Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Then out spake brave
Horatius, the captain of the
gate To every man upon thisearth.
Death cometh sooner or later,and how can a man die better
than facing fearful odds for theashes of his fathers and the
temples of his gods?
Lord McAlay, you are listeningto the Ardaburn Radio
(00:32):
Transmission, are you notentertained?
Speaker 2 (01:10):
I forgot how long
that intro was.
One of the best ones.
I had to look through my emailsto find the archive.
I had Melissa record thatvoiceover at the end of 2018,
reading Lord Macaulay's Rome.
I thought that was just puttingit over.
(01:30):
Megadeth's Conquer or Die,great decision Wonderful intro
there.
Well, welcome to the Art ofBurn radio transmission.
It is episode 500 of theofficial broadcast of the
apocalypse.
I was thinking of all thetaglines I've created and I
didn't create shirts for them.
500 of the official broadcastof the apocalypse so many.
I was thinking of all thetaglines I've created and then I
didn't create shirts for them.
I have weapons, great truth,parapolitics, precious metals so
(01:54):
many I mean.
I had a list written down ofall the stuff that I wanted to
make into shirts for the lastweek or so, when I was in
Acapulco and Anarchapulco andhad some time to just kind of
zone out and stare off into thePacific and I was thinking about
what I was going to say on thisepisode and 500 shows in and
(02:15):
what have I learned?
Well, I keep going back.
What rattles around in my mindis the story of the Zen master
and the little boy.
You know, this is an ancientZen tale, a Chinese fable about
a 16-year-old boy is given ahorse for his birthday.
(02:35):
And the village says isn't thatwonderful, it's such a prize.
And the Zen master says we'llsee.
So he gets the horse and he'shappy and he's riding and he
gets thrown off and he breakshis leg.
And the village goes oh howawful.
He just got the horse and nowhe's lame, he doesn't have the
use of his leg.
(02:56):
And Zen Master says we'll see.
And then there's a big warbreaks out and they're
conscripting all the young menand this young man can't go.
He's saved from the fightingbecause he has a lame leg.
And they said isn't thatwonderful?
The village says and the Zenmaster says we'll see.
So that's what I look at overthe horizon, what's behind me.
(03:22):
In 500 episodes of thisparticular program and this is
the second iteration of mybroadcasting career We've got
some stories and stuff to gointo.
I'm going to do some kind ofdifferent subject matter after
we break through a little bit ofthe political periphery, if you
will.
There's a new book out byJoseph Farrell I want to cover,
(03:44):
but I wanted to give you somecontext of episode 500 of my
program.
So this all started.
You know, broadcasting for mestarted in 2013.
I long before wanted to getinto broadcast and do something
I always knew.
When I was a kid I would listento talk radio.
Imagine a 15, 16-year-old kid Ijust got my license at 15, and
(04:06):
I would drive around and listento right-wing conservative radio
.
I'd listen to, even tune in toTerrell Texas and listen to Bo
Grites.
This was like the height of thePatriot Radio Wars.
I had Bill Cooper and others.
I always loved radio, the waythat it told stories and the way
that it would captivate youwith a voice.
(04:27):
They have the disembodied voicespeaking to you and you could
imagine the story that the hostwas painting for you, and I
always loved that and some eventraditional stuff.
I'd even listen to Limbaugh andothers.
I'd be at the gym.
I was a weird kid and had acrash course.
In reality, thanks to my dad, Iwas showing me a lot of the
(04:53):
alternative information outthere in the mid-90s and, of
course, still joined themilitary.
I fell in love after 9-11 withhosts like Michael Savage and I
like the energy of it.
I like the stream ofconsciousness.
I like how it didn't soundscripted.
There would be a shift in thegear here or there.
(05:15):
I mean it would take you onthis journey.
I always thought that was theway I would broadcast, if I ever
did, and it took me a while.
But by the time I was 33, Idecided I was going to put it
all on the line and run forCongress, get on the air.
And I remember going into theDallas radio station.
You have to do these tests.
I always knew that I would do.
Okay, I had to do these.
(05:35):
You know they would put downthe tracks and you would have to
talk about a story or dosomething.
And I passed all that.
It was fine.
And I got my first show, but acompletely different person than
they thought they were allowingto go on the network.
And by the time I left thatcontract they were.
I think they were glad to seeme go because I didn't fit any
of the molds.
You know I wasn't.
(05:57):
You know you saw Dan Crenshaw.
I've been right about thesepeople for so long.
I mean you know Dan Crenshawtalking about how he would
effing kill Tucker Carlson if hesees him.
I mean just unhinged people.
But he's an approved veteran.
You have to understand.
Like I'm not an approved combatveteran, because once they find
(06:17):
out that I don't want to justtake your sons and daughters and
throw them into a meat grinderof unnecessary wars, then I'm
written off.
It was pretty apparent, by theway, and every other host that I
was with at the time they'veall gone on to syndication and
other things.
I went my own way.
I'm glad that I did.
I would have never been.
I didn't believe the thingsthat would have got me into this
.
You know the leverage ofsyndication, so I'm fine with
(06:39):
that.
But you know, after 2013, 2014,I made some choices and I backed
Ralph Hall, the last World WarII veteran in Congress, mainly
because he called me and askedme you know, I'm going to turn
my back on a World War II vet.
He wanted one last term inCongress.
His opponent was John Radcliffe, who is now the head of the CIA
(07:01):
, so they would send me out to,you know, as a surrogate to
speak for Ralph.
I was in charge of his Twitter.
I mean, I've been his opponent,but he trusted me.
So you know, I learned a lotabout speaking, I learned a lot
about presentation, I learnedabout broadcast and learned a
lot about politics a lifetime'sworth in that year and then, you
(07:22):
know, I was persona non grata.
It was time for the wildernessand I didn't do anything for
about four or five years I don'tthink the next time I've spoken
public.
