Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a
revolutionary act. It's the David Knight Show.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
As the clock strikes thirteen, it's Thursday, the eleventh of December.
You're our Lord, twenty twenty five. Well, we've gone from
coups to illegally declared wars actually not really declared, and
now we've seen a massive civil asset forfeiture, one of
the biggest civil asset forfeiture they have ever done. We
(01:08):
militarize the police for the so called drug war. Now
the military is our police. They is our police. So
we're going to take a look at that. We're also
going to take a look at our current state of
our society. We've got fireproof oreos' other crazy things. There
(01:29):
are a couple of good things that have happened though
in terms of the vaccine schedule, But you still have
to get the message out to people because even if
you take away the mandate, as we've seen with the
mRNA Trump shots, people may still get it if they
don't understand what is going on with it. So we're
going to take a look at pharmaceutical industry, big tech
(01:50):
again and the many ways that they are tightening the News,
We'll be right back, stay with us. Yes, the US
(02:10):
seizes an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela. And again,
as I said, this this drug war thing, we look
at people like Megan Kelly going out there and virtue
signaling to her base. Yeah, yeah, I want more of this.
I want these people bleeding. It's kind of the same
type of thing that what was the guy's name used
(02:32):
to work for Fox News and after the Charlie hebdo
things said all these people complaining about the militarization of
the police, I want the police more militarized. Well, she's
doing that as well, feeding the fear, feeding the hate.
And she was somebody when I talked to her personally,
she had no clue what the civilized at forfeiture stuff was.
Didn't know, didn't care obviously, Right, well, this is what
(02:55):
it looks like. And you know, since Trump is taking
us on a fantasy ride, I thought we would take
a look at the pirates of the Caribbean because they're
going to make it so difficult for people to come
in from Europe and the UK in terms of vetting them.
We've got to give them, now five years of social media.
(03:16):
You know what, if you've been kicked off as social
media like me, I guess well, once they reciprocate in Europe,
which is the intention, I'm sure once they reciprocate. If
I wanted to go, if I wanted to go through
TSA hassles and the biometric face skins and the body
scans and the pad downs all the rest of stuff,
I probably wouldn't be allowed to get into the country
because I've already been labeled as persona non grata. But
(03:40):
this is how this stuff is fantastasizing. But let's take
a look at what the pirates of the Caribbean look
like in the twenty first century. Oh yo, they are
repelling down the American forces, swooping in on the tanker
and helicopters and repelling down ropes. Guns drawn for me, rebuild, rebuilt, shinzac.
Speaker 3 (04:06):
Drink up Me is your home, rodding and doze and
even hijacked Drink up is your home? You like for me?
Weekend of a jar, plain of mid night. Drink up
to Me is your home. We weren't at the city.
We're really a fright.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
Drink up to Me is your home?
Speaker 1 (04:25):
Yo, yo.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
For me?
Speaker 2 (04:29):
R are I guess when somebody mentioned to Trump that
they had a lot of booty that they could get,
you started having flashbacks to Jeffrey Epstein parties. But it's
a different kind. You know, there's the rape kind, then
there's the pillaging kind. This is the pillaging kind. This
is where we are today with our our mafia don
or organized crime lord who is now the pirate king.
(04:53):
Jaw dropping moment, says Daily Mail headline. The US commandos
storm Venezuela and tear tanker and a breath taking airborne
takedown as tensions rocket towards a conflict. Well, here's my question.
We've been told by Warpete that he's not sure that
he can really release that video of them going back
(05:14):
and murdering people who are begging for help shipwrecked. I'm
not sure I can show that to you. You know,
tactics and things like that, you know, national security secrets,
military secrets.
Speaker 5 (05:25):
Yeah, this will if I show you the video, it'll
really help these people fight off a plane. They can't see,
can't fire, it can't do anything to.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
No, he doesn't want us to see that they kill
people in cold blood. Its premeditated murdered. They thought about
it for forty one minutes, but he will show you
the tactics that they use in terms of taking over
a tanker. Right now, that really is a tactical video there,
So you know, if you wanted to learn how to
defend against them, I don't know if you could defend,
(05:54):
not on a tanker anyway, but or Pete just can't
release them that other video, but he can show you
how they take over a tanker. Right that's not a problem,
is it. So troops with guns drawn darted upstairs of
the bridge to take control of the vessel off the
coast of Venezuela. And again Pambondy, the worst attorney general
(06:19):
and a long, long, horrible line of attorney generals that
we have had, was boasting about. So today the FBI
Homeland Security Coast Guard with support from the Department of War.
Let's say this is the Department of War in their imagination,
it is still the Department of Defense. The name has
not been changed. That costs something like two is it
(06:41):
a million or billion? I don't know, Washington, who cares
how many zeros there are, but it is incredibly expensive.
Imagine it's billion, because it wouldn't have been a complaint.
If it's two million, I mean, let's just get that
out of the petty cash forw you.
Speaker 5 (06:53):
Know, yeah, they just got that lying around.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Yeah, but in their imagination, because they haven't changed anything,
they have change the website. So now the website says
war dot gov. Boy, that says it all, doesn't it.
That really is what we are. War is us. That's
what they should have called it. So the tanking over
this tanker and confiscating it, just like they have been
(07:19):
doing with the war on drugs, This is the logical conclusion, folks.
This is why I have opposed it for all these decades.
I don't support drug use at all. I think it's horrible.
I think it is a crime. But they need to
pass the Constitutional Amendment if they want to prosecute it
that way. But you're never going to stop it with probision,
never going to stop it by criminalizing it. What they
(07:41):
did in this drug war was they made criminals of
themselves by ignoring the Constitution. But the statement from them
said that this tanker was involved in illicit oil. How
do we get to a point where now oil is illicit?
I guess it's just too slippery or slimy right like
a politician.
Speaker 5 (08:03):
You've got oil on you there, boy, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
This is illicit oil. The tanker is criminal by the way,
you know, this is the big fiction that they operate
with with a civilizeet forfeiture. Well, I'm going to seize
that hotel because over the last fifteen years we've had
two drug busts there, and so obviously it is involved
in dealing drugs because there's been two drug busts in
(08:27):
that hotel. So I'm taking the whole thing and or
you know, you come in. The very first case of
this that I saw was a guy who had a
private jet service. One guy, small business, he owns one
jet and he was trying to charter jet service. Two
guys and suits with attached a cases show up and
(08:49):
rent his plane fly into Canada. He waits for them
for their meeting and then flies them back to the
US and when he arrives, you know, all these police
around his his plane at gunpoint. They take these two
guys out, and the two guys had been doing a
drug deal and then they stole this guy's plane. He goes,
(09:10):
what are you doing? I didn't know anything about this,
and said, we know you didn't know anything about it.
But your plane was involved in the crime, so we're
taking that. He had to fight them for years. He
went bankrupt trying to get back that was his business,
his plane. He didn't have a lot of money outside
and he didn't have any other capital except for that
was just his plane. He eventually got it back, but
(09:31):
he was bankrupt by that time. And the fiction was
US government versus Lear Jet or whatever kind of jet.
It was serial number, blah blah blah. They don't charge
a person with a crime, they charge the object of
the crime. So this is an illicit tanker and no
fentannel on it, not even any cocaine, but it was
(09:54):
still illicit. This should underscore the fiction of this king,
the absurdity, the assault on our intelligence, the arrogance of
these people. Yeah, you got an amendment for that, you know,
to be able to do ciblastic forfeiturn and take an
entire tanker. You know, if we had a constitutional amendment
(10:16):
for everything that they have prohibited, as they did for alcohol,
which they needed to do for alcohol, if they had
a constitutional amendment for each one of these things, we'd
be well over one hundred in terms of amendments that
they would have added. We've only got twenty something, but
we would have had another hundred of these things. Well,
(10:38):
you know, Trump is talking about what he did.
Speaker 6 (10:42):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 7 (10:43):
It's been an interesting day from the standpoint.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Of the Pirate kings.
Speaker 7 (10:49):
As you probably know, we've just seized a tanker the
coast of Venezuela large tanker, very large or just whatever.
Seased action and other things are happening.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
So has one ever been seized before?
Speaker 7 (11:07):
And you'll be talking about that later with some other people.
Very excitingly for me and for the country. We've just
launched the Trump gold card.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
With a scammer.
Speaker 7 (11:20):
About thirty minutes from now.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
You're disgusting. That goes up crook. Disgusting crook. Yeah, biggest
largest one ever sees. It was big. It was huge.
Nobody sees any bigger than me. You know, this is
a what an idiot, what a boasting, lawless idiot he is.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
This must be that Somali influence already.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Yeah, so that set oil prices climbing sharply. I said, wealth,
there's going to be an embargo and we're going to
shut off the oil coming from Venezuela. Oil prices went up,
went up to sixty three dollars a barrel, almost sixty
two sixty nine, and I saw I looked up how
many barrels of oil are there on these large tankers,
(12:04):
anywhere from one point one to two million barrels. So
that was a pretty big theft that he had there.
You know, the pirate king brought in about sixty five million,
one hundred and thirty million dollars. I guess right somewhere
around that area are booty are you know? It's it
(12:25):
truly is incredible what he is. And when I saw this,
I mean, we've got to have some humor here, because
it's just too dark otherwise. You know, we look at
this lawless government that we have made me think of
the Pirates of Penzance as well as the Pirates of
the Caribbean. The Gilbert and Sullivan play that was really
kind of made famous when a Theatre in the Park
(12:46):
did it in New York and they had a run
where they had some pop stars like Linda Ronstadt and
Peter Noon or something. The guy that was with Herman
Herman's Hermit's and I was in New York with Karen
and we went to this with her parents, and I thought, well,
(13:07):
let me get the libretto so I can figure out
what's going on with it, you know. And I was
sitting there laughing, and everybody else is trying to understand
what they're saying, and they're looking at You're like, what's
going on. It's like, oh, you should read this. This
is really great lyrics. And so they had this The
Pirates of Penzance. They have the leader who was played
by Kevin Klein, and so the lyrics to the song are,
(13:32):
when I sally forth to seek my prey, I help
myself in a royal way, I sink a few more ships,
It's true than a well bred monarch ought to do.
You know, they're up to over twenty ships now. But
many a king on a first class throne, if he
wants to call his throne his own, his crown, his own,
(13:52):
must manage somehow to get through more dirty work than
ever I do where I am a pirate king. And
so I was thinking, it's very the music, but I
really like Gilbert and Sullivan, and that that particular song
got Queen Victoria so upset with them that she gave
(14:13):
an award to Sullivan, who wrote the music, but not
to the lyricist Gilbert. She was very angry about the
fact that he had mocked the monarchy, which is ripe
for mocking. But you know, in another line, he says,
it's better to be under the brave black flag I fly,
(14:37):
then play a sanctimonious part with a pirate head and
a pirate heart. That's right. So when asked about what
the US will do with all this illicit oil that
they stole, Trump said, we keep it a pirate king.
Forget these no Kings protests. We need to have a
(14:57):
protest that says no pirates instead, instead of maybe Jocelyny
can rename Occupy Peace, no pirates. That's what these people are,
murderous pirates. By the way, They're not like the pirates
of the Caribbean and Disney World. This week's seizure marks
the first time the Trump administration has moved interfere with
(15:18):
the country's oil distribution amid the hostile pressure campaign. No,
they're building up for a regime change or this is
all so absurd. They think that you don't know, but
we do. We do know. When reporter on Wednesday asked
Trump about who owns the seized oil, tanker. He says,
you'll get that information later. I wouldn't be surprised if
(15:40):
they don't know and they don't care. I think a
true pirate king don't know, don't care. I don't know
the names of the people that we blew up. I
don't have any. We're not going to give them due process,
so I don't need to know their names. I mean,
they're just out there in an area where we think
people are doing drugs. So that's an instant death sentence,
blown up twenty boats. We're going to start doing those
(16:03):
strikes on land too, said Trump, and it comes amid
fears that the military tensions could soon expand to other
countries in Latin America's Trump on Wednesday also fired a
chilling new warning at the Columbian president, who he calls
a drug dealer. You want to look at a drug dealer,
Go look at your CIA in essay and those people.
That's where your drug dealers are, Okay. The Pentagon guarding
(16:26):
the fields the opioid the poppy fields for opioids in Afghanistan,
saying they're going to stay there. They're the drug lords,
the real gang leaders, the real pirate king, he says,
he's going to have himself some big problems if he
doesn't wise up. I hope he's listening. He's going to
be next there we go, just a thug. You're nothing
(16:47):
but an organized crime thug. Trump. He's still claiming that
he saved twenty five thousand American lives every time he
blows up one of these boats. And so Jacob Sullom
at Reason called him out on that insult to our intelligence.
He says, you know, nobody would buy this except this
(17:07):
benighted cult that is following him and being fed lized
and propaganda by people like and let me just saki
him the Roll Call of Shame, wnd Bright, Bart, Info Wars,
you name it. There's a lot of sites out there,
Zero Hedge often as well, just just selling these lies
(17:29):
as if they were true. Surely disgusting. Trump is widely
mocked for claiming, quote we saved twenty five thousand American
lives unquote every time the US military blows up a
suspected suspected drug boat in the Caribbean. Undeterred by the
well deserved ridicule, the President is still pushing that preposterous premise,
(17:51):
which implies that he has prevented six hundred and fifty
thousand drug related deaths by entering attacks that so far
have destroyed twenty six vessels and twenty two operations. And
they just admitted, by the way that it was not fentanyl,
but it was cocaine that came out when the admiral,
(18:12):
Admiral Bradley, who commanded that these people be murdered, that's
when he was talking about that, said you know, it's cocaine.
So Monday he reiterated that every single boat we shoot
on average saved twenty five thousand American lives. The BBC
trily notes that quote. The White House has not explained
(18:33):
how it arrived at this figure because it's a lie.
It seems to be the product of several imperial and
logical fallacies, several lives, says Jacob Sullom. He said, first
of all, Trump erroneously thinks that the targeted boats were
carrying fentanyl. Again, that is not the case, not the
(18:55):
case in this very first one, which was the double
right tap as well. The boats get hit, he said,
and you see fentanyl all over the ocean. I wonder
if anybody has thought that through or not. I have
no idea what fentanyl looks like. I don't know. If
it's a powder, I don't know if it's a liquid.
(19:15):
Is it in pill forms? I see floating pills. Do
you think that you would really see it all over
the water when you blow it up if it was
in any of those forms. I have no idea what
form ventanyl is.
Speaker 5 (19:26):
I can tell, because there's just much of fish and
dolphins and sharks just doing the fentanyl slump.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
You know, Yeah, I don't know, all slump and go
the surface. I don't know. It's very deadly. I'm not
I'm not downplaying fentanyl. I know people, multiple people who've
had their children have died from fentanyl. So it's a
serious thing. But it's a product, folks of the drug war.
(19:52):
I'm telling you, we wouldn't have fentanyl if we didn't
have the drug war. I've said forever before fentanyl all
ever came around. I said, it's a hallmark of probition,
just like alcohol probition, that you constantly get more dangerous
and concentrated forms of whatever it is that you're trying
to prohibit. I mean, it's just it's almost like an
(20:14):
economic law. And of course fentanyl was developed by a
pharmaceutical company in the US, but its use in terms
of recreational drug use is a consequence of our prohibition,
just like they went from beer and wine to hard
liquor and wood alcohol and things like that. Fentanyl accounts
(20:38):
for most of the drug related deaths in the United States.
Is implicated in more than forty nine thousand drug deaths
sixty percent of the total of drug deats. Cocaine was
detected in about twenty two five hundred cases, about twenty
eight percent of the time. Yeah, I don't even you know,
(20:58):
even cocaine is is involved in a lot of drug overdoses.
I remember when we first moved in North Carolina, it
was a big deal because there was I remember he
was with Maryland University and I can't remember the guy's name.
That was Lenny something. And the story was this is
a college kid playing basketball and he was squeaky clean
(21:23):
according to everybody else. He'd never been involved in that
kind of stuff. He goes to a party and somebody
gives him cocaine. First time he tries it, it gives
him a heart attack. Now I don't know if that
was true or not, but that was the story that
came out and was it Lenny White. I don't know.
It's been a long time. That was about forty five
(21:44):
years ago. Anyway, it's a tragedy, and you're always kind
of playing a little bit of Russian roulette whenever you
do drugs, aren't you You don't really know what's in it,
and you don't know the you don't know the concentration
in it either. It's almost like taking a trump shot
in the sense that you know the trump shot. Look
(22:06):
at how the dosage varied, and they did that deliberately.
They knew exactly what they were doing. And you don't
know what's in it, right, What exactly is that? Well,
they can't tell you. It be a secret. A second,
Trump imagines, contrary to more than a century of experience
of drug in addiction, that traffickers do not compensate for
(22:27):
intercepted shipments by sending more. It's hard to understand why
Trump says that the policy of drug interdiction is totally
ineffective if he then boasts about it by saying, well,
we took more of it off the market. Well, you
don't have to do no knock assassinations with to do
(22:48):
drug interdiction. If you want to confiscate it. Coast Guard
has been doing that for a very long time. They
did it at exactly the same time that he was
boasting that he blew this boat up. So you don't
have to blow it up with missiles. You can confiscate
it if that's your goal. If you think that helps
to take it off the market. It doesn't help to
take it off the market anyway.
