Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
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.
Veteran of three foreign wars,entrepreneur and warrior, poet,
(00:48):
Tony Arterburn takes on theissues facing our country,
civilization and planet.
This is the Arterburn RadioTransmission.
So Thank you.
(01:49):
Can you believe what you havebeen seeing on CNN today, ladies
and gentlemen?
Can you believe it?
Supposedly a CNN reporter foundOsama bin Laden, took a
television camera crew with him,went into Osama bin Laden's
(02:10):
hideout, interviewed him and histop leadership, his top
lieutenants and colonels andgenerals in their hideout.
This is a CNN reporter with acamera crew and he came out and
told everybody within threeweeks Osama bin Laden is going
(02:34):
to attack the United States andIsrael.
Now don't you think that's kindof strange folks, you see,
because the largest intelligenceapparatus in the world, with
the biggest budget in thehistory of the world, has been
looking for Osama Bin Laden Foryears and years and years and
can't find him.
The FBI also, under theleadership of Louis Free, has
(02:57):
been looking for Osama Bin Ladenfor years and years and years
and years and years and can'tfind him.
Some doofus Jerk off reporterand years and years and years
and years and many years andcan't find him.
Some doofus, jerk-off reporterwith a camera crew waltzes right
into his hideout and interviewshim, and you know what his
budget is?
Zip, zilch, nothing.
(03:19):
Now, that tells us two thingsEither everyone in the
intelligence community and allof the intelligence agencies of
the United States government areblithering idiots and
incompetent fools, including theentire apparatus of the FBI and
all of their personnel, orthey're lying to us.
(03:42):
They're not looking for him atall.
And the second is the truth.
You see, the CIA created Osamabin Laden.
They recruited him, theytrained him, they found his
leadership, they brought themall together, they showed them
(04:04):
how to fight the Soviet Union inAfghanistan, and when that was
over, they still continued tofund him and train him.
And they're now using him tohelp bring about world
government by making him the bigboogeyman, because they can't
use Saddam Hussein anymore,because they needed a new
(04:26):
Boogeyman.
A reporter from CNN and hislittle camera crew Got in to
Osama Bin Laden's secret Hideoutand conducted an interview.
If you don't believe me, tunein to CNN.
They're probably running itright now as I'm speaking, and
(04:46):
if you believe it, you are oneof the stupidest jerks.
If you don't believe me, tunein to CNN.
They're probably running itright now as I'm speaking, and
if you believe it, you are oneof the stupidest jerks that ever
lived on the face of this earthand whatever is going to happen
, that they're going to blame onOsama bin Laden.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Don't you even
believe it?
Well, this is the officialbroadcast of the apocalypse.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is adark day in America, not just
for the anniversary, but for theevents of yesterday.
(05:23):
I think it was John F Kennedywho said that those who make
peaceful revolution impossiblemake violent revolution
inevitable.
Dark days ahead for the UnitedStates If we don't get ahead of
this ball.
Figure this out why we?
Our discourse is disintegratinginto some sort of China
(05:48):
syndrome meltdown.
You remember what that's?
A reference to the theory thatif a nuclear power plant melts
down, it melts to the earth allthe way through the core of the
earth to China.
That's certainly what we'redoing.
I've spent the last few hoursmeditating on that as I look
(06:10):
through the headlines.
And of course, it's September11th, an anniversary of a very,
very dark day in Americanhistory, perhaps the darkest,
and we'll get into some of thattoday.
But following yesterday'sattack, it really made me think,
and I saw a post from someoneI'd never heard of it's been
shared on my social media but aninfluencer, and they said that
(06:33):
the left or the progressiveswill one day beg for a
conservative like Charlie Kirkbecause, where the right um, it
will make him look toothless,which I think at some level.
I already thought that.
I said that yesterday.
What brand of conservatism isoffensive about what Charlie
(06:58):
Kirk was?
I mean, I followed his careerfor many years.
We were on the same radiostation in San Antonio.
I knew exactly who Charlie Kirkwas and it was just basic stuff
Like there's two genders.
And you know, I'm a Christian,you know basic conservatism and
(07:21):
you know he was a pro-Israel guy.
He was a Zionist.
There was an interestinginterchange he had with Megyn
Kelly just before this awful,tragic thing that happened to
him, that he had made Israel madat him and some of the
supporters of Israel.
So that's interesting.
And Harrison Smith put out atweet that said as much that he
(07:45):
knew somebody close to CharlieKirk and that he was afraid to
cross Israel in some way.
I don't know.
These are strange times.
I looked at this.
We're going to jump into someof the headlines, but I wanted
to get into that.
Like, what is this set up?
We're definitely being primedfor something.
I saw a post that billy rayvalentine had put on my twitter.
(08:10):
He's doing a show I didn't geta chance to to catch his, his
broadcast.
But he said they're.
They're pushing us to civil war, of course, and this is exactly
what's happening.
And what MO does?
A peak fluoride, you know superangry leftist.
(08:32):
Where do they?
Where does the weapons come in,especially a 200-yard shot on a
building?
There's some pre-planning inthat.
There's some cognitive functionthat goes into having to do
that.
And then again I beg thequestion what is it about?
What was it that?
I've watched several videos.
What is it that animates peopleto be so upset about the benign
(08:58):
sense of conservatism thatCharlie Kirk had?
It's absolutely benign.
There's nothing in CharlieKirk's conservatism that in any
(09:20):
way, shape or form wasmilitaristic, was antagonistic.