I'd been asked to come out andhelp with the Alamo, trying to
save it from George P Bush, fromthem neutering it and spending
$500 million on some boondogglereal estate play down there and
(07:45):
it's uh, I think for the interimit's worked, uh, but I spoke at
the cenotaph, which they wantedto move, you know, this
beautiful monument.
That was the first time I spokein public, uh, for years.
Uh, so that was, you know, from2014 to 2018.
And then, uh, I was in a hotelroom, uh, traveling dog Layla,
(08:05):
and we were just going back andforth.
This was right before I startedWise Wolf and I was looking on
just YouTube videos and I forgetwhat subject matter I was on,
but I was thinking I was lookingup something with anti-war, saw
this video that someone haddone with a, uh, the imprint,
(08:26):
the over the music overlaid ofit was, uh, rocking in the free
world by neil young, but all ofthe imagery was of the iraq war.
And when it gets to, when thevideo got to the point where the
the lyrics are.
Here's another kid that willnever get to go to school, never
(08:47):
get to fall in love and neverget to be cool.
And it showed this little Iraqiboy crying.
And I remember I don't know, itwas one in the morning.
I'm sitting there with mychocolate lab and I'd been
silent for so long and I sawthat and of course we nothing
(09:08):
changed.
You know like we had all thishope in the ron paul movement
and the anti-war and the paleocon movement, all this stuff to
stop these goblins.
You know these uh warmongersand uh people that would kill
their mother for a dollar.
You know, like these, likethese, I mean just, I mean they.
You know David Icke calls themreptilians.
I mean, well, they sure as hellact like them, you know.
(09:30):
And I remember thinking I lookat that and it just hit me so
hard and I said I'm going to goback into radio.
And so after I opened my shopofficially on San Antonio, I
called up 930 AM, klup out thereand I said you got any slots?
And I just tiptoed back in.
I said, well, this time I'mgoing to do something a little
different.
Everybody's got a show,everybody's got a report, I said
(09:53):
I'm going to do, I'm going tomake it an acronym, I'll be
creative and it's art, you know.
So it's an art, not a science.
Arterburn, radio Transmission,art, and you know my themes were
just welcome to tomorrow.
I anticipated there was anunderpinning in the mass
consciousness that was about tojust break out and I think it
(10:17):
was.
You know, and so many differentthings and happening at the
edge of the great reset decade.
I knew the financial house wason fire.
I knew just history.
Everything that was driving meto start this program was all
based off of.
I want to try to make sense ofit and one of the things that I
(10:39):
always tried to do was try todisassociate the fear from my
message, because I found that somuch of the rhetoric out there
and the danger and things istrying to one, it's trying to
put people in certain camps Likethis is where my team is and
your team is and really we'rejust were just so I think again
(11:11):
divided for those reasons.
And then the message and thePSYOP, and I just wanted to
break free of that.
Now whether I've succeeded it'san open question, but I
certainly didn't start with theintention of creating fear and
division.
As a matter of fact, I openedup my I want to read this to you
.
I've got one of my books hereAt Anarchapoco.
I spoke two times and thesecond time I spoke I wanted to
(11:31):
touch on that about.
You know, I think there's somuch fear and division being
thrown out there and really it'sgotten away from scholarship
and people are captured by thefulcrum of partisan politics and
all the rest of that.
It's a very unfortunate time,but I wanted to read you a
little bit of this.
(11:52):
This is a history on gold that Ihave, and I mean the financial
part of what I do is a fractionof it, but we're in such a
monumental shift in history, asI've always said, that it's
important to understand themonetary system.
But I want to read you thislittle excerpt uh, as we
(12:14):
continue down this uh stream ofconsciousness for for lack of
fear but this, there's somethingancient and visceral happening,
connected to the old magicalpower that makes us believe that
gold is an unchanging store ofvalue, as you cannot eat it,
warm yourself with its glow,anything from it or wrap
(12:36):
yourself in it.
You might describe it asinherently worthless.
Nations have no actual use forit except as a security against
the day when everything elseloses its value.
Possessing it is an act offaith, not of reason.
A lump of gold has no moreinherent value than a bitcoin or
a painting.
It is simply worth what someonewill give for it, which is not
(13:00):
fixed in any way.
Which is not fixed in any way,its value is subjective.
A dream bulwark againstcollapse.
The size of a nation's goldreserve measures the darkness of
its nightmares.
This is like the opening salvoto this book.
I've been really enjoying it.
By the way, I'm going to haveAlan on.
(13:27):
This is Alan Arreara and uh,this gold, how it shaped history
.
I highly recommend it if you'reinto history, like I am.
It's a very detailed account.
But I bring that up because Ithink that's all too often why
we do what we do in the preciousmetals business or why we do
what we do in the alternativemedia.
I think there's a alternativemedia.
I think there's a danger in it.
I think there's a danger inpainting refuge from the
(13:50):
nightmares itself, becauseyou're just building up the
power of the nightmare.
We live inside the Great Resetand I joke about it's the
official broadcast of theapocalypse, but the word
apocalypse.
It's Greek, it comes from theroot meaning of the unveiling.
It just means to show you whatactually is.
Armageddon is a little bitdifferent, if you notice.
(14:12):
I don't say this the officialbroadcast of Armageddon, that's
the end of things.
But I think what we try to doat least those of us in this
side of the media and we have tobe our own journalist folks.
You know, nobody else is goingto do the job.
That's why there is analternative media.
It became the truth, became sodisassociated from the popular
(14:37):
narrative and disassociated frompolitics itself.
And I've been on the, you know,the cutting edge of a lot of
things going into 2020 andbeyond.
I mean way before 2020,.
My show was talking about theGreat Reset.
People looked at me like, whatare you talking about?
And then when they realizedthat yeah, it's a Rockefeller
(15:01):
lockstep plan around the globe,with governments at war against
their own people, you know,funding it from central banks to
lock you down and reward someand others are non-essential.
This was worldwide.
This wasn't just a plan in theWest, it's worldwide.
They did that.
