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May 8, 2025 • 61 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
We have before us the opportunity to forge, for
ourselves and for futuregenerations, a new world order.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Good evening folks.
You're listening to the hour ofthe time.
I'm William Cooper.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
The chair is against the wall.
The chair is against the wall.
John has a long mustache, wall.
John has a long mustache.
John has a long mustache.
It's 12 o'clock, americans,another day closer to victory.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
And for all of you out there, on or behind the
lines, this is your song veteranof three foreign wars,
entrepreneur, entrepreneur andwarrior, poet, tony Arterburn
takes on the issues facing ourcountry, civilization and planet

(00:51):
.
This is the Arterburn RadioTransmission.
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
I got the weirdest feeling today when I was going
over the headlines.
I feel like it's tomorrow'snews.
Today is what I should havebeen saying.
That's an old InfoWars tagline,but looking at some of the
things that are coming out, younotice that I go back to the
spring of 2020.

(02:07):
Oh pass, tony, go back and lookat some of those clips Not all
the time, but sometimes they'llpop up on my feed, and Facebook
recently started deleting oldvideos and so I tried to archive
some stuff, and I was goingback looking at what I was
saying in the spring of 2020.
And some of it was.
It was prescient, you know.
Archive some stuff and I wasgoing back looking at what I was
saying in the spring of 2020.
And some of it was prescient.
You know, and depending on howmuch you pay attention, you look

(02:30):
at these headlines today, it'slike we're going to get into
stuff on geoengineering andthat's last minute, by the way,
because I was looking, you know,obviously the distraction is
whatever the headline is, andthen you look at that and it's
usually clown show stuff, clownworld order, um, we'll talk
about some of the geoengineeringstuff and all the geopolitical

(02:51):
financial things.
Ladies and gentlemen, it'scrazy.
Last week I was saying happybirthday, ironically, to the
illuminati, for you know may 1,1776.
I opened up the show that way,but today is May 8th.
Does anybody know what that dayis?
That's Harry Truman's birthday,but it's also something else.

(03:13):
I'll get into that here in asecond.
The first articles I saw up onDrudge when I was doing my
research for the show.
But welcome back folks.
This is the Arterburn RadioTransmission.
I am your hostony arterburn.
I'm broadcasting in defiance ofglobalist goblins, the neocons
and the new world order herefrom the wolfpackgold studios in

(03:36):
beautiful branson, missouri.
I'm joined by my co-pilot andco-host just off screen.
uh, beans, the ladies andgentlemen, she's here to keep us
safe from bad vibes, woodlandcreatures, intruders, anything
that may disturb thetransmission.
So glad to have her here.
All right, so it's May 8th,it's Harry Truman's birthday and

(03:57):
, if you don't know, harryTruman was the 33rd president of
the United States, of which hedisputed.
By the way, he said heshouldn't have been the 33rd
president because GroverCleveland was elected twice and
so he thought that math was off.
But he was the 33rd presidentand, of course, presided over

(04:17):
the end of World War II.
Franklin Roosevelt elected to afourth term.
It's interesting All the talknow about undoing the 22nd
Amendment so we can havemultiple terms, but Franklin
Roosevelt, fourth term, died inoffice in April of 1945.

(04:39):
Harry Truman takes over andpresides over the end of World
War II, takes over and presidesover the end of World War II,
and it just happens to be hisbirthday coincided with VE Day,
which is Victory in Europe Day.
So check this headline out.
This is interesting.
Just a little bit ofparapolitics, hidden history and
other things as we start tolook down the barrel of our

(05:04):
daily news feed.
Now let's check this articleout.
This was up on Drudge, but it'slinked over to Fortune magazine
.
Trump just declared May 8th anational holiday and they ask
what's open and closed.
President Trump announced twonew national holidays on Monday,

(05:26):
including one that would falljust days later, on Thursday,
may 8th.
Here's what you need to knowabout On Monday, donald Trump
took to social media to announcehe was establishing two new
national holidays, one whichwould fall just days later.
The holidays, he said, weremeant to commemorate the ends of
World War I and World War II.

(05:47):
So November 11th and May 8thand this is what President Trump
had to say we won two worldwars, but we never took credit
for it.
Everyone else does.
Trump wrote on Truth Social.
All over the world, the alliesare celebrating the victory we
had in World War II.
The only country that doesn'tcelebrate is the United States

(06:11):
of America, and the victory wasonly accomplished because of us.
It was an announcement thatraised all sorts of questions.
Would there be a new day off?
November 11th, veterans Day isalready a national holiday.
Does Trump even have the powerto declare a national holiday?
This is what the article asked.

(06:31):
Well, just again, just a littlebit of history here.
World War I we should havenever been in for any stretch of
the imagination.
Banker's War comes to mind.
You're talking about a completeconstruct that should have
never been in for any anystretch of the imagination.
Bankers.
War comes to mind.
You're talking about a completeconstruct that should have
never happened.
Just the slaughter pins oftechnology in the 20th century

(06:53):
meet the tactics of the 19thcentury.
Just an awful.
Awful thing, just abloodletting, a ritual, if you
will.
And in and in fact you talkabout World War I.
Just a little bit of history.
November 11th was the ArmisticeDay in 1918.
Millions dead, the French,everybody gives the French a

(07:16):
hard time because the Maginotline and just not standing up,
or supposedly not standing up tothe Third Reich or whatever in
the late 1930s and all that, theretaking of the Rhineland and
all that stuff that happened inthe mid-30s.
But they give the French a hardtime.
Well, they lost an entiregeneration of people.

