All Episodes

July 16, 2025 40 mins
I've done a rant, narrated articles & presented my commentary:
* How The British Government Silenced the “Free” Press, Made Truth Illegal
https://reclaimthenet.org/brit...
* Ingenuity: Parallel Economies to Survive Economic Crisis
https://www.theorganicprepper....
Music Credit by The Orchard Enterprises "Faster Than Light Introduction"
Contact, LL3.Podcast@proton.me
Donations:
* PayPal - https://paypal.me/LokiLuck3
* Cash App - https://cash.app/LokiLuck3
* Steemit @ LL3-Podcast #censorship #demoniacresistance #economiccrisis #freepress #greatbritain #immigration #multiincome #multitask #nullification2025 #venezuela
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Grittings. My fellow freem love SOUVGN thinkers, thank you for
tuning the L three podcast. My name is Creation has
benefit of beautiful realms upon Earth. Today's day is Tuesday,
July fifteenth, twenty twenty five. This episode eighteen sixty British
government silence, free press and ingenuity to survive economic crisis

(00:54):
before proceeding of funding and multiple social media sites in
podcast challenge this type in Looking Luck number three, Look
you Luck Ruman no nor three three eyes or look
you Luck Ruman in three podcast for the more of
the questions, comments, recommendations and a lot of good stuff.
Whatever you do, please use the corn hit me via
email to LL three dot podcast the protonst me if

(01:17):
you want to donate, gonna pay that on me or
cash at for slizes with look number three or follow
donate crypto love on steam it at LLL number three
dash podcast. Well I gotta be there since here it's

(01:38):
like more people are talking about the real idea act
that the trojan horse to the surveillance states. I renounced
that a couple of days when they are pushing for
it after the perfect events on September eleventh, two thousand
and one and they have the tinkleberries and the mainstream

(02:02):
news and it will make us feel safe. It is wild.
I don't mind having to give the metaphoric penine microphone
front of the TV screen wherever, at my home or
at the bar, and people ask me, why are you

(02:22):
doing that for sir, because they're a lyon. It was
never because we were attacked on that day for our freedoms.
There's nothing more than a control game. Put us in fear,
have us billy up and the name of safety, which

(02:43):
is the road to tyranny. Now we're seeing more regulations,
restrictions and all that good stuff. And you have to
have the real id, you know. I I say, go
f yourself, skank and go bang Alejandro, New yorkis when

(03:07):
you have a chance. Could you think it's smell alike crappy?
And that's why I don't go love we w with
people in government. I remember what she did in South
Dakota sign that any any Semitism protection Act. Oh yeah,

(03:34):
anti free speech can't criticize a nation because they claimed
to be the chosen one, not the people themselves. It
is the idiots in Tel Aviv, and I digress. There's
always about ethics. When I found out Donald Trump hired

(03:55):
her to be it's I tarry for Home Insecurity, I went, waw,
Now she wants us to all get the ready to
go to court, to go to federal courthouses, nuclear facilities,
and on the on the airplanes. They're desperate. People are

(04:20):
seeing right through. It is a matter of what political party.
Democrats are, Republicans don't mean anything. The technico crafts are
controlling everyone under the same umbrella, and everything to goes
trickles down, question everything. My friends Jimmy Door did an

(04:42):
interview on that. You know, it's on the show. It's
on YouTube, and I give them props. I almost just
mad man religion, but religiously or anything like that. But
he has good content out of fairness. I really hear
people like them. Then what's on the idiot box? And
it's still out there to watch the same garbage news

(05:02):
over and over and over again. And I give them
information on what other place, but they get that one
dimensional hypnotized uh huh, precisely. And you have more municipalities

(05:22):
good old boys basis genius cities institutions think that's more
than an oath of offices suppressing people's natural rights. You
were born with them. They say, you can't get on
to be taken away. You're born with those rights. Engaged
as they're being apathetic. Whiners go nowhere. Quitters never win.