So there's something to it,right, there's something
(15:22):
interconnective about thefinancial network and those who
control our reality.
So that's what I've beentalking about.
Now you can get caught up in thepartisan politics of it all and
you can scream until your youknow voice runs out or blows out
, but that's not going to helpanything, I think.
Understanding what your enemyis and a lot of times it's
yourself, most of the time wecreate this reality of mass
(15:44):
consciousness.
If you understand how thatworks, that's the gift God gave
you.
The mass mind is full of fear.
You take it from an individuallevel, you can fix that, but
that's what we do.
We're so easily put into thesecul-de-sacs of camps and
tribalism and all the rest.
They decompartmentalize onpurpose.
Camps and tribalism and all therest they decompartmentalize on
purpose.
It's wonderful to bedecentralized in the face of,
(16:07):
you know, control and all therest of that, but they make sure
that we're cut off from eachother so that we don't have any
sort of way to push back againstthe narrative that the rulers
want to create, the overlords.
You understand this.
There is no politics outside ofthe people versus the
plutocrats.
Everything else is windowdressing and nonsense, and
(16:28):
that's what I've learned in 500episodes.
And then you talk about andthen, by the way, it's more than
500.
There's a lot of mine justdeleted.
I wanted to be a goodbroadcaster.
I didn't like that episode.
I mispronounced a word.
I'm a lot less hard on myselftoday because I've done so much
broadcasting, but yeah, we'reway past that, and that's not
(16:49):
counting all the times I'vefilled in for people and all
this stuff.
This is just a nice milestone.
I used to be on every day, butwe stopped that a while ago.
It's a nice once a week kind ofthing, but that's the message
I've learned.
It's something that resonateswith me.
It's something I want to do alittle bit different here.
So every week when you tune in,I'll have some headlines ready.
We'll try to make sense ofwhat's going on in the world.
We'll do that together.
(17:10):
I'll talk with you, not at you.
That's always been my goal,because I'm learning too.
I don't have all the answers.
Anybody that tells you to do it, they're lying.
Matter of fact, the older I get, the less I seem to know.
I've tried to follow the lineof Socrates.
You know, the Oracle told himhe was the wisest man in all of
Athens and he said there's noway.
And I went and asked all thepeople.
(17:32):
He asked businessmen andstatesmen and architects and
engineers and everybody else,and he finally came back and
said well, I guess the Oracle'sright, because at least I know I
know nothing.
That's kind of the beginning ofhow all this works.
If you want to know, it's justfigure out.
You don't know anything, sowe'll do it together.
It's like Christ said let usreason together, we'll reason
(17:53):
together here every week.
So I appreciate you all formaking 500 possible and we'll do
it without the fear.
All right, let's jump into,let's just do this one first.
I'm going to knock this.
This is a quick story, but itmade me laugh and I can't not do
it.
And then, when I go, I want totalk about fluoride for a minute
(18:15):
and then we're going to jumpinto the final article.
That was this new book thatJoseph P Farrell has written.
I didn't realize he'd put out anew book, but it has to do with
some things I'm starting tocatch on to, and you can.
You know, look, everybody canhave their own opinion of what
we're going to bring up, butit's about breakaway
(18:35):
civilizations and the aftermaththe financial aftermath of World
War II, and I think it makes alot more sense in uh, when, when
you're watching it through thatlens.
All right, let's uh, let's dosome standard politics stuff.
This is everybody want.
Why is the media dying?
Why does it have any marketshare?
(18:59):
Well, this is why, uh, zerohedge.
Well, this is why, zero hedge.
Oh, let me put this up, not ajoke.
Jake Tapper writes book on thecover-up of Biden's cognitive
decline.
After covering up Biden'scognitive decline, I used to
(19:20):
think that, you know, I mean,it's like the Babylon Bee or the
Onion or whatever, they'rerunning out of room.
They're running out of room,they're running out of headlines
.
For some reason, cnn anchorJake Tapper thought it would be
a good idea to write a book onhow the media covered for Joe
Biden's obvious mental declineafter he spent the last election
covering for Joe Biden's mentaldecline.
(19:41):
It's called Original Sin, nowavailable for pre-order.
This is Jake Tapper's Twitteroriginalsinbookcom from Penguin
Press.
So this is again they.
You gotta wonder like what istheir motive?
You know the entire mainstreammedia narrative and we know
(20:07):
about things like OperationMockingbird and we know that you
know there's been an influencefrom intelligence and higher-ups
for a long time to control thatnarrative.
A better conspiracy when youjust get the people that carry
it out to believe it or not, tobe a vessel of their own
(20:28):
self-aggrandizement?
Gore Vidal talked about that.
Now, he was an insider'sinsider, you know.
I mean Vidal.
If you look at you know hishistory.
His dad was the head of FDR'saviation wing, of his
administration, and hisgrandfather was a senator, had
(20:52):
all these insider deals and hisdad dated Amelia Earhart.
I mean, he just knew all thesepeople and he came to the same
conclusion.
He was like well, they don'thave to, it doesn't have to be a
conspiracy if they just allthink alike and that's just fine
.
These people, if you've everbeen in media, they actually
believe this stuff.
Like that, they're actuallydoing good.
(21:14):
Like he thinks he's still Imean, and in some way he was
covering the truth, doing whathe's supposed to do, it's they
just put their finger in thewind and see which way it's
going.
Whatever the narrative needs tobe, it's very malleable.
The truth is transitory intheir world.
But it also brings to mind thattruth is treason in the empire
(21:36):
of lies.
Interesting times.
I thought that was fun, butthat's how bankrupt the entire
mainstream media narrative is.
That's why alternative mediaexists.
And then now we have what DavidIcke calls the mainstream
alternative media and you knowthere's a philosophy there that
(22:02):
also, I think, has credence andwe can watch all that it make.
Mainly, just do your ownthinking.
Don't listen to anybody unlessyou come to that conclusion
yourself.
Everybody, your favoritecommentator may have an idea, it
may lead you in a certaindirection, but do your own
research.
