.
And a day and a half later, twodays later, is in the hospital
for something that he didn'thave a pre-existing condition,
that has never been diagnosed,it's never come up in his 60s.
So pray for Steve Baker.
Please.
Pray for our nation right now.

SPEAKER_21 (01:00:16):
Yeah.
Pray for Steve Baker, pray forour nation.
This sat kind of heavy with me.
Because I get people every daythat say, Well, you should do
this, or you should do that, oryou should do this.
And I'm like, guys, I'm in abox.
I know where I can stand and Iknow where I'm safe, but I'm in

(01:00:36):
a box.
I'm on the list.
Right?
Whatever list exists of peopleto eliminate, of people whose
voices need to be silenced, I'mon that list.
My wife assumes that I am Yeah,by association, right?

SPEAKER_31 (01:00:50):
So for me, I'm like She hates that I'm on this
podcast at all.

SPEAKER_21 (01:00:55):
Yeah.
And a lot of people are like,why don't you do this?
Why don't you do that?
Why don't you put ads?
It was like because I need astrong support base because I
know when they come and if theywill, who knows if they will,
it's the people that will carryyou through.
It's the real world connections.
And that's what I'm trying tobuild with you guys here in the
chats.
You know, so many of you guysknow who I am in real life.
So many of you guys see my dailywalk, right?

(01:01:17):
Yeah, I'd love to go viral anddo something sensational or
whatever.
But at the same time, it's likeI don't want the attention.
I want the truth.
I want people to take action onthe truth.
I want, I want the words of thispodcast to echo, right?
That was one of the beautifulthings by shutting the podcast
down for four years and watchingpeople who still would reference

(01:01:38):
the podcast in prison lettersthat they'd send to me and how
they had taken action in theirlife to do XYZ.
It echoed because the messageresonated.
We're peasants.
We have to live here.
We have to take care ofourselves.
We have to hold governmentaccountable.
We have to get involved in anyway we can.
And sometimes being involved,the highest and best use of a

(01:02:00):
stay-at-home mom is justhomeschool your kids.
That's the best thing you can dofor the country.
You know what I mean?
For some people, it's go to yourlocal uh political meeting and
get involved.
For some people, it's doorknocking.
For some people, it's, you know,many different things.
But it's like you have to takecontrol, affirmative action.
That's what I want to echo.

SPEAKER_31 (01:02:18):
And some people, all they can do is is find a quiet
spot and pray.
And if that's all you can do,then do it.

SPEAKER_21 (01:02:25):
Then do it, right?
But the point of this wholething is these are real people
that have real power and realmoney, and they have long since
lost any caring for you.
It is beyond my comprehension totake someone off the chessboard.
I can't even fathom what thosedecisions would look like.
I can't even fathom asking anintelligence contractor overseas

(01:02:49):
to attack my own country becauseI don't want Donald Trump in
office.
So madness.
You know what I mean?
I can't even fathom this stuff.
I can't even fathom working forthe Secret Service and taking
payoffs that are funneledthrough nonprofits, therefore
tax exempt, tax-free, blah,blah, blah, blah, and not

(01:03:10):
helping kids with the money.
I can't even fathom that.

SPEAKER_31 (01:03:14):
I think 10 years ago, I would have pictured in my
mind if you worked in the StateDepartment or you worked for
Foreign Service, or if you were,you know, any member of the
government, you were like stakepresident quality.

SPEAKER_21 (01:03:29):
Yeah, you were you know you know what I'm talking
about.
Yes.
That like you'd been vetted,your background had been gone
through, you know what I mean?
And turns out that's actuallythe opposite.
Right.
I would take a small businessowner running a construction
company.
I bet their books are waycleaner than any of our Fortune
500s.
You know what I mean?
Because oh, there's thatbookkeeping air, but that's

(01:03:51):
okay.
We got the guy at the SEC paidoff, so they overlooked it.
And you know, once you get pasta few years, it's kind of you
know beyond the statute oflimitations.
They live in that world, right?
It's another thing forcompletely for someone who's
living in private and has no jobaffiliation or income stream
coming from government to belike, oh my taxes are like, you
know what I mean?
Like, yeah, you're not in it.

(01:04:12):
But for someone that actuallyworks for the government and
takes that paycheck, you knowwhat I mean?
Like, when in Rome, do as theRomans.
You're gonna play the game, playthe game.
If you take an oath to thenation, honor the oath.
You know, the whole point of theoath is it's unenforceable.
I went over this in prison withguys all the time.

SPEAKER_16 (01:04:26):
The judges are denying their oath.

SPEAKER_21 (01:04:28):
They don't even have an oath on it.
Let's look up oath in the legaldictionary.
It's enforced by God.
So I feel sorry for peoplewho've taken an oath and then
violate it because yourretribution by virtue of the
oath does not come here.
Okay, it does not come here.
It's gonna be a sad day someday.

(01:04:48):
It's gonna be a sad day someday.
And sometimes as Christians, wewe think we're deluded in
believing that, but it's it'sall we have to hold on to
sometimes.

SPEAKER_30 (01:04:55):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_21 (01:04:57):
Justice is not mine, it's his, God's, the truth.
Truth has an interesting way ofdoing what it does.
One of the best books I everread was Count of Monte Cristo,
right?
The Hand of Providence.
And that's what I see in manyways, Donald Trump.
He's kind of like the Count, theHand of Providence.
All right, this is AnnaKasparian from the Young Turks
fame.
And over time, slowly butsurely, it's like we live in

(01:05:19):
this uh failure to launch erawhere people don't actually go
get their first job and ownproperty and things until
they're a little bit later inlife.
So the conversion from you knowprogressive liberal to
conservative takes a little bitlonger.
But she's been living in LA andshe actually got assaulted on
the street by a homeless man,right?
And that made her go, it madeher look at the homeless crisis

(01:05:40):
and all these people in needthat she's been walking by, and
she was proud to pay her taxesbecause they were being helped.
Well, turns out she did a littlebit of digging, and it might not
be happening that way.

SPEAKER_10 (01:05:50):
We spent$13 billion in Los Angeles alone last year
to combat homelessness.
You want to know where thatmoney went?
That money went to these trashnonprofits who have a bunch of
executives making half a milliondollars.

SPEAKER_21 (01:06:03):
You know, like JD Vance's Secret Service Security
Detail.
Do you see how this all tiestogether?

SPEAKER_31 (01:06:10):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_21 (01:06:11):
This is why I say it.
There are no laws, there areonly cops.
There's only enforcement.
That's all there is.
And if people aren't enforcingthis stuff, then it doesn't
exist.
The Somali crisis, the Mainecrisis, the cartel problems, the
drugs, the open borders, thehomelessness, they all tie
together.

(01:06:31):
They all have a guy in some spotgetting paid, some wheel getting
greased, something's happening.
You know, oh hey, we've gotwelfare.
Give us your money to feed thekids.
Horrible food made by Frito Lay.
Wonderful.
And we won't make any arrests.
And we won't make any arrestsbecause we designed it this way.

SPEAKER_10 (01:06:48):
A year.
You're working for a nonprofitdealing with homelessness.
That's my money.
That's my parents' money.
Okay?
That is the hardworking peopleof California paying incredibly
high taxes that go to what?
So yeah, I'm sick of it.
I'm sick of it.
And honestly, just experiencingwhat I've seen on the ground in
California has made me questiona lot about left-wing ideology.

SPEAKER_21 (01:07:12):
We spent you know, silver went to$70 yesterday.
What?
$70.
Ron, when did I tell you to getinto silver?

SPEAKER_31 (01:07:19):
Uh, I think it was about$30.

SPEAKER_21 (01:07:21):
Uh-huh.
So you've missed out on ahundred and whatever percent
increase because you're stillhanging on to the dollar.
Why?
Because they're using thedollar, they're inflating it
away by paying for homelessnesscrisis, food benefits for people
for you know, kids in Somalia,ISIS terror groups, and all that
kind of stuff.
Guys, it's not just your taxbill for those of you that file

(01:07:43):
a 1041 EZ and get all your moneyback because you're actually
poor and broke.
The truth, yeah, right?
If you're getting all your moneyback, it's not because you're
doing well.

SPEAKER_31 (01:07:53):
No, you're broke.

SPEAKER_21 (01:07:54):
You're broke.
You just don't know it becauseof the ski the way the scheme's
set up.
But you're paying for it in yourprice of eggs, your price of
steak, all the different itdoesn't matter.
That's your money being griftedaway, and the homeless crisis is
still there.
I mean, the amazing thing, likein Seattle, where they're like,
we're spending like$197,000 perhomeless person.
I know, it's crazy.

(01:08:14):
You just give it to them as asalary and they would qualify
for a home in Seattle.
You know what I mean?
You could buy a house year one.
Yeah, it's like the amount ofmoney we're spending per
homeless person and gettingnowhere.
And it goes the same thing withthe defense agencies, right?
We need national defense, weneed it.
This is our country, those areour borders that we've
established, and we want the setof rules in here to be different

(01:08:38):
than the set of rules out there,right?
We don't like pirates, we likeCoast Guard.
Ultimately, they're kind of thesame thing, but we like our
pirates, right?
My gang.
There are no laws, there areonly cops, and I like it when
the cops like me, okay?
And I like it when they like myway of life.
So even the defense contractors,the people we pay to keep us

(01:08:59):
safe, they've got some problemstoo.

SPEAKER_32 (01:09:01):
To allies or to ourselves.
Takes too long.
The only way they're going to beable to deliver them is if they
build new plants.
They don't want to build newplants because that's expensive.
So we're going to be discussingproduction schedules.
We're going to be discussingCapEx spending.
We'll be discussing the um thepay to executives where they're

(01:09:23):
making$45 and$50 million a yearand not being able to build
quickly.
They're going to make that kindof money.
They have to build quickly.