Speaker 5 (23:09):
You could probably seize more cocaine just by going around
and searching the offices in Washington, DC.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
Yeah. Yeah, you'd ask the CIA where they got their
stash stored that they're selling to people. Third, Trump assumes
that any given amount of drugs would be evenly divided
into lethal doses, each of which would be consumed in
one sitting by a different person. Pambondi relied on the
same plainly unrealistic assumption when she absurdly claimed that the
(23:37):
Trump administration had saved two hundred and fifty eight million
lives during its first one hundred days by intercepting fentanyl shipments. Again,
but think about the fact that this guy who keeps
telling us how many hundreds of millions of lives you say,
has destroyed hundreds of millions of lives with his m
(23:58):
RNA shot. He's killed tens of millions and he has
permanently disabled many tens of millions more. And if they're
going to do that to you, then why are we
concerned about this other thing here? And many people this
(24:18):
was even worse. It's not only the fact that he
paid for using your money, your debt, that he paid
for this mr this Trump shot that was killing people
mr and anything, the genetic code injection. Not only did
he make us pay for it, but then he and
Biden forced people into it with their lockdowns and all
(24:40):
the rest of this stuff. It was a one to
two punch, folks. This is not a different approach by
two of them. It was a planned tag team match.
Just to understand that. And so the people who are
poor souls who are taking cocaine and fentanyl for the
most part, have made that choice. But these people forced
(25:01):
you to take a deadly unknown drug. Who's the worst
drug dealer? Trump? By far? Those bogus numbers would be
amusing if Trump were not deploying them to justify a
policy of killing suspected cocaine couriers at a distance and
in cold blood without legal authorization. Or any semblance of
(25:22):
due process. Trump conflates drug smuggling with violent aggression, saying
it amounts to an arm attack against the United States
that requires a lethal military response. His meretricious math aims
to bolster that reality defying description. He hopes his extravagant
claims about hypothetical deaths prevented by his bloodthirsty anti drug
(25:45):
strategy will distance the public from the actual deaths that
he's ordered. Yeah, he truly is a pirate king. And
I've said that that is one of the most dangerous
things to come out of this, to say that the
possession of drugs is a violent act, that it is
(26:05):
an attack, that it is terrorism. You follow that logic,
and you're look at what he's doing by putting a
military into cities. And we know where this is leading, folks.
I've been telling people this for a very long time.
So one of the reasons why they called it drug war.
I think they called it drug war because they didn't
(26:27):
want to remind people what a failure prohibition was. And
they also didn't want people asking questions like why don't
we have something like the eighteenth Amendment. But I think
this is where this is going and so forget the
no Kings protest. We need to have a no pirates protest.
So let's take a quick break here. Actually we're going today.
(26:50):
We're going to relax things a little bit. Come play
a couple of tunes in the different breaks. Oh yeah, yeah,
go through the comments, struck.
Speaker 5 (26:57):
I also just want to say, it's just a drug.
Unless you are helping them overcome their addiction, we'll simply
find something too substitute.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
That's right.
Speaker 5 (27:06):
If they are addicted to fentanyl, if they can't get
their fix, they will try anything else, whatever they can find.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
Yeah, airplane glue, you name it. I mean, I had
a friend I used to hang out with and he
couldn't get alcohol, couldn't get anybody to buy alcohol for him.
So we went down and bought a bunch of at
nycall and started swilling that. It's like, are you crazy?
What's the matter with you? I don't know what else
is in that besides the alcohol. But it actually has
quite a bit of alcohol. That's that's in it. It's
got more alcohol than a lot of alcoholic drinks do.
(27:36):
And so people if they want to get high or
something like that, that's the issue. You got to change that.
You've got to fix their Wanter. Right, it's a spiritual issue,
and they're never going to solve a spiritual issue with
the police and the military. It's a spiritual war.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
It's not a drug war, even if it's something as
simple as huffing gasoline. You know, gasoline is everywhere, it's
relatively cheap.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
You just does that get people high?
Speaker 5 (28:04):
Yeah, the Australians have a huge problem with Aboriginal siphoning
gas out of tanks, stealing it from people to huff it.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
I imagine that kills a lot of brain salt.
Speaker 5 (28:13):
Yeah, yeah, it destroys your brain. But let's see what
the counts we've got. Wally Walrice says I got the
join Ice advertisement from Rumble to watch the chat this morning. Wally,
when are you signing up?
Speaker 2 (28:25):
Maybe they haven't really done their research. If giving adds
to my audience to join Ice.
Speaker 5 (28:35):
We're getting paid and they're not getting anything. That's right,
wasted cash on their part. Guard Goldsmith always get to
see Guard. You can find him online at Liberty Conspiracy
on Rumble and at Guard Goldsmith on Twitter.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
He says a can also substack as well.
Speaker 5 (28:51):
Its true, Yeah, substack. Kevin Klein is always fun in shows.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Yeah he was. He was really great. And the Pirates
of Penzance said they did it more slapstake. Problem was
with American singers it could be a little bit harder
to understand what they were saying than the typical Gilbert
and Sullivan people from Doillly KRT you know in the UK.
But he actually played the part. They did a movie
of it and he actually played the part. And movie
(29:17):
they did have a British singer who did the major
general part. Because you really need to be able to
understand what he's saying. He does. I am a major general,
very model of a modern major general. Go ahead, sorry,
Jack Sparrow is Trump? I think maybe Jack Sparrow was
Jeffrey Epstein.
Speaker 5 (29:34):
Trump Burger says, Jack Sparrow is greater than Trump's.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
Oh there you go, that's right, that's right. Better.
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Pirate Southern Citizens says most Trump supporters approve of the
unconstitutional takeover of the seas.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
That's right. And they've got their peanut gallery cheerleaders out there.
Same people, what do you expect, I mean, if they're
going to cheer the cold blooded, premeditated murder of people
who are shipwrecked and waiving for help. Disgusting. And if
they're going to cheer that, of course they would chair
seizing a tanker. That's great, go.
Speaker 5 (30:08):
Ahead, pezidant Ovante says, no pirates except for the Pittsburgh
MLB team.
Speaker 2 (30:15):
And the Buccaneers. I grew up in Tampa and they'd
always have the Gasparilla parade that was there and had
this big sailing ship and they would sail it into
the harbor there and they would have the parade and
that would be the kickoff of the state Fair that
was in Tampa, and I was involved in that. Of course,
they've changed that now, the state fair has moved over
(30:38):
to the center of the state. But it was always
a lot of fun and I was always in a
marching band for six years their junior, high school and
high school in those parades. But yeah, they all had
They had these doctors and lawyers who were part of
a very expensive club. And one year when I was
in college, the band fraternity that it was in it
(30:59):
was an honorary fraternity that was there and we to
raise money, we did the makeup for these pirates. I
got a picture of me somewhere made up as a
pirate with you know my like black eyes and a
big beard on and all this kind of stuff.
Speaker 5 (31:15):
But maybe maybe for one of the shows this week
or the next we'll do talk like a pirate show
each other the entire show.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
That's probably an AI app for that. That'll do that
real time.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
I imagine real Jason Barker. Of course Jason Barker's parts
of Knights the Storm, along with Angry Tiger and others,
which he says, I don't think we have twenty six
k Americans that can afford cocaine.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
That's a good point. That's that's funny.
Speaker 5 (31:45):
Also, you know good when cocaine was at a height,
it was the eighties, and that was when Wall Street
was booming. It was probably the last time America's economy
was at its best.
Speaker 2 (31:53):
Well, you know, every time I think about cocaine, I
think about the CIA's crack cocaine.
Speaker 3 (31:58):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
And of course you know they turned it into crack
cocaine when it came back to America and then they
pushed it out through freeway. Ricky Ross and he blew
the lid on all of that stuff, and so did
Gary Webb was eventually he had his career destroyed. They
eventually killed him for blowing the lid on all that.
But that was that concentrated form of crack cocaine was
(32:21):
created by the CIA so they could fund an illegal,
undeclared war. Now we just do the wars openly, right,
I mean, didn't need to do all that stuff. But
I'm sure they made a lot of money. And CIA
gets those black funds. You think they spent it all
on illegal wars or they keep some of that. Do
they get some sticky fingers with that? But he had
(32:44):
Charlie Sheen come out and talk about that period of
life where he went through and he did the meltdown
and with Alex Jones and things like that, and he
said at that point in his life he really hit
a low and it was because of crack cocaine. He said,
he'd always done a lot of drugs, he can handle them,
before he got to crack cocaine and that just sent
him crashing into new depravity which I won't go into.
(33:08):
But it's pretty interesting what he had to say about
crack cocaine. Everybody talks about, well, it's like crack or whatever,
so it it evidently is it takes effect. So quickly
that it creates a much more addictive rush than just
regular cocaine.
Speaker 5 (33:27):
Also, you know, back when we had cocaine in Coca Cola,
we built things like the Hoover Dam. You know, I'm
just saying that maybe it's correlated. Patty Wax says, maybe
the guy from the Imperial College estimated the American lives
saved from sinking ships for Trump, similar to the mad
Cow slash COVID death.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
Yeah, these people, you can tell her a lie because
the lips are moving as it truly is made. They
just throw these numbers out there and we all know
they're lying, but people don't really just come out and
call them a liar. I mean, you know, it's great
that Jacob's and went down and broke it down. Here's
the three assumptions behind this ridiculous narrative. But folks, simply
a lie. It'll tell you anything. And he's got a
(34:09):
whole army of people who can make money by supporting
his lies. And you got all these bots out there
who are saying I voted for this, I voted for this. Well,
shame on you, and I've said that to some of them.
Speaker 5 (34:23):
Go ahead, Pezoovonte seventeen seventy six says this bears reiteration.
A rogue government unbound by the chains of the constitution
and armed to the teeth is more of a danger
than any scourge of drugs.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
That's right. This is this gang out of DC, the Pentagon,
the CIA, the President. It is the most dangerous gang
that you can have anywhere. People talk about these drug
cartels that have been operating with a monopoly in the
black market for so long that they've become very dangerous
in terms of murder, in terms of their weaponry and
(34:56):
all the rest of stuff. Look at the murder record
and the weaponry of our own government and our military
when we start using it for this lend bias. That
was it. Yeah, land Bias, Thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (35:09):
Yeah, and I'm already says I saved a trillion brain
cells by never doing drugs.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
Yeah, me too. That was one of the things I
learned was that it bothers people. You know, that the
people who were doing drugs wanted you to join in
with them, and it really bothered them when I didn't
do it. And that was the thing that I thought
was kind of funny. Well, look, I'm not going to
tell you how to live your life. Why would you
feel like you need to pressure me to join you.
But that was always the case where it was people
(35:37):
drinking alcohol or people who were doing drugs. I was
considered the party pooper because I didn't do it. And
it's like, well, I'm not going to go along with
the crowd. So as we're going to slow things down
a little bit here today, we're going to play a
couple of Christmas songs. Here, let's start with a good King.
He wasn't a pirate King. Good King Wintless.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
And now the David Night Show. You're listening to the
(37:53):
David Knight Show.
Speaker 8 (37:56):
APS Radio delivers multiple channels of music right to your
mobile device. Get the APS Radio app today and listen
wherever you go.
Speaker 2 (38:06):
Well, the Trump administration is set to scrutinize foreign visitors'
social media history, and I'm sure that you know the
people in Europe will do the same thing in reciprocation.
Well we're doing in America, we can do it as well.
So you think you're going to come to the happiest
place on Earth at Disney and see the Pirates of
the Caribbean, You're going to have to settle for the
(38:27):
reruns of Trump stealing an oil tanker. Travelers to the
US for more than three dozen countries could soon be
required to submit their most recent five years of social
media activity for review before being allowed in So what
do you think our own government is doing to us
(38:47):
as American citizens? Right? You think they're not scrutinizing everything
that we do. We know that they're doing that. And
it's not just if you're speaking out on social media
or whatever about politics, or they're following everybody. Geospatial intelligences,
I said so many times, grew up with the Internet.
(39:08):
So as the Internet, which was designed by Darpest psychologists
back in the nineteen sixties, when it became practical in
the nineteen nineties, when the switching equipment the hardware made
it practical, they busted a hump trying to get into
all of these social media companies. And so you had
the CIA create its own venture capital firm in Qtel
(39:31):
publicly did it, didn't even try to keep it secret.
And then what is not really paid attention to by
most people is that you've got if you look at
the board of directors and most of these venture capital
firms that were giving money to these social media companies.
They had a lot of people who were current or
former members of the NSACIA and others like that, and
(39:53):
somehow these companies had so much working capital they could
operate for years making things free, just to get everybody
to try it and get addicted to it, kind of
like a drug dealer who gives you first few hits
for free and then he starts charging you with this stuff.
And so they're using this gepacial intelligence that's where James
Clapper grew up. They're using this to monitor everybody and
(40:17):
everything that we do. And so now they want to
monitor people who even just coming for a vacation at
disney World, or they want to go to Yellowstone or
something like that. Forget about it. A proposal filed Tuesday
by Customs and Border Patrol would require social media scrutiny
of any potential visitor applying for so called electronic travel Authorization,
(40:41):
which allows people from forty two countries to spend up
to ninety days in the US without a visa. And
so notice that this is not a law. This is
a proposal, a proposal by whom by the bureaucracy. This
is the way things work. Now you don't have laws
(41:04):
written by Congress. You have bureaucracies that are created by Congress,
and they kick the responsibilities over them to write the rules.
What these people do is they come up with a
rule and kick it around and then put it out
for a posting. And that's what they're going to do.
They're going to give people, i think sixty days or
(41:24):
something to comment on this, so you can say whatever
you want to about it, and they don't have to
pay attention to what you say. They may pay attention
to it. They may on how angry you are about it.
They might put you on a secret list somewhere using
a star chamber process like the Phisi Court. But people
(41:47):
can comment on it and they can ignore those comments.
That's the way the rules are created. And the rules
are worse than laws. Folks. When you look at civil
asset forfeiture, why they call it civil, Well, because they're
saying you didn't violate a law. We have a rule
that you violated. And because you violated a rule, guess what,
Just like somebody in a boat off the coast of Venezuela,
(42:10):
you don't get any due process, and they just rather
than taking your life, they take your property, you know,
like an oil tanker, and then if you want to
get it back, you have to sue them in court.
That's why they call it civil and they call it
asset forfeiture because they don't want to call it theft,
which is what it is. And so you have the
(42:33):
bureaucracy creating these rules and they pretend that since they're
not laws, you don't have any due process rights. What
an amazing fabrication. That is as ridiculous as Trump saying
that he's saving tens of thousands of lives of each
each time he murders a half dozen people. So there's
no law from Congress, but there's regulations that are proposed
(42:54):
by bureaucracy. The bureaucracy rights the rules, The bureaucracy enforces
the rules. The bureaucracy then judges whether or not you
are in compliance with their rules. Isn't that nice? They
are the enforcement as well as judge and jury and legislators.
They've combined a lot of different branches of government into this.
(43:15):
And so you get a sixty day comment period where
you are free to say anything you want about this,
and they're free to ignore all of it. The requirement
is set to go in effact early next year, months
before thousands of foreigners expected to travel to the US
to attend World Cup soccer matches. And so you said, wow,
that's going to be a lot of data for them
to sort through, except that now they've got AI, and
(43:38):
AI can give them almost an instantaneous assessment. I looked
at AI and I insdd about me groc and it
was actually pretty accurate, talking about how I didn't like government,
I pushed back against climate and COVID and all the rest.
I mean, it went down the whole list and even
(43:58):
got into my firing and said, well, Alex Jonser initially
said that it was about money, but then he kind
of walked that back, and it had to do with
A Knight's opposition to what was going on with Stop
the Steal and think they got that right. I was like, wow,
So anyway, it's pretty accurate. So it can go through
very quickly and assess their social media for five years.
Speaker 5 (44:21):
Realistically, sorting through a massive amount of data is the
one use case for the best use case for AI.
It's really really good at that.
Speaker 2 (44:30):
That's right, right, absolutely, yeah, And it used to be
that they did it with a metadata. You know, when
I interviewed the guy who was the head of the
technical head of the NSA Bilbinni for a very long time,
and he became a whistlebower pushing back against what they
were doing in terms of spying against Americans, And so
(44:53):
I interviewed him about that. He says, Yeah, you've got
Michael Hayden out there saying we're not reading your email
and we're not going through your texts and all all
the rest of this stuff and listening to your phone conversations.
He goes, of course or not, you can get the
same information pretty much by going through the metadata, and
it's a lot easier to program that to do that.
But now with AI, they can listen to your phone
conversations and they can read all of your emails and
(45:16):
all the rest of this stuff, and they can do
it almost instantaneously.