That's, that's bill cooper 101.
All right, let me stop thatscreen and we're going to go go
(22:23):
to this article I found onNatural News.
Hold on, put this up.
This is Utah and I want to getinto this because for so long
and this is how stuff haschanged so rapidly in the last
(22:44):
decade or so since I startedbroadcasting I've been
broadcasting for 12 years andstuff has changed.
I mean, it's like it's not eventhe same world.
You know, you just talk.
Now it's like a foregoneconclusion that we're going to
talk about tariffs and thenational discourse, and that was
so far away.
I couldn't remember that.
The Dallas Morning News laughedat me.
That was so far away, Icouldn't.
I remember the Dallas MorningNews laughed at me.
(23:09):
I was in their vetting process.
You know, through there theyhad all the candidates and John
Radcliffe was there.
He's now head of the CIA, bythe way, and he was in the room
with me and we got to talkingabout economic nationalism.
They just started chucklingwhen I brought it up about
tariffs and economic nationalsand how Ronald Reagan saved
(23:29):
Harley Davidson.
I have all this you knowhistory rolling around in my
head.
They don't like that.
I didn't realize that that waslike.
You're not supposed to knowthings, you're just supposed to
have a.
You know a winning smile andyou know a narrative with
whatever establishment, you knowfinancial network or whatever,
and that's why you get yourstamp of approval.
If you're anti-war thoughyou're also, I mean, that is you
(23:52):
just sealed your own fate,especially in any sort of
establishment, paper or newsoutlet.
They are definitely mouthpiecesfor the military-industrial
complex these days, but there'sso much conspiracy that's been.
(24:13):
Now it's no longer a conspiracy.
I mean, if you watch DrStrangelove, jack D Ripper, the
main character of Dr Strangelove, talks about fluoride and
fluoridation and why he onlydrinks distilled water or
(24:34):
distilled liquors.
Stanley Kubrick put that outthere, and then it kind of made
a caricature of itself becauseyou had groups like the John
Birch Society and right-winggroups that have brought up like
hey, you know, fluoride is aneurotoxin and it anesthetizes
people.
Well, you also get that fromOperation Paperclip.
(24:57):
You know we get the Nazis.
It was a race to get the Naziscientists at the end of World
War II.
We'll talk a little bit aboutthat at the end of the show
because Joseph's new book,joseph Farrell, I think has to
do with that operation,operation paperclip.
You know we got the best naziscientists.
We got werner von braun.
You know like, uh, he went fromyou know the, the blitz on
(25:21):
london with the v2 rockets tobeing on disney and uh, we
rolled out and a lot of the youknow the nazi scientists and
with uh, with alcoa, uh alsopushing, they had alcoa.
You know one of the byproductsof, of making aluminum is
fluoride and all this extrastuff laying around.
And the nazi scientists werelike, hey, um, you don't put
(25:45):
fluoride in your water becausefluoride is an anesthetizes.
You, you know it kind of makesyou a little bit more docile and
you know you can argue that itmesses with your pineal gland
and your third eye and all thestuff that keep you from being
spiritual, metaphysical, to kindof keep you drone.
Likes.
Matter of fact, fluorine is 94%of the ingredient of Prozac.
(26:08):
Fluorine is just a derivativeof.
It's the same, basically thesame thing as the same
anesthetizing kind of effect.
And so that's what you know andyou.
It's funny because they, thepeople that are proponents for
fluoride in the water, theyalways say, well, it's good for
the teeth or whatever.
And I'm like, well, why don'tyou mass dose vitamin D?
How come you don't mass dosevitamin C?
(26:31):
Like it doesn't make any sense.
Like why this one thing, thisindustrial byproduct?
What are you doing?
Why are you putting that in thewater?
And, of course, how do youcontrol the dosage?
It doesn't on its face.
It's just stupid.
Like that doesn't on its face.
It's just stupid.
Like that doesn't you know.
They sell you because they havea certain amount of trust, and
(26:57):
now that we're in the fourthturning, that we're in this
cycle of history, trust isdiminished.
All right, so let's put this upon the screen.
This is natural news.
So this is where we are okay.
Utah set to become the firststate to end water fluoridation
for all residents.
Well, this is another one ofthose headlines I didn't think
I'd see anytime soon when Istarted out in radio.
This is how fast we've moved.
(27:26):
Utah lawmakers last week votedto pass the first US statewide
ban on adding fluoride to publicwater systems.
The Utah Senate voted 18 to 8in favor of the measure.
After it passed the House, whowere the eight people?
You like fluoride in the water?
If Governor Spencer Cox signsthe bill into law, it will end
community water fluoridation.
The new law also givespharmacists new authority to
(27:47):
prescribe fluoride supplementpills.
Typically, such pills can beprescribed only by a dentist or
a physician.
All right, well, they're goingto give people the ability, like
they give you a choice, whichhas always been fine.
There's fluoride water I'veseen for the children, like they
have at the grocery store orwhatever, because people just
(28:11):
that's what they believe.
You know, rep Stephanie Grishis, who sponsored the bill, told
the defender she is thrilledwith the legislature.
This legislature voted to passthe bill.
Utah leads the nation in so manythings.
This is just one more example.
Well, it's definitely'sdefinitely leading the way.
Grishas emphasized that the lawallows people to make their own
(28:33):
decisions about whether or not,how to take or supplement
fluoride.
Well, that's all I've everadvocated.
I mean, just, if you want toingest fluoride, that's your
prerogative.
And as a community, how do you?
Even nothing else is mass-dosed.
(28:53):
I mean that should be the alarmbell that something is.
Why are you putting it in thewater?
You've got to trace that backand they'll say well, it's a
conspiracy, it has nothing to dowith Operation Paperclip.
It has nothing to do with Alcoaand all these other things.
Paperclip has nothing to dowith Alcoa and all these other
things.