You'll have to help me there.
Figure that one out and we'llget into some of that.
It a.
It's an interesting time.
Ladies and gents, I have a talkafter this broadcast is over.
I'm gonna go speak to therotary club in denison, texas,
about 9-11.
All I all I was told was Iasked if I could speak about
(09:42):
9-11 on 9-11 and they said yes.
So we're gonna see what we canget into.
But I opened up the broadcastwith uh, of course, that famous
uh, june 28th.
Excerpt from william miltoncooper, bill cooper broadcasting
(10:02):
from his uh, bill Cooperbroadcasting from his studio in
Igor, arizona, in June of 2001.
And I think it's one of themost overlooked pieces of
American history.
Really, if you look at somebodylike Bill Cooper, he's a
troubled guy and Vietnam vet.
It was a naval intelligence andVietnam vet.
(10:23):
It was in naval intelligence,but a savant, a genius in many
ways, especially when it came tothe realm of conspiracy or the
hidden hand or the esoteric.
He was on another level.
As a broadcaster, he's probablysecond to none.
As a matter of fact, theClinton White House labeled him
(10:46):
the most dangerous radio host inAmerica, and Rush Limbaugh read
that memo live on the air in, Ithink, 1995.
He said see folks, it's not me,it's Bill Cooper broadcasting
out of a shopping center inArizona.
So you go back and look at thatbroadcast, though it's June 28,
2001.
(11:09):
And CNN was running a storyabout a camera crew getting in
to talk to Osama bin Laden andhe was setting the stage and
saying that Israel and theUnited States were targets.
The United States were targets,which is interesting because he
left out a few other entitiesthat were also antagonistic
(11:30):
towards so-called internationalterrorism.
At least on paper.
He left out the British, amongothers, but he called out the
United States and Israel in thisinterview.
Might I add that interview hasdisappeared.
That doesn't exist anymore.
You can only find broken linksof it, but there's no footage of
(11:52):
it.
There's a 1998 footage of CNNgetting in to talk to Osama bin
Laden, but not June 2001.
And I suspect that that'sbecause they were setting the
stage for something and, if Iremember, I was in Sofia,
bulgaria, on September 10th 2001.
(12:13):
I was on the United States team, representing the US on the
American powerlifting team atthe World Powerlifting
Championships.
I just happened to be a soldierand a veteran and I'd already
done a tour in Kosovo.
I remember distinctly watchingCNN International.
I was with my dad and I lookedover and it burned in my mind.
(12:39):
Now this is September 10, 2001,.
And I remember I looked overand I saw the TV and they were
talking about a story.
Now this is another camera crewstory that gets whitewashed
through and lost in the DonaldJeffries would call it the
American memory hole, maybe theinternational memory hole.
But on September 10th 2001, afake camera crew got in to talk
(13:05):
to the leader of the NorthernAlliance in Afghanistan.
Now, the Northern Alliance wasthe most adversarial group
opposing the Taliban andopposing groups like al-Qaeda,
and they blew up andassassinated, with this fake
camera crew, the leader of theNorthern Alliance.
(13:29):
Now that's pre-planning and yougot to wonder who made that
decision.
Lots of unanswered questionsabout 9-11 and every year we
talk about it on its anniversary.
Two years ago, I was in NewYork City along with Billy Ray
(13:50):
and Don Jeffries and CharlieRobinson and Wayne McCroy and
many others talented researchersRichard Gage was there
architects and engineers for9-11 Truth, and I thought we had
a great summit.
It was a presentation of thethings that we do.
I just went off the cuff andtalked like I do now, but I
(14:12):
think there's so much there, somuch weight, and when you get
something like yesterday thatpops up, you're reminded about
the fragility of life and thatyou know whatever your hand
finds is like the the Bible willsay do it gladly.
You know, do your work, stay onmission, stay on point and know
(14:36):
what's important.
You know, when you get caughtup in things that will drain you
of your life force and your anysort of of uh, any sort of joy
in this, in this realm, on thisuh plane of existence, as we get
caught up into so many, so manythings, and I those are always
unfortunate.
They're wake-up calls.
When you see something likethat happen and I also, it's a
(14:58):
harbinger and I don't want it tobe.
But I think the country's inreally bad shape when it comes
to discourse and something ispushing us, something I believe
is directing us towards moreantagonism and taking our eye
off the ball of the real goalhere, which is to have some
(15:22):
common ground.
I mean, if we're not united inany way, just like Lincoln said,
a house divided against itselfwill not stand.
I think that's where we are,folks.
I think that's the goal ofwhoever's pushing these buttons.
I want to look at some headlineswith you.
Thanks for being here.
My support group a lot ofpeople go to.
(15:45):
I go to.
I don't go to meetings, I justshow up on WWCR and my live
stream and talk to all of youaround around the world.
This is according to theheadlines of Drudge, and this
just came in when I was on theDavid Knight show this morning.
Let me share this screen.
We'll put it up.
This just came in while I wason the David Knight show this
morning.
Let me share this screen.
We'll put it up One second.
(16:08):
This is Drudge Report.
Wall Street Journal is puttingthis out, by the way, that the
ammunition engraved with transand anti-fascist ideology, and
(16:29):
I'm not sure if they just meanthe casings.
I hadn't had time to look at thestory.
That is, uh, it seems to be thesetup.
More is going to happen withthis story and you know so long.
(16:53):
It reminded me what happened invegas, because as soon as the
federal agencies get involved,then there's no story, then you
just don't find out anything.