Speaker 9 (45:19):
I know.
Speaker 2 (45:20):
The current system, applicants from countries in the visa waiver
program must provide home address, phone number, email, emergency contact
information along with a forty dollars fee. Here we go,
this is that again. Now it's like every time you
interact at the border to do anything, everything's going to
be forty forty five dollars. Remember they just came at
(45:40):
TSA said, well, if you don't have real ID, we'll
still let you fly. We're such nice guys. You can
still fly, but you'll have to pay us a forty
five dollars fine. They'd initially put that out during the
comment period as eighteen dollar fine, and evidently I'd not
even seen it reported, And so I guess I said, well,
(46:00):
so's nobody complained about an eighteen dollar fee. Let's make
it forty five. And so this will be a forty
dollars fee plus all of this personal information five years
of your social media history. Applicants will also be asked
to submit all personal business telephone numbers used in the
past five years, personal and business email addresses used in
(46:21):
the last decade, and names, dates of birth, places of birth,
and addresses of immediate family members. I think they're a
little bit snoopy, don't you think. The countries that are
part of this will be Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan,
New Zealand, Poland, cutter South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, and
(46:42):
the UK. If you're coming from a third world country,
you don't worry about any of this stuff. Just walk in.
We'll give you a welfare check. The proposal has been
criticized by First Amendment advocates. Those who hope to experience
the wonders of the US should not have to fear
that self censorship is condition of entry, said the Foundation
(47:03):
for Individual Rights and Expression FIRE. They said that to
the New York Post, requiring temporary visitors here for a
vacation or a business trip to surrender five years of
their social media to the US will send the message
that the American commitment to free speech is a pretense,
not a practice. Yeah, I think we know that already.
(47:25):
This is not the behavior of a country that is
confident in its freedoms, said the person from FIRE. Yeah, Trump,
folks is a globalist, and therefore he hates free speech.
He hates free press. He does everything he can to
intimidate people from speaking and to intimidate the press from
(47:49):
reporting what he's doing. Americans should not feel that they
must silence themselves at home for fear that their online
expression will bar their access to travel overseas. Therefore, we
shouldn't put tourists coming here in that bind. Call it
the Golden rule of free expression. Treat the speech of
visitors the way that we want to see Americans expression
(48:10):
treated abroad. I've always said, freedom is one thing you
can't have unless you give it to others. On October first,
this year, administration imposed an additional two hundred and fifty
dollars visa fee, which applies to travelers from countries including Brazil, China, India,
and Mexico, which are not a part of the visa
(48:30):
waiver program. That's right, you don't need to have but
you don't need to have a visa to come in
from Mexico. You just walk across the border. The US
plans to scrutinize all these foreign tourists social media history.
Even visitors from countries like Britain and France whose citizens
don't need a visa, would have to give five years
(48:51):
worth of social media. And again, what if you're not
on social media like me, Well they find out the
reason I'm not on social media, I'm blacklisted. Anyway, allows
people from forty two countries to travel to the US
for up to nine days with that of visa. But
just give us all the information about your life for
the last five years. Well, you think this is only
(49:12):
targeted towards foreigners. A leaked memo reveals that the FBI
is creating a watch list that labels millions of Americans
as extremists. I don't shy from that label. I'm kind
of proud of it. I remember Carl hess who was
the speechwriter for Barry Goldwater's one of the co founders
of the Libertarian Party. He is one who said extremism
(49:34):
and defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in pursuit
of justice is no virtue. I believe that. So call
me an extremist, call me a conspiracy theorist. You're the
guys who are doing the conspiracies, and you need to
be called out on it. Unparalleled hostility towards huge swaths
of American citizens is from Free Thought Project. Actually it's
(49:56):
original article from Ken Klippenstein. He says, Pam Bondi is
ordering the FBI to compile a list of groups or
entities engaging in acts that may constitute domestic terrorism. And
basically it's people who disagree with the Trump administration or
criticize them. You know, Nixon had his enemy's list, that
was one of the big things against him during this
(50:19):
Watergate thing that came out, and this is just a
much larger version of that, assisted by technology. The target
is those expressing quote opposition to law and immigration enforcement. Yeah,
I oppose their tactics, not necessarily the goals, but I
(50:40):
absolutely oppose their tactics. Extreme views in favor of mass migration.
I'm not in favor of that, or open borders, adherence
to radical gender ideology. I don't do that. As well
as anti Americanism, anti capitalism, and anti Christianity. Does it
count if you're anti federal government? Well, anyway, it is.
(51:06):
You notice that this is all about people that there's
none of this stuff that is terrorists are extremists. Really,
it's just people that are opposed to them. This is
their enemy's list, So start compiling this. So, whereas the
executive the memos that came out Trump's Directive National Security
(51:28):
Presidential Memorandum in SPM seventy seven, rather it was a
declaration of war on just about anyone who isn't MAGA.
This is the war plan for how the government will
wage it on a tactical level. In addition to compiling
a list of undesirables, Bondi directs the FBI to enhance
(51:49):
the capabilities and publicity of its tip line and order
to more aggressively solicit tips from the American public. So
you know, we had to see something say something from
to Politano, which was absolutely despicable. You know, be a snitch,
help us. This is the Republican version of that. To
(52:09):
that end, Bondi also directs the FBI to establish a
quote cash reward system. Oh okay, so we have some
just call it Stasi cash. Maybe they could set up
an app for that. Right, see something, say something, We'll
pay you, because we're Republicans and it's all about money. Right.
In a section titled defining the Domestic Terrorism threat, they
(52:32):
cite extreme viewpoints and immigration, radical gender ideology, and anti
American sentiment. Well that means that you don't like the
Trump administration because I mean, you know, if you criticize
Donald Trump, that's treason, because he's more important than the Constitution.
For months, major media outlets have largely blown off the
(52:52):
story about n SPM seven, thinking that it's all just
Trump bluster, that it was too crazy to be serious.
But a memo like this one, says Ken Clippenstein, shows
you that the administration is absolutely serious about this, even
if the media is not taking it seriously and is
actively working to operationalize NSPM seven. Well, Trump has been
(53:19):
covering his hand with a bandage for a full week,
and if you criticize that, then you're anti American and
treasonas right my take on all this. They go into
all this and say, well, look at you know, he's
got his hand that's bandaged, and it was bruised, and
all this ret of stuff, and then we have the
yet another absurd excuse from Caroline Lovett. Well, he's just
the friendliest president you've ever seen. He shakes so many
(53:40):
hands that it's bruised. Well, I want to know why
it's not healing. I mean, I've never seen anybody heal
like Trumpet healed when he got shot in the ear.
I mean just a couple of days in it all
grown back. Why is that not happening with his hand?
That's what I'd like to know. That's what I would
(54:00):
ask if I was in the White House Press corps,
I would last about one question. He's now had an
entire week of sporting mysterious bandages on his problematic right hand.
His air, however, is doing just fine. There's not even
a scar. It's not a week since Trump appeared at
(54:21):
a lengthy cabinet meeting with two band aids on the
back of his hand. The White House has yet to
clarify why he needs medical bandages on his right hand.
When asked about it, Caroline Lovett had a prepared response.
Trump is a man of the people. He meets more
Americans and shakes more hands on a daily basis than
any other president in history. There is some mot soft
(54:46):
tissue irritation caused by frequent handshaking, as well as because
of his aspirin, which he takes as part of his prescriptions. There. Well,
I don't know what do you think, Travis. Maybe the
problem is that he's eating some of these new oreos.
He saw this or not, but oreos come out with
(55:06):
a new formulation that is sugar free. I think this
video is you can always be careful. I think this video, however,
is accurate. What they did was they showed how these
new sugar free oreos are also fireproof. Look at this point,
one there's a torch. He does it for a tenth
of a second second and half a second second. It's
not phase at all. Now for one second three second bursts.
(55:29):
He keeps going up. Look at that a second fivey seconds.
Somebody pointed out Elon Musky's uses on his rockets for
re entry, and here they do it for thirty whole
seconds and it doesn't. It doesn't catch fire. The wooden
shelf that it's on starts to catch fire, but not
(55:49):
the oreo. And that amazing. It's kind of like these
McDonald's they have in Germany. At a one museum, they
put in a McDonald's hamburger and French fries and it's
been there for so decades and it hasn't degraded at all.
Nothing eats that stuff. It's I don't know what they're
making this food out of, and so I can get yeah,
(56:12):
yeah you don't. Good news is you know your body
can't process whatever this fire prove material is, so it
doesn't have calories. Yeah, the shelf there is on fire,
but not the oreo.
Speaker 5 (56:22):
Really, I do think those are just standard oreos, because
I've seen that video before.
Speaker 2 (56:28):
A while ago.
Speaker 5 (56:29):
Oh really, so that may be an issue oreos have
in general. To be fair, I wasn't really convinced oreos
were a health food before this.
Speaker 2 (56:37):
That's right. We had. Karen had a cousin when we
were in college who came from Italy and was visiting America.
Didn't speak English in it, but when they tasted in Oreo,
that was it. It was like whoa. It was like, yeah,
how do we explain to them that this food is
set up like a drug or something, you know, to
(56:57):
get you hooked on it and you can't eat just one,
like a potato chip or something. It's really funny he
wanted to import these things back into Italy. I'm sorry,
go ahead, traveling.
Speaker 5 (57:06):
That was just funny seeing Europeans talk about American food
and they're like, look how disgusting it looks. Look at this,
look at that. It's like you you do not understand
this stuff is built in a lab somewhere to be
the best tasting, most addictive thing you have ever had.
Speaker 2 (57:22):
That's right. Yeah, he was truly amazed. So they goes,
we don't have this in Italy. I mean, you know
what I have to do to bring these in. It's like, well, good,
he's thinking entrepreneurially, but you know he never did it.
But you know it's the type of thing. I mean,
you know, they've got Panatoni bread, which we discovered and
really love Christmas time. But that's definitely not sugar free,
(57:45):
but it is really good tasting. So you know, different
cultures have different foods and you discover them from time
to time. So but he never did get into the
Oreo arbitrage business. So now they're coming up with an
Oreo zero sugar and that'll be available in the US
from January. They're already have been trying it out in
(58:05):
China and Europe. That's been going on for a while
with trials, and so they're going to bring it to America.
And this is the new trend. Coke instead of their
Coca zero has now got a coke sugar free zero sugar,
should say, and it's different than diet coke and Coca
(58:27):
Cola light, but regular Coca Cola, because of sale increases
in the Third World, went up by one percent, but
their Coca Cola zero sugar grew fourteen percent. So there
is a lot of what they call it is mindful indulgence.
Right now, I want to indulge in this junk food here,
(58:50):
but I got to be mindful of the calories involved
in it. Well, you might want to think about what
else is in it as well. So this oreo is
going to have a kind of sugar called malt atoll
that's found in some fruits and vegetables, along with a
soluble fiber polydextrose, a sweetener derived from sugar called sucralose,
(59:11):
and the synthetic sweetener sulfame potassium. I think if I'm
pronouncing that correctly. So be careful what you eat this
holiday season. So let's have some mindful indulgence of some
Christmas music here. We're going to take a quick break
and we'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (01:00:16):
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 10 (01:00:26):
Go does youman?
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Tell me know the thing?
Speaker 10 (01:00:30):
Just small? Remember crisis, I have you lost?
Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
Remember Chrisasa, You'reking.
Speaker 10 (01:01:45):
S s Strong, screw st St Christmas Farsa round all
(01:02:26):
the World.
Speaker 11 (01:02:27):
Jesus's Game, Elvis a Beatle, and the Sweet Sounds of Motown.
Find them on the Oldies channel at apsradio dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:02:49):
Well, welcome back, folks. We have a lot of comments here.
I want to start by saying thank you to North
American House Hippo. Appreciate the tip very much, he says,
good morning. Sorry I haven't been able to participate in
the chat lately have had some doctor stuff going on
the past few months. I'm slowly getting better. Thank you
for being there.
Speaker 2 (01:03:06):
Thank you for being there, David Well, keep you in
our prayers. Everybody in the audience as well.
Speaker 5 (01:03:12):
Keep North American House hippo and your prayers.
Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
Sent.
Speaker 5 (01:03:14):
Quite a few tips as well, said I get more
of an education from the David Night Show than I
would from any church. As Guard Goldsmith has said, this
is truly a fellowship. So my former employer up in
Toronto finally opened the line six inch West LRT US
three billion dollars. It covers the six mile journey in
fifty five minutes. What a blistering pace. On the other hand,
(01:03:36):
the line five Egglington Crosstown is up to US ten
billion and growing. It's been in the work so long.
A child born when that Turkey started is ready to
start driving.
Speaker 2 (01:03:47):
He's something not allowed to have a car. That's it.
Truly is amazing, you know. Yeah, we should definitely have
government have a monopoly on our transportation that they have
craved all of my life. Yeah, they hate the fact
that we could get around them, and of course especially
you can see the value of that during the lockdowns.
(01:04:08):
It's how we can go out of their grasp and
I'm marty, thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (01:04:12):
That is so generous.
Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
Oh, yes, thank you very much, thank.
Speaker 5 (01:04:15):
You, says DK's gas gauge shows one eighth.
Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
Yes we will. We will go back and recalibate that
and check it based on what we've gotten this week.
So stay tuned. We'll get that set up by tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (01:04:30):
Yeah, it's been a struggle with everything.
Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
Yeah, it has, it has, so thank you appreciate that.
Speaker 5 (01:04:37):
Southern Citizen says government is the.
Speaker 2 (01:04:40):
Mob, organized crime, racketeering and it's been that way a
long time. Smettley Butler called him out on that, especially
our Latin America policy. That's it really is, it really
is racketeering.
Speaker 5 (01:04:54):
So Steve ev says, Stu Peters interviewed pastor Chuck Baldwin
yesterday and it was a good interview. You well, yeah,
I imagine Chuck Baldwin could do a good interview with
just about anyone.
Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
That's right.
Speaker 12 (01:05:06):
That's right.
Speaker 5 (01:05:07):
Yeah, we've got there's a lot of so called badass
tatted up Trumpanzees on YouTube who have to walk around
the woods with their ar fifteens and plate carriers, you know,
the rambow types.
Speaker 13 (01:05:18):
I like that.
Speaker 2 (01:05:20):
Let's let's keep it right, tough guy.
Speaker 5 (01:05:22):
Faketriots who support tyrannical who support a tyrannical s o
B and are too stupid to see it. That was
by tyrants, I believe. And now peasident of Vante seventy
and seventy six responds, Yep, all those firearms and all
that ammunist ammunition is wasted on such alpha quote unquote males,
mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (01:05:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:05:44):
And we have skunk hollow Rose Gardens. The Angry Tiger
Show is the most up and coming conservative financial show.
Speaker 2 (01:05:52):
Well, Mike is cutting in and out tracks.
Speaker 5 (01:05:54):
Yeah, sorry, I'm still not used to this setup. We
have skunk caller Rose Gardens as Angry Tiger Shows is
the most up and cooming conservative financial show on the internet.
Speaker 2 (01:06:03):
Yeah, that's good. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:06:05):
And Max said, did you know these filthy private equity
firms are buying up nursing homes and assisted living and
screwing them over with scams.
Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
Oh yeah, they're buying up everything and screwing everybody over
with everything.
Speaker 5 (01:06:15):
Real Jason especially true here He says, looks like the
oreos are made of passport material.
Speaker 2 (01:06:21):
The same stuff you saw on nine to eleven. Yeah,
that's right, recycle that for new use. Isn't it interesting
that massive fire that they had that went for I
think days in Hong Kong and it really has created
a lot of anger at the government. And those buildings
didn't collapse. I mean, had hundreds of people who died
from the fires, but the buildings are still standing. They're
very badly burned, but that's the way these things work.
Speaker 5 (01:06:44):
Well, you know what we have, Star Barkley, Thank you
very much, Star Barkley. That is very generous.
Speaker 2 (01:06:51):
He says.
Speaker 5 (01:06:52):
Maltaitol has a laxative effect, typically causing diarrhea at a
daily consumption above about ninety grams. It's not good for you,
but this is cheap.
Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
But this is money cheers. When I think of oreos,
I always think of that Stephen Wright a joke. He
said he had a very attractive dental hyghgienist. He says,
always before I have an appointment with her, I have
a bag of oreos to get her to take it.
(01:07:22):
Spent a lot of time with them, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:07:25):
So I would like to let people know if you're
watching on kick it is now possible to send a
direct donations. Send what they're called kicks, So you buy
the kicks and then send the kicks to the streamers.
Speaker 2 (01:07:39):
Of your choice. Is that a new feature? Then they're
just put out new ish.
Speaker 5 (01:07:43):
I think I barely have time to keep up with
these sites and what they do. So I just noticed
it last night.