You know, if you want tobelieve that everything is just
accidental and there is no youknow that powerful entities
(29:23):
don't collude and there is nosocial engineers if you want to
live in that world, that soundsfine.
You're just going to get hit.
You're going to get hit byeverything, from the side or
from the front.
You won't going to get hit.
You're going to get hit byeverything, from the side or
from the front.
You won't know what's coming.
Rick North, board member of theFluoride Action Network or FAN,
one of the plaintiffs, who lastyear won a landmark lawsuit over
water fluoridation against theEnvironmental Protection Agency,
(29:43):
said Utah's fluoridation banbill enjoyed wide support in
both the House and Senate,reflecting both concerns over
health risk and firm oppositionto adding any drug to drinking
water.
North added if the governorsigns the bill, it'll be
historic and it could be acatalyst for other states and
cities to do the same.
Well, isn't that a great way tostart a trend?
(30:10):
Well, that's a good trend.
You have a bad trend.
You can always undo it.
It's like Harry Truman saidwhatever you do make a decision,
you can always make another one.
It's like you made a baddecision America.
We trusted some people and,because of their authority or
their place on high, we followedthem and they created this
current reality and a lot of oneof those realities was putting
(30:34):
fluoride in the water, and Iwish I'd have known that years
ago.
I didn't really dig into that.
It's kind of likegeoengineering is right today.
It'll be the same thing likeyou'll be seeing these headlines
, folks, just uh, spoiler alert,you'll be seeing these same
(30:54):
headlines.
There'll be class actionlawsuits on, uh, geoengineering
and uh, weather modification anduh, spraying things over your
head without your consent.
That's, that goes on.
And I've been saying that foryears and years and years and
I'm like, well, it's prettyapparent.
I don't have to be in the know,I can just look up and I can
(31:18):
tell when forecasts call forlight winds and sunny skies for
four days, and then it'll startraining, like okay, well, you
know.
And then you'll just see clearskies for skies for four days,
and then it'll start raining,like, okay, well, you know.
And then you'll just see clearskies for three or four days and
people say, oh, it's just theregular contrails.
I'm like, well, so no planesflew today or yesterday or the
day after that, and then all ofa sudden, there's planes.
(31:39):
Yeah, okay, that's silly,that's silly.
Opposition to water fluoridationhas been growing across the
country, particularly since theCalifornia federal judge ruled
the case brought by FAN MothersAgainst Fluoridation and others
(32:03):
against the EPA.
Water fluoridation at the US,the current US levels, possess
an unreasonable risk tochildren's health and the agency
must regulate it.
Well, this is all good news.
Yeah, fluoride a byproduct ofphosphate fertilizer production.
Grixis stated working on theissue last year.
(32:28):
Uh, after a resident approachedher of having individual choice
when it comes to whatprescriptions she and her
children took, local waterconservatory districts also
reached out to cullimore to askthe state to ban water
fluoridation, citing claims ofemployee safety and the decision
in the Landmark case againstthe EPA.
(32:49):
Well see, once that dam breaksright and there's legal
precedents, then there'sliability, which is also fun.
Yeah, kulmar also emphasizedthat many Utah citizens don't
want the chemical added to theirwater.
It does not prohibit anybodyfrom taking fluoride.
(33:12):
You can tell somebody that.
I mean we call that thefluoride.
Stare, you know, I'm tellingyou it's a neurotoxin and that's
what it does.
I learned that from Jim Marsabout Prozac and fluorine.
It's like there's a reason whythe Operation Paperclip
(33:34):
scientist asked us why don't youput it in the water?
Yeah, it says we're watchingwater fluoridation unravel
globally in real time.
Well, it's interesting andthere's much more to this.
This is the beginning and, likeI said, this will lead to other
things.
So it doesn't really fit.
(33:58):
And what I'm really sick oflately is the narrative that
everything's an op I came out of.
I don't fit.
I'm a man without a country,somehow like I.
I don't fit in.
Uh, traditional talk radio,which is a game like that's not
even real, like conservativetalk.
I left that completely.
I kept trying.
I mean, I tried, I tried, I didevery which way I could.
(34:20):
Like maybe I can be, you know,I just fit, I'll be the one
that's just a little different.
No, no, it doesn't work at all.
It's an absolute waste of timeand a dead end.
And then you got the other sideof the spectrum, which is I
don't go far enough and sayeverything's an op, you know,
and nothing matters.
And you know, come on, you know, the world is, this is God's
(34:44):
creation, and there'sintricacies and the possibility
of chance and free will, whichthere is.
And then there's also those whohave the enormous amount of
resources and wish to stiflehuman progress for their own
ends and benefits.
That's just history.
It's what they do.
I mean that's that is the fightagainst psychopathic,
sociopathic, soulless automatonsfor Satan.
(35:06):
That's what they do.
They accumulate dead things andrule over you, and that's what
they love.
They don't have the same kindof conscience that regular
people have.
I mean, that's probably.
They probably hate us for it,for our creativity and for our
heart and all the other thingsthat you know make us
susceptible to ops.
But they don't controleverything and you understand
(35:30):
that when you break, this is anexcel.
This is an example of when youbreak into mass consciousness,
when people when it, whensomething lets loose a truth and
it finally breaks out and itstarts to wind through and
people internalize it, itcreates these sorts of events.
You don't have to have a.
It's not a war of guns, it'snot a war of tanks, it's not a
(35:54):
war of bombs, it's a war of themind.
That's what this is.
That's why I'm in it, becauseif you explain it right, then
that passes on and the nextperson picks it up and it
changes the consciousness andthat's what makes change and
that's why, like I said, itstarts with fluoride in the
(36:16):
water and now we have anentirely different because of
what they did on the jab andOperation Warp Speed and all
that stuff, because of theabsolute overreach and the
tyranny of it and it's so, overthe top, blatantly obvious that
(36:37):
something's wrong, that the whatthey could have pushed five
years ago no longer exists.
It's diminishing.
So you understand that there'sa there's there's like you give
thanks for things like that.
