Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
We have before us the
opportunity to forge, for
ourselves and for futuregenerations, a new world order.
Good evening folks.
You're listening to the Hour ofthe Time.
I'm William Cooper.
The chair is against the wall.
The chair is against the wall.
John has a long mustache.
(00:25):
John has a long mustache.
It's 12 o'clock, americans,another day closer to victory.
And for all of you out there onor behind the lines, this is
your song.
I'm weathered Bye Wade.
Veteran of three foreign wars,entrepreneur and warrior, poet
(00:47):
Tony Arterburn takes on theissues facing our country,
civilization and planet.
This is the Arterburn RadioTransmission.
So Nothing to see here.
(01:37):
Nothing's going on.
Nothing's going on Now.
Subscribe to Normalcy Bias,that will help.
Oh, folks, we got a lot to covertoday.
This is the Arterburn radiotransmission, the official
(01:58):
broadcast of the apocalypse, andI'm sorry I've been absent for
the past.
I guess it was three weeksworth of episodes and I did not
intend that.
There have been technicaldifficulties or travel or
whatever and it interrupted myflow, so I'm sorry about that.
I won't let that happen againanytime soon.
We are back in the saddle.
I've got Beans the Brave withme here to protect against bad
(02:25):
vibes, woodland creatures,anything that would disturb the
transmission.
As a matter of fact, this isthe last broadcast from my house
in Texas.
I'm going to be moving over toour new old bank location.
Wise Wolf has acquired an oldbranch bank and it's still got
the drive-through.
It's still got all the coolstuff, the bells and whistles.
(02:47):
It's a smaller location butwe've rebranded it.
We're going to do Wise WolfGold, silver, bitcoin.
I have a new logo.
I'm trying some new things inthe face of a lot of economic
uncertainty and the headlines.
Well, there's a lot to takefrom them.
You know there's thede-dollarization that's going on
(03:09):
.
You've got gold hitting itsall-time high again, like it's
Groundhog Day.
You have silver breaking $40 anounce For the first time since
yours truly has been in theprecious metals business, silver
is over $40 an ounce andthere's a lot of things
(03:29):
underlying phenomenon that arehappening inside of that.
If you're a dealer like me andyou're watching this really
closely, it is strangeness.
It's ugly times.
Ugly out there with the pricesascending and you have to wonder
what is driving that.
The average person obviouslyisn't driving that price.
(03:52):
The average small business, theaverage investor, isn't driving
the prices of gold and silverright now.
These are institutional moves.
Folks, these are governments,these are central banks, as I
mentioned on the David KnightShow earlier today.
I'll tell a funny story.
(04:13):
I was on the David Knight Show.
I'm live.
I'm talking to David and I hadpulled up.
I usually do.
I have about 15 different tabsopen and I'll look at different
stories and I don't know whatsite it was.
It might have been goldpriceorg.
I don't want to cast a Spurs.
Whatever I was on.
And then, like the, the, thecomputer was hijacked for a
moment and it went over theaudio.
That's the first time in mybroadcasting career that
(04:35):
anything like that's everhappened and I couldn't shut it
down.
And, um, I rebooted,everything's fine, but we were
talking before I was interruptedby by the robot that said it
was.
They were like you had visiteda site and now your computer is
hijacked.
I was just telling me.
I'm like, no, it's not.
Um, it was like boomer bait toget me to click on it and give
(04:59):
it all my information.
I just x'd out but, uh, I wastalking to David about the moves
that have happened in silver.
Okay, and it hasn't caught up towhat happened with gold,
because gold's always been anout front monetary metal and you
can see from.
Like central banks, you knowthey amass about 36,000 tons.
(05:20):
36,000 tons.
So central banks collectivelyoutside of the US hold more gold
than we do.
We're supposed to hold about8,000 plus tons of gold.
So that's moved the metricright.
The price of gold has beenreflected and it's almost in
(05:40):
real time.
You can see it surpassing theeuro as the second most held
reserve asset this past year.
But silver really hasn't donethose kind of moves until
recently and I think I'm stillgoing back to this.
I really believe whatever thatwas that signal when Russia put
(06:01):
silver as a strategic reserveasset.
That hadn't been done reallysince the pre-communist Chinese.
Russia put silver as astrategic reserve asset.
That hadn't been done reallysince the pre-communist Chinese
because they traded mostly insilver.
And countries like Switzerland,who they were the last country
to go off of a metallic standard.
They had a silver standard fortheir currency.
(06:24):
They ended in 2002.
They were the last.
But this has really, I think,reset the board and now you're
seeing prices above $40 an ounceGold getting close.
$35.78, I believe, was the topend, so $3,578 was the top end
on gold this past 48 hours, 72hours for another all-time high.
(06:48):
So a lot's happening there andthese are driven by institutions
, folks, this is institutional.
Now, yes, people are buying.
You know, there's especiallydifferent populations around the
world, like India.
Those are buyers.
China these are people.
In the United States not somuch.
I mean, there is a small likeif you, obviously, if you're
(07:10):
subscribed to Wolfpack and Davidmentioned this earlier today uh
, david Knight was talking abouthow that people have gone back
through the invoices and it's,you know, it's basically doubled
.
You know, if you held, if youbought Wolfpack through me in
the past couple of years, you'relooking really good right now
and I'm proud of that, and it'snot an investment product.