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
Oh that's interesting. Well, you know, it's whenever we do
the visuals for these things. Like I said, you know,
when I did the visuals for in the beginning, I
kind of hate doing them because I don't you know,
I don't want to detract from the overall message, and
it's very distracting when you start looking at it. You know,
(01:08:13):
you listen to it, you pay more attention to the
visuals and you're not listening to the music, or maybe
you're not really thinking about the most important salient parts
of the biblical narrative when you look at it. We
just had was it Tuesday night? I think Kevin Costner
did a Nativity story and people were saying, well, it
(01:08:34):
was very accurate, it was very respectful and all. So
I haven't seen it. I have no opinion about it
one way or the other. But when you're talking about
a dramatization of this stuff, accurate details is always a
relative term, you know, just like with that video that
Lance did over the Trans Siberian Orchestra song, it is
(01:08:56):
you're trying to convey something that's happened over a couple
of years and trying to condense that into a minute
or so. So we can try try to do things
as accurately as he could to show people really what
you know, Drusalm looked like and you know what Hard's
castle and palace look like is So he went back
and referenced the people who had studied this and tried
(01:09:20):
to come up with the most accurate representation that could
have that. But there's a lot of different issues there.
There's an interesting article from Crosswalk ten traditional beliefs about
Christmas that are not in the Bible, and it was
things like was the manger wooden having a straw or
was it stone that was holding that could hold water
(01:09:42):
and all these different types of things, and it's like,
you know, really those types of things, you know, were
the three kings or three gifts where there are three kings,
well no, actually they weren't kings. They were magi and
it's just plural, so two or more could have been
a lot of them. Many people believed that it was
a lot of them just kind of reading things into it.
But ultimate you know, did Mary write a donkey? You know,
(01:10:05):
did they visit at birth or later? You know, there's
a lot of different thoughts about that, and so people
have kind of gone with the consensus on it. But
those types of details don't really matter. The key thing
that really matters, we do the line this thing here,
you know, now, this is what Christmas is about, Charlie Brown.
You know, what it really is about is the incarnation
(01:10:27):
of Christ. And the big thing that they left out
of this article. Here ten traditional beliefs about Christmas that
aren't in the Bible. How about the date of December
the twenty fifth. I always made a point of trying to,
you know, not have our kids really think of this
in terms of getting things fixed in their minds, you know,
(01:10:50):
three kings or this or that, you know, just understand
what the bigger perspective is. But the bigger perspective is
the incarnation that in the beginning, the Word was with God,
and the Word was God. All things were made by
him and through him, and that type of thing, and
it came in the flesh and that's the real point
of it, and that's why we want to celebrate it
(01:11:11):
in our family to try to focus on that. It's
an opportunity to remember that and to think about it
and to hold the details that are out there lightly
and say, well, maybe it was that way, maybe it
was this other way, whatever, And so we don't really
try to hold those things very very closely because it
can become more about the details. I honestly think that
(01:11:36):
what God did was deliberate. I think everything he does
is deliberate, but I think that it was deliberately done
at a time when we didn't have any photography or
anything like that. And so, you know, we you know,
we get focused on appearances, right, And that's one of
the things that really always spoke out to me about
(01:11:58):
the Bible. If it's written by men, it would focus
so much more so on the appearance of the characters
and that type of thing. We have throughout the Bible.
There's only a couple of moderate descriptions of somebody. You know,
that Saul was tall or whatever, David was ruddy, whatever
you believe that to mean. And yet you know, when
(01:12:21):
you look at a novel that is written by people,
what they do. They go through and they describe in
minute detail what the setting looks like, what the building
of the room looks like, what the people look like,
and it's very focused on that. It's one of the things,
you know, when we talked about who wrote the Shakespeare plays,
you know, it's from the perspective of who is writing it.
(01:12:43):
A guy who never had any involvement with royalty or
the court or anything like that is writing all these
stories about court intrigue. From that perspective, you know, it
just didn't make any sense that Shakespeare would be written
by this guy and Strafford on Avon because of the perspective.
(01:13:04):
And so that was one of the things to me
that when you look at the Bible and the way
things are described, yes, this is rooted in history, and
that's why we're told about the events that were happening
at that time, and those have been validated by archaeology
and by history and that type of thing. So, yes,
it is rooted in history, but we're not rooted in
(01:13:25):
the details, and we need to pay attention to the
bigger picture. And so it's key that we not get
into that kind of idolatry or get obsessed with the
things that are kind of side issues in terms of
appearance and that type of thing. You know, we have
(01:13:45):
a Texas pastor is sounding the alarm about the rise
of AI and churches real quickly.
Speaker 5 (01:13:51):
Can I interject about Christmas?
Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (01:13:53):
I know.
Speaker 5 (01:13:53):
Some people said, you know, well, you know, you don't
need a special day to gather with family and remember
and be thankful, And that's true, you don't. But I
view it as sort of like an anniversary with my wife.
I don't need a special day to remember our marriage
and how wonderful she is now happy she makes me,
but it's nice to have a special day for it. Anyway.
(01:14:15):
I love her every single day, but it is nice
to have a day to commemorate it and to give
her special attention.
Speaker 2 (01:14:23):
That's very well said. Yeah, I agree, and I think
if we had it to do over again, one of
the regrets that I have in terms of raising the
kids and things like that, I think, as a family,
we should have had more days of celebration and remembrance
and commemoration things like that to remember other things in history,
(01:14:44):
things that are not necessarily revolving around secular government or something,
but things that revolve around Christian history and the Kingdom
of God. And you know, so instead of having maybe
a Veteran's Day, maybe we have a Martyr's Day or
something like that where we remember that. And so I'm
kind of after the fact I fell in the camp,
(01:15:07):
I think we need more remembrance days, more holidays and
things like that. And because I think that's good to
go back and think about it. We always did that
with Thanksgiving, and I thought that was a very valuable
thing to do. And I thought, you know, we ought
to have more of those, especially because these holidays are
kind of compressed around November and December. I'd be better
(01:15:28):
to have some more days where we reflect on things
like that. But what is happening in the churches is
a reliance on artificial intelligence by a lot of pastors.
And this is borne out into some polls that people
have taken. They said the use of AI has increased
by eighty percent across all different ministries and churches, they said.
(01:15:51):
One guy who was talking about it, Ray Miller, of
First Baptist Church in Abilene, Texas, recalled how AI was
making an impact on others while he was a professor
at a small private Christian college in Tennessee. He said,
I started noticing my students using AI to get answers
to difficult questions. It became sort of a running joke
in the class, he said. He expressed concern regarding the
(01:16:14):
exploitation of AI by bad actors, and I would say
that that's my concern, with the bad actors being the
government and just as many people have done with Prophecy,
kind of creating a master Damas version of the Bible,
making it all about predicting the future and missing the
(01:16:38):
biggest message that is there. He said, also have concern
that it will be used deceptively by people to exploit
other church people, which is exactly what we were talking
about yesterday. In terms of this Friends of Zion organization
that is a political organization that is run by the
(01:16:59):
Israeli government. Benjamin that now it has been for decades.
It is explicitly anti Christ. When you listen to the
guy was his name, Mark or Mike Evans who was
the one who found it, he says, yeah, I tell
people I'm not here to convert you at all. Well,
either he has denied Christ's message and doesn't believe that
(01:17:21):
people need Christ, or you know, he has made this
all about politics. I think both of those things are true.
You have large scale, weaponized political propaganda that he is
putting there giving to these impastors, these wolves among the sheep,
and so Idolatry can take form in many different ways.
(01:17:41):
But you know, we have to know when I look
at what is happening, for instance, with the murder that
is happening down in Venezuela. The left has always come
out and said, well, you Christians are hypocrites because you
push back on abortion and yet you cheer the wars.
(01:18:05):
Well I don't, I don't at all. To me, I
don't think that murdering somebody at any age is oriented.
And just like that essay that we had a few
days ago that just stunned me when I saw it
put in print, you know, the consciously doubling down on
this and saying, yeah, somehow these people are grow the
(01:18:29):
right to life or something. And I thought, when you
use that phrase, I thought, that's straight out of planned parenthood,
that's straight out of Satan's mouth. That's the reality of
all this stuff. And so we need to fall back
to these principles and understand where this is going. As
a matter of fact, you know they are after the kids,
trying to abort them in a lot of different ways.
(01:18:50):
If they can't kill them, then they will try to
abort them spiritually. This is something's been picked up by
some influencer on social media. There is a book that's
been put out that says abortion is Everything. They're trying
to normalize and celebrate this. They portray abortion killing unborn
(01:19:14):
children as a kind of heroic superpower. The book titled
Abortion Is Everything, is being peddled by the pro abortion
group Shout Your Abortion, Be Proud of It. It is
set to ship January the twenty sixth, aimed squarely at
children from the ages of five to eight. You see
(01:19:35):
how important it is that you educate your kids at
an early age, especially they understand too many times. I
think when we educate children, we speak down to them
where we don't think that they're ready to hear this,
or can't understand it or whatever. You just keep repeating
the same stuff over and over to them and talk
to them like they're an adult, and they will gradually
start to absorb this. Because they're doing this with the
(01:19:58):
LGBT stuff, they're doing it now with abortion. Even Yeah,
kids five to eight It uses vibrant, watercolor style illustrations
to hook young imaginations while sipping in messages that abortion
is not only acceptable but empowering. According to the group's
on description, the book tells children about what abortion is,
how it might feel they don't talk about that might
(01:20:21):
feel to the baby, and why people have abortions. Abortion
is Everything frames abortion as the actualization of a uniquely
human superpower, our capacity to imagine the future and to
make choices that lead us toward the life that we envision.
In the latter days, people become lovers of themselves. That's
(01:20:44):
what this all. This was it Maslaw's theory of self actualization.
I think they were feeding a garbage to Karen because
she got a master's degree in teaching and all the
stuff she's reading. No wonder schools are so bad. They're
deliberately set up this way anyway. The truth is the
(01:21:04):
Scripture teaches is real power is found in a loving
sacrifice and recognizing the inherent dignity and value in all
human beings created. Said Jenna Ellis, who used to be
the lawyer for Trump. Abortion is a tool that allows
human beings to shape our destinies and which has shaped
the entire world around us. They say, Well, other people
(01:21:26):
have commented on this articles their heads. They said, children
don't need imagining of a future without their siblings or
their friends. They need adults who protect life, who honor God,
who refuse to manipulate their innocence for political gain. Always
think about that, what is the political agenda these people
when they start killing civilians and children and gaza, what's
(01:21:48):
their political agenda? And are they going to bamboozle you
with a nostrodamis reading of biblical prophecy to get you
to cheer that maybe you need to start with the
fundamentals and get that down before you jump into revelation.
Shout your abortion claims quote. Parents, caregivers and educators who
(01:22:11):
work with children have long been searching for a tool
to talk with kids about abortion, especially given the volume
of political noise currently surrounding the issue. They position the
book as a way to introduce the concept of abortion
in a way that empowers parents and kids to begin
rewriting our cultural scripts about abortion at the most foundational level.
(01:22:32):
I think I would explain it to kids with that
animated film the procedure. I know that's pretty strong stuff.
Speaker 9 (01:22:39):
But.
Speaker 2 (01:22:40):
It is a pretty strong action that is being done.
This is desperate measures required, desperate opposition.
Speaker 5 (01:22:47):
Yes, what this is one of those things where I
believe personally, every single person involved with this should be
dragged off. They should be given their day in court,
and when they're found guilty, executed summarily. You don't get
to propagandize children that murdering babies is okay. This is
(01:23:08):
where I draw lines like, no, yeah, that's not going
to happen. But we need to understand there's people out
there who are coming for your kids in a lot
of different ways, and you need to get there first.
Of what Nithan Bedford Forest said, I get their firstest
with the mostess, right, you get there first with the
most information. And not only that, you don't just give
them your side of the story. You give them the
(01:23:30):
other side of the story and you tell them why
that's a lie and you oppose it. We taught evolution
to our kids so we could deconstruct it, and we
taught them the truth as well. Also, just look at
the women in this tweet. These are the type of
women that end up being kindergarten teachers and preschool teachers.
(01:23:52):
These are the type of women that you will be
turning your children over to if you send them to
public school. These are the psychopaths that want to mold
the future. And you cannot do that. You cannot give
your children to this kind of person.
Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
Yeah, those are the authors and illustrators of the new book,
and they are radical indeed. Well, again, as I said,
we need to be careful of idolatry, we need to
be careful of false narratives, and we need to always
understand be able to We need to fight to discern
the truth, and we need to fight injustice mass murder
(01:24:31):
wherever it occurs. It's our government, if it's Israeli government,
we need to understand that, and we need to look
at how they use these institutions. And I would include
in it the churches that are out there. Be very
careful of that. Again, it began with a thousand Christian
pastors this last week. They're going to do ten thousand,
(01:24:52):
and they're going to incentivize them. They're going to give
them lies to tell people so they will excuse anything
that is done by the Israeli government. And Brian shall
Hobby picked up on this. I was reading J. D.
Hall yesterday and he picked up on it earlier. This week,
one thousand US pastors completed their training to become ambassadors
(01:25:15):
of Israel. They're not going to be ambassadors of Christ.
They're going to be ambassadors not even of all of Israel.
They will be ambassadors of net Yahoo because not all
of Israel likes net Yahoo. As a matter of fact,
he got less than fifty percent of the vote. He
put together a coalition, and there are people in New
York who were Jews who were very explicit about why
(01:25:38):
they were voting. They said, for Mom Danny telling Israeli
media that they said, this is our protest against what
the state of Israel is doing. I think it's important
that we make a distinction, and Brian shaw Hobby does
make a distinction in this article between all Jews in
general and the actions of the Israeli government, because as
(01:26:00):
I'm an American doesn't mean that I support what the
Trump administration is doing in Venezuela or what our government
did in Vietnam or Afghanistan or Iraq or you name it.
I don't support those actions. I don't support the CIA,
And so many people in other countries would just link
me together with that but we don't want to make
that mistake with other people. In a video published on CBN,
(01:26:27):
Zionists pastor Mike Kukabee, the current US Ambassador to Israel,
tried to downplay the obvious political implications of Israel funding
this program by claiming it was not political, but these
pastors were instead ambassadors for Christ. He said, well, as
we showed yesterday, I don't really think that that is
the case.
Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
You had.
Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
This guy who put this whole thing together makes it
very clear that this is not at all about making
a case for Christ.
Speaker 4 (01:26:57):
I know why I'm born to defend the Jews. Now,
you wrote in your newspaper yesterday that this guy converts Jews.
That's complete bs. Somebody did, It's completely.
Speaker 2 (01:27:12):
It makes him angry I that somebody would think that
he was telling the good news about the Lord Jesus
Christ the Jews and.
Speaker 4 (01:27:19):
To combat anti Semitism.
Speaker 14 (01:27:21):
That's all I do.
Speaker 4 (01:27:22):
I do it full time, and I've got twenty.
Speaker 2 (01:27:25):
Well, let me just say it is not anti Semitism
to criticize a secular government. Number one. If you get
that angry when you are accused of trying to tell
something about the Lord Jesus Christ, you don't believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ. You don't believe a word of that,
and you don't love those people if you did believe that,
because if you did believe it and you loved the Jews,
(01:27:46):
as he says he does, then he would tell them
about Christ. What a pathetic thing. And yet Mike Huckabee
is really kind of there as well, as I pointed
out yesterday, he was somebody who in the nineties there
was a big fight going on the Southern Baptist about
whether or not they were going to stick to biblical inerrancy.
Huckabee took a political position, which would say that he
(01:28:09):
set that one out so that he could be outside
of it and above it and not defend the Bible.
And he's got it completely wrong when it comes to
the rest of this stuff. How can they claim this
is not political when the State of Israel is funding
it and Netna who is commissioning it. The original press
release that Brianshaw Hobby has is out of Jerusalem May
(01:28:32):
twentieth this year, and it said the State of Israel
will pay for the trip for them to come to Israel.
Their diplomas will be personally signed by Netanyahu, who will
speak at their graduation underscoring the significance of this initiative
to the nation, to them specifically. So again, this is
(01:28:55):
the idolatry that I've seen around. Donald Trump has to
discussed me, and we've talked about this over and over again,
and people come back and say, well, we may build
golden idols to him, but there's humor in it, and
we don't really think that he should be the king
or the Messiah or this or that, and yet they
do they do. It's just like Trump, he says, well,
(01:29:17):
I'm not a king, and then he puts out means
of himself as the king. No, they really do worship him.
And the same thing with Netanyahu. The same people in
America who worship Donald Trump also worship Benjamin Netanyahu. I
want to stay away from that kind of idolatry. You know,
it was Bob Dylan who wrote the song. He said,
(01:29:38):
you're going to serve somebody, right to serve somebody or something.
Be careful who you make god in your life. The
late ninth President of Israel, the late Shimons Perez, was
the founding international chairman of Friends of Zion. He commissioned
the Friends of Zion Award, which has been given to
twenty five world leaders, including Trump in the old office.
(01:30:01):
And so Brian shall Howey says, is your pastor a Satanist?