(05:49):
Respectors are not given not go on all day long.
But I'll be boring you to death. All right, Well,
talk about seveillance, states and common anti common law and
all that good stuff. First thing I want to be

(06:12):
reading here is an opinion piece. According to reclaimdnet dot org,
how the British government silenced the free press made truth
illegal is by cam Wakefield. A secret court ordered muzzle
the press while state quietly rewrote reality. Secret court all

(06:37):
held the star chambers right, and let's see what it
says here. There are cover ups and then there's whatever
the British government just pulled. Imagine torching seven pounds seven
billion pounds of public money or nine point four billion dollars,

(06:57):
risking one hundred thousand lives trading an greation scandal, and
then when the avail invitible outrage starts to bubble, slip
in a gag order on the entire country and pretended
it never happened. Trust us where the states? This is
a Banana Republic behavior with better tailoring, because for nearly

(07:20):
two years, a superinjunction, the con usually deployed when a
Premier League footballers pants have wandered off again, was used
the sound as journalists and the free press gag Parliament
and stop the public from learning that the Ministry Defense
has done something catastrophically in epts. It began in August two,

(07:44):
twenty twenty three, when journalist David Williams discovery that the
Ministry of Defense had managed two leak the identities of
eighteen thou eight hundred Afghans who had worked with British
forces drivers and translators, their families included, were tough. We're
talking about one hundred thousand people now allegedly squarely in

(08:05):
the Teleban's crosshairs, all because some bright spark couldn't handle
a spreadsheet. Someone in Whitehall realized that explaining to the
public how a government that wants to introduce digital IDs,
biometric databases and centralized health records can't even keep the

(08:27):
data of war zone informants safe might just might be
a tough sell sounds familiar is everywhere, folks, not just
by in the United States. This is around the world.
That's another example of what's going on prison planet now.

(08:48):
In a functioning democracy, this is the point where government
admits the error, apologizes profusely, and gets on with fixing
the mess. But that's not what happened. Instead, the Conservative
government went nuclear. It reached for a superinjunction, a legal
instrument so secretive that you can't even mention that it exists.

(09:12):
It's the Voldemart of British law. He who must not
be named and also must not be reported on, discussed
in parliament or even acknowledged and polite company. Ever since
the data hit the fan ministers hidden behind a wall

(09:32):
of censorship so Dick could double as a North Korean
border post, having quietly orchestrated one of the largest peacetime
migration missions in British history. Do you guys say illegal
immigration illegal aliens? Oh, migration is such a soft word.
We gotta be so sensitive. No, I don't care if

(09:55):
they're wider than me. To be very honest, not that
they told the tax paying public, of course, or Parliament
or anyone who wasn't legally bound to pretend it wasn't happening.
They went full coaking daggers smuggling thousands of Afghans out
of a collapsing country into Britain on taxpayer funded flights,

(10:18):
all while maintaining the straight face lie that nothing was
going on. So far, eighteen thousand, five hundred people whose
data was lost in Administry of Defense tastrophic blunder have
either arrived in Britain or are en rooted stuffed into
charter jets the public paid for without being asked extortion. Yeah,

(10:44):
another five thousand, four hundred are queued up to follow.
They're currently being house and mod homes or hotels on
the taxpayer's dime or mo Who to call it right?
Another person reason? Another reason, Prime Minister care Strung Starmar's

(11:08):
government likely wanted to keep the Superinjunction in place when
he became Prime Minister, for fear of facing even more
public backlash that he's aredder receiving. Let's be clear about
what the Superinjunction did. It did more than banned journalists
from publishing the truth. It prevented Parliament from talking about it.

(11:30):
It made it illegal to reveal the existence of the
Other Order itself. For nearly two years, Britain was living
under a state sanctioned lie of omission. Sorry about that
was my dog begging for a biscuit. But I continue on.
And the people who were gagged the very one's task

(11:53):
without holding power to account. It is not typically how
democracy behaves. How a dodgy offshore bank operates, or a
mid tier dictatorship with delusions of grandeur. Sounds like the
rothschilds right. I'll continue on. You do not, under any

(12:15):
sane definition of a free society get to blow seven
pounds on a secret resettlement program and then deploy stealth
censorship to bury the consequences of your own incompetence. We
don't want you to hurt your feelings. We goofed up,
but none of your damn business. How it's done. They'll

(12:37):
go grab some teeth from me, Please a cup of tea.
Yet that's precisely what happened. Justice Chamberlain, who heard the
case and secret court rooms, were reportedly stunned to learn
that government officials were actively planned to lie to MPs.
His actual words, a very very striking thing for a

(13:01):
High Court judge. That's basically in cansident a candacent rage.
We've now entered a world where the government can simply
decide that public interest isn't well in the public's interest. Superinjunctions,
originally designed to stop tablet editors from splashing scandal across

