Episode Transcript
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(00:02):
One world currence as a trouble.I imagine that right now you're feeling a
bit like Alice tumbling down the rabbithole. Let me tell you why you're
here. You're here because you knowsomething. What you know you can't explain
(00:24):
what you feel. It You feltit your entire life. But there's something
wrong in the world. You don'tknow what it is, but it's there,
like a splinter in your mind,driving you mad. It is this
feeling that has brought you to me. This is your life's chance. After
this, there is no turning.You take the blue pill, the story
(00:44):
in you wake up in your bedand believe whatever you want. You take
the red pill. You stay inWonderland, and I show you how beat
the rabbit hole go. All I'moffering is the truth nothing. For we
are opposed around the world by amonolithic and ruthless conspiracy have relies primarily on
(01:07):
covert means for expanding its sphere ofinfluence. On infiltration instead of invasion,
on subversion, instead of elections,on intimidation, instead of free choice,
on guerrillas by night instead of armiesby day. It is a system which
has been scripted vast human and materialresources into the building of a Titan nith
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highly efficient machines that combine military,diplomatic intelligence, economic, scientifics, and
political operations. Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried,
not headlined. Its descent is aresilenced, not praised. No expenditure
is questioned, no rumor is printed, no secret is revealed. But I
(01:53):
am asking your help and the tremendoustask of informing and alerting the American pea.
And now welcome to another episode ofDown the rabbit Hole. Here's your
host, It's Popeye. Ladies andgentlemen, welcome to another live edition of
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rabbit Hole Radio. It is Septemberthirty two, twenty three, and tonight
joining me for two full hours offun and jocularity, just crapping all over
the New World Order. Agenda ismy good friend, my brother from another
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mother, and fellow broadcaster here atkg R A, mister Joe Joseph Joe.
Welcome, hide Leyho, neighbor.How you doing. I'm doing pretty
good. How are you? I'msurviving. That's about all I can say
right now. I feel your pain. Thank you for coming on tonight,
(03:00):
appreciate it well. I mean,I gotta do it once a week,
and if Scotty can't make it forone night, then you know, I
can always punt and do the teno'clock thing if I have to. You
know, it's fun. It's funto stay up late and hang out,
right, Yeah, yeah, itsure is. But but even more so,
it's it's good to vent, andthere's a lot to vent about holy
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crap, you know, and thenlike and then like, so, you
know, I've been going through alot of craph this past week, and
who knows, you know, maybenext weekend we'll have a humdinger of a
freaking story to tell. So it'sjust there's just so much. I mean,
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I used to say, man,I can't get much crazier than Obama.
Yeah, oh no, it's wellit's about Bush too. It's still
Obama. He's just sitting in abasement. Yeah, you're right, Yeah,
he's sitting in He's sitting in abasement somewhere with a poop, straight
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up poop. So what are wetalking about tonight? There's a few things
actually, I'd like before we getinto Ukraine and the money pit situation that
that whole thing is because I havea thing from sixty minutes this report where
I don't know if a lot ofpeople have seen this. I'm gonna play
it and you and I can justverbally tear it apart. But before we
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get into all that fun and themoney laundering and all the wasteful spending in
Ukraine, but hey, we needmore taxes here at home anyway. But
before I can get sidetracked right intoit, So before we get into that,
there's a couple of things I wantto discuss with you. So Radchick
had wanted me to ask you aquestion, and this is a great on
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air question because she's seeing on likeTwitter and I've seen it too. It's
like all over Twitter people keep talkingabout or X whatever Musk Talk calls it.
Now that it's there's this upcoming eastest on the fourth And Steve Steve
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Stars had brought this up to melast week and we didn't get a chance
to get into this. Him andI covered so many things. I just
didn't get into it with him.But he had brought this up too,
that there's this talk of, youknow, with all the nano particles that
is said to be in these vaccinesand all these people that got vaccinated people
are worried now that because and Idon't know who started it, who came
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out and said it right, butwhere the source was from. But somebody
put out there that they're going toput out some sort of broadcast during that
test, and it could affect peoplepeople that are vaccinated. And there's because
there's such a concern with the otherside effects of the vaccines that are real,
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like that are people are dropping dead, you know, you know,
all over the place. So Ican completely understand how somebody even a few
years ago this may have sounded crazy. Uh, it's not really crazy.
So and you used to do yourspecially like radio and satellite communications and stuff,
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so you are the like most qualifiedindividual I know personally that I could
reach out to at a moment's noticeand ask their opinion about it. So,
what is your opinion about the upcomingtest, the possibility of five G
some weird signal coming through the fiveG or from the test and the nanoparticles
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from the COVID vaccination. Well,first things first, five D and of
itself is not dangerous, not offthe not off the bat, not off
the bat. It's like everything else. Radiation is cumulative. Five G is
just a designation for frequency. It'sjust a band, right, and typically
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those higher frequency bands. I thinkfive g's like I want to say,
like seven five to seven giga hurts. Maybe I got to look it up,
but anyway, it's in the gigahurt range. And what that means
is it's a tighter wave form.So and the tighter the wave form,
the better it is to pass data, which is why they like to use
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the higher frequencies. Now, militaryis already up in seven G and higher
and have been using that for sometime. And again, if you're just
using a transceiver like for example,your cell phone, and you don't you're
not holding it straight to your heador you know, you don't have it
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on your person directly, it's reallynot that big a deal. It's it's
not. When you hold it aquarter inch or less from your head is
when you start or body. That'swhen you can start to, you know,
over the long term, have somehealth effects. Now here's the here's
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the that's it in its organic Iguess the organic way. Right. That's
just a transceiver or a transmitter anda receiver and they're talking back and forth,
right, and they're back actually bothtransceivers, because ever since smartphones came
around, that's when we went froma system of like half duplex, which
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means that it's it will send backif it's pinned, but it won't send
and receive constantly, to a fullduplex type of environment where your cell phones
are constantly sending and receiving at thesame time. That's how they're constantly updating,
that's how you constantly get emails orchats or whatever when they come in
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is because you've always got that connectionat handshake with the closest cell tower.
And when that happened, it changedthe game because no one up to that
point had really held a full duplextransceiver on their person for hours at a
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time, all day long. It'skind of unprecedented, and there's really not
much data to support it being healthy. Because like in the military, we
do rad hazard right, radiation hazard, and you have to know like what
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your radiation hazard is, what yourzone is, that kind of stuff,
and they focus a lot on yourhigh power transceivers or transmitters, and they
also focus on full duty cycle orfull duplex transmitters or transceivers because because just
how I don't want to say dangerous. It's dangerous over time. And really
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it's a function of wavelength and power, power being the most important factor out
of it, because the more poweryou have, the more it's going to
penetrate the skin. Whereas so theway it goes is, the longer the
wave form, the less penetrating itis, Whereas the tighter the wave form,
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the more it's able to penetrate.The way we know this is like
for example, Ham radio right,ham radio is what we call high frequency.
It's in the high frequency range thatcan't penetrate our atmosphere. So when
you keya ham radio, it bouncesoff the atmosphere and comes back down.
That's how you get over the horizoncommunication without a satellite. And depending on
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how you tune it and what frequenciesyou're using, and you know, ducting
and all sorts of other ways thatyou have that kind of factor in to
it, you can reach anybody anywherein the world with a thousand wats,
maybe even less, maybe even onehundred, depends on how well you've got
it tuned and how good your systemis. But it can't really penetrate anything.
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It can't even penetrate our atmosphere.Then you get in the VHF and
UHF very high frequency and ultra highfrequency. Well, now it can penetrate
the atmosphere VHF and UHF like youknow, that's a voice terrestrial radio TV
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that kind of range. And thenyou get into your personal electronics, your
home phones and things like that.Then you get into your giga hurt range
and your multi gigga hurt, yourhigher gigga hurt range. That's your cell
phones and and high data stream typedevices. That's also like Wi Fi extenders
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and things like that. So therule of thumb is though, the tighter
the waveform, the more power youneed to push it. So you know,
for a micro transmitter that your cellphone is it. Like I said,
it has to be cumulative over time. However, we know that with
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all the peer reviewed stuff, thescience, the nanoscience and things like that,
it's not out of the realm ofpossibility for them to have a binary
bioweapon or something like that. Allahmaybe a vaccine or just could be anything.
It could be something they spray inthe air. You had the philip
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Igo experiments in the nineteen sixties wherethey sprayed like that radioactive stuff over the
Saint Louis ghettos to see the reaction, see and monitor what would happen.
They've sterilized people with these covert campaigns, So we have a history of our
country doing that. You have avery, very, very sensitive populace because
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the institutions that you're supposed to beable to trust, that should have your
best interests, that are looking outfor your rights and everybody's rights, are
not doing that at all, andit makes people's minds wander. The other
thing is what's been seeing can't beunseen, and we got a big problem
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with that now because there's a lotof things that are happening in our society
that once you go there, there'sno going back. And cell phones is
one of those things. Because couldyou imagine tomorrow they come out and say,
oh, you know what cell phonesare are cancers? Well, they're
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already starting to say that. They'vebeen putting it in their their literature with
the new phones now for about thelast five years, and yeah, are
you kidding you think people are goingto dump those for what? What are
they gonna think? They just did? They just came out country, give
up your cell phone. Go ahead, let's see, there was one of
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the European countries, was it France? I think it was France just came
out and said that the iPhone twelve, the iPhone twelve, it is it
seems the safety standards. Yeah,by by a pretty large amount. Yes,
it's it's not even by like youknow, the line is here and
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it's just going over the line.It's past. How many people a lot
of things to their head. Well, a lot of people have implants now,
like pacemakers, things like that.It could start to interfere with that
kind of stuff. To higher yougo, depending on the frequency. Remember
a lot of this. That's nota joke. That's not a joke.