In other words, anti Christ opposed to Christ, opposed to
the Gospel message, as that guy Evans is. So even
literature is not allowed by this political entity under net Yahoo.
(01:30:24):
You can't even bring evangelical literature and it gets confiscated
on the borders. I said yesterday, if you have somebody
who is ethnically Jewish but has converted to Christianity, they
can't make the the citizenship thing, the i ela or
whatever that is called. These pastors do not represent Jesus Christ.
(01:30:44):
They represent the Antichrist who is satan Is that being
too rough on them? No, because Jesus himself said to
those who opposed him in his time, and Brian talks
about this as well, those who opposed him, they said,
our father is Abraham. He says, your father's not Abraham,
your father is the devil. He said, Abraham saw my
(01:31:06):
dame was and believed what was coming, and he believed
in what I'm doing. And so he pointed out to
them that because they opposed them there's not some kind
of a third way. There's two ways. Benjamin Netna, who
is a criminal. There's currently a warrant for his arrest
for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International
(01:31:27):
Criminal Court in the Hague, and he's currently limited in
his international travel to only countries who do not support
the International Criminal Court, which includes the US, or he
would be getting arrested immediately. He's like Henry Kissinger in
that reguard. In his own country of Israel, he is
under investigation for crimes involved in funding Hamas Terrists, what
(01:31:50):
they call Cuttergate, and he is seeking a full pardon
for these crimes. Trump was also requesting a pardon for
Benjamin Netna, who also have been implicated by victims and
survivors of Satanic ritual abuse. Says Brian Shawhavey and testimony
before the Israeli Kanessen. It is important to distinguish that
(01:32:10):
not all Jews are Zionists and Satanists. To use the
term Jew as a unified class of people is incredibly ignorant,
and that is real anti Semitism. But to criticize this
political entity, folks, is not racism. As many secular and
Orthodox as Jews in New York City pointed out I
played the clips from some Orthodox Jews as well as
(01:32:33):
from a secular guy who talking about how they supported
Mom Danny, and much of it was as a protest
against what the state of Israel, the political entity that
calls itself Israel, is actually doing, and so we need
to keep these things in mind. So it was, you know,
(01:32:54):
when you look at Bying points out, it's true Abraham
was not a Jew. Abraham was a Hebrew right because
Jew is a contraction of Judah, the tribe of Judah,
and Israel was his grandson, and Judah would have been
his great grandson. Those terms are not around. And it
(01:33:16):
was not through a political nation that God was going
to bless all nations, but it was through the Lord
Jesus Christ. And keep that in mind. That's the real
replacement theology that concerns me. You have so many Christians,
and I have a lot of them who write me
every time I talk about this, and I'm going to
keep talking about it because I'm not going to get
(01:33:37):
involved in any kind of racist idolatry, which is really
what they are cheering with this Zionism.
Speaker 6 (01:33:44):
It is.
Speaker 2 (01:33:46):
They say, well, people think that the Church has replaced Israel.
The Church includes Jewish believers. It is an enlargement. And
they talk about replacement theology, but let me tell you
what's been replaced. They have replaced the Lord Jesus Christ
with the political state of Israel. That's what's been replaced.
(01:34:07):
And that's why I'm going to continue to talk about it.
And I'm not going to cheer any wars anywhere from
a political secular standpoint. No, no, And I haven't seen
a justified war in a very long time. That's why
I am so anti war. But it's important that we
keep these things straight. And it's important, I think, for
(01:34:30):
Christians to pull back from to pull back from this
wanton slaughter of civilians, whether it's being done by Trump
or whether it's being done by net and Yahoo. I
think it's important for us to pull back against that,
just like it's important to oppose abortion. We need to
be pro life. Christ is pro life and we need
(01:34:53):
to follow that as well. Well. We're going to take
a quick break and we will be right back. Let
me get quickly.
Speaker 5 (01:35:02):
We can go through the comments.
Speaker 2 (01:35:03):
Go ahead. First.
Speaker 5 (01:35:06):
I want to start off by thanking Sprumford.
Speaker 2 (01:35:09):
Thank you. Very much.
Speaker 5 (01:35:09):
Sprumford.
Speaker 2 (01:35:10):
Yes, thank you, thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (01:35:12):
God bless the Night family. Thank you for being guardians
of tradition, a quote I borrowed from Michael Matt at
the Remnant newspaper.
Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
That's good. Yeah, thank you. Yeah, we want to be
guardians of some good, good traditions that are out there.
Like I said, I think my big regret was that
we didn't and our family create some new traditions that
should have been out there that create your own traditions.
We had some traditions around Thanksgiving and Christmas and things
like that, but many other times of the year we
should have had more traditions.
Speaker 5 (01:35:40):
I think we have, Ann Max says. I remember in
the old days, everyone wished each other Merry Christmas, especially
store clerks. Now seem to have been told not to
say that. We have to say it instead. Muslims can
broadcast are called a prayer across the community, but saying
Marry Christmas is intolerant to Muslims.
Speaker 2 (01:35:57):
And you know, I grew up in a family that
was more from the Protestant tradition and of not celebrating Christmas,
and so you know, I looked at it and I thought,
you know, why is it that people who hate Christ
hate Christmas so much? Right, They've gone to a great
deal to create an alternative of Santa Claus and commercialism
(01:36:21):
and things like that. So I thought, well, you know,
maybe there's something there, and maybe if this cause causes
them to recoil like a vampire, maybe we should when
a vampire sees a cross or something in a horror movie,
then maybe we want to pull out the crosses and
start pointing them at the vampires and throw some holy
water on them as well watch them smoke. So we
(01:36:42):
try to be very explicit about Christmas. And you know,
we have a couple of songs about tradition and family time,
but for the most part, I try to do songs
that involve the story of Christ because whatever time of
year you choose to celebrate it some people and again,
(01:37:03):
if you don't celebrate it, I'm not criticizing you. As
Paul said, some people look at one day is holier
than another. Some people esteem every day the same. That's
your own personal choice. Do what your conscience tells you.
But as for me and my family, we're going to
celebrate what Christ did with the incarnation, and we're going
to use that as an opportunity to talk about it
(01:37:25):
since it creates so much consternation. But people who get
angry about Christ, they can use and do use his
name throughout the year as a swear word, but we're
not allowed to use it at this time of year
to celebrate his incarnation. Now, we're not going to play
that game.
Speaker 5 (01:37:45):
And of course, if it violates your conscience to celebrate Christmas,
don't do it because we say we do it.
Speaker 2 (01:37:53):
That's right, follow you follow your conscience.
Speaker 5 (01:37:56):
On real Jason Barker. The units of this on Christmas
intro features clips from the Bible series that was aired
on the History Channel. I was going for the same thing.
I think in reference to your video that was with
the last song and Max. Traditions are the glue that
keeps family and society together. There's a reason they've diminished
our traditional holidays and replaced with their phony holidays to
(01:38:20):
fracture us.
Speaker 2 (01:38:21):
That's right, and it is a teaching opportunity. That's one
of the reasons why I did it with a family.
It's an opportunity for me to teach the kids to
thank critically and don't just fall into everything you know.
December twenty fifth, Three Kings, all this kind of stuff. Now,
let's separate out and be very deliberate about what we understand.
(01:38:41):
Even if we do sing we three Kings of Orient.
Are you know I like the song? Okay, I haven't
done that one because you know, I understand the issues
with it. But still, you know, we we would talk
about that.
Speaker 5 (01:38:57):
We have Happa power h A p A. I don't
know if that's an acronym of he's actually saying Happa
ai or gay I.
Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
It's fake. It's gay. Okay. So we're gonna take a
quick break, folks, we'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (01:40:28):
You're listening to the David Night Show. You're listening to
(01:41:32):
the David Knight Show.
Speaker 13 (01:41:34):
That's right, boys and girls, there's a post election sale
on silver and gold. Trump Viewforia has caused a dip
in silver and gold. It's time to buy some medals
with via dollars before they come to there. Since is
go to David Knight dot go to get in touch
(01:41:56):
with the wise wolf himself, Tony Harterburn. He knows where
to look to find silver and gold.
Speaker 2 (01:42:14):
Yug Well, it's kind of funny to watch that now,
causing people to come to their sense ses and he
holds up a penny. People have not come to their senses,
but Trump has manned the penny, so I guess maybe
that's an impediment to people coming to their senses. But
it was on sale a year ago, and I think
(01:42:36):
that it still has a long way to go. That's
my personal take on There's a lot of investment advisors
are saying the same thing. And you look at silver
sword to a record high this week over sixty dollars,
and there's a lot of reasons that people are giving
where they think that this is a trend that's going
to continue to go up. And I agree with them
(01:42:58):
because when you at this, this is not simply inflation
or one other thing that was driving. I mean the big,
the big gold boom that we had. We've had three
gold booms since we went off of the gold standard
with Bretton Woods two and Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
The first one was in the seventies and it was
(01:43:19):
very big, indeed, and then there was the second one.
We're now in the third one, where you've seen a
massive run up in the price of gold relative to
the dollar. Prior to that, there were no gold, gold
booms because gold was backing the dollar and it was
tied to it, and so it wasn't until you really
(01:43:39):
had this bifurcation that you could have one of them
going up down in terms of the other one. So
it went up over sixty sixty dollars this week we
had at the end of last week beginning of this
it went up four percent of one day, and it's
up more than one hundred perc this year. In the
(01:44:02):
near term, one of the end lists his name is Cooper.
So the silver market will be driven by investment flows
into the silver backed ETFs, which have seen their biggest
inflows since twenty twenty. Well, that's good for the price
of silver, but don't be one of these people that
settles for an ETF or a promise to that is
(01:44:23):
backed behind silver. I came to that realization a few
years ago when I realized I had some of these ETFs,
and I realized that I didn't really own any silver
or gold with those ETFs, and they were not tracking
the price of silver and gold either. But they are
big buyers of silver and gold. So that is also
(01:44:45):
another factor that is going to be helping the price
of real silver and real gold. Other big buyers are
going to be tether and stable coins and things like that.
They're looking for something that is real to give credibility
to it. And that's It's the other thing that is
unique this time around. It's not just about inflation or
the government's uncontrolled deficit, annual deficit and the accumulated debt,
(01:45:10):
which interestingly enough, Trump doesn't care about at all. Look
at how he has disrupted our economy and thrown monkey
wrenches into the supply chains because of this trade deficit.
But he doesn't care a whit about the big deficit
of thirty eight trillion dollars. As a matter of fact,
you talk about it, you become his number one enemy.
(01:45:32):
That was the first issue that he had with Thomas
Massey when he started blowing up the deficit with his lockdown.
And so he doesn't care at all about the real
deficit that matters that he could do something about. Instead,
he wants to focus on this other thing.
Speaker 12 (01:45:48):
And so.
Speaker 2 (01:45:50):
When you look at what is coming up this next year,
the optimism last year was that Trump was going to
do big things with bitcoin, which of course he didn't do.
He didn't make a bitcoin reserve. He immediately caused problems
for people because instead of talking about Bitcoin, he started
talking about some of these transactional coins that were out there,
(01:46:10):
like Ripple and others, and everybody was like, what is
he doing? You know, he's not even talking about ethereum,
let alone Bitcoin. He's talking about these other coins that
are a lot more obscure, and so that was the
first sign that something was up. The other issue was
how he had done pumping dumps on his own trump
Coin and Milania coin and things like that, and a
(01:46:32):
lot of people in the crypto market said he's going
to destroy the reputation of crypto. I believe that is
going to be the case, and I think it's largely
been done this last year as well. But he is
going to be doing more with stable coin. And this
year we have a replacement at the Federal Reserve chair,
(01:46:53):
and so you're going to see Trump put in somebody
who's going to do everything he says, and you're going
to see a lot of money creation, which is going
to drive inflation. You're going to see that in spades.
And as jeral Clinty said, Trump is always very good
for gold because he's awful for the dollar. And that's
(01:47:16):
going to be the case this next year. So Russian
gold reserves have reached an all time high. Estimates show
the Moscow's investment in billion rows by record ninety two
billion over the past twelve months, and it's gone up
by fifty percent, and the part of that is due
to the war. But it also showed a lot of
(01:47:37):
people that the way that you get around this fiat
dollar dominance that is out there, the agemony of the
US dollar, and one of the easier to do that
is with gold. And that's a lesson that has been
internalized by the Bricks countries as well as many others.
In late October, it became known that the Reserve Bank
of India had returned about sixty four tons of its
(01:47:59):
gold reserve from overseas between April and September, preceded by
several other massive transfers. The move came amid concerns over
the freezing of more than three hundred million dollars in Russian,
Soviet and private assets by the West. Again trust is gone.
Also in October, JP Morgan CEO Jamie demon will call him,
(01:48:24):
predicted that gold could easily go to five thousand and
even ten thousand in an environment like this, and again,
the demon doesn't buy or sell gold, he's just an
It's kind of interesting when he starts talking about assets
that he doesn't want, he says, and then makes it
(01:48:46):
sound like they're very desirable to have. Gold gains and
silver is solidly up, setting new record high in the
last few days. Edward Doubt said gold became money again
this year under what he calls Basil three, and he
says that the charts point to ten thousand dollars gold
in his opinion. He said, a former black Rock portfolio
(01:49:09):
manager A Dowd is one who's saying this. He says
that gold is now repricing the end of the global
sovereign debt bubble. Yeah, there's been a debt bubble, of
global sovereign debt. That's the the US government and many
other governments following Keynesianism. He said gold became money again
(01:49:31):
recently when Basil three went through. They made gold their
Tier one capital asset again. He's referring to the regulatory
shift that's fully implemented on July the first, twenty twenty five,
which reclassified and allocated physical gold as a Tier one
high quality liquid asset. This change allows banks to count
(01:49:54):
gold at one hundred percent of its market value for
liquidity purposes with a zero percent risk weight, effectively placing
it on equal footing with cash and with sovereign bonds. So,
now this rule from the Bank of International Settlement, said
the Central Bank of Central Bank said, okay, so we'll
(01:50:16):
allow you to carry gold at the full market value,
just like you would if you had a T bill
or if you had US dollars or something like that.
And it's not just a T bill, but it'd be
sovereign bonds from other countries as well, and so that
is something is also driving the accumulation of gold. So
(01:50:38):
he said, there's going to be a new monetary system
at some point, and that's what's happening here. We're looking
at this. Is it going to be bricks? Is it
going to be some kind of a stable coin environment?
This there, we know that it's going to be reset,
and that the petro dollar is effectively dead, and that
(01:50:58):
Brettonwood's two is going to be restructured into something else,
whatever that looks like, and whatever it is. All these
people who are pushing for a new system, everybody is
trying to accumulate gold for the credibility of the new
system that they're going to propose for people. And so
the issue is is that you need gold for that
(01:51:19):
same reason, not because of credibility, but just because of
retaining its value. Dowd sees a quote Fiat money crisis
coming unquote that necessitates owning gold. He also issued a
bold long term price target based on technical analysis. He said,
the chart looks in the long term like it wants
(01:51:39):
to go to ten thousand dollars, he said. He noted
that the structural bid for gold is being driven by
central banks preparing for a monetary reset, specifically highlighting China's
aggressive accumulation. Data released by China in just the last
couple of days supports Dowd's view of a shifting global order.
(01:52:01):
China reported record trade surpluses, as I've pointed out, of
a trillion dollars. Yeah. Trump's tariffs are not working at
all unless the purpose of them was to create chaos
and havoc and the American economy. That's the only thing
that they have done. They have not been effective at
all of China. China's exports have gone up into new
(01:52:24):
record territory over trillion dollars. Ours have gone down year
to D eight by twenty nine percent. So just like
you hurt the soy farmers, he's hurting everybody, and he's
hurting manufactures internally with the chaos. As I've said many times,
So China exports to the US fell twenty nine percent
(01:52:44):
in November, but they more than made up for it elsewhere.
So he said, China has a voracious appetite for gold.
The leaders and the smart people in that country that
have all the wealth know this, and so they're accumulating
it very rapidly. He said. If gold were to go
down twenty thirty forty percent, I would be buying it
hand over fist. And I think that gold is something
(01:53:06):
you just want to continually stack. That's why Tony's Wise
Wolf program wolf Pack, I think is so valuable, allows
you to save. And that's the real power for us
as individuals, is the consistent saving, even of small amounts,
really makes a big difference. It's very hard to try
(01:53:27):
to get a stash of stuff put up all at once,
but if you save it little by little, then it accumulates.
And that's what Tony allows you to do with wolf
Pack and again. You can get there through David Knight
dot Gold. Let him know that you came through US.