(07:32):
We just want you to beprotected from things like
debasement and inflation and Ifeel like we've done a pretty
good job with that and we'rejust getting started.
This is just getting started,folks.
I promise you this is nothinglike.
This is not a top end moment.
This is not a bubble.
(07:53):
This is history happening.
A little bit more about uhmarkets today.
Let's jump into, let's jumpinto some headlines.
I want to.
I want to go back.
You know we're we're in thisfourth turning.
There's a lot geopoliticallygoing on and there's half.
(08:16):
There's so much has happened,um, especially with the, I think
, the psychological fallout fromthe gaslighting of the Epstein
files.
A lot has happened.
I knew that that was a watershedmoment and it kind of reset the
path.
Everything changed at thatmoment and they tried to run
(08:38):
some other ops hey, what's thelatest?
From remember how they rolledout Russiagate and Tulsi Gabbard
was going to have all theseheads of the, you know, james
Clapper and Comey, all thesepeople are going to be pulled
back into Russiagate and nothinghappened.
It's because of what happenedin the fallout of Trump saying
(08:59):
you know what, what are we stilltalking about this guy, this
creep, you know, are you stilltalking about this guy, this
creep, are you still askingabout this?
And then Pam Bondi, with thedeer in the headlights Look,
there was a lot that reseteverything.
However, prior to that and Iknew that that was a big moment
(09:22):
was the strike on Iran and thisarticle just came up in Zero
Hedge.
Let me put this on the screen.
I really want to talk aboutthis because this is something
that you wouldn't have seen eventwo years ago this type of
language, and there is somethingto this, and I want to dig back
(09:46):
into this because this hasreverberating effects of what
happened to the internalpolitical establishment of our
country, the perceived politicalestablishment of our country.
Let me put this on the screen.
This is Zero Hedge.
By the way, I don't usuallytell people like I don't know, I
(10:12):
am in pain right now, like I'mliterally just it's so
ridiculous.
I didn't even do anything to my.
I was just doing some deadliftsa couple of weeks ago and I
slept on my background.
I have a pinched nerve in myhand.
It just it makes it so hard tojust find a place just to sit
comfortably, and it's justconstant and it's annoying.
(10:32):
But I know you're like BillClinton, you feel my pain.
But I'm in pain, right, it'sridiculous and I didn't even do
anything to it.
It's like, uh, of all the liftsand all the things I've ever
done, that was not the one thatwas supposed to hurt me, but
that's how it works, isn't itAll right?
(10:54):
This is um zero hedgecom.
Trump bluntly explains that theU?
S bombed Iran for Israel.
So this is a hell of a headline, folks, and there was a lot to
(11:16):
that if you remember that strike.
So much happeninggeopolitically and we wonder why
.
I'll get into more of that, butthere's definitely a shift
going on.
No-transcript.
He says so.
(11:36):
Israel is amazing because youknow I have good support from
Israel.
The president told the DailyCaller Look, nobody has done
more for Israel than I have,including the recent attacks
with Iran wiping that thing out.
We, that plane, wiped them outlike nobody ever saw before.
(11:57):
Trump made the comments whenasked if he was worried about
the growing skepticism amongyoung Republicans when it comes
to the US relationship withIsrael growing skepticism among
young Republicans when it comesto the US relationship with
Israel and he noted thatIsrael's lobby control over
Congress, saying it, has wanedin recent years.
He says but when?
If you go back 20 years, I mean, I will tell you Israel had the
(12:18):
strongest lobby in Congress ofanybody, or anybody or any
company or corporation or statethat I've ever seen.
Israel was the strongest.
Today it doesn't seem to havethat strength.
It's amazing, though, trump saidthere was a time where you
couldn't speak bad.
If you wanted to be apolitician, you couldn't speak
badly, but today you have AOCplus three and you have all
(12:42):
these lunatics and they'vechanged.
He had it Well, he's not wrongthere, but this is a sea change
and something that there's ait's in the wind and you can
tell if you're if you're aforecaster of trends at all, if
(13:04):
you pay attention.
And he was right, I mean, whenI ran for Congress in 2014,.
We're talking about a differentworld than it is now.
It's totally different.
A lot has happened, so much hastranspired.
And the younger demographicshift.
This isn't going to be the wayit was and there's an unraveling
(13:25):
taking place.
But this sort of candid off thecuff.
We struck a rant for israelthat is.
That is huge.
The criticism of israel among asmall number of members of
Congress is no longer limited toDemocrats, as Rep Marjorie
(13:47):
Taylor Greene, who is considereda strong supporter of President
Trump, has recently come outstrongly against Israel's
campaign in Gaza and become thefirst Republican in Congress to
label it a genocide.
Rep Thomas Massey is also knownfor his opposition to USAID, to
Israel and the pro-Israel lobbygroup AIPAC Israel.
(14:10):
You could understand this verymuch.
Israel was the strongest lobbyI've ever seen.
They had total control overCongress and now they don't.
You know, I'm a little surprisedto see that Trump said.
The president, who was stronglybacking Israel's assault in
Gaza, said the military campaignis not good for Israel's public
image.
They may be winning the war,but they're not winning the
(14:31):
world of public relations.
You know, trump made similarcomments while on the campaign
trail last year, both about theIsraeli lobby and Israeli's
public image.