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Microwaves. My friend's got a pacemaker. He's coasty and he's got a pacemaker
because he's got a fib so theythey he's got a pacemaker in there,
and it's also a defibrillator. It'slike both. It'll shock his heart and
it monitors everything. They can remotelycontrol it. He'll talk to his doctor
on the phone and they'll be like, you know, they'll be keyed in
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on his and they'll tune it whilehe's on the phone with them, and
he'll be in his apartment and theycan tune that thing from wherever the doctor
is sitting in his office. Firstof all, which is creepy. There's
a lot of things they could dowirelessly with those things. But he can't
go near a microwave. Like whenif he uses a microwave oven, he
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has to have somebody else like useit. He can't stand near the microwave.
And he used to have a metaldetector. He used to love to
go down to the beach and gometal detect and he just walked the beach
and like miles and miles and miles, he had to stop because the thing
was interfering. It made him.He went down there and he was metal
detecting. One day after he gotyou know, he had surgery and it
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was like, you know, Idon't know. Eight months later he's like,
you know what, I want togo out metal detecting. He goes
out and he's metal detecting for liketen fifteen minutes. He got all woozy
and he couldn't He didn't understand why, and then he realized, oh my
god, it's the metal detector.Like it was giving off a frequency that
was interfering with his pacemaker. There'stwo ways. There's two ways a metal
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detect there's either like a radar typeaway or sonar. It's typically radar or
magnet like magnetism. It creates amagnetic field, which is like the bane
of a pacemaker. Defibs exists.You don't want to hear that too bad.
They couldn't walk near dick Cheney afew years back. Oh tell me
about it, dude, But Imean, let me I think what was
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it? Elon came out he didlike a little meme or something today and
said, well, look at allthese conspiracy theories proven right, We're running
out of conspiracy theories. You knowthat that I haven't been that aren't wrong.
So how many times do we haveto be proven right before people start
believe in the conspiracy theories? Youknow? And of course it's just a
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label, it's just a label.But conspiracies are very very serious, especially
if you can put somebody in prisonfor one, that's for sure. And
you know, there's a bunch ofpeople sitting in prison because of January sixth,
and the word of the day wasconspiracy. Right, that's right,
and that's that's a pretty serious thing. And those things investigated and quite Frankly,
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the government has a bad track recordof experimentation on our own people,
and it would be highly irresponsible ofthe people to not question these really weird
things. Now, we've had thesedrills before. That's not what bothers me.
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What bothers me is that Russia,at around the same time it's going
to be on the third, isconducting its first ever nationwide nuclear attack drill
that's going to span eleven time zonesand it's going to simulate a nuclear attack
on the West. Now, thething to understand about Russia different from US
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is they have enough nuclear shelters forbasically their entire population. We don't.
We don't have spit, we don'thave the infrastructure. All that Cold War
infrastructures gone now, so there areno places to go. It's all duck
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and covered duct tape and plastic wrap. Didn't know they got sold to rich
people. Oh well, that's right, Yes, you could. You could
buy a if you're rich, youcan. You can buy a bunker.
Yeah, I remember, you seewhat I'm buy the old missile silos and
the bunkers. Like ten years agowe talked about this, or moved to
the ozarks, yeah, or removedto the Ozarks, right, But then
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you got to be careful because ifyou run into what's his name, Marty,
who's laundering money for the drug cartelsout there. You never saw that
show Ozark, Yeah you don't.I don't know, bro, after after
seeing that show, So I don'tknow if it's safe to live out on
the other side, it's probably not, probably not, but but you know,
so October three, the one dayattack exercise, it's only ever has
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only ever been done region by region, so never a whole national thing.
And it's going to include the preparationfor the destruy action off the seventy percent
of Russian housing stock and life supportfacilities. So it's it'll assume martial law
and Russia and the ruling class willbe able to practice implementing the utmost terrific
level of tyranny on a slave class. Basically, Wait, so they're they're
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doing a drill the day before.Uh huh. We have our emergency alert
system drill that people are worried about. Yes, and while everyone is I
mean a genuine concern about frequencies andstuff like that. But while everyone's concerned
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about frequencies and things like that.I wonder if people are not paying attention
to the Russian drill happening the daythat's the problem where they're going to implement
martial law and you're gonna it's gonnago through all the motions. We're not
the only ones that know how tomake a drill go live. You know.
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It's a lot of people think likeAmerica, you know, we're so
smart. No, I mean weare in many aspects when we do come
up with or pioneer certain things,but then eventually, like that's going to
get exported to the rest of theworld, just like every other country throughout
history. So you know, Russia'sgoing to learn and how we control our
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population here in the United States versushow they used to. And you just
can't disappear everybody into a goolog orhave them photoshopped out of history like Stalin
did so. You know his famousphotographs where over the course of time,
if you look at the original photograph, there's like three different versions of it,
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and every time there's a new version, one more person has been removed
from the photographs. He I mean, he literally did this. They would
kill them and then just remove themas if they didn't exist in history.
Well, that's not really effectives.Turns out that's a crappy management method,
Joe, you can imagine that thisis. Let me tell you what the
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scenario for the test reads. Itsays, in some constituent entities or regions
of the Russian Federation, as aresult of emergencies or other types of physical
impact, complete destruction of life supportfacilities and up to seventy percent of the
housing stock is possible. The riskof armed conflicts escalating into local and regional
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wars, including those involving nuclear powers, is increasing. Members of the ruling
class, both in high and lowlevel rulership positions, are said to be
asked to organize non staff emergency rescueteams, endure food and medical supplies,
and protection from radioactive A radiation basicallyso so they are not they're not messing
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around. And again they have theinfrastructure to house most of I'd say about
ninety percent of their population, ifnot a hundred, and very different than
us. If we get attacked,all of that infrastructure has gone very low.
There's no bunkers, and if therewere bunkers, they'd be full of
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illegals right now anyway, Yeah,right, right exactly, which is match
is another crazy thing that's going on, and you know, it's out of
chaos order. It's all that crap, right, So I don't think anybody
disagrees that there should be a pathwayat this time in our history for humanity
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to come together and say, allright, you know, I think we're
smart enough now, and I thinkwe figured things out enough now to where
we should be able to alleviate alot of human suffering and poverty should be
it's a utopian way of thinking,but technically humanity is capable of it.
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The problem you have is here inthe United States is once you started this
thing called citizenship, and then youstarted the whole you know, taxation,
income tax, then you started thewhole social safety net, that right there
sunk us. You're right, you'redone immigration. It changes everything all of
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a sudden, because what ends uphappening is if you don't have a control
process, it's going to overwhelm yoursocial safety net. That's exactly what's happening.
And they know this now. Compoundthat with the fact that people's immune
systems are not used to the myriadof diseases that are coming over that's not
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an inhuman things to say. It'sjust is the bugs down South and South
America and China and Africa where theseimmigrants are coming from, are different than
the ones in North America, andour bodies haven't been exposed to it.
So you have that and it's causinga tremendous amount of hardship in a lot
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of places. To where between thatthe crime which is out of control and
the fact that you can't even walkthrough major cities anymore without getting mugged or
beat or murdered or raped or pillagedor whatever, it doesn't matter. It's
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a big problem. And what isit doing. Well, they're pulling the
nine to eleven Anya, which is, let's make it so bad because the
people didn't want the police state,all right, people, you don't want
the police state, no problem,it's gone. No police state. Even
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though it's still there and it's stillever present. If anything, it's more
present in your life than ever before. It's going to get so bad that
people will be clamoring for that policestate that they fought against, that they
didn't want. And that's what you'restarting to see now. You're starting to
see a lot of banter out there, a lot of pundance, and a
lot of people on the Internet andTV clamoring for more police, clamoring for
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more security, you know, andall that kind of stuff. And it's
funny because in biblical prophecy, whenall of the leaders and the kings of
the world are saying peace and safety, peace and safety, that's when disaster
is about to strike bad. Andthat's all you hear these days. It's
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all in the name of peace andsafety, right, kind of what it's
about. Look at the vaccine,right, safety for your Everybody needs to
get it, because if you don't, then you're just like the terrorists or
whatever the hell he would he said, it's insane, And so I don't
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know. I don't blame people atall for feeling that way. It's very
plausible idea that they could have putsomething, some nano stuff in there.
Absolutely could Could people turn into like, you know, like the zombies on
SpongeBob when the bucket helmet comes downover their heads. Absolutely absolutely, I
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wouldn't. I wouldn't doubt it firstsay, I wouldn't be surprised if it
happened. We'll put it that way. I'm sure a lot of people would
be shocked, like, oh mygod, there's zombies everywhere, But I'd
be like, it's about f andtime. I'm like, okay, who
I've been waiting for this for along time. Yeah, very interesting,
dude. So not out of therealm of possibility. But five G in
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and of itself is just a pipe, just a data pipe, and quite
frankly, for five G to harmyou in a very short order, you
need a lot of power. Sothings like microwave weapons, those non lethal
type of ones that make you feellike you're burning on the inside. That's
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that kind of power that you wouldneed for that to affect you in that
way. And it's the same,it's the same stuff. So no one's
going to turn to a five fiveG zombies. They might, they might,
but it's not going to be becauseof five G. It's gonna because
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of whatever they activated. You know, five G is just a just a
data pipe, that's all it is. You know, you're exposed to it
all the time, so it wouldhave to be a specific command. It
gets a lot of negative press.Then I don't think people really understand a
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lot about five G. So itfive G, as you know, in
and of itself, it has positivesto it because you can go I mean
like you can you can look atin your everyday life if you have a
five G phone and you go somewherewhere there's five G reception. If you've
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ever tried to upload a video,I mean, four G is great,
but five G you blink and it'suploaded. You know, whatever you're doing.
I mean, it's it's that fast. So it is. It does
enable a higher speed of communication,which I think is awesome and technology technological
advancements like that I think are great, but they're along with those advancements do
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come some negative side effects. AndI think a lot of the negativity around
or the worry anyway, is peoplerealize that cell phones are dangerous. Like
they're just starting to admit, likewe were talking about earlier, how they're
just starting to admit now that they'recancerous and that they can cause cancer and
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make you know, make people sickand everything. I remember, if you
talked about that ten years ago,we were a conspiracy tard. You know,
they'd point fingers at us and laughand we were like, well,
no, it's science, No,you're good. Ten years ago, I
was a living dude. I wenton the air, and I said,
look when I KIA radio, myjoints hurt all my hand, my hand
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joints. If I KIA radio,I feel it. Why Because over years
and years of working with these damnthings, I've just become ultrasensitive. It's
it's cumulative damage. I mean,you can't it's not anything I'm vacing.
