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November 6, 2025 61 mins
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SPEAKER_01 (00:35):
Then out spake brave Horatius, the captain of the
gate, to every man upon thisearth, death cometh sooner or
late.
And how can a man die betterthan facing fearful odds for the
ashes of his fathers and thetemples of his gods?
Lord Macalay, you are listeningto the Artiburn radio

(00:59):
transmission.

SPEAKER_00 (01:18):
Looking at the headlines of Drudge.
It's like a dystopic fever dreamof a madman.
May you live in interestingtimes.
You see why that's a Chinesecurse, don't you?

(01:39):
Not a not a well-wish.
Oh, ladies and gentlemen, it isthe 6th of November 2025.
Had a little bit of um technicalissues right before we went
live.
Somehow just the screen's notscrambling to get everything
going.
If you are listening on WWCR, Iknow one of my listeners over on

(02:01):
YouTube also follows us onworldwide Christian radio on
shortwave across the globe.
If you are tuning into that, letme know in the chat that we're
going through on WWCR since uh Iwas about 45 seconds off queue.
All right, folks, officialbroadcast of the apocalypse.
This is the Arterburn radiotransmission, parapolitics,

(02:25):
precious metals, weapons gradetruth.
We'll dig into um a great dealof financial news today.
Probably not what the anythingnear what the mainstream's
covering.
Got some foreign policy we diginto and uh the election
yesterday.
Are you happy with the outcome?

(02:45):
I it reminded me, I don't knowwhy everything happening right
now just reminds me of readingGary Allen's None Dare Call It
Conspiracy from the 1970s.
So I pulled up some Gary Allenquotes for uh a little bit later
in the show.
But let's uh let's start withsome financial headlines.
And if you're paying attention,you're watching the

(03:08):
de-dollarization of everythingworldwide that has uh been
happening rapidly since 2022,since uh Russia invaded Ukraine.
We put the sanctions on Russia.
There was a massive blowbackbecause of the actions taken by
the United States government.

(03:29):
And uh the ruble recovered, andde dollarization started
happening rapidly, went fromlike 56% of dollar usage
worldwide to about 43% in 18months, and that continues to
slide.
You watched uh in the last 60days, where central banks now
hold uh more gold than they doU.S.

(03:51):
treasuries for the first time.
And it's only a matter of timebefore central banks hold more
gold than they do US dollars.
So uh in that line of logic, inthat vein, we'll go to let's go
to the master.
Let's let's talk, let's go seewhat Ron Paul had to say over on
Kitco.

(04:12):
Let me share my screen with you.
Always good to hear from RonPaul.
I remember uh when I was runningfor Congress and ended up
helping Ralph Hall, the lastWorld War II veteran in
Congress, and um he was liningup all the people to endorse him
in his last run.

(04:32):
And uh I was at his house and Isaid, Well, don't you know Ron
Paul?
He says, Yes.
And he gets on the phone and hecalls him up and says, Ron, uh
you endorse me?
And then Ron said, Of course.
And um, because they're bothTexas were Texas congressmen,
and uh they put me on acampaign.
I'll let I'll have to find it,it's on my Facebook.

(04:52):
I was on a campaign ad rightnext to Ron Paul's.
That was one of my proud momentsas a as a much younger man.
All right, this is KitCo.
Ron Paul, U.S.
totally bankrupt.
Warren's Fed strategy is tocause chaos.
I'll cut right to it.

(05:13):
Former U.S.
Congressman Ron Paul declaredthe United States is totally
bankrupt morally andfinancially, arguing a
wide-ranging interview withKitco News that the nation's$1.9
trillion deficit is a debtspiral that will be paid off
with funny money, and thatcitizens should be on our toes

(05:33):
for something very, very big tohappen.
Well, I've been thinking thesame tank too.
I've been watching the prices ofBitcoin, gold, and silver.
And uh I want to talk to youabout something that's been
bothering me about Bitcoin andthe Bitcoin price, and I'll get
to that here after this article,but it's something that we
should definitely watch.
Speaking on November 5th, 2025,Dr.

(05:56):
Paul analyzed a series ofcolliding economic and political
crises.
His comments came as the FederalReserve injected$125 billion in
emergency liquidity in the repomarket while simultaneously
facing public criticism from thepresident's own Treasury
Secretary, Scott Besson, over ahousing recession.

(06:16):
Well, you remember the repomarkets, don't you?
See, that was happening in thelast quarter of 2019.
And I'll never forget that.
It was the first time I went onthe David Knight show.
And the Federal Reserve, notjust not just the Fed or the
central bank here in the UnitedStates, but around the world,

(06:36):
they were injecting liquidity ata at a historic rate into the
overnights, also known as therepo market.
So it's where the clearinghouses are for liquidity.
And the Federal Reserve alone,and I couldn't believe it at the
time.
I was like, why is nobodycovering this?
But it was around$6 trillionthat they just created to fund

(07:00):
the liquidity of overnights.
And that's when you saw in thelast quarter of 2019 leading up
to COVID-1984, you saw thelargest exodus of CEOs in
history.
Dr.
Paul suggests the conflictingmoves may be intentional.
Maybe their strategy is to causechaos, he said.

(07:21):
And in order for the people, youknow, to just roll over and say,
hey, save us.
Dr.
Paul knows.
Dr.
Paul pointed to a slew ofconflicting economic data
released today as proof of thischaos.
While a report from the ADPshowed private payrolls
unexpectedly grew by 42,000 inOctober, data from the real

(07:43):
economy told a different story.
According to McDonald's earningscall this morning, lower income
consumer traffic is declining bydouble digits even as higher
income traffic grows.

unknown (07:55):
Dr.