This is what happened stevenpaddock.
We don't still don't know.
This was october of 2017.
I still don't know who this guyis, and you never will, or the
(17:13):
the shooter in uvalde.
What about?
What's the latest?
What's the latest from whathappened with that kid?
You know how do you afford toget the assault rifles and the
weapons?
And working at fast food joints, how did he afford weapons that
I can't afford?
Well, that's another.
You know federal agencies getinvolved and you don't know
anything, most likely by design.
(17:36):
All right, I want to get intosome more headlines concerning
this too, and then we're goingto get into some financial stuff
, maybe talk a little bit of9-11, and I've got an article
from natural news on on ufos,just just in time, just in case,
just in case you don't knowwhat's next, and it's my job to
(18:00):
give you the best analysis, andI, in this project art this is
episode 515, has always beenabout sussing out whatever is
next, whatever's the truth,whatever the trends are, to the
best of my ability, and we'regoing to talk a little bit.
I think this decade is notthrough, with us giving us
(18:24):
things we couldn't have imaginedin 2020.
All right, let me pull thisnext article up.
This is Zero Hedge and justkind of where we are.
I think this is a good barometerof the mental sickness of
people.
It's primarily the mentalillness is people of, not it's
(18:48):
it's, it's primarily this themental illness is on one side of
all of this, but we have iteverywhere and it's it's even
pervasive in alternative medianow, and especially in.
You go into the chat groups ofa lot of these shows and you're
like I mean, why don't we justall give up?
You know, you see these guysthat are black pilled or, um,
extreme.
I mean, why don't we just allgive up?
You know, you see these guysthat are blackpilled or extreme
racism or whatever you know,whatever defect they have, and
(19:11):
they're projecting it onto you.
Just a lot of anger, a lot ofhate.
I don't care what side you'reon.
I see the mental illnesseverywhere, illness everywhere,
but there is a certain kind ofmental illness and it finds
(19:31):
itself in these circles.
This is zero hedge.
Msnbc fires matthew dowd forsuggesting charlie kirk had it
coming, and then liz warren jimsake doubled down.
Msnbc has fired politicalanalyst Matthew Dowd after he
suggested that conservativeactivist and TPUSA founder,
charlie Kirk, who wasassassinated on Wednesday, had
it coming.
During the coverage of Kirk'sshooting, anchor Katie Turr
(19:57):
asked Dowd about the environmentin which a shooting like this
happens a disgusting framing initself to which dowd replied
he's been one of the mostdivisive, especially divisive
younger figures in this, who isconstantly sort of pushing this
sort of hate speech or sort ofaimed at certain groups.
And I always go back to hatefulthoughts lead to hateful words
(20:18):
which lead to hateful actions,and I think this is the
environment we are in.
You can't stop with these sortof awful thoughts you have and
then saying these awful wordsand not expect awful actions to
take place.
That's a logic of a diseasedmind and I go back to.
(20:39):
Well, I think it's interesting.
I go back to my originalquestion in all of this, what
brand of extremism did CharlieKirk represent?
It's the most benign.
Again, what does it deserve?
It doesn't deserve violence atall, but I mean the opposite the
animated opposition to somebodyas normal as what Charlie Kirk
(21:05):
was.
I mean you realize that theoutlier in this situation, like
if I'm talking about the thingsthat I believe in, I'm the
extremist.
Now, on some of these socialissues and stuff, I think most
of it's an op and I don't evenwant to engage, like I would
never show up to a collegecampus to engage college kids
(21:26):
like Ben Shapiro or others.
One it's.
It's low hanging fruit.
I'm not really changinganybody's mind and I mean I
think it's good to debate.
It's not me, it's not what Iwant to do, but these are, these
are.
You know, these are minds thataren't developed yet.
These are very impressionable,malleable young people that have
(21:47):
had a cushy life and they'revery susceptible to Marxism and
cultural Marxism, as we've seen.
And cultural Marxism is reallya frequency of Satan and it's
really what it is.
I mean you can call whateveryour idea of Satan or evil is.
That's a frequency.
(22:07):
It is a bad frequency when youtap into cultural Marxism.
It is, and the prototype is theFrench Revolution, it's
Jacobism, it's the beheadings,it's the reign of terror, it's
the Bolshevik revolution, it'sall of that.
It's the Gulag archipelago,it's the starving of 4 million
(22:27):
Ukrainians, it's the mass gravethat is China.
It's, you know, 60 million dead, 70 million dead under Mao,
like it's some.
That's what it is.
That's what cultural Marxism,that's the frequency it's in.
(22:47):
So these kids get susceptibleto it and so they show up at
these college campuses and youget somebody like Charlie Kirk,
who's just normal.
I've watched the videos.
I don't understand what's the.
I mean, I really tried tounderstand what the extremism
was Like, what would pushsomebody.
So to me there's something moreto this with this shooting.
(23:10):
There's probably layers to itand it doesn't even fit the MO
of one of these people like apro-trans.
You know, anti-fascist whatever.
You know anti-fascist whatever.
These aren't your.
You know the anti-fascists ofthe 1930s that pushed back
(23:34):
against Hitler's Germany werecommunists and they were
militant.
I'm not sure you could say thesame thing about these modern
anti-fascists, but maybe so.
Maybe they've become weaponized.
This is a tweet by WesternLensman.
The despicable ghouls at MSNBCimmediately attacked Charlie
(23:55):
Kirk in wake of shooting.