(07:37):
There wasn't enough men to goaround to be married and there
was also a lot of the geneticpool of the French changed
because of World War I, becauseso many men that were over six
feet tall couldn't hide in thetrenches as well and they were
killed.
So I mean you change the entiredemographic and future of a

(08:00):
nation.
War often does that, and youknow they were the most affected
.
I mean, unlike the english,that was where a lot of the
fighting took place.
And november 11th again, we'llgo back to that armistice day,
which happens to be um georgepatton's birthday also, but
november 11th was the, you know,11th day, 11 month, 11th hour,

(08:24):
so 33.
And they did this ceremony toclose up that, whatever they had
done to open it up in the firstplace.
There's a lot of the esotericstuff that floats around.
Through that and World War, Icaused the United States to form
the America First Coalition andwe rejected thank God.
We rejected the League ofNations and all the things that

(08:46):
were all the internationalistswanted to impose on us after the
war.
It was like 150,000 US troopsthat were killed, and not to
mention hundreds of thousandswounded and maimed and other
things, and then the countryjust threw up its hands and go
for what.
You know, what did we get forthat?
We were supposed to make theworld safe for democracy and we

(09:08):
made it safe for Hitler andStalin.
And just you know, I like theidea that we have historical
holidays, like you havePresident's Day, but it's
supposed to be Washington orLincoln's birthday or something
like that, and we should talkabout Thomas Jefferson and other
great presidents, but well, notLincoln's, not in other

(09:30):
presidents, like like Jeffersonand Washington, you should do
that.
But then you kind of you makeit, you neutralize it, you
neuter it.
When you put in otherpresidents, like talk about
Miller Fillmore, we're going totalk about, you know, jimmy
carter, we're going to put allthose together, I mean that's
kind of a dilution, but any kindof historical holiday is good,

(09:53):
however, let's, let's.
I mean again, historicalcontext is always very important
and I want to, just just foryour, your knowledge, if you
want to take away this is thekind of questions that I ask.
When we say we won world war one, well, we came in at the last
minute to bail out the British.

(10:13):
We bailed out the British outof the second world war and
that's why you know two worldwars.
The British used to have theworld's reserve currency, the
British pound Sterling.
You know the sun never set onthe British empire.
That was something that wassaid throughout the 19th century
and by the, you know, end ofthe 1940s, they were an aircraft
carrier for the United Statesgovernment and military, as Gore
Vidal said.

(10:34):
So that's what war can do toyou.
It can wreck your treasury, youcan, you know, basically stifle
your empire.
It can completely dismantleyour civilization if you let it.
So it's not accurate to saythat we alone did that.
Let's just look at some factsand figures.

(10:55):
And, if you ever ask, I've hadmany conversations with Russians
and Ukrainians over the years.
Just curious, because a lot ofthose people have a great
historical sense.
I learned this when I was ayoung soldier on the border of
Kosovo and Serbia and talking tosome of the Russian
paratroopers.
But they usually have a greathistorical sense.

(11:16):
Does anybody really throw outthe amount of deaths that the
Soviet Union endured duringWorld War II to take on Hitler's
Third Reich?
Let's just look at this.
It's about 27 million, bothcivilian and military, from all

(11:38):
war-related causes.
Although exact figures aredisputed, a figure of 20 million
was considered official.
Think about that.
So let's say it's 20 million.
That's a staggering number.
You're talking about the mid,early to mid-20th century, and

(12:08):
the population of the UnitedStates in 1947 was about 145
million.
So if you just adjusted thatfor current numbers, that would
be staggering today if we wereinvolved in something like that.
So history is not a simple taskto be able to put that in terms
of understanding it.
And there's lots of stuff thatgoes with this.
With World War II, a lot ofpeople call it the good war, and

(12:32):
when Winston Churchill wasasked what they should call and
this is Churchill, by the way,and that's where Pat Buchanan
got the title of this book, butit's a great, if you ever have a
chance, you should absolutelyread Pat Buchanan's Churchill,
hitler and the Unnecessary War.
That's what Churchill said itshould be called.

(12:53):
It should be the UnnecessaryWar Again.
It should never have happenedAgain.
World War I we made not safe fordemocracy, safe for Hitler and
Stalin.
We imposed a Carthaginian peaceon the Germans.
The war debts and all the restis ripe for a fascist takeover.
They've just set up everycondition.

(13:16):
A lot of times.
That's what they want.
History again is not thisorganic flow like the court
historians want you to see it.
But there's something else tothis too, and then I'll move on.
Just food for thought aboutWorld War II is we're going to
have a new holiday, which Ithink is great, and I think it
starts conversations.

(13:38):
But back in 1941, the warofficially kicked off in 1939,
right after Germany invadedPoland.
There's a reason for that.
I mean, if you look at thegeopolitics of the time and what
Germany was trying to do withthe reunification and everything
that was taken in the Treaty ofVersailles so German-speaking

(14:00):
peoples, the port of Danzig,which was in Polish territory,
and there was a lot offered bythe German government to the
Poles, but they had a warguarantee from the British.
So it was actually the Britishthat declared war on Germany in
1939.
And, of course, that set up the.
It shocked the Germangovernment.

(14:21):
They didn't want war with theBritish.
They were.
If you read Mein Kampf and youunderstood the philosophy there,
they were going want war withthe british.
They were.
If you read mein kampf and youunderstood the philosophy there,
they were going to turn on thesoviet union.
Uh, eventually for levenstrom,which meant living space.
That's the whole.
Like that's they broadcast.
It's so funny, like that's whathappens today with things like
the great reset, and that's likelike where did you get that

(14:42):
information, tony?
They literally say it know.
So you just have to look intowhat they were, um, what their
goals were back in the 1930s andmoving forward.
People forget, though, andpeople think that we had this
deal with the British.
You know, and we did have some,we get Lynn lease and we give

(15:03):
some equipment away and otherstuff like that and we would
trade some of the Britishterritory for supplies and other
things.
But the State Department, theforeign policy of the United
States, was neutrality.
Barbarossa, june 22nd 1941,where Hitler turned on his

(15:28):
former ally, turned on Stalinand invaded the Soviet Union.
That's when all the bells andwhistles and everything went on.
The alarm bells went off in thenight for the State Department
here in the United States andyou can go look at this history.
That's when they got animated,that's when they wanted to get
into the war, not when he was,you know, the Battle of Britain

(15:48):
and all the things, and notDunkirk and not taking on the
British, because that was statesforeign office, right, the the
state department when hitlertook on the communist.