SPEAKER_21 (01:09:30):
So these defense contractors have been taking
these huge contracts, andthere's been, you know, high
compensation, and then theycan't fulfill on their
obligations because they can'tgo to market because they didn't
invest in a factory, and so theystill have these open contracts.

SPEAKER_31 (01:09:44):
Maybe because they didn't have enough capital,
because they were taking bigsalaries.

SPEAKER_21 (01:09:56):
Okay.
And so we need you to buildthem, but we're going to have to
start micromanaging where thatmoney's going.

SPEAKER_32 (01:10:02):
Again, we make the best equipment in the world, but
they don't make them fastenough.
And we're going to be alsodiscussing dividends.
We want the dividends to go intothe creation of production
facilities.
So we'll be uh talking about allcapex dividends and the pay.
We're also going to be talkingabout buybacks.

(01:10:24):
They spend so much money onbuybacks.
They want to buy back theirstock.

SPEAKER_21 (01:10:27):
I don't want them to buy back their stock.
I want them Yeah, so we pay thema government contract, and what
do they do with the money?
Instead of building a factory,they buy back their own stock
and do high executivecompensation.

SPEAKER_32 (01:10:36):
To put the money in plant and equipment so they can
build these planes fast,rapidly.
Like immediately.
I mean, I I have sold moreplanes than any president by far
times probably twenty.

SPEAKER_21 (01:10:53):
Every time I go someplace I sell a hundred
planes that include he'sliterally outpaced Boeing's
capacity to make them, which islike you're gonna have to build
more factories.
They're like, but we had a stockbuyback schedule.
Some of these big defensecontractors have publicly stated
they want to go private again.
They want to buy back enoughstock to go private, right?

(01:11:13):
So that they're not asaccountable.
That's scary.
That's scary.
Uh Tiff Time says puddle piratesin reference to the Coast Guard.
Now, uh one of our listeners isretired Coast Guard, right?
I love the Coast Guard.
They're like, we've talked aboutthis before, they're a military
service branch that are likelegit non-combat arms, national

(01:11:34):
defense.
I love the Coast Guard, right?
They're gonna be there in yourtime of need.
More than any other branch.
The Army ain't going up to theBering Strait to pull you out of
the ocean.
So one of the things we have tobe conscientious of is I believe
there is a significant spotlighton the election machines, the
election apparatus.
Donald Trump has teased out thatwe're gonna have more and more

(01:11:54):
information coming out about theelections.
Beware of the replacementgimmicks.
Okay, there are going to bereplacement gimmicks.
There's gonna be, they're gonnawant to go to different types of
machines.
They're gonna want to, oh, we'regonna recertify them this way or
the other.
Beware of that.
One of the other things to beaware of is mail-in voting, lack
of transparency on signaturematching, right?

(01:12:16):
Beware of the details.
The devil is in the details.
And one of the places that theDemocrats are starting to pivot
is they want us to start doingranked choice voting.
Ranked choice voting is whileeasy to pitch and it sounds like
a good idea, it creates audittrails that are difficult
because you'll literally havepeople that get a plurality, but

(01:12:37):
it wasn't 50%.
And so it creates runoffs.
And this is how you get guysthat were in like third and
fourth position that end uptaking seats.
They've done this out in Alaskaand they straight up stole a
Senate seat from um what's hername?
Uh Palin, Sarah Palin, or ahouse seat.
They straight up stole a houseseat from her through ranked
choice voting.
And you know it's a bad newsdeal when someone like Jamie

(01:12:59):
Raskin thinks it's the bestthing ever.

SPEAKER_44 (01:13:01):
I believe that ranked choice voting will
dramatically reduce negativepolitics in America.
And fight that.

SPEAKER_21 (01:13:10):
Okay, that's ranked choice voting will dramatically
reduce no.
Okay.
Again, let's hear them out.

SPEAKER_44 (01:13:18):
Dramatically reduce negative politics in America and
promote positive politics.
Now, why is that?
So say the three of us were allrunning to be the senator in
Vermont.
Okay, so right now theincentives are I've got to trash
these two wonderful candidates,even in my own primary.
And you'll do it if you have to.
And I would do it if I got to,right?

(01:13:39):
And I, you know, I everybody'sgot skeletons, and so I'm just
gonna spend all my time makingthem sound bad.
But under ranked choice voting,the incentives are the reverse.
The incentives are just say, youlove Don Bayer, you love Peter
Watts, I love those guys too.
If you can't vote for me first,if you want them, number one,
make me number two, or make meyour number three out of 29 or
whatever.
And then as the lower candidatesare eliminated, the votes get

(01:14:02):
redistributed.
So um we have people we servewith in the House of
Representatives um from Maine,and people we've served with uh
from Alaska, um, and I think youserved with Mary Paul Chola too
before you went over to theSenate, Peter, who were elected.
They came in second in the firstround, but nobody had a

(01:14:24):
majority.
And when the votes wereredistributed, they catapulted
ahead.
Why?
Because they built a coalitionbetween Democrats and
independents to go over.

SPEAKER_21 (01:14:33):
And both of those places, he's referring to
Republicans.
They built a coalition and theystill vote with Democrats.
That's that's the new gimmick,okay?
Beware of ranked choice voting.
As more spotlight comes on themachines, ranked choice voting
confuses things.
People on the ground do notunderstand it because what

(01:14:55):
happens is you're casting morethan one vote.
It's not just for the guy youlike, it's then for your second
choice, third choice, fourthchoice.
Well, then when your fourthchoice wins, you're like, well,
I voted for him.
No, you didn't no, you didn't.
You voted for the first guy, thefourth guy.
Like, don't put more people onranked choice ballots.
Put one person.

SPEAKER_31 (01:15:13):
No, yeah, just put the guy you want to win.

SPEAKER_21 (01:15:16):
Yes.
In fact, and do everything youcan to avoid him.
This is an old technique fromthe political machines to flood
the zone in the primaries, todilute the popular guy, to make
it so the second, third, or evenfourth.
This happened in Missouri, andthis happens in our primaries a
lot.
In Missouri, I'm watching theprimary for governor.

(01:15:37):
Okay.
Now, Mike Kehoe, he's aRepublican, okay, and it was
kind of interesting.
They had three Mike's running, Ithink, or whatever it was.
Anyways, Donald Trump just kindof endorsed them all by first
name.
So they all were like, I got hisendorsement.
He didn't not endorse anybody.
But you had two super MAGARepublicans.
Okay, we're talking deporteverybody, no more farmland for

(01:15:58):
China, um, you know, no moreroundup.
Like, I mean, these guys wereMAGA, MAGA, MAGA, MAGA, MAGA.
And then you had Mike Kehoe, whowas like rhino as the day is
long, kind of an institutionalestablishment down there.
Okay.
The number one and number twoguy got 63 or 64% of the vote.

(01:16:18):
I think it was like 64%.
So they ended up with 32% eachand 32.8, 32.something.
Mike Kehoe ended up with 33% ofthe vote.
Mike Kehoe won.
Because the other two candidatesgot 32s split.
Even though that constituency,the MAGA constituency that

(01:16:42):
couldn't tell there was zerodaylight between the two guys
other than personal insults.
Okay.
Zero daylight policy-wise, 64%support.
Lost.
Lost.
And we got the rhino guy at 33%because 33% of our party still
didn't know or something.

SPEAKER_31 (01:17:01):
Because we're this dumb and getting abused.

SPEAKER_21 (01:17:04):
Yeah, we're dumb.
Now, if one of those candidateshad dropped out, they would have
run away with it with probably45, 50%.
Because you know, there weren'tgoing to be that much, so we're
going to go to Kehoe from thosetwo guys.
But that was a great example.
I was like, you guys, you guysdid it to yourselves.
Right?
Both of you guys were superexcited.
One of you should have justsaid, I'm out.

(01:17:24):
Like, we're the same, right?
But they both had their reasonsto stay in, and they should
have.
But Mike Kehoe ended up beingthe governor of Missouri, and he
was not the better of the threecandidates.
Um, on a different front, NicoleShanahan was on War Room, and
she is telling you somethingthat I've been saying for a long
time.
Guess what, Ron?

(01:17:45):
The dirt is healing.

SPEAKER_04 (01:17:47):
I am very pro-science.
In fact, we are just on thefrontier of probably one of the
most exciting, excitingscientific discoveries, which is
the soil microbiome.
There is so much life in ahandful of healthy soil.
And we are going to understandhow that soil interacts with our

(01:18:08):
health and can actually feed usin ways that you know we haven't
even explored in terms of cropproduction.

SPEAKER_21 (01:18:16):
Um, I I think that if you talk to a Ph laughing
because I'm like, every damnfarmer has been screaming this
while you're puttingpetrochemicals on their shelf
for fertilizer and throughregulatory capture forcing them
to use it.
And they're like, Can we justspread manure?
Can we just do plot ass?

SPEAKER_31 (01:18:36):
Can we get a Joel Salatin out here?

SPEAKER_21 (01:18:39):
Can we just do regenerative farming?
Can we turn over our fields andsend them fallow for a year
while we move over here?
Can we let livestock you knowdrop their droppings out there?
No, but but thank goodness,thank goodness they're finally
looking at the soil.
They're like, turns out the dirthas a lot to do with our health.
Yeah.
From dust we come to dust we go,buddy.

SPEAKER_04 (01:19:01):
Here at Stanford University, um, who's studying
ecosystem science, and you askthem what is the most
interesting breakthrough area ofthe field of conservation,
they're gonna tell you it's thismicrobiome.
There is this whole world oflife under our feet, and we can
solve so many of humanity'sgreatest issues um by exploring

(01:19:25):
uh the majesty of soil.