(13:22):
page three, had become the Swiss army knife of political
embarrassment management. And what's more disturbing is how quietly it
all happened. No headlines, no debates, just two years of
eerie silence while the government conducted one of the most
politically expensive operations in modern British history. Never had written

(13:46):
to such an extraordinary scene in almost thirty years of
reporting from the press benches of the Royal Course, wrote
Daily Mail chief reporter Sam Greenhill, saying that the judge
appeared only incredulous that the government was prepared to actively
deceive Parliament. Here are the ways the British state just

(14:09):
showed us it can gag, mislead and trample liberty with
a silk glove. Number one, they gagged the press from
reporting on matters of public interest. The superinjunction wasn't content
only hid in the details of the made monumental data catastrophe.

(14:33):
It forbid anyone from even acknowledging the gag existed. That's
reality control or well would have lit a cigarette and wept.
Trillis couldn't report, editors couldn't hit, and the public, the
people paying for all this, were told nothing. Number two,

(14:54):
they allowed the government to mislead Parliament and the public
with the press silence. Ministers had a field day spinning
fantasy in the Commons. They deliberately concealed the fact they
were moving thousands of Afghans into the country at a
time when immigration is the number one concern of the public.
According to Poles, Justice Chamberlain reportedly looked visibly disturbed in

(15:18):
one secret hearing when officials revealed they were preparing to
tell elected members Apartment something deliberately misleading. And what happened, Nothing,
of course not it, dag remained taxpayer rinsed. Democracy is
treated like an inconvenient bump in the road. Number three.

(15:39):
They bypassed democratic oversight and institutional checks, even Parliament's Intelligence
and Secret Committee, the people who are legally supposed to
know about this stuff, were left out of the loop.
The executive branch simply decided it didn't need supervision anymore.
Number four, they inverted the roles of the courts in

(16:02):
a free society. Here's fun twists. Here's a fun twist.
The courts, whose job is ostensibly to protect civil liberties,
were used as the government's personal bodyguard, shielding ministers from
embarrassment while throttling the press. Judicial rods turned into legal
armor for executive cockups. You expect judges to be the

(16:27):
firewall between government overreach and public freedom. Instead they were
the gatekeepers of secrecy. The legal system was weaponized against
the very people supposed to protect. Number five. They prizeized
state embarrassment over genuine security. The DSMA notice system, originally

(16:48):
designed to stop hacks from leaking nuclear launch codes or
troop movements, was activate because ministers were at risk of
a bad headline. The real national survacy was a pr fallout.
Number six. They threatened journalistic freedoms and chill investigative reporting.

(17:09):
Journalists were legally strangled. Even as the government later admitted
these reporters have performed a various necessity necessary public service,
they still try to gag them for nearly two years.
Forgive me, folks, I worked earlier this morning, so please
bear with me. Number seven. They contradict liberal democratic principles.

(17:34):
In case we all forgotten in a liberal democracy, the
government's opposed to fear the press, not the other way around.
Superinjunctions flipped this on his head, created reality where public
servants act like private oligarchs, hiding decisions that affect millions

(17:56):
behind legal iron curtains. Number eight the UK lacks the
constitutional free speech guarantees. Here's the tragic punchline. Unlike the
United States, where the First Amendment was treated a superinjunction,
like the bubonic plague, the UK has no constitutional protection

(18:17):
for freedom of expression, which means when ministers decide to
shove descent into a sack and drown it in legal lease,
there is a precious little the courts can do or
will do to stop it. Number nine. The undermine public
debate on critical policy decisions. This was a seven billion

(18:41):
pounds migration program carried out in total darkness. It involves flights, housing,
free hotels, resource allocation, and massive public impact, and the
public early excluded from the debate. Worse still, when local
tensions flare, including riots in towns housing migrants, no one

(19:06):
could speak honestly about what was going on because honestly
had been declared illegal. Number ten. They established a dangerous
precedent for future censorship and Finally, the real horror. This
worked for nearly two years. The government ran a secret, expensive,

(19:29):
expensive whiskey and morally fraud operation and got away with it.
If this becomes the playbook for future crisis, then we've
just pioneered censorship by precedent. What began as an emergency
measure is now a neat little workaround for policy failure.