(16:11):
So thank you, joe mccarthy,showing us how that all worked
later on.
So just a little history lessonthere for you folks, and
history is happening all aroundus.
I'm going to talk a little bittoo about the prices of precious
metals today.
Bitcoin back over 100,000.

(16:32):
I knew that was coming.
It's so funny when it's goingdown, it's never coming back,
and when it's going up, it'snever going down.
It reminds me a lot of how thegeneral public and just regular
folk look at business.
You know when you're doing well, you can never fail, and when
you're not doing well, you're anidiot.
You know you never get back up.

(16:53):
That's just a life is.
It's a long road.
You have to be prepared forthose, for the long outlook, the
, the uh 37,000 foot view.
If you will and I'll get to somecomments too let's bounce
around a little bit.
I got a hodgepodge of stufftoday.
It's going to be fun, and I sawthis article too.

(17:13):
Let's go, let's jump into thisand then we'll do some metals.
I'll talk about what's going onwith the gold market, but I was
reading Zero Hedge and it's sofunny.
I find myself doing this a lotthese days.
I'll think something andbecause I'm really working on
that, on controlling how I thinkof something or the words that

(17:36):
I use I'll think something andthen I'll go and all of a sudden
, what I thought was I know thisis kind of woo-woo, but what I
thought is actually manifested.
So, without getting too deep inthe weeds on that, there was an
article on Zero Hedge about thefourth turning and Neil Strauss

(17:58):
was on there and, of course,strauss and Howe, they wrote the
book the Fourth Turning and youguys have heard me talk about
that cyclical history every 80to 100 years, you know, there's
this major upheaval in society.
So they were given an overviewof what our politics here, like
the Trump administration and theAmerica First ideology, that
again we can have arguments ofwhat's behind that.

(18:19):
But that's what's driving thisfourth turning.
And then other nationalistmovements around the world, and
I thought, well, they're leavingsomething out, they're leaving
out the technocracy.
And so I go over totechnocracynews and he took the
exact same article, patrick Wood, and put it up, and it was on

(18:40):
the front page oftechnocracynews, and so we'll go
into both, like his analysis ofit and what it means.
I think both of these takes aregood, because in one way, the
Zero Hedge article is right andthen another way, there's
another underlying issue therewhich is not always comfortable.

(19:02):
This show has always beendedicated to the difficult
conversations and it's what I do.
Let's take a look at this.
This is technocracynews,patrick Wood.
He took this article the FourthTurning Globalism is dead.

(19:24):
Technocracy is reborn.
Reborn, and you see, this isagain the technocracy movement
going back to the 1930s.
And he says that the theory ofsocietal turnings, and in
particular the fourth turning,attempts to explain why the old
globalization is being destroyedand the new global order is

(19:46):
rising.
That new global order istechnocracy and President Trump
is the disruptor.
That new global order istechnocracy and President Trump
is the disruptor.
Trump is wielding Thor's hammerto crush the old while
embracing technocracy asarch-technocrats impose their
blueprint for scientificdictatorship.
This is why Curtis Yarvin'stheory of the dark enlightenment

(20:07):
is increasingly popular withSilicon Valley technocrats.
They want to install a monarch,ditch the political system and
appoint themselves to runeverything like a sovereign
corporation, a sovcorp.
Sovcorps will own all the landand resources throughout the
world, using UBI universal basicincome to pacify populations as

(20:30):
the world slowly depopulates.
To pacify populations as theworld slowly depopulates.
In the meantime, the world willbe increasingly run by AI and
later by AGI Artificial GeneralIntelligence and ASI Artificial
Superintelligence.
When you study historictechnocracy from the 1930s, you
will see all the above peekingthrough.
Early technocrats openly calledfor FDR to declare himself

(20:53):
dictator, dismiss Congress andappoint themselves from the top
to bottom to run the country.
The technate Technocracy hasbeen biding its time over the
decades, methodically buildingits infrastructure, gaining
adherence and jockeying forposition.
Now the coup d'etat is wellunderway, but this time it's on
a global scale.

(21:14):
Patrick Wood asked Did ZygmuntBrzezinski and David Rockefeller
understand the fourth turningwhen they co-founded the
Trilateral Commission in 1973?
Well, the book that broughtthem together was Brzezinski's
Between Two Ages, america's Rolein the Technocratic Era, which

(21:34):
predicted the end of the nationstate and the rise of technology
.
Well, this is a good companionpiece to the actual article and
I thought this was.
This is where we're headed,folks, I mean, and regardless of
the political.
This is why politics in generaldoesn't interest me.

(21:55):
I look at, I cover it becauseof intelligence.
I mean not that it's like the,the megadeth song, the military
intelligence, two words to gettogether that don't make sense.
But this is supposed to beintelligence for the sense of
you having information to makethe best possible macro

(22:16):
decisions and there are sometimes, to be an activist and to
fight for what's morally right,for liberty and the rest.
But if you're talking about arigged system.
I saw wrestling on the othernight at the bar and I'm like
you know.
I asked who I was with.
I said, did you, uh, did youknow the difference between

(22:39):
politics and wrestling?
And there's no.
And I said nothing, there's nodifference.
And so you know, I'll gothrough this, uh, this article,
because it is apt.
I mean cyclical history is realand if you go back to the mid
nineties you have the book thefourth turning by Strauss, and
how it's very important, Um,because if you go back and look

