Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (01:06):
Thank you.
We have before us theopportunity to forge, for
ourselves and for futuregenerations, a new world order.
Good evening folks.
You're listening to the Hour ofthe Time.
I'm William Cooper.
The chair is against the wall.
The chair is against the wall.
(01:28):
John has a long mustache.
John has a long mustache.
It's 12 o'clock, americans,another day closer to victory.
And for all of you out there onor behind the lines, this is
your song Time, weather andHighway.
Veteran of three foreign wars,entrepreneur and warrior, poet,
(02:02):
tony arbor, and takes on theissues facing our country,
civilization and planet.
This is the arbor.
Radio transmission.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
What did I miss?
It's deja vu all over again.
Ladies and gentlemen, are youenjoying your halftime show?
We're officially halfwaythrough the great reset decade.
I remember opening up in 2020,almost exactly five years ago to
(02:57):
the day, filling in for thegreat David Knight.
It was the first show on theInfoWars network of the new
decade and it started out with abang much like this, where
Trump had ordered theassassination of the Iranian
General Soleimani and thehashtag was World War III.
But that's kind of right, itwas World War III, except all
(03:18):
the governments of the worldwere uniting in a Rockefeller
lockstep fashion against theirown people, and we learned that
through the COVID-1984 lockdownsand President Fauci and all of
that.
But you know, really, folks,the quote from Vladimir Lenin
where there's decades wherenothing happens and weeks where
decades happen.
(03:39):
That's true for this decade,except it's a decade where
decades happen weekly, it seems,and we'll try to cover it to
the best of our ability here.
This is the Art of Burn.
Radio Transmission.
We're broadcasting from deepwithin the heart of Texas.
I'm streaming out on WorldwideChristian Radio.
I don't know if I told you guysthat last time we picked up the
WWCR signal, that was the homestation for William Cooper and
(04:04):
then Alex Jones, and then I havethe channel that Alex had for
many, many years.
As I picked that up, we'regoing to be there for a long
time as long as I can hold thatcontract.
I love WWCR and I loveshortwave and terrestrial radio.
I've left traditional talkradio for good.
I won't be on any morecommercial networks.
I'm building my own network andI hope you'll go check out
(04:26):
freeworldfm.
That's going to be a lifeboatfor free speech and many great
broadcasters are already thereand many will be joining us.
I'll be working on that in 2025, so go check out freeworldfm.
It's the 2nd of January 2025.
This is episode 494 of theArterburn Radio Transmission and
(04:48):
we've got a special broadcastfor episode 500.
I've been thinking about what Iwant to do.
I may have Mr Anderson join uson that one.
I wonder what you could if youcould put all 500 episodes
together.
I wonder if you could learnanything.
I wonder if there's anything to.
We should put it together andsee if there's anything coded in
it, but we'll jump right intotoday's headlines.
(05:10):
Of course.
Again starts out the year with abang.
You can't even take a day offin this great reset news cycle
and there's a reason for that.
It's called Tempo.
I don't know if I've spoken onthis many, many times, but if
you've listened to the show foryears, it's something a military
term called tempo and what itmeans is just always keep your
enemy off balance.
(05:31):
Even if you can't destroy them,you keep them off balance,
always just annoying here andannoying there and irritating,
and that's what all of our newscycles are.
Whenever you get comfortablewith one narrative, it shifts to
the other.
Oh, does anybody even rememberthe drones?
Remember the drones?
No, of course you don't,because I've got the headline
from Drudge right now and I'vebrought books on with me today
(05:54):
I've been thinking about, Iwanted to cite some information
in real time.
You always hear me pull from mystream of consciousness, but
let's pull from David Icke's theTrigger here in a second.
But I'm going to get into theheadline on Drudge.
Let's put this up, and not thatI like.
I mean Drudge is basically thisis what the intelligence
agencies want you to talk about.
(06:15):
This is the OperationMockingbird prescription daily.
But let's put this up on thescreen and let's check out this
headline and we're going to doan analysis that the mainstream
is not going to do because theydon't know this, or if they do,
they're going to go willfullyignorant.
This is the Army vet.
Terrorists and officials probemilitary link to the two
(06:41):
different attacks Las Vegas andNew Orleans, to the two
different attacks Las Vegas andNew Orleans the Matthew
Leibsberger.
He was a merry Green Beret fromColorado Springs.
We're going to get into that ina second.
But they're looking into andI'm going to jump to Zero Hedge.
(07:04):
They're looking into thepossible links between these two
things.
And, yeah, you know, whereveryou have this kind of
coordination that's what itappears like to me they'll throw
it out there as absolutecoincidence.
But I'm going to get into astory that again.
Let's look at this zero hedgearticle.
Let me pull this down realquick.
This is just again.
I'm just testing the waters andget it to the screen here.
(07:27):
This is, uh, zero hedge andfeds probe possible military
link between suspects in thebourbon street massacre and
trump hotel cyber truck blast.
This is zero.
Head says welcome to 2025.
Yeah, again, welcome to 2025,welcome to tomorrow.
Ladies and gents, federalauthorities and investigative
(07:51):
teams are probing a potentialmilitary connection between us
army veteran who displayed anislamic state flag isis.
Does anybody remember when theytry to rebrand that like from
coke classic to uh, to regularcoke?
When it was, I remember it wasisis.
And then they're like, oh wait,that has too many esoteric
(08:11):
meanings.
Uh, isil tried to rebrand it.
They're always doing, they'revery clever with that.
Uh, they had a head of islamicflag hell bent on causing
maximum damage by steering aFord F-150 Lightning EV they're
both EVs Into a crowd on BourbonStreet, killing at least 15 and
(08:32):
injuring dozens, and another USArmy veteran who drove an
explosives-filled TeslaCybertruck EV that detonated
almost like a vifette outsideTrump's Las Vegas hotel.
Just after the Bourbon Streetmassacre.