Well, I also found itinteresting that no one seemed
(14:55):
to bring up the fact that thisJune 22nd strike it was further
down in the article, it was likedown in the article, it was
like operation hammer, somethinghammer.
Well, if you go back and youlook at that, uh, it's the same
(15:17):
day as operation barbarossa,which was the day that the so
Union was invaded by the ThirdReich.
That's when Hitler's Germanyinvaded 1941, June 22nd.
And I thought that wasinteresting.
They picked that day.
There was a lot leading up tothat.
(15:38):
Of course, you had peopleforgotten already because of the
Epstein situation, but rememberthe president tweeting out, you
know, unconditional surrenderin all caps and telling the
people of tehran to evacuate.
If you don't think that thathas reverberating consequences
geopolitically and just like,just like this recent move where
(16:03):
you have Xi Jinping, you haveVladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un
and they're walking and you know, meeting and having a summit,
basically setting up furtherrelations and contacts and plans
(16:25):
and other things, and trump'stweeting out things like you
know.
Tell vladimir putin I saidhello, while you conspire
against the united states.
Well, this has been.
That may be just a publicrelations photo op deal, but
this has been happening behindthe scenes for a long time now.
(16:45):
We just continue to drivewedges.
These are not the geopoliticalsituations we've had in the past
.
These are new things wherewe're continuing to isolate.
That was always the thing when Iwas growing up, the reason you
weren't supposed to be able tosupport somebody like Pat
Buchanan.
He was supposedly isolationistand I thought what is that?
(17:06):
When I was 16 years old in 1996, when he was running for
president for the second timeand I followed that very closely
he's like, oh, he's anisolationist.
And I thought what does thatmean?
Oh, that means he would wantthe United States to stand alone
and all these other things.
Oh, actually it wasn't that.
He was for peace.
He wanted economic inroads.
(17:26):
He wanted to have manufacturingbrought back.
He didn't want all thesetripwires all over the world
known as treaties to bring usinto no-win wars.
He wanted to scuttle the oldCold War alliances that were no
longer serving us since theSoviet Union had collapsed into
16 pieces.
There was a lot of things thatwere very smart about what he
(17:48):
was doing, this and what we'redoing, and even the rhetoric
that we bombed Iran for Israel.
That's isolationist folks,that's isolationism.
And we've not been thisisolated in living memory.
(18:10):
I don't know ever.
We definitely boxed ourselvesin to.
I mean, you talk aboutfinancially, with use of the
dollar and de-dollarization.
I will give you some othermetrics.
I was doing some research thismorning, I think since Bretton
(18:33):
Woods in 1944, there's more goldholdings by central banks and
foreign treasuries than thereare US treasuries.
So you know, the euro wassupplanted.
It used to be reserve assetsheld by central banks.
It was the dollar and then theeuro, and then gold was like
(18:56):
seven banks.
It was the dollar and then theeuro and then gold was like
seven, and then they reset thatto make gold a tier one asset
instead of a tier three assetback in 2021.
And it skipped up and itsurpassed the euro.
Well, this is another one ofthose de-dollarization metrics
and you need to pay attention Ifyou want to know why the price
of gold is at almost $3,600 anounce and you have Goldman Sachs
calling for $5,000 an ouncegold and Bank of America and
(19:18):
their intel saying $4,000 anounce gold.
Well, it's because ofde-dollarization and a lot of
that's not.
These analysts will talk aboutusage and other things.
And, yeah, usage is up, butit's also and gold is plentiful
in many respects.
I mean, it's hoarded by centralbanks and it's even throughout
(19:43):
history.
Very much of gold is stillaround.
I mean, if you go back and Iwas talking to Alan Herrera
about this and his history ofgold and I didn't know this but
there was a hundred thousandtons of gold mined, perceivably
between all of recorded history,in 1990 and after the collapse
(20:08):
of the soviet union and up untilour time now we have mined the
same amount of gold.
So there's about 200,000 tonsthat have been mined in all of
recorded history, but we've done100,000.
So it took us from all ofrecorded history to 1990.
Now, why do you think that is?
(20:28):
And that's an interestingquestion.
I've been pondering that sinceAlan and I had that conversation
, and a lot of that's due to thewhat you want to call it the
inflammation, the pressureapplied to markets and other
things by fiat currency.
It creates all sorts ofuncertainty.
(20:50):
It creates illusions as well.
It creates things that aren'treal on a massive scale, and so
the pursuit of gold and thingsand commodities that would be
able to house and be a safehaven away from the volatility
of fiat currency and whereeventually it will lead.
I mean, if you're runningenough simulations, you have to
(21:12):
know that the fiat currencysystem collapses.
There is no escape.
To know that the fiat currencysystem collapses, there is no
escape.
Yeah, you can always.
It can morph into somethingelse, but on a long enough
trajectory, just like zero hedgesays, in a long enough timeline
, the survival rate for everyonedrops to zero.
It's a quote right here on zerohedge and that's from fight
club, but that's true.
(21:34):
So we, we're we're awash in thatright.
We have a.
There's gold out there and it'sbeing gobbled up because the
problem of the, the debt, thecrisis of all that's been
amassed and everything that isthat is surrounding our current
reality, when it's financiallyis hollow and it's coming apart,
(21:55):
and that's why you're starting,just just as this.
This is the very tip of theiceberg for that, and I think
that, believe it or not, thereason I brought this article up
with bombing iran for israel isthis is a high watermark.