Is it depilitating? Not right now, it's not. But who knows.
I mean, I'm an uncharted territory. I don't know how to hell that
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if I kept working on them,what would it do? I don't know
that, you know, But Ican tell you how it's felt over time,
and it's only gotten worse. Andif you get I mean you can
read the frequencies. You can getlike an RF meter and it'll start screaming,
you know, if you go nearcertain things. And I mean that
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is all very important stuff to beaware of and pay attention to. And
I think that is where the fearof five G comes from, because it's
an unknown no one knows what's goingto happen. I think a real world
problem is more like what they're experiencingwith the GPS thing. I think they're
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focus. I think it's just focusingon the wrong shit is what it is.
You know, right, people arefocusing on five G. No.
I mean they've got eight G nineG out there. I mean it's not
like whatever, right that, whetheror not it causes us cancer is not
going to stop them from using iteither. No, and it's not going
to stop anybody from using it.That has no bearing on anything. But
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but you you could you could usea I don't know, like the weather
band, you know, you coulduse that to put a signal out.
You could use FM, you coulduse AM. It could be any sort
of signal as well. You justneed to have a receiver on the other
end that picks it up and thensomething in there that tells it Okay,
(32:30):
I'm gonna do this and it doesit. What about Faraday Cage clothing my
Lar? Right? Well, Imean so like we you could make my
lar make you want to want towant to have a million dollar company,
let's just fabricate, Yeah, youwant to have you want to have a
million dollars a billion? Find onethat you could use my lar or an
(32:52):
intern that breathes, because you'd bein there, like swimwear, Manu,
the my lar you put that ondude, you're gonna be sweating buckets,
right, it doesn't breede. No, that's the downside. So it's the
downside. Yeah. So it's allwell and good, like if you want
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to hide heat signatures things like that, my lar perfect lightweight, cheap and
reflective. But uh, you won'tbe loving life wearing a my lar lined
shirt or something like that. It'scertainly not under armour, We'll put it
that way. It'll be sweating,oh man, terrible. So to keep
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you alive longer, but will it? Will it be? You know,
but up you'll end up dehydrating orsomething like that, or get some sort
of freaking uh rash that ends upkilling you. Yeah, that's what I
mean. It's like you don't diefrom the radio frequency, but you die
from like trench foot. Yeah,right, exactly. You gotta look at
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a big picture. Man, it'snot five gees, just five It's just
a frequency. That's all that standsfor. It's just a frequing. Well,
you know, it's a valid concernif you've ever seen uh what is
it called. It's I can't rememberthere's I can't remember the full title,
(34:20):
but it's at the part of thetitles part of the title is Beings of
Frequency, resonance. I think resonance. Beings of frequency was the title of
this documentary. And they went aroundand they were showing like how the cell
phone towers, you know, beingaway from them and they're holding up the
meters and the thing is screaming,and they were explaining how you know that
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does mess with our bodies, andit does, and that's a whole side
thing. But I I think thatthat fear comes from that, and that's
why, you know, during ifyou remember during the pandemic, you and
I and Scott and keV we woulddo live streams in the very beginning of
it, and we were talking aboutthis and we said, you know,
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we kind of laid out like whatwe thought was going to happen and what
they were going to push. AndI said, I think they're going to
push the whole microchipping thing. Andthey started the whole push for that with
the with the passport. But theway that they threw everybody off was that
they said, oh, you know, they had the conspiracy suddenly appeared that
(35:30):
they were going to inject nanoparticles andhave have you rfi D chipped. But
with nanobots or nanoparticles, and thatthat very well, maybe a technology that
exists to a certain extent extent likesmart dust and stuff, but that's not
they were. They were trying toconflate the two. So that way,
(35:50):
if you pointed out, hey,they're micro chipping people, they would you
would instantly be labeled a wacky,you know, conspiracy theorist because here you
are talking about this crazy stuff againand obviously no one's putting, you know,
nanoparticles inside of your inside your vaccine. You crazy conspiracy theorist now,
(36:15):
because they've never done that before,right, right, right, because they've
never ever done human experiments like Tuskegeeanybody SV forty Right, Yeah, Well
that's it's funny because you know,I've seen reports when when that first came
out, when the vaccine first cameout, I was like, oh,
I wonder if you're going to seethe s V forty virus in the vaccine
(36:37):
and now and I talked to Judithabout this, and she's even said this,
And then now it's I've seen otherpeople like publicly talking about this saying
yes, they've found traces of theSV forty virus in the vaccine. And
I'm like, well, and Ihaven't seen like a published research paper showing
exactly what's in it. But Imean, that would be horrible if that
(37:00):
was in there, that that wouldbe absolutely horrible. But I don't know.
We have history of that, right, we know that that at some
point in time that was put intothe vaccines and cause cancer. Well,
what's worse than that is out ofthat too. If you read ed Haslam's
book, Mary's Monkey, Doctor,Mary's Monkey, in the end he talks
about he postulates like, is thatwhere maybe HIV came from? And if
(37:25):
you've ever seen a nineteen eighty eightdocumentary called the Streker Memorandum, okay,
it was this doctor doctor Strecker,and he talks about how the AIDS virus
back then, this was nineteen eightyeight. He said, this is this
is man made. This is notthis was not made you know, by
(37:46):
you know, by man having copulationwith monkeys. And that's the same,
differs, no different. It's thesame bullshit story that they came out with
COVID. Somebody was eating bat soupor what ever, and then it was
a bat and a pangolin had likea relationship. And then that's where it
came from. And then somebody atethat bat, which kind of makes you
(38:08):
feel bad for the pangolin because nowthe pangolin's mate, you know, got
eaten. So you're like, oh, it's a it's a sad love story
too, So I mean, youknow, this is this is the most
ridiculous crap I have ever heard.But they did the same thing with AIDS.
So this old documentary called the StreckerMemorandum, he was interviewed all the
(38:30):
way back in the eighties and hetalked about this, and then you read
ed Haslam's book Doctor Mary's Monkey,and he talks about how they mutated the
SV forty virus, but he explainsthat the SV forty virus wasn't the only
thing in those vials that they weremutating. And I asked Judith about this,
(38:50):
and I'm getting her on in thenext couple of weeks, but I
asked her about this the last timeshe came on with me, and we
did like a six and a halfhour broadcast. And if Judith, I'm
referring to for the listeners in caseyou're not sure, Judith Varry Baker Lee
Harvey Oswald's mistress. She was didn'tknow it was seventeen at a time,
but she was working as a childprodigy for the CIA. They were trying
(39:13):
to weaponize cancer anyway. She explainedthat I asked her this very same thing.
I said, Look, you know, I know that you know Ed
talks about in this book. Iknow that it's been discussed before. But
do you think that they mutated theHIV virus while they were doing the same
research? And she said, yes, she knows that they came up within
(39:34):
that there. It wasn't just SVforty. They were also working on like
an immuno suppressive virus at the time. So I believe the whole AIDS epidemic
was a test trial run of abioweapon, and it may have gotten you
know, you could say, oh, well it got out of control.
I mean, you know, didCOVID get out of control? They just
(39:55):
contained whatever AIDS really is HIV.They contained it better than they did uh
COVID. I guess well, thequestion is, well, the question is
why, why why? Why didit not run as rampant because at first
they thought it was going to runway more rampant than it has now.
(40:19):
I mean, it's all over theworld HIV is worldwide. But I mean
it's well, it's a little harderto transmit. That's the problem, you
know, you have there's certain conditionsthat have to be met, and HIV
doesn't. HIV and air don't getalong too well. So that's that's the
issue. Whereas cold light right,COVID though, is it rides the wave.
(40:43):
Man, It's like, whoa,I'm here, Yeah, it's it's
happy. So it's just if youlook at COVID, it's got traces of
what in it, HIV, tracesof HIV in it. That's how it
suppresses the immune system. That's correct. Yeah, So I mean, of
course that's weird. Aren't stupid,That's let's just put it. Let's let's
call a spade a spade here.That's weird. Spiracy theorists are not.
(41:07):
They're just people that think for themselves, that's all it is. And quite
frankly, sometimes people get steered inthe wrong direction because they are so scared,
they are so afraid and so concerned, and they're grasping at anything that
basically either gives them hope that thingsare going to get better or gives them
(41:30):
hope that the world's going to bedestroyed because things are so damn bad that
that's what they do. It justoh man, look at this is bad
and it's going to collapse, like, for example, the economy. Right,
you have thousands upon thousands of peoplethat have been saying for years and
(41:51):
years that the economy is going tocollapse, that anything's going to happen by
gold, by gold, by this, by that, by crypto. Okay,
right, and then what happens.Time goes on, time goes on
under people. Some people make moneyon that, sure they do. Unfortunately
I was never one of those peoplethat level that like to gamble, so
I don't. But there are thatdo. But nothing's going to collapse.
(42:16):
And let me let me give youan example this and I'll tell you why
that is. Because everybody's making abig deal out of thirty three trillion dollars
debt, and we should because it'sabsolutely all it's done is basically put us
in a massive amount of debt thatwe can't even quantify or even remotely payback.
(42:37):
In my humble opinion, for whatsocial safety net, it's all it's
been, and what has it done. It hasn't brought people back up or
lifted them up out of poverty.No, it's dropped everybody into poverty.
So it's been different. It's nothow they advertise it. It's a spin,
just like Department of War, Departmentof Defense. It's the same crap,
(42:58):
right, So now the money he'sgone, so they say, but
is it because there's also a fortyseven trillion dollars four oh one case slush
fund out there that they haven't tappedinto. But they know that they can
because during Arab Spring, Cyprus tappedinto it to the tune of sixty percent
of anybody with a million dollars areover I think it was at the time.