SPEAKER_00 (07:56):
Paul says this K-shaped economy is proof that
the headline data is a lie.
It can't be true, he said.
He argued that the Institute forSupply Management ISM report
also released today confirms astagflationary environment.
According to that report, theprice paid index soared to 70,

(08:17):
while the unemployment indexcontracted for the fifth
straight month to 48.2.
That's the dilemma the financialmarkets have, Dr.
Paul said, comparing the economyto a drug addict begging for
another shot of liquidity.
Well, he's absolutely rightthere.

(08:37):
And this is what it's built on.
It's built on debt, it's builton fake, and the entire system,
it's malignant, it'smetastasized all over the globe.
As I read last week, the IMF isalready saying that by 2030, uh
global debt, sovereign debt,will exceed GDP.

(08:58):
So that's worldwide bankruptcy,folks.
And that's happening because ofthe currencies and the liquidity
injection of those currencieswithout the accountability of
any sound money whatsoever.
Now he's also mentioning herethe chaos on purpose, which

(09:19):
we've covered here for years.
But that's true.
It's creative destruction, it'schaos on purpose, and it's order
ap chaos, right?
Order out of chaos, the Hygeliandialectic, and of course,
problem reaction solution.
You get that, the pattern there.
There always has to be a crisisto usher in the societal changes

(09:42):
they want to bring.
That's CBDC, and of course, theydon't call it that anymore.
It'll be a public-privatepartnership, which is, I think,
even more insidious for lack ofoversight.
Even if you think you you haveless oversight with the Fed,
wait till you have privatecompanies that control the
currency system in the digitizedspace.

(10:04):
And that's what it's all about.
The uh the future, the digitizedblockchain CBDC type future, it
has to be done on the heels of acurrency crisis.
And he's exactly right.

(10:26):
And that's what it's all about.
But he is right, totallybankrupt.
And it doesn't look like there'sany relief inside.
As a matter of fact, I thinkit's a cloud and pivot and pivot
strategy.
And we are, we're in the we'resmack dab in the middle of uh
cloud and pivon.
I mean, it's it's aninternational cloud and pivon,

(10:47):
it's not just the United States.
But we're watching this uh setuphere, you know, to uh blow up
the system in order to replaceit with something else.
But you know, that's uh theeconomists, Cloud and Pivon,
going back to the University ofChicago, 1960s.
I mean, they were socialistMarxist economists, and they're
like, well, how do you how doyou get real Marxism?

(11:10):
How do you get it?
Well, you just overload like theNew Deal systems, any sort of uh
social safety nets, you youoverload that to watch it break.
So it's all about this creativedestruction, and that's totally
right.
Chaos works in their favor.
Kind of like the it's kind oflike the the philosophy of the

(11:31):
Joker and the the dark night.
Just to create the I'm an agentof chaos, and you just need a
little push.
Well, they're giving you a pushright now.
All right, we're gonna stay onuh financial news.
I this was something else thatcaught my eye.
And I know my wheelhouse, the uhthe precious metals theme to

(11:52):
this transmission will continueto be a uh a major vein of logic
because that's where we'reheaded.
I want to I want to show you inreal time the stuff I've been
looking at for years, and it'sfinally coming to fruition.
Not that I'm spiking thefootball or celebrating
anything, but look at this.

(12:13):
Another indicator of wherewealth is headed.
This is zero hedge.
Breaking central bank choosesChina for gold vaulting.
Now, remember I talked a coupleof months ago about the uh the
Hong Kong gold bullion storagefacilities.

(12:34):
They were uh building massivestorage facilities for gold
holdings, not paper gold,physical gold.

unknown (12:41):
Right.

SPEAKER_00 (12:41):
That's where things the trust is diminishing around
the world.
We're in a fourth turning, theinstitutions are coming apart.
That's what happens in cyclicalhistory.
So the trust that interwoventhrough the financial system, of
course, markets love certainty.
That's why you see so muchstrange stuff going on, is
because lack of trust.

(13:02):
And of course, we we lookschizophrenic here in this
country.
Our economic policy is questionmark uh with crazy.
And so countries are and centralbanks and major institutions are
looking for the physical,they're hedging against the
ideological or anything built onblue sky, right?

(13:25):
What's the what are the initialsfor for blue sky, ladies and
gents?
Beijing.
Cambodia announced today that itis among the first nations to
place part of its official goldreserves under Chinese custody,
marking the first tangible stepin Beijing's effort to position
itself as a global bullionstorage hub.

(13:48):
China's entry into the goldvaulting business for central
banks was first discussed inChina Enter Central Bank Gold
Storage Business.
This is the article link here,but its implications were
discussed later, days later inChina.
According to a report byBloomberg News, the Southeast
Asian country plans to sourcesome of its gold reserves in a

(14:12):
vault registered with theShanghai Gold Exchange, located
with Xinjiang's bonded zone.
The arrangement involves newlypurchased bullion rather than
transfer of existing holdings.
Well, that's another thing, too.
The movement of bullion, andthen, of course, the Shanghai
Exchange, they're selling itdirect and then storing it

(14:36):
there.
This is not just a blip, folks.
This is a big news, and ofcourse, it didn't get a lot of
play because I don't think theuh hairdo teleprompter readers
understand this.
This is a transfer of wealth,and of course, it is a uh a
signal for the you're betting onthe future, you're betting on
the stability of the Chineseeconomy, and you're trusting the

(14:58):
Chinese.
It's kind of what's happenedwith our paper markets over the
last many decades is just acomplete dissolution of trust.
Beijing's goal is to build afinancial architecture less
dependent on the dollar andwestern institutions.
And of course, it's moving awayfrom London, moving away from

(15:21):
Zurich.
And it's not just the Shanghai.
Again, it's Shanghai, it's alsoHong Kong.
Don't forget Hong Kong spottedpart of China since 1997.
So they're building two.
The initiative is being pushedthrough the People's Bank of
China as part of a broaderstrategy to attract reserve

(15:43):
custodianship to domesticvaults.
Cambodia's central bank governorpreviously said a few locations
were under consideration forstoring the nation's gold, so
she declined to name Chinadirectly.
Well, we know it's China.
National Bank of Cambodiacurrently holds about holds
about fifty-four tons of gold.