(22:16):
This is something to payattention to, the reason that
the Israeli lobby doesn't havethe same pull that it used to is
because the demographically,intellectually, america has
changed and because of theinternet, because of things that
have failed, because of theconsequences of neoconservatism
(22:42):
and the war in Iraq and failedpolicies and the fact that
politics looks like a dead-endroad.
I mean it certainly is for mostthings and whatever perceived
notions you had of what, who was, uh, who had the influence,
that's waning and that will goalong with what's happening with
(23:07):
our dollar.
These things, these thingscoalesce together.
You understand like,geopolitically, the interlinkage
there is very real and whatkind of power that the United
States can project versus what'shappening with the currency.
Those, those things go together.
So watch that very closely.
(23:28):
All right, we'll get back tosome more financial news here
towards the end.
I have an article up on activistposts by Michael Snyder that I
wanted to talk to you about, butfirst I'll go to the chat and
we'll check in on everybody.
(23:49):
I'm still up on at TonyArterburn on YouTube, at least
for now, and we are Skunk HollowRose Gardens.
Oh, thank you.
Thanks for being Welcome back,tony says Freethinker59.
Good to see you too, and I'vegot Jody Leslie over there.
(24:10):
Harps is in the chat on YouTube.
Thanks for joining.
I'm over on Rumble as well.
Nights of the Storm, dustinHelm Lots of good folks over
there.
I see Brandon Bennett Thanksfor being there and Harps over
on the Rumble stream.
(24:33):
Anything you guys want to talkabout, you always put it in the
chat.
If I get back in time to lookat it, I definitely will do that
.
We've got a lot of changescoming to the show too.
I appreciate you guys stickingaround.
I want to get back to.
I definitely don't take manycommercial breaks.
(24:54):
I don't plug enough either, butit's good to be back.
I wanted to get a live streamout, even though I feel like I'm
being stabbed in the back by ascrewdriver.
It's so much fun.
All right, did you guys see?
I want to bring this up and itdidn't get enough play and I'm
(25:21):
going to leave it up for yourinterpretation.
But you want to talk aboutparapolitics, precious metals,
things that are strange.
This is this is what the showis designed for folks.
It's for you to.
We'll gather together.
You're my support group.
I'm going out live on WWCR.
We're broadcasting all over theglobe and I bring up these kind
(25:43):
of stories.
This is stuff that sticks in mymind and I remember to talk with
you all about it.
I don't have a conclusion perse, but I find it interesting.
But I find it interesting andyou talk about these other world
leaders, what's happening inthe realm of geopolitics and the
(26:03):
shift here.
But this is something a littledifferent.
This is Fox News.
That's the only link that Iwanted to click after I'm not
sure what was attacking mybroadcast this morning, but
medical expert weighs in afteruh xi xi jinping putin, caught
(26:26):
on a hot mic discussing organtransplants and immortality.
Now I leave this up, for Ileave this up for the
possibility that the because Idon't speak Russian, I would
like to, and I don't speakMandarin, chinese I would like
to.
I don't speak these languages.
So you could easily tell methat this is what's being said.
However, it seems to besomewhat confirmed that they
(26:50):
were discussing this.
But Russian President VladimirPutin and Chinese leader Xi
Jinping.
Russian President VladimirPutin and Chinese leader Xi
Jinping, beijing hot mic remarkssuggesting organ transplant
could help people live to 150.
No-transcript.
(27:22):
After Reuters captured the twoleaders' bizarre exchange on
Wednesday, transplant surgeonJames Markman told Fox News
Digital that Putin and Xi shouldbe talking about ethics and
organ access instead, I don'tthink that the head of the
(27:43):
Communist Chinese or the head ofthe Russian Federation are much
into ethics, and that's anotherthing you know.
And I think we've gotten soschizophrenic in alternative
media because obviously the linethat you're supposed to grab
(28:04):
onto with the narrative of theglobalist and everything coming
out of, you know, the mainstreammedia is that Russia is bad and
we have to have this enemy.
And you know we've got to plantthe rainbow flag in enemy and
you know we got to plant therainbow flag in Moscow and you
know we're going to fight to thelast Ukrainian and all that.
That's a sick philosophy andI've stuck up for what's
(28:25):
happened to Russia post fall ofthe Soviet Union on this
broadcast many, many, many times, because I know the history.
I didn't go to a fancy school,you know I wasn't.
I don't have to read foreignaffairs, I just understand
history and what happened postGorbachev, james Baker and the
(28:47):
summits that they had and whathappened to NATO.
So I don't have to be arucophile to understand that
they have a grievance here.
However, a lot of alternativemedia and some on the faux right
or whatever you want to call italt-right, fault-right,
whatever it is they believe thatPutin's like this savior figure
(29:09):
, and I've never bought that.
I just thought well, these arepeople that have ascended to the
highest levels of power.
You know there are no good guys, you know there's only us, and
so I would caution against likethe human mind has a real
tendency to do that.
That's why we do this.
We have team sports, andpolitics is the ultimate team
(29:32):
sport, and you know, if we aregoing to cheerlead for so-and-so
, then that person can do nowrong and then the other person
can do no right and all thatstuff.
It's a very distorted way oflooking at things.
However, this is an interestingexchange and I want to go on to
(29:53):
see.
I love when the websites resetthemselves.