Matthew Dowd blames Kirk'spushing hate speech as reason he
was shot again.
He says hateful thoughts leadto hateful words.
With these hateful actions,doubt's comments said it off a
(24:16):
firestorm, resulting in a publicapology from msnbc president
rebecca cootler, who called thestatement inappropriate,
insensitive and unacceptable.
We apologize for his statements.
As he Cutler said from MSNBC'sX account, there is no place for
violence in America, politicalor otherwise.
(24:36):
Dow took to Blue Sky to issue asimilar apology to an echo
chamber of leftists.
So sorry, I got caught.
Okay, I apologize for my toneand words.
Let me be clear.
I in no way intended for mycomments to blame Kirk for his
(24:57):
horrendous attack.
Meanwhile, both SenatorElizabeth Warren and former
Biden spokes and MSNBCpersonality Jen Psaki blame
President Trump, with Warrensuggesting he needs to tone down
his rhetoric.
Well, that's the price of freespeech in America, folks.
(25:19):
And might I add, it's not justyou should be able to say
anything you want anything.
It's like Voltaire said I maynot agree with you, but I will
defend to the death your rightto say whatever you've said.
(25:40):
That's the kind of attitude weshould have on free speech,
because when we lose that andwe've lost a great deal of it.
It's hanging on by a thread.
We might have freedom of speech, we don't necessarily have
freedom of reach.
It's the last holdout, it's thelast refuge for free speech is
(26:02):
anywhere.
And this is this country.
It's this the last bit of thistradition.
Nobody needs to tone downanything.
Trump put out a four minutevideo.
At the end he says for years,those on the radical left have
(26:23):
compared wonderful Americanslike Charlie to Nazis and mass
murderers.
The radical left have comparedwonderful americans like charlie
to nazis and mass murderers.
Well, on that, he has a bigpoint there.
Yeah, when you start comparingcharlie kirk to those who
facilitated, uh, the holocaust,and you know your image of pure
(26:44):
evil, when all they're doing issaying things like, yeah,
there's two genders and marriageis best to facilitate a family,
and you know people should havethe right to own a firearm and
stuff like that, I mean this islike basic stuff that Charlie
Kirk represented.
I mean, why did they get a loan?
(27:08):
I mean, if they ever really justheard what I espouse, like I
think your entire construct ofthe life that you perceive is
false, like, not only like youryour mind is colonized, like I
don't even think that you'rewrong, I just think that you're
defective.
Like you've been lied to.
You're inside of a psyop, beingmind controlled.
(27:29):
That's what I think of thepeople that are captured by the
fulcrum of cultural Marxism.
Like do you ever stop and thinkabout who funds you?
Like I go to the deeperquestions.
Like do you think it's demonicthat you get visibly upset and
animated when somebody wants tostop a war?
Have you thought about that?
(27:51):
Have you thought about you knowyou're supposedly
anti-corporate but you shill forcorporations like nobody in
history ever has?
Do you think about the dualityor the friction of your mind?
Like you want to tax the richbut the rich fund all of your
programs and all of your mind.
Like you want to tax the richbut the rich fund all of your
programs and all of your thing.
I'm talking about the superrich, not the Forbes Fortune 500
(28:14):
.
Imagine living inside of thatlie.
Like Solzhenitsyn said, live notby lie.
I try not to Everything I tryto espouse.
I want to figure out if I'mspeaking from a place of wisdom
and knowledge and basis andtruth.
If I can't, you know I don'twant to live any other way.
(28:35):
I can't live in that duality.
But it must be exhausting allthe time to frame yourself as
being part of the open and kindportion of society kind portion
of society and really you'rejust angry and animated by hate
and degeneracy and a meltdown ofyour own faculties.
(28:55):
Just it's bizarre to me.
So it must be.
You can see them and the peoplethat confront like you're.
You're mad about things thatdon't matter, like nobody's
stopping anyone from livingwhatever life.
I mean this is 2025 in theUnited States of America.
It's not 1950.
It's not 1850.
(29:16):
Like, name me something that isoppressive.
You can't.
Well, I mean I could probablythink of you know, I can think
of some groups that are having apretty hard time.
You know white Christian malesare having a pretty hard time,
christian males in generalHaving a pretty hard time.
(29:39):
There's some other things thathaven't.
I mean demographically, lookwho's suicide rates, just men in
general, and look at that.
You could look at groups thatare having a pretty hard time
Veterans.
You know combat veterans had apretty rough time.
You got sold.
You know a pack of lies.
You're sent off to meat grinderwars and you know you come back
(30:01):
home and things aren't as theyseem and that's another thing
that happens to veterans is thecognitive dissonance there where
you start to to these opposingideas in your mind, you start to
learn things and can eat awayat you.
So very similar to that psychictension that you have as a, I'm
sure, the psychic tension thatyou have as a leftist, that you
(30:26):
have as a leftist.
Charlie Kirk says he wants to bewanted to be remembered for his
faith and I think he will be.
I mean, he's just a kid, didn'tlive long enough really to he
probably on a long enoughtimeline somebody like Kirk
(30:50):
would have done an arc.
My arc of where I've come fromisn't that extreme, but there's
beliefs and things I don't haveanymore.
Obviously I mean things aboutforeign policy that I've always
since I was young.
I wanted a constitutionalforeign policy.
I was a big fan of Ron Paul, Iwanted to bring the troops home,
(31:10):
just being a combat vet, and Ithought for a long time that
September 11th was incompetenceand a result of blowback.
