Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Our foundering fathers here in this country brought about the
only true revolution that has ever taken place in man's history.
Evolved the idea that you and I have within ourselves,
the god given right and the ability to determine our
own destiny.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
The United States of America the greatest nation in history,
ordained by our founders to be guided by divine providence.
But today we are witnessing the orchestrated disintegration of America.
Take a few seconds and take a look around your town,
your state, look at your country and your world, and
(00:39):
boldly ask what in the hell is going on?
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.
We didn't pass it on to our children in the bloodstream.
The only way they can inherit the freedom we have
known is if we fight for it, protect it, defend it,
and then hand it to them with the well taught
lessons how they in their lifetime. Let's do the same.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Welcome to the podcast Project Third Eye Opened, where we
dare to question with boldness the events that are unfolding
around us that others won't. At the end of the day,
it is we the people who will decide the destiny
of the nation. Now introducing your host, Tony ell.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
Gree changs, gree chains. Greetings America. This is Tony L.
And you experiencing another hopefully stitying, thrilling, informative presentation a
prize that I open. Yes, I know it's been a minute,
but you know, whenever I'm gone absent out of sight
(01:55):
for a while, you know, I'm in the lab trying
to put togethers hopefully interesting provoken material and I think i've,
hopefully I've succeeded in doing that. But of course before
I go into further got to get praised and most high. Well,
(02:17):
without him, I will not be here when I have
been born in the greatest country on the planet, and
therefore will not be being able to present this informative,
propocative information to you. There's always one to curse each
and every one of you. Do follow me, subscribe like
(02:41):
me on your favorite social media posts. You'll find me
either project that I opened, Tony L. Or three eye open,
three eye open on one bow. I think the majority
of the others you could definitely follows find me a
(03:02):
project that I opened. Yeah, Biden, I think he would
probably him and Obama, particularly Obama to go down as
(03:27):
one of the most transformative particular Obama, I mean Biden.
You think just just say he was Bamba's third term, but.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
Oh excuse Nonetheless, his period in office, someone would say
it's frightening, but.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Definitely, definitely his mark was definitely laid on that office,
his stamp, his imprint was laid on that office. In
my humble opinion, not in a good way. But I'll
(04:20):
let you decide how it suits you. So, Wen, we're
gonna go into this. It's just about his pregnancy, how
he came into it. When you look at his four years,
(04:43):
he's definitely continued Obama's fundamental transformation of this what's a
great country? Yes, they admitted such how he arrived of
(05:04):
position in to the presidency. We all saw how that happened.
Some questions have to be answered in regards to that,
how did this? How did he get into office by
the way he did? But you may want to step
back and see that may not be a bad thing,
(05:25):
but you maybe maybe wanted to step back and look
at was just all planned from the beginning. Hissue will
reveal itself how this man definitely change the society, the culture,
(05:45):
and I think it would never be the same again
and again. You can definitely say that about Obama's eight years.
So if you include Biden's four years with Obama eight years,
that's a long time to have de seat of power.
(06:12):
Two really do some damage to a nation, to a society,
to a culture, and that's what they did. They've done
Muhammed opinion. They've done some serious, serious, lasting damage to
this our country and to our culture, to our society.
(06:39):
It's going to it. We had to first look at
the the whole issue with his cognit cognitive skills. Where
(07:04):
are they? Let's me know, there we are, and you know,
I'm a history but so I'm definitely gonna draw some
some correlation to war Door Wilson for those who may
not know about War Door Wilson. He too has some
(07:26):
cognitive issues yawn, and all of a sudden, he has
some serious cognitive issues. And the two gentlemen's predidency mirror
in so many ways. Let's look at both of both
the Democrats. Wilson. In October nineteen nineteen, stuffered a massive stroke,
(07:52):
leaving him paralyzed, partially blind, and cognitive be impaired. Liked
by his condition was concealed from the public and Congress,
more so with Wilson. Of course, his wife actor as
(08:13):
the gatekeeper filtering all communication decisions. Sounds familiar. The twenty
fifth Amendment wasn't an amendment when this happened under Wilson.
That changed due to the events dealing with Wilson. That's
(08:35):
where the twenty fifth Amendment come. What was was enacted
due to Wilson's situation and period under Wilson was seventeen months.
Seventeen months, the US United States can arguably said was
(09:02):
effectively run by the shadow government unelected individuals with Biden.