Two law enforcement sourcesfamiliar with the New Orleans
truck terror ramming attack andthe Las Vegas incident told NBC
(08:54):
News that federal investigativeteams are probing a potential
military connection between thetwo individuals involved in both
attacks.
You think so, and if you readinto the suspect, matthew
(09:16):
Leibelsberger, whatever his nameis if you read into him, he was
, of course, the Green Beret andhe was apparently anti-Trump,
going all the way back to 2016.
And I've spoken about thisbefore there is a school of
thought, and it's not all themilitary, but in some of the
elite units there are some,especially those who have links
(09:38):
to intelligence, where you cansee that germ of the Trotskyite
revolutionary strain, and what Imean by that is they really
don't have affiliation with thenation state.
They don't really feel likeAmerica is a place for defending
all on its own, for its ownsake.
(09:58):
It's more of an ideas based.
You see that in those who wantto fight in Ukraine, who want to
fight in Syria to help al-Qaedaoverthrow Assad, there is a
strain of that running throughelite units and in the military.
There's many people.
You can find them on Twitter orsocial media.
They're very virulent, very,very pro-war.
(10:22):
And with Trump running in 2016,if you remember, he was
challenging Hillary Clinton whowanted to shoot down Russian
aircraft who were bombingal-Qaeda, which is supposed to
be our mortal enemy.
I'm going to read about thathere in a second.
They're supposed to be shootingdown Russian aircraft, you know
, so we could protect al-Qaeda.
That's what she was running on.
(10:43):
And Trump back then he wasopposing that, saying it was
stupid.
And, of course, I was opposingany military intervention in the
Middle East in general, butespecially in Syria, because it
made absolutely no sense.
By the way, that cost me agreat deal of a great deal of
(11:04):
love from any broadcastingcompany that I was on.
They thought I was thetraditional combat veteran and
it turned out that I wasskeptical of foreign
intervention and I loved theConstitution, so they wanted
nothing to do with me at thatpoint.
So let's dig into this for asecond.
And again, the headline is aboutthe Army vet terrorist official
(11:28):
probe of military link.
Well, because we have.
There were.
Like Gore Vidal said, we're theUnited States of amnesia.
Nobody really remembers certainevents in the past with the
same kind of signatures on them,certain events in the past with
the same kind of signatures onthem.
Well, I do, because that's thewheelhouse.
I live in History and you know,this little cul-de-sac of
(11:51):
alternative history is somethingI love and I remember.
As I watched these headlinesunfold over the last 24 hours or
so, I started thinking aboutthe meeting.
Then this is, by the way, thisis a documented, this is an FBI
file Back in the late 90s thiswas documented actually mid to
(12:15):
late 90s and in 1994, there weretwo men that and this is weird
because I'm broadcasting on BillCooper's station right now,
where he originally talked aboutthis he had an office, a
broadcasting office and ashopping center and two men came
to his office, his library, hisstudio, and they wanted to talk
(12:40):
to him and one of the menidentified themselves as Timothy
McVeigh.
Now this is 1994, late 94, goinginto 95.
And everybody remembersOklahoma City 1995, right.
Well, these two men came in andthey said they were working
with the Army.
Now Tim McVeigh had been out ofthe Army for years.
(13:01):
After that he tried out forSpecial Forces and went through
SFAS.
I know what that is, that's aSpecial Forces Assessment
Selection Program.
He went through that.
He failed.
He probably failed for multiplereasons, but he got out of the
Army.
He was very disaffected andbitter and got into some of the
Turner Diaries and all a bunchof extreme right wing, if you
(13:23):
want to call it that.
But it got into some of theTurner diaries and all a bunch
of, you know, extreme right wing, if you want to call it that.
But it got into some of thedarker corners of the
anti-government stuff.
And he's out there roaming free, listening to Bill Cooper
showing up at different events.
This is post-Ruby Ridge butbefore and, of course, post-waco
(13:44):
, and so he was at Waco.
He shows up, then he shows upto Bill Cooper's studio.
Well, the second man was neveridentified but they said they
were working with the Army.
This again, this is in adocumented FBI file.
And both men claimed that theywere chipped.
They were.
They had tracking chipsimplanted in them.
(14:05):
The other gentleman who wasagain never identified, he had
said he had one in his shoulderand Bill Cooper felt that and
said it was like a lump in theshoulder.
And then Timothy McVeigh saidthat his implant was in his
right buttock and he wanted Billto take a look.
And Bill said no.
And afterwards Bill said I wishI would have taken him up on
(14:27):
the offer.
He was so weirded out and heasked him a few questions that
were very strange, like if weget pulled over, if I get pulled
over, what should I do?
And Bill Cooper said show themyour ID, you comply.
What else?
What do you mean?
What are you going to do?
And it was just very all loadedquestions like something could
(14:49):
link.
You know again, this is afterBill Cooper was called the most
dangerous radio host in Americaby the Clinton administration
and so there was a lot of heaton him.
So they for some reason,timothy McVeigh, showed up to
talk to Bill Cooper and withanother unidentified person who
said they were both working forthe military and before he left,
(15:10):
getting in that same I think hehad like a olive, drab, green,
whatever old car it was that TimMcVeigh drove.
He looked over his shoulder andhe told Bill, look out for
Oklahoma City.
So that really happened.
You know, that's not just a madeup shock jock.
(15:31):
Bill Cooper was not like that.
He didn't like.
He was an intellectual, verymuch a thinking man's analyst,
and he'd be on the edge ofthings that way out there.
But it was not for shock value,it's not what he did.
If you really look at the bulkof his work it was deep dives
into the nature of realityitself and he paid a high price
(15:51):
for not jumping on bandwagons.
And gosh, I have to.
This is almost episode 500 ofmy radio show and I love my
audience.
It's a niche audience because Idon't jump on bandwagons.
I know I could but I don't.