(23:02):
at that and you look at history,they were right.
I mean there's so much of that.
They got right about, uh, that,that part of this, the human
story of how history goes incycles.
And it's funny because we're atthe 80 years after World War II
and we're just going to makethis a holiday.
I mean there's no coincidencethere.
We're trying to sanctify thator put you know that was, you

(23:26):
know, the good war and ourfinest hour, all that stuff.
We want to put you know a newspin on it.
But we're 80 years past.
So now this is the new turningWe'll get into this article the
original from Zero Hedge.
History tells us thatcivilization and societies boom
bust and rise anew to repeat thepattern, a pattern that

(23:46):
demographer Neil Howell says issurprisingly predictable, both
in its timing and trajectory.
Howell says is surprisinglypredictable both in its timing
and trajectory.
Howell refers to these seasonsof societal change as turnings
and he famously has declaredAmerica is now well within the
fourth turning, the bust part ofits cycle, where the status quo

(24:07):
falls apart, often chaotically,and is replaced by a brand new
order.
He says well, it's in the firsthundred days.
The Trump administration hascertainly made big and, some
would say, disruptive or evenchaotic strides to attempt to
replace the previous status quowith a new playbook, both

(24:27):
domestically and internationally.
And he says is this the kind oftextbook fourth turning
upheaval that Howe expected?
Neil Howe affirms that theglobal shift from globalization
to nationalism, driven byTrump's America First policies,
are parallel movements.
Maloney in Italy, modi in Indiais a hallmark of the fourth

(24:50):
turning.
This trend, accelerating sincethe 2008 financial crisis,

(25:15):
reflects a rejection of the USsubsidized world order, with
Trump criticizing globalizationas a bad deal for America.
Well, this is all true, like onpaper, and that those movements
have been there for a long time.
This is nothing new.
Those movements have been therefor a long time.
This is nothing new.
The outlet in 2016,.
Somebody just had to pick it up.
It's like Lenin used to say tothe United States,

(25:36):
deindustrializing and givingaway so much of its wealth and
technology and jobs andinfrastructure after the fall of
the Soviet Union.
That was, that was in a crisismoment for America.
So even in 1992, pat Buchanantakes on George HW Bush in the
Republican primary, almost winsNew Hampshire I mean, it was so

(26:00):
close folks Like he was takingon a sitting president almost
wins New Hampshire, picks up acouple of more states was given
a.
You know he had so manydelegates too, I mean, so he'd
taken on a sitting president anda Bush by the mean.
So he'd taken on a sittingpresident and a Bush, by the way
.
And he takes him on and doessome serious damage because
people were unhappy.
You know Buchanan tells thestory of going through the line

(26:23):
meeting people in New Hampshireand he goes to this, he's
reading some factory workers andhe goes to one of the men
standing in line and the mandidn't say much.
He just looked at Pat, you know, with like a haunting look and
said save our jobs.
And that really bothered Pat,like you know he really wanted
to do something to bring thosejobs back and the things that
we're losing because ofglobalization, because of the

(26:46):
new world order, all the thingsthat were America was just put
on this chopping block.
You know like it was like oneof these vulture capitalists,
like a Mitt Romney, just buyingup America and selling it off
piece by piece.
That's what was happening.
So you know, a lot of this washappening way before 2016.

(27:06):
I just want to for thehistorical record and I mean
yours truly I ran for Congresson this very platform.
I felt like the people loved it.
The establishment didn't knowwhat to make of me, even like
you know this the radio host Iwas with and people would say oh
, that's just, you're just doing, you're talking, you're talking
like a lib, that's lib stuff.
I'll never forget that.
I'm like you just don't haveany historical sense, and that's

(27:29):
the trend.
So that is correct.
But the reason I led withPatrick Wood's analysis about
the technocracy is look at thehead.
Fake, right.
That's what you have to payattention to.
That's regardless of who winsthe presidential election,
whether it's Kamala Harris orTrump.
There's different avenues, butthat is still the blueprints for

(27:53):
the central bank, digitalcurrency.
You can't lose your vigilancewhen you're talking about
opposing something like that,because the technocracy has the
same plans.
They just do it a different way.
They'll do it through stablecoins.
They'll do it throughpublic-private partnerships.
It's just a different recipefor the same outcome.
Private partnerships it's justa different recipe for the same

(28:14):
outcome.
You know, a 15-minute citysounds like a dystopic hell, but
if you say it's a freedom cityand you put MAGA next to it,
then all of a sudden it soundsgreat right to those people.
See it's language and it's alsotactic.
Howell notes widespread supportfor re-industrialization and
immigration control, aligningwith populist demands for

(28:34):
economic sovereignty andcultural identity classic
forth-turning dismantling ofestablished systems.
How explains that this bustphase, characterized by the
collapse of the status quo andthe rise of a new order, is not
limited to the united states,but is synchronized globally,
with populist, nationalist andauthoritarian movements emerging

(28:56):
worldwide?
This is the trend, in the West,certainly, and now the rest of
the world has been.
We've seen a synchronization ofthese turnings.
It's global.
It's now global.
He highlights the Trumpadministration's disruptive
policies, such as tariffs,immigration, crackdowns and
deregulation.

(29:18):
An emblematic of forth-turningchaos.
Trump is a necessary figure,unleashing something pretty
primal.
Where it goes, though, I don'tthink even Trump understands.
Well, we've talked about thattoo.
I mean, I love the idea ofeconomic nationalism.
It actually works.
I'd love to bring the jobs back,but you have to make the so if

(29:38):
you add a tariff on top of theincome tax, then you just have
another tax.
So the best thing to do will beeliminate the corporate income
tax or all income tax.
Why not have an external tax?
Have a consumption tax?
Look at the fair tax.
Have an external tax, have aconsumption tax, look at the
fare tax.
But we didn't do it.
We added another tax and thenit's like I saw an article One
of the largest jewelry makers inthe world.