(19:50):
Don't want to answer for it. Slap a gag on it,
don't want the public involved, call it classified, don't want
Parlament poking around. Says it's under review, and carry on
spending because now they know they can. And unless this
entire fiasco sparks real reform, actual limits on injunctions, real

(20:14):
free speech protections, and courts willing to discover their spines,
they will do it again. And once he's seeing a
scandal like this dragged kicking and screaming into the daylight,
you can't help but wonder what else is being hidden
behind velvet curtained courtrooms and conveniently redacted memos. If a

(20:40):
multi billion dollar, multi billion pound operation involving national security,
mass migration, and a catastrophic data breach can be buried
for years under legal quicksand what small disasters are quietly
rotting in the dark. How many other narratives have been
quietly managed into non existence while the public is spoon

(21:02):
fed whatever sanitized drivel passes the Cabinet Office sniff test.
Nothing new on the sun, of course. And I know
one thing for sure, my friends, people are waking up
to this deception. And Great Britain is one example. You've

(21:27):
been seeing what's going on around the world and they're
and these sons of bitches are desperate to have a
one world government. They want technocracy on planet Earth to
the fullest extent. This is unacceptable. Free speech, free press

(21:53):
is a natural born right. And I don't care we
live regards of your creed. I know one thing for sure,
it's all gonna backfire. If they're gonna have a civil
war in Great Britain, lord forbid, make sure use the

(22:14):
information war to the fullest. And there's a lot of
great people in Britain are doing that. Whether you agree
with them completely or not. This needs to be stopped
in Britain. And beyond what can I say, never trust
the government regardless where you live. I'll be back, all right.

(22:48):
I gonna do one more here. This came from the
Organic Prepper dot com Daisy Luther's website, the official blog
of the of the Apocalypse thiss one is here. I
under prepdent Survival Ingenuity Parallel Economies to survive economic crisis

(23:09):
is by J. G. Martinez. D came out today. Dear readers,
I know this is a question many of you want
to see answer satisfactially. I will do my best. Of course,
this article will delve into somewhat how the ordinary, uncommon

(23:35):
ways many Venezuelans turned to informal and innovative economic structures
to secure food, medicine, and essential services. Even in place
like that, you always found a way of sticking it
to demand. Right below you will read some real life
examples of adoption to combat hyperinflation and economic collapse by

(23:57):
creating informal and often innovative systems to secure necessities. What
you are reading now is the byproduct of some of
those initiatives. Of mind the gap between wages I simply
can't explain why these are so low and the prices
of goods. The price of goods has forced Venezuela's working

(24:19):
class population to develop multiple creative ways to earn income.
While this phenomenon isn't new. It has worse than alongside
the economic collapse, hand in hand with dollarization, and something
that we could interpret interpret as a revival of commerce.
The country has gone from being one of the cheapest

(24:41):
to one of the most expensive in North and South
America tiger killing. One of the examples is mister B,
a professional musician born in Caracas, now in his fifties,
who found his passion from music influenced by his older sister,
another musician. Growing up in the lower middle class area

(25:02):
of Carricio, Jamie started playing the flute along with a
Peruvian quent Cuna Aquina, both of which would become his
constant companions in the harsh times to come. Mister B
is a living example of Venezuela's relentless struggle to survive,

(25:25):
as many other professionals, with a career of over thirty
years in music that includes studies at the Jose and
Ngel Lamas Conservatory and the Central University of Venezuela. In
a country with formerly vibrant oil and gas industry, diverse
technical studies were once the most in demand. However, even then,

(25:48):
under the light of economic development in those years, all
kinds of activities were decently rewarded. Teachers can make a
decent living, even music teachers. Nowadays, many teachers mostly dedicate
themselves to activities with the popular street name as a
description killing tigers, meaning with this expression that any kind

(26:11):
of economic activity is valid raising chickens pigs. For those
in a more rural environment in the cities, many people
resort to driving a cab or working part time in
a fruit and vegetable vegetable shops or with a hot
dog cart at night, sewing nails, hairdressing, delivery, private classes, housekeeping,

(26:36):
waitress in a restaurant. You name it as a side note,
tiger killing not exactly hunting expression means that people will
find side jobs doing a variety of different chores. It
seems to derive historically from the second half of the
nineteenth century and the first three or four decades of

(26:58):
the twentieth century. Its origin is linked to the peasants
who worked as hunters to keep the big feline predator
population at bay to avoid them preying on the cattle
and hasiendas, usually surrounded by wilderness. A tiger's corpse was
then delivered to the owner. He would pay handsomely to