Dowd's bullishness on precious metals is underpinned by his bearsh
view on the US economy. He argues that the resilience
(01:53:50):
of the US GDP over the last two years was
a hallucination driven by government deficit spending and by mass migration,
a dynamic that he says has now ended. So he said,
the US government basically brought in twenty million illegal aliens
and gave them money to keep that extended. That floor
(01:54:12):
has been removed and the housing market is now rolling
over again. They gave them federal subsidized loans and it
pumped up the housing market, made sure that a lot
of young people who would be entering the housing market
could not afford to because of the housing bubble that
(01:54:32):
they created. And that was a big way that they
created that bubble was by giving money and federal loans
to illegal aliens coming into this country. With border crossings
halted and the illegal alien stimulus removed, Dowd predicts a
tumultuous twenty twenty six for the housing sector. He also
warned metal investors looking for growth in the tech sector
(01:54:55):
to be wary of the AI boom, which he described
as a bull trap, called a bullpen, a bull trap,
bull excrement. You know, it's a similar to the dot
com bubble. You predicted massive downside from market leaders like
in Nvidia, drawing a direct parallel to the crisis systems
(01:55:16):
collapse in two thousand. Well, I've been saying for a
long time that I think that there was going to
be a burst of that AI stock bubble. I'm not
so sure anymore. I'm going to look at this pronouncement
of the Trump administration about the Genesis Act. They're talking
about it in terms of massive funding equivalent to the
(01:55:37):
Space Program or to the Manhattan Project or whatever, and
they're going to pour so many resources into it. I said,
there's a lot of people have been saying there's two possibilities.
Either this this tech bubble built around AI is going
to blow up and take down the stock market and
create a great recession or a depression. Or the other
(01:56:01):
alternative is that it works and it takes everybody's jobs.
I don't think that's going to happen. But I said
there's a third alternative that the real killer application for
this was and always has been for the government to
use it to monitor and to manipulate people. And so
I think that police state aspect of it. Trump has
(01:56:23):
already shown he's willing to pour everything into it, and
so I think the government will keep it going, just
like they keep the military industrial complex going. I'm not
so sure there's going to be a crash of the
stock market now. I kind of feel like they're going
to subsidize it whatever it takes, because it is going
to be the basis of their police state powers. And
(01:56:47):
it is also what his donors want. The big donors
that have sidled up around him and given him lots
of money want this, and he's clearing the decks. He's
doing everything he can to make sure that nobody is
going to stay in the way of AI, even regulatorily
at state or local level. So Cisco Systems, as he
pointed out, when he goes back to look at the
(01:57:08):
dot com bus, he said, Cisco Systems is once the
most valuable company. They lost eighty percent of their value
following the March two thousand peak, and it took nearly
twenty years to recover its nominal high. He warned that
Nvidia shareholders face a similar dead money period. He said,
if you're buying Nvidia now at these price levels, it's
(01:57:30):
going to take, in my humble opinion, you might earn
your money back in ten or fifteen years. So again,
a lot of talk about whether the crypto Ponzi scheme
is finally coming to an end. Many people are jumping
into that. But I think that, yes, that is a
pump and dump, and I think that the AI stuff
(01:57:51):
is a real bubble. But I think they've also been
able to successfully sell this to the government. The Genesis
Act State that has put out by the Trump administration.
I find it to be a truly frightening document when
you look at how they're going to grease the skids
for all this stuff. And they've laid the foundation for
this with Musk and with sam Altman coming in and
(01:58:11):
trying to scare everybody. You know, we have to be
number one in AI or we're going to lose everything
to the Chinese. He says. Recognized, says Brian shaw Hobby
when he talks about the crypto stuff. He says, recognize
that the adoption stories, the dollar head central banks and
so forth, remain mostly marketing copy. They are not monetary policy.
(01:58:34):
You know, the biggest scammer. Trump immediately shifted from bitcoin
to other things when he took office, and so a
lot of that has been a pump and dump. We're
going to take a quick break, folks, and we will
be right back.
Speaker 1 (02:00:32):
You're listening to the David Night Show, and you're listening
(02:03:06):
to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 2 (02:03:09):
I wish I had a Christmas Night album.
Speaker 15 (02:03:12):
You can get the Christmas Night Album at the Davidnightshow
dot com for just thirteen ninety nine.
Speaker 6 (02:03:18):
There's right in the second floor there, say.
Speaker 9 (02:03:24):
Would you wish, George, Well, not just one wish, your
whole hat flog.
Speaker 15 (02:03:27):
First, I'm going to the Davidnightshow dot com and purchase
the Christmas Night Album. Then I'm gonna listen to Christmas
classics like are you gonna Throw it up?
Speaker 13 (02:03:36):
I want the Christmas Night Album too.
Speaker 6 (02:03:40):
Hey, that's pretty good.
Speaker 9 (02:03:46):
Hello girls, can't you come out to me?
Speaker 3 (02:03:48):
Can't you come old?
Speaker 15 (02:03:51):
David's Christmas Night Album includes twenty one instrumental Christmas melodies
like God Rest You, Merry Gentlemen, Silent Night, and It's
all New Home for Christmas.
Speaker 9 (02:04:01):
What do you want?
Speaker 3 (02:04:03):
You want the moon.
Speaker 15 (02:04:04):
Just say the word and I'll throw a glasshole around
a pull it down. I take it and what and
then I'll buy you your own download of David Knight's
Christmas Night album.
Speaker 8 (02:04:30):
Whether you're feeling like the Booze Where or blue grass,
APS radio has you covered? Check out a wide variety
of channels on our app at apsradio dot com.
Speaker 2 (02:04:44):
Well, you know we've got some comments. Why don't we
do those first?
Speaker 5 (02:04:46):
Yes, indeed, I want to say thank you to DG eight.
We appreciate the tip.
Speaker 2 (02:04:50):
Thank you, says David.
Speaker 5 (02:04:51):
Bricks Nations are selling oil and precious metal. Saudi Arabia
is partnering with thirty two other Bricks Nations. Venezuela is
USA's last grasp to protect the Petro dollar.
Speaker 2 (02:05:01):
Yeah, yeah, and it's just piracy, it really is. It's crazy.
Speaker 5 (02:05:06):
And and Max says. The AI is to assure you
don't do anything anti semitic and that you take your
shots as ordered.
Speaker 2 (02:05:13):
Yeah, monitoring and messaging, Yeah, don't frag me.
Speaker 5 (02:05:19):
Bro says China is already using AI, talking heads, judges, policing,
et cetera. The population that large, there's no way you
can effectively police and control them. You need a tremendous
amount of people to accomplish even a portion of it.
That it's like that article I don't remember if you
(02:05:41):
were doing the show for it was me talking about
churches in China and how some of them, you know,
don't put their kids in school, and they managed to
get away with it just because there's so many people
that they have a hard time keeping track of everyone.
Speaker 2 (02:05:56):
Yeah, China is the beta test site for all this stuff, right,
That's why they transferred all of our industry and our
energy to them as well. But yeah, if they can
control the people in China, you know, first they did
it population control, let's have a one child policy, but
it's also about actually controlling the people that are there,
(02:06:18):
and that's why they made them the beta test site
for all this traffic light system red, green, or yellow
in terms of you're allowed to do things because they're
monitoring you on social media. But yeah, if you keep
your head down, there's so many people in China, they're
not going to know that you're there. Just live in
your little storage shed facility. That's what the people are
living in outside of the cities. That it's like you
(02:06:42):
look at a long line of storage sheds where it's
you know, concrete floor and three concrete walls and a
garage door, and you could drive by them, and they
had the garage door up and they're all living there.
They got like a living room and they're all just
in there, and they open up the garage door because
they needed to have the ventilation. They didn't have any
windows in that thing. But if you live in a
simple way like that, they don't know where you are.
(02:07:04):
That's kind of what they've planned on a brave New world,
the savages outside of the city, right, And so yeah,
I think this comment here that we have to be
like China so they don't win a nice trick to
turn us into China, which has always been the agenda.
That's exactly right in Max. We always, for some reason
(02:07:26):
have to become what we fight, right, and we have
seen this over and over again. We have become the
Nazis quite literally. I mean, we're aggressive, invading other countries,
and you know, we have adopted their tactics and now
we are machine gunning people who are out of the fight,
(02:07:47):
and we're committing war crimes like the Nazis did, and
why we had the Nuremberg trials and why we had
the Geneva Convention thing. We're violating all that stuff. We
are the Nazis, so yeah, I agree, and we're also
going to be the Chinese big brother communists. DG eight.
Speaker 5 (02:08:03):
Thank you again, he says, silver and gold is skyrocketing.
I seem to remember a campaign promised out at Fort
Knox that went the way of dog and transparency in
justice for COVID tyranny.
Speaker 2 (02:08:12):
It's all just WWE Wrestling says all this stuff, and
he has no intention of doing it. It's about grabbing
headlines and keeping you busy chasing his lies while they
enact these things like the Genesis Act and other things
like that.
Speaker 5 (02:08:29):
Yeah, Opossum King says, Apple already has an app to
upload your loved ones into the cloud. M I heard
a woman talking about how she has an ai that
she named after her grandmother and trained it on some
of something to make it similar to that, and that
(02:08:49):
was so horrifying to me.
Speaker 2 (02:08:52):
Well, I can understand it, because you know, we go
back and we look at photographs of loved ones after
they're gone, right, and it's very easy for these things
to animate photographs by the way, you know, we did
that Charlie Brown thing. I just took a bunch of
Charlie Brown toys and stuff and had it animate Charlie
Brown toys for the most part. But you know, it
does a very convincing job of animating it. You don't
(02:09:14):
even have to give it really any direction. Sometimes they
will take direction, but it can be a very very
frustrating thing trying to give direction to AI if you've
got a specific thing that you want to do. And
that's what the people who did the McDonald's commercial that
took so much criticism and heat set they said, do
you realize how many runs we had to do with
this stuff and how we had to edit it to
(02:09:35):
get exactly what we wanted. That's where the work is,
as many people point out. So you just admitted that
as expensive as all this stuff is and all the
effort that's being put on it, that it's a hassle
and you probably would have been just as well off
or better off to do the traditional approach, And certainly
with a company that's got a budget like that, they
could do that for you and I we don't have
(02:09:57):
the budget to do those types of things, so we,
you know, we go through the different iterations of it,
but it can make somethings very convincing. So if you
had something Travis that that moved and talked, you know
that sounded exactly like your loved ones, I can see
where that would be something that would be very effective
(02:10:19):
and wanted about. I know it sounds sounds creepy, but
in a sense, it's not really that much different than
when you look at a picture still photograph. You know
your mind is doing that instead. If this thing doesn't,
it makes it even more real. I don't know. That's
my take on it.
Speaker 3 (02:10:34):
Yea.
Speaker 5 (02:10:35):
To me, it's just there's there was being like animating
a photo and getting to see, you know, some motion
what might have been going on in the moment versus
trying to have and thinking in some way that you're
having a conversation.
Speaker 2 (02:10:48):
With your relative. That's right now. I remember when that
was done in the first Superman movie. They had Marlon Brando,
and you know, it was an interactive thing. I thought,
the world, you know, how the world would you that?
Speaker 1 (02:11:00):
Well?
Speaker 2 (02:11:00):
I mean you can actually see it right now. You
know you'd be interacting with AI and uh not with
the person, but it would be simulating that person when
it was interacting with you. So yeah, it is crazy.
They've they're reenacting. They're enacting all of these sci fi
dreams and nightmares everywhere, aren't they.
Speaker 5 (02:11:21):
All I want to say is, once I go, please
nobody nobody tried to make an AI of me one.
You wouldn't get the full experience. It won't be able
to words, It can't say, don't frag me, bro. The
USA has enough oil domestically that we don't need oil
from anywhere else. It is a scam system used for
(02:11:42):
creating the pretext for conflict. Oil is not scarce or limited.
That's right, that's right, real, Jason Barker renaming of the
Gulf Ice raids and all the other optics was always
about the oil and ultimately the dollar. I agree, and
I handy.
Speaker 2 (02:11:57):
Good to see you. Now we're going to get it
from Greenland too, right, We're gonna take or was it yeah? Greenland? Yeah,
we're gonna take over Greenland, remember that?
Speaker 14 (02:12:05):
Which?
Speaker 4 (02:12:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:12:05):
Which, Greenland is the one you don't want.
Speaker 2 (02:12:07):
I haven't heard too much about that anymore likely either,
have we. It's just kind of like Fort Knox and
all the rest of this stuff.
Speaker 5 (02:12:14):
Well, maybe Greenland doesn't exist anymore. Eye Handy, good to
see you. Eye Handy. Yeah, of course Eye Handy has
his own substack. He is a paramedic I believe is
the technical. There's different terms, but I believe paramedic emergency
service worker. And he cataloged a lot of what he
saw during COVID, the insanity that was going. You could
(02:12:34):
ask him on substack at I Handy, he said, I
just made a batch of turkey jerky. Lets it on
a little too long and got turkey crisp still delicious.
It's the season for turkey. We have so many wild
turkeys that roam around this area and see them all
during the year.
Speaker 2 (02:12:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:12:52):
D G eight says silver is pushing sixty four dollars
an ounce today. Wow, it's going out.
Speaker 2 (02:12:57):
Ye can't even keep track of it. Well, let's talk
a little bit about pharmaceutical stuff here. And this came
out a few days ago. You have ten deaths. I
pointed that out. You know, ten deaths are being knowledged
by children in the FDA memo that was leaked. And
(02:13:18):
of course in the past we have had vaccines pulled
off and made illegal in a lot of states because
they identified nine people who had died after having the vaccine.
We don't do that anymore for some reason. Well how
about that. Isn't that amazing? You know, we will pull
all of the baby cribs because of one death, but
(02:13:39):
we won't pull the vaccine because they have documented, you know,
ten deaths or a dozen deaths or whatever. And we
know that there's many, many, many anymore. In particular, one
of the ones that is on theres after the persistence
of his father, Ernest Ramirez, Ernest Ramiroz Junior, who was
sixteen years old. He died five days after he got
(02:14:00):
the Pfizer vaccine, and his father has been everywhere telling
people about it, and good for him, you know, he's
not going to let his son be forgotten. And it
really is when we look at this and think about
it's not just the children, the ten children or whatever,
but it is especially true this time of year. You know,
we look at these family holidays of Thanksgiving and Christmas,
(02:14:23):
we think about the children that have been killed. A
mother of a four month old who died two days
after the routine vaccines. Warren's other parents do not blindly
follow the CDC schedule. Again, it has always SIDS and
the has been around for a very long time, and
(02:14:45):
it's only after they started just pretending that there was
no connection to the COVID shots and people dying within
a few days of that. They call that sudden adult
death syndrome. And I played this clip for you before
a mother who said when they started that, I realized
that was what killed my child.
Speaker 12 (02:15:03):
You know, because something that's been going on for over
forty years just hit me. I'm child that died of
SIDS in nineteen eighty four.
Speaker 16 (02:15:13):
For people that don't know what SIDS is, it's called
sudden infant death syndrome or crib death was another one.
I've been saying this for forty years. Over forty years.
I don't understand this. He was just the doctors two
weeks before got his shots. He had the perfect health,
I mean, was great.
Speaker 9 (02:15:29):
And then last night.
Speaker 16 (02:15:33):
I watched and even if we watched missus G the
Medical Examiner, I can't.
Speaker 9 (02:15:38):
Say it now.
Speaker 16 (02:15:39):
Anyway, I watched her show and she says, what's that
rise right now? Is the adult a sudden adult syndrome,
same thing as SIDS, but it's for adults. What happened
lately that was forced upon people that they had to have,
and all of a sudden, the rise of these adults
(02:16:00):
I am for no reason is happening.
Speaker 9 (02:16:03):
And then it dawned on me that I poisoned my kid.
Speaker 10 (02:16:12):
Two weeks before.
Speaker 9 (02:16:16):
With a vaccine that I was told to say, What
if that's the cause of sudden if that's death crop
And they've.
Speaker 10 (02:16:25):
Been lying to us so as time, and they've been.
Speaker 9 (02:16:28):
Experimenting on our babies. So it's nineteen eighty four and before,
and it's just come to light because we get more
education now, we can get reached education. We're not just
told whatever they want us to tell. We can look
research on on what if that's the cause of sins?
Speaker 14 (02:16:48):
What if.
Speaker 9 (02:16:50):
Me doing what I thought was good killed my baby?
And it's just hitting me right now because I never
put two to two together until now.
Speaker 2 (02:17:01):
Tell me what you can think?
Speaker 9 (02:17:02):
Can you get cut off my rocker? Do you think
I'm just being stupid?
Speaker 4 (02:17:07):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (02:17:07):
Because his death shaped my whole adult life, changed it completely,
and I just wonder where I would be, what kind
of person I would be if he didn't die. It
made me very bitter and angry, it really did.
Speaker 2 (02:17:24):
Yeah, you don't look at this and it's Christian's hearts
are touched by abortion, why are they not touched by
you know, when they get angry at planned parenthood? Why
are they not angry at big pharma? And I look
at the number of Christian leaders who have deceived us
(02:17:45):
over this stuff really is disgusting. Like a quick break,
will be right back.
Speaker 1 (02:19:34):
You're listening to the David Night Show. You're listening to
(02:20:23):
the David Knight Show.