(30:00):
They're like we're not movingto the US.
You don't understand.
There's too many moving parts.
And again, that's supply lines.
It's timeframes.
There's a lot of disruptionsgoing on.
Timeframes there's a lot ofdisruptions going on.
He says that he notes inherentcontradictions, particularly

(30:23):
between the role, tradeprotectionism and fiscal
deficits.
You cannot eliminate trade andtherefore credit flows from the
American economy while runningup the deficit.
We will literally have nothingleft to invest in capital.
How predicts increasedvolatility, legal battles and
potential crises economic,political or geopolitical that
could catalyze majorinstitutional reshaping by the
2030s, when a new first turningmay emerge, and so the first

(30:48):
turning after this.
This is the end of the.
There's four turnings, right,so it's the fourth.
A turning is 20 years this isbiblical.
Lincoln said that he called it ascore.
You know, four score.
A score is 20 years, four scoreand seven years ago in the
Gettysburg Address.
Well, that was the 87 yearsafter the beginning of the

(31:09):
American Revolution.
So that's a turning.
So another turning would be theGreat Depression and World War
II that just culminated.
That's the end.
You know 1945, 1946.
And so we're at the end of thatcycle now.
So the next beginning would be2030.

(31:30):
Folks, this is why you see uh,not only agenda 21 from the
united nations back in the 1990sand, by the way, wasn't that 92
, like when I was just talkingabout, where you see the ramp up
of de-industrialization andother things to.
It's called like a whipsaw,like you take it away and then
you create the politicalenvironment to try to restore it

(31:51):
, which is an upheaval, and itlose faith in institutions.
Right, you can alsopre-engineer some of these
things or make them work in yourfavor.
History is not an accident.
There is a lot of things thatare organic in history.
There are some things that arebecause this is, this is God's
world.
It's not just because you haveadvanced simulations and you

(32:13):
have a printing press and youcan put fake fiat, luciferian
banks or notes into the systemdoesn't mean you get to control
every aspect of reality, but somuch of it is controlled.
It's not what you learn inschool and sometimes you can't
escape it.
Some history is something youhave to go through.
It's like these repeatingpatterns, but you can misdirect
it.
I've often thought that 9-11was a bend in the river, like

(32:41):
something that really wasn't ontrack to happen.
But you look at something thatwould be a misdirection, a way
to change course.
Project for a New AmericanCentury got that right.
They're very prescient.
Talk about me being prescient.
September 2000,.
You know.
Project for a New AmericanCentury Bill Kristol, william

(33:07):
Bennett, others, richard Pearlnew Pearl Harbor-style event
needed for their rogue staterollback Boy.
They got that one year later.
That's kind of weird to get athing that you asked for.
In the document itself, howadvises investors to focus on

(33:28):
absolute returns, hedge againstvolatility and prioritize assets
like commodities, gold, defenseand infrastructure, while
emphasizing personal resilienceto navigate the turbulent period
ahead.
Pay most attention to financialprofessionals that talk a lot
about absolute return and don'tget sidetracked into looking at

(33:50):
the relative return of otherindexes.
Well, I never give investmentadvice return and don't get
sidetracked into looking at therelative return of other indexes
.
Well, I never give investmentadvice.
You know what business I'm in.
I'm in the business of real, tothe best of my ability.
I'm in commodities, I'm infinite, I'm in housing value and
I see so much fake built intothe casino stock market.

(34:14):
As my friend Don Jeffrey says,80% have to lose, so 20% can win
, and it's probably not.
Even those aren't great, it'sprobably more like 99% have to
lose, but that's where we are.
I mean, you talk aboutvolatility.
There's going to be so muchchange.
This is where we are.
You can't bury your head in themuch change.
This is where we are andthere's there's.
No, you can't bury your head inthe sand, it just is what it is

(34:36):
.
I think there's a lot ofopportunity and I think there's
more upside for us that areaware than downside, honestly,
and it gives you opportunitywhen, when institutions are
crumbling, whether it's the Imean, how's the public relations
with the Fed going to be whenyou reach 130% of debt to GDP?

(35:02):
How's the Treasury going tolook?
How's?
You know?
I think Congress already has alower approval rating than liver
cancer.
I mean, this is like it's notgood.
Folks, these institutions, thatpeople once were like yep.
And you go back, look at someof the propaganda videos from
World War I and World War II andpeople just like yep, that's

(35:23):
what we're going to do for themost part.
And you can't run that kind ofstuff today.
You have to run itinadvertently.
You have to run it through thepolitics you have to set up and
in, you have to run it throughthe politics you have to set up
and in a lot of ways, like a WWEinfrastructure, you have to get
people invested in teams andother things so they suspend
disbelief.
That's the way you get newpropaganda.

(35:45):
So it's not.
You know.
There has to be subtle changesin the way things are done.
Changes in the way things aredone.
The new golden age is unlikelyto emerge directly from Trump's
agenda due to legal battles, egtariff laws and economic fallout
, recession, risk from laborcuts.
Neil sees history resolvingcontradictions, potentially

(36:10):
forcing fiscal discipline byweaning America off foreign
credit a painful but necessarystep.
Well and that's pretty muchwhere it ends.
We're going to go through that.
And you don't have to be agenius to understand what

(36:31):
de-dollarization is.
You don't have to be a geniusto understand what
de-dollarization is.
You just look at the math.
And math doesn't care aboutyour politics.
Math doesn't care who yourfavorite candidate is.
Math doesn't care.
It just is right, it justexists.

(36:53):
And the math says when countriescontinue to de-dollarize which
they are and I've been trackingthis for many years there will
be a fiscal, economic, monetaryreset, and that's even my terms.
I mean, that's what they callit.
That's what the overlords,right, the people that walk
between the raindrops, whateveryou want to call them.
That's what their simulationsare showing.
They know that you want to callthem.
That's what their simulationsare showing.
They know that and, in acertain kind of letting the

(37:14):
vampire, in kind of way, orrevelation of the method, they
have to tell you this.
They tell you this is whatyou're looking at.
So if you're aware of it, thenyou're already way ahead of the
game, because most people thinkand we all have this to some
degree, but some more thanothers you have normalcy bias or
you're paying attention tosomething that isn't real.
So I try to advise against that.