So I give thanks for theseheadlines.
This is cool Stuff I didn'tthink I'd see.
I thought it would take 20, 30years and it's only taken about
(37:00):
four Because every once in awhile there's a catalyst,
there's what's called abifurcation point.
That's what COVID-1984 was.
It's a bifurcation point.
It's where reality and whatcould happen and then they split
and they diverge.
And this is where we're on.
We're on a different stream ofhistory and these kind of things
(37:22):
are start popping up.
Watch geoengineering next.
It will be a thing within two orthree years and you'll start
seeing I'll be reading headlineslike this, and then it'll be
through the legislature andthere'll be people talking about
it and environmentalists andpeople that had been captured in
that mind control for so manyyears will start coming out.
Let's don't give up on them.
They're just partisan.
(37:43):
Politics makes people reallystupid because they have to play
team sports and it'stribalistic and it's what.
It's what you tend to want todo, right?
All right, let's jump around alittle bit.
I should probably go to the chatreally quick.
Let's go to the chat.
I always neglect the chat.
Don't mean to do that.
I want to shout out to ourlisteners on WWC, our worldwide
(38:05):
Christian radio, we're tuning in, tuning in across the globe on
shortwave.
That's why my terrestrial seatalways will have that for the
transmission, to make it legitBroadcasting in real time there.
Let me go to Rockfin real quick.
We're over on the AmericaUnplugged channel.
I want to see who is all overthere.
Let's see, we've got JasonBarker.
(38:27):
Karen Carpenter, guardgoldsmith, octo spook good to
see you guys.
Aaron gale is over on the chat.
I'm trying to uh scroll throughto see if there's anything you
all, you all, had for me.
Um, I need to like startsetting a time so you can go.
You know, send me a question orwhatever you'd like to do.
(38:49):
Karen Carpenter says a fewstates are already working on
geoengineering bans.
Yes they are and that's what I'msaying.
That's the future, and Chrissays congratulations, tony, on
500 episodes.
I'm so thankful for yourreports.
I've learned a great deal and Iknow I'll continue to learn
(39:09):
more.
Well, that makes two of us.
I always learn something.
I remember I did a daily showduring 2020 when I first got up
to Branson and I was on TruthFrequency Radio and I looked at
the end of the 2020, and I hadthese shelves filled up with
printed stories.
(39:29):
I mean, I'd done so much opresearch on it, so much that was
going on at that time and itwas hard to keep up.
That'll make you a goodbroadcaster.
I even thanked David Knightwhen I was at Anarchapoco.
I was like every Thursday, Ihave to talk to David about
markets and gold andcryptocurrencies and you don't
wing it with david, you betterknow something, uh.
(39:51):
So I always try to knowsomething new uh by thursday and
uh, it's not always easy to orteach david something.
That's even tougher, um, but II'm glad to see all of you there
and uh in the chat on rockfin,and then I'm over on rumble as
well.
I think I've got one of thechats uh over on my twitter is
(40:15):
also going.
I need to make sure that's goodwith birdhouse blues and, uh,
others.
What is that narrow way, narrowgate?
Uh, over on rumble, it's goodto see you guys, you know.
See, we've got a comment over amartin thorn.
Good day, tony, and all thanksfor that comment.
Yeah, I'm just trying to keepup with the comments and we're
going to be doing some, somegood stuff on production here,
(40:36):
uh, on the show very, very soon.
All right, let's, uh, let's dolast article today.
I thought this was cool, let mestop the screen.
And, by the way, and before weget to this, the one last thing
(40:59):
when I got, let me just do onemore thing before I get into
Joseph P Farrell's deal.
I just I just thought of itbecause I was thinking of a text
.
My one of my friends fromBranson area is a business owner
and he was, I mean, very astuteguy.
As a matter of fact, he askedme one time I had an InfoWars
shirt on back in 2020.
He said you listen to InfoWars?
I said, yeah, I'm a host overthere.
He's like what I'm going downto Austin to host for Owen
(41:20):
Troyer tomorrow or whatever, andwe've been friends ever since.
But he sent me a text the otherday.
He said is this was thisreality and it was.
Let me put this up real quickand then we'll jump over to the
Joseph P Farrell story, but holdon one second.
(41:40):
It was yeah, this is antiwarcom.
By the way, trump shares an AIvideo of a Trump Gaza.
This is again a Trump Gaza.
The video showed a goldenstatue of Trump in what might
(42:11):
look like drawing backlash onsocial media.
The video showed a goldenstatue of Trump what appeared to
be Elon Musk dancing underfalling money and Trump and
Israeli Prime Minister BenjaminNetanyahu lounging on chairs
near a pool.
Should have had Netanyahudancing.
I think that would have beenbetter, because you know the
(42:32):
Israelis, they like theirdancing a lot.
It's very dancing and a lot ofdancing in the Israelis.
In response to the video, basimNaim, a senior Hamas official,
told Newsweek that Trump wasonce again proposing ideas that
do not take into account thecultures and interests of the
(42:52):
people.
Yeah, yeah, trump shared thevideo after his repeated calls
for the US, to quote, take overGaza.
Yeah, a plan that would requirean ethnic cleansing campaign,
since he has said thePalestinians must leave and
wouldn't have a right to return.
(43:15):
I've commented a little bit onthis.
I had to verify Again.
This is why it's so importantwhere we are to stay grounded.
There's so much AI and then theheadlines and disinformation is
to make you completelydisassociate from the truth,
(43:36):
right, all of this is meant to.
So when this stuff like thishappens, like I had to go verify
it because I'm like is thatreal?
And that's what I said Is this,is this?
Even because he's asking me ifit's real and I'm like I'm
asking Right, that's just wherewe are and that's why that's a
strange Right and this will be.
(43:56):
I mean, look, the Greenlandthing and the Gulf of America
and all that stuff.
Greenland I've already givenyou my arguments on probably a
legit pickup as far as nationaldefense and other things.