SPEAKER_21 (01:19:28):
I feel like I feel like there's this big fat brrr.
Obviously, the tech bros whonever grew up gardening, right,
who never grew up like growingtheir own carrots or anything,
are suddenly coming to thisrealization like, man, farms are
pretty cool.
You know, I mean, and and and uhthis is the crowd that's anti

(01:19:51):
Monsanto, right?

SPEAKER_31 (01:19:52):
Anti Roundup.
Well, you got Bill Gates outthere buying as much of it as he
can.
Yeah.
He thinks it's cool.

SPEAKER_21 (01:19:57):
He thinks it's cool.
I just think that's freakinghilarious.
Because I'm like, yeah, everyfarmer's been like raging.
Like, you know, we know how todeal with the soil, but you guys
are making us strip it ofnutrients with all these
petrochemicals that we put inthem.
Okay, so another thing thathappened, and we talked about
this fusion reactor that DonaldTrump's truth social has emerged
with.

(01:20:17):
This is a big deal, and it'ssending shock waves kind of
throughout the politicaluniverse because I don't know
how much this stuff was keptunder wraps or secret.
Obviously, fusion's been thedream of every mad scientist for
a long time.
But Trump is actually takingaction and it's Trump doing it,
right?
Which means it's not going torun into some of the regulatory
issues that maybe if it had beenTrump doing it under Biden.

(01:20:39):
So this is, I can't remember,this is um the Promethean report
or whatever.
These guys do like almost adaily report on Trump's
policies, and they're very goodabout articulating the British
financial system and kind of howthat works and how Trump's
really that's his real globalistentity, is the British financial
system.
So, anyways, she's talking abouthow this move to fusion is a

(01:21:02):
total game changer.
And it's actually just in thelast week since Devin Nunes came
out, it's starting to sendshockwaves through the empires
because the energy game ischanging.
Right now, the energy game iswhat?
Oil tankers, oil, that's yourmain source of energy.
Well, and it's still coal.
People don't like to think aboutcoal, but it's still coal.

(01:21:23):
These are hard resources thathave to be taken out of the
ground and used.
And with this infinite energyfrom fusion, all of a sudden you
don't have to you don't have todig up as much coal to feed all
these robots that Donald Trumpplans on hiring.

SPEAKER_00 (01:21:36):
Donald Trump on Thursday did something the
globalists have dreaded for 50years.
He bet his name and his company,True Social, fully behind
developing commercial fusionpower.
True Social is now merging witha fusion energy company, TAE
Technologies, to produce thefirst commercial fusion reactor.
Like Sputnik in the 1950s and60s, this is the new space race.

(01:22:01):
The nation that wins the fusionrace will wield enormous
economic and military power anddominate the entire next
century.
Here's Devin Nunez, the CEO ofTrue Social and the head of the
press's Foreign IntelligenceAdvisory Board, talking about
it.
The mainstream media is, ofcourse, belittling this.
They are telling you thatPresident Trump has already lost

(01:22:21):
the 2026 midterms.
But folks, he's only been inoffice for 10 months, and he's
reversing decades of economicrot.
And in his Wednesday speech,Trump roared back like a lion
concerning prices andaffordability.
We're poised for anothereconomic boom.
And that boom will be fueled byfusion, and Trump is betting

(01:22:41):
everything on it.
It's the key to how you buildthe economy of the future.

SPEAKER_21 (01:22:46):
It's the key to how you build the economy of the
future.
So simultaneously, and this iswhat the majesty of Trump is, is
he's got everybody kind of offbalance.
All of his enemies are offbalance.
On one hand, he's drill, drill,drill, drill, drill.
On the other hand, you've gotfusion coming online.
On the other hand, you have AIand robotics that he's fully
behind.
On the other hand, he's closingthe border and sending out the

(01:23:08):
illegal immigrants.
On the other hand, you know,he's got he's fighting on every
front.
Is he winning on every front?
Some days it doesn't feel thatway.
I mean, some days you do feel alittle bit down in the dump,
especially on the social thingslike Epstein, right?
But for the most part, he'smaking huge, huge strides.
One of the things that has beengoing on, obviously, they've
been going after Venezuela,which prior to Trump coming in,

(01:23:28):
Venezuela was like anafterthought for people.
Only a few hardcore people canremember Sidney Powell and Rudy
Giuliani about talking aboutVenezuela with the Dominion
machines, right?
But now we're understanding moreclearly their role in the
worldwide cartel setup and howand how they operate.
Well, you've also got theMexican cartels.
The Mexican cartels do a lot ofthe drug smuggling, clearly.

SPEAKER_31 (01:23:49):
They do a lot of heavy lifting.

SPEAKER_21 (01:23:50):
They do a lot of heavy lifting, and they've
changed their mode to get drugsinto the United States because
the border has been enforced.
So this is Tom Holman on withJesse Waters talking about that.

SPEAKER_08 (01:24:00):
Cartels are getting craftier.
They're obviously trying toadapt to what you're throwing at
them.
You're seeing this video now,they're on boats.
How have you seen the coyotesand the cartels kind of reorient
their business uh to handle whatyou've done?

SPEAKER_45 (01:24:17):
Look, they they are going more maritime.
We knew they would.
That's why we've increased uhCoast Guard patrols three times,
uh, uh three times more than wehave in the past.
So Coast Guard will answer thatcall.
So we're gonna shut them downmaritime too.
Look, we're gonna put them outof business.
President Trump is designatingthem criminal terrorist
organizations, which they shouldbe.
They've killed more Americansthan every terrorist

(01:24:37):
organization in this worldcombined.
President Trump will end upwiping them off the face of the
earth because we're gonna putthem out of business.
You put them out of business,you take their money away, they
can't bribe Mexican officials,they can't bribe anybody.
Without money, they have nopower.
We're not just gonna attack inMexico.
In the 43 countries that haveoperations currently uh

(01:24:59):
operations 43 differentcountries, we're gonna attack
them worldwide.

SPEAKER_21 (01:25:03):
There are very few people that don't have a price,
right?
And the Mexican cartels knowthat they know that you have a
price.
Even the Bidens had a price,right?
And even though here you've gotHunter Biden, this is kind of
stunning to hear.
This is Hunter Biden on withSean Ryan.
Even Hunter Biden had a price,right?
And then the Biden family,because they didn't they didn't
want this illegal immigration.

SPEAKER_09 (01:25:26):
But we don't want immigrants that are coming here
illegally, draining us ofresources and also um uh and and
and being prioritized abovepeople that are actual literal
heroes that are coming home orthat are that uh uh that are
still recovering from uh 21 20years of uh endless war.

(01:25:48):
Or anybody else in our society.

SPEAKER_49 (01:25:52):
Right.
But nobody's everybody's talkingabout vibrant.

SPEAKER_21 (01:25:56):
So even the Bidens were against illegal
immigration.
I wonder how much I wonder howmuch they had to get paid to let
the opinion set aside for fouryears.
It's kind of stunning.
Oh my goodness.
Uh I uh we'll skip over this,but DeSantis was asked about you
know illegal or migrants.
Actually, we're gonna play thisbecause he's asked about

(01:26:17):
migrants and uh he makes aclarification here, and this is
important for us to understand.
When you're talking aboutillegal immigration, it's no
accident.

SPEAKER_25 (01:26:29):
One, um, Florida is home to hundreds of thousands of
um undocumented immigrants whouh are working in areas.

SPEAKER_19 (01:26:37):
Well, you know, just to be so the federal government
has made clear that thestatutory term, it's not und
they're illegal aliens.
That's the statutory term, andthat's that's what it is, and I
think it's to try to water down.
I mean, like undocumented, it'slike if I get in my car and I
forget my wallet, okay, I don'thave my document on me like my

(01:26:57):
driver's license.
But I mean, I still have a rightto drive.
I just made a made a mistake.
This is intentional to come inillegally.
It's not just a question ofmissing a document, it's a
question of you know, youviolated the law that were very
clear and knowingly, and withthe help of the cartels in many
cases, hundreds of thousands ofuh illegal immigrants who are

(01:27:21):
illegal aliens, if they're usedto call it, um, who are working
in areas of agriculture, uh,farming, construction,
hospitality.

SPEAKER_25 (01:27:29):
I'm just wondering, once we start to see you know
the significant roundups ofthese people, uh, is there a
plan in place to help thoseindustries, to prevent those
industries from uh experiencinguh true heart hardship,
financial hardship?

SPEAKER_19 (01:27:44):
So here's what I'd say they they made the same
arguments on 23 when we did ourimmigration in Cayenne Rose.
We did e-verify when you now anyof those industries, when they
hire new people, they've got toverify their immigration status.
Otherwise, they can't work.
And people said you are notgonna be able to Yeah, so that's
good.

SPEAKER_21 (01:28:03):
Taking a hard line there.
Look, it's not just like youforgot your driver's license at
home officer.
I don't have my ID with me.
That's not what's going onthere.
Uh, we're going to play, we'regoing to play this clip from uh
Matt Gates and Tucker Carlson.
And this is how Matt Gates wasbeing blackmailed.
He and his family were beingblackmailed by a combination of

(01:28:23):
the CIA and the Department ofJustice.
He was being blackmailed by aformer prosecutor for the
Department of Justice to go,okay.
There's this guy that went intoIran, he's been missing for 20
years, and it's always been thisrumor that he's still alive in
some death camp.
And there's Ross Perot tried tosend a group in after him.
And, you know, like there's beenthis constant guy that allegedly

(01:28:45):
they can go rescue.
Okay.
So they've used this guy thatthey're going to go rescue.
They've blackmailed peoplesaying, we've got dirty
information on you, but if yougive us money to fund this
rescue operation, we'll look theother way.
Right.
And this has been an ongoingscheme that they have done a
couple times.
And the Gates family saw throughit.
So we're going to hear MattGates talk about that.