The Wall Street Journal says and Ford says that that
they cite memory lapses, limited public appearances, and heavy reliance
(09:23):
on scriptive materials. How many y'all remember this, and you
can said, well, Obama did the same thing. He was
very much attached to the telepropter. But Obama could go
off script sometimes some meditations to his own this uh uh,
(09:52):
this favor. But Biden went our script and he got
lost and everybody could see that. But he was wh
why widely criticized, particularly after the after doing the twenty
(10:17):
four presidential election, that when of y'all saw, the whole
world saw where he completely checked out, and the truth
that many of us knew just by watching him, not
just in the last months, but throughout his old his
(10:41):
whole presidency, from the beginning when he pretty much ran
his campaign from his basement. Excuse me, excuse me him
due to the so called pandemic. But anyone with eyes
(11:01):
that could see saw that something that cleaned with this guy.
But by in the circle led by his wife similar
to Edith Wilson shielded him from scrutiny and real thirty investigation.
But unlike I want could argue with Wilson, many in
(11:27):
the Congress who had you know, meetings with him, who
saw him doing press conferences, who saw him doing uh
like the State of the Union address such as that
(11:47):
they knew something was off with this guy. They had
to they dis depended on what side of the aye
on particularly you want to understand thing in public. But
this is a different time there with Wilson, and I
believe that many Republicans knew off Biden his condition, but
(12:16):
it wasn't politically it's beneficial too and dirty laundry. Then
the issue with the auto pen, which came to light
mainly and mostly during the latter part of Biden titnancy,
(12:39):
and that got into question the legitimacy of his signatures,
particularly when you look at his extraordinary pardons that pretty
much give all the all come free for his family
and many individuals like frauci uh Burke and many elected
(13:02):
officials that were involved in the travesty of the so
called January sixth investigation, so that has to be looked at.
Both saw government intervention not as a threat to liberty,
(13:26):
but as a tool to enhance freedom by protecting citizens
from concentrated private power, not government power. No government power
is good. Progressive Democrats always want us to believe, so
(13:53):
they had that in common, and both made use of
government music and propaganda. Wilson created the Committee of Public
Information the CPI, a wartime propaganda machine that shaped public
opinion and censored dissent, and Biden's This Information Government's Board
(14:19):
both did the same thing, and it both sought to
police speech. As you said, history don't always repeat, it
often rhymes, and that sudden is the case with these
two individuals. I wonder if Biden read the memoirs of Wilson,
(14:45):
maybe even Obama, And if you think the world wasn't
watching Biden Even though the Nations news media apparatus did
its best to not let the American people see the
(15:10):
way of Biden, the rest of the world did take
this out. Just if I'm Australian, I believe Australian news seven.
Speaker 5 (15:23):
H during the opening speeches, the leader of the Free
World was called dozing off and while making schools for
(15:47):
the reductions of cornwall.
Speaker 6 (15:52):
Missions frightening Man, the heir of the the Commilla, has
reportedly described the incident as long, loud, and impossible to ignore.
Speaker 5 (16:08):
It's not the first time Biden's had a bungle. This
first presidential press conference at March was somewhat puzzling you
if it.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
Holds near and dear to you that you wait to
be aget like.
Speaker 5 (16:28):
Not even a binder of notes could help America's commander.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
In chief get back on track.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
Really sorry, kid, And during the historic Focus announcement in September,
Biden struggled to remember that he was partnering with I.
Speaker 3 (16:46):
Want to thank you. I've fell down under him. I
thank you very much about it. Appreciate this.
Speaker 7 (16:53):
I want to be clear, I'm not going notes. Graduation
day for Colorado's Air Force can but who was the
US president coming in for a hard landing, the eighty
year old stooped up by naval and security officers. Joe
Biden back on his feet, pointing at the culprit a
(17:13):
sandbag on stage, quickly given the old clear by a
White House spokesperson, the image not helping America's oldest they're
a president because he ramps up for a second term,
of course not.
Speaker 8 (17:28):
It's not anything that the White House or his.
Speaker 3 (17:30):
Camp hall was the online pylon to be expected. What
wasn't this from his fiercest.
Speaker 9 (17:36):
Critic, he actually fell down?
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Well, I hope he wasn't hurt.
Speaker 7 (17:41):
Trumpet seventy six has had his own near public stumbles,
and this isn't the first for Biden, who spent much
of this term defending his record against claims he's too
old for another skilt.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
If he runs, wins and serves.
Speaker 7 (17:53):
A full term, Joe Biden will be eighty six years
old when he leaves office.
Speaker 9 (17:58):
It's a matter of can do the down?
Speaker 4 (18:01):
And I believe I can do the down.