Pat Buchanan made that argument,but you'd also have to couple
it with drawing down forces inEurope and other things.
That would be America first.
(44:17):
I mean, so it's like, well,throw that out there, but then
you know, or the annexation ofCanada or whatever that I
despise and other things thatare nonsense.
So you don't need to grow thesize of the United States or
territories in any way.
But looking at something likethis and he's floated this idea
we're going to get to that thiswill come back up, not something
(44:41):
that I agree with.
I mean.
Obviously, something differentneeds to be done and I've got
some ideas on that, but it'smostly like a marshall style
plan from europe.
Uh, but what's happening as faras the us and committing us
troops to, uh, to take gaza ordo any some like scooby-doo real
estate plan, you know, andscooby-doo the villain is always
(45:02):
a real estate developer.
Okay, so just take that withyou, all right.
So that is real and weird, allright.
Let's see Last article of theday.
Let's see.
This was cool Again, josephFarrell.
(45:22):
He wrote a book that I lovecalled Babylon's Banksters.
He's written about 9-11 andfinance and I mean ancient Egypt
and other things.
He's got an interest.
I need to have him onParatrooper, but I saw this
(45:43):
article.
I thought we would go over it alittle bit.
There's a new book out.
Natural news, covert wars andbreakaway civilizations reveal
the connection betweenclandestine finance and
extraterrestrial intrigue.
The Nazi counterfeiting schemeOperation Bernhard was a
(46:16):
precursor to a hidden financialsystem used to fund covert
operations and black projectsduring World War II.
Farrell suggests the existenceof a breakaway civilization, a
clandestine network of elites,intelligence agencies and
corporations operating beyondstandard oversight and backed by
a secret reserve of looted gold.
The seizure of counterfeitbonds, some dated to 1934, hints
(46:37):
at a clandestine financialnetwork used to fund mysterious
activities, challenging theconventional understanding of
post-war economic practices.
Farrell draws links between thebreakaway civilization and the
UFO phenomenon, noting severalsignificant UFO incidents during
the Korean War and suggestingthat these events represent a
(46:59):
serious national securityconcern.
Farrell argues that the UFO'sadvanced technologies could
manipulate space-time andpotentially alter the
effectiveness of nuclear weapons, highlighting the breakaway
civilization's intense interestin UFOs and their technological
capabilities.
See, this is the kind ofout-of-the-box thinking I think
(47:20):
is important right now.
I'm going back on my ownresearch and things and this is
my wheelhouse.
I think about things all thetime and I even turn over ideas
and I could be thinking like youlook at me and I could be
thinking about a businessproject.
Or I could be thinking aboutCold War treaties or mutually
(47:40):
assured destruction or thegeopolitics of the 1950s
geopolitics of the 1950s.
Or, you know, I could bethinking of the technological
prowess and you know thescientists of the late 19th
century.
I'm all over the place, but alot is trying to figure out
(48:01):
problems and then overlay thatwith something you learn when
you go into something, if youstudy something called like
neuro-linguistic programming orother aspects of how language
and actions and thought meet up,and a lot of the times what
happens is people's perceptionof reality, is their reality.
And what I have a problem withand why I try to let the
(48:21):
plasticity of my mind stay veryloose not that anything can
penetrate it to change my valuesystem.
That's intact, you know, rightwrong, all that stuff is intact.
But I'm very open to othersuggestions of why reality is so
different.
You know, if you look atpost-World War II, the world and
(48:45):
what happened to the UnitedStates mean like where did the?
You know we absorbed.
We talked about operationpaperclip, which was the nazi
scientists, and we absorbed that.
The soviet union got theirscientists, we got our
scientists right.
But I have a book here that Ibought is from the late 1970s
about martin borman, who washitler's, you know, second in
(49:07):
command, and how they.
They rerouted all thesecorporations and all their
holdings and stuff and madethese companies and holding
companies just evaporate intothe world economic system and
then pulled back and basicallyall this stuff that they looted
and leveraged and everythingelse, nothing really died except
the governmental regime knownas the third reich.
(49:28):
It's you know again.
That's why jim mars uh wrotethe book the fourth reich.
It was about the in themilitary industrial complex and
this absorbing of these naziscientists.
But what I'm getting at is thatit doesn't.
Our history timeline doesn'tmake any sense and I've often
thought that there is a strongpossibility that there's some
(49:51):
sort of breakaway civilizationat some level.
That's running like we'rerunning on analog and they're on
complete digital or somethingway beyond that.
And they allow, they do drip,like a drip campaign that you're
allowed to do.
It's like you know, you canargue all day about whether the
space race was real or whetherwe walked on the moon or
whatever.
I tend to believe that we didand I believe that we were told
(50:15):
not to do it anymore.
We were told to leave.
That makes more sense to methan you know, this
choreographed thing.
I mean you can make theargument, fine, and then people
can write me all day long andsay, well, I sell this and I get
it.
I just have a problem with youknow, the timeline doesn't add
up.
I mean by 45, we harnessed thepower of the atom, had the first
(50:36):
nuclear fission bomb I think itwas 1946, we discovered DNA.
I mean you can throw that outthere.
We had jet propulsion in 47 orso.
The Russians get the bomb.
Then we have the hydrogen bomb.
We have not just fissiontechnology for nuclear weapons,
we have fusion technology, andthis is all by 1950.
(50:58):
And you're saying that by 1969you can't go 237,000 miles.
That's Kubrick's Room 237, butthat's, you know 237,000 miles,
supposedly how far the moon isaway from the Earth?
Right, room 237,.
But that's.
You know 237,000 miles,supposedly, how far the moon is
away from the Earth, right?
Well, I think that's apossibility.
But something happened and nowwe're left with this.
We go on these Fiat experiment,which so does it?
(51:21):
They have to know like it'sjust mathematics.
You have to know like it'sbasically like you're going to
loot something known.
Like it's.
It's basically like you'regonna loot something.
So in 71 they pulled that plug.