And the reason I don't isbecause I want to cover stuff
like this and tell you what Ijust told you, which you you
(16:11):
know.
You go over to another countryand you invade sovereign
territory, you blow things up,you have collateral damage, you
create terrorists.
Those things exist, and whenyou have a wide, open border,
(16:38):
you certainly are going to feelthe after effects of your
decisions.
There is something to that.
You know the law of cause andeffect, but most of this is
internal.
So I can't tell you for surethat there's linkages between
these two guys, but if they'refrom the same you know, if they
(16:59):
were working in the samemilitary bases, around the same
things, who knows, you know?
But these are the questions youought to ask, and you ought to
ask him too, like why, at thebeginning of the year, we have
to reset the narrative.
It's very much like a recipe,isn't it?
They have the last quarter ofthe year.
We've got drones, financialissues, of course, the election.
(17:23):
The biggest issue with theelection for me was that the
green lights, all the greenlights, were there.
The skids were greased.
None of the pallets of brickswere laid out.
The coordinated effort to flypeople coast to coast to burn
things down weren't there.
The screaming at the sky, thetalk show hosts that were
(17:45):
calling for armed revolutionweren't there.
All this stuff.
I'm talking about the normalblowback that you would have
seen if the buttons were pushedto do that.
For some reason there was astand down, but now you see us
going into 2025, and we're inthe first two days, and this is
the tempo that you're going tosee, and though this will be
(18:07):
forgotten too probably not byyours truly I will remember this
, but this will be forgotten tooand what's coming next, which
are the cycles of geopoliticaltension and finance and the.
You know what's going on withde-dollarization, all the stuff
that we're going to cover.
But just if you take awayanything else from this
broadcast, think about the storyI just told you.
(18:28):
You know these again we'regoing to I want to jump into
something here.
In a second too, there was a CIAspokeswoman who came out, and I
want to talk about setting thestage for you to accept that the
war on terror is back on.
You know it's part two, thereckoning trademark.
(18:49):
That's what they're doing.
They're just going to build.
They're building it back better.
You know you thought it wasgone and just when they think
it's over, they got the sequel,or the prequel.
They're going to bring it allout again, and that's what I was
covering.
You know, five years ago, weand that's what I was covering,
you know, five years ago we hadthe.
(19:09):
Remember the war on the global,the global war on terror.
The original name for the warin Iraq was Operation Iraqi
Liberation, until somebodypointed out it spelled oil, and
we're going to talk a little bitabout oil too today.
A lot of people forget just alittle tidbit about Syria that
you probably don't know.
I learned as a young mansomething about Syria that isn't
(19:30):
in the headlines and certainlyisn't in the mainstream
narrative at all.
All right, I want to jump intothis article and, by the way,
I'll be checking the chat overon Rockfin and on the America
Unplugged channel, as well asRumble.
On the America Unpluggedchannel.
I got a lot of changes I'mgoing to be making this year on
(19:50):
the show and how you caninteract with it.
But if you want to commentthere, or on my Twitter as well,
you can comment.
If you've got questions or youwant to interject, I'll do my
best, as I am my own producerand I've got Beans the Brave
here with me.
She's taking a nap over by theheater it's a little bit cold,
uh, here in Denison, texas andshe's uh, she's, uh, uh,
(20:13):
preserving all of her strengthsand all her reserves to go out
and bark later.
So, um, she's, she's nothelping me produce right now.
All right, let me jump into, uh,this article, because I I
really article, because I reallywant to dive into this, because
this is part of the narrative,right, you start with an event
and then you get a comment or asetting in place of those who
(20:38):
have an agenda and they want youto accept something.
It's kind of like when you havea financial crisis and you have
to first set up a boogeyman.
Like it's an outside source,like we didn't do it, it was
somebody else.
Like you know, remember, it wasPutin's price hike for
inflation.
Like it's pretty, it's prettyfar reaching to blame Vladimir
Putin's Russia, who has a, whohas a, an economy that's just
(21:02):
about the size of Texas, andyou're blaming him for the
inflation of the almighty dollar.
But that's what they did.
It's always an external enemy.
It's China is recently hackingthe financial system.
China hacked the Treasury SureI can buy that, right.
The Chinese balloon, theChinese hack on the treasury
(21:25):
Sure.
Like they need that for us todestroy our currency.
All right, let me put this upon the screen.
This is also zero hedge andthis is in the same line of
logic that we're talking on nowFormer CIA officer warns 1,000
Al Qaeda fighters in US for nexthomeland attack.
(21:49):
Can I just say for the recordthat I despise the word, the
nomenclature of homeland.
What other land is there?
I mean, if you don't control it, it doesn't make any sense.
It's very Third Reich-ish.
I don't like the term homeland.
I never understood theDepartment of Homeland Security.
(22:11):
I don't understand that either.
I mean you had the FBI, and theCIA supposedly weren't talking
for 9-11, so you create a thirdbureaucracy.
Uh-huh, when I ran for Congress, I remember the Dallas Morning
News interview.
They asked me what agencieswould you cut?
I'm like, oh, the DHS for sure.
And they're like why?
(22:31):
I'm like you don't know why.
In a recent discussion on theSean Ray Show, former CIA
targeting officer Sarah Adamswarned of a potentially
devastating attack planned by AlQaeda terrorists on American
soil.
The interview offerssignificant insights into what
may be unfolding, as Al Qaedasleeper cells could be
(22:54):
activating to wake up in thewake of the New Orleans
terrorist attack and a possiblevehicle-borne improvised
explosive device in the rear ofa Tesla-rented cyber truck that
exploded outside of Trump'shotel in Las Vegas just hours
earlier.
Ryan asks I just wanted toclarify.
You are 100% certain that thereare 1,000-plus al-Qaeda-trained
(23:17):
fighters within US borders.
He says well, al-qaeda saysthey trained and deployed 1,000
for this attack.