The chat in question unfolded asPutin and Xi walked alongside
North Korea's Kim Jong-un andthat's a pride of lions to draw
to At a military parade to markthe 80th anniversary of the end
(30:16):
of the Second World War in theChinese capital.
As they moved towards the stageto watch the spectacle in
Tiananmen Square, putin'sinterpreter could be heard
saying in Chinese, biotechnologyis continuously developing.
(30:37):
Putin's interpreter explainedthe russian president's view
that human organs can becontinuously transplanted and
added the longer you live, theyounger you become and you can
even achieve immortality.
It's not really a Christianperspective, is it?
Does that sound very OrthodoxChristian to you?
(31:01):
Xi, who was off camera at thetime, can be heard saying in
Chinese some predict that inthis century humans may live to
150 years old.
However, dr Markman, presidentof the American Society of
Transplant Surgeons ExecutiveCouncil, claims Xi's conclusions
lack evidence.
(31:21):
I don't think, mr Markmandoctor.
I don't think that's the kindof transplants that you're
thinking of, that you'rethinking of.
It reminded me of the story oflittle-known history that Stalin
(31:42):
, the man of steel, ran theSoviet Union, stalin prior to
(32:02):
World War II.
This was one of those erassoviet history that got swept
under the rug.
But he created and they.
They were successful.
That was the thing about thisexperiment.
Um, he wanted to create agorilla human hybrid and they
had uh will as willingparticipant.
This, this woman.
They had uh and they.
They went through all themachinations and continuously
(32:26):
tried to create this art of thishybrid and um, from what I
understand from the history andyou can go look this up for
yourself it's a bizarre history.
Apparently, he was trying tocreate a super soldier and they
were going to use human andgorilla DNA once they could get
(32:47):
in, supposedly they weresuccessful with at least one and
it died, and it died.
But later, you know, FDR would,franklin Roosevelt would come to
Stalin's aid and the StateDepartment was this kind of goes
(33:14):
back to my history, aboutOperation Barbarossa, june 22,
1941.
This was when, you know, theSoviet Union was invaded by the
Third Reich and that's when ourState Department in the United
States hey, we got to get inthis war.
You know they didn't.
Really it wasn't so much thatEngland was supposedly under
attack or the Battle of Britainor Dunkirk or any of that, that
wasn't what set off the alarmbells in the State Department.
(33:35):
It was the invasion of theSoviet Union by the Third Reich.
And FDR would go on to you know, that's the whole reason we
went in the war, because Hitlerinvaded Poland and then we gave
Poland to Stalin at the end ofthe 50 million dead, to give
Poland from you know, take itfrom the Third Reich and give it
to the Soviet Empire.
(33:56):
Poland, from you know, take itfrom the Third Reich and give it
to the Soviet Empire.
And so we gave it to Stalin andlater Harry Truman would call
him Uncle Joe, and you know wewere taught to like them.
But again this is on the worldstage.
You know you've got to look atthis from a lens of actually,
you know, some realpolitik andsome not team sports or anything
(34:21):
like that.
Again you have Putin, who, Ithink, got a really raw deal
from the.
We should have financialinroads, we should have made
peace, we should have summitswith Russia, we should be doing
things right now to promotepeace and economic prosperity
between our nations, andespecially with the growing
(34:44):
influence of the, of the chinese.
But we didn't do that.
We went and we completelyisolated ourselves.
Kenny f in power says hi, tonythe brave.
Well, she certainly is brave.
And uh, she's just off to myright.
She's um, she's napping, butI'm glad to have her here.
(35:08):
So just a little interestingstory.
You know you take with thatwith a grain of salt or whatever
you'd like, but's aninteresting blip.
You know that bodies exhibit,supposedly, and you talk about
organ harvesting.
I brought this up on America,unplugged.
You know, you see that bodiesexhibit, that travels all over
(35:28):
and it emanates from China.
Supposedly.
A lot of the bodies are Chinesedissidents, people that were no
longer viable.
They were unalived by theruling party.
But I think they're talkingabout something else here, not
like your traditional, like, Ithink, growing things and
(35:52):
creating, you know, cloningthings and all of that.
So something to look, somethingthat should have been talked
about more.
That's what we do here.
On the Art of Burn RadioTransmission, I'll bring up
stuff that maybe you shouldthink about a little bit more.
(36:12):
You draw your own conclusionson what they were actually
talking about.
I have my own ideas, but noneof it's provable.
All right, well, I've got about.
Uh, 24 minutes left in the Holdon.
(36:35):
Hold on, I figure.
Since there's been a change,I'll discuss with you, dear
audience, my beloved followersof Arterburn Radio Transmission
and Paratruther.
Let's discuss a littlesomething interesting.
(36:57):
All right, let me put this upon the screen.
Uh, let's see, he's dead.
To me it's so funny I got allthese pop-ups.
It's hard to read that he'sdead.
To me, alex jones calls formerinfoars co-host demon possessed
(37:24):
MAGA conspiracy theorists.
I don't know, the MAGAconspiracy theorist is an
interesting nomenclature, I hadnot run across that before.
And InfoWars founder Alex Joneshad a meltdown on air as he went
on a tirade against his formerco-host for quitting the show.
(37:45):
Jones 51 blasted far right, farright, far right presenter owen
schroyer 36 on his tuesday livestream.
After schroyer cha why he leftInfowars on his rumble.