(16:08):
Well, this is a big story,folks.
I mean it's small beginnings,but they won't be the only one.
And as we watch the gold, it'sabout where gold flows.
If you see like gold flows onhistoric charts, and it's been
flowing away from the West for avery long time.

(16:29):
And as I mentioned on this showmany times, you've had China
being a secret buyer since thebeginning of this century.
Now, what happened at thebeginning of this century?
It was an epical event.
It was December 11, 2001.
George W.
Bush made China a gave it a mostfavored nation trading status

(16:52):
with the U.S.
And immediately following, welost one in three manufacturing
jobs and closed down 55,000factories.
As I and I this is not a joke,I've said it many times.
They the Bush administration hadsuch a catastrophic loss of
manufacturing in the first fouryears, they fudged the numbers
to show that fast food workerswere uh manufacturing because

(17:14):
they were building sandwiches.
And so when all that wealthtransferred, the Chinese went
out and bought gold, folks.
And it they bought it off thebooks.
They've been slowly doing, theyhave a long game, and we
depleted our holdings, or wedon't even know what our
holdings actually are.
Remember the good old days of uhdoge and auditing Fort Knox?

(17:40):
Remember that, ladies and gents?
All right.
Interesting times in the uh goldsilver realm.
And I'll get to some spot priceshere in a little bit.
Did you know that you can checkspot prices for gold and silver
by going to wolfpack.gold?
You can see a live ticker inreal time.
I don't do that enough on theshow, but you can go to

(18:00):
wolfpack.gold.
You can also check outmemberships uh for precious
metals delivered directly toyou.
And I don't know of anybodythat's doing it for we go to we
go as low as$35 for the Wolf Cubfor kids.
So let's jump over a little,let's do a little bit of Bitcoin
news.
And I I've got so many storieshere.

(18:21):
I wonder if we can cover it all.
So I got Beans the Brave rightnext to me, by the way.
She's in the chair.
Maybe she'll come up in a littlebit.
I adopted a cat.
I don't know if I didn't ummention it.
We have a cat named Pumpkin hereat the shop.
She's a black cat.
She just showed up.
And I got here this, she's beentalking to me through the window

(18:42):
of the studio for the last 30minutes.
But I got to see Pumpkin thismorning.
Beans is not a fan of pumpkin,doesn't really care.
Doesn't want to be friends.
I think Pumpkin wants to, but uhI had both of them on the chair
a couple of days ago.
But pumpkin's up on the top ofthe chair.
And I got beans here.
Maybe she'll pop up here in alittle bit.
All right.

(19:03):
Let's get into some Bitcoinnews.
Uh, because I won and I won't gotoo deep into these articles,
but uh there's somethinghappening, and I'll share my
thoughts with you.
It's not investment advice, andI'm not a cheerleader for I'm
not a cheerleader for anythingwhen it comes to this kind of
stuff.
I'm just more I have questions.

(19:23):
Uh I'm definitely not acheerleader for fiat currency.
Uh I don't cheer on uhLuciferian bankster notes, so
you know that.
But let's let's reason together.
Let me put this up on thescreen.
This was a headline over onDrudge, and then I want to go to
a tweet that's up on Bitcoinmagazine.

(19:46):
Uh, Bitcoin bears see more perilafter a$300 billion crypto
sell-off.
Bitcoin is headed for what couldbe its worst week since early
March, with few signs thatinvestors are getting ready to
buy the dip after a route thaterased about$300 billion of
digital asset market value.

(20:08):
The original cryptocurrency haslost 6.2% so far this week, a
period in which it dipped below$100,000 for the first time
since June.
Yeah, I love these sites.
There's so many pop-ups.
Like, can you imagine having asite so terrible?
Like you get these big sites andthey're just littered with
stuff.

(20:28):
Never.
Like you'll never have that fromthat's why I don't litter my
podcast up with garbage either.
Like, listen to me or don't.
I'm not I monetize it through.
If if you want to support theshow, you're welcome to.
But uh, we're never gonna dothis.
It's funny, I'll start thesearticles and it just gyps below,
and then it'll go back up andshow a different part of the

(20:49):
article.
Let's see if we can even findit.
Yeah, it's just so all over theplace.
Sorry, I can't hold it steady.
It all adds up to a spectacularreversal of sentiment from early
October when Bitcoin rallied toa record on the back of a
frenzied buying on margin.

(21:10):
And when it hit its all-timehigh back in October, briefly,
and it's you know, 100, what isit, 127,000, something like
that, 126,000.
And of course, the they'realready starting the new target
pricing from 120,000 to 185,000.
Uh significant leverage wipeout,they're saying.

(21:33):
So, all this is here, and thenit's the financial networks are
covering this, and I'm I'm gonnaclick off this site.
So terrible, this MSN site.
Just no.
So many like there's so manylike that now.
Just try to try to read anarticle.
So many pop-ups.
Well, let's bring up this.
Uh there's a tweet over onBitcoin magazine.

(21:56):
Let me pull this up.
This is something I think thisis what's going on, and I'll
give you my logic behind it.
We got a nice even though I putmy phone on silently, I don't
call counting.
All right, this is a a tweetover on Bitcoin magazine.