First off, I think there aremore than 1,000 al-Qaeda members
in the United States, but forthe homeland attack that number
is based on what al-Qaeda issaying, so they could exaggerate
(23:38):
it.
However, they did have about1,400 in the Hamas attack, so
the number is not off from whatthey did in the first round of
attacks.
Okay, that's a lot of word saladand that's what you usually get
from this kind of stuff, if youthey have a, they have a
cadence in a certain dialect, acertain way of speaking.
(23:59):
You saw that from remember the.
Of course this is a memory.
Remember the secondassassination attempt on Trump
and the guy that was likecoordinating fighters from all
over the world to get to Ukraine, like pulling them from places
like Afghanistan or wherever hewas pulling them from to funnel
(24:21):
them into Ukraine.
It's very much an operative,very much an operator.
There's operators speakingthere.
He says there's too much ofthis happening and when an
attack on our homeland emanatingfrom Afghanistan occurs, the
resulting moral injury will becatastrophic.
(24:43):
Those who served deserve farbetter than this.
And then you get this commentfrom General Flynn, who served
as national security advisor toTrump, well, I mean, like for a
week or two.
Again, it is not what you callit.
In the end, what matters isthere was an intelligence prior
(25:06):
in some agency or department andit wasn't acted upon.
A failure of decision makers,not a failure of intelligence.
Prevention is what we shoot forand what the hard work of
intelligence does.
So, says General Michael Flynn.
(25:38):
And let me just start.
Let me do this.
Uh, as we this, this is again.
They're creating a, a new spinon all of this, and I don't know
the meaning behind it, but youcan feel it.
You know they have to.
There's a narrative reshufflingthat's going on.
New administration, newproblems.
Uh, very much, like you know,know the beginning of 2020,
where you had this massive,perceived something and then you
(25:58):
had to put your eyes on itwhile something else is
happening.
I always try to figure out what, like, when these headlines are
going on, what we all should bedoing is figuring out what else
is happening, and I think Iknow.
But let's jump into this.
This is a book by David Ike.
It's called the trigger.
I'm going to reread this,especially in this season where
(26:20):
it looks like we're going to betalking more and more about uh,
you know, the forever war.
Um Gore Vidal said it was.
The war on tariff was terror.
It was like a war on dandruff.
Let's see if we can go throughthis really quick.
Yeah, this is former BritishSecretary Robin Cook, who
(26:45):
resigned from the Blairgovernment over the invasion of
Iraq in 2003, said publicly thatthe very name al-Qaeda came
courtesy of the CIA.
He said the term means the baseor database, and referred to
again this is a high governmentofficial in the British
(27:09):
government and said it referredto the database of Musha Hadin
fighters brought together tofight the Soviets, cook said in
2005.
The truth is there is noIslamic army or terrorist group
called al-Qaeda and any informedintelligence officer knows this
, but there is a propagandacampaign to make the public
believe in the presence of anintensified entity representing
(27:32):
the devil, only in order todrive TV watchers to accept a
unified international leadershipfor a war against terrorism.
The country behind thispropaganda is the United States.
Well, I've mentioned this manytimes and I've've never actually
cited, and there's morecitations.
(27:54):
This is a tome.
It's a huge book, greatresource.
If you have a chance, youshould go buy it in paperback.
I don't think he even sells itin Kindle or digital form, but
that's a good thing to have.
Again, what do these headlinesmean?
You have the possible linkageof two coordinated attacks
possibly, right, and then you'vegot the military link there.
(28:15):
I told you about Bill Cooper, Itold you about Tim McVeigh and
then you got the convenientlyyou've got the spokesperson who
keeps saying homeland over andover again, and you know he
wants you to accept that there'sa homeland and we have to.
And all of this has ties backto the global war on terror,
which is never ending.
It's like a, you know, it's atreasure trove.
(28:36):
They can get the kitty.
They can go back at two at anytime they want.
Take the cookie out of thecookie jar, whether that's, you
know, the crackdown on personalliberties.
You know, just for the children, we have to, for the sake of
everyone, we have to strip youof your constitutional rights.
It's what the Patriot Act wasto get you to accept this.
Also, it gets, you know, they.
First of all, they collapse theborder.
(28:57):
They allow these, you know,socialist billionaires and
multinational bankingconsortiums to fund caravans of
people showing them, you know,giving them visa cards and
showing them maps and how to getthere.
And they have these massivewaves of illegal immigration and
crushing the border.
You have that At the same time.
(29:18):
You have the Washingtonlawmakers, who complete traitors
to the United States of America, who create a welfare state,
who have blurred the linesbetween what a citizen actually
is and whether you can vote, andall the rest just trying to
demoralize you on every singlelevel.
So you're like well, I thoughtthis was the United States of
America, I thought we had acountry.
Well, unfortunately, you know,the political class doesn't see
(29:41):
this as a country.
They see it as an economicregion in the new world order.
And you're just stuck here.
And that's the way they see it.
And that's again.
That's the demoralization.
Anybody could cross the border.
Anything could happen.
The tell whether or notsomething is real anymore is the
(30:05):
border itself.
It's a great barometer.
Going back to something Jim Marssaid at post 9-11.
We have to go to Afghanistan.
I was one of those people.
I have to go to Afghanistan.
I was one of those people.
I had to go to Iraq.
We've got to fight the globalwar on terror.
Saddam's got a death ray.
There's weapons of massdestruction.
Dick Cheney called it the 1%chance or whatever.
You have to completely mobilizeeverything trillions and
(30:32):
trillions of dollars, currencycreation and debt and blood and
treasure to fight this invisibleenemy that you can't see.
You can't see the hijackers,the passport's found in the
rubble right, but you can't seethem.
Meanwhile, and I rememberthinking this as we corkscrew,
(30:53):
landed in a C-17 into Kandahar,afghanistan, I was on a show the
other day and they said oh,what years were you in
Afghanistan?