(01:29:06):
The guy who did it was a DOJofficial, actually did go to
prison, okay, because Matt Gateswould not back down.
But that this instance is whatled to the Matt's Gates ethics
investigation, which then theytabled, right?
And then Matt's Gates resigned,and people have tried to slander
him, saying he was with underagegirls, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah.
It all starts from this righthere.
So we're going to take a listento this, and then we're going to

(01:29:28):
do our raid, and then we'regoing to jump into private.
Okay.
So those of you that aresticking around, the show that
we're going to raid today iswell deserving of the raid.
She literally has one personwatching right now.
Okay.
In fact, why don't we go aheadand do the raid right now?
Because we have enough people inthe in the chat that if we do

(01:29:49):
the raid right now, she is doinga cooking show.
This looks like a mama.
Big mama, I don't know who sheis.
Dana TV, but she's doing acooking show, and we want to go
in and say hi to her.
Okay.
She's working on her own rightnow.
She's looks like she's makingsome beads or something like
that.
So please go in and say hi toher.

SPEAKER_31 (01:30:08):
Try to do something to make her day.

SPEAKER_21 (01:30:09):
Yeah, do something to make her day.
Go in there and say hi to her.
Okay, go ahead and hitch playthere.
Hi.
Oh, we gotta confirm.
Confirm.
Oh, this is gonna be great.
We're here.
And to say hi.

(01:30:30):
So head on over, guys.
She only has one personwatching, and I think it's me.
Oh, that's the best.
Yeah.
So please go on over and say hito her.
Meanwhile, those of you thatabsolutely cannot get over there
to say hi in chat, we will playthis clip from uh Hunter Biden.

SPEAKER_22 (01:30:54):
Uh the shocking moment was when my father, who's
a prominent person in ourcommunity, got outreach from
someone he had never met thatsaid that there were pictures
and images of me with underageprostitutes, and my dad needed
to meet with these people rightaway.
And so uh my my dad, uh somewhatsurprised and concerned, goes
and talks to these people andsays, What in the world are you

(01:31:15):
talking about?
And they said, Well, uh, Mr.
Gates, we need$25 million fromyou to go and rescue a uh a spy
that is being held in Iran.
And if you do that, we can makethese things about your son go
away.
Which was crazy and wild.
We did what any reasonablepeople would do.
We went to the FBI and said thatwe're being extorted by these

(01:31:39):
folks with their false claims.
And we later learned that thisconsulate official with the is
working for the Israeligovernment was sending text
messages to Scott Adams of allpeople, the Dilbert cartoonist,
saying they were expecting myfather to furnish this$25
million payment uh and that thatwould be evidence of my

(01:32:00):
consciousness of guilt.

SPEAKER_17 (01:32:02):
For the American FBI agent grabbed on a Iranian
island, maybe 18 or 19 yearsago.

SPEAKER_22 (01:32:07):
Yeah, and I don't know anything about this person.
I don't know if the person'sdead or alive.
But but it was troubling andconcerning to me that someone
who was getting paid by theIsraeli government was involved
in a criminal shakedown of aU.S.
congressman.
And there someone went to jailfor this.
Someone, the person who conveyedthis message to my father, pled
guilty to the attempted fraud.

(01:32:29):
And uh surprisingly, there wasnever really an effort to figure
out what the government ofIsrael's involvement was in this
matter.

SPEAKER_17 (01:32:37):
But you know that the government of Israel was
involved because this was anIsraeli government official who
was involved in the house.
Yes, yes, a a person who hisname's Jake Novak.

SPEAKER_22 (01:32:46):
I think he currently works for Real America's Voice,
and he sent text voice.
Yeah, yeah.
Uh that that's the name of theofficial, and he sent messages.

SPEAKER_21 (01:32:54):
So he currently has a TV show.
One of these guys that was uhpart of this scheme is being
propped up with a TV show onReal America's Voice, which by
the way, are the same peoplethat host War Room and other
shows we love.
I thought he was in jail.
Well, the prosecutor guy thatdid it, but I'm saying there was
a team of them that were doingit.
So the one guy took the fall,and that's how it always works.

SPEAKER_22 (01:33:17):
Uh just to Scott Adams saying that he was
involved in this scheme that waslater deemed a criminal scheme
to shake down my family.
So what is false allegations?
He got a television show.

SPEAKER_17 (01:33:29):
Come on now.
I didn't know any of this.
I'm not playing dumb.
I really didn't know that.
Have you ever talked to himabout it?

SPEAKER_22 (01:33:36):
Uh I I have uh I have attempted to uh to figure
out because obviously I stillhave a lot of unanswered
questions about why he wasworking for a foreign government
and trying to shake down myfamily.

SPEAKER_17 (01:33:48):
What's the answer, do you think?

SPEAKER_22 (01:33:50):
Well, uh some have shared with me their concern
that this was a consequence ofsome of the votes and positions
I took in the Congress.
I represented one of the mostmilitary-heavy districts in the
entire country.
Yeah, right right up there.
In school of Florida.
Uh I uh saw these wars in theMiddle East that my neighbors

(01:34:10):
and friends had fought in uh asuh unworthy of our of our best,
unworthy of the disruptions andparenting and the divorces and
the injuries.
And so I uh took the positionthat we should be less entangled
in these things, and I thinkthat really um shocked a number

(01:34:30):
of people who thought I would bemore of a neocon coming from the
district I came from.
And I think that you know thatwith with with like the Israel
influence operation, it's alwaysfire and ice, it's always
outreach followed byconsequence, and then outreach
and then consequence.
Even to this day, uh there wassomeone who just appeared and

(01:34:50):
offered to pay me a bunch ofmoney to go to Israel and give a
bunch of speeches, and you know,uh you you decline those offers
when you don't feel they'reappropriate, and then lo and
behold, it's like green blad onthe other side of the operation
calling you an anti-Semite.

SPEAKER_21 (01:35:06):
So I'm unable to listen to the audio here.
Actually, let's uh this is ourshow that we went and raided.
Guys, look at them, look atthem.

SPEAKER_15 (01:35:13):
We bling bling them.
We bling bling them.
Oh, she's doing like Fabrogereggs.
Just water, let's dip it inwater.
Let's see if it's water helps.

SPEAKER_31 (01:35:25):
Wow, it's pretty detailed.

SPEAKER_21 (01:35:28):
Yeah, I followed her because you have to, man.
You have to support the littleguys.

SPEAKER_31 (01:35:34):
Where's she at?

SPEAKER_21 (01:35:35):
I don't know, but she's making some amazing art.
It is so cool.
Yeah, it's amazing art.
You have to support these guys,right?
She had one viewer, and I'mpretty sure it was me.

SPEAKER_31 (01:35:48):
Oh, check it out.
Pony boys in the chat.

SPEAKER_21 (01:35:50):
I know, right?
Dude, I know.
Look at these are all look atthese are all our people.
We totally made her day.
She had nothing going on here.
I love it so much.
Yeah, Rumble bought today'srecipe.
Uh, strawberry tarts, bavariumcream cake, and butter gummies.
And wow, that's food.

SPEAKER_15 (01:36:05):
I can't eat that.
That's a work of art.
Yes, good morning, everywhere.

SPEAKER_21 (01:36:10):
That is so cool.
Well, that's what we did today.
Hopefully, we made her day.
She's she's rolling with morepeople than we are.
So thank you guys for being overthere and watching that for her.
That's really fun.
I'm gonna I'm just gonna leaveit streaming on in the
background here.
Okay, so one last thing.
So, as you can see, Matt Gates,right?
He gets accosted and they set upthis entrapment steam, and it

(01:36:31):
kind of was the end of hispolitical career.

SPEAKER_31 (01:36:33):
This is the first time I've heard of this story.

SPEAKER_21 (01:36:34):
Really?

SPEAKER_31 (01:36:35):
Yeah, I didn't know this happened.

SPEAKER_21 (01:36:36):
Oh man, it was like the thing.

SPEAKER_31 (01:36:39):
I mean, I knew that he lost his position, and I knew
about the assertion about theunderage girls because that's
why he had to go, but I did notknow that his family had this
has happened to him.

SPEAKER_21 (01:36:52):
Matt Gates.
Oh my god.
We'll mute that.
Okay, yeah.
Matt Gates was uh one day, hejust comes out on the steps of
the Capitol, holds a pressconference, and goes, My family
has been bribed, they'veattempted extortion, they want
$25 million from my dad, orthey're gonna release footage of

(01:37:14):
me that's not real, and theywant us, you know, and just we
want us to go rescue this guy inIran, Paloo whistle.
And then he named names.
That put all of a sudden the DOJwas in this position like, Oh,
we're on our heels.
They got caught.
Now it wasn't the DOJ, it was aformer prosecutor that worked at
the DOJ.
But if anybody knows, you know,once you have a key pass, you're

(01:37:34):
gonna keep it.
And so they ended up putting theguy on trial, and he pled
guilty, and I think, I don'tknow, a year or two in jail or
so.
I don't know what his oldsentence was.
But that is what created theethics investigation, which then
was just political fodder,because I mean, listen to what
he just said.

SPEAKER_31 (01:37:52):
So you gotta sit in you, you gotta sit in jail for a
year, or you could have got 25million.
I think the juice was worth theattempted squeeze.