(22:18):
It says, Justin, uh cypherpunklegend says dips exist to
transfer Bitcoin from weak handsto strong hands.
Well, that's what they call itin in Bitcoin when you're
holding, call it diamondhanding.
But this is what has been on mymind for the last couple of
weeks, is uh the sentiment thatBitcoin is uh is stalling or

(22:46):
it's it's not performing orsomething's wrong with it, and
you're it's not it's not uh thatit's mass uh negativity or
something, but it is you can seethe prevailing sentiment is not
good.
And uh again, not a cheerleaderfor Bitcoin, but I have to ask
the question, you know, theseinstitutions, and I go back to

(23:09):
January of 2024, I and I did alive stream driving my truck
from Missouri to Texas.
I just that was tea time withTony.
I should probably bring thatback by the by the way.
But I was noticing, you know, Isaid, look, folks, we got
BlackRock just is launched thisETF.
I think Bitcoin was around32,000 or something.

(23:33):
And I said, you gotta reallywatch this.
Well, by the next month it was50,000, then 60,000, and onward
and onward.
And um, you go to last year.
So let's look at last year.
What was the price of Bitcoin inNovember of last year?
So just after the election, youhad a spike because uh Trump was
uh elected and uh he's cryptofriendly, or at least he had a

(23:55):
big part in you know the uhBitcoin conferences and had
backers and all the rest ofthat.
So this the price moved and itwas about 75,000 this time last
year.
And then I was going on 10 foilhat on December 4th, uh, 2024,

(24:16):
when it hit its first all-timehigh of 100,000.
So I was just before I went liveto record that show.
And I'll never forget thatbecause I told people I was
gonna take Bitcoin at no fee.
Well, you fast forward all theseother, you know, to October and
then you know hit anotherall-time high, and then we're in
November, and there's somethinggoing on, and I think this

(24:39):
sentiment about the dips andabout uh transferring from weak
hands to strong hands, look atthe accumulation.
Do you think that Larry Finkover at BlackRock would be going
to uh Davos and telling peoplethat Bitcoin's gonna be 700,000?
This is the World EconomicForum.
And I'm not a fan of any ofthese entities.

(25:00):
I'm just telling you, somethingis up with this, and it's the
way it always moves.
Why do you think that silver,physical silver bullion, has
been manipulated for the past 45years?
Why do you think that is?
Uh why was JP Morgan Chaseconvicted of suppressing the

(25:23):
silver price?
And then you buttress that logicwith the fact that they're the
largest physical holder ofsilver in the world, private
holder of silver in the world.
Institutions, especially whenthey have goals in mind of
accumulation or market share,it's not in their best interest

(25:46):
to cheerlead something untilit's in their best interest to
do so.
So something's going on withBitcoin, and I think it has to
do with shaking out just how fewpeople actually own a single
Bitcoin.
It's less it's 850,000 people inthe world own a single Bitcoin.

(26:08):
The rest are owned by you knowlarge holders, uh corporations,
governments.
So you talk about a scarceasset.
There's more, there's moremillionaires on earth than
people that hold at least$1,200in Bitcoin.
So it's a scarce, scarce thing.
I mean, the network still existsand it continues to gain uh

(26:32):
adoption and it's it's still ontrack for all those things, yet
the price trades sideways or itdips down and below 100,000.
And I'm not telling you to gobuy the dip, or I'm not telling
you to go load up on Bitcoin.
I'm just asking questionsbecause I see this and I don't
think that it adds up.
I think we'll be talking about acompletely different price
structure a year from now.
So bookmark this show.

(26:54):
It's November 6th, it's theanniversary of uh the passing
away of well, it wasn't passaway, he was um shot at his
doorstep, Bill Cooper in 2001.
Matter of fact, four years wasit four years ago?
It was four years ago today.
I wish I had the um picture ofme and Mr.

(27:15):
Anderson uh at the gravesite ofof Bill Cooper um paying homage
in respect to to that man.
But we'll mark this as uh asignificant day.
We'll come back a year from now,we'll see what the price of
Bitcoin is.
I don't think it'll be below100,000.
I just don't think so.

(27:36):
Institutional accumulation, andI think you know, you for good
or ill, uh, and again, I'm thisis not an endorsement of it.
I'm just telling you where valueis going.
If you look at what is it, 900trillion or whatever it is, I
mean, this is a speculativenumber of worldwide assets.
So it's say it's 900 trillion,that's what people think.

(27:56):
Um, I don't know what the actualnumber is, but the market cap of
Bitcoin is like two and a halftrillion or whatever it is.
The market cap of gold is 20trillion.
Market cap of silver is I thinktwo trillion.
So in a sea of hundreds oftrillions of so-called value,
these assets are nothing, theydon't even register, but they're

(28:21):
the actual money.
So I think we have a long way togo to actual price discovery in
anything.
And the same thing goes withwith gold and silver.
I don't think price discovery iseven close here.
So something to watch.
Just bringing it to yourattention.
I think this is a lot of uh headfakes, transferring, buying.

(28:46):
Again, you don't get you knowservice announcements saying,
hey, you should all they tellyou to feed the pig, right?
Go to feedthepig.org, right?
You go to feed the pig and youput your fiat currency into a
piggy bank, into a savingsaccount.
Well, it's gonna lose, you know,the dollar's lost 50% of its
purchasing power against gold inthe last 12 months.

