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May 15, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Brons got crossways with Trump running against him, and it
really hurt him because I think he's a good governor.
Now Byron Donalds is going to run against him, Barron
Donald's very popular, He's very popular with MAGA, and he's
very very good at projecting a certain image. I hate that.

(00:22):
I hate that because I'd like to see Baron Donald's
in a position. I'd like to see DeSantis continue as governor.
I think he's done a good job as governor. The
thing he is criticized for that may cost him the
governor's office, but I don't think it will is running
against Trump. And I think if he was certain Trump
was going to run, people forget It wasn't certain that
Trump was going to run. It was not a certainty.

(00:46):
The Democrats were trying to knock him out, and a
lot of people told me Trump won't be on the ballot.
I said, I believe he will. The odds that Trump
would be back in the White House as president in
January of twenty three, just after the midterms, I'll bet
you those odds were less than five percent. Oddsmakers would

(01:09):
have that number, but I bet you they were less
than five percent. So Rod DeSantis ran Okay, Well, I
think he's done a good job as governor, and I
don't think he would have run against Trump if he
knew he was going to have to face off with Trump.
I think he thought. I think his bet was Trump
won't be on the ballot, and that'll leave me. And

(01:29):
if Trump hadn't been on the ballot, we'd rather had
DeSantis than Nicki Haley because she's awful. She is absolutely awful.
So anyway, DeSantis has tried to kind of quietly, somewhat
quietly continue on just govern go along. But it's not
easy because you got Byron Donalds out there running, and

(01:53):
you got the Trump folks who hate Rod de Santis,
and I think they always will. Interestingly, Marco Rubio ran
against President Trump and he's been forgiven, so it tends
to be a transactional world. Trump can forgive if he
wants to. So we'll see how that turns out. But
we turn our attention now to something that Ron DeSantis did.

(02:15):
He was holding a very thoughtful sit down press conference
and he's talking about property taxes. Now, I should tell
you that in the state of Texas, we fund the
lion's share of our state government off of property taxes,
and the reason that's problematic is the property tax. Unlike

(02:39):
a consumption tax, like the sales tax, the property tax
is with you. You're in and you're out. So even
when you quote pay off your house from the mortgage,
you never really own your home. You're always renting it
from the government because you have to pay a property
tax every single year. Now, the reason the sales tax is,

(03:00):
in my opinion, a preferable tax is because it's based
on consumption. If you want to save more money and
not spend so much money on the government, don't buy things,
buy fewer things. But with a property tax, whether your
income tax, whether your income that year is up or down,
whether your investments are up or down, you pay this

(03:22):
rising property tax. Now, if history holds true, Greg Gravitt,
the governor of Texas, so named because he was grabbing
power during COVID and not behaving as we wanted him
to behave. What he has a tendency to do is
whatever Ron DeSantis does, he then rushes in afterwards and

(03:44):
announces that that's his position too. So this is probably
the kind of thing we could expect Texas Governor Greg
Gravitt to jump up and announce and that is that's true.
We need to rely on a sales tax or a
consumption tax. There's a value added tax VAT that they
use in Europe and not the property tax. I'm going

(04:06):
to play this in just a moment so we can
go to break on DeSantis property tax and I'll leave
you to listen to it yourself. But we spend a
lot of time talking about what tax mechanism we're going
to use in the states, each state to fund the government.
And we spend this time federally on what's the right

(04:29):
tax rate and for whom we got to tax the rich? Okay,
well that's popular. Not sure it's a good idea, but
it's popular. But what no one talks about is you're
all arguing over how much to tax people and which
group should be punished worse. Because we recognize a tax

(04:50):
is a punishment, how much should we do, who should
we punish and by how much? But what nobody talks
about is why do we need all this money? Because
government is spending it and we're not paying We're not
actually covering their tab. Let's be clear on that we're
not covering their tab. We're only covering a portion of it.