Speaker 7 (18:04):
And he intends to keep going, arriving home tonight dancing
off any questions of fitness.
Speaker 10 (18:13):
Ask one last question, have you had any talks with
Senate Republicans who work threatening this administration with not considering
the immigrationional legislation that was passed in the House until
the situation on the border has been resolved.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
No, because I know they have to pasture for a while.
Speaker 9 (18:31):
You're going to have got to get another system.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
This is a.
Speaker 9 (18:40):
But I'm ready to work with any Republican who wants
to help solve the problem and make the situation better.
But folks, I'm going thank you very very much.
Speaker 8 (19:02):
If you get any questionable calls, please tell us by
going to report fraud, report fraud the d O, t
FTC dot com where I come from.
Speaker 11 (19:16):
You don't get bar unless you ask. My name is
Joe Biden. I'm a Democratic candidate for the United States Senate.
Speaker 8 (19:22):
Look me over your leg wes help both the other by.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Give me a look though. Okay, if you can.
Speaker 9 (19:27):
Do anything at all, Joe, what would you do?
Speaker 3 (19:30):
Said?
Speaker 8 (19:30):
Cure cancer?
Speaker 3 (19:31):
It looks at me like why cancer? Because no one
thinks we can.
Speaker 12 (19:35):
That's why we can if you and the cancers we
know this is an historical moment and for the US
because invite they can do.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
You can?
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (19:52):
Good and so it's a good question.
Speaker 9 (19:57):
Number One I I was a Democratic caucus.
Speaker 11 (20:04):
Yeah you know, line dog faced pony soldier, and you
said you are, but here now you gotta be honest.
I'm gonna be honest with you. You know you're wrappingly
rising uh.
Speaker 7 (20:15):
Uh with uh.
Speaker 12 (20:19):
With uh you know Donald hump Donald Trump is re
elected forty slip.
Speaker 3 (20:26):
Wait, but you've got to play from then with the
political that's a great ass more facia, it's a stupid So.
Speaker 12 (20:43):
We should challenge teams in the schools that advanced placement
program in the school we had this notion somehow you're poor,
you cannot do it. Poor kits are just as bright
and just as talents white kids.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
The wealthy kids kids.
Speaker 12 (21:00):
I really do I think I would think about its
un chain.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
I'm gonna put one.
Speaker 6 (21:12):
Of Obama what nine trillion dollars so far the beginning
chicks in the mail that are consequential.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
This week, which I don't care environment, Why would I know?
Speaker 8 (21:28):
Before America is a nation that can be defined in
a single word.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
I was in prison, go to, but go go to
in honor, honor to be here. We're welcome.
Speaker 8 (21:52):
I'm as Albanes and I'm thank you Boris and m hm.
Speaker 3 (22:04):
Hm, now you know somebody most up. It was up.
You got the reporters, you got other legislators, and my god, yeah,
other leaders of other countries, from dignitaries. They knew, they
(22:30):
knew that, they recognized that they were watching that they're
like grand grandfather. This wasting away in front of them
wasn't a secret secret from those who are not not
(22:53):
not even necessarily political junkies, people just not in honest
about themselves, if they even so. Artists man Tyki's speech,
those who were in attendance at that campaign stop of
a parent campaign stop, but they like that big D
(23:17):
in front of its name. This ignore all of that. Amazing, amazing,
ye me. So the fundamental transformation Part two of America.
(23:48):
You have no US borders. What did it look like
under Trump? Say, twenty seventeen? Number of encounters this is
from the the Ice and Boulder. Don't think the name
(24:18):
c cbb C, c CBP on on the records. So
you had Trump twenty seventeen, you have about five hundred
and twenty six thousand, nine hundred and one. And this
was sharp decline after inauguration. Why because he let everybody
(24:40):
know a new sheriff was coming to town, and he
didn't have to do remain in Mexico policy twenty seventeen
up checked six hundred eighty three seventy eight, twenty nineteen,
(25:02):
nine hundred and seventy seven, five hundred, one thousand, five
hundred and nine. Twenty twenty it dropped drastically. Pandemic of
course in lockdowns four hundred and fifty eight thousand, eighty eight.
Then comes by Hughes doubling. This is just in twenty
(25:29):
twenty one people knew a new shell was coming to
a time, one that was held bid on a raising borders,
particularly in the South one point seven million. And that
was even with Title fifty two, which is basically was
(25:50):
Trump pandemic eraror legislation a law to protect I guess
conteminated it individuals I believe from coming across the border.