(29:09):
So, you know, that Dave Ramseyapproach of having a thousand
dollars in savings, well, that'sa good start, I guess, but maybe
you should have that in physicalsilver bullion.
You would at least, you know, ifyou had a good dealer, you get
in and out, buy the right kindof product, you'd be up.
You know, a year ago, if youbought gold, you bought it at

(29:30):
the right price.
Maybe you were in Wolfpack.
Uh, I can sleep at night.
No, everybody that's bought forme in Wolfpack is you're doing
good.
And I can't promise that youalways will because there are
sell offs and there's thingslike this.
This exists where they try totransfer you out of the
commodity, scare you out of it,or just make it boring, where it

(29:52):
doesn't do anything, and thenyou'll end up selling it.
It's funny, right now we can't.
There's so much happening,folks.
The inside baseball of what'shappening in the gold and silver
realm, it's not what you think.
It's not what, I mean,especially when you see prices
the way that they are, and goldand silver are down a little

(30:13):
bit.
But there's nobody buying.
We're literally just putting uhso like silverware and scrap
silver and all like I can't meltit.
I'm gonna have to become arefiner.
There's nobody's buying it rightnow at any price.
And I was told yesterday by aconsultant that uh they might

(30:35):
stop buying like gold scrapbecause the payments are so far
out.
So everything this I thinkthere's a some creative
destruction going on with thecommodities markets, too.
And that's I'm glad that I builtmy business in the way that I I
have because we're notoverleveraged and I'm not

(30:57):
hanging on, but you know, I'mnot uh I can survive a downturn,
especially with slow pace.
It'll stress me out.
I might have a little bit moregray in my beard, but I'll
survive it.
But lots happening here, andit's not just Bitcoin, it's uh
it's all commodities, the marketitself.
All right, I'm gonna go to thechat.

(31:19):
I haven't done that in a whileand make sure I'm over on.
Let's see, do we have any?
Do we have any live chat over onRumble?
I don't see anybody.
Maybe that's just me.
That's interesting.
I don't see any live chat overon Rumble.
Uh, but we are on YouTube.

(31:39):
You want to follow me over onYouTube?
It's at Tony Arderburn.
It's crazy that I have aYouTube.
And Jason Barker says, I thinkde dollarization is why
Venezuela.
Yeah, I think uh well Venezuelais part of, you know, has this
largest oil reserves possibly, Ithink, in the world.

(32:03):
And especially in thishemisphere.
And it's part of the Wolfwoodsmemorandum about hemispheric
resources.
Nancy Chambers says, Tony, uh,where where are you sitting?
You appear to have a halo.
That's my that's my wise wolfgold and silver uh Bitcoin logo.

(32:24):
That's my that's my neon.
And Jessica Gisler says, Hi,Pumpkin.
Yeah, well, come say hi toPumpkin.
Uh Kenny F and Powers.
I that's by the way, that's agreat name.
I don't do it.
Does anybody get that?
Because I get that.
I know about Kenny Powers andhis uh his ego.

(32:48):
Hi, Tony, and Beans the Brave.
Just keep on stacking in yourhead on a swivel, brother.
Going grocery shopping today.
Ready to take down.
Gotcha.
Funny.
Yeah.
I know what you mean.
That's so funny.

(33:10):
All right.
Well, as promised, we always getthrough as as many articles as I
can.
Um, but we got plenty left.
Let's see.
Maybe I'll come back to maybewe'll end out on a little bit of
more economic news.
I'm really gonna try.
Maybe a little bit of foreignpolicy.

(33:31):
Uh stick with the chaos in mybrain, I promise we'll have fun.
So we watched the elect well, Iwatched a little bit of the
election coverage, tiny bit, um,but I don't know why anybody was
surprised.
Are you surprised that asocialist uh Marxist won in New
York City?
Like what is wrong with you?

(33:51):
You think you think you thinkthat's not gonna happen?
Uh that's where we are.
This was all done on purpose, bythe way.
You can't have a one-worldtotalitarian socialist
government without socialism,folks.
All right, let's talk about thisa little bit because this is

(34:12):
what got me to thinking aboutGary Allen.
Natural news.
Mamdani's victory as New YorkCity mayor sparks economic
uncertainty and political feuds.
Zoran Mandami, a DemocraticSocialist of America, DSA,
member, and Muslim progressive.
Just kind of a weird combo,isn't it?

(34:37):
Islam's all about tradition anduh submitting to the will.
Actually, Islam meanssubmission.
That's the literally thetextbook definition of it.
You can submit to the will ofAllah.
Okay.
I don't know how you can beprogressive, also.
Uh he's been elected New YorkCity mayor, marking a major
shift towards socialist policieslike universal health care, free

(35:00):
college, and a Green New Deal.
There you go.
There's a Green New Deal.
You know what the Green New Dealis?
It's a watermelon.
Uh it is green on the outsideand uh communism red on the
inside.
It's a watermelon, folks.
Mom Domini's victory speechdeclared opposition to President
Trump.
Capitalism, yeah, because screwcapitalism, right?

(35:23):
We can't have like, you know, afunctioning system of economics.
You need, you know, you needbread shortages and food
shortages and lines and uh, youknow, North Korea.
I mean, everybody knows NorthKorea is an economic marvel.
I mean, you just go into spaceand then you see South Korea,
and there's lights, and there'syou know, bustling cities, and

(35:43):
there's life, and then there'sthis darkness above it, which is
North Korea, because socialismand communism works.
I mean, clearly it's I mean,that's why in Cuba they have the
they're still fixing up those1950s model Chevrolets, is
because there was new stuff thatcame out.
Fears of socialist governancehave always prompted Republican

(36:06):
leaders like Governor Kelly Adamof New Hampshire to lure New
York City businesses away.
First of all, it's not going tohappen.
I mean, yeah, some of them willgo, but the stick with me here,
folks.
This is not an organicgrassroots thing.
It never is.