Was it 2003 or 2004?
And I'm like 2001.
2001.
I just turned 22, landing inKandahar, afghanistan, and I
(31:15):
remember thinking, as we landedthere, I thought well, four
planes take off from inside thecontinental United States and
strike targets.
Well, one of them crashed inPennsylvania.
It was most likely shot downand it's debatable on what
happened to the Pentagon.
But I'm in Afghanistan, I was22.
I was thinking that was prettystrange.
And then you get to Afghanistanand it's, you know, a blown out
(31:39):
road warrior, impoverishedcountry.
Very, it's tragic.
It has a lot of beauty, butit's tragic, you know, between
the revolutions, the CIA-backedcoups, the British, the Soviets,
everything.
It's really sad.
But I was there and I rememberthinking that doesn't make any
(32:01):
sense.
Well, of course it doesn't.
We have an invisible enemy andyou didn't close down the border
.
So Jim Mars was right.
That was the tell in 2001 andin 2002.
We didn't do anything about thepoorest, wide-open US border.
You could do pretty much.
You know.
You can sneak drugs, humantrafficking.
(32:22):
I've seen videos of whateverthey are cartels or paramilitary
in formation crossing theborder in formation crossing the
border over into our country.
And again, nobody's stoppingthat.
There's a whole lot of hoopla.
Trump said he couldn't build thewall because of the budget.
(32:42):
But he's commander-in-chief.
You can just actually order itbuilt.
If you can drop bombs on Syria,you can secure the United
States border.
That's pretty apparent.
You have that authority.
But that wasn't exercised.
Again, they did the same thingfor COVID-1984.
Same thing it's an invisibleenemy, you can't see.
(33:04):
And if that was the case, if we, you know, have to stop flights
and everything, why don't we doanything about the border?
They didn't do anything aboutthe border.
It's a convenience for them.
Because, hey, if there'ssomething we have actual,
legitimate blowback from one ofthese splinter groups, you can't
(33:25):
run a coordinated, centralizedterror network.
Really, I mean not, really Not.
If you're opposing superpowers.
It doesn't work.
By the way.
The superpowers are the onesthat put it in.
You know, if there is anythingcentralized, it's the
superpowers that put it intoeffect.
It's a convenient boogeyman.
You go back to 1979 and theintroduction of Tim Osmond.
(33:46):
I've talked about this manytimes.
Tim Osmond is Osama bin Laden.
He went to the Pentagon.
That's his code name.
George HW Bush was meeting withthe bin Laden family at the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel with theCarlyle Group on September 11,
2001.
You find that to bestatistically probable.
These are interlinked thingsand that's what we're watching.
(34:12):
So remember the invisible enemy, remember that the border is a
barometer, and I would tell youthat you're going to see more of
this kind of stuff movingforward.
I'm going to check the comments.
Sunshine and rainbows at theArterburn Radio Transmission.
Ladies and gents, I'll checkthe comments.
(34:33):
I'll go to Rumble.
Hey, thanks everybody for beinghere and we're going to do so
much cool stuff on this channel.
Guard Goldsmith says he's gotto get on the exercise bike and
listen to Tony.
Yeah, keep your heart rate at adecent level.
Keep your heart strong, keephealthy gonna.
(34:54):
We're gonna need guardgoldsmith's brain, so keep blood
pumping to it in this air guard.
Yeah, go check out guardgoldsmith's channel.
Liberty conspiracy folks.
Uh, just a magnificentrenaissance gentleman, great
thinker and lover of liberty, uh, harps over on uh, the rumble
channel says, uh, yeah, the eyeof the tornado.
(35:16):
Uh, who's to say what's for meto say?
That's a great, isn't that agreat song?
I thought I'd start out.
That's what I felt like thismorning.
So I put on a little bit of uh,mega death cover for the eye of
the tornado.
Thanks for being here.
Harps homeland equals wizard ofoz.
That's right.
Well, the wizard of oz is, uh,we're going to do a paratrooper
(35:37):
on that.
So much allegory.
In the wizard of oz itself, ozmeans ounce right and the wizard
of oz is an allegory and acritique.
Uh, on the uh fiat versus goldsilver standard.
You know that's, the yellowbrick road is gold and the, the
uh wizard lives in the emeraldpalace, which is the green back,
(35:58):
and dorothy clicks her silverslippers in the book l frank
bomb, not her ruby red slippers.
It's good to see all of you.
Yeah, I'm going to.
Uh, let's see what rockfin's upto.
We got, oh've got, a prettydecent amount of folks watching
over on Rockfin.
Let's see.
(36:19):
I'll go back to the beginninghere.
Steve Swann's over there.
Jason Barker.
Yeah, jason Barker's streamingus over on freeworldfm.
Thank you, jason.
Got a good crowd over onRockfin.
Got a good a good crowd over onon Rockfin.
Yeah, the Jason Barkermentioned what I said.
(36:42):
Anyone noticed that the dronefrenzy was in the forefront of
the media while they passed theomnibus and then it went away.
Yes, I noticed that too.
Always, you know, take theseheadlines for is with a grain of
salt.
You know, stay frosty, keepyour head on a swivel.
This is, you know, take theseheadlines with a grain of salt,
stay frosty, keep your head on aswivel, keep your mind, protect
your mind, because that is themost important asset you have,
(37:02):
especially in these times, andit's easy to go mad trying to
keep up with it.
I'm just doing the best I can.
I'm a paratrooper who likesbooks.
Ladies and gents, yes.
Steve Swan says the TurnerDiaries by the late great Dr
William Pierce.
Pierce was a harsh critic ofZionism.
(37:23):
He soon caught a heart attack.
Yeah, I read the book.
I just meant behind, you know,there was this and I think there
was demonized for a certainreason.
I've talked many times aboutTim McVeigh, the response to
that, and I was part of them.