But I don't believe thatanymore.
I think there's some truth tothat a little bit, but I think
that that was obviously.
It's an anomaly.
(31:30):
I think it's more like whatDavid Icke pointed out as the
trigger event, a let it happenon purpose, or even perhaps a
mehop of make it happen onpurpose, some sort of construct
to bend the river of time.
I think it was a ritual in manyways and a way for the
(31:50):
surveillance state to bekick-started the Patriot Act,
the looting of the United StatesTreasury, the resetting of the
Global Chessboard, the usheringin of digital currencies and
other things that would be, orat least the goal of control of
digital currencies and otherthings that would be, or at
least the goal of control ofdigital currencies, and the
(32:11):
weakening of the United Statesto make it an economy sector
instead of a real power.
That's why we're just flailingaround doing stupid things.
Right now.
We're not actually powerbrokering anymore like we used
to.
I mean, say what you will aboutKennedy or Nixon, you know they
had summits.
There was the SALT Treaty thatNixon did, the Strategic Arms
(32:31):
Limitation Agreement.
There was detente throughoutthe 1970s with Brezhnev, and
Reagan had Reykjavik and Kennedydid the upper atmospheric
testing ban with Khrushchev.
You know they cuban missilecrisis, but there was a a lot of
uh headway done there.
Eisenhower had that.
(32:52):
I mean, there's big power playsthat we used to have.
We don't do that anymore.
We just flail around and doschizophrenic things, like
threatened to topple venezuela,which has nothing to do with
anything.
Meanwhile we're not ending thewars, all the rest.
I mean you look at the bigpicture.
(33:13):
All right, let's continue downthe road here.
I'm going to go to the commentsand then we'll get into some
financial news.
There's an article up onActivist Post.
Good to see you.
(33:33):
I'm on the YouTube chat.
I've got Harps over there inYouTube and then Din.
Good to see you guys.
Let's go over onto the Rumblechat.
Let's go over onto the Rumblechat On the active chat today
over on Rumble.
You can find this programalways on the America Unplugged
(34:02):
channel over on Rumble.
Brandon Bennett says rest inpeace, charlie.
Yeah, I agree with that.
Indeed, really sad.
Marky Mark, new Jersey says theproblem is that with the modern
left, anyone to the right ofChairman Mao or Joseph Stalin is
considered an extremist.
Yes, harps says Some truth.
(34:32):
Bombs about to hit the texasrotary club.
Yeah, I mean, I I will gosomewhat easy, but I think
anybody attending today it'sgonna, I just imagine, make it
30 minutes because I'm justgoing to tell a little bit of a
story.
Let's just tell a little bit ofa story and then we won't be
the same.
You'll never look at september11th the same again after that.
Uh, what world spell spells?
(34:56):
I never listened to anythingkirk ever said, except maybe a
clip.
Uh, yeah, I understand, if youknow.
I don't know if I'm followingyour line of logic.
I'm not sure that I would saythat that we're watching any
sort of pageant.
Yeah, twisted communique, saysKirk is proof they will take out
(35:20):
their own.
Yeah, he, there's definitelysomething to this that's more
than more than a simpleexplanation will suffice.
I think there's there'ssomething.
There's something to thisthat's very sinister and again,
(35:44):
it's like we're just beingprimed more and more because
people that are otherwise notactivated on normal, like you,
can look across and I haven'tsaid anything on social media, I
just was waiting to talk to allof you People that are normally
not activated are activebecause of the level of violence
(36:08):
, you know, and the shock natureof it all.
All right, let's do somefinancial news really quick.
I talked to David Knight thismorning and some things that
I've been following I think isreally interesting to watch, and
we talked a little bit aboutprecious metals and, of course,
the major shifts in the monetarysystem folks.
(36:28):
I mean it's happening wayfaster than I anticipated.
But some things for you guys totake note of.
One, there's two differentratios you need to follow.
That's the gold-silver ratioand then that's the
gold-to-Bitcoin ratio, somethingI've been following the last
month or so, just like I wantedto see where that's gone.
(36:49):
I want to look at historictrends, but the silver to gold
ratio.
Something really important ishappening.
Silver is pacing with gold.
Right, it's not gold's breakingall-time highs, but silver is
staying in the race with it, andgold crossed over close to
$3,700 an ounce and brokeanother all-time high in the
(37:10):
last week, but silver kept pacewith it.
It's 88 ounces, or 87.7 ouncesof silver to make one ounce of
gold.
Now, historically, that's notbeen the case.
As I mentioned many times, it'seither been 10 to 20 to 1, and
then sometimes it goes as highas 40 ounces of silver.
(37:33):
But in this modern era we'vegone to the 80s, 90s, 100s Even
I mentioned to David Knight thefirst quarter of 2020, we saw
125 ounces of silver to make oneounce of gold.
The ratio was completely skewed, so silver is staying up there
and I think that's in large partto the governments that are
(37:56):
buying now the Russians adding astrategic reserve asset.
So be watching that reallyclosely.
As we see, that's pacing withgold because it's with the rate
cuts that are impending and allthe fear and uncertainty about
the FUD all across the globeright now, with the financial
(38:19):
system and the monetary systemin general, I think you're going
to see massive moves in goldand you're still going to see
silver keeping pace with it, andthe all-time high of silver is
$52.50 from 1980.
I was asked today do I see $150or $200 an ounce silver?