(37:36):
You don't get emotionallyinvested in any of this.
You get invested in yourselfand what difference you can make
.
You change yourself.
You can change the world.
They don't teach you that it'sall about.
It's an internal struggle.
You do that.
You change that.
It will change outwardly.
That's the last place anybodywould look.
They always think it's externalWork on yourself and you can

(38:01):
change the world.
All right, let me go to the chat.
I've neglected the chat Everyshow.
I'll get going on this streamof consciousness and I'll miss
the chat.
I see over on YouTube.
Harps is in the chat andFreethinker59.
Good to see you guys.
I see Guard showed up.

(38:24):
Yeah, guard says about PatBuchanan that the GOP
establishment in New Hampshirehated Pat Buchanan.
Yes, they absolutely did.
He won New Hampshire in 1996,by the way, if you think this is
a new movement for nationalism,it was just repressed.
Nobody had anywhere to go.
Let's see Jippy Joe.

(38:49):
Nathan, I like over in Rumble'schat, says would love to have a
year of Jubilee.
I would love that too If yougot fake money.
Why don't we just start over?
Let's see Dustin Helms in thechat.
I can see you guys.
Soundwave promotion Soundwave.

(39:10):
Oh, randy's asking what clipsshould you take from the show.
Yeah, I'll message Randy.
He makes every week or so.
He makes a clip of me andthey're really great.
So check out Soundwavepromotion.
Hey, make that a clip, randy.
Appreciate you, brother.
All right, let's, we're blowingthrough this show today.

(39:30):
These transmissions are so muchfun.
Okay, let's jump over into somefinancial stuff.
I mean I was going to coverforeign policy today.
Let's do that.
Let's do some financial stuff.
Kitco, Let me stop this screen.

(39:50):
Put this one back up.
Yeah, and I'll tell you whatthis means.
This is Kitco Gold price downon profit-taking, better risk
appetite.
What that means is those whohave bought in to the contracts
and bullion, the physical stuffthey're selling off for

(40:12):
liquidity, because markets lovecertainty and there's a little
bit more certainty, or at leastthat's.
The Fed is going to holdposition.
It's not raising rates, notcutting rates.
It's exactly where it was.
And there's a new deal with theUK on trade, or at least that's
the proposal.
Gold and silver future pricesare lower in early US trading

(40:33):
Thursday on some moreprofit-taking following gains
scored earlier this week.
Improved trader-investor riskappetite in the general
marketplace late this week isalso bearish for the safe haven
metal.
A firmer US dollar index todayis negative outside of markets
for the metals.
June gold was down $40.

(40:55):
And this is kind of talkingabout the futures which you know
.
It's funny.
I got asked the other day by myIRA company.
I guess they caught some oftheir dealers or somebody was
taking the funds from customersand betting on future markets
and I'm like, look, I wouldnever do that.

(41:18):
Who has the time?
I mean, but I don't, I don't dothat.
That's crazy.
Now I get.
It's funny.
Whenever I get a deal from acustomer, I told them I was like
I want that money out of myaccount.
So if you're dealing with me,it goes to the trading floor
Like I want that locked in andmetals immediately.
I do not want any risk formyself or my customers.

(41:39):
So just a little bit of insidebaseball there.
Asian and European stock marketswere mostly firmer in overnight
trading.
Us stock indexes are pointed tosolidly higher openings today
in New York.
Risk appetite is keener todayfollowing news that President
Donald Trump announced a bignews conference Friday morning.
He said the news conferenceentails a major trade deal with

(42:03):
representatives of a big andhighly respected country.
Reports say the country is theUnited Kingdom.
Trump added the action will bethe first of many.
However, the specifics of sucha deal remain unclear.
In other overnight news, theBank of England cut its main
interest rate by 25 basis pointsor a quarter.

(42:25):
The move was widely expected.
So just a little bit to digestthat.
What?
it means is exactly what I said,which is a little bit of market
certainty, a little bit of goodnews for those who are trading

(42:45):
in things that are more volatileand require some certainty.
And so there's some profittaking, which means for you, if
you are buying precious metals,great, and that's for me.
I like it.
When gold takes a little bit ofa dip, that means it's time to
buy a little bit more, andyou'll see, these kind of these
are always signals to buy.
What's funny is, when thishappens, people think, well, I

(43:08):
guess the ride's over and gold'sgoing to start going down.
Folks, let's see what spotprice is right now.
Yeah, gold's at 3,309Luciferian Bankster notes per 20
ounce.
It's down $76.45 since openingbell.
Silver just reached under $33.
It's $32.47.
Great, and especially Silver.

(43:35):
We're going to be talking moreabout that.
I've been thinking a lot latelyabout doing a new show that is
once a week and we'll do it liveand we'll answer questions and
all that, and it maybe justdon't have a time limit, maybe
it's a shorter show, maybe it'sa longer show, but we'll do the

(43:56):
major headlines of the monetarysystem, the geopolitical
monetary system, the entireeconomic world order.
We'll do that a breakdown oncea week.
So if you guys are interestedin that, please let me know.
I'm thinking about doing thatand when we do that we can be
live pretty much anywhere.
I don't have to worry aboutwhat I say, because it'll all be
this kind of stuff.
There's so much I want to talkabout when it comes to what I'm

(44:18):
seeing on the ground withphysical things like silver and
where I think it's going, whatI'm personally doing.
I'd like to talk to you aboutthat.
But gold's down.
So yesterday I think what did Isay?
It was Yesterday we hit over$3,400.
Now, so it's down a significantamount and that's just an

(44:40):
opportunity to buy, folks.
Okay, just an opportunity tobuy.
All right, I'm going to get outof this screen.
As I told you earlier, theBitcoin price is at 101,000.
Let me refresh this Yep 101,210Luciferian Bankster notes
101,210.92 for one Bitcoin.