SPEAKER_21 (01:38:00):
Yeah, and I don't know, I again I don't know the
exact sentence, but still, likethat's the game they play,
right?
Now, Hunter Biden was on withSean Ryan, and he had some
interesting things to say aboutthe Hunter Biden laptop.
This is bull crap, okay.
So, just so everybody knowshere, I'm playing this because
it's important to hear.
It's not true, okay.

(01:38:21):
Um, it's not true.
Oh, that's uh uh he says it wasa bad thing to take the job at
Barisma.
That's true.
But uh but uh because it openedhis family up to be called the
the Biden crime family.
Well, the bribes did that, youknow, the bribes were a big
thing.
This was just one of them.
But this is this is Hunter Bidenclaiming that the laptop was

(01:38:44):
fake.
Now keep in mind 51 intelligenceagents said it, all the
hallmarks of Russetish info.
So they covered for you.
So when he's doing this here,he's leaning on them being like,
this was all an op against me,not that my crackhead ass
dropped off my laptop at arepair guy shop and then forgot
about it because I can't recallever dropping it up.

(01:39:05):
I know people on crack tend toforget the things they did when
they were on crack.
You know what I mean?
But go ask the wife of acrackhead.
She's like, he doesn't rememberhalf the sh he does.

SPEAKER_09 (01:39:14):
So what I can tell you about the laptops is that
there is no laptop.
That's bullshit.
What was provided out there,what the um there was no fucking
laptop?
There is an actual physicallaptop that somebody had.
But the guy that had that saidhe had the laptop, the existence

(01:39:35):
of the search for the laptopcame before he was even a
twinkle in Rudy Giuliani's eye.
There were people talking to LevParnas.
Lev Parnas literally went toUkraine to get a laptop from
Dmitry Furtash.

SPEAKER_21 (01:39:50):
Lev Parnas is one of these characters that ended up
being a double agent withoutknowing it.
He was working for one side andthen the other side came and
they offered him some money, andhe thought he was part of the
other side.
So he ended up like spilling thebeans to both sides what the
other sides were doing and thenwent to jail.
Okay.

SPEAKER_09 (01:40:05):
He was like an accidental double agent.
To get a hard drive, HunterBiden's hard drive from Dmitry
Furtash and Andrei Dirkach inUkraine.

SPEAKER_21 (01:40:15):
So he's right.
They had more than one harddrive.
In the Hunter Biden laptop,there's a video of him
complaining to a Russianprostitute that other Russians
had come in after he was withanother Russian prostitute and
taken his electronics out of theroom.
Okay.
So yes, there are multipleHunter Biden hard drive laptops

(01:40:37):
floating around the world.
Austria.

SPEAKER_09 (01:40:43):
Nobody ever existed.
And so what they did is theycobbled together, stolen,
concocted, fabricated, mishmashof digital information, largely
which is, you know, thousandsand thousands and thousands of
emails.
For twenty from 25 years.
I mean, no laptop could haveheld all of that.

(01:41:06):
Yeah, I can't.
And so what they did is theyjust they they put it all
together and then they talkabout it.
I mean, John Paul McIsaac, whois literally blind, has no
there's no videotape of me everdropping off a laptop.
There's no so whatever.
You never dropped off a laptop.
I have no recollectionwhatsoever of ever dropping off

(01:41:27):
a laptop to John Paul McIsaac,to his shop.
And so what he did, though.

SPEAKER_21 (01:41:32):
Because he's just gonna blame it on being on
crack.
I have no recollection ever ofdoing it.
There's my signature, right?
But there's no security camera.
Well, maybe he didn't have asecurity camera.
Maybe he's schizophrenic.
Maybe you know the securitycameras overwrite themselves
every 30 days, and until youmissed your build 90 days later,
he wasn't expecting to have toreview the tape.

SPEAKER_09 (01:41:50):
Let me just put it this way.
Say I did.
Okay.
And you're John Paul McIsaac.
And what he says is he reads andhe could repair the laptop, but
then he starts to read the filesin the laptop.

(01:42:13):
And he reads a file and he seesfiles about barisma.
By the way, a board of which I'mon, of an independent private
Ukrainian company, in which I ama board member doing corporate
governance.

SPEAKER_21 (01:42:28):
Of which is in the news because your dad had a
prosecutor fired who was lookinginto criminal allegations of
barisma, bragged about it at theAtlantic Council, and Donald
Trump made it a centerpiece ofhis campaign, constantly
pointing out barisma and Ukraineand Hunter Biden on the board of
barisma.
So he's acting like, well, wheredid he learn about barisma?

(01:42:51):
I don't know.
TV?

SPEAKER_09 (01:42:52):
As an attorney.
And he says that the only thingthat he can think of doing is
calling Rudy Giuliani?

SPEAKER_21 (01:43:03):
The mayor of New York who saved the day after
9-11, brought New York City backfrom the brink.
One of the probably people thathe thought was a good, righteous
dude and would do something withthis information.
That might be why he called RudyGiuliani.
I mean, if I had a seriousproblem, I'd call Orrin Root,
the Republican council memberhere in town.
You know what I mean?

SPEAKER_09 (01:43:23):
Why?

SPEAKER_21 (01:43:24):
Because he'd take my phone call.

SPEAKER_09 (01:43:25):
Laptop repair shop owner in Wilmington, Delaware,
who lose store is three and ahalf odd miles at most from
where my parents live, whereeverybody knows my parents live.
So if he had a laptop that hewanted to return, he thinks that
the best thing to do is callRudy Giuliani's Rudy Giuliani's
lawyer, Bob Costello, and giveit to my sworn enemy.

(01:43:56):
What crime has anyone ever therewas no laptop, right?
No.
He took a hard drive.
He took whatever he said.
He said that he had a damagedlaptop, and what he did is he
downloaded a hard drive, andthen he gave that hard drive to
um Bob Costello.
And then from that hard drive,um uh you have people like

(01:44:19):
Patrick Byrne and um and JackMaxie and a whole bunch of other
people, like I could list thenames that come together.
There's one woman that's likeknown as Cat Lady or something
like that.
Literally.
And what they say that they didis they cobbled together all of
this digital material that wasfloating out everywhere that had
been stolen from phones, thathad been taken from uh the dark

(01:44:40):
web, that had been taken fromthe hard drive that jumped.
Consolidated it all.
And they consolidated it all,and they made it out to be this
thing.
And so then the story doesn'tbecome about the laptop at all.

SPEAKER_21 (01:44:50):
By the way, all this got disproved in court because
he was the baby daddy to a kid,and he didn't want to be the
daddy, didn't want to admit thatNavy was a Biden, right?
And so she took him to court forchild support, and he fought it
and got a paternity test.
Turns out it is his kid.
And then they brought in uhGarrett Ziegler, who went

(01:45:12):
through the laptop anddocumented it in a book, page by
page, screenshot by screenshot,tracked down all the
prostitutes, tracked down allthe business deals, email by
email.
I mean, we're talking of verycomprehensive work.
They brought him in as an expertwitness, and guess what?
The court determined that therewas a real laptop and that there
really was a was a, you know,everything was there, and it was

(01:45:32):
it met the standards of paroleevidence, which means it was
submittable in court.
So everything Hunter Biden issaying right here is bull crap.
There was a laptop, it had allkinds of details of crimes, even
though he's gonna blow them off.
Watch this.

SPEAKER_09 (01:45:46):
There's nothing in the laptop other than a record
of me being a degenerate, adegenerate drug addict.
At the worst moment in my life,at the worst moment of my life
of people clearly, me not takingselfies, of people clearly
there's plenty of selfies takingpictures of me in the rooms that
I found myself in.
Smoking crack, doing drugs,doing whatever.

SPEAKER_21 (01:46:10):
Nothing illegal.
Nothing illegal, though.
Just prostitution, humantrafficking, smoking crack, pay
to play, bribery and extortion,tax evasion.
Okay.
Tax, yeah.
Nothing criminal.

SPEAKER_09 (01:46:27):
Other than obviously, drug use.

SPEAKER_21 (01:46:29):
Oh, that's but that's the topic of my book,
Beautiful Things, right?
Is my recovery from drugs.

SPEAKER_09 (01:46:34):
What other people would think is, you know, it
abhorrent behavior.
I mean, whatever.
Having sex with women.
Whatever.
And so they take that, and thenyou can say whatever you want.
No one, no one read the stories.
When you put me naked on thefront page of the New York Post

(01:46:57):
over and over again with a crackpipe in my mouth, it becomes
like gold.
Is the most read, the mostfollowed story in the history of
the paper.
She's written and sold twobest-selling books based upon
that.

SPEAKER_21 (01:47:13):
It must suck to be hunter Biden.
Yeah.
I think that's interesting,though, just the deflection.
Oh, it was just girls.
It was just no.
That's not really it.

SPEAKER_31 (01:47:23):
It was just girls, drugs, depravity.

SPEAKER_21 (01:47:25):
Girls, drugs, depravity, but then you get into
the emails.
And the emails is where it's at.
That's where it's 10% big guy.
That's where he's complaining tohis siblings and his kids about
how dad takes half of his moneyand all this.
It's just lays it all out there,the Biden crime family.
So I thought it was kind ofinteresting that he took a crack
at Sean Ryan.
I felt like Sean Ryan didn't doa great job at so there is no

(01:47:46):
laptop.
Like, okay.

SPEAKER_31 (01:47:48):
Oh, let's just let that roll.
Okay.

SPEAKER_21 (01:47:50):
At least he's on the record.
All right.
We need to jump on over toprivate.
We are going to be talking aboutthe thing I didn't want to talk
about anymore, a little bit ofEpstein.
We do have some news on thatfront, some more commentary.
And uh we're gonna hear fromMatt Gates again.
And uh yeah, so we're gonna jumpon over to private, and we've
got quite a bit going on overthere.
So if you can join us, great.
If not, we'll see you againtomorrow.