And that's why I think it's,that's why I cover money and
finance and metals in themonetary system, because this is
where everything starts to getwonky, because all these things
(51:43):
that grow up out of that they'reall fake.
You know, they have literalzombie corporations that are
propped up by central banks andother things that aren't real.
You have that and you have ourentertainment, all of this stuff
.
There's this outcropping offake and it is truly insidious
and it's evil.
You have these fiat wars.
(52:04):
You have to constantly havesome sort of war.
This injection into our societyof fake uh is like
anesthetizing.
It's a trap and it's meant tokeep our thinking off balance
because we're constantly havingto chase something that isn't
real.
So that really leads to me.
And then you start seeing, likeuh, by 2017, they have these
(52:24):
videos in new york.
Time drops is the tic-tac videoand I think that's the first
thing I thought when they werethat FLIR vision, you know, with
the jet from 2004 and that leakdeal, and I thought, uh, that's
ours or that's a breakawaycivilization.
I don't think that's a UFO orit's a UFO, but it's not.
You know, it's not.
Bleep blarp from the planetNeptune Okay.
(52:45):
In blarp from the planetNeptune Okay.
In a world where secrets oftenshape the course of history, a
groundbreaking investigation byauthor Joseph Farrell and his
book covert wars and breakawaycivilizations, the secret space
program, celestial psyops andhidden conflicts and, as
unearthed, a labyrinth of covertoperation, clan dot,
clandestine finance andextraterrestrial in intrigue.
(53:08):
This investigation raisesprofound questions about the
forces that have been silentlysteering global events since the
aftermath of World War II.
The story begins with OperationBernhardt, a Nazi
counterfeiting scheme that wasanything but ordinary but
(53:31):
ordinary.
Led by SS officer AlfredNorjocks, the operation aimed to
produce counterfeit Britishpound notes of such high quality
that they wereindistinguishable from genuine
currency.
The goal was to destabilize theBritish economy and, by
extension, the Allied war effort.
However, as Farrell suggests,this was merely the prelude to a
much larger and more secretiveoperation.
As Farrell suggests, this wasmerely the prelude to a much
larger and more secretiveoperation.
(53:52):
The techniques andinfrastructure used, developed
during Operation Bernhardt, laidthe foundation for a hidden
financial system that wouldpersist long after the war ended
.
The hidden system, according toFarrell, is the backbone of a
breakaway civilization, ashadowy network of elites,
intelligence agencies andcorporations operating behind
conventional oversight.
The existence of this system ishinted at by the bearer bond
(54:16):
scandals of recent years.
These scandals involved theseizure of billions of dollars
in counterfeit bonds, some datedto 1934, a time when such large
denominations were non-existent.
A time when such largedenominations were non-existent.
Farrell posits that these bondsare not the work of mere
counterfeiters but are insteadevidence of a clandestine
(54:40):
financial network used to fundcovert operation in Black
Project.
I'll have to bring up and Imeant to do a show on this and
maybe Mr Anderson and I will doa pair truth, or that's probably
the most appropriate thing.
But there is an entire historyof one of the most bizarre
episodes in our American story,with the Fed, the Federal
(55:07):
Reserve, creating notes for theChinese government.
This was Shanghai Shek's family, like the oligarchs for the
Chinese before Mao Zedong, andthese bonds and these notes from
the Fed were real and they werefound later.
(55:29):
They disappeared and they werefound later and somebody went to
go turn them in.
It was the descendants of thisfamily and they were found and
they were billions by today'sstandards and the Fed fought
them.
So they weren't real.
We counterfeited them,basically for ourselves and for
our own ends, and when thegovernment collapsed wrote those
(55:53):
people off and they went allthe way up to federal courts and
they never denied theauthenticity, but they denied
the right of the plaintiff tosue and it got swept under the
rug.
I'm going to cover that.
That was in the Killing ofUncle Sam, great book by Rodney
(56:13):
Howard Brown.
All right.
Well, I can't finish this entirearticle, but you get where I'm
going.
Let's see.
Let's see if Farrell'sbreakaway civilization, with its
vast resources and advancedtechnologies and an ability to
operate in the shadows, may beinfluencing more moderate events
(56:33):
than most people know about.
The UFO phenomenon, far frombeing a mere curiosity, could
represent a serious challenge tothis hidden order, one that has
profound implications for thefuture of humanity.
Well, this is the kind of stuffwe need to talk about, and I've
(57:01):
always said, you know, startingthese shows, especially the
first episodes of the ArterburnRadio Transmission, and I always
tell people and I got this froma Megadeth song when I was a
kid, but the line is welcome totomorrow, so I thought we were
in the tomorrow land.
This is always on the lookoutfor what's next.
These will be the things we'llbe talking about, because
there's a lot.
If you can notice, reality iskind of breaking in some ways
and your perception, in the wayyou look at things, will be
(57:25):
changing as well, and I'll do mybest to help you make sense of
it.
We'll do it together.
All right, I'm going to go overgold and silver prices real
quick and then we'll get out ofhere Gold at $2,883.
Luciferian Bankster notes pertroy ounce Silver $31.48 per
(57:47):
troy ounce for the white metal.
Both are extremely cheap.
If you know anything about thedebasement of the dollar.
We'll cover more on Fort Knoxand other things next week.
I'm still waiting for somethings to play out, but go to
Arterburngold, go to my website,sign up for the newsletter and,
as a matter of fact, we've gota new newsletter we're going to
be working on the next coupleweeks.
(58:07):
It's going to be cool.
So, arterburn Gold, wise Wolf,gold and Silver Look at Wolfpack
for all of your membershipneeds when it comes to gold and
silver.
We got it down to $50 a monthall the way up to $5,000.
So check us out there.
Anything gold or silver related.
We want to earn your businessand it helps this program
continue, and your business andit helps this program continue.
(58:30):
So, from Beans the Brave andmyself and all the crew and
everybody with Wise Wolf and theproduction team, you guys take
care of each other.
We'll see you next week.
End of transmission.