(45:06):
And that again is based offwhat?
Market certainty?
No rate changes.
Markets love certainty, folks.
A lot of the headlines here justkind of echoing what I just
said.
And so we're back over 100,000for the first time in a while.

(45:29):
And then you know, it was108,000 and some change on
inauguration day, which wasJanuary 20th, and it has, since
then, just taken a dive and itwas down even into the I want to
say flashpoints into themid-70s, high 70s and this whole

(45:49):
time, wisewolf Bitcoin.
I just have a set buy and Icontinue to accumulate, and I'm
doing that because I think thisis one of those also and I want
to get into this more.
You know, in a financialcentered show.
I think there's a lot here andsomething to watch.
This is one of the commoditiesthat I've been in since 2016 and

(46:10):
I'm watching very closely and Ithink it's going to be directly
tied to this monetary reset insome way, and we'll just watch
it to see what happens.
But I think that price isprobably a base level.
Somewhere in there, 100,000will start.
I mean, it may be going to someprofit taking, doing other
things that it does, but we'resteadily climbing.

(46:32):
There's just too much inflowsof big players right now and
more adoption.
All right, let me see what elseis on the screen.
I had some foreign policy stuffI wanted to get into, foreign
policy stuff I wanted to getinto and did you guys see the?
I don't want to go into toomany details on jabs and other

(46:56):
things.
You guys know the drill,especially when you're on these
type of platforms.
But the headline on Drudge mademe laugh today because it had to
do with Bill Gates and let'spull this one up.
The headline on drudge was wasgates going after musk?
And not that I care all thatmuch, but it just people forget

(47:21):
for some reason, like I was,mainstream media which is owned
so much by.
I mean, that's why ms nbc ismicrosoft nbc right.
So much of gates and his littlesweaters and things he had.
Just a ridiculous thing.
He says um, bill gates claimsthat elon musk is killing
world's poorest children.

(47:43):
Okay, microsoft co-founder billgates has resigned, reignited
his ongoing feud with Tesla CEOElon Musk, accusing the world's
richest man of killing theworld's poorest children through
funding cuts to the US Agencyfor International Development,
usaid, overseen by Doge.
This was in the Financial Times.
Gates pointed to the slashingof grants to a hospital in

(48:07):
Mozambique.
Gates pointed to the slashingof grants to a hospital in
Mozambique, claiming that cutshave undermined efforts to
prevent mothers from passing HIVto their newborns.
Well, certainly, aid has beencut and other things, and this
is kind of the straw manarguments about all these things
.
Well, if you cut all that blo,you know this is what's going to

(48:29):
happen to the children.
This may or may not be true,and if it is like you know,
gates, you certainly can raisethe money and you can do this
yourself.
But then I started thinking ofjust nobody ever asked him like
if you're in, if you were areporter, if you're with the
financial times you know tobring up how about those oral

(48:50):
polio vaccines, bill?
How about Africa?
How about that TED talk whereyou're like if we do?
a really good job with healthcare vaccine.
We can lower that number by 15percent or something.
Whatever he said, which was thepopulation itself, which is
like a billion people.

(49:11):
So you know, it's like gettingmoral advice from Beelzebub.
It's like asking Charles Mansonis this, you think this is too
violent?
Things like that and it's justa ridiculous clown world.

(49:31):
And not that I am taking a sidethere or anything, but that's
just.
I went and looked up.
There's so many.
They scrub so much from theinternet and I used to have I
wish you could see it off camerafolks in 2020.
I did so many live reads ofarticles.
I'd stacked them up.
I had like just whole countersfull of articles.
I was going to go back throughthem.

(49:52):
I've since shredded them, but Ishould have kept them because a
lot of that had thatinformation on some of those
things that we could talk aboutgoing in with Mr Bill.
Last article of the day.
Let me get you guys out of here.
All right, let me jump overhere.

(50:15):
I was going to go into.
This is just a little bit ofintel.
We'll do this really quick.
And then there's a little10-point thing on preparing
yourself.
We put a lot into this show.
So this is the second to lastarticle.
Um, preparing yourself foreconomic downturn.
I thought that was worth goingover really quick.

(50:38):
But this is something I saw onantiwarcom.
Just so you know, this is thein the rumblings, this stuff I
look at that doesn't make thepolitical headlines but should
be considered something thatI've worried about.
This is off through antiwarcomand then responsible

(50:59):
statecraftorg Trump consideringUS led Iraq style occupation of
Gaza.
Officials are reportedlylooking at the coalition
provisional authority as a model.
If you don't remember, that waspaul brimmer and, uh, you know
paul liked to wear suits withhis desert issue combat boots.
They're in the green zone iniraq and everybody knows iraq is

(51:23):
an absolute model for success.
We did a great job, you know,just defiling that civilization
and turning it over for freedom.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
Um, last time I checked it's doing great right.

Speaker 3 (51:36):
The trump administration is reportedly
considering a plan for us tolead the administration of gaza
after israel's siege, similar tohow washington ran iraq after
the 2003 American-led invasion.
Reuters reports there have beenhigh-level discussions centered
around this is Reuters, notjust somebody that's speculating

(51:56):
a transitional governmentheaded by US officials that
would oversee Gaza until it hadbeen demilitarized and
stabilized and a viablePalestinian administration had
emerged.
The sources, who spoke oncondition of anonymity as they
were not authorized to discussthe talks publicly, compared the
proposal to the coalition'sprovisional authority in Iraq.