But even even with that, buying pretty much ignore that
(26:11):
twenty twenty two two point four million record breaking for
global migrations, and a global migration spike twenty twenty three
three point two million, highest ever recorded. Even we're tired
afforded to ending and in the mid the middle of
(26:35):
that year twenty twenty four buying, of course he's looking
at leaving and for political reasons, he I gotta do
something to make at least make people see not trying
to do something. So there was a fore people who
say sharp decline after aside of restrictions put it in
(26:59):
place by Biden, and that was even still one point
five million. But let's look at on top of the
immigration issue, and if y'all remember a couple of productions
(27:28):
ago or videos ago, I talked about Agenda twenty thirty.
If y'all want to get more answers about why it
was Biden's pregnancy so significant and why he can't mention
all of the goals regards to the transformation of this
(27:52):
country all were attached to twenty thirty. When you look
at the issue involving migration, look at twenty thirty. That
will answer a lot of your questions. He was definitely
a globalist, unabashedly so, but twenty thirty will answer a
(28:15):
lot of questions in regard to his behavior, particularly in
regards to the border. Twenty thirty made it made it
quite clear that it was going to give free reign
for people to this course so into another country. Look
at it. It will open your eyes to a lot,
but moving forward, moving forward, Bide spoke a lot about
(28:41):
his his so called positive imprint on the labor labor market.
Excuse me, Sat DoD my note South for the noise,
(29:03):
but pictures worth one thousand words. This is for those
of you who are able to actually watch this. This
is a graph from the House Budget Committee twenty on
twenty twenty three. It shows compassion between growth dob growth
(29:30):
on the Trump and job growth on the Biden pre
pandemic from twenty seventeen to twenty twenty nothing but roses up, up,
up in a way, Dan King, of course, twenty twenty
(29:54):
and it had never reached the level of pre pandemic
Trump period. So the main point of this is this.
The two numbers. Liberal participation strongest under Trump, zero point
(30:22):
seven percent lower Biden than Trump, adjusting for population games.
Two million Americans on the sidelines during Biden. What's up?
(30:47):
What's that say? Two million Americans on the sidelines more
than under Trump. Wages real wages down over five percent
under Biden, the average work loss was over four thousand,
(31:10):
nine hundred dollars and real wages. Cost of living prices
shot up fifteen point five percent under Biden three times
higher than it's a few years prior. Of course, we
talk about the Trump the average family of four paying
(31:36):
thirteen thousand, seven hundred and seventeen dollars per year. Say
that again, thirteen thousand, seven hundred and seventeen dollars per
year under Biden, one thousand, one hundred and forty three
(32:00):
dollars per month to purchase same goods and service services
as they were preciously under twenty twenty one. Think about that.
Think about that. Domestic investments under Biden forty nine zero
(32:30):
point seven percent of Inflation Reduction Act equating to two
hundred and seventy one billion dollars, and taxes all went,
(32:50):
the tax credits all went to the top one percent,
primarily banks and insurers. Forty nine point seven tax hit
(33:12):
on manufacturers, says the Joint Committee on Taxation. The tax
will cost twenty thousand jobs and slow economic growth, says
(33:40):
the Tax Foundation. That's the real number. That's the real
story regarding Biden's term in office, the economic devastation that
(34:06):
he let loose on this country. We all feltered. But
to see the numbers, and that to stop there when
you look at again, continue on the fundamental transfersformation of
(34:28):
this country. You have to look at during the pandemic.
Of course, we all know about the millions and trillions
of dollars that poured into the printed and poured into
the economy. The American rescue Plan injected at one point
nine trillion. That's on the books. Okay, understand that that's
(34:52):
on the books. The real number from from the FED
is unknown. Some believe it's in the multi trillion dollars. Okay,
Boosting one provate benefits, tax, child tax credits, and food assistance.
(35:16):
At its peak, the average poor family received oh my god,
the average poor family received seventy up two up to
seventy six thousand, four hundred dollars annually annually and combined
(35:42):
government support, says the Hawtage dot org. Let me see
that again. At its peak, the average poor family received
up to six thousand dollars annually. This, these these expansion cut,
(36:21):
these these expansions cut property, raised stress dramatically. In twenty
twenty one, I go back to so especially among children
and communities of color. Of course, give a poor family
seventy six thousand dollars, and companies all over one of
(36:47):
where are the kids out. Where are the people? How
come they they look for jobs after the pandemic or
after the crackdown pandemic after the crackdown, where are they?
They were lunching off of sety five thousand. Sit that
(37:07):
whole crazy, insane. The impact low income families. Of course,
if you if you're gonna pay me to stay home,
you know it's gonna be it's gonna be a problem.