No, I don't see that investmentadvice that I think we will see
(38:44):
in this year.
There's a strong possibility,more likely than not, that
silver will finally reclaim itsall-time high from 1980.
And we'll see what happensthere.
Too much has happened.
Too much dollar debasement andthe market caps for these things
are ridiculous In a world ofhundreds of trillions of
(39:07):
so-called perceived value ofcurrency and stock markets and
real estate and sovereign wealthfunds.
Hundreds of trillions.
Uh, silver has a, you know, atwo trillion dollar market cap
or whatever it is.
It's like it's, and I'll I'llneed to track that.
Well, maybe we'll talk aboutthat next week, but it's.
It's something ridiculous, forhow many trillions are actually
(39:27):
out there as a monetary metal.
In the face of all this, it'snothing.
And the gold to Bitcoin ratiois another thing I was tracking
this morning because I waslooking ounces of gold to make
one Bitcoin In December of 2024,it took 40.
(39:58):
So Bitcoin's been tradingsideways.
There's still a lot of thingshappening with integration and
adoption and all that um.
The price above 100 000 seemsto be probably most likely where
the bottom is of any sort ofresistance for trading.
But it's not.
It's not going parabolic.
It's not going to where a lotof the bitcoin um advocates and
(40:19):
I like bitcoin and that's partof my business, but I, I, I
think we're just talking aboutreality.
It's a long-term project foradoption, for integration and
all the rest that will come tomake that price bump higher.
But it just goes to show silverand gold are still a monetary
metal.
They always will be, regardlessof technology.
Bitcoin solves a lot of problemsand it's great for long
(40:42):
distances and it's great to beable and I like it stabilized,
by the way distances and it'sgreat to be able, and I like it.
I like it stabilized, by theway.
I mean honestly, I think itshould be a stable thing as much
as possible, where if you'regoing to get in and out of other
commodities and it should bestable there if it's, if it's
trending up, and fine, but itshould be measured.
I like it better that way and Ithink it's good, uh, for
business that way um, eventhough you know it'd be great if
(41:05):
it was was stable at a muchhigher price.
But I think we take what we canget Over.
$100,000 is just fine for rightnow.
As more integration happens,all right.
So let's go into Kitco.
This is one of those articlesthat always go yeah, I get it.
(41:28):
Kitcocom.
Clearly weaker economy willdrive gold through 4,000 in six
months, says strategist.
A top European strategist isforecasting that gold will reach
$4,000 an ounce and silver $50an ounce within the next three
to six months, arguing that arapidly weakening US economy
(41:48):
will force the Federal Reserveinto aggressive action.
Philip Gisels, chief strategyofficer at BNP Faribus Fortis,
made the call in an exclusiveinterview with Kitco News.
Followed a bombshell reportthat the US Bureau of Labor and
Statistics that revised US jobgrowth for the year through
(42:09):
March down by a record 911,000jobs.
Okay, there's a 911,000.
The job market is clearlyclearly weaker than most people
thought, gazelle's Kitco News,arguing that the data confirms
the US economy is slowingsignificantly.
(42:31):
The BLS revision followed asummer where job growth averaged
a meager 29,000 per month andthe June number revised to a net
loss of 13,000 jobs the firstnegative print since 2020.
The first negative print since2020.
(42:53):
The news prompted JP Morgan CEO,jamie Dimon, to state bluntly
the economy is weakening.
Hey, I remember something verydistinct that Jamie Dimon had
mentioned a while ago.
Jamie Dimon, remember theeconomic superstorm?
I wonder what happened to that.
It was supposed to be aneconomic superstorm.
(43:13):
Do you remember, ladies andgentlemen?
I remember that he hasn't hadthat rhetoric lately.
I don't know for gazelles thatthis means that the federal
reserve will be forced into moreaggressive action than just
rate cuts.
When asked if the fed wouldrestart quantitative easing or
(43:35):
implement yield curve control,he was unequivocal this is
exactly what they will do, hestated.
When push comes to shove, theywill go there.
It's going to drive real assetseven higher, he says the
economic uncertainty in the USis occurring as the political
foundations of Europe arecracking.
(43:57):
The government of France, theEU's second largest economy,
officially collapsed overnightafter Prime Minister Francois
Barreau was forced to resign.
Yeah, and the European CentralBank.
They decided to not do any morerate cuts and it didn't do
(44:18):
anything to the price of gold.
It's funny, just from aperspective of following this
stuff for many years folks, thegold price is starting to do its
own thing outside of whateverthese central banks are
proposing.
I know that you can see atemporary it does affect a
little bit but the trend isbecause what you're seeing is
(44:41):
central bank buying.
You're watching the collapse ofthe current monetary order, the
currency systems in general,worldwide.
This is the trend.
You even see.
David Knight mentioned to methis morning about El Salvador's
made Bitcoin a legal tender,which I applaud and I think
every country should.
(45:01):
But they are getting into goldand putting some gold in their
reserves as well, and Tether,the stable coin, is putting
holdings into gold mining andthat's the leader of the dollar
stable coins.
That just says a lot to wherethe finding of value in a world
(45:23):
that is rapidly changing isgoing to be coming from stable
things like gold and silver.
All right, let's go over toActivist Post.
This is something that caughtmy eye as well.
Just some food for thought onthis September 11th.
(45:44):
I always seem to find a Michaelmichael schneider blog over on
activist post, but it's thefirst place I look when I get up
in the morning, especially onon show days, and I thought this
was interesting.