(27:19):
the hunter. Considering back in the day, Venezuela wasn't even
five million people living in almost one million square kilometers,
tigers were a hazard even for peasants in the countryside.
Don't take my word for this, but this is what
my dad's historical memories records record exhibits. Basically, food family

(27:44):
food basket being plus four hundred and forty dollars means
you have to do whatever you can to get the coin. Sure,
some people are making it better than others. Qualified professionals
and many technical areas flew to greener pastures for a
long time ago. Others came back after bitter experiences. I'm

(28:06):
abroad to face the realities of being in a land
that is simply not a functional country for millions. I
have to mention this. Those who know how to create
wealth are the ones doing decently in and out of Venezuela.
Sally is a skill that in my case, is a
steep learning curve. But I am working actively on that.

(28:29):
But let's move on. Independent business owners. People with independent
businesses like importing merchandise or all kinds of retail shops
and a like that were once what we could call
prospers can be seen as the least affected and vulnerable.
Many of them have their capitalist stashed abroad and transfer

(28:50):
all the wealth they can to their international accounts after
paying their life their life expenses. There's a whole ecosystem
of people working on services for this class, mostly women
doing nails and hair at home or visiting, and electrician plumbing, paint, masonry,

(29:11):
AC laundry, machine repair guys, and of course the mechanics
and car electrician. Electricians need some tools for this check
a scan, check, check scanners, a booking how to use them,
volt meters, tool sets, Imperial metrics here and metrics only here.
So there's links you get check it out for yourselves.

(29:31):
I do got some of these tools myself. Any come
in handy, okay, so trust me on. With the economy
undergoing and adjustment process, prices now hover in dollars. You
can see in the shops a number file by the
abbreviation re EF indicating the price in US dollars or

(29:51):
US usd just so you can have an idea. With
the African level wages, people try to live in cities
with European level prices. The economist Juan Guerrera a deputy
of the twenty fifteen National Assembly that has wiped out
clean and violently dissolved before they could impeach the bus driver.

(30:14):
That's the midst Venezuela is proportionally the region's costs theest.
The evidence collected by organizations like the Venezuelan Finance Observatory
found staples like rice and eggs cost ten percent of
wages in Bogata or Lima, but exceeded that by ten
dollars in Caracas working class on barrios. But we will

(30:36):
leave it to the DEA to produce the only reasonable
explanation for this small task. Another example we can quote
is mister A, a forty one year old teacher. He
walks dogs, does masonry work, and occasionally moves furniture. He
says the service jobs are Venezuela's lifeline. These tasks allow

(31:01):
him to earn two hundred and seventy dollars a month,
barely enough for him and his elder mother. State social
policy relies on cash transfers average two dollars per person,
and subsidized food boxes known as collapse, received by nine
percent of households but delivered monthly to only thirty five percent.
According to the twenty twenty two National Living Condition survey

(31:23):
Or in corvy of households aren't poor, but inequally soored
by venezuela, Latin America's most unequal country. Go figure, nothing
but the truth here, bare nothing but the truth there.
Excuse me, Of course, most of these jobs are not formal.

(31:44):
Forget the eight hour per pay work we schedule that
modern life was promised making ends meet. To barely survive
will demand a lot of energy and strength only to
keep your head above water. I have already seen this
in the nineteen nine being a young man, things were
somehow different nowadays, with my current responsibilities and aging parents.

(32:06):
Oh well, you know, the drill stretching one's ability to
make money is now more like a national sport than ever.
The proverbial Venezuelan improvisation is now a basic financial skill.
Leisure time is often reduced to a few hours of washing,

(32:29):
free streaming content on the Internet, or spending a couple
of hours chatting with friends over a caffee in the cafe.
I remember that receptionist as secretaries in nineteen ninety soed
Avon teachers use some of their free time after class
or on the weekends give some private classes, and often

(32:50):
and office workers used to dedicate a couple of hours
to transport people in their cars as informal taxi driving
or even tall taking kids to school, given that there's
no such thing as school at school bus since like
thirty years or more. I recall that back in the

(33:10):
nineteen eighties and nineteen nineties many teachers so tupperware. One
of the most outstanding chemistry teachers in town had a
sox kiosk in the Sunday market. There was a lost
decade tied to multi employment, but in a bad way
to wage de kay, hyperinflation and the reversal of the