(37:28):
Get getting me to change my behavior. Okay, longcame. Families
saw short term relief, but now face rides, it costs,
and we and reduced aid a degree. We train got
an end. Sometime. Middle class savers felt the squeeze by
inflation and housing prices going up. Public perception remains skeptical.
(37:56):
Skeptical only nineteen percents of swing state vhoters we waited
the economy is good in late twenty twenty three, but wait,
there's more post pandemic after the party, somebody got to
(38:17):
pay the bill, and the band is all gone home.
In late twenty twenty three, minion portgrins aspired and were
scaled back, including enhance snap food stamps. Monthly benefits dropped
by ninety to three hundred and twenty eight dollars per
(38:39):
household says slate dot com. Childcare stabilization funds ended in
October twenty twenty three were risking closures and rising costs.
Student loan motoriums lifted with payments assuming for twenty eight
(39:01):
million dollars, said Politico, the roadbacks led to rise and poverty. Really,
that seventy six thousand dollars was gone, and nobody taught
them how they invest it to make it last. So
(39:23):
now that works off than before they got that money.
Imagine that from seven point eight percent and twenty twenty
one to twelve point four percent twenty twenty two, and
that buiden great criticism and economic trade offs. Some analysis
(39:49):
argue expanding welfare discouraged work. Seventy six thousand dollars come
to my home for home, home for free. You don't
think that that might discourage me from going on actually
looking for a job, continuing contributing to labor shortages and inflation.
(40:13):
The Bill Back Better Plan was criticized for removing work requirements,
potentially increasing dependency on government. I wonder was that a
mistake or was it deliberate? You know what, I think
(40:35):
it was definitely wasn't a mistake. The other state of
programs temporarily mass economic hardships but failed to create lasting
mobility because there were no strings attached to the seventy
six thousand dollars annual gift from the government, and you
(40:57):
had to do any thing for it never ends well.
And then of course we go to Biden's trend transgender agenda,
(41:19):
and I would quote, if we can't agree on what's
the boy and what's the girl, what else is there
to talk about? I say not much. Biden's Executive Orders
thirteen nine eighty five launched a whole of Government Equity initiative,
(41:46):
requiring agencies to assessed and address barriers faced by underserved communities,
present of body's d EI. Diversity, equity and inclusion, and
transgender policies have wide range effects on American society, touching
(42:06):
touching government, education, health care, civil rights, and cultural norms.
These administrations supported gender firming care, including for minors, and
back Medicaid coverage for transition related treatments. There's no such
(42:28):
state as transition. There's no such status transgender. It's only
two genders. And once God make you, you are it.
There's no trends by definition, you are either a male
or you are a female, no matter what kind of
(42:50):
augmentations or or or or chopping off you do. When
when you're when your bones are picked up thirty eighty hundred,
two hundred years from now, there's only three things that
they're gonna look for, your ethnicity, well two, your ethnicity,
(43:15):
and your gender. There it won't be no question in
the gender either you're gonna be a male or you're
gonna be a female, period period. If someone knows something different,
let me know, even when I'm aphrodite, still is gonna
(43:35):
have to be either a male or female. Period. Nonsense
to think anything else. But this is where we are,
and Biden really really hyped it and put it into
the school system, and that is gonna be something that
(43:59):
we will be paying for for a long time to come.
Buying DEA and transgender policies aimed to embed equity into
the fabric of American governance, but they also anticified national
debates over identity, merit, and civil liberties. Supporters saw progress
(44:19):
toward inclusion, Critics saw a shift towards I ideological bureaucracy.
President I mean buy his pregnancy has reshaped the way
the Americans viad the country. His administration has led to
(44:39):
an increase in pride among progressive and younger Americans who
value its inclusivity so to justice and international cooperation. Conversely,
conservatives and traditionalists may feel that the country's natural identity
is being diluted or undermined by policies they seem that
(45:04):
seemed to question long standard traditions and values the evaluation
of national pride that the evolution of national pride during
Biden's term reflects deepening cultural device and shifting views of
what it means to be a proud American government handouts
(45:33):
group under Biden's tenure, Biden's budget proposals aim to increase
taxes un a wealthy missed, of course, and let's found
that some let let let the state of versions actually
resulted in regression outcomes. Regressive outcomes. Get this, The bottom
(45:56):
twenty percent of earners saw a two point nine percent
income decline. That's right, decline. The bottom twenty percent about
seven hundred dollars annually gone. The top one percent gained
were for you thirty thousand annually through the loopholes and
(46:20):
teriffle op sets, said the budget lab at Yale critics
argue by his policy hurt the middle class savor, especially
through proposed caps on retirement accounts and penalties for lost balances.