(05:12):
But because they're going to be able to come back
and soak us again, they borrow money to spend it.
So they take all of what we have and then
they borrow more money. And the problem is the borrowing
means that now the money we give them is having
to pay money from in the past. What I'd like
this is a good discussion, but what I would like

(05:34):
to see is a government actually cut spending. And you
don't see it in America.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
Now, you should own your property free and clear. I
think to say that someone that's been in their house
for thirty five years just has to keep ponying up
money that you know that is not and you don't
own your home if that's the case. So yes, of
course I'd like to see people be able to owe oh,
free and clear. And it's interesting because it's like, you know,
if I go to Best Buy and buy a flat

(06:02):
screen TV and put it on the wall, I got
to pay a sales tax on it, right, But I
don't keep paying tax on it every year. I mean,
it's just not that's not how we do things. It's like, Okay,
if you're going to tax something, you tax it at
the transaction and then let people actually enjoy their their
private property free and clear of the government. So that,
I think is the vision. That's the philosophical insight. And

(06:24):
if you think about our founding fathers when they were
proposing the Constitution. In one of the Federal's papers, I
think it was Hamilton he's writing about, because you know,
there was opposition of the constitution. They were making a
more powerful federal government than under the Articles of Confederation,
and people worried about taxation, and they didn't have obviously
a sixteenth Amendment which eventually came on income tax, but

(06:45):
basically that you were not effectively allowed to do any
direct taxation. It had to be indirect, meaning you couldn't
just I mean, you could theoretically just apply like a
tax on land federally, but it had to be a
portion among the states, so practically it could never work.
So basically Hamilton saying, look, the indirect taxes are the
most effective efficient way to raise revenue for the government

(07:06):
because they they basically allow the individual to choose how
much tax they want to pay based on how much
they're consuming. And there's a security, there's a protection against
excessive tax in that regard because if the government raises
consumption tax too much, it kills the golden goose because
then it causes people to stop stop purchasing as much.

(07:27):
But he said, taxing property is one of the worst
forms of taxation because people don't have a choice in
the matter, and you're just basically drilling these folks over
and over again on tax and so it's it's an
issue that I think's pinched a lot of people. But philosophically,
it was not the way that that the federal government
was constructed. Now I understand local there was a history

(07:49):
of it and that's kind of been kind of been
the norm. But man, I mean you talk about family
of four having the medium.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Right, Man, I think the term an intercourse your programs, Michael,
if it's revant to this story for journalistic purposes before
we get to news that matters. There's one old pair
of shoes to throw out from years ago, and that's
Joe Biden. He's trying to re enter public life, or

(08:20):
at least Jill Is so she can get paid for
speeches or maybe even get paid for him to mumble
and bumble because he was once president and there are
people who would like to say the former President speaking
at the event. I suppose there's some cash in it.
I mean, how else are they going to get paid.
They can't get bribes anymore, they don't have any influence,

(08:42):
and Hunter can't carry the bags for him any longer.

Speaker 3 (08:45):
So what to do?

Speaker 4 (08:46):
What to do?

Speaker 1 (08:47):
So Joe Biden, at Jill's insistence, I suppose, goes on
the view and they asked the question about what do
you think about these books that are being written? And
the only reason they mentioned this is these book for
books of their friends. These aren't some crazy conservatives out there.
Now you've got You've got Jake Tapper and and and all,

(09:08):
these all these liberals who now want to you know,
it's it's like the Nazis who now all of a sudden,
you know, engage in Jewish charity.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
I always cared about the Jews. There were people who
covered the tracks after World War Two with with actions.
They would take. Well, that's what those that's what the
Jake Tappers and all are doing. Now they're coming out
and saying, you know, Biden, he wasn't really the president.
He was in the cognitive decline and it was horrible, Yes,

(09:40):
and you covered for him. So they send him out
to the to the set of the view. First you're
gonna hear Joe Biden answering the question as to his
cognitive decline, whereupon he puts it on full display, and
then he turns to Jill, who jumps in to cover him,

(10:04):
tell us you have mental decline. While telling us and
showing us you have mental decline.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
Have been a number of books that have come out,
deeply sourced from democratic sources, that claim in your final
year there was a dramatic decline in your cognitive abilities
in the final year of your presidency. What is your
response to these allegations or are these sources wrong?