(33:31):
nineteen seventies prosperity. According to economist Louis Crespo, our countrymen
now are hustling as fence painters, cat nail trimmers or
coffee vendors. Ag. A university guide quit a ministry job
to migrate to Columbia had to return and start to
work in Caracas as a taxi driver in Roderi a

(33:54):
local urbu like app a writer excuse me, He earned
more in a week than a state employees monthly wage.
The widespread spectrum of jobs is simply outstanding university professor,
teach a public at public and private schools the same day,
jumping from one classroom to another, taking consulting gigs, and

(34:18):
work twenty to fourteen hour days. There are people multiple
degrees to survive on things like dog grooming two hundred
dollars a month and freelance writing one hundred and twenty dollars.
Teaching in a public school pays like thirty dollars a
month that barely covers the bus fare for many survival

(34:38):
Trump's vocation home bakery, cakes, sweets, pastries, every single product
that people know how to cook that is tasty can
be sold with the profit. Others more fortunate can work online,
earning over twenty five hundred to three thousand k. But
they are a high skill old minority, usually with a

(35:01):
software engineering degree and English fluency. And we can't forget
those who started with crypto trading. And if you feel
like learning about it, click here. Venezuelan's usually like to
be well groomed. A professional haircut for men is close
to eight to ten dollars, meaning that with that three

(35:24):
to four customers per day, a good hairdresser can get
two hundred dollars in a week. You'd like to know more,
there's a click for that, a link for that. Trust
me on this one. The best moment to learn is
before the situation escalates. When you don't have the pressure,
you may want to collect some information just in case.

(35:45):
Won't do any harm. Remember that building a community network
is paramount. One of the aspects impacting my access to
a professional labor market right now is that my colleague
community is now scattered, even deceased. So much to write
about and so little space. This article tries to cover

(36:06):
a lot of information. Let me know in the comments
below what you think and how you feel you could
build an income if the actual array of variable suddenly changes.
Thank you for your necessary support and sponsoring these days
to keep us going strong, Stay tuned, stay safe, and
keep tune well. Like I said, my friends, there's a

(36:30):
will in a way, regardless of economic collapses, even in
these United States, we should be ready for this. The
more skills you know, the better capable you be. I've
been very thankful and I'm still learning, even in my age.
Multiple trades and skills, basic stuff and enhanced from there.

(36:52):
Being self reliant is essential, folks. We don't have everything
we don't know everything. We all have our strainths and flaws.
Maximize our straints, minimize the flaws, and there's others may
have other skills better than yours. Work together, network, don't

(37:13):
rely on the state. There's people on welfare. When that
EBT goes down, oh Lord forbid, all hell will break
loose and many people I remember knowing what happened in
New York City watching the news. Of course I know
friends that went survived INCLUI, members of my family, like

(37:36):
especially Manhattan. All hell broke, lousey, stort of being looted
and all that. You don't want to be part of
that crowd. But staying productive, self reliance, work with your neighbors,
be a team player community based on a voluntary basis.

(37:56):
There's why the more you know, the better you can.
Like I said before, I'm learning these things. I've done
stuff while back, and I'm very proud of myself. We're
all got great gifts, my friends and a story to tell.
Don't let the central banking system and government bring you down.

(38:19):
Inspire be inspired not to be like them. Remember, without us,
they are nothing. So folks, do your best. Contribute to
the people you care for. And be ready when it
comes down. Wherever you're at, more you know, the more

(38:42):
opportunities you'll get, well, that will be it. I thank
everyone for listening, plus feel free to download and share
this right your social media networks. If you have any questions, comments, recommendations,
all that good stuff. Whatever you do, please use the chorn.
You can hit me via email to l L three
dot podcast dot proton dot me. I'll leave the footnotes

(39:06):
of these articles. You can check it out for yourselves.
And if you want to donate, gonna paypout me or
cash dot at four slash look at number three you're
gonna give me a little cryptal love. Follow me on
steam it it's at l L number three dash podcast.
If you want to support Reclaim the Net Organic Prepper,

(39:29):
please do so say I'm locally up. The third sent
you once again. Thank you for your time. Pu's os.
Remember that the moneyarker resistance is healthy for selling can
de liberate h Maddie. Until next time, take care of yourselves,
keep on spreading love and me. Your guardian spirits be
with you.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.