Schroer cited Jones, callinghim too anti-Trump, among the
(38:07):
reasons for his departure.
Jones says you are a snake, ashe yelled aggressively, pointed
his fingers towards the camera.
You are a rat, you are a fraud,you are a backstabber, you are
a hand biter, you are a disgrace.
Jones continued to bash theex-host.
I don't know if the stuff he'ssmoking, but I've seen a lot of
(38:28):
people get paranoid.
You know they smoke pot and gonuts.
Jones also claimed that Schroerwould look at him with hatred
and asserted his bad behaviorwas because Schroer wanted to be
fired by Jones so he could be avictim.
He's going to stab me in theback, jones said.
(38:51):
I'm not here to be stabbed inthe back.
Okay, well, I'm sure anybody inalternative media.
If you follow this a little bit, you probably heard uh, this
story.
But I wanted to tell you whereI love owen and uh, I've been
friends with owen for for manyyears.
(39:13):
I like these a far rightpresenter.
He's so far right, um, that'sthe funny thing about this
country, that, um, and where weare like with the narrative like
, just just constitutionally,like you are an extremist, um,
oh, it's not a far right guy atall.
(39:34):
Um, that's so funny.
But it is true that he's beenfired or let go and it seems
like that was an inevitability.
He lasted a long time, I wouldsay, from what I've seen, and I
used to fill in for Owen on infowars and I'd filled in for
David.
They've both now been.
(39:56):
I mean, david was let go inDecember of of 2020.
And then the last time I filledin for Owen was February of 21.
It's the last appearance I evermade on InfoWars.
It was February of 21.
I was remote, remoted in.
He has a three-hour show.
I had Don Jeffries coming on.
(40:17):
I had two other guests.
I was already booked the show.
I was live streaming from myoffice in branson, so plugged in
, opened up, did the first youknow 30 minutes or so, uh, of
the war room, and then thisvoice comes on in my headset and
it just says, uh, hey, tonyalex is going to take it from
(40:39):
here.
And I said he was on like in onthe vacation, he was in like a
hotel.
He just didn't want to see mebroadcast.
So, um, I, that's the last Iwas just told to get off and I
did and, uh, it's his network,he can do what he likes.
And because, uh, you know, I'mfriends with ow, I never even
(41:02):
told that story, I just said,fine, you know, and it was just
the way that it was.
But I thought that's one hell ofa way to end your.
I just used to fill in overthere, but I'd gotten, and I
(41:24):
think because I sided with Davida lot too, I never brought that
up, but just the analysis.
I mean, I thought the analysisof going into 2020, 21,.
It was just I was trying tocall it like I was seeing it.
I was right, but it's athankless task.
I remember the comments peoplejust really mad at me for not
being more of a Trump sycophant,and I knew right then that that
was going to be a massiveliability in the future.
(41:46):
It would be good right then,but in the future, the further
you can get away from whateverthe hell that was like the stop,
the steal and everything else.
The further you get away fromthat, the better off you'd be in
the long run.
But it's going to be a lot ofshort-term wilderness time,
because people want to hear whatthey want to hear and it
doesn't matter if you're right.
(42:07):
I've been telling you to buygold, since it's $1,100 an ounce
.
Nobody's calling me thanking me, saying, hey, you did a great
job, no, they're just now going.
Well, maybe I should buy gold,maybe he should.
Maybe that de-dollarizationdeal is real or the
nationalistic political movementwas hijacked and is a clone or
(42:29):
something.
It's a funhouse mirror versionof itself and I didn't believe
in it.
And people say, well, you gaveup.
No, I'm calling it like I seeit and Schroer called it like he
saw it and that's where he'sgoing to start a whole new thing
and the good for him and I haveI've never complained about you
(42:50):
know I I'm thankful for all thebroadcasts I got to do on
InfoWars and I appreciate thoseguys.
It's Alex's station, he can dowhatever he wants.
Uh, it's alex's station, he cando whatever he wants, uh.
But I thought that was uh fromwhat I had seen just in the in
behind the scenes and hangingout with owen and you know,
filling in for him and his crewand everything I saw.
(43:11):
There is not a soldier that youwould want more than owen
freuer like you talk about aloyal guy Like he was.
He's so loyal.
So it's all really sad to watchwhen these kind of things
happen and a lot of the pressureemanates from outside, but it
is.
The truth is is that Owen isvery, very loyal and you know,
(43:40):
having that sort of somebody inyour corner like owen freud,
that's a tough thing to lose.
Um, so you know, and again,that there's stuff that you'll
never hear me talk negativelyabout anybody over at info.
They can do what they want.
Info wars is.
I appreciate the time that Iwas able to go host over there,
but that really did have.
I think a lot of otherbroadcasters would have been
(44:01):
like to.
We were just getting started in21 with what was about to happen
Shortly following.
(44:27):
Geopolitically, that was BaselIII, and gold became a tier one
asset.
Gold became a tier one asset.
And then the invasion ofUkraine by Iraq, all this stuff,
(44:48):
that the ruble fell and thenthey reset it with gold and it
went back to its original basisand the dollar usage from
worldwide fell like 10% andcontinues to fall.
I could have covered a lotthere, but Godspeed to Owen
Troyer, I'm sure he'll do fine.
I got a call with him.
As a matter of fact, we'regoing to.
We texted me yesterday.
I'm going to talk to him.
We'll see what I'm going to dosome stuff with Owen.