(01:48:11):
Bye.
All right.
Okay, so let's get this out ofthe way.
This is Joe ScarboroughScarborough at MSNow.
Uh and he under he gets it whenit comes to this Epstein thing.
This Epstein thing isn't aboutTrump.
Despite what some pundits and alot of online influencers are
trying to say, it's just notabout Trump.

SPEAKER_33 (01:48:31):
One of the great mysteries to me and a lot of
other people is we've hadreporting for some time.
Donald Trump is not on Epstein'slist.
There's nothing in there that'sreally damning about Donald
Trump, and as Susie Wilde says,not damning about Donald Trump
or uh Bill Clinton.
So one of the great mysteriesall along in this, not been like

(01:48:52):
what's Donald Trump hiding, whatdid he do?
Da-da-da-da.
It's like, why, if he's not inthese files, which all the
reporting says he's not, why ishe so obsessed on blocking
access to the files?
Is he trying to protectsomebody?

SPEAKER_35 (01:49:08):
Joe, you got to the actual heart of the question,
and it's actually not beenreported.
One of the reasons MarjorieTaylor Green got on board with
Massey and my effort is shefundamentally believed that
Trump was not implicated.
And she would call the presidentand say, look, just get these
out.
I don't know why you're notgetting it out.
And she would tell Massey andme, of course he's gonna come
around.
And every press conference wehad, we never made it about

(01:49:30):
Donald Trump.
We made it about the survivors.
The survivors pleaded withDonald Trump, you can be a hero.
No previous president has donethis.
Release the files.
And what people are asking, andfrankly, even I'm asking, is
what are they hiding?
Why is it that they're notreleasing the draft 60 count
indictment when they onlycharged Epstein with two counts?
Why aren't they releasing the82-page prosecution memo of all

(01:49:53):
the implications he had withrich and powerful folks?
Why are they protecting thisEpstein class?
And why aren't they releasingthe FBI interviews?
Every time they do one of thesethings of concealing, they're
just ripping it worse.

SPEAKER_21 (01:50:05):
Yeah, they're making it worse by concealing.
Except they keep dripping stuffout as required by law.
So Justice Department puts morestuff out again today, and they
made a statement with that.
Justice Department hasofficially released nearly three
thousand, three thirty thousandmore pages of documents related
to Jeffrey Epstein.
Some of these documents containuntrue and sensationalist claims
made against President Trumpthat were submitted to the FBI

(01:50:28):
right before the 2020 election.
To be clear, the claims areunfounded and false.
They've had they if they had ashred of credibility, they
certainly would have beenweaponized against President
Trump already.
Nevertheless, out of ourcommitment to the law and
transparency, the DOJ isreleasing the documents with the
legally required protections ofthe victims' names.
I am not a robot.
Okay, so basically you go in andyou can find, you know, all

(01:50:51):
these files.
So they just look like this.
Boring.
So what is this?
Some checklist here.
So you know, internet sleuthsare gonna go.
What is this?
Special housing unit, 30-minutecheck sheet.
So this is in prison.
This is a special housing unitcheck in and check out.
So this is the people that camein and out of the uh the shoe.

SPEAKER_31 (01:51:14):
Okay.
Yeah, you know, for redacted,redacted, redacted.

SPEAKER_21 (01:51:20):
Yeah, emails to to who?
Sure, sounds both intriguing andcomplicated.
Tuesday is better for me.

SPEAKER_31 (01:51:25):
Oh it was on Tuesday.

SPEAKER_21 (01:51:27):
Ah, Standard Litigation Council, human
trafficking and project.
This is interesting.
Oh from I don't know who, UnitedStates A N S Y S that's
attorneys.
Sent to another attorneys nextweek, meet with Jeffrey Epstein.
Hi.
This is in 2016, so Trump's noteven elected yet.

(01:51:48):
And it's coming from SeniorLitigation, Human Trafficking,
and Project Safe ChildhoodCoordinator, United States
Attorney.
Hey guys, this is why would theybe meeting with Jeffrey Epstein
in 2016?
While you're still alive.
Huh?

SPEAKER_31 (01:52:06):
He was still alive.
So you could meet with him.

SPEAKER_21 (01:52:11):
Yeah, pretty interesting.
Anyways, so people are gonna gothrough that.
I'm sure we'll see some clips ofit coming out today.
And uh Scott Jennings basicallyhad this to say.
This is just dramaticallybackfired on the Democrats.

SPEAKER_18 (01:52:24):
Everybody's quick to blame the executive branch here.
Maybe Congress wrote a stupidlaw.
I mean, they gave them 30 daysfor millions of documents, and
you just said they didn't putany penalties in.
I mean, look, this is Rokana andThomas Massey's baby.
Did they not give the executivebranch enough time?
Didn't they not give them enoughuh motivation to do it?
That's not Donald Trump's fault.
That's not the administration'sfault.

(01:52:44):
I think they're doing this asfast as they can.
But I think this issue of makingsure you don't release to the
public someone's name or imagethat could jeopardize a victim
or put them in harm's way in anyway, that's a real issue.
If you get that wrong, you can'tput that back in the bubble.

SPEAKER_43 (01:52:58):
Maybe the executive branch should have delivered on
their own promise to release thefiles and not required Congress
to step in and write the law.
So if that's the argument, thenyou know the Trump
administration should have beenforthcoming and done voluntary.

SPEAKER_21 (01:53:08):
Let's go find D chess.
Or maybe they needed these guysto write the law so that you
could get the Democrats to shutup about it when we finally
release things that are normallyagainst law to release.
Just saying.

SPEAKER_43 (01:53:22):
Are we going to do voluntarily?

SPEAKER_18 (01:53:24):
Has Biden has Trump released?
Hundreds of thousands.
How many did Biden release?
Zero.
They are being transparent.
They are releasing.

SPEAKER_43 (01:53:33):
I know.
It's always somebody else'sfault.
Give me a break.
Give me a break.
I mean, so they did run on it inthe trail.
They said they're gonna releasethe Epsy files.

SPEAKER_18 (01:53:40):
The president said, sure, you know.
The president is not a coretenant of the president's
campaign.
Some people around him made it abig issue.
He did not get up on stage as apoint.
I'll go even everybody's quick.

SPEAKER_31 (01:53:52):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_21 (01:53:53):
Well, your constituents think that it is
red meat.
The whole, you know, childtrafficking, sex trafficking,
it's a huge deal.
Sex abuse, it's a huge deal.
What really is more concerningis the 300,000 kids that came
across the border.
You know, a lot of these victimsof Epstein, they're all adults
now.
They've all aged out, right?
They they have to have, um, justbecause he's been dead so long,

(01:54:15):
right?
But um it's tragic.
Like there's zero downplayingit.
But the thing you have tounderstand about Epstein is the
kids was the sideshow.
What Epstein really is and whatthey're really covering up is
not the kids.
If they could just let the kidsstuff out without exposing the
rest of it, I think they would.
Donald Trump tries to explainthis to some degree.

SPEAKER_13 (01:54:36):
Number of photos of Bill Clinton in the Epstein
files, and you could can youcommit to their full and were
you surprised by the number ofphotos of Bill Clinton in the
Epstein files?
And can you commit to their fullrelease by the end of the year?
Some of the victims wereprotesting that too many of them
were redacted.

SPEAKER_32 (01:54:51):
I know there are a lot of people that are angry
about all of the pictures ofother people, you know, but I
think it's terrible.
Look, uh I don't like the I likeBill Clinton.
I've always gotten along withBill Clinton.
I've been nice to him, he's beennice to me.
We've always gotten alongrespectful.
I hate to see photos come out ofhim, but this is what the
Democrats, mostly Democrats anda couple of bad Republicans, are

(01:55:13):
asking for.
So they give me their photos ofme, too.
Everybody was friendly with thisguy, either friendly or not
friendly, but they were, youknow, he was around, he was all
over Palm Beach and otherplaces.
The head of Harvard was his bestfriend, Larry Summers.
And Bill Clinton was a friend ofhis, but everybody was.
I actually threw him out ofMar-a-Lago.
And as a you know, as a personthat was in Mar-a-Lago, I threw

(01:55:35):
him out of Mar-a-Lago's, this isMar-a-Lago.
It's the hottest place in Ithink it's the hottest place in
the world, but it's the hottestplace in Florida.
And everybody would come here.
He'd come here.
We actually threw him in thespecial club.
But no, I don't like thepictures of Bill Clinton being
shown.
I don't like the pictures ofother people being shown.
I think it's a terrible thing.
I think uh Bill Clinton's uh abig boy, he can handle it, but

(01:55:59):
you probably have pictures beingexposed of other people that
innocently met Jeffrey Epsteinyears ago, many years ago, uh,
and they're you know highlyrespected bankers and lawyers
and others, and they'll end upbecause of guys like Massey,
who's a real low life, whosepolls are down to about nine
percent, by the way, in thegreat state of Kentucky.

(01:56:20):
If you look at Kentucky, uhKentucky is such a great place,
but I don't know, they've gotthey've got a couple of people
in there that are very strangein terms of leadership, but
Massey's a loser and he likesit, and that he works with the
Democrats.
He's just being used by theDemocrats because what this
whole thing is with Epstein is away of trying to deflect from

(01:56:42):
the tremendous success that theRepublican Party has.
Like, for instance, today we'rebuilding the biggest ships in
the world, most powerful shipsin the world, and they're asking
me questions about JeffreyEpstein.
I thought that was finished.
I believe they gave over 100,000pages of documents, and there is
tremendous backlash.
It's an interesting questionbecause a lot of people are very

(01:57:04):
angry that pictures are beingreleased of other people that
really had nothing to do withEpstein, but they're in a
picture with him because he wasat a party and you ruin a
reputation of somebody.
So a lot of people are uh veryangry that this continues.
A lot of Republicans are angrybecause of the fact that it's
just used to deflect against atremendous success.