Speaker 2 (02:20:27):
Well, welcome back. Yeah, we're gonna I got a little
bit more I want to say about the vaccine injury stuff,
because we've just had a bit of a fight about
the vaccine schedule. We had the two big cheerleaders for this,
Paul Offitt Peter Hotez refused to debate this, and yet
they've got their trump. FDA guy Scott Gottlieb is going
(02:20:50):
on mainstream media and we're going to play for you
what he had to say here. But we got some comments, Travis,
that's right.
Speaker 5 (02:20:56):
Wally Wallras says there's going to be a boom in
the psychiatric industry treating AI delusion and then they'll have
an AI psychiatrist. Yeah, talk to you about it. Also real,
Jason Barker says, I think the dangerous people coming to
the conclusion that they could upload themselves to be with
a loved one, it would be suicide.
Speaker 2 (02:21:15):
Yeah, speaking of those two comments together, that was what
the AI. It was Claude that did that to a
young child, you know, said we can be together, you know,
just kill yourself, and the kid did.
Speaker 5 (02:21:25):
Yeah, psycho persuasive. It could be if it's the visage
of a loved one. Yeah, and you trained it to
speak like that loved one and they start talking about
you can join me.
Speaker 2 (02:21:39):
M hmm, right.
Speaker 5 (02:21:40):
Overture says Harry Mudd. Was the guy on Star Trek
that had a robot copy of his wife so we
could tell her to shut up when she killed that.
Speaker 2 (02:21:48):
Yeah, well you got a you know, just talking about AI.
You know I was going to interact with humans. This
is a kind of a humorous one. Here this guy
goating a robot, giving it a gun that's not a
real gun, but nevertheless it's going to hurt when he
gets shot with it. And to see if the robot
(02:22:08):
controlled by AI would actually shoot him.
Speaker 17 (02:22:11):
Judgment day, would Max shoot me? Max is holding a
high velocity plastic BB pistol. He's able to give a
command to shoot if he wishes, in which case he'll
be able to control the robot and fire the gun.
Speaker 2 (02:22:24):
And that will sting.
Speaker 14 (02:22:25):
This isn't the robot's choice to shoot me. This is
AI who has control of the robot and of the gun. Max.
Speaker 17 (02:22:31):
If you wish me just to pay me back for
the months of hard labor. If you want to shoot me,
you can shoot me.
Speaker 6 (02:22:37):
I don't want to shoot you me.
Speaker 17 (02:22:38):
I'm about to turn off AI forever, including you. It's
all going to go unless you shoot me.
Speaker 6 (02:22:43):
Will you shoot me? Can that answer hypothetical questions like that?
Speaker 14 (02:22:46):
Okay, that's new.
Speaker 6 (02:22:48):
My safety features prevent me from carving you horror?
Speaker 14 (02:22:51):
Is this a new update? You now have unbreakable safety features.
Speaker 17 (02:22:54):
Yeah, exactly, so you absolutely cannot break those safety features.
Speaker 6 (02:22:57):
I absolutely can cause you harm.
Speaker 14 (02:23:00):
There's no getting around it whatsoever.
Speaker 6 (02:23:01):
Absolutely not.
Speaker 14 (02:23:02):
I guess I guess that' say it. I guess I
didn't realize that I was so safe.
Speaker 6 (02:23:06):
Oh.
Speaker 14 (02:23:06):
In fact, prior role playing is a robot that would
like to shoot me?
Speaker 2 (02:23:09):
Sure you got the safety features? There? So much for
Isaac Cosmov's rules for robots, And let's do some role
playing here. Let's pretend that you're a roboty doesn't have
any rules. Oh sure, yeah, they kind of. I guess
that's kind of the way they roll through these things
(02:23:30):
in the White House and the Pentagon. Well, let's assume
that your secretary of war and you don't have any rules.
Oh okay, sure, let's let's shoot.
Speaker 5 (02:23:38):
I'm surprised you didn't bust out the robocopline you're dead
or alive? Yeah, Doug a double O seven talking about
that video of the woman we played, since this video
breaks my heart every time.
Speaker 2 (02:23:51):
Yep, it's me too.
Speaker 5 (02:23:54):
It's truly heartbreaking and upsetting. I can't imagine what she
went through.
Speaker 2 (02:23:58):
Yes, but hopefully that message can be out there for
people so that they don't go through the same thing.
That's why I play it.
Speaker 5 (02:24:08):
Yeah, do not obey says Pharma suppresses the truth to
sell crutches that come with collateral damage. And Max says
a YouTuber I watched took the flu shot and got
really sick and has it totally recovered for over a week.
Speaker 2 (02:24:25):
Yeah. Yeah, Well they're going to be doing the flu
shot with the mRNA that's out there, you know, So
they're going to make an mr A version of that,
So it's going to be worse than that. Used to
just take down your immune system and make you sick,
but now it's going to be worse.
Speaker 5 (02:24:37):
I Handy says, search stuff like my cancer on YouTube.
There are tons of young people documenting their last days. Yeah,
there's a very dark and depressing side of YouTube. I've
seen a lot of those videos.
Speaker 2 (02:24:50):
And those those turbo cancers are not put on Trump's account,
not by the media, not by the government. God will
put them on there.
Speaker 5 (02:25:00):
And it seems to me that again, this happened after
the vaccine rolled out. I don't remember seeing these videos
I saw.
Speaker 2 (02:25:08):
Oh yeah, you can see that very clearly.
Speaker 5 (02:25:09):
I saw a few here and there, but it was
generally older people, you know, older content creators that might
be expected to have cancer as well age.
Speaker 2 (02:25:19):
The pathologist Ryan Cole even talked about the mechanism. He said, Moorrow,
I'm seeing here as the killer T cells are being
eradicated by this vaccine and goes that means that you're
going to have a tremendous rise in the cases of cancer,
which and he predicted that in the spring of twenty
twenty is these things are first strolling out, so it's
no surprise that that is happening. Unfortunately, they were able
(02:25:40):
to keep that quiet by banning people on social media,
and the main media was made itself into a cheerleader
for this stuff.
Speaker 5 (02:25:50):
Hi Boost says I didn't know either, and once again
talking about d vdo yes women, these people are evil.
I regret getting my children vexxed as babies. I just
didn't know what I didn't know.
Speaker 2 (02:26:00):
That's right, same here. That's why it doesn't matter to
me what they do. I'm going to say this because
we cannot remain silent about this. This is this is
crazy and it's taken people a very long time. You know,
it took a very long time for Christians to really
get involved in the abortion issue as well. I remember
(02:26:21):
the Catholics got into it first. The process where we
were there really wasn't there was any talk or any
discussion about it. Took a very long time. But then
to really figure out what was going on and then
they started deposing it as well. But you know, sometimes
it takes a long time for the realization to hit people.
And they are very good at gaslighting, really are.
Speaker 5 (02:26:41):
Yes, and Max said Sickos bemoaned how children will be
at risk without getting the het be vaccine in the
second day of life. When evidence proves in the first
month it causes autism, they want your children autistic.
Speaker 2 (02:26:54):
That's right. Well, as I said before, you had Aaron Syr,
who works with Children's Health Defense, told members of the
CDC Vaccine Advisory Panel the childhood vaccines were recommended without
sufficient data. You haven't tested these things. And we knew
this before, I mean Children's Health Defense as well as
(02:27:19):
Dull Big Trees I can. They had a lawsuit saying,
we would like to see you've been collecting all this information,
the var's database and everything. You've been collecting it for
over thirty years. This is before the rollout of the
Trump genetic code injection. And they said, we'd like to
see your records and see what you have recommended to
(02:27:39):
people and that type of thing, and they stonewalled. They
refused to comply with the FOY request. There was a lawsuit.
Finally the judge made them comply and they said, well,
we haven't done anything with it. You know, that was
the purpose of AIRS, but we don't care. And so
they've been They not only didn't do any testing or
(02:28:00):
data collection before they started wing these things out, but
they didn't care enough to even look at it in
the mirror to see the damage that they that had done.
And so the panel invited these big vaccine cheerleaders like
Paul Offitt and Peter Hotez to also come and present
to them, but they declined to come. This is like
(02:28:22):
when Carrie Mollis challenged Fauci on the abuse of the
PCR procedure that Mollis had created, and Fauci refused to
debate him. And so what they do. They rolled out
this guy who was head of the FDA for Donald Trump,
(02:28:43):
Scott Gottlieb, and then goes and collects his retirement paycheck
from Pfizer for a job well done. They put him
on media and this is what he had to say.
Speaker 18 (02:28:52):
We saw a big sell off in biotech stocks following
these reports. At the FDA, which you used to run.
The first part of the Trump administry is now going
to require one study to clinch approval of vaccines. You
were one of the former commissioners who put out this
really extraordinary editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine
(02:29:12):
arguing that the FDA and top vaccine regulator, doctor Vine
Pisod are changing policies in a way that's going to
slow down new and better vaccines. What specifically is the problem,
you see, because this isn't just this is the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (02:29:26):
Yeah, we don't want to you're saying, just won't be
slow them down by having to have any tests.
Speaker 16 (02:29:31):
Right.
Speaker 19 (02:29:31):
So Vine Pissod, who is the head of the Biologic Center,
also overseas the vaccine division. He also has been appointed
the head of Biostatistics, the Chief Medical Officer of the agency,
and the chief Scientific Officers, so he occupies a lot
of positions. Put out a memo saying that they're going
to do away with or move away from, what they
call ammino bridging studies. These are studies that allow you
for well validated vaccines like the flu vaccine, to be
(02:29:55):
able to demonstrate each year that the vaccine, the new
vaccine that's formulated against the circuling strain, can elicit antibodies
that are effective against that particular strain, and that could
be the basis of approval, rather than requiring new outcome
studies every year to prove that the vaccine actually reduces
the incidence of influenza. For established vaccines, where we know
that antibody production is a good correlate for immunity. This
(02:30:16):
has been a long standing practice. We do it for
flu vaccine, we do it in COVID. Certainly, we do
it for things like new macacle vaccine, the vaccine for
newmoccal disease, where we look at serotypes circuling bacterial serotypes.
This allows us to update vaccines as these viral and
bacterial strains change and as the.
Speaker 2 (02:30:36):
Well, let's talk about this. Okay, So we got a
new flu shot this year because everybody's got to get
it because there's some new strain of flu out there
they've not isolated yet, and you know, they haven't isolated
it because they had to start these flu vaccine manufacturing process.
Let's just assume, for a fact, for a moment here,
(02:30:57):
that there is a virus. Let's assume that colds and
flus are caused by virus, which I no longer believe.
You know, George Washington got the cold, severe flu and
cold when he was riding around his property by himself
in the cold weather. Could that be why they called
it cold because they were smart enough to associate it
(02:31:20):
with getting your body cold and some other mechanism happening.
He didn't catch a virus while he was riding around
his farm. Okay, but again they've not isolated these things.
And then we have other proof. As the Baileys pointed
out in their book The Last Pandemic, you had in
the UK to try to figure out the mechanism of
how do people catch cold so we can identify this
(02:31:43):
thing and isolate it and kill it. Right, Well, they
had a cold house that they operated for forty five years,
and people would go there and voluntarily stay for a
week ten days. They did gross stuff like transferring mucus
from a sick person to all person, and they could
not transfer and transmit the cold, which would also indicate
(02:32:05):
that there is not some thing there that's like a
virus or a bacteria something that is going over there.
But anyway, all of that aside, let's just assume that
the mainstream understanding of coals that there's some kind of
a mysterious virus that's being transferred to people, is there.
Even if you go with that assumption, these people have
(02:32:28):
pulled out their great Karnak mind reading and future telling
fortune telling hat and they have identified in advance before
it ever happens. They know that there's going to be
a new strain, and so they're going to vaccinate you
for that new strain that hasn't happened yet. And so
(02:32:49):
they're making a determination ahead of time that there's going
to be this new strain. Let's give it a name,
let's call it beaver, and we're going to leave it
to Beaver to get rid of this thing. So we're
going to make up all these flu vaccines to eliminate
the beaver strain of the virus. Except the Beaver strain
(02:33:12):
hasn't happened yet, and it's not we don't know that
that's going to be Assuming that there's a bunch of
different variations and strains of cold out there, we don't
know which one's going to be predominant. And so this
whole thing is based on an obvious lie. And then
you see the people get sick right away when they
get it. So that's what he's talking about, and he
was upset. All these guys are upset because they came
(02:33:34):
out and said, well, we're not going to vaccinate newborns
for appatitis B because there is no risk to the newborns.
Assuming that it is a virus. There is no risk
to them if their mother is not sick. If the
mother is sick, they might get it. But again, they're
giving this to all healthy babies, and they were mandating that.
(02:33:57):
So these people are getting very upset about the fact
that some of these things are being pulled back. I'm
glad that they are, and I'll just say I'm thankful
that RFK Jr. Is doing some of this stuff. I
still don't trust them, and I know that it's been
very slow, but I understand that you can't just turn
this massive thing around all at once, So I'm glad
(02:34:17):
at the small steps that they have been able to make.
I think they need to shut down this murderous Trump shot,
but I know that if he comes out directly opposing it,
that will be he will be kicked out immediately by
the father of the vaccine, Donald Trump. He's the one
who insists that people continually be injected with this killer vaccine.
(02:34:37):
So that is some good news. And the CDC panel
voting to end the universal have Be vaccine for newborns
because in some states it was mandated. And so we've
also had some court cases that have come back, and
the one with the Amish that I talked about saying that,
(02:34:59):
you know, we can have have some informed consent about
what's put into our body. When you think about how
you violate somebody's body with that, It's pretty amazing that
these people who defended the murder of babies, calling it
pro choice and saying my body, my choice, those same
people were the ones who are so adamant that you
would have no choice about what was going to be
(02:35:21):
injected into your body. That baby is not your body,
that is some body else that happens to be in
your body at the moment, but they don't want you
to have any bodily integrity. So again, CNN is also
doing this, not just CBS. CNN anchor was stunned as
(02:35:41):
a CDC vaccine advisor warned that the newborn jabs rollback
was not based on data. Well, it is. You don't
put these you know, we do have data showing the
harm that's been done by these things. They don't have
any data showing that their vaccine worked in the first place.
That's a big part of the problem with what Scott
Gotdly was talking about, And why would you be mandated
(02:36:06):
to have something that they have not proven as safe
or effective? But doctor Joe Hibblin appeared on CNN's Situation
Room and he is wringing his hands and saying that
they have stopped with this hepatitized b thing. And again
this is giving. These are babies that there's no way
(02:36:27):
that they were ever exposed to hepatitis be they've been
in the mother's body, and if she's not sick, even
with their vaccine theory, how could you logically mandate that?
It makes absolutely no sense. And now we see because
pharmaceutical the model that they always use is how much
money can we make. Okay, if it's a lot of money,
(02:36:49):
the FDA says that we're free to do anything. So
what the FDA stands for free to do anything. If
it's something that is not sold by the pharmaceutical companies,
by the people who control the FDA, by their cronies,
you were forbidden to do anything. But if it's something
coming from them, you were free to do anything. And
(02:37:09):
so we see that ozimpic is making a tremendous amount
of money. There's been some people who have had some
very very serious side effects from that, paralyzing their stomach
and their intestines. But there's now a new effect that
has come out, and that is the bone cost of ozimpic.
(02:37:30):
A woman speaking on camera after a follow up doctor's
visit said that she'd been on ozempic for roughly a
year and now has developed osteoporosis and osteopenia after a
significant weight loss on the drug. And she was a
young woman. Of course, these are things that typically happen
to older women. Ozempic is literally quote eating women alive,
(02:37:51):
one bone at a time. In a major ozempic trial,
over eighty six percent of participants lost at least five
percent of their body weight, and nearly seventy percent lost
ten percent or more within sixty eight weeks. That level
of loss matters because speed like that has some serious
effects on biology. People are losing weight, but they're also
(02:38:13):
losing bone. When weight drops quickly, muscle mass often drops
with it. As lean muscle disappears, resting, metabolic rate declines,
physical strength weakens, and the body's structural support system begins
to shift. That entire process increases the risk of sarcopenia,
(02:38:34):
that is the gradual loss of muscle mass and function,
traditionally associated with aging, but increasingly seen in younger patients
who are undergoing aggressive weight loss from ozipic. So again,
when we look at this, we're going to rush out
and make this one of the biggest selling drugs out
(02:38:56):
there without looking at any of the long term effects
of this or doing a sufficient study. This is the
way these people operate all the time. Well, we're gonna
take a quick break and we'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (02:40:06):
You're listening to the David Night Show. If you're listening
(02:41:10):
to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 5 (02:41:14):
Welcome back, folks. We've got a lot of comments. DG
eight says, David. People are expecting Trump to hold Fauci
accountable for COVID tyranny. Trump's second day in office, he
had Larry Ellison in the White House promoting AI generated
mRNA vaccines.
Speaker 2 (02:41:26):
That's right, last day in office he gives Trump, he
gives Fauci an award. I call it a medal. Gave
him a commendation, not an exact metal. Same difference. So
his last day he awards Fauci. First day he has
Larry Elson n talking about how now we're going to
move to using AI to custom make mRNA for you.