(46:40):
Democrats always always worked to do the best to erase
the middle class. Not me saying this. Take a good
look at their policies and see if they match up
(47:01):
with their rhetoric. Well, man, these changes may have this
incentivize investments, of course, if you're gonna if I may
not be the smartest investor, but you're gonna penalize me
for my investments, tax me on it does that make
(47:27):
me want to do it more or less less? It's
low retirement growth. It puts wealthy your individuals toward real estate,
driving up housing prices and worsing affordability for those for
some home buyers, those kind of in the middle income
(47:49):
bracket are those looking to go up a bracket problem
read distribution through stimulus and social spend that may have
continued to contributed contributed to inflation, especially in housing and
consumer goods. Nothing happens in the vacuum. Government again doesn't
(48:17):
create wealth. It can only it can only it can
only redistribute it from one hand to the other. Most
cases is from the bottom half to the upper half.
(48:43):
That's just the way it is. But here don't tell it.
It's exact opposite. Wealth taxes and capital game reforms reduce
incentives to invest, potentially slowing economic growth and innovation. Because
(49:06):
the pie is only so big, the more government government
hand is in the pockets of the American people, as
long as their hands are carving up the pie, more
(49:30):
for them and their cronies. Less for private people private
industry to do things that create wealth for those on
the lower end. The job creators, those who create jobs
(49:51):
for little Johnny to have something to do during the
summer or have some have to allow Johnny decide to
have their first job. Government doesn't do that. Someone in
a private sector wanting to put their capital, their money
(50:15):
at risks for their dream to be a business owner
to provide jobs for their community. But goverment come in
and take all the money that he needs to borrow,
(50:37):
then he cannot open that business. You have to talk
about what happened to him January sixth and comparison to
(51:00):
what happened during the Summer of Rage under the guys
of George Floyd protests i e. Riots, The media totally,
totally totally misrepresented. Both one was called a riot, the
(51:25):
other it was called political protests. And you know which
one was called the riot. It wasn't George Floyd. But
by definition and description you'll see otherwise. And a quote
(51:47):
by Edward Barnez, Who's Edward Barneze. He's the father of propaganda.
He's the father of propaganda, propaganda, and he learned his
lessons under the Nazis, under Aloft Hitler. He says, the
(52:10):
conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions
of the masses is an important element in democratic society.
Those who manipulate the unseen mechanism of society constitute and
invisible government, which is the true ruling power of our country.
(52:37):
How that play out here the contrasts between how the
Biden administration and Federical government agencies handle January Assists Capital
protesters Russus the George Floord rioters. Let's look at this.
The Januine Assist Capital protesters fourteen thousand plus were arrested,
(53:00):
average sentence forty eight days for a misdemeanor. Pre trial
and detentions lasted four months. Pre trial. Participants were lostly
allowed to leave the capital before being before being arrested later.
(53:25):
Many times they went to different different different states, different
counties because they lost were visiting DC from that day.
They were snatched out at homes that they long forgot about.
Most cases what happened, many were charge based on video
(53:48):
evidence and social media approachs. Comparedition to George Floyd riders
seventeen thousand plus who were arrested Nation changed WI ever
sentenced twenty seventy months for filly charges but right pre
(54:09):
tried detention. Mostly mostly were quickly released or charges or
dropped totally. During the George Floyd riots, law enforcement deploymentlitary units,
under cover agency that's interesting and aggressive crowd control tactics
(54:32):
like Kentling Kentling and being backgrounds. They have to do
that for the January six ers. But you look at
the penalty, very very misplaced. Nobody's talking about it. The
(54:58):
scale of violence, that property of damage during the twenty
twenty riots which cast up to two billion with the
b y'all two billion dollars in damage, an injured fifteen
times more officers than January sixth. Chester says a real
(55:22):
clear investigations dot com it's right, yeh. And what they
(55:45):
did the Trump. If it's not, If that's not criminal,
I don't know what it is. And again it's not
like this is secret. H This was an article in
New American Biden Democrats Garden didn't wage lawfare soon enough
(56:09):
against Trump, as they said. And then of course we
got that traveser of of a court case in New
York where the DA is shown to be working for Biden.