But if you could just imagine,you know, people fifty five and
(43:24):
below or fifty four and below,guess what, We're gonna take your four
oh one case and we're gonna giveyour treasuries in return, and don't worry,
you're gonna get a three percent annualreturn, so you're not going to
lose money at all. As amatter of fact, it's back by the
full faith and credit of the UnitedStates government, so it's safe and you
(43:45):
are doing your patriotic duty by investingin your country. No different than war
bonds during World War two and instantlyup that's gone back to square one.
Oh let's do this, let's dothat, let's do this, let's do
that. So I mean, Idon't I don't buy into that kind of
crape where I do see things likeI try to look at things honestly.
(44:12):
So what do we see about COVIDNo different than HIV and anything else.
You see a lot of clandestine involvement. It's coming out now that CIA was
definitely in cahoots, that it wasn'tthe Chinese government that was trying to create
this COVID, not saying that theydon't do biowarfare and things like that.
Of course they do. However,we do know that our intelligence agencies had
(44:37):
a thing to play, that Fauciwas at the CIA, that there was
funding for it, and then itwas basically us that that funded it and
why it was released. I mean, so if we got to call a
spade a spade, let's call aspade a spade. The United States,
oftentimes the Bible actually prophesies about theUnited States, and it calls it the
(44:58):
beast with the horns of a lamb, but the tongue of a of a
dragon. And basically what it isis. It comes in peace, but
its actions are not. They're evil, it's nasty, it's not what they
intend to be. And that's exactlywhat we do. Right We're going out
to defend freedom and democracy or throughoutthe world, by God, because without
(45:22):
the United States, well, theworld would go to hell at a hambasket.
But what people don't understand is theworld's and hell and a hambasket because
of all of the interventionist policies we'vehad over the course of time, none
of which have bearied any fruit andand and done anything to our benefit in
the long run. Everything's been shortterm. Everybody focused on the short term
(45:45):
because they can't see past their nose. It's it's it's crazy, dude.
So when when you hear that kindof stuff, always question it, Always
question it and look at it froma strictly logical standpoint and say is it
really you know, and and ifit ends up being conspiratorial, well then
(46:12):
guess what I would say, that'spretty serious. And like you said,
people go to jail for conspiracies.So I don't I don't doubt nor do
I minimize people's concern that the governmentmight do something like that. Not at
all. No, they've done thingslike that in the past. And what
(46:32):
I have up on the screen,that's the Strekker memorandum. That's the full
documentary. It's up on my Rubblechannel there, that's what's up on the
screen. And just go over torabbit Hole Radio. Rabbit Hole Radio over
on Rubble and subscribe to my channel. And not only did the live streams
(46:53):
of this show they go there onSaturday nights, but I also stream randomly
old documentaries like this, which constantlyget banned from YouTube. Of course.
By the way, you see Joeyou see Joe Fox's comment. There,
isn't it the Shining City on thehill of the Temple? Yeah, well,
it's funny because because they can't theycan't even get from home to the
(47:16):
temple without getting mugged. Now itis the Shining City on the hill of
garbage. Yeah. Yeah, that'sa methane plant and bodies. That's right.
It's crazy, man. They've gotthe congressmen are giving tips on how
not to get mugged, you know, oh, you know, minimize an
(47:39):
intrudent because things are so bad inthe population center. It's not it's fine,
it's fine. Michael Snyder just wrotesomething on that it's funny enough deep
fund the police show. That's right, that's right, you know which,
which let me tell you something thatisn't necessarily a bad thing. No it's
(48:04):
not. But see, you knowhow remember when we were talking about the
police state. You and I hadthis conversation off air at the other day,
and we you and I did ashow. There was a shooting at
like a bart station in Anaheim,and Anaheim went nuts, and there they
were people protesting and the cops werehaving a problem controlling the crowd, and
(48:29):
there was a lot of agitators inthe crowd, probably undercover police, because
that's happened before, it will happenagain, and it's standard operating procedure for
them. They've been caught on videodoing it, okay, in many different
cases. Anyway, the cops startedriding around member in military fatigues, no
(48:49):
patches, no nothing, didn't saypolice or sheriff, didn't say. You
couldn't tell if they were in themilitary or not. They were riding around
on an suv, a blacked outsuv that was like armored up. And
this was one of the first timesin your face it had been broadcast on
CNN because we had talked about thisfor years. Other people, even Alex
(49:12):
Jones, did documentaries back when hewas actually a documentary filmmaker, and he
put out quality content and he madehis films like Police State. His Police
State series of films was great becauseit touched on a lot of this stuff
that you see that's become kind ofpart of your everyday life, and it
pointed out how we're becoming a policestate. Sixty percent of people live paycheck
(49:37):
to paycheck now, right, somore people are desperate than ever before.
The social safety net has not,nor does it ever pay enough for anybody
to live though. I mean,let me say, let me preface that
are there people that get enough?Of course there are, and and don't
(49:57):
get me wrong, that I couldquit my job tomorrow, and between benefits
and Medicaid and all that stuff,it's about fifty to sixty K a year
that you'll get if you can takeadvantage of everything in the system. That
being said, that's not the norm. And quite frankly, the food stamps
(50:21):
and the welfare check and the Sectioneight just keep you your head a button,
like like you're just surviving at avery keep you poor. So what
does it do? So more frustration, more poverty. People are getting desperate
now to the point where it's startingto become visual. And they knew this,
(50:44):
they knew that that was happening,that there's more desperation. There's you
could see it in the metrics andthe numbers. So what do they do.
Well, let's go ahead and starta campaign to defund the police so
that we can have instability. Sowe can't have that, so people will
clamor for more police, for moremonitoring, for more Oh well, hey,
(51:09):
you know what we could do.We could put AI there and cameras
everywhere. And AI is fair becauseit's not human. They're not biased.
AI will do the right thing everytime. That's right. Yeah, it
will not, it will. Itdoes something else too, you do In
California, they're they're giving like policejobs to immigrants, so they're not there.
(51:37):
No. Look, my mother,my aunt, my Alma, and
my opa were all immigrants. Theycame over here from Holland after World War
Two. My grandmother was a DutchJew in a concentration camp. So if
nothing against immigrants, okay, theythey came through Ellis Island. They did
the whole you know, immigration trick. They had to take the test,
(52:00):
the citizenship tests, they had todo all of that. So I don't
have any issue with immigration or immigrantsat all. What I have an issue
with is our poorest southern border andeleven thousand people a day, you know,
yesterday with eleven thousand people that crossed. Well, and then to mention
(52:22):
all the poison it comes across,right, Well, that's just in one
spot. Now, who are thosepeople? What are they bringing across?
Are any of them being trafficked?Are any of them traffickers or any of
them? Actually yes, are anyof them bad guys that perhaps you know,
mean us harm? Right? Sothere's there's there's that, but but
(52:43):
there's also that are trying to finda better way to Yes, right,
like my like my mother and myaunt and my grandparents. Yes, right,
right, But there was a wayand they followed the process. Yes
they didn't, Yes, they camein the legal route. They didn't try
to hop offense and the process isbroken, but right, and that needs
(53:04):
to They're not going to fix thatbecause it's a political football, right,
So another thing, right, sothat they could just keep tossing it back
and forth because they really don't care. But the police state thing, how
they what they're doing is they're offeringright now, like in California, they're
offering jobs to people that are hereillegally and do not have citizenship yet.
(53:29):
And imagine you make whatever cops therewere bad or good, so irritated the
people that wanted to be in lawenforcement, the people that did the training
and not. Remember I've I've doneplenty of shows talking ill against police brutality,
(53:49):
right, so I'm not taking theirside. But if you put out
enough negativity instead of the spotlight beingshown, like hey, why why are
they getting weapons from the military throughthe ten thirty three program? Why are
they getting bearcats? Why are theygetting all sorts of armored vehicles? And
stuffy The psych profile one that favorsbasically a thug, right, well,
(54:14):
that yes, why do they psychologicallyprofile certain individuals? Why if you have
a higher IQ then I think it'slike I think it was like a hundred,
like it like I want to sayit was like yeah, New Year,
right, I think it was actuallylike ninety. A guy sued he
(54:34):
had like a like an IQ oflike one twenty five or one thirty He
was a former Air Force cop.He did security forces in the Air Force,
so he's a cop. He getsout, goes to be a civilian
cop, and they wouldn't hire himbecause he was too smart, and he
sued for discrimination and lost because theysaid, well, it's not really discriminating.
(54:58):
It's not against you, you know, for your race or anything.
It's it's you know, they havea that's their their prerequisite, so they're
cut off. I think was likeninety or one hundred. It was really
low. They basically wanted somebody whowould follow orders and beat the crap out
of people. So you you havethis like awakening where you know, people
(55:21):
are paying attention to that kind ofstuff, and it got hijacked into you
know, white cops hate black people, and that took it the attention off
the police state. But it alsoserves another multi pronged fork. It a
allows you to divide the country itselfon the system the argument of race and
(55:45):
whether it's black versus white. Butit also puts distrust into the police,
and then from that distrust, everytime there was an event, they would
harp on it and they wouldn't saypolice brute, you know, they would
cover police brutality, but it onlybe against if it was against black people.
That way, they could continue thisblack versus white thing and continue the
(56:07):
race baiting. And that's what they'vebeen doing in this country. Right.