We can discuss this before weget into our last article of the
day.
New poll finds nearly 70 percentof the U?
(46:06):
S think the American dream isdead, and the month of September
is typically the worst month ofthe year for the stock market.
This is Michael Snark Snyder,the economic collapse blog via
activist post.
By the way, if you haven't goneover to activist posts, do so.
My friend Charlie Robinson hasa great site over there and you
(46:29):
can sign up for his newsletter.
It's a great news aggregator.
I know he's put a lot of workinto it.
Michael says I kept warningabout what would happen if our
economy, if we stayed on thepath that we're on.
For decades, our leaders havebeen making unbelievably bad
decisions, and now theconsequences are really starting
to catch up with us.
(46:49):
The cost of living has becomeincredibly painful.
A larger housing bubble thanthe one that we faced just prior
to the Great Recession isbeginning to burst and large
companies are conducting masslayoffs all over the country.
We were handed the key to thegreatest economic machine the
world has ever seen, and ourleaders have completely wrecked
(47:09):
it.
As a result, economic pessimismhas soared to unprecedented
heights.
If you don't believe me,consider what a new Wall Street
Journal NORC poll justdiscovered About 70% of us now
believe the American dream isdead and only 25% of americans
think they have a good chance ofimproving their standard of
(47:31):
living.
America has become, andbecoming, a nation of economic
pessimists.
More than three quarters saidthey lack the confidence that
life for the next generationwill be better than their own.
The poll found nearly 70percent of people said they lack
the confidence that life forthe next generation will be
better than their own.
The poll found Nearly 70% ofpeople said they believe the
American dream.
(47:51):
That, if you know, said thatthe American dream that if you
work hard you will get ahead nolonger holds true or never did.
The highest level in 15 years.
Well, I think the issue heretoo.
You know what's baked into allof this if you go to the website
.
Wtf happened in 1971, just theconsequences of having unsound
(48:16):
money as opposed to having agold standard, as opposed to
having a standard at all, and,when you have to, the hidden
cost of everything, that isinflation, when you have to dig
(48:37):
in and work twice as hard tomake half as much and your
savings dwindle.
I mean, that's what made theAmerican dream possible in the
first place is that when youhave sound money, you don't have
to be a stock wizard, have tobe a stock wizard.
You don't have to have fancycomputational powers to put into
some savings account or someplan or a 401k or an IRA or
something or a mutual fund.
You can literally just put yourdollars away and save and you
(48:59):
can put it in a house orwhatever and at the end of the
day you will be better off.
You work hard, you get ahead,you save money.
But those things no longerapply and it's becoming more and
more evident.
They don't apply in that wayanymore because the rules of the
game has changed.
In the early 1970s, folks, therewasn't ads on TV for getting a
(49:23):
Charles Schwab account.
There wasn't any of that.
In the early 1970s there wasn'tIRAs or 401ks.
The average person wasn't inthe stock market.
The average person was lookingto buy a home or get a better
job or make a little bit more.
That was the savings plan, thatwas the retirement plan,
(49:44):
whatever it was.
And, yes, we had our momentswhere we had the New Deal and
you had Social Security and allthe rest of that stuff.
That's a completely differentargument.
My phone, it's so funny.
I try to get a little bit of abreak from it, but it rings
constantly, which is not a badthing.
(50:06):
All right, bit of a break fromit, but it rings constantly,
which is not a bad thing.
All right, I'll have to uh togo here in a minute, but I
wanted to finish this article.
Sorry, I got looked over at myphone.
I got like 15 text messagesfrom the always fun, let me see,
I think.
I think I know what they wantme to do.
(50:27):
Hold on you, gotta, we gotta,do this in real time, live on
air.
Ladies and gentlemen, I think Iknow what they want me to do.
This is part of, uh, being theceo of wise wolf, and I'll get
back to this article.
Yeah, that's what.
That's what needed to happen.
Well, that's what happened.
You got lots going on.
Beans is my producer today.
(50:47):
She's also in charge ofcommunications and she's napping
folks um.
Michael snyder says thosenumbers are absolutely dismal,
but things didn't have to turnout this way.
Following the great recession,many of us laid out our plans
for fundamentally transformingthe system, but that didn't
happen.
Instead, our leaders simplypatched up the old system and
(51:11):
started inflating bubbles thatended up becoming much larger
than the bubbles that burst thelast time around.
Because now we're on the vergeof another global financial
crisis, and throughout ourhistory, the month of September
has typically been the worstmonth of the year for the stock
market.
History shows that the DowJones Industrial Average has
generated an average monthlydecline of 1.1% in September and
(51:34):
finished higher only 42.2% ofthe time, dating back to 1897,
according to Dow Jones marketdata.
There's this great movie.
If you're a fan of films, filmsthat didn't get a lot of
notoriety, but I thought it wasreally interesting.
It's just called august andit's about august of 2001, and
(51:59):
it follows this uh tech firm, uhceo and his brother and uh, I
don't want to spoil the film ifyou ever find it, but at the end
they meet up with agenerational wealth person and
it's played by david bowie andhe kind of tells them how things
(52:21):
really work.
It's kind of like that scene onnetwork where Ned Beatty uh, uh
shows how actually thingsactually are.
You know the the, the grimrealities of things.
Um, but that's a good movie.
It's.
It's supposed to be, you know,the August before September of
(52:42):
2001.
And it is.