For sure I'm a love Owen, sohopefully I'm I'm proud sponsor
(45:12):
of his program wherever he goesand wherever he winds up.
So we're supposed to talk afterthe show today.
Maybe we'll have him on.
He was the episode one ofParatrooper, by the way.
Kenny F in Power says great runin gold and silver recently
(45:32):
Stacked since 2010.
Well, good for you, kenny.
I know that's not how Kenny Fin Power is.
I love Kenny Powers.
Harps says Alex is theChristine on broadcasting.
He's definitely carved out hisown niche, his own thing.
(45:52):
I love, I think, pre-2016InfoWars great stuff.
Pre-2016 Infowars great stuff.
I mean back when you had JimMars on and it was the
left-right paradigm and Al-Syedaand all that.
I liked that.
That was good.
The poison of politics,especially the Trump brand and
(46:19):
everything that that brought.
It's just been disastrous foralternative media.
It's been disastrous foreverything and it's sad because
it carries with it a nugget of aselection of truths and things
(46:41):
that have been great for thiscountry and it's been
unfortunately put into thisphantom zone.
We've been dispatched to thisweird place where it's being
used against itself.
If that makes sense, all right.
Used against itself.
If that makes sense, all right.
(47:02):
Let's uh jump into the, the lastlittle bit of stories for today
.
Let's see what I've got here.
I had, um, several thingspulled up.
I wanted see what.
There was something abouthousing.
Yeah, it was activist posts.
Let's talk about this.
(47:24):
The reason I bring this up ifyou want to get the most out of
an hour, okay, so this show isbasically an hour.
It's hour live.
If you take two or three thingsout of it.
There's something in there,right, and it's either about
trends or what comes next, orsomething to think about when
you're either economically orpolitically or socially.
(47:45):
There's something in it.
Art will usually do that, and Isaw a comment the other day.
It was like I like Tony's show,but he makes me want to fall
asleep.
I'm like it's because I'm notyelling at you.
I'm not going to yell at you.
This is a conversation.
Imagine you called me and Ijust happened to be enunciating
a little bit better and I'mgoing to watch my words a little
(48:07):
bit more carefully.
You're not going to be talkingto the former paratrooper all
the time.
You're going to be talking tome.
I'm more.
This is a family show, butyou'll learn something and this
is is an art.
This is one of those thingsactivist posts.
By the way, go and subscribe tomy friend charlie robinson's
activist post.
What a great website.
He's always got stories that Ican use for the show and things
(48:32):
you can use for this is intel.
Folks we are.
We are gathering intelligence.
This is source intel.
It's what this show is aboutand it's analysis based on
what's happening now and whathappens next.
Home prices are starting tocrash.
Is that really good news orreally bad news?
This is Activist Post viaMichael Schneider of the
(48:55):
Economic Collapse blog.
Home prices are falling allover the nation.
Should we be cheering or shouldwe be concerned?
In this article, I am going todiscuss two distinct scenarios.
In one scenario, lower housingprices could be a really good
thing for our economy, but ifanother scenario plays out, we
could potentially be looking ata repeat of the chaotic days of
(49:18):
2008 and 2009.
Zero Hedge is reporting thathome prices in the 20 biggest
cities in the United Statesdeclined for a fourth
consecutive month in June.
Home prices in America's 20largest cities fell for the
fourth straight month in June.
The latest data available fromS&P core logistics case revealed
(49:42):
the 0.25% drop was larger thanexpected and dragged the
year-over-year price growth downto 2.15%, the weakest since
July of 2023.
Four months in a row isdefinitely a trend, and other
data points are confirming thata significant turning point has
(50:04):
arrived.
According to Zillow, 27.4% ofall home listings had their
prices slashed during the monthof July.
Home prices are falling in halfof the nation's largest markets
.
A new report reveals sparkingfears that a housing crisis is
looming.
(50:25):
Well, I'm going to go back towhat I talked with before.
The robot got mad at me on theDavid Knight show Tried to
hijack my show.
We were discussing this verything.
So we were discussing this verything, and it has to do with
the metrics and it's hidingsomething.
(50:45):
The housing market is showingyou something, and what it's
showing you is the failure offiat currency, and now it's
reached a point where thehousing and real estate,
especially single-family homes,has housed for lack of a better
(51:07):
term, it's housed the decliningpurchasing power of dollars
rapidly since 1971.
That's why home prices havestarted to outpace everything
else, and so the whole economyis built on that, and instead of
us making things and being alender, we become a debtor and
(51:31):
we start consuming.
We stop making things, weimport them for cheaper prices.
People get laid off All themetrics of what happens in a
fiat, post-manufacturing worldfor the United States.
So we put it all into housingand wealthy people will go out
and buy multiple, multiplehouses, not even to rent out,
just to own.
And it makes it where theaverage person is priced out.
(51:56):
It used to be as about 30 yearsold was the average home buying
age.
Now it's 40.
So there's an entire generationof people that have been priced
out of the home market andeventually real estate is what
somebody will pay for it.
It's kind of like a rare coin.
You can come to me with a rarecoin.
I love them, they're neat andyou can say I clicked on an app
(52:16):
and it shows me it's worth X andI'm like that's true if you can
find somebody to buy it.
Gold and silver are liquid allthe time.
I know exactly where I can takeit.
I know I can get within hours Ican be liquid back into fiat
currency.