SPEAKER_21 (01:57:24):
Look, we have eight.
And is there is truth to that.
It is being used to deflect.
It's like red meat, but it doeshave serious inclinations.
This is Matt Gates talking aboutuh Epstein's intelligence role.

SPEAKER_22 (01:57:37):
As we join you this evening, America is still
digesting the hundreds ofthousands of documents released
by the Department of Justiceregarding the activities and
associates of Jeffrey Epstein.
Most notable and prominent inthis release are the many
pictures of former PresidentBill Clinton in varying degrees
of naked with women who do notappear to be Hillary Clinton.

(01:57:57):
By the way, shocking.
Bill Clinton could have guessed.

SPEAKER_21 (01:58:00):
So when people talk about, you know, Prince Andrew
and Virginia Goofy, I mean,she's made allegations against
him, and here she is sitting onhis lap in the jet.
Bill Clinton, who could haveguessed?

SPEAKER_22 (01:58:10):
But who really was Jeffrey Epstein and why was he
doing all of this?
Some want you to believe he'sjust a pervert, someone who had
harmful and illegal proclivitiesthat ultimately led to his
suicide.
I don't believe that.
And evidence we are going toreview tonight explains why.
Evidence that we believe tiesEpstein directly to the CIA and

(01:58:30):
potentially Mossad and otherintelligence services.
While the release of thesedocuments does evidence my
claims, I'll point out myviewpoint on the matter isn't a
new one.
I explained who and what JeffreyEpstein was on the Benny Johnson
show last year.
I actually think that on Epsteinit it was a foreign government
that took him out.
I don't think it was a domesticenterprise.

(01:58:53):
Really?
I do.
I'm not going to say which one,but I don't think it was it was
domestic inspired to take out ofhim.
I think that was a foreignoperation.
Government sponsored.
So foreign operation took outEpstein inside of our prison.
Yes.
So they would have must havebeen allowed to.
Oh, I I think it was it was itwas in concert with people in

(01:59:15):
our government.
But not at like some you know,low-level guard getting bribed
kind of way.
Yeah.
At a at a state to state level.
Wow.

SPEAKER_21 (01:59:24):
And I'll just cut in there.
Patrick Burns says what they didwas a foreign government came
in, they ran wire or you know,ran some kind of tube down the
air shaft and actually gassedthe guards to have them fall
asleep.
And then they had disabledcameras and they were able to
come in and do what they had todo.
That all of this wasorchestrated by a foreign
intelligence service with thebuy off of some American

(01:59:46):
intelligence.

SPEAKER_22 (01:59:47):
So that's probably a lot of party interests in
keeping that under wraps.
You better believe it.
Weapon systems at play, globaldeals at play.
What if Epstein was MI6 or CIA?
What activities would he havedone?
A report from Dropside Newshelps answer this question, and

(02:00:09):
it begins with Iran-Contra.
The public learned of theIran-Contra scandal in 1986 when
a CIA front group calledSouthern Air Transport lost a
plane in Nicaragua.

SPEAKER_21 (02:00:21):
Here's the dirty little secret.
This book that I've mentionedfrom time to time, Trance,
Transformation of America, thatdetails MK Ultra.
It's set in the 80s.
Iran Contra, Sex Slaves, SexSpies, Epstein, Ronald Reagan,
Barr.
All of these people areinvolved.

(02:00:42):
The Uniparty, the deep state.
That's it right there.
Epstein is a Reagan creation.
Okay?
He's not purely a de hisassociation with Clinton comes
because the Bushes who aredeeply involved with the Reagan
White House, right, aretrafficking drugs through Mina,
Arkansas.

(02:01:03):
You see what I'm saying?
This is all connected.
Epstein goes way back.
It's not just the uh sexualproclivities of these men.
It's the drug trade.
It's the arms trafficking, it'sthe weapons system.

SPEAKER_22 (02:01:18):
Southern Air Transport then quickly needed to
move their fleet out of CentralAmerica, and Epstein helped
them.
He helped Southern Air Transportset up a new base in Columbus,
Ohio, where very interestingly,they became the fleet
transporting women's lingerie.
That's right.
They went from moving Contras,guns, drugs, and money to

(02:01:41):
running undies, bras, andteddies.
And who did Jeffrey Epstein setup with this new air shuttle
service for panties?
Les Wexner was a billionairefashion mogul who owned
Victoria's Secret, Abercrombieand Fitch, and other brands.
Times of Israel spoke to anauthor who studied Epstein and
mentions Massad links and theneed to review them.

(02:02:01):
And the Washington Timespublished this story with
viewpoint from an NSAcounterintelligence official
that Epstein was indeed tied toMossad.
Epstein would eventually getpower of attorney over Wexter's
fortune.
So on one hand, Epstein wasgetting some of the most
powerful people in the world,like Bill Clinton, naked with
females on his island, and hewas apparently taking pictures.

(02:02:22):
Now, President Clinton doesn'tseem to know all of these photos
are being taken in all cases.
That's weird too.
So why was Jeffrey Epsteintaking CIA planes and then
handing them off to someone whohad potential ties to Mossad?
And what was he doing takingthese pictures of Bill Clinton?

SPEAKER_21 (02:02:41):
It's about the drugs, it's about the guns, it's
about the money, JamalKhashoggi, these guys are, it's
all tied in.
And we're just kind of skirtingon the edge, being like, we
want, we want pedophiles to goto jail.
Yeah, we do.
Yeah, we do.
Unfortunately, you shopped foryour wife's Valentine's presence
at Victoria's Secret.

(02:03:03):
You put your kids, you send yourschools, your kids to school in
Abercrombrian pitch.
They got good genes.
You're part of it.
You're bought into it.
All those vested interests.
Oh, we like national security.
We want boats with lasers.
Have you ever considered thoselasers have something to do with
this deep intelligence thinggoing on?

(02:03:24):
Here's Mike Benz explaining thesame thing.

SPEAKER_14 (02:03:26):
What you're dealing with here is an international
intelligence web.
Take his role in Iran Contra.
That was illicit armstrafficking and money laundering
for a CIA activity that violatedinternational law.
In that one operation alone, youhave you have the CIA in the US,
you have Israeli intelligence,you have UK intelligence, and
you have Saudi intelligence.

(02:03:47):
That's four different countries,intelligence agencies running
through this single person.
So if they if if the CIA wantsto, or DOD or NSC wants to
protect its relationship withthose countries, it's probably
got to get a consensus withthose intelligence agencies as
well.
Like what you're dealing withhere is an international so much

(02:04:08):
bigger.

SPEAKER_21 (02:04:09):
Right.
That is why it took a specialbill to get the information
released, and that is why you'regetting blacked-out documents.
Because you've got foreignpolicy and top secret stuff
going on there.
How the sausage is made.
How do you get$17 billion tocome back to the United States
and investment in Boeing?

(02:04:29):
I don't know.
You put the pinch on someforeign government that has the
ability to make the purchase.
And how do you do that?
Hey, if you don't buy from us,it'd be a real shame if you lost
your power.
Be a real shame.
Remember the Matt Gates story?
That's why I started with that.

SPEAKER_31 (02:04:45):
Or you could just buy a hundred planes.

SPEAKER_21 (02:04:47):
Hey, we have 25 million to go and rescue someone
that can't be rescued.
You know, be a real shame if youdidn't help out and do your
patriotic duty.
Except at scale.
Except at scale.
How does Hunter Biden end upwith$1.5 billion along with John
Kerry's son-in-law?

SPEAKER_31 (02:05:06):
It's a lot of artwork.

SPEAKER_21 (02:05:07):
Right.
How does he end up with$1.5billion in a hedge fund to
manage and get commissions offof?
I don't know, because if youdon't take it and don't use that
fund to go funnel into defensecontractors that we have
backdoors on their servers, makesure we get to get that stealth
fighter info.
Because that's what it wasabout.
Or other things like that tomake we know where you found oil

(02:05:29):
out in international waters andwant to put a deep sea rig so
that we know what's going onwith your precious metals
market, right?
Better better get us involved,get our money.
We want to be shareholders.
See what I'm saying?
This gets deep and dark, deepand dark really fast.
All right.
We're gonna end on this.

(02:05:50):
We're gonna watch a little videoabout the election.
This is coming out of MaricopaCounty.
So what happened during theMaricopa Copa uh post-election?
You had a lot of people thatcame forward and gave
information, and for some reasonthey signed non-disclosure
agreements.
Okay.
So those non-disclosureagreements have now expired and

(02:06:11):
they've come together, and thishas been released.
This clip, by the way, is sevenminutes long.
We're just gonna play it.
This is the end of the show.
So I just want to get this outthere on the record so that you
and I can reference it in thefuture.
Okay, good.
Okay.
So we're gonna watch this.
I know it's a little bit longer,but uh, it's pretty pretty good.

(02:06:35):
John Attack says, please don'tlet Mada Easel, which is my mom,
uh see the podcast, the one wesent the raid to, because we
don't need more Trotskis aroundthe house.

SPEAKER_28 (02:06:44):
Not just for we're trying to do not just for the
state of Arizona, not just forthe the voters, but for the
entire country.
Whether you're white, black,Hispanic, Italian, Asian, it
doesn't matter.

(02:07:05):
It's not a color thing.
It is a a God-given right to us,and we have to protect that that
given right.