(37:43):
I was a kid, 1994.
I was 14 years old.
My dad was taking me to seeColonel Bo Greitz speak.
You know they based thecharacter Rambo off of this guy.
He was an integral part of the1980s and early 90s for the
constitutional movement inAmerica and that all died.
(38:04):
When Oklahoma City happened, itjust they, you know, tried to.
They tied, they make a linkagebetween a monster, whoever you
know, and it wasn't tim mcveigh.
I mean tim mcveigh was a kindof lee harvey oswald type
character, in my opinion, out infront of that and they just
sullied everything that wasgoing on in that movement.
(38:25):
Uh, with tim mcveigh, that's a.
The tragedy of oklahoma citywas in large part a way to kill
that movement.
So no, I wasn't disparaging thebook, I just meant that's what
they're putting out there asbeing bad, right?
Yeah, dustin Helms, how couldthey possibly know if they
(38:49):
weren't monitoring them?
Great question.
Yeah, there's a lot to unpackhere, folks.
We'll do our best here on thetransmission.
I'm reading some comments.
Oh, this is an active chat.
(39:09):
I appreciate everybody.
I'm going to jump back into theshow, but I was reading
comments.
I need to get a producer andyou know Beans does the best job
she can, but she getsdistracted really easy.
All right, let's jump into somemore headlines.
So let's talk a little bit offinance.
First of all, I want to readyou.
(39:30):
I love Gold Telegraph, goldTelegraph over on X.
I don't have any affiliation,but an intelligent stream on X
and I thought he put out acouple of posts I want to read,
and then we're going to jumpinto an article.
And then I want to talk aboutCBDC.
By the way, you know,everything going on in Syria is
(39:53):
we're still kind of.
You know, if we have a chanceto talk geopolitics within the
hour, I don't think we will, butI'll just tell a quick story
and we may elucidate more onthat in the next show next week.
But if you notice, like youknow, the power struggle in
(40:19):
Syria and everything that's goneon since 2012 has been horrific
.
You know, assad was notfriendly in many ways to
international finance and otherthings.
We learned the lessons of a lotof dictators and he had close
ties to Russia, which again,central banking, all the things
that we've thrown out there.
But I was, as a young man, Ispent some time with a real what
(40:40):
they call a wildcat, or likesomebody who had gone around the
world looking for oil to youknow, putting holes in the
ground, getting oil out of it,like he was somebody they sent
out Texas guy, just extremelybright historical knowledge.
You know they'd send him out todrill oil or find oil or
whatever.
And he went to Syria severaltimes and he had some, he owned
(41:03):
some rights to some Syrian oilfields.
And he told me once he saidwell, you know who owns all.
So there's, you know, those arethe pipelines and the
underlying pipelines, theinterconnectivity, all the major
wells and then the transport.
And this was right when Syriakicked off.
(41:25):
And he told me he said well,tony, I don't know if you know
this, but a lot of people don't,but the entity that owns all of
the pipelines in Syria for theoil is a subsidiary.
It's a holding company for theCIA.
So think about that.
This is a tweet by GoldTelegraph and I thought this
(41:47):
pretty much summed it up.
Let me talk a little bit aboutfinance Going into 2025,.
The Federal Reserve is stillworried about inflation.
The European Central Bank isworried about an economic
shutdown.
The Bank of England is worriedabout stagflation.
The Bank of Japan is confusedabout stagflation.
The Bank of Japan is confused.
Canada owns zero gold.
It's like I talked with Daveand I and I was like all the
(42:10):
fundamentals.
I just know that they need aweak dollar.
They got to inflate their wayout of stuff.
So, hey, I'm in the rightbusiness.
If you want to preserve thevalue of your work, you have to
own actual money.
You can't do that with fiatcurrency.
It's a big drawback.
I mean, you may be able to findliquidity and you may be able
to get assets a little biteasier because you can float a
little bit longer, but the musicalways stops.
(42:32):
You don't want to get leftholding the bag when a currency
loses value or collapses in andof itself, imploding like a
dying star.
You don't want that.
So be sure and stay frosty.
Do your research and if youwant to get precious metals, you
reach out to me and you go towisewolfgold, or you go to
wolfpackgold, or just reach outto me on Twitter at Tony
(42:54):
Arterburn.
Whatever you need to do to getin touch with me, we'll figure
out how to put you in someactual money.
This is the US dollar share ofglobal foreign exchange reserve
held by central banks in 2001.
It was 73% and today it's 57.4,lowest in 29 years.
He said who's ready for tradewars?
(43:15):
Well, that's what we're seeing.
And then this article by Kitco,and I'll just read a little bit
and then we'll jump into CBDCBecause that's still.
Yeah, don't think that's overwith.
That is just getting started.
When the lizard people at Davos, when they start crowing that
(43:39):
they're so happy that 97% ofcountries have a white paper
drawn up on central bank digitalcurrency, it's not going
anywhere.
Kitcocom China's goldenresurgent Net imports via Hong
Kong more than double inNovember.
(43:59):
Gold premiums rise in Decemberand we saw that China's November
net gold imports from Hong Kongmore than double in November.
Gold premiums rise in Decemberand we saw that China's November
net gold imports from Hong Kongmore than doubled from the
prior month, while the return ofprice premiums also suggests
the world's top gold consumer isgetting back into gold in a big
way.
Well, they never left theunderlying weird story about all
this.
And this is me all the timelike digging into this, this
(44:22):
stuff and one of the weirdestthings and we'll have to cover.
We'll cover a lot this year onchina, but they've been playing.
China doesn't think in terms oflike months or even like years,
they're decades, centuries.
You know, napoleon said thatchina was a sleeping dragon.
You ought to let it slumber.
Yes, there is something Chinahas after 1971, this is the
(44:47):
timeline, you know 71, we go offthe gold standard.