It is true that there'shistorically a lot of downturn
in the month of September, but,that being said, I don't think
any of these metrics apply muchanymore.
The office and multifamilysectors of commercial real
(53:03):
estate loans got furtherbludgeoned in August, despite
large-scale extend and pretendand forbearance deals executed
in the hopes for better timesand lower interest rates and
more demand so lenders don't endup with the property and huge
loss.
The delinquency rate of officemortgages that have been
(53:23):
securitized into commercialmortgage-backed securities
spiked to 11.7% in August, theworst ever, a full percentage
point above even the peakmeltdown rate of the financial
crisis.
Well, that is true, and I think, if you've listened to this
(53:46):
broadcast or listen to peoplelike Gerald Salente, go on to
the David Knight Show, that timebomb of the commercial lending
and the commercial office spaceand all the stuff that was even
post-2020, what was it?
It wasn't that long ago thatone of the biggest firms, inada,
sold a skyscraper in manhattanfor a dollar.
(54:10):
They just wanted it off thebooks because it was such a
liability, that's still a verymuch a looming crisis.
All right, let's jump over intothe last story of the day and
(54:32):
then I'll get you guys out ofhere.
My phone today I'm going tohave to start figuring out if I
can put the phone on silent.
About a month or two ago, Idecided I would answer the
phones because we need to,because I was like what's going
on?
Why is it so crazy?
(54:53):
The economy if you look at it,a lot of things seem like.
You look at the price of metals, you think, oh well, that's
great for a metals business,well, that's kind of okay, but
you've got to have the peoplebuying also.
You can buy from people all daylong, and that's kind of what
we've been doing.
Somebody's buying, and it'slarge.
You got to think about that.
(55:14):
Just a little bit of intel fromyour friendly gold and silver
broker folks.
All right, let's jump in thelast story of the day.
We got about five minutes.
All right, this caught my eye.
(55:36):
This is natural news.
Ufo deflects us missile indeclassified video.
Um congress demands answers.
As whistleblowers Allege,cover-up, declassified footage
shows a US Hellfire missilefailing to destroy a glowing orb
(55:59):
off Yemen in October of 2024,raising questions about superior
unknown technology.
Superior unknown technologyThree military whistleblowers
testified under oath that the USgovernment suppressed UAP
reports destroys records andretaliates against those who
speak out.
No known human technology canexplain the orb's ability to
(56:21):
survive a direct missile strike,according to veterans and
lawmakers.
Bipartisan frustration growsover intelligence agencies to
refusal to disclose uap data,even to congress and past
presidents.
I don't like them.
I don't know why we had to tore do this.
Uh, reclassify these things asuap unknown aerial phenomenon.
(56:47):
I'm not sure why, other than arebranding package.
The footage recorded by an mq-9reaper drone on october 30th
2024 depicts a hundred poundmissile striking the object,
only for it to ricochet offbefore the orb accelerates away
(57:09):
at speeds no US aircraft canmatch.
The video obtained by Rep EricBurleson of Missouri from an
anonymous whistleblower waspresented during the House
Oversight Subcommittee hearingtitled Restoring Public Trust
Through UAP Transparency andWhistleblower Protection.
Wow, that's a long title.
(57:30):
The longer the title, the lessimportant it is.
Just think about it, folks.
If your title is really long,if the title of something is
really long, it's not reallyimportant or it definitely
doesn't have the gravitas.
Remember that word green lightgiven to engage missiles appears
(58:00):
to be ineffective against thetarget.
Burleson posted on x formerlytwitter after the hearing this
is science fiction.
This is a real threat oropportunity that we don't
understand.
Well, I'll close with this andthe reason I brought that up.
I think, with this broadcastand if you're turning into
parapolitics, precious metalsand welcome to tomorrow and all
(58:23):
the things that I try to keeprelevant here as we gather on
Thursdays and try to suss outwhatever the truth is, this is
something we're going to beseeing a lot more of and I'll
leave that for you to draw yourown conclusions and your own
opinions on what that means.
And we opened the broadcast upwith Bill Cooper on June 28,
(58:47):
2001, talking about 9-11.
But one of the things that BillCooper saw when he was a sailor
, when he was on a naval vesselout at sea, was a USO, a very
large, very large, unidentifiedsubmergible object, and it went
(59:14):
out of the water and then flewaway and he was told never to
talk about it.
So something to uh.
This is not anything new underthe sun.
These are things that have beenfloating around or have been
part of the lore of themilitary-industrial complex in
the Cold War since 1947 andbefore I think it was 1947.
(59:44):
It was Mount Rainier andKenneth Arnold, but it wasn't.
It was 1878, right here inDenison, texas, and a farmer was
out hunting and looked up andsaw what he described as a
saucer, so something to thatright.
And then we're going to seewhatever this is and it could be
a breakaway civilization.
(01:00:04):
Whatever this is, and it couldbe a breakaway civilization,
breakaway technology, could besomething dimensional, could be
something spiritual, could beall kinds of things, could be
multiple things, but definitelypart of whatever's next.
So I'll leave you with that.
On the September 11th 2001.
Wolfpackgold Go check out allthe great deals we got at
(01:00:31):
Wolfpack.
You got to, I got to go jump onthis.
I say, oh, you just had to jumpon a call, but I'm going to go
knock out this talk at theRotary Club.
So, wolfpackgold, arterburngold, we appreciate you.
Being here Very much means tomyself and the crew.
I'm going to go check oneverybody.
You guys take care of eachother.
End of transmission.