SPEAKER_29 (02:07:16):
If everything was done pristinely, there shouldn't
be a problem.
You should want it to say, letshow really what the true
numbers were and and and anddispel any any misconceptions.
You would want that, but it'stelling to me to say, I don't
want to know, and I want to knowwhy don't you want to know.

SPEAKER_48 (02:07:50):
We'll read it.

SPEAKER_21 (02:07:50):
Maricopa County audit of the 2020 election was
conducted from April 22nd toSeptember 24th, 2021.
2.1 million ballots wereprocessed by hand.
All counters were MaricopaCounty residents who voted in
the last election.
Each person was run through astandard background check.

SPEAKER_34 (02:08:06):
My name is Shauna.
I am a homeschooling mother offive, and I was an observer at
the Maricopa audit.

SPEAKER_21 (02:08:14):
Notice the people that come to save the day.
A homeschool mom of five soundsa lot like my wife.
Notice the people who come tosave the day.
Here's a war vet, United StatesNavy.
Notice the people who come tosave the day.

SPEAKER_37 (02:08:27):
It's people like us.
If you ever saw the videos, wewere the ones in orange shirts.

SPEAKER_29 (02:08:34):
I started the first day and I worked up until
yesterday.
I came in as an observer.

SPEAKER_05 (02:08:40):
We were just there basically as quality control to
make sure everything was runningsmoothly in the way that it was
supposed to run.

SPEAKER_24 (02:08:46):
Just oversee, watch for any anomalies, any that one
of our heroes.

SPEAKER_21 (02:08:52):
You know what's interesting.
I've been going to these TPUSAmeetups here in Kitzep County.
It's kind of interesting thecrowd that shows up.
A couple guys that look likethis.
They're our friends, they're ourallies, they share our core
values.
They choose to expressthemselves differently than you
and I are on.
Cool tats.
Right?
But this is a guy that I wouldhave on a job site.
I'd work on a shovel with them,just down to earth.

SPEAKER_24 (02:09:17):
Anything that was out of the ordinary.

SPEAKER_05 (02:09:19):
People from every different occupation, all walks
of life were there wanting tohelp and work and find out the
truth for their country.

SPEAKER_41 (02:09:28):
My question was more about the integrity of the
election.
I just I had to find out thetruth.

SPEAKER_42 (02:09:36):
I had to find out if we could trust our election
system.

SPEAKER_21 (02:09:41):
Her shirt says obedience to God, rebellion
against tyrants.
Thomas Jefferson quote.

SPEAKER_46 (02:10:09):
Is to look at the logs of the tabulators and
compare them to that CVR recordand then compare them to the
ballot counts.
The only way to ensure that isthrough those logs, which the
county has now via Twitteradmitted they deleted.

SPEAKER_38 (02:10:25):
Maricopa County election failed to control the
election.
They failed to do their job tomake sure that 22 months all of
these documents were saved.
They got rid of them.
Why did they do that?
Well, they did that because itoverwrote the log files.

SPEAKER_05 (02:10:44):
There were a lot of things that we noticed that were
not organic.

SPEAKER_29 (02:10:48):
The bubbles being filled in absolutely perfect.
Was obviously not done by ahuman hand, as though they were
printed.

SPEAKER_05 (02:10:57):
A human being didn't do that.

SPEAKER_29 (02:10:59):
Ballots that were, you know, that weren't weren't
lined up.

SPEAKER_42 (02:11:02):
The bullseye didn't line up.

SPEAKER_29 (02:11:04):
That target should have been in that bullseye.
The crosshairs would be here,and sometimes the mark would be
over here.

SPEAKER_24 (02:11:10):
The volunteers stop and look at a ballot.

SPEAKER_29 (02:11:19):
The paper was really thin.
I mean, because when they movedit, it's almost like it was just
it's just really thin.

SPEAKER_28 (02:11:25):
It looks like someone had stained the ballots
on purpose.

SPEAKER_34 (02:11:29):
At times there were more than 50% of the ballot that
was gone.
Sometimes it was twenty onlylike a 25% of a ballot was
there.
It was very peculiar.

SPEAKER_28 (02:11:39):
They were large pieces torn off of the ballots.

SPEAKER_46 (02:11:43):
When a ballot is soiled, damaged, or otherwise
marked, and shifts intoadjudication.
The startling thing to point outis another human being is now
determining your intent.
They have now effectively votedfor you.

SPEAKER_21 (02:12:01):
Over 20, 200,000 ballots were sent to
adjudication in Maricopa County.

SPEAKER_42 (02:12:06):
I would watch the ballots go by, and there were
odd patterns.

SPEAKER_41 (02:12:10):
I question the patterns of rape hates that I
saw.
That is an anomaly that wasrepeated over multiple days.

SPEAKER_34 (02:12:20):
Seven of those ballots are for Biden, one for
Trump, seven for Biden, one forTrump, seven for Biden, one for
Trump.
That clearly doesn't, that's notstatistically possible.

SPEAKER_42 (02:12:32):
If I had a box of all Bidens, and I didn't want to
look like I had an all-box ofall Bidens, wouldn't I just like
and stick some in?

SPEAKER_28 (02:12:40):
So we reported the patterns of the ballots, and um,
of course, we reported all ofthis to uh the leads, but not
quite sure if it actually got uhinto the report.

SPEAKER_38 (02:12:53):
The physical recount of the physical ballots pretty
much aligned with what theyclaim.
What they didn't tell you isbehind the scenes there were
17,000 plus duplicate mail-inballots.

SPEAKER_46 (02:13:07):
The audit has revealed that possibly well over
60,000 of these counted ballotsare illegal ballots, and without
further investigation, we do notknow whether a ballot is legal
or illegal, and that must bedetermined.

SPEAKER_21 (02:13:25):
And the the staggering difference in these
numbers is way more than enoughto alter and change every aspect
of the one of the things thatthey went to court over was they
wanted to prove that theseballots weren't of the original
batch because there werespecific printing parameters and
paper and everything.
And the way to do that is youcan obviously look at it.
Look, this is a thin piece ofpaper, this is card stock.

(02:13:45):
Like this one came from thecounty, this one, who knows
where it came from.
They're not the same.
A judge looked at that and goes,Well, I can't tell they're not
the same.
So, how would you do it?
Well, you'd do a pulp analysis.
You have to take a little dabout of the ballot and you have
to go and analyze it.
It'd be like that quick.
Judge said you can't do that.
That would be defacing a ballot.
What shut up?

(02:14:06):
No, I'm being dead serious.
Dude.
The courts got in on this,right?
So a lot of this stuff couldn'tbe.
Some of these ballots werealready torn in half.
But they just went toadjudication.
Some of the ballots weren'tfolded, but they came in an
envelope.
How do you get an unfoldedballot in an envelope to do with
signature verification?
Oh, well, those the signatureverification, that all burnt up
in a chicken coop.

(02:14:27):
I'm serious.

SPEAKER_34 (02:14:30):
We've had something very unique in this country, and
that we have freedom, and thatwe get to decide who our
president is, who our vicepresident is, who our elected
officials are.
We get to choose.

SPEAKER_42 (02:14:43):
Your vote is your single most important right on
earth here in the United States.
And to have that stolen from youis bringing it yours.

SPEAKER_21 (02:15:30):
The audit in Maricopa County proved that the
margin of error was greater thanthe margin of victory.
The Arizona Attorney Generalrequested numerous doc documents
in support of an investigationand has requested that Maricopa
County preserve all documentsrelated to the election.

SPEAKER_20 (02:15:51):
But they didn't.

SPEAKER_21 (02:15:55):
That is why we fight.
That is why we fight.
Because we see something to go,that's not right.
And like a dog on a bone, thatChristian nice turns into a
Christian resolve.

SPEAKER_31 (02:16:06):
And we're not going anywhere.

SPEAKER_21 (02:16:08):
We're not going anywhere.
Alright, guys, thank you somuch.
Thank you for sticking around.
Long show today, but I think itwas worth it.
And uh we'll talk to you againtomorrow.
Bye.

SPEAKER_02 (02:16:39):
Matt, sorry.
What night lifted that car toeveryone?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37.
I'm not old.
Well, I can't just call youMatt.
You could say Dennis.
I didn't know you were calledDennis.
I did say sorry about the oldwoman, but from behind, you
know, what's getting you is theautomatic treatment of an

(02:17:00):
experience.
Well, I am king, old kingexperience.
How'd you get that?
By exploiting the words.
There's never going to be anyproblems.
How do you do?

(02:17:21):
How do you do the things?
I'm asking the British.
We all.
We're all brilliant.
I am your kings.
You're still yourself.

(02:17:47):
These good people.
I am in haste.
Who lives in that class?
No one lives in there.
Then who is your Lord?
We don't have any Lord.
What?
I told you.
When I know those thingscommune, we take it in turns to
act as a sort of executiveofficers of the wheels.
Yes.
But all the decisions of theofficers have to be ratified in
a special byweight emission.

(02:18:08):
Yes, I think by a civil majorityin the case of your internal
fairness.
The lady of the lake.

(02:18:40):
That is why I'm called kings.
Listen, strange women are inimportance.
Distributive thoughts is nobasis for a system of
government.
Supreme executive power derivesfrom a mandate from the masses,
not from some classic or aquaticceremony.
You can't expect to wieldsupreme executive power just
because some water is passedthrough a sword.

(02:19:03):
Saying I was an emperor.
Just because some poisoned beasthas loved a similarity.
Shut up! Shut up! Now we see aviolence inherited in the
system! Shut up! Now we see aviolence inheriting the system!
Help, help us be repressed! Oh,what a giveaway! Share that,
share that! I'm on about.

(02:19:24):
Do you see it repressing me?
You saw it, didn't you?
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