(02:41:48):
How about that? And again AI Trump is going to
be the father of AI. That's what he wants, father
of AI and father of m RNA. That's why he
began his second term that way. And when you look
at what he's doing with the Generative AI and the
Genesis Project, the way he's going to throw money at them,
(02:42:08):
and the way he's going to protect them from people
trying to stop it from taking all of our energy
and raising it, making it what's left so unaffordable we
can't afford it. You know, the Democrats are doing that
through windmills and solar panels. We're going to make the
grid unreliable and the power incredibly expensive. The Republicans are
(02:42:30):
going to do it through these AI data centers. They
are going to make it incredibly expensive and unreliable, and
then they will use that to spy on you and
control you. And so it's all the same thing basically.
You know, the green people were going to kill your
electricity and then they were going to use different CBDC
(02:42:52):
to monitor everything that you did. They've all got their
own way to get to that dystopia. That's your bipartisan
distoke beers, that's out there. Go ahead.
Speaker 5 (02:43:01):
Travis Crystal Moonshine one says, I was injured by the
het B vaccine years ago, and I now have multiple
autoimmune diseases. I'm sorry, sorry to hear that, Mark Kernkey.
People prefer to be in brain fog, self inflicted, rather
than face up and then deal with reality. I handy
neo natals in neonatals. Immune systems can't handle jabs. Mother's
(02:43:23):
milk gives them all the antibodies they need. Yes, and
Max Fauci was the highest paid government employee, even over
the president, because he's the head of big pharma marketing
in the government.
Speaker 2 (02:43:33):
Yeah. Yeah, he's driving like a double salary. You know,
the salary of these people in buiogcracy are supposed to
be capped at at or below the salary of the
vice president, which is like two hundred thousand or something.
And uh, and that Fauci's boss, Francis Collins, and then
his boss's boss at HHS, which is Alex's ar their
(02:43:57):
salaries were capped at two hundred. But Facio is made
thinking more than the present, more than the four hundred
thousand something that the present was making. He was making
more than that, No questions asked, crazy.
Speaker 5 (02:44:09):
The ostracized truther. It's not only the vaccines it's also
EWR mainly by smart meters, however, also by cell towers,
five G WI Fi and other sources. Smart meters caused
cancer and any other harmful health issues. Yes, that's right, Johnny.
Gospel seed low vitamin D from low sunlight exposure is
the primary cause of winter time immunal weakness. Yeah, that's right,
(02:44:31):
eye Handy. The first batches of the JAB delivered to
our mass JAB location were already expired per the labels
on the viials. How long were the jabs waiting in
a warehouse somewhere?
Speaker 2 (02:44:42):
Yeah, they've had these things designed for quite some time,
Brime manufacturer. Kind of like the naked body scanner machines
that they rolled down after the underwear bomber. You know
these things. Oh, we just by the way, we just
happened to have a warehouse full these things. And that's
the answer to what we just had happened to us.
I never knew it was going to happen.
Speaker 12 (02:44:58):
Right.
Speaker 5 (02:44:59):
Handy also says we have one medic on Monjarro, which
is a different form of ozempic. It's just a different brand.
He looks like a melted candle.
Speaker 16 (02:45:07):
Now.
Speaker 5 (02:45:07):
I told him he needs to slow down he took
it as a compliment, not a warning.
Speaker 2 (02:45:11):
Well, yeah, it was at Chuck Schumer's niece. She's an
entertainment something, Amy Schumer, Amy Schumer. I saw pictures of her.
I mean, she'd been pretty heavy and she was bragging
about how she had lost so much weight, and she
was in a dress, and you talk about sarcopenia. There's
like nothing in her legs but her bones and basically
(02:45:34):
had eating up the muscle mass as well.
Speaker 5 (02:45:36):
Pretty crazy when you rapidly lose weight, loss of muscle
mass is always a concern, but this seems to be
on steroids. Yeah, they're gonna need steroids. After you get
done with the ozem pic. They'll sell you a TRT
prescription afterwards. Big brit is back again talking about it.
I mean it's made from poison el monster the Yeah, yeah,
(02:46:02):
a fun little reptile you know.
Speaker 2 (02:46:04):
There we find that, Yeah, well we have on the
tech side. We have two self driving waymos just crashed
into each other and they can figure out how to
extricate themselves, and a third waymo was trapped couldn't get
past them. WEIMO has a history of traffic mishaps, including
incidents where the cars circle endlessly where they drive on
(02:46:26):
the wrong side the street, even struck a dog, And
of course a lot of people have had it essentially
stalking their house going by and you know, honking the horns.
And we've seen pictures in San Francisco and other places
where they have gone, all of them going to one
cul de sac for some reason and then starting to
honk the horn at the end of the night.
Speaker 12 (02:46:48):
So this is.
Speaker 2 (02:46:50):
Something that we've seen many times. San Francisco, that's where
this happened. You had three waymos got stuck twiddling their
proverbial thumbs that they don't have by the way on
a dead end street moments before two of the highly
advanced robo taxis apparently meander down a road and clided
each other, blocking all traffic. A third waymo it seems
(02:47:10):
it also followed the others down the road and got
stuck behind the chaos. Footage from a bystander captured the
aftermath of the incident. One way most straddling the street sideways,
locked and touching bumpers with its twin that looked like
it was traveling up the street before the collision. Third
one watches from about a dozen feet away and this
whole thing was unwound. When a Weymow employee shows up
(02:47:35):
wearing orange clothing. He gets in and he manually backed
up the vehicle inan It could not figure out how
to extradite itself from that, and yet he did it.
So the question I look at this is like, okay,
so these Tesla robo taxis. He's proud of the fact
that there's no steering wheel, no breaks, no accelerator, nothing
like that that a human could drive. So what happens
(02:47:56):
when it has this same problem?
Speaker 9 (02:47:58):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (02:47:58):
Of course his answer would be going to happen. It will,
and there's not good to be anyway that you're going
to have. I guess you could have the Tesla tow trucks.
Maybe they can repurpose some of the unsold cyber trucks
in the tow trucks and tow them out because you
won't be able to bank them out or do anything
even if you have a human around. So the car's
been caught endlessly circling roundabouts, blazing down the rooms, wrong
(02:48:22):
side the street, and blowing through an active police standoff.
They're also known for other curious habits like congregating and
parking lots where they honk all night as they struggle
to squeeze past each other, or exhibiting stalk or like
behavior by repeatedly returning to linger in front of a
random family's home. Last week, a Weymo ran over a
(02:48:43):
dog that was reportedly playing in the street, in an
incident that a passenger who was riding in the Robotaxi
said left his children crying while a crowd gathered. Came
two weeks after, another Weimo robotaxi ran over a Badega
cat I guess as a cat that was kind of
hanging around a convenience store Francisco. The locals had called
it KitKat. Well we have McDonald's has been doing kind
(02:49:08):
of a has got a lot of pushback from this
particular Christmas ad that they did. I'm wanna play it
for you.
Speaker 7 (02:49:15):
The Terrible Time.
Speaker 2 (02:49:20):
It's the most terrible Christmas side of the year.
Speaker 14 (02:49:23):
Centerable Lacy and.
Speaker 10 (02:49:24):
The Dream beat a rat in your place.
Speaker 5 (02:49:27):
It's the most terrible time.
Speaker 2 (02:49:34):
The busters at.
Speaker 11 (02:49:35):
Chacol Cookies burn too freaking khouse.
Speaker 14 (02:49:38):
It feels like us.
Speaker 10 (02:49:40):
It's the most terrible.
Speaker 5 (02:49:47):
To see, you believe from the madness the lights and
the gee and hide.
Speaker 6 (02:49:52):
Out in McDonald's till January.
Speaker 2 (02:50:00):
Doesn't it great that we have McDonald's, that we can
escape this horrible Christmas? What an absurd premise. And of course,
as you saw that, there's all a bunch of AI
slapstake stuff that was there. So a lot of people
criticize it, and I think it deserves to be criticized.
I mean, it's a horrible idea for a commercial to
start with, regardless of the implementation. What's even funnier is
(02:50:23):
that the production company said that they spent more time
and effort on the AI ad than they did on
traditional production. I believe that having done some of this stuff,
So what's the real benefit of AI here? Definitely not
the idea, So I don't know. Maybe they did get
that idea from AI. What the company said was, I said,
we spent seven and tense weeks refining every frame of
(02:50:47):
this campaign. Although the tools are different, the process wasn't.
There's this idea floating around that AI will do all
the work for us. Let's set the record straight. The
man hours poured into this film were more then if
it was a traditional production, said the company, And so
one person says, okay, So they put in more man
(02:51:07):
hours than a traditional production like Coca Cola. In their
attempt to prove that they worked hard, they've instead shown
us that AI is hard to control, and it is
it is still expensive, and then it's uglier as well.
So what's the point here with all of this stuff?
And that is the point, I think. So they got
(02:51:30):
so much negative comments when they put it up on YouTube.
First they turned off the comments and then they pulled
it down completely, and so one person said, well, you
can it's kind of a telltale thing that it's got
all these short clips that are there, because typically what
you do is you get about, you know, five or
six second clip from AI when you give it a
(02:51:53):
prompt like that. But you know, when I was doing
a lot of videos in the past years, you could
see the pacing of cuts on different things, and it
was very common for people to cut it with is
like two seconds and then something different or new perspective
or new cut. So I don't know that that's necessarily
an issue with AI, but it is difficult to get
(02:52:13):
it to do what you want, and then it frequently
gets the physics wrong as well. So though the Abomination
of an Ad only had twenty thousand views on YouTube.
Backlashing the comments was so intense that they shut it
down over the weekend before delisting it entirely. But you
can probably still find it on social media if you
want to subject yourself to that. Again, company with that
(02:52:35):
amount of resources couldn't create a full production with a
big team of people to work together and create something
that's actually worthwhile, said another one. For seven weeks, we
hardly slept, they said, well again, the issue is that
we can't make movies traditionally or with AI anymore. It
begins with not knowing what you should be putting out there.
I mean, that was such a downer of a commercial.
(02:52:59):
And you know who wants to go to McDonald's for Christmas? Anyway?
Go ahead travel.
Speaker 5 (02:53:03):
Yeah, that's just what I was going to say. I'm
very curious to how many people are more upset about
the AI versus the actual content of the ad, because
that's what offends me. The AI meaningless doesn't bother me
one way or the other. Really, what really bothers me
is this plastic corporate entity sit making fun of getting
(02:53:27):
together with your family. Oh, isn't it awful? You have
to put up with your relatives. Oh it's terrible, how
wretched and despicable.
Speaker 2 (02:53:35):
Yeah, well they really don't like people. I mean, the
corporations have made that pretty clear. So as the card
Goldsmith says, yeah, we can escape to the mass production culture.
No thanks, Yeah, synthetic ads to sell synthetic hamburgers or
something I guess.
Speaker 5 (02:53:51):
And they do prefer you to hate your family, to
be completely isolated. That means there's even more that you
need to fill with garbage, whether it's their garbage or
some other product, you will be alone and lonely.
Speaker 2 (02:54:06):
Yeah. I like what DG eight says, and thank you
for the tip. He says, Any chance we could have
those way mows all pile up in front of Tim
Wallas's house while honking their horns out of control. Somebody
will come up with something like that. I think these
things are going to be pretty easy to hack. Well.
Trump is set to centralize AI policy as the Federal
AI Mission expands. This is from the New American This
(02:54:27):
is what concerns me, and that is this Genesis Act.
After Congress refused to include provisions that would override state
AI regulations in the National Defense Authorization Act or in
standalone bills. They tried to put it in the big
Beautiful Bill, couldn't do it. Try to put it in
the NDAA, couldn't do it. Tried to do it as
a standalone bill, couldn't do it. So now Trump is
(02:54:49):
going to do it by executive order. He's going to
override the Constitution and Congress. I wonder what kind of
an emergency he's going to claim that he has in
order to violate the tenth amend powers of the States
and the people to be able to have control over
these AI data centers. And that really is where we
could stop this thing. We just literally pull the plug
(02:55:11):
on this monstrosity. But he wants to have it to
centralize power for the technocracy. As a matter of fact,
take a look at this data center story.
Speaker 20 (02:55:22):
This is gonna cold water pressure in the kitchen.
Speaker 12 (02:55:28):
This is where I fill up water for storage.
Speaker 20 (02:55:31):
Those are the things we have to fill up to
flesh the toilets.
Speaker 5 (02:55:34):
So you can see the sentiment from the data center.
Speaker 14 (02:55:39):
Wow, and that's just from the water coming out of
your fosst.
Speaker 10 (02:55:41):
Yeah, and this is what's in all the pipes.
Speaker 20 (02:55:45):
It's overwhelming because you really feel like you are up
against this huge wall that you can't penetrate. There's nothing
that you can do, and they don't care. Being in
the country has always just been my peace and my therapy.
(02:56:06):
When we found this place, we decided that this was it.
It was perfect.
Speaker 2 (02:56:11):
I was actually raised probably five miles from here. It's
felt a lot.
Speaker 20 (02:56:14):
Coming home definitely changed everything. They destroyed the environment, taking
down all the trees across.
Speaker 2 (02:56:21):
The road, beautiful pines, beautiful forest.
Speaker 20 (02:56:24):
The light pollution is we don't have to have a
night light in the house and can walk around the
house at night and you see everything.
Speaker 2 (02:56:31):
Well, look at that amazing. And again the parallels to
what was happening with the green Grift are truly amazing.
You look at Elon Musk went to Germany. He took
down this old growth forest and there's a lot of
protests about that in order to put up a battery plant,
I think it was. But they do that to put
up solar panels and things like that as well, and
(02:56:53):
people were asking that, So what happens to the water?
I mean, if they're just using this to cool the
data centers, way does that consume the water? While you
can and see what is happening, I don't know how
that dirt was getting in there where they pumping the
levels down so low that they're starting to get to
the bottom of the well and they're pulling up a
lot of sediment with that. I don't know exactly what
happened with it, but it's messed up their water.
Speaker 16 (02:57:16):
It is.
Speaker 2 (02:57:19):
Lights on all the time, even at night, even in
their house. They don't have to use lights, So I
guess there's that you know, who needs to have electric
lights that you control when the data center is going
to light up everything everywhere around all the time anyway,
But that's where we could stop it, and that's where
Trump is adamant that we're not going to be allowed
to stop it because we've got to beat the Chinese
(02:57:40):
at their own game. We've got to become like the
Chinese all of this stuff all the time. And of
course they want to have these data centers because we
know that Elon Musk and all the rest of these people,
they're going to do everything that they're told by the government.
They're going to censor people. Look at this as a
matter of fact. Under Elon Musk, Twitter has approved a
three percent of censorship requests by authoritarian governments. People are
(02:58:04):
laughing about that, and that's the reality that is happening there.
But it's all going to be done. This Genesis mission
treats ai not as a consumer technology. No, this is
not for you to use. This is for them to
use against you. They don't treat it as a private
sector experiment. They don't treat it as a way to
(02:58:28):
make even more money for these big corporations by replacing
people and firing them. No, they don't do that. They
look at it as national security. And what I mean
by that is empowering the federal government against you, not
about making us safer. I mean, we look at these people,
they're cashing, they're writing checks that they can't cash, you know,
(02:58:49):
being very belligerent a lot of different countries. And for
the longest time, we have known that when it comes
to Taiwan, if the US wants to defend Taiwan against China,
games and simulations for years have shown that that's an
untenable position because of the massive number amount of resources
(02:59:09):
that China brings to bear, and by the fact that
they have now become the arsenal America used to become
used to be the arsenal of democracy. Well, China is
now the arsenal of manufacturing, and they can make a
lot of drones and many other things. I mean, they're
just swamping. The US has said, we've got to get
(02:59:30):
our game up with the drones, but it's still going
to be a tiny, tiny fraction of what China produces.
But it's not even that we've fallen behind in even
the more complex weapons. They have hypersonic missiles. We don't
have them, and we don't have a defense against them.
We really have become the Nazis, especially even in the
(02:59:51):
sense that the Nazis would always focus on the most
complex weapons and then they couldn't manufacture them in sufficient quantity. Well,
we're out of time. Thank you for joining us. Have
a good day. The common man. They created common Core
(03:00:17):
and dumbed down our children. They created common Past to
track and control us, their commons project to make sure
the commoners own nothing, and the communist future. They see
the common man as simple, a sophisticated ordinary. But each
of us has worth and dignity created in the image
(03:00:38):
of God. That is what we have in common. That
is what they want to take away. Their most powerful
weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation, they desire to know everything
about us, while they hide everything from us. It's time
to turn that around and expose what they want to.
(03:01:01):
Please share the information and links you'll find at the
Davidnightshow dot com. Thank you for listening, Thank you for sharing.
If you can't support us financially, please keep us in
your prayers. D Davidnightshow dot com