(56:38):
How is that not a automatic should be dismissal? But
far as I know, he still had the job. The
raised on not just poor life, poor life, was poor
(57:02):
poor life leaders. But this the ray on anyone aspiresing
a Christian belief on the Biden's term or sickening to
see he was so blatant about it. Gave much love
(57:26):
for any religion so long as it wasn't Christian, almost demonic,
throwing anyone who held a high position and belief in Christianity,
(57:52):
particularly those who dare tried to save someone from killing
that child in the womb deffinitely no note they put
you under the jail, and not figuratively. They cannot talk
(58:13):
about Biden, not talk about what he did doing COVID lockdowns.
Liberty took a serious hit and it's not going to
recover anytime soon. September twenty twenty one, Biden are now
(58:39):
sweeping vaccine requirements. All federal employees and contractors had to
be vaccinated, had to be vaccinated. Businesses with one hundred
plus employees were required to mandate vaccines or weekly testing
via USHA regulations. Health care providers receiving Medicare or Medicaid
(59:04):
funding how to ensure staff vaccinations. And you know, many
of those smaller ones totally gave up receiving Medicare and
Medicaid funding for that main purpose. They did not want
to be told but government that they had to inject
their employees with the unknown concoction just because government was
(59:33):
telling them to do so. Bill framed biten frame as
a public health necessity, saying that it's not about freedom
or personal choice. It's about protecting yourself and those around you. Oh,
don't want to put individual freedom ahead of the collective.
(59:58):
Don't want to do that. See they tell you who
they are. We just listen to them. American alarm bell
signing around the country. GOP governess revolted at least nineteen
(01:00:18):
Republican governors about legal action, calling the mandate constitution, which
it was, How was it when when constitution does the
government gets us power? You don't ask that question. We
ain't got any doubt about what the government is trying
(01:00:39):
to tell you to do. But what authority? Simple question
as a citizen of a free citizen of America the
fifty States, By what authority do you have to have
to tell me to do such a thing? Simple question?
They have to tell you if they can. South Carolina
(01:01:04):
Governor Henry Macastle said he'll fight them to the case
of health South Carolina's Christian known which is now very
very well suited and top of administration treated directly to
Biden senior court lawsuits and legal challenges. The publican national
communities sue no behalf of some of our businesses, look
(01:01:26):
for them. Federal court issue temporary blocks, especially on mandates
for federal contractors and private employers. When it came to
individual individualism versus the public health, the United States response
(01:01:48):
was filtered through a cultural leans of individualism where personal
freedom and autonomy are prize. Policies like mass mandates, vaccine requirements,
and business closures were seen by many as government overreached,
(01:02:09):
sparking resistance even among those who supported by Politically, the
most emotional polarization was big high arousal, high arouser emotions
like anger, fear, in defiance dominate a public discourse. People
are fighting, y'all. Start the people fighting, Particularly if you
(01:02:34):
were around someone who was living in fear compared to
someone who was living in freedom, who didn't see a
need to wear a mask if they were sick. That's
always just watch somebot wear a mask. At least before COVID,
was because you were sick, not people around you. Leaders
(01:02:56):
used war metaphors and visible enemy, complete victory that implified
anxiety and division, psychological strain, and identity politics. Americans face
identity based stress, where complaints with manadates became a symbol
of political allegiance. You on this side, you're on that side.
(01:03:19):
You are someone who's for freedom. I'm not gonna wear
a mask. That's because I ain't sick. Someone who wanted
to visual signal wearing a mask indoors wearing a mask,
sitting along in your car or driving along in your car,
that nonsense. Or when I love six feet distance in
(01:03:43):
an airplane? How many remember that nonsense? And that would
seem as completely logical insane. The rise of slogans like
my body, my choice, we purpose against we, we purposed
(01:04:08):
against vaccines reflected a collision between personal liberty and communal responsibility.
The collective mental health deteriorated, especially am under youth because
they were blocked from going to school, seeing their friends
(01:04:31):
living a normal life. You know what countries that didn't
do this nonsense Sweden. Look at it and see how
they managed to survive that period. You see very interesting.
Then you also better understand why Sweden went off the
(01:04:52):
map during COVID, particularly regards to America news, losing media
and politicians, especially among young and marginalized groups, respite anxiety, depression,
(01:05:14):
and substance abuse. Of course, not computer will go off now.
Emergency Temporary Standards ETS the vaccine mandate. In September twenty
twenty one, Buying Director over shoot to issue an emergency
temporary standing requiring business EDUA with the one hundred plus
(01:05:35):
employees to ensure workers were either fascinated or tested weekly.