So now you've then Black Lives Matterhappens. People don't want to you know,
people don't want to you know,they're burning stuff, there's marches all
this. Now, No everybody hatesthe police. No one wants to be
a cop. So a lot ofpeople that might have been good cops don't
(56:28):
even want to be cops anymore,so they leave. So now you have
police forces which you're having staffing problems. Well, who better to fill those
staffing issues than somebody that you're willingto give citizenship to in in exchange for
service. Gee that it sounds oddlylike what they do in the military,
(56:49):
very much so, because that's exactlywhat the US military does, and we've
been doing it since we've been doingit since the Civil War, by the
way. That's how that's how theNorth won the Civil War, that's right,
because we kept taking Irish immigrants andright, yeah, we'd sign them
up right on the dock as theycame off the boat. They'd get off
(57:13):
one boat and go on another.That's it. And and quite frankly,
there's a value there. I mean, the expertise, the culture and all
that stuff, there's a value.But if you don't couple that with personal
responsibility and the fact that if youdo do that that first of all,
there's like, you can't expect thatwhen you get to the place that you're
(57:37):
migrating to, that people are gonnagive you a place to live, to
give you medical care and all that. Oh wait, yes you can,
huh here you can. That's whathappens. Meanwhile, citizens in this country
that pay their taxes and do theirthings, or even if you don't pay
your tax I don't even give acrap. You can't get that. You
can't get the same level of ofof treatment. You know, you can't
(58:01):
get that, not not at all. So of course it's pissing people off.
Prior to that, it was allcharity. Charities handled things, you
know, typically was the churches,and of course before income tax there was
no nonprofit associations or anything like that. But it was just all charities.
And we can't we don't have moneyto take care of the dying first responders
(58:22):
from their false flags. That's imploymenton nine to eleven. Okay, trains,
infrastructure crumbling, and infrastructure bro yourshree, Yeah we just did that.
Yeah, okay, that's great,but you actually do anything, you
know, no, and even ifthey do, it's only a fraction of
(58:44):
what needs to be done. Andthen you take a look at the fact
that because all of these resources havefunded useless wars that have done nothing but
create more problems for us, wehaven't had the resources then to put in
and fix the infrastructure and fix Lookat municipalities right, municipalities right now all
(59:07):
over the United States are struggling notjust with the cost of living, poverty,
rents, the whole nine, butcrumbling infrastructure in water. So water
is becoming a major issue everywhere,everywhere. And it's not so much all
the water level or quality, somuch quality of course driven by the older
(59:30):
infrastructure. Of course it degrades it, but the cost to replace now this
aging infrastructure, a lot of thesecities are, you know, approaching one
hundred years old, and that's youknow, basically the life expectancy of some
of those watermans. Now they allhave to be dug up and replaced well
(59:52):
let me give you an example.I think it's West Springfield, Massachusetts.
Right, had a just a bigproblem. They got to replace all their
water maids. Well, the residentsin West Springfield had a fivefold increase in
their water bill, fivefold increase topay for it. So and more and
(01:00:13):
more municipalities are struggling with that andcan't pay for it. Well, I'm
sure we could have come up withsomething to handle that in the current structure
of things, had we not beenprinting money and give it, shipping it
overseas, going a war with it, or you know, all these failed
(01:00:37):
social programs that have done nothing butbring the middle class down to the lower
class instead of bringing the lower classup to the middle class. I honestly
like I think the idea of someof the and this is gonna this is
gonna get me arrows from the conservativeside. I think that some of the
social programs could work if actually runproperly. Part of the problem is the
(01:01:00):
Democrats, since the sixties, sinceLyndon Johnson was the president, started dipping
into that Social Security Fund was supposedto be a savings fund. They started
to dip into it and write ious and then never pay any of the
money that they were taking out back. So when they complain, when these
(01:01:22):
politicians are like social Security is gonnarun out, they want to take oh
your soul security, whatever side,whatever faue, bullshit side wants to get
you scared saying that about the otherside. They both Republicans and Democrats dip
into that fund and then write ious and then never, never, ever,
(01:01:42):
in a spending bill, is it, Hey, let's repay the fund.
No, Then they'll say, oh, it's it's amazingly it's empty.
We need to regenerate it. Whyis that because for the last decade to
refinance those io us, because allthose io use our treasuries, right,
they've been able to do it atzero percent. It's been free money.
(01:02:06):
Basically. You know, when itcomes to that they're not paying interest.
Well, now it's a big fanproblem because huh now it's like five percent.
Oh oh, that's not good.So let's put it in perspective.
Right, they did this, Theydid a study back like ten years ago
on this, around twenty let's saytwo thousand or so, into like two
(01:02:32):
thousand and eight, you started tosee the interest rates start to fall,
especially in response to the the GreatRecession, which they won't call a depression
because they bailed out everything and printeda bunch of money to do that.
When the Great Depression, those toolsweren't available and there was tremendous suffering.
(01:02:54):
All that suffering just went underground.You know, it's no different than lines.
Breadlines don't exist because you have EBT, and before EBT, there was
food stamps. Before that, therewas none, and that's when you had
breadlines and soup lines and things likethat. You still have them, but
they're not wrapped it. Well,I guess you can say they are now
if you look at food banks andthings like that. But over time,
(01:03:19):
these these programs now cost more andmore and they're borrowing more and more,
and you're at the point now whereyou're paying that. So they did this
study. They figured the historical averagefor interest rates was around seven percent.
And back when I think that thenational debt was like fifteen trillion, say
(01:03:44):
it was half at seven percent,it would have took ninety percent of the
income tax just to pay interest onthe national debt. That was then.
So now you're looking at anywhere fromsay like three and a half to five
percent right now, depending on howshort term or long term. The bond
(01:04:05):
is for that to happen, right, And it's getting more expensive to service
the debt, and we're close.We're rapidly hitting that, going racing to
that point where you've got a lotof bankster saying, oh man, you
know, if it hits this,youch because you're gonna have a come to
(01:04:30):
Jesus moment where you're gonna have tosay, well, we know we tax
everything and it's mother and then some, but we're gonna have to do it
more. And if people don't knowbecause we weren't alive then. But back
in the fifties, the top tiertax rate was ninety percent because we were
bankrupt and the World War two bankruptedus. So they paid down that debt,
(01:04:59):
but they did so by taxing thecrap out of the rich, which
is why you hear a lot ofthat coming back now because they always have
a work around, and but thesolution is not simply to tax the rich.
They don't. That's like a howdo you put it, It's kind
(01:05:24):
of like a really crappy band aid, Like the system is flawed. Everybody
knows it. It's broken, andthe chasm between the haves and have nots.
It's just it's never been as bigas it is now. But their
solution is not going to be whatyou might think it would be. And
(01:05:48):
everybody looks at this great reset asbeing it's not going to be good in
many facets, Right, if youthink about it, how do you pull
off a great reset? How doyou pull that off and then go to
like a standard currency for everybody?You wipe out all the debt and then
(01:06:12):
and then start over. How doyou do that? How do you do
that and maintain personal property? Idon't see how you do that. So
you'd have to have a major restructuringof society. How do you pull that
off without absolute cataclysmic, bloody civilwar everywhere? I just don't know.
(01:06:34):
There has to be an event thatbrings humanity together on a scale that they'll
willingly accept it. Maybe that's whatthe UFOs stuff is all about. Bingo
just saying maybe that's would Carol Rosensay all those years ago? Yeah,
(01:06:59):
you have to think about it.She work like that. You can't pull
off a recent like that. It'sjust right. Sheep too much shit that
they don't want to get rid of. Right, it was going to be
the Russians. Then it was goingto be terrorists. Then it was going
to be rogue states. So Russianscheck terrorists, al Qaeda isis check,
rogue states, North Korea shit,Russia checks, China right bat right check
(01:07:29):
check. And then the next cardwas an asteroid hitting the planet, which
they constantly bring up, like atleast once every two years. And if
you watch Discovery or the History Channel, it's just they should call it the
doom Tard Channel, and it's alwayslike, oh my god, what happens
(01:07:49):
if a meteor hit you know,downtown Los Angeles, Well, the city
would be gone. That's that's whatwould happen. I could wrap it up
in a nutshell for you. LosAngeles wouldn't exist. Right, let's committee
together just explore that, right,and it would. It would definitely set
up earthquakes and cause, yes,it's got a team of scientists to explore
(01:08:11):
that. Here, we'll give youout dollars, dud. Don't give the
US government any ideas, Joe,because maybe that's what they do. That's
where all your money's going. That'sthe problem. Right, No, they'll
explore that. Meanwhile, the HistoryChannel already did all the work for them.
You could simply watch the forty fiveminute you know TV broadcast. You
can probably find it on YouTube andwatch it. Just stream it to your
(01:08:33):
television. It would save billions inmoney. And then the the last card
was the fifth and final card thatshe said that von Braun said they were
going to play play in order toweaponize space and you know, bring about
this one world government was going tobe a fake alien invasion. And what
(01:08:56):
did Paul Krugman say years ago,Joe I used to play this clip all
the time where krug And talked aboutwhen they were Obama was trying it was
after they passed the Baillout. Yeah, it was a like a year or
two years later they were trying topass another economic stimulus package. Yeah right,
I remember that installed because of allthe corruption from the Baillout and all
(01:09:19):
the money and people questioning, youknow, what was going on. People
don't understand is seven hundred and eightyseven billion dollars was never the final number.
It was a revolving credit line basicallyis what it was. But it
they did so much more than that. It's not they plundered so much more
(01:09:40):
than that. Well he remember heKrookman he worked with the Obama remember when
on TV and said we should fakean alien invasion to get this budget passed.
And then after it's passed, thenwe can come out and say,
ah, well it looks like wewere wrong. There is no aliens.
Yeah, or they'll blame it onRush. Well all right, So as
(01:10:01):
long as you have a bad guy, whether it be Russia, aliens,
you know, z New, anybody, you could, you could blame it
on the planet Reptard, whatever youwhatever you want to blame it on,
they will and they will have thisour our good friend, you know,
Webster Tarply, you know, hehad he talked about he was interviewed by
(01:10:25):
Jones and he had talked about howCarl Schmidt he was a neo Khan,
and he had said that you needthat enemy, that that idea of an
enemy in order to organize the peoplearound that way, and you can control
them if you want. In thecrowd, right, and guys like reply
(01:10:46):
with the triune brain method all centeredaround reproducibility and survivability, you have to
hit that center. If you wantto control people, it has to be
based on survivability and reproducibility. Sowhat do you do? You threaten their
very existence, You threaten their abilityto make a living, you threaten all
that stuff. You keep them inconstant fear. When you do that,
(01:11:08):
you can control them. And andalso you know, with like these flash
mobs that you see and all that, people behave differently in a crowd than
they do by themselves. They knowthis. That's why you see them deploying
these mobs, because mobs are easierto direct and control, especially when you
(01:11:29):
start pinging on those centers where theyfeel injustice, where they're desperate, all
of that. It all pings onsurvivability, you know. So that's that's
why they do that. Now withthe teens. Who the hell knows why
the hell the teens are doing itoutside of they're just freaking it's just trouble,
(01:11:50):
you know. And whereas they don'thave the resources anymore. Baseball leagues
and you have all these things thatthe kids used to be involved in.