Speaker 4 (10:28):
They are wrong.

Speaker 6 (10:29):
There's nothing to sustain that number one. Number two, you know,
think of what we're left with. We left for the
circumstance where we had an insurrection, I started nonsense of
civil war. We had a circumstance where we were in

(10:49):
a position that we well the pandemic because of the
incomponents of the last outfit, end up over a million
people dying, many people dying. And we're also in a
situation where we found ourselves unable to deal with a
lot of just basic issues. And I won't go into

(11:12):
it in an interesting time, and so we went to
work and we got it done. And you know, one
of the things that.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Well, well, listen, you know, one of the things I
think is that the people who wrote those books were
not in the White House with us, and they didn't
see how hard Joe worked.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
Wait what just happened? Rewind? When Joe mumbled and kind
of faded out, Jill goes to the scripted points. These
have been prepared for them. Okay, watch this rewind about
thirty seconds. He's trying to answer, but he'd kind of
run out. He can't remember where he is, so he pauses,
and then she jumps in with the scripted.

Speaker 6 (11:55):
Points, and we got it done. And you know, one
of the things that that.

Speaker 4 (12:03):
Well, well, and Alyssa, you know, one of the things
I think is that the people who wrote those books
were not in the White House with us, and they
didn't see how hard Joe worked. Every single day. I
mean he'd get up, he put in a full day,
and then at night he would I'd be in bed,

(12:25):
you know, reading my book, and he was still on
the phone, reading his briefings, working with staff. I mean,
it was NonStop. It's the White House being president is
not like a job. It's a lifestyle. It's a life
that you live. You live it twenty four hours a day.
That phone can ring at eleven o'clock at night or

(12:48):
two in the morning. It's constant.

Speaker 3 (12:51):
You never leave it.

Speaker 4 (12:52):
And Joe worked really hard. I think he was a
great president. And if you look at things today, if
you look at things today, give me Joe Biden anytime.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Oh that one was good. And you even delivered it
with a smile on your face like they practiced. Oh,
very cheeky, jail, very cheeky. It's so clever, you know
when you look at what that rapist is doing. Huh,
he's orange, and the horrible things he I would take

(13:29):
the Joe Biden era any time. Oh yes, and all
the stupid efforts. They all cheered along. Yes, we agree.
Why is it better? Man? I noticed you played along
and cheered and hooted. And how old when she said

(13:50):
it was better then than now? How is that? Well?
Things are bad now. Women are dying from trying not
have a boor they can't. These are bad now. Everybody's upset. Okay,
well we yeah, all right, why is everyone upset? Just
so we know what exactly has everyone upset. Well, then

(14:13):
we have Rachel No, not Rachel Madow, the other one,
Jen Pisaki, Jen Pisaki saying, Okay, mister Art of the Deal,
mister I can make deals. Mister I'm so good at deals.
She thinks she's taunting him. Ah, yeah, he's claiming he
can make deals. He can't make deals. He's not the

(14:36):
Art of the Deal. I'm so jealous of him. I'm
so bitter and angry and fed my cat so many
times today, and so bitter and angry and ugly, and
it's a bad look. And I'm I've been repudiated by
the nation, me and my politics. And mister Art of
the Deal, Well, where's his deals? A couple hours later,

(15:00):
deal with the United Kingdom announced, major deal announced with
the British, and there you have it. You know, you
know they cry into their pillow every night, just drunk
as a skunk, because everything they say, everything they predict,

(15:22):
they get embarrassed by the same people who were telling
you for the last four years that Joe Biden is
not only looseid, he's a great president. He's got it
all together. And now you've got even the people on
their own staff, even Joe Biden's top advisor, saying, no,

(15:43):
he was asleep most of the time. He didn't know
what was going on. It's a good times, folks, good times.
I don't have to tell you to stay with us
because I know you're gonna because this is fun stuff
to talk about. Yes it is, Michael Berry. Imagine my