(36:27):
This the big business is backingall of this.
Big business.
They go the small businesses cango.
They'd like to get rid of therabble, you know, anybody that's
supporting themselves, andthey're gonna price them out of
it.
This is what this is about.
And of course, it's you'resetting yourself up on this fake
paradigm of like, well, he's badand socialism's bad, so you got

(36:49):
to give us a you know, a cookiecutter Mitt Romney type or
something to oppose it.
And that both of those arewrong.
Trump vowed to oppose Mondami'sagenda.
Ben Shapiro called his win arevenge candidacy and raised
concerns for Jewish New Yorkers.
Oh, what is Crimea River.

(37:11):
Actress Deborah Messing labeledhim a communist jihadist, which
is a strange combo.
In contrast, Muslim activistslike Linda Sarsur and is Imam
Siraj Mawaji celebrated hisvictory as a triumph for
progressive and Islamic causes.

(37:33):
In a historic controversy ofvictory, Zohan Mandami, a
self-proclaimed democraticsocialist and Muslim, has been
elected as the next mayor of NewYork City.
Well, there's so much to unpackhere.
I mean, I don't know why therewas any, like people are
surprised somehow at any ofthis.

(37:59):
This is the end game where ourpolitics are headed.
They've priced people out onpurpose.
Like you've been the latter'sbeen taken away taken away from
you.
The upward mobility on purposehas been taken away.
And you wonder why youngerpeople, and of course, we've the

(38:21):
demographic changes in thiscountry, whether it's illegal
immigration or legalimmigration.
Legal immigration is theunprecedented migration of
peoples to come to this countrysince the fall of the Soviet
Union.
It's unprecedented.
It's never happened before.
People talk about like the Irishand the Polish, you know, waves

(38:42):
of immigrants uh in theScottish, the Irish, going back
to the late 19th century, early20th century in the United
States, the most you could haveever thought would have come in
a year would be like 250,000.
But we do a million plus uhlegal immigrants a year.

(39:03):
And that's been going on for Imean, close to going back to
1965 with the Immigration Act of1965, and it changed the origin
on purpose.
It went from a Eurocentric,which you know you get a lot of
the Catholics and Christians andand others, uh mostly of of the
same European stock, and then itchanged it to everywhere else

(39:27):
but there.
So we this has been a long playto where you're gonna have these
lockstep elections that happenlike this.
No problem.
It's it's built into the system.

(39:48):
Mondami's win has sparkedeconomic uncertainty and
political tension with both inwithin the city and across the
nation.
His victory speech, described bysome as radical, declared war on
President Donald Trump,capitalism, and traditional
America, raising concerns amongconservatives and business
leaders.
In particular, the prospect of asocialist mayor in America's

(40:08):
financial capital has sent shockwaves to the business community.
True enough, the economic impactis already being felt.
Republican Governor Kelly out ofanyway already read that.
She's attracting thosebusinesses.
Well, you get some smallbusinesses for sure, but the big
businesses love this stuff.

(40:30):
It's so funny that progressivesor the left, they don't know
their own history.
They don't know where theirfunding comes from.
It's so funny too, the uh I'mgonna read you some Gary Allen
quotes, by the way.
It's so funny, the the taglinehere is tax the rich, and but

(40:52):
why wouldn't you just say helpthe poor?
What does that even mean?
What does tax the rich mean?
Really seriously.
Does the rich write the taxcode?
So who are you taxing?
Or eat the rich.
That's another one of my the funones.
It's like the French Revolution.

(41:15):
Do you did they behead thebankers?
Or was it just like the uh morecentrist politicians and people
that wanted to end the reign ofterror?
You know, like maybe we shouldstop this satanic bloodletting.
Maybe this is a ceremony ofSatanism.
Maybe we should not do this,this with the streets running
with blood.
What what what is the point oftaking all the relics out of the

(41:38):
churches and changing it to thechurch of reason?
And why are we taking anddigging people up and re-burying
them in other cemeteries?
Like what kind of what kind ofuh strange upside down are we
doing?
Oh, they killed all thosepeople, but yeah, all the
finance they almost killedThomas Paine, too.
Do you know that?
The only reason Thomas Paine,the author of uh the the

(42:00):
pamphlet on common sense and therights of man.
Let's go, let's go to some GaryAllen code.
So this is I don't know why it'seven a surprise, but the guy
wins in in New York, and I thinkthis is probably there are gonna

(42:23):
be other uh victories forpoliticians like this, and
they'll fail.
Um, but they'll fail with thehelp of a big business and big
banking.
And going back to the 1970s,there's an author, his name was
Gary Allen, he's a researcher,historian, and he wrote a book

(42:45):
called None Dare Call ItConspiracy, and this was radical
for the 1970s.
And he had some great, I justpulled up some quotes from the
book.
He says, though, why are thesoup super rich for socialism?
Don't they have the most tolose?
I take a look at my bank accountand compare it with Nelson

(43:07):
Rockefeller's, and it seemsfunny that I'm against socialism
and he's out promoting it.
Or is it funny?
In reality, there's a vastdifference between what the
promoters define as socialismand what it is in actual
practice.
The idea of socialism is a sharethe wealth program, is strictly
a confidence game to get peopleto surrender their freedom to an

(43:29):
all-powerful collectivistgovernment.
While the insiders tell us weare building a paradise on
earth, we are actuallyconstructing a jail for
ourselves.
If you have total government, itmakes little difference whether
you call it communism, fascism,socialism, Caesarism, or

(43:49):
Pharaohism.
It's all pretty much the samefrom the standpoint of the
people who must live and sufferunder it.
Socialism is not a share thewealth program.
All the socialists would likeyou to believe.
But a can consolidate andcontrol the wealth program for