(52:18):
Most experts cite the CPA asthe catalyst for an impending
insurgency that mired the USmilitary in a war in Iraq for
more than a decade.
That's exactly CPA as thecatalyst for an impending
insurgency that mere that miredthe U?
S military in a war in Iraq formore than a decade that's
exactly right From whichhundreds of thousands were
killed at a cost of upwards of 3trillion.
Well, just so you know that.

(52:42):
So that's on the that's on thetable.
Okay, just a little bit of Intelfor you there and not in the
major headlines, and that isabsolutely one of the worst
possible scenarios I can imagine, sending any US military to you
talk about a no-win meatgrinder war with no good outcome

(53:06):
.
And then you have to askyourself how does this help
defend my constitution and mybeloved Republic and my home and
my family?
How does that do that again?
What am I?
What did I raise my hand foryou know?
To swear allegiance to?
What does this have to do withanything?
The answer is nothing, and itwould be.

(53:26):
If you die over there, you diefor nothing.
The answer is nothing, and itwould be.
If you die over there, you diefor nothing.
So seems like a satanic errandto me.
So I would be opposing thatwith everything I have.
Just so we're clear.
One last article, and so, if wecan get through this, we've got
about seven minutes.

(53:47):
This we got about, uh, sevenminutes.
Ten ways to adapt to theeconomic collapse unfolding
before us over on natural newsand put an article up on the
screen.
Just some.
You know, keep your mindorganized here.
The global economy is teeteringon the brink of collapse, with
inflation soaring, banks failing, world trade unstable and

(54:10):
governments printing money atunprecedented rates.
The us dollar wants the world'sreserve currency, is rapidly
losing value, leaving millionsvulnerable to financial ruin.
But those who act now, shiftingwealth into durable assets,
acquiring survival skills andfortifying their homes, will be
the ones who thrive when thesystem crumbles.
And you don't have to be likean alarmist and say the entire

(54:30):
thing's going down, but justhave a mindset of not relying on
the current system always agood thing key takeaways convert
dollars into tangible assetslike gold, silver, ammunition,
tools and food, beforehyperinflation erodes purchasing
power.

(54:51):
Well, you may ask you know, whenis hyperinflation coming?
And I don't know that it willever see a Weimar-style republic
.
You know Germany in the late20s, early 30s with wheelbarrows
full of cash to buy a loaf ofbread.
I don't know that that's coming.
I think that can be a bit ofalarmist, histrionic.
I'm not going to say that'scoming, but if you look at the
eroding power of the dollaragainst something like gold,

(55:16):
it's not hyperinflation, butit's hyperinflation adjacent.
You look at gold in 1971 was$35 an ounce, folks.
We've almost hit 30.
I think we have hit $3,500 inAS.
We have we hit $3,500 an ounce,folks.
We've almost hit 30.
I think we have hit $3,500 inAS.
We have we hit $3,500 an ouncegold.
That's 100x and that you know.
Gold doesn't suddenly becomemore valuable.

(55:36):
It's just the dollar againstthat commodity 100x.
And that's what you need tolook at.
You know, as you're tradingyour time and your energy for
fake paper fiat currency, whichwe all do, that's the system
that we're in Trade itimmediately or to the best of
your ability for something,either investing in yourself, or

(55:59):
a fixed asset, or somethingthat's tangible, finite,
something that has value in it.
I like all of those options.
I like all of those options.
Diversify precious metals intosmall, tradable denominations.
Avoid large bars that may beconfiscated or impractical for
barter.
That's always.
That's why Wolfpack's important, the Wolfpackgold studios folks
.
We take large orders and wetake even things like 100-gram

(56:24):
bar sheets of gold, like100-gram the Combi, the Combi
bars.
We break them, we give you yourown coin flip, we put that in
there and we do that by hand.
And we do the same thing withsilver.
You have a gram bar of silver.
You can do silver dimes.
You can do silver quarters, asilver dime.
I remember Ron Paul saying thatback in the 2008 election.

(56:47):
He's like I can get a gallon ofgas back to a dime a gallon.
Again, everybody laughed.
He's like actually a silverdime is worth $3.
A stockpile of essential goods,including water filters,
storable food and medicalsupplies, as supply chains
weaken Always a good idea.
Water filtration all that stuff.
I love that.
I need to buy more filters.

(57:07):
As a matter of fact, you cancollect rainwater.
Filter it once or twice I didthis on the homestead.
Filter it through a couple ofband-aids.
Get all the loose stuff out,then put it through a
gravity-fed water filter system.
You've got clean water.
You can go to preparewithartcomthat's where we get all of our

(57:31):
storable foods and waterfiltration system.
Master self-sufficiency likegardening, foraging, hunting and
natural medicine.
I need to do more of that.
I haven't done enough.
I mean, I have my old skillsfrom being a kid, but I haven't
done enough.
I need to spend more timeoutside anyway.
And it says prepare for civilunrest by securing your home,

(57:53):
learning self-defense andrecognizing criminal behavior
before it escalates.
Yeah, you should Again.
That's 101.
If you have the ability toprotect yourself, do it.
Learn how to safely store yourfirearm, ammunition, all that
stuff.
That's key.
I carry something.

(58:16):
Could you imagine me and thebusiness that I'm in traveling
and not having what I use toprotect myself and my shop and
my employees?
You've got to have that.
Free society requires it.
A polite society is alexis detocqueville noted that the,
especially the southern unitedstates, very polite.

(58:36):
That's because everybody'sarmed.
Uh, that's always a good.
That's a sign of a politesociety.
It's an armed society and, uh,a well-prepared society.
All right, folks appreciateeach and every one of you.
I'll be back next week All newtransmission, beans, the Brave
and myself.
I'll be announcing something.
I'm going to do a new show.

(58:56):
I'm going to do something onprecious metals and the
geopolitical financial monetarysystem, a little bit of crypto
and other stuff like that.
We'll put that on the docketand I'll do a post about it.
I'll let you guys know, but youguys take care of each other.
We'll see you next week, okay.
End of transmission.
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