(16:10):
surprise when I was forwarded by an email a promo
for an upcoming biopic on George Floyd. It was from
k h o U, one of the local news stations
in Houston. K then h OU for Houston, a station

(16:33):
that over the years has has always prided itself on
good journalism. It's something they talk about and look station
management changes and all that, but there have been times
where KHOU was considered that the most ethical journalistic home
on Houston airways. So imagine my surprise when I see

(16:57):
this biopic about you know, George Floyd is from Houston
and you know, making him sort of a favorite son.
We're going to talk to people who went to high
school with him at Jack Kates High School. We're going
to talk to people who knew him, and we're going
to talk to people who this When we talk to
people with that I thought, well, that's really odd. Why
did he leave Houston. I wonder if you'll tell that,

(17:20):
is it because he got out of prison and some
other thugs that he knew had relocated in Minneapolis talk
about him as a father as a father. That's funny
because there were police officers at the funeral who were
working jobs who commented on the fact that they the

(17:42):
children had to be told when they saw a picture
of him, that's your daddy, and they were old enough
to know who their daddy was. I'd hope that at
my funeral, my wife wouldn't have to say to my
kids when they put a picture up, you know that
was your daddy. That guy right there, this one over here, No, no, no,
not that one from over here was your daddy. That
means he wasn't involved in his children's lives. I mean,

(18:05):
are we going to how honest are we going to be?
Seems like seems like you're trying to make a hero
out of someone who became a political football for certain people,
who scored a touchdown with the twenty twenty election, and
that was part of the plan. Divide people, make people angry,
make people untrusting, make people into victims. So what timing.

(18:32):
I get a message, I get pitches every day. I'm
never interested, but this one went like this. Mariam Hanain
is the author of Operation George Floyd, a multi layered
syop Exposed. She's also the director of the accompanying documentary,
The Real Timeline, And it says the book that the media,

(18:55):
the left and the right don't want you to read.
Operation George Floyd reads like a who Done It? Deep
state thriller, while serving as the most comprehensive factual look
at George Floyd's twenty twenty death while ushered, which ushered
in a cover color revolution and changed America forever. Very interesting.

(19:19):
So we're talking to Merriam Hanain. Welcome to the program.

Speaker 3 (19:24):
Thank you for having me. I have some things to
say about the biopic I believe though you're talking about
the one from the Washington Post.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
No, no, I'm talking about the one that the local
TV station in Houston is making. That caught my attention
and it made me think, well, it didn't sound like
they were promoting it as a fair look at a
man's life, the good, the bad, and the ugly. Maybe
just what they perceived to be the good and a
whole lot more than that. But first of all, Miriam,

(19:57):
what made you get interested in this project? But why
this subject?

Speaker 3 (20:03):
That's very interesting. I think that it chose me. I
was in the jungle with Google whistle blowers Zach boor
He's and he asked me to choke him, and I
was like, what, Like, I'm doing the George Floyd challenge,
and I hesitantly stepped on his neck and then I

(20:26):
told him that to find out, we would have to
call the medical examiner. I was the first in the
country to call the medical examiner, and I was told
that it would take weeks and weeks and weeks. And
then the day after that, NN published some preliminary reports
on the autopsy and started sewing divisions, and I scratched

(20:51):
my head and I just never tapped out. This has
been a five year investigation. I also purchased all the
footage from the United States government, and arguably the left
and the right have suppressed my work. I am the
director behind the award winning film Vanishing of the Bees.