(44:12):
all the insiders.
Yeah, one of the greatestquotes.
In politics, nothing happens byaccident.
If it happens, you can bet itwas planned that way.
That's Gary Allen quotingFranklin Roosevelt, by the way.
If you wanted to control thenation's manufacturing,

(44:33):
commerce, finance,transportation, and natural
resources, you would need onlyto control the apex, the power
pinnacle of an all-powerfulsocialist government.
Then you would have a monopolyand could squeeze all of your
competitors.
If you wanted a nationalmonopoly, you must control
national socialist government.
If you want a worldwidemonopoly, you must control a

(44:55):
world socialist government.
This is what the game is allabout.
Communism is not a movement ofthe downtrodden masses, but is a
movement created, manipulated,and used by power-seeking
billionaires in order to gaincontrol over the world.
Now, what makes more sense?
Gary Allen or the deficit oflucidity from these people have

(45:23):
no idea how business is done oreconomics or how wealth is
created.
And they are the political classare very parasitic and they move
from host to host.
They feed their egos, they aremere puppets for those who want
to control actual policy.
And you don't see the peoplethat actually control policy,

(45:43):
but you see their puppetsdancing on the string, and
they'll tell you what you wantto hear.
But it's about control.
And make no mistake about it,big business is pushing this.
And I'm not talking about, youknow, even like the Forbes, I'm
talking about like this ismultinational generational

(46:05):
wealth banking consortiums.
And he's right, right in theheart of the financial capital
of the United States.
Or what once was a lot of prettymuch the real stuff is going on.
You know, Wall Street does itsthing, but the rest of the

(46:25):
country is where all theeconomic energy is going.

unknown (46:32):
All right.

SPEAKER_00 (46:33):
Just a little trip down memory lane with with Gary
Allen.
You got the the the left-rightparadigm is strong.
You can sense it, isn't it?
It's very um like a siren'scall.
Like, this is bad, so join theother team.
This is bad.
You know, it's like when I ifI'm going after this socialist
communist guy, you'd think that,well, he must love Ted Cruz, you

(46:56):
know.
It's like I can't decide whichone I don't like more.
Actually, I don't like Ted.
And it's mainly because like themy problem with the the fake
right and the cowards and thepeople that have power is that

(47:16):
they wasted it.
I mean, not to this isn't aboutme, but you realize what have
happened if let's say I had wonmy seat in Congress, you would
know me.
I would be known because I wouldbring up uncomfortable things in
the congressional record, and Iwould use my office as a

(47:41):
platform for just like Ron Paul.
I I'm not comparing myself toRon, but I would do something
like that.
You would know who I am.
Who is the congressman here?
Like, I don't even know.
I mean, I knew Ralph Hall formany years, but I don't know who
it is.
And and and that's the tell.
They have uh by the way, it's96% incumbency rate.

(48:06):
So if you get elected, 96%chance you're going back.
I mean, you have to really screwup.
So if you have that that seat,it's secure, you're just fight
for your people.
Do everything you can to lowertaxes, lower regulations,
increase freedom.
And people should know who youare.

(48:27):
Because you should be outspoken.
But they don't do that.
I don't know who they arebecause they just use it for
it's kind of like the guy thatbeat Ralph, you know, and now
he's the director of the CIA.
Uh, but I didn't know anythinghe did as congressman.
You would have known what I didas congressman.
I would have been first thing Iwould have done is sponsor like

(48:49):
the bill to get us out of theUN.
Like you just startco-sponsoring bills that are
designed as America First.
Like you start doing that andyou start touting that.
But I never hear anything from,and Tucker Carlson brought this
up about Ted Cruz.
Just said, you know, why wasn'the holding press conferences
every week, you know, during theBiden administration about the

(49:10):
border being overrun and shamingGreg Abbott into doing something
about it instead of bustingpeople to Martha's vineyard or
some weak crap.
But he never did.
So I, you know, when you talkabout who do I dislike more, I
dislike the people thatsupposedly are on my side, which
you're not on my side.

(49:31):
Because you wasted all of yourit's like uh right now you got
Cash Patel's head of the uh FBI,he's flying out on government
planes to see his girlfriendsing.
I'm literally we're we're theamount of corruption and the
amount of evil that goes on,especially like human
trafficking and other thingsthat are happening.
And you watch, I watch thesevideos of people, people, I

(49:57):
imagine I assume that they'repeople, um, in fatigues crossing
over the southern border of theUnited States.
Like we have video of this, likethis is a militarized, yeah,
yeah, you have migrant workers.
I'm talking about like this anoperation to bring in massive
amounts of people, uh illicitwhatever.

(50:19):
Not that I don't care about thewar on drugs, but this is how
they fund their narco-terrorism.
We have all that going on righton the border, but then we're
gonna blow up boats inVenezuela.
Um it really is disgusting.
We have that, and the massiveamount of corruption all
throughout.
I mean, the the investigationsthat need to go on, especially

(50:40):
since well, we all live throughCOVID-1984, but nothing to see
there.
All right, last article of theday.
See if I can even get throughit.
I so I have to I'll have tocondense it because we only got
like eight minutes left.

(51:01):
But Lou Rockwell, let's put thisup on the screen.
I want to just get through justa couple of things.
This was important for me toshare with you.
This is a little bit of foreignpolicy, but big idea stuff,
global chessboard.
Um, LouRockwell.com.
What's the real reason why theeconomist wants Europe to spend
$400 billion more on Ukraine?

(51:23):
And it's not ideological.
It's about federalizing the EU.
Federalizing the EU, not thepolitical fantasy of defeating
Russia, is the real goal, whichrequires another four years of
proxy warfare and at leastanother$400 billion to complete.