It's a monetary metal.
It's easy.
Real estate's not necessarilylike that and it's a lot of
(52:40):
subjective things like what's itreally worth.
We know what an ounce of goldis worth.
We know what a Bitcoin is worth.
We know what an ounce of silveris worth.
But real estate's different andit can have different pockets
of pricing.
That has been, maybe it's a hotarea or whatever, and people get
into it.
They borrow against it.
Every time that you get a homeloan, it's currency creation.
(53:02):
When you borrow from themortgage company, from your bank
, they don't pull from somereserve somewhere.
That is currency that is made.
That's new currency.
So we've built this house ofcards on the housing market.
This is the entire backbone ofwhat the US economy is, and
(53:25):
that's why, if people can't buythe house, let's say interest
rates are too high for them orwhatever because when the
interest rates rise, thepayments rise, and so if people
get priced out, then they can'tkeep up the Ponzi because it has
to continue.
Well, that's why they want tolower rates and to cut rates.
Then you can borrow more with,you can have a lower payment and
(53:51):
capitalize it more.
The problem with that, too, isthat it creates all this
liquidity and then the dollarloses purchasing power.
So if you're a gold, silver,bitcoin person, that looks good
for you, if you're a real estateinvestor long-term, if you own
rentals and stuff, that can bereally good and the tax
(54:13):
implications are magnificent.
However, we just reached areally interesting point here in
American history where this hasbeen built in and built in and
built in and propped up andbecause we didn't allow markets
to correct themselves, naturallyin 2008, 2009, because we had
to bail out in the too big tofail in jail, because those
(54:34):
numbers seem quaint now.
You know, in 2008, I think thedebt of the US was around I
think it was around $7 trillionin 2008.
And we'll have to look that up.
Maybe I'll look it up now.
Let's see if I can look up thedebt of the US in 2008, real
(54:54):
quick, before the transmission2008.
Real quick before thetransmission 2008.
Let's see if we can go back andlook so it's $9 trillion.
Okay, it's $9 trillion.
(55:14):
So it was $5 trillion in 2000,.
So it was $9 trillion.
So all these numbers are quaintcompared to that, because it
took us from 1776 to 2008 to go$8 or $9 trillion and now we add
a trillion every 100 days.
So these numbers and thesemetrics aren't going to play out
(55:39):
well, especially with thingslike the housing market.
Florida and Texas in particularare home to former boom towns
where prices have fallen at thequickest rate over the past year
.
Tampa prices are down 6.2%,austin 6%, miami 4.6%, orlando
(56:02):
4.3% and Dallas 3.9%, accordingto Zillow.
If you want a canary in thecoal mine, this is it.
Now we don't have time to gothrough the entire article, but
what I will add is that theupside to this, if it's allowed
to go on its natural conclusion,prices will fall and it allows
(56:28):
people to get into the housingmarket, which can be a good
thing.
The problem is that all of thisI think the traditional way to
outpace inflation and own a homeand all that, I think that
(56:49):
those things are antiquated andthat real estate can be a great
play, but there's going to be areversal of those trends.
If you want to call it that,and this is just me giving you a
little bit of advice to look tothe, it will not the housing
market and what we think of astraditional, you know, home as
(57:14):
an asset, all of that stuff Ithink will will be a lot
different in five to ten years,especially ten years.
Ten years think will be a lotdifferent in five to 10 years,
especially 10 years.
10 years we'll see a completelydifferent system.
All this is built on somethingvery shaky, which is you get out
so the next person can get in.
Prices rise, but it's going uptoo fast because it's a failure
(57:38):
of currency and it's notnecessarily that the house is
worth more.
It's kind of like the goldright Now.
Some real estate is Becausethey don't make any more,
especially in areas where thepopulation has boomed.
So there's a supply and demandissue that drives price, but
it's mostly because of thefailure of currency.
Kenny F Empower says they lowerrates and make more money than
(58:04):
hyperinflation will be the finalnail in the coffin.
Yes, well, I appreciate each andevery one of you.
It's good to be back.
I got some good shows plannedfor the coming weeks and months
and I hope you'll stick around,be sure and give us a review
(58:27):
over anywhere podcasts are found.
If you find us over on Appleand you like the show for
Paratroother, give us a review.
Same thing with Arteburn RadioTransmission.
I've got some great stuffplanned for the show and I want
to bring that to you.
And and uh, have theseconversations.
It means a lot to me to to belive and uh, we're gonna have
some guests on and some otherthings happening with
(58:49):
paratroopers.
So, yeah, give us a review ifyou can.
And if you haven't, uh, lookedat wolfpack, please do.
Wolfpackgold, uh, that's, I'mreally working on some new stuff
there.
Uh, wolfpackgold is, um, it'sjust a great way to stack, it's
a great way to dollar costaverage precious metals, and
(59:11):
we're just getting started.
Silver is over 40 an ounce.
Uh, I think that's.
I think that's an indication ofthings to come.
And the repricing, therevaluation of all commodities
against fiat currency.
There's a lot of changehappening right now, folks, and
I'm glad to be here with youthroughout the change.
(59:32):
So, yeah, arterburngold,wolfpackgold, america Unplugged
on Saturdays, be sure and tunein.
I'll be here along with BillyRay Valentine and the legendary
Donald Jeffries.
You guys take care of eachother.
Have a great weekend.
End of transmission.