72, nixon opens China, alongwith Henry Kissinger.
1973, the Trilateral Commissionis born.
1974, the united states runsits last trade surplus ever then
, never again.
(45:08):
And so where did all thosetrade deficits go?
Because trade deficit, therehas to be a deficit.
It doesn't go into the, itdoesn't go into the ether, it
goes to somewhere.
It enriches something.
Well, china.
You know, because of theTrilateral Commission and the
internationalists, they wereable to take American
(45:29):
manufacturing and put itsomewhere else.
This was part of thetransference of power into the
Asian sphere that thetrilateralists wanted the
technocrats, and they were ableto build this up.
Bilateralists, one thetechnocrats, and they were able
to build this up and meanwhilethere was this giant lull.
(45:50):
For a long time, given the 1980sand 1990s, where gold and
silver were relatively calm,nothing really happened.
There was a lot of emphasis puton the stock market and other
things and there was arelatively low inflation.
There was inflation, but notlike hyper, like we're seeing
now, not after the amount ofdebasement that's taken place,
but if you look by memory orlook at statistics, gold was
flat or would stay in the $300range.
It didn't really move anywhereand there'd be certain spikes in
(46:12):
silver, but not really.
Warren Buffett took a shot atit, but meanwhile China started
to heavily accumulate.
As a matter of fact, theystarted buying blindly.
If you look back at thebeginning of the century, they
were buying it off the books.
There's been some research toshow that China may actually
hold more gold reserves than theUnited States, which would
(46:35):
reset the balance of power.
If you were to go back to theoriginal standard, it would
reset the balance of power andChina has 60,000 gold mines and
when they find even if you likeRobert Kiyosaki, who wrote Rich
Dad, poor Dad, when he found agold mine there like he'd done
the research and they were aboutto renew the permit and the
(46:58):
Chinese government took it fromhim.
They wouldn't renew the permit.
Then they took the gold.
There's a war there and I'mgoing to bring this into your
attention because the trendsuggests not only like, oh,
they're buying gold again.
No, they've been buying it, andsome estimates show that they
have close to 16,000 tons, andthat would be, you know, the
(47:20):
United States.
Supposedly we haven't done anaudit since the 50s, but that
would be like 8,000 and somechange.
So something to this story saysChina imported a net 33.074
metric tons of gold in November,the Hong Kong Census and
Statistics Department announcedon Monday.
(47:41):
This represents a 115 percentincrease from the 15.414 tons
recorded in October and it's thehighest level of net import
since April.
So post-election, they see theresult, and I remember this too.
(48:17):
If you watched the election of2020, when it looked like, you
know, trump had the beginninglead and then all the whatever
you know the airplanes and dumptrucks full of paper ballots,
and you know the lockdownelection, whatever came in and
then he lost.
That the Chinese yuan was wasdown and then it was up.
You this has to do a lot withnationalistic policy, so it's a
trend to watch.
Ladies and gents, I'll see if Ican get to spot prices here too,
before we go.
I want to pull up this lastarticle that I want to cover for
(48:39):
the day, which is Natural Newsthat I want to cover for the day
, which is natural news, again.
The thing to watch, right,because it's not necessarily in
the headlines.
I'm glad that it's in thevernacular, but it's not being
talked about as much as itshould be, because they need a
crisis to implement it.
(48:59):
You've got to have aproblem-reaction solution for
this stuff.
Natural News, raymond Tomey isthe article that's who it's by.
Aaron Day, sounds alarm.
Central banks create digitaltotalitarianism through CBDCs
central bank digital currencies.
Several nations, particularlyVietnam and Kuwait, are
(49:22):
implementing central bankdigital currencies.
Several nations, particularlyVietnam and Kuwait, are
implementing central bankdigital currencies CBDCs tied to
comprehensive digital IDsystems, raising significant
privacy concerns and sparkingdebate.
Critics, including privacyadvocate Aaron Day, argue that
CBDCs are setting the stage fora global surveillance state
(49:43):
where all financial transactionsare monitored and citizens'
behavior could be linked to asocial credit score.
Refusal to comply could resultin severe consequences.
I think I'd be much like the,because I just didn't.
I just haven't conformed wellto the new order of things.
(50:03):
I'm a throwback.
Even when I was a kid I'm athrowback and I'd be much like
Stallone on Demolition man.
Whenever he gets the demeritsfor whatever language he's using
, he keeps getting the demeritsfor whatever, and that's this
social credit score Like.
Wherever you are, a littleticket pops out.
(50:28):
Countries like Vietnam andKuwait are mandating citizens to
register their biometric datafingerprints for access to bank
accounts and government services.
Noncompliance can lead to theloss of these services.
While supporters claim thesemeasures enhance financial
inclusion and security, criticsview them as steps towards a
greater state control overfinancial behavior.
(50:50):
The trend is growing, with 134countries exploring CBDCs and 11
already launched.
Well, that's the proud metricsby your friends at the World
Economic Forum, where, you know,really, depopulation
enthusiasts disguisingthemselves as entrepreneurs, not
(51:15):
much economics.
In the World Economic Forum,privacy advocates and concerned
citizens are calling for thereassessment of these policies,
emphasizing financial privacy asa fundamental human right.
The fight for financial privacyis intensifying globally as
more countries adopt thesesystems.
Well, that's the war.
That's the war you're in.
(51:37):
This is fourth dimensional,nonlinear.
Fifth dimensional.
I guess we're in a completelydifferent world and that will be
the fight.
You know, just again it's—andthe elites are fighting history.
Decentralization is wherehistory is trending.
They can't really stop that.
(51:58):
It's like the Soviet Union.
They could control it for awhile.
I mean, you can have atotalitarian, top-down nightmare
state for a bit, but eventuallyit breaks down because you're
human beings.
You know Yuval Hararinotwithstanding, who said that
man is a hackable animal.
Human beings are created in theimage of God.