Now it's all been vilified, boyscouts, it's all gone. It's like,
well, you can remember being ateenager yourself, and then it you
know, think about all the stuffthey have access to that we don't have.
(01:12:14):
Accent, we didn't have access tothese kids like when we wanted social
media, dude, well, Imean social media. Well that's a huge
that's a huge part of it,social media. But like even just Google,
if you went back old school forUS US boomers, right if if
you if you want, you know, Google itself, you didn't have that
(01:12:38):
tool when we were their age,when we were fourteen and Google about Google
just came out when I was asenior in high school on tet on telnet
and it was only in the universities. It was on the tel net university
system that it got its start.And I remember that because a lot of
(01:12:59):
my friend ends were the geek squadand they would always be hip deep in
that stuff and they would be goingand playing like RPGs on the on the
Universe university tel net system that andthey're like, oh, you want to
check something out, check this out. It's Google. And of course it
was all monochrome and it wasn't likeanything that you see today, and you
(01:13:24):
had to type in commands almost alladasyou know, back in those days.
But but that was Google in itsinfancy, and you basically searched. It
was a search engine for the universities, so you could go to any University
library and you could search whatever topicwhatever they had online and it was really
(01:13:45):
really cool, you know at thatpoint in time. And then it just
evolved into into what it is today, but it's not by any means what
it what it used to be.And of course, you know, then
there was like Prodigy, Prodigy Ithink was the I remember Prodigy. That
was my jam right, there wasProdigy. My dad bought my dad bought
(01:14:06):
a three eighty six twenty five MegaHurt computer with an eighty megabyte hard drive
for me and a twenty was ittwenty four hundred bod modem uh, and
that thing was the bomb. Digitythree eighty six was like the workhorse of
(01:14:26):
personal computers back when we were kids. Yeah, it was really something else.
And so I learned about all thatstuff, you know, as a
junior and senior in high school,play leisure suit, Larry Dude that in
the Lemmings, you know what wasuh what was the other one? God,
(01:14:48):
dang it. There was Duke Newcomb, Yeah, Duke dom Uh Doom.
Yeah. By the time I waslike a senior in high school,
doom came. Doom was out,or like Doom had been out for a
while. Oh yeah, and therewasn't all the bulletin board systems, so
you'd dial into bulletin board systems andof course you'd only have like if you
(01:15:10):
had a BBS, you only hadone in one out, and there might
be that one company like we hadCommonwealth Computer Group that had a twelve line
BBS and people could go on andjust chat and you would have thought,
I mean, we spent hours justchat rooms. Dude, chat the original
(01:15:31):
chat if people have no idea likethe people nowadays, the unless you were
around back then, like the youngercrowd that wasn't around back then. If
you think Twitter is vile, okay, the chat rooms were live, so
like you blog into one of thesechats and it would just be scrolling and
(01:15:51):
nobody gave. There was no parentalcontrols. There was no parents paying songs.
You had sisops right, system operatorsright, which they did really nothing.
They did nothing, no dude thereyou I mean, it was like
Twitter on steroids. People are likenowadays, you hear people like I got
(01:16:13):
my feelings hurt on Twitter or xwhatever, and it's like, dude,
you have no idea. The Internetchat rooms of like yester year from like
thirty years ago were the most brutalplaces because nobody was used to that.
This was like a brand new thing, and it was literally like opening Pandora's
box. It was just like andthe gates open. I remember those days,
(01:16:35):
Joe, Oh, I remember thedays of chat rooms on boards.
Oh yeah, yeah. But mostmost bbs is it was only one line
and you'd go on like it wasone that I liked to go on and
play Trade Wars and it was justthis space game but no graphics, absolutely
(01:16:56):
no graphics. It's all text andyou just type in core knits and hopefully
you know, you got a hitor you beat an imperial cruiser or something
like that. But no graphics.Joe sunk a battleship because it's twenty four
hundred. No graphics. No,you know, So I had I remember
I had a computer game. Itwas about Spider Man and it had to
(01:17:18):
be loaded up on like a floppydisk, all the big old floppies yea,
and yeah it was so annoying.It had it had like just still
shots and it wasn't you know,it was horrible, like the pixel right
and everything, and then like youknow, you try to I was on
the outside of a building, andI'm like, break the window. And
(01:17:39):
it's like Spider Man is no vandalmcbro, You're stuck on the side of
a skyscraper. Break the window.It was so the games were so silly
back in the day. Now youlook at stuff. You look at video
games now, and I mean,we're we're older, right, we look
at it and we're amazed. Imean the stuff that the kids are gonna
(01:18:00):
have in twenty years, you know, when we're older, when we're in
like our sixties, when we're ourmid sixties, these kids are gonna have.
It's gonna be like Minority Report,where you have the holographic keyboard,
you have the holographic controls. Imean, that's the future. I wouldn't
mind actually having holographic keyboard and controlsthat kind of I'm gonna. I'm gonna
(01:18:28):
there's two things I want to playbecause we've got about about forty minutes left.
Uh. But the first thing isbecause we brought this up, we
were talking about, uh, thefalse flag alien invasion. Here's here's Carol
Rosen. Let's let's let's see whatCarol has to say about it. And
she used to work she worked forfair Child Industries, which was a private
(01:18:53):
corporation, and she was in theaerospace industry, and she worked with Werner
von Braun, former Nazi scientist thatcame over and then we know he helped
create NASA. This is what shehad to say about what von Braun told
her. This is what I wastalking about earlier. When I was a
corporate manager of fair Child Industries innineteen seventy four through seventy seven, I
(01:19:15):
met the late doctor Werner von Brownin early seventy four. At that time,
Von Brown was dying of cancer,but he assured me that he would
live a few more years in orderto tell me about the game that was
being played. That game being theeffort to weaponize space, to control the
Earth from space and space itself.Von Brown's purpose in life during the last
(01:19:43):
years of his life his dying yearswas to educate the public and decision makers
about why space based weapons are adumb, dangerous, destabilizing, too costly,
unnecessary, unworkable, undesirable idea.The stratag that Bernar von Brown taught
me was that first the Russians aregoing to be considered to be the enemy.
(01:20:03):
In fact, when I met him, in seventy four. They were
the enemy, the identified enemy.We were told that they had killer satellites.
We were told that they were comingto get us and control us,
the dirty communies, that whole story. First, the Russians were the enemy
against whom we're going to build spacebased weapons. Then terrorists would be identified,
and that was soon to follow.We heard a lot about terrorism.
(01:20:26):
Then we were going to identify thirdworld country crazies we now call the Nations
of concern. But he said thatwould be the third enemy against whom we
would be needing to build space basedweapons. And the next enemy was asteroids.
Now at this point he kind ofchuckled the first time he said it
asteroids against asteroids, we're going tobuild space based weapons. So it was
(01:20:49):
funny then. And the funniest oneof all was against what he called aliens
extraterrestrials. That would be the finalcard. And over and over and over
during the four years that I knewhim and was giving his speeches for him,
he would bring up that last card. And remember, Carol, the
(01:21:11):
last card is the alien card.We're going to have to build space based
weapons against aliens. And all ofit, he said, is a lie.
He didn't mention a timeline, buthe said that it was going to
be speeding up faster than anybody couldpossibly imagine. That the effort to put
weapons in space was not only basedon a lie, but would accelerate past
(01:21:34):
the point of people even understanding ituntil it was already up there and too
late. Und sound familiar like anythingwe're dealing with right now. Oh yeah,
yep, yep, I mean,and this was years ago she did
this. This is a much longerinterview, but I always referenced that and
(01:21:56):
bring that up because you again youhear them. They're talking about it right
now. Like you can go onYouTube and put in Paul Krugman fake alien
invasion and it should bring the videoclips of him on like MSNBC and CNBC
and he's and the people at likeMSNBC were stunned that. He was like,
(01:22:19):
wait, you want a fake analien invasion? And he was like
yeah, yeah, that way,you know, we can we can get
the budget pass, get this billpassed and everything, and then afterwards we
can be like, oops, wemade a mistake once yet, because see,
once that happens, it changes everything, and I think it has it's
(01:22:42):
already started to happen in the mindsof a lot of people, to where
all of a sudden, all thebs, the rat race, the rigamarole
becomes unimportant because if they're coming andmaking themselves known to us, it's going
(01:23:06):
to change everything. And so Ithink people like you see all these disclosures,
if you will, I think alot of that's our technology, quite
frankly. And the reason why Isay that is because if you remember,
the Nazis were really big on techin World War Two, and we're very
(01:23:28):
much farther ahead than any of ourscientists, are the Russian scientists anybody.
So when they're using counter rotating mercuryfor antigrav for example, that can do
exactly what say that tic Tac didin that video, and that was in
the forties, the thirties and theforties, right, that's what they said
(01:23:51):
that the bell could do, right, so the sixty degrees and not just
laterally but like vertically and on allaccess. Yep, that's right. So
so if we could do that thenhumanity and we with Operation paper Clip took
(01:24:15):
all that stuff back here, thenwhy are we not considering the fact that
that is us playing Shenanigans or settingthat up. Let's also remember too that
you know, the clandestine operations andapparatus for the United States is I don't
(01:24:45):
even know if you can measure itbecause it's so vast and limitless resources.