(21:11):
I started my career in the mainstream. I wrote for
all the top magazines. My first job from Montreal, Canada,
was in Los Angeles working for MSNBC producing the news
for the website. It was just as Internet was becoming popularized,
and so upon. It's just like a Russian doll of

(21:35):
opening one doll and then finding another one in it.
There was layer upon layer, and both sides, the left
and the right, don't want you to know the truth
now as far.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
As his.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
Supposed scholarship or working or playing in Houston, and the
truth is that they took several different h Lloyd George's
and they created analgamation of a character, and they there
was in my book is hush Money links to the

(22:12):
Podesta group, how we went from virus to violence overnight.
And we did indeed use this as a as it
was a color revolution to topple statues and rewrite history, recirculate.
I can't breathe in conjunction with us being told to
wear face diapers.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
I never took the shot. I didn't wear the face diaper.
I spoke out against it. And I find how many
people will will today not admit that I looked you
up as just before we started our discussion, and we

(22:57):
agree on a lot of things that you have that
you spoken out about.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
The banks, well, I've been covering vaccine since twenty twelve,
I was writing for doctor Sherry Tenpenny. I'm a functional
medicine coach, the Technocratits came after me under Operation quack Pack,
so no I first called out Bayer in my film

(23:21):
Spanishing of the Bees got my first death let. So
if you look at my bees, which were medical freedom, vaccines,
trans humanism, and George Floyd, you know as a result,
I have lost venmo, Vimeo, PayPal, GoFundMe, Instacart, Airbnb. I've
been neared on Shattle Peacock in a series called Shadowland.

(23:46):
The government has shut me down several times. I was
debanked by Chase. I am in an alternative dimension, a
hero for my courage. For you know, I expressed more
balls than most men in this country. So you know,

(24:07):
George Floyd taught me a lot. And to even see
the conservative cover up my my movie The Real Timeline,
where I purchased all the footage from the government and
we're looking at what happened between seven thirty and nine thirty,
and my book looks at everything else. It is for
the future, just like it took fifty years. I'm a visionary.

(24:31):
So this is to keep records because we are rewriting
the truth. I'm about for just a moment.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Yeah, more coming up. The book is Operation George Floyd,
a multi layered psyop Exposed, and the documentary is called The.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
Real Michael Berry.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
Mariam Hanain is our guest. She's the author of Operation
George Floyd, a multi layered sigh up Exposed, and director
of the documentary that accompanies it, called The Real Timeline.
Let's drill down into some things about George Floyd. Well,
first of all, let's drill down to the timeline of
what happened and some things that you think people need

(25:27):
to be aware of that they can go to the
documentary for or later and learn more about.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Absolutely. I would say one, I want to say that
my film is only available on Moon Rock Books and
Mariamhinane dot com. And I'm going to spell it out
m A R y A M is a Mary h
E n E I n as A Nancy dot com

(25:56):
and that we one thing that I'm the only one
that featured is the role of Cup Food Convenience Store
in this entire operation and the truth behind Derek and
George Floyd, the fact that they both worked at Almuevo
Rodeo and that the book looks at money laundering and

(26:21):
drug cartel's compliccency of the government, and you know, using
the destruction to burn evidence, including Precinct free and Prestinct four.
Precinct four was where they had information regarding informants. And
to your point of how many people go from Houston

(26:42):
to Minneapolis, Well, what occurred to me is like, huh,
I wonder if it's a drug corridor. And it is,
and George Floyd was a truck driver, and that's not
really highlighted. But I looked under every rock. I'm very
thorough and the information. There's a reason why I'm on
my third publisher because it's been too dangerous for anyone

(27:05):
to stand by. It's certainly not a lack of investigative
skills or writing.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Yeah, I think that's an understated, intentionally understated way of
making a point, is that so many things have been
hidden in this case because there are plenty of facts
with regard to the autopsy, There are plenty of facts
with regard to a previous arrest that he had that
was very similar that now the video is out on him,

(27:35):
on him being hospitalized with an overdose of Finland almost
dying you know, just before all that, I think there
are a lot of things. You know, My concern when
we when we have documentarians or book authors on is
they don't want to They don't want to say anything
because they think people are going to run to the
book or run to the documentary and watch it, and
so we end up not being able to talk about much.