(51:43):
This is the Economist magazine.
By the way, the Rothschildsrecently put up the Economist
magazine for for sale.
So if you're interested, uh youcan make a bid.
Um good luck to you.
You can know you can finally ownThe Economist, but that's who
that's who currently owns it.
The Economist argued that the EUand the UK should meet Ukraine's

(52:04):
estimated$390 billion financingneeds over the next four years.
In their words, another halfdecade of Russia's supposedly
worsening economic financialsituation would probably trigger
an economic and banking crisisin Russia, while any long-term
financing solution for Ukrainewould help Europe build the

(52:24):
financial and industrial muscleit needs to defend itself.
Of course, they said that'sfear-mongering.
The alternative would be forUkraine to lose the war and
become an embittered,semi-failed state, worse whose
army and defeated industrieswould be exploited by Mr.
Putin as part of a new,reinvigorated Russian threat.

(52:45):
While it's unlikely that Ukrainewould ever team up with Russia
to threaten any NATO state,Ukraine might blame Poland for
its loss.
They go into all these differentscenarios, and if you have a
failed state or if uh you knowthere's a by the way, they don't
even think about what anotherfour years of proxy war will do
to Europe itself, but not tomention the Ukraine.

(53:13):
The economist wrote, for the EUto issue bonds collectively
would be create a bigger pool ofcommon debt.
So this is where this is going.
War is the health of the state.
So when I read this articletoday and I pulled it up, I was
like, that's of course whatthey're doing.
It's good.
Think of how sick that is thatthis the policy here being

(53:35):
pushed by the Economist magazineis to continue the current
system so that and the currentfunding and to meet all these
needs to keep the proxy war openso that there will be a greater
chance for more consolidation ofpower for the European Union.
By the way, does anybodyremember whose idea it was for

(53:55):
the European Union?
In the chat?
anybody?
The original EU, I think eventhe EU flag.

(54:17):
He was a corporal in the Germanarmy in World War I.
Great speaker.
Very captivating speaker.
Had a beer hall putsch.
Let's see what else.
Um head of the Nazi Party.
Mustache.
That's where they I'll have todo a show on that.

(54:38):
We should do a paratroother onthe EU and its roots.
Yeah, this is the again, thedrift here is insane.
400 billion, that's what theywant to push.
And then again, the reason theywant to do that and to continue
these wars is more consolidationof the supranational states.

(55:04):
The consolidation of power,which is the game, right?
All right, folks.
Let's uh as promised, let'slet's do some spot prices.
You can always go towolfpack.gold to get your live
gold and silver spot priceticker.

(55:26):
If you know, if you knew what Iwent through to make sure that
this ticker stays up there, thenyou would always use this
website, wolfpack.gold.
The gold is it?
3,986 Luciferian bankster notesper troy ounce for the yellow
let yellow metal, 3,986 FederalReserve Fiat notes per troy

(55:49):
ounce, silver,$48.09.
By the way, I checked thismorning running my price
structure.
It was$47.88.
So$48.9 as of this broadcast onthe 6th November, 11 57 a.m.

(56:12):
Central Time.
And remember, you can getsubscriptions for precious
metals sent direct to your door.
And I don't I don't really pluga lot, so bear with me.
Promo code 1776 for some free90% US constitutional silver.
We'll put that in with every youcan buy one time.

(56:33):
If you go to wolfpack.gold, youcan get precious metals,
especially you go to the if yougo to the Sigma level at$750,
you can get free shipping and itstarts your ability to say, I
want all gold, all silver, or amix.
And we spend a lot of time onthose invoices.
I mean, we meticulously gothrough every item.

(56:54):
And uh, which is the beginning,it's so weird, it takes forever
to get paid now on the bulkstuff that I have to sell to the
wholesalers because apparentlythey're backed up for six weeks
or more.
So it's taken forever to getpaid, but there's also a
shortage, and so try to makethat make sense, which I think
in the chaos of all of this iswhat um we're supposed to be

(57:18):
shaking out, shaken out of ourposition, but don't do that.
Just keep stacking and uh youstack against uh it's funny.
I I'll bet against I don't haveto bet for something, I'll just
bet against it.
But I'll continue to bet againstthe Luciferian fiat system.
And uh so far, so good.

(57:39):
I've been proven right.
But I appreciate uh all of youbeing here.
Uh we'll be on for AmericaUnplugged on Saturday, uh 12
Eastern, 11 a.m.
Central Time on Saturdays, thelegendary Donald Jeffries and uh
Billy Ray Valentine of theInfinite Fringe Podcast.
So we do that show on episode203, I think, for America

(58:02):
Unplugged.
Great show.
And I always look forward todoing that.
If you can, please give us areview over on the Paratrouther
channel anywhere that podcastsare found.
I'd really appreciate that.
I've got some I'm gonna do ashow live this weekend uh for
Paratrouther with Mr.
Anderson.
Uh, we don't know exactly whatwe're gonna talk about yet, but

(58:24):
it's always I'll get to uh hosthis brain live on Sunday, I
think around 5 p.m.
Somewhere around that, we'll doa Paratrouther live.
So um stay tuned to all thesechannels.
We'll have a and bring yourquestions because we're gonna
have a uh definitely beinteractive with the audience,
but we're gonna bring backParatrouther Live and some other
shows.

(58:44):
But give us a rating becausethis show goes up on
Paratrouther, Artiburn Radio,anywhere podcasts are found.
We appreciate you uh for beinghere as always from myself and
the crew and Beans the Brave anduh Pumpkin.
You guys take care of eachother.
End of transmission.
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