(52:18):
God is a creator, god.
God wants to create.
That's what God does.
And if he makes you in hisimage, then you are de facto
creator.
And in a state where you'resupposed to be all gray, like
you know, there is no spirit,there is only the state, and you
have to do what the state saysand thwart or throttle your own
(52:42):
creativity.
That stuff breaks down andthose civilizations perish.
But that's what the elites want.
It's a Georgia Guidestonesfuture less than 500 million and
for some reason, when youbecome a multi-billionaire, you
get a card that says welcome tothe club.
Maybe you get a copy of SilentWeapons for Quiet Wars, maybe
(53:03):
you get that.
But they say welcome to theclub.
You're supposed to be adepopulation enthusiast.
Now let's see.
Let's dig into this article alittle bit more.
Concerns are backed by recentdevelopments in countries like
Vietnam and Kuwait, wherecitizens are being compelled to
register their biometric data.
(53:24):
In Vietnam, starting on January1, 2025, bank accounts not
reconciled with biometric datawill have their online
transactions halted.
The push for a cashless societyaims to enhance financial
inclusion and security,according to supporters.
Critics, however, view it as aslippery slope towards more
pervasive state control overfinancial behavior.
(53:46):
Well, it's not even about money.
Catherine Austen Fitz said itbest it's surveillance disguised
as money.
That's what currency is right?
It's an electric current.
Yeah, they pushing to fightfraud with CBDC is.
(54:10):
This is the always.
It's always to protect you.
Proponents argue these measuresare necessary to prevent fraud
and ensure financial stability.
Critics like day, however, seemsee them as steps towards a
dystopian future where everyperson's behavior and
transactions are monitored byessential authority.
All you need is history to beyour guide.
(54:34):
You just have to listen to whatLord Acton said Power corrupts
and absolute power corruptsabsolutely.
You give this authority to acentral bank and you make it
necessary for those transactions, for any economy to work, has
(54:54):
to be on your system.
Then you're certainly going tohave a social credit score.
You're going to have you getdebanked by the Fed, like there
is no turning back at that pointand it's the end of politics.
If it's allowed to beimplemented as they see it,
which I think, they'll implementit.
I just think if we do our joband we talk to our friends,
(55:16):
families, neighbors, we sharethings and we raise
consciousness about what centralbank digital currency is.
We work on the local and statelevel.
We do what we can.
I'm doing what I can.
If we all do what we can, it'llbe inert.
It'll exist.
It'll just suck.
It'll be like Nigeria.
You know they tried this inNigeria because they thought, oh
(55:38):
, the Nigerians love theirBitcoin and they're really good
at using digital currency, sowhy don't we give them?
We'll just do this.
You know the banksters roll itout as a beta test and it was a
huge flop and I love to see thatkind of stuff.
I like it when the so-calledsmart set and all their
(56:00):
simulations fail.
Isn't that great?
Yeah, the so-called smart setthey I watched that documentary
the other day on Enron calledthe smartest guys in the room.
I mean, that's what they?
They were so arrogant.
Human history.
It's just.
(56:20):
The only thing we learn fromhistory is that we do not learn
from history.
It's the same thing over andover again, even in just on
those micro levels like that.
So we can talk about thedangers and the evil of this,
but the way that you combat itis through information and you
raise your own level ofunderstanding and you share that
with others and then you workoutside of the system.
(56:43):
By the way, I'm reading youthese stories and I believe
that's absolutely dangerous,especially if you comply and you
sleepwalk into it.
You know, like we sleptwalkinto the Iraq war because of
fear.
You know, because they wereable to to use-level,
weapons-grade propaganda andthat filters through One of the
(57:07):
reasons I left traditional talkradio.
It's an intellectual dead space.
Now it's a game.
It's not about fighting evil orraising awareness.
It's the same.
It's a team sport and just notwhere I belong.
But if you can raise that up,it becomes again.
(57:28):
You share that with otherpeople.
You have an understanding.
You go outside of the system.
When you look at it from whereI'm looking at it, they'll have
these programs.
But things like gold have been apart of human history before
recorded history andcivilizations were built on it.
(57:49):
It's a part of us, it's a partof the human story.
I didn't make the rules.
I just know that, in an erawhere we're living in a massive
sea of fake, the future belongsto authenticity.
It belongs to the real.
So the more that you canunderstand the difference
(58:09):
between real and fake, thebetter off you're going to be.
And when they implement thesecentral bank digital currencies,
in my opinion they will arriveinert if we do our job.
So danger, but I'm giving you.
Let you close.
We have all the news as Tonysees it.
(58:29):
I'll leave you with a littleray of sunshine, because I think
we all need that right now,because it's turbulence
Definitely going to be theremainder of the decade for sure
.
We're in 2030, folks Don'tforget that.
We're inside Agenda 2030.
We're inside Agenda 21.
(58:51):
We're inside the Great Reset.
These are the things to focus on.
Politics can, a lot of times,can be a sideshow.
So focus on what you can do andthat way you're empowered,
because they will roll out thesethings, the technocrats.
They're just too hungry to doit.
They're not going to not do it,but what you can do is
understand the lessons ofhistory and share that with
(59:15):
others, which is what I'm tryingto do.
All right, go to wolfpackgold orwisewolfgoldandsilvercom, any
of the websites.
I was talking to my brother andI'm like we have too many
websites.
I know I have tons of websitesand you can also go to
arterburngold and be sure and dothat and subscribe.
Send us a little bit offeedback and give us a review.
(59:38):
It really helped me.
I'd appreciate that I made theshow just a little bit longer,
since we're no longer on radiotime constraints, but I do have
to exit.
I just want to say thank you toeverybody for being here.
It means a lot to me, fromBeans the Brave and myself, all
the crew, everybody at Wise Wolf.
We wish you a wonderful weekend.
Take care of each other.
End of transmission.