(27:55):
My opinion, the more we discuss, the more likely people
are to go and read the book and watch the
doc memory.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
Absolutely, I mean the details. The devil's in the details.
And then I already have mentioned things that the mainstream
on both sides haven't covered, the role of cup foods,
I have hush money. They covered up his real children.
The George Floyd family played marked everything under the sun,

(28:21):
from slippers the key chains, threatened to assume me for
using the public name George Floyd. And you know, the
most telling thing is that Maurice Lester Hall, who was
with George, who I befriended, is in jail and nobody
cares about his black life, certainly not Benjamin Crump.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
Benjamin Crump. Isn't it amazing that this lawyer just keeps
popping up every time there's a case and claiming the
black person as a victim, even if they plunged a
knife into somebody, into a into a colleague's chest, or
even if they have these these long records. I suspect
there's a lot more about Ben Crump we don't know, thoughts.

Speaker 3 (29:05):
Well, he's an ambulance chasing schreister, He's a bullet, he
is a gatekeeper. I have an entire chapter on him,
and he's central to orchestrating a lot of these operations.
And he certainly has profited from black people and parading

(29:25):
them as victims. And you know this, my book also reads,
it's really showing the blueprint and showing how multi layered
these operations are. And if someone looks at a Game
of Thrones, let's say series, how detailed and real quote
unquote that the same level you know Hollywood is applied

(29:49):
to these operations. And people have been told to believe
their eyes, but they left so much on the cutting
room for that you could see in my film. And
then it's quite discouraging to see both sides hide the truth.
This film, I mean, is an excellent film. It's edited
and produced by Sean Hibbler, and certainly I've gone an

(30:14):
accolades from people like Sue Peters, who is from Minneapolis.
And I met someone, I mean, by the grace of God,
met someone who's seeing George and Derek together. I came
across someone else who's evidence, who's footage on Snapchat was
literally removed. And they did a good job. I have

(30:38):
hundreds of footnotes, and if I was commissioned to write
this book today, half of them have been scrubbed, even
from archive dot org. So they do a really good job.
And you can imagine that there's repercussions for I mean,
the thousands of hours of work that I've conducted. I mean,
the price doesn't do justice. And in the future, if

(31:00):
there's only x amount in circulation, this will be a
hard to find book.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
You know, it's interesting what an effort is spent today
trying to keep facts, whether someone agrees or disagrees with
what a report says, or what a witness said, or
a timeline that was created by an officer, or whatever else.
Whether you can choose for yourself, but it strikes me
as interesting how much effort has been spent suppressing things

(31:30):
that might help people come to different conclusions than they have.
As to say, what happened to George Floyd.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Absolutely. There's also what ends up is that they bombard
the mainstream and then people get George Floyd fatigue and
don't realize that there was a lot going on. There
were a lot of legislation that changed, there was a
lot of impact and repercussions as a result of this event.
They're always there is and I call them tries truth

(32:04):
mixed with lies, and so you have I don't throw
the baby out with the bathwater, but certainly you'll have
a influencer talk a lot of truth and then inject
a complete lie. And they're not doing the actual investigations.
I mean, this is full of freedom of information documents,

(32:24):
this is full of images, It comes with receipts, and
it lays it out in a very comprehensive detail way.
And I think that's why it's dangerous. I mean, to
get wrecked from the George Floyd family. And if you
think today we still don't know the details between behind
Derek Chauvin getting stabbed, while the FBI informant gone rogue,

(32:48):
John Tursak aka stranger Mexican Cartel Eider only wants to
talk to me, the Bee lady and sixty minutes and
Fox wanted to get exclusive, and that week of black
Side Day of this year, or in twenty November twenty
twenty four, I order a burger and I get a
copproach in it that same week. I mean a lot

(33:10):
of strange things happen and they mess with people. You
don't have to be a public figure like I am,
if you know the truth, or if you stood out
against this plandemic and you know we're ushering in a
transtunist agenda, Agenda twenty thirty is very much a foot.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
I'm going to hold you there because I'm up against
a break. The book is Operation George Floyd, a multi
layered SIOP Exposed, and the documentary to a company is
called The Real Timeline
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