Went on that earlier a little bit. Legal challenges and
Supreme Court blocked many of these efforts. The ETA faced
the ETS face does lawsuits from Republican Lazed States, religious groups,
(01:05:58):
and trade sanctions. The interesting thing that I think is
critical to look at how the government shut down many
churches to impose this mandate requirements. The church is supposed
(01:06:25):
to be above government. Government is not supposed to be
in friends on religious expression. All of that went out
the window. People allowed government to shut down the church California,
(01:06:46):
I believe there was a big church in California fought
them and won. Many other churches in many other states
that you don't hear about based on that state's political
of persuasion. Those churches remain open. On all of this,
(01:07:12):
another thing you need to understand. Government schools closed, many
of them, particularly in blue states, but interestingly, private schools
stayed open. Many moment pop stores businesses were shut down,
(01:07:43):
but the big multi national businesses hardware stores, food change
were allowed to remain open. They were made that they're
call essential. The mama parts were called non essential. Dirty game.
(01:08:10):
Dirty game. January twenty twenty two, the Supreme Court, like
the mandate ruler that ULSHA had exceeded its authority, also
formally resul because oh should knew? Oh should knew? They
did need an excuse to get out of that mess.
(01:08:32):
The Supreme Court gave them that excuse. They ended the
legal battle by encouraging businesses to voluntarily comply, which it
should have been voluntary from the first pretend. Oce she knew, Oh,
she knew that there was nothing and their rules of
authority to oppose such a mandate over all businesses. They
(01:08:58):
knew crisis that Cristis emphasized compliance. According to Harvard led study,
seventy Americans were in initially willing to sacrifice liberties for
(01:09:22):
health security. This was a blind obedience. It reflective fear
of certainty and a desire for collective safety in the
face of an invisible threat. Collective not individual. Collective. Americans,
(01:09:43):
despite their reputation for Rugan individualism, showed that that under
the rest many betrayed autonomy for procede protection. Trust the
institutions was fragile. The pandemic exposed deep distrust in government, media,
(01:10:05):
and science, especially as medicine shifted and mandates evolved. Yet
many complied not because they trusted, but because they felt
powerless to resist or fear social and legal consequences. Remind
(01:10:28):
me of the board, Remind me of the of the board.
Doesn't you? That doesn't doesn't.
Speaker 1 (01:10:45):
I?
Speaker 3 (01:10:45):
Founders knew better to mu Jefferson, those who sill render
freedom for security will not have nor do they deserve either.
James Madison, I believe that. I believe there are more
instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people
(01:11:08):
by gradual science and ciding coursements of those in power
than by vioting in sudden receptions. And then maybe most
poignant John Adams, Liberty wants lost is never It's lost forever.
(01:11:32):
When the people want surrender their share and their legislator
and their right of defending the limitations upon the government,
and of the resisting every upon them upon them, they
can never regain it. Let me say that again, Liberty
(01:11:58):
wants lost is lost forever. When people once surrender, one time,
one time, surrender their share and the legislature, and their
right of defending the limitations upon the government, and of
resisting every encroasement, every encroasement, every encorsement upon them, they
(01:12:27):
can never regain it. Nobody to this point has really
seriously been held accountable here. If y'all remember the first election,
there's a midtim election, not one Democrat lost his seat.
(01:12:58):
Think about that. The terror that went on in Blue
states during this period, people in Blue states had to
witness the World Series in Texas where people were walking
(01:13:21):
around free. People in Blue states had to witness Super
Bowl being played in Florida, were walking around free, no mask,
and y'all turned around and send those same people who
(01:13:42):
imposed that nonsense on y'all back into office, had them
do what they've done to y'all with impenity. I think
it won't happen again. That's the issue. And Biden and
(01:14:05):
the Democrats divided us to where it maybe it would
suck irreversible the damage that he has done and the
(01:14:32):
Democrats have done. But at the end of the day,
it is up to us. It is up to us
to save ourselves and decide whether we're going to be
(01:14:52):
free or not.
Speaker 2 (01:15:10):
Thanks for listening to today's show, and don't forget to
like and subscribe to this podcast and look for Project
Thirdeye Open on your favorite social media platforms. Check out
our web page at Projectthirdiopen dot com and that's third
I with the letter I Projectthirdiopen dot com. Drop us
(01:15:31):
a note at tonyel at Projectthirdiopen dot com. That's tonyel
at Projectthirdiyopen dot com. As you wait for our next
podcast to drop. Don't take anything we've said us back. Instead,
do your own homework, make up your own mind, then
take action. Until next time, be blessed, be good, and
(01:15:55):
be free.