You think the government has limitless resources. The government has to post like their
debts and their stuff. Do youhave no way of knowing what CIA front
company or how much money they havecoming in from all that stuff all over
(01:25:10):
the world. It's nuts. It'salmost like it's almost like when the OSS
to CIA transition happened. Of course, a Dullises were big into that,
and they were in cahoots with allthe banker families, you know, and
(01:25:31):
you have the bankers first and foremostinvolved in World War Two with the Warburgs,
with Paul Warburg being the CEO ofIG Farban, and then you know,
then you have all the trading withthe enemy act with the bushes and
things like that, a lot ofcahoots going on there, and then we
(01:25:51):
bring all that tech back. That'swhy I'm twenty. When I saw that
footage, I was like, that'snot alien footage. No, wait,
dude, that's counter rotating mercury athigh speeds. Uh. And that's exactly
what the Bell and the Food Fightersand all that stuff did, you know,
So I get it if you readJoseph so desperate for it to be
(01:26:15):
aliens. And let me be honest, if you read Joseph Farrell's books,
he even talks about that's what thefood Fighters were. It was the Nazis
work, you know, experimenting withthis technology. That's right. And so
as I've said to you before,and why would aliens come from? You
know, people are always like,oh, they seem to follow the roads
(01:26:36):
from the sky. Why would aliensthat could come from like millions of light
years away, it would follow ourshitty road design to get around? Then
that is going just that's still second, look where our tech is going.
Uh. And like with quantum physicsand things like that, why would you
(01:26:58):
need a ship like that? Perse? Knowing how that highlights humans are
trained to fly from the sky andidentify things like the roads and aliens.
If aliens can fly through outer spacewith they're not flying right well, I
(01:27:20):
think though, I think they're zippingthrough wormholes. But it's all yeah,
right, so I think they're justthat's why they blip in and out so
fast. People are like, Iblink and they disappeared because they want a
wormhole, right, they just don't. It's like and it's not even a
wormhole per se, because you're nottraveling through any It's just like if you
(01:27:41):
can imagine just folding slip spacer togetherand going through, right, that's what
well, that's what Einstein. That'swhat the Einstein rosen bridges. That the
wormhole. It's if you take,like, you know, the rectangular piece
of paper, put the dot atone end, dot at the other,
folded, put a pencil through thetwo dots. That space though when you
fold the two pieces of paper,there's still space in between there. That
(01:28:04):
would be slip space. That's whattechnically the wormhole is. But that's why
things can just boop. I mean, think about how inefficient it would be
to fly any type of propulsion systemfrom here to like Jupiter. It would
tax radiation forever, right right,you could literally just be like you could
(01:28:28):
if you had the technology, youcould look. I mean, I can
send a facts to you, Ican send information to you through the Internet.
The Internet technically could be looked atlike a wormhole of information and I
send you information from one point toit kind of operates the same way.
Okay, you're that slip space isthey're just learning they know how to traverse
(01:28:54):
that. So my point is anyany type of creature or being or whatever
intelligence that has the wherewithal to travelthrough slip space, and you know,
it doesn't give a lot about humanity, right they don't. Well, they
don't need to fly up and belike, hey, let's follow Smith Avenue.
(01:29:15):
No, let's go harass eighteen right. Well, I mean even if
they did, I honestly think theywould treat us more like monkeys in the
zoo. I think they would visitus and check on their science experiment and
see's like, hey, how howare the humans coming on? Oh,
they're nuking each other? Still leavethe How are the watchers described? You
(01:29:35):
know, like in back antidiluvian times. You know a lot of this technology,
they say is derived from from that, from the prior iterations of man.
That's why I like some of themegalithic structures that you see. You
can't fit a piece of paper through. A lot of people think it was
(01:29:55):
frequency that they were able to coldmold stone where it would just instead of
having molten rock. It would justbe cold, almost like liquefaction, and
just mold it and pop it intoplace. So I mean, Baila Lebanon,
Yeah right, It's just it justmakes it makes more sense to see
it that way. And then andthen you look at like, okay,
(01:30:18):
the elongated skulls and the things likethat. Obviously there was other intelligent beings
here on the planet. We knowthat there's physical evidence of it. So
why is everybody surprised by all thisstuff? The issue is exactly that if
I was an alien race, andI was I had the ability to go
(01:30:41):
up from one side of the universeto the other, I'm not really too
concerned about mankind or humanity outside ofthe fact that, you know, maybe
I gained some scientific knowledge. IfI even know, like or have any
sort of uh care in the worldabout you, dude, all I gotta
(01:31:03):
say is this, if they havethe capability to travel through slip space,
you're not You're not right open uplike zip a portal, open and come
through it. They're there. Theycould easily just come up and wipe us
out. There's they obviously realize thatit would be like an adult human being
(01:31:26):
walking up to a six month oldand picking a physical fight with it.
It's just idiotic. We are baby. For all the advances we've made with
quantum physics and understanding just how weirdit everything is, uh and and ultimately,
(01:31:50):
you know, like for all thedamage and all the crap that concerns
caused, it's really done a lotto advance our knowledge. And typically when
we advance our knowledge, we doso at a cost. And we don't
even know what that cost is yetdiscertain, but I'm sure it will make
itself evident at some point. Itkeeps changing the timeline. Maybe could you
(01:32:14):
put one where I win the lottery? Right? But that fantastic? That
doesn't seem to happen. Instead,it just seems to be getting worse and
worse. But there's a lot ofthings that they've done that to me prove
that there's so much that we don'tknow, and there's so much capability to
(01:32:40):
the universe if you can harness controlof these particles and the smaller the particles
are and whatever, and that's howyou observe it. Blah blah blah.
But I mean, what they're findingout is holy crap. Going in a
spaceship from point A to point Bis stupid, like stupid. It's not
(01:33:01):
a satellite you're putting up in thespace. You know you're riding across vast
quantities of radioactive, really harsh environmenttype stuff that it's stupid. They know
that all it's going to take isa little bit of time to figure it
out, and they can do it. And that's where AI comes in,
(01:33:25):
because AI can and has shorten thatprocess because now you can put a machine
learning tool or an algorithm and sayI want you to focus on this problem
and this problem and tall, here'sall your databases the knowledge of humanity have
at you. And that thing isgoing to figure it out and figure it
(01:33:45):
out fast. So what happens nowthat we're in such uncharted territory to where
you have technological advancement at such apace that it's it's out of control,
it loses control. I think that'swhy everybody's crapping their pants right now about
(01:34:06):
it, Because the genie's out ofthe bottle. You're not going to be
able to stop it. I don'tknow how you would, so I don't
know. I kind of look atit things like, Wow, what a
screwed up world? We're in andI need to get the hell out of
(01:34:29):
freaking Massachusetts and somewhere into where likeEast Podunk. Get the hell out and
put it that way, because allI gotta say about the AI thing is
Joe and you running away, isit has anyone? I know people don't
like the last Terminator movie with ChristianBale. It was like the most panned
(01:34:53):
one of the four films, orI guess there's more now, but at
the time when it came out,it was like the most panned of the
the Terminator films. But I honestlythink that's probably the best one because it
shows humanity being taken over by theserobots and by these AI controlled robots,
and when you know, Skynet becameself aware, so to speak, and
(01:35:16):
you see it nuke everybody in humanityand then you see humanity fighting for like
two hours. It's humanity fighting againstthese robots and going back and forth.
And that's a good you know,I joke around when I say it,
but it's it's kind of not joking. I use humor to get a point
across. It's like that old expression, if you're going to tell somebody to
(01:35:40):
truth, uh, you know,use humor or make a joke otherwise they'll
kill you. So, uh,you know, it's kind of in that
vein, but I mean, inall seriousness, it's a problem. You
know, science fiction writers, alot of them, like Philip K.
Dick. He even said that hisstories were not just entertainment, they were
(01:36:06):
cautionary tales. I mean, hetripped. He did mind altering drugs at
the time, and psychedelics in orderto and he would sit around and then
he would have these trips, andyou know, people could say, wow,
was just the drugs. Well whatif the drugs unlocked his mind enough
(01:36:27):
that he could then run all ofthese scenarios through his head and during that
trip it allowed him to see theoutcome, the inevitable outcome. Why you
know, it's always let's blame thedrugs, but it wasn't the drugs.
And Philip K. Dick talked aboutit. He said, you know what,
(01:36:49):
the stories that I wrote, likeMinority Report. He's the guy that
wrote Minority Report, which they thenturned into that Tom Cruise movie. And
I mean, if you watch thefilm that was written a long time ago,
watch that film and look at thetechnology they're talking about it now,
you'll see CNN or CPS talk aboutThey'll they'll put up a video and they'll
be like, it's not minority report. But look, this person can walk
(01:37:13):
from point A to point Z andall of this facial recognition software can find
them. Isn't that great? Itcan help us find the bad guys?
Yeah, but when does a goodguy become a bad guy? Is the
question? Anytime it needs it tobanger, And that's the problem. See,
so this is here's any other issue. The infrastructure is already in place,
(01:37:34):
and Buffdale, Utah, is whereI believe we already have some version
of AGI already. There's there's alreadysome sort of something cooking in Buffdale.
Because you're talking about a storage facilitythat can amass and will and has recorded
and will record every communication on theface of the planet for the next hundred
(01:37:57):
years. That's its storage compacity,and it keeps growing. And what better
way for an AI to get datathan to just be tapped into all that.
And so you could take somebody's lifeand you could stick that AI on
(01:38:20):
it, and it can find everysingle event, every single thing you've done,
every record every ping of your cellphone, and it can create a
timeline, and they can manipulate itany which way, deep fake, you
name it. They can fake yourvoice. Now there is really nothing real
(01:38:41):
anymore. How can you trust anythinganymore? I don't know. So so
how do you go on with thesociety? I don't understand. You know.
It's like you're either gonna go withthe flow, right, Well,
that's what So they're going to createordo ab ko. They let the chaos,
they help eight and foment the chaos, they let it get out of
control. Then they come in andthey wait until society is screaming. You
(01:39:06):
know. Kissinger said at a Builderbergmeeting in the nineties that you know,
and I'm paraphrasing er because I don'thave the quote in front of me,
but it's something to the effect oftoday people would, you know, be
up in arms if un troops werewalking the streets of Los Angeles, But
tomorrow they'll be begging for it.You can look this up. It's a
(01:39:27):
famous quote by Henry Kissinger at oneof the Builderberg meetings in the nineties.
And that's you know, he's right, because people literally, you know,
it went from it went from questioningwhy cops again are militarized and they look
like soldiers too. You know,this very divisive issue about race with the
(01:39:48):
police that was going to make eithersomebody go on one side or the other.
There was no logic to it.It was all bringing everybody back down
to that base human level, andeveryone gets tribal, so they picked one
tribe or the other. Then everybody'sbutting heads. Meanwhile, no one's paying
(01:40:08):
attention that the cops still drive aroundin armored vehicles. There, they still
have all of this equipment that makesthem very militarized. Now, why is
that a problem. Well, asI said earlier, that's a problem if
you start to replace good cops withpeople that aren't citizens, and you say,
hey, we'll give you citizenship ifyou become a cop. Do you
think they're going to, you know, say no to an order that they're
(01:40:30):
given. No, they will followorders. They will do whatever they're told
to do. Okay. That Andaside from that being the issue of who's
filling the ranks, the other thingis the federal government could always try to
come in and say, well,you know, in order to fix everything
and get rid of police brutality,what we're gonna do is we're going to
federalize all police forces, so youcan still be you know, you could
(01:40:55):
be in your small town, butyour local police force are now federal officers.
And by the way, that givesthem a whole different litany of powers
over regular police officers too, andthat's what they want. Remember Barack Obama
was famous when he was the presidentfor saying that they need a civilian version
of the military that's just as fundedand just as trained as the military.
(01:41:18):
And by the way, Joe,because we got about a little less than
twenty minutes, since since we're talkingabout the military, I would like to
switch to Ukrainian money hole because thatwas one of the topics and all the
money laundering that's going on. Ihave a clip I want to play from
sixty minutes. I know, Ithink you've seen this for those of you
(01:41:39):
that may have not, and I'veI've kind of sped it up into into
it a little bit. But thisthis clip that I'm going to play.
This is a clip. This isa report from sixty minutes about like the
money and it's funny because that's goingto Ukraine. And it's funny because they're
(01:41:59):
like, well, only you knowthey've We've only given them twenty five billion
in aid for their their country,like their infrastructure and stuff. The rest
of the money and it's well overone hundred billion that we've given them,
but has been military equipment. Andyou're going to see, like all the
equipment they're fighting with is US militaryequipment they're using, like the old Bradley's.
(01:42:27):
We're sending m one abrams over there. But I want to play this
because I don't think people realize wheretheir money is going. So let's let's
show people where their money's going.Our first stop a forest fifteen miles from
the front line in eastern Ukraine.These are US made Bradley fighting by steel
clad behemoths hidden beneath the canopy ina makeshift workshop that's difficult for Russian drones
(01:42:56):
to spot. Ukraine's forty seventh metand Ice Brigade was only formed last year,
but it's soldiers have seen some ofthe deadliest fighting in this war.
The Bradley's armor was designed to protectAmerican infantry troops moving through combat zones.
Now it's doing the same thing forUkrainians. Wow, look at that this
(01:43:19):
machine survived a landmine and shrapnel froma Russian missile. Yeah, it's done
some damage, but it's still inone piece. What happened to the guys
who were inside? They say,yeah, I suppose they are safe in
the US has sent one hundred andeighty six Bradley's here. Wait, I
(01:43:40):
suppose they're safe A life. I'msorry. The guy doesn't even know what
happened to the people inside. He'she's just the pr mouthpiece for the Ukrainian
mechanic. He was just a mechanic. He doesn't even know what happened at
the cost of around two million dollarsa piece, So two million dollars versus
how many that this say, onehundred and one hundred and eighty something or
(01:44:01):
one hundred six, one hundred andeighty six times two million. That's fine.
That's where I'm just I'm showing youthis video, folks. Everybody wants
to know where how is my moneybeing expect in Ukraine? Saving your lives?
Lives? Do any other vehicles savelives in that way? In my
opinion and from my experience, thisis the best weekle I have ever seen.
(01:44:27):
You're all hidden here in the forest. Lieutenant Alexander Scherchen is a former
sales manager and a father of two, who enlisted on February twenty fourth,
twenty twenty two, the same dayRussia invaded his country. What are those
US weapons doing to the Russian military? What impact are they having? Oh,
(01:44:48):
we can destroy them faster, wecan seize them far away. The
fraid really even they're afraid of theAmerican weapons? Of course, how do
you that? Sometimes we can takeprisoners and they tell what people talking about
(01:45:08):
inside their companies. As their beginning. The US has spent just over forty
three billion dollars on military a toUkraine since Russia invaded. That's equivalent to
about five percent of the American defensebudget. European countries combined have contributed around
thirty billion. American rocket launchers arenow reaching deep into Russian occupied Ukraine,
(01:45:35):
and the Patriot Air Defense System isshielding millions of Ukrainian civilians from air strikes.
Where would the Ukrainians be right nowwithout US weapons? How much of
their country would they have lost withoutthat sort of a I think Ukraine would
have been probably overrun, defeated,certainly would have lost a lot more.
(01:45:57):
Lieutenant General Ben Hodges served as thecommander of the US Army in Europe.
He retired in twenty seventeen and isnow an advisor to NATO. Hodges told
us the Biden administration has failed toexplain to Americans what they're getting for their
dollar in Ukraine. If you thinkabout it, Russia has been for decades
(01:46:18):
and still is an existential threat forEurope and the United States. I mean,
listen to what their leaders say.Look at the thousand nuclear weapons.
They clearly will keep going if they'renot stopped. It sounds like you're saying,
stopping Vladimir Putin in Ukraine directly benefitsevery American. Absolutely, this war
(01:46:38):
is about so much more than justUkraine. This is a high point.
Wait, now it gets better.I know this is the propaganda because well
he's not lying though. I mean, you know, it does benefit the
government. It's just not meant inany way for US. No, no,
but the propagandas American foreign policy,it will be after Russia has been
(01:47:01):
defeated. American taxpayers are financing morethan just weapons. We discovered the US
governments buying seeds and fertilizer for Ukrainianfarmers and covering the salaries of Ukraine's first
responders, all fifty seven thousand ofthem. That includes the team that trains
(01:47:24):
this rescue dog named Joy to combthrough the wreckage of Russian strikes looking for
survivors. So we know the Americanpublic doesn't have any money themselves, and
the government refuses to fund any ofour own things here at home. But
hey, we're going to fund fiftyseven thousand first responders in Ukraine. We're
(01:47:46):
going to justify it by putting thisdog in the video and making you feel
bad and like a huge pile ofshit if you don't want to spend all
these billions of dollars, because lookat this dog, Joe, Look how
this dog is. And then there'reyou right, and then the grain and
the food and stuff and the thingsright, because you got it. That's
all about survivability. Oh wait,there's more. There's harping on it.
(01:48:10):
There's more. And the US alsofunds the divers who we saw clearing unexploded
ammunition from the country's rivers to makethem safe again for swimming and fishing.
Russia's invasions shrank Ukraine's economy by abouta third. We were surprised to find
that to keep it afloat the USgovernment is subsidizing small businesses like Tatiana Abramovs
(01:48:39):
knitwear company. These are Ukrainian townthat's cute. I recognize. Yeah,
especially in the condition of what wehave to walk, We have to pay
taxis, we have to pay weightsalary to our employees. We have to
walk, don't stop. Why doesthat help Ukraine win the war? Because
(01:49:00):
economy is the foundation of everything.American officials from USAID, the agency in
charge of International Development, helped aRamava find new customers overseas in the midst
of war. Her company is supportingover seventy families. We realize that it's
the eights from government, but it'sthe eights from their heart of every ordinary
(01:49:28):
American persson. Yeah, okay,but that's not true. That it's not
that's nice that you feel that way, but that's not true. There you
see how they're selling us. Butit's like, I don't know if they
did this as like a covert wayto get the information out and they tried
to make it look like yeah maybe, or it was just they're so blatant.
(01:49:53):
I mean, but the people peoplelike with half a head on their
shoulders, this would this would pisspeople off in the Ukraine. Bro,
Bro, If if you were asmall business owner, do you think the
US government would subsidize you if youneeded help to like you needed funds to
(01:50:15):
like get off the ground. Doyou think US AID, which by the
way, US I like how theycalled it us AID. It's us AID
and they are a CIA front.Okay, there you go again. See
they got their freaking tentacles and everything. It's my point and and you know,
ah ah, just Google for thoseof you that don't believe, just
(01:50:41):
look up US do it. Let'sask a question here, Let's ask a
question. Okay, so what wouldyou do if all of a sudden you
had armies just starting to kind ofform around you. You know, but
you're a big superpower, but you'rebeing surrounded. What would you do?
(01:51:05):
What did we do? And whatdo we do when other countries try to
set up missile bases right off ourcoast? What did we do? We
almost started a whole World War three, you know, and it spawned the
Cold War. The fact that therewas basically kind of an agreement in place
(01:51:31):
that NATO wouldn't expand any further,and then all of a sudden we do
our NATO expands even further. That'swhat prompted the response. And unfortunately,
there's also a lot of corruption inUkraine, and there's also a lot of
(01:51:54):
Russian heritage there, deep Russian heritage, and Russia's also so got a population
problem. So there's a whole hostof things that goes into it. But
that pr is not part of it. That's not part of the true story,
you know. So I got aproblem with that the way that they
(01:52:15):
tell it. Fact of the matteris, could you please pay your taxes?
Good American citizens? So right right? That Ukrainian ladies knitting companywhile meanwhile
we can't worth of damn and peoplecan't afford to pay for their own medicines
and and buy their food and screwthe that's an unimportant joe. Who are
(01:52:39):
you? Who are you to actuallycare about where your tax dollars go?
Yeah, that's unpatriotic. How doyou not care about patriotism? That's my
favorite line. So what's your endopdoing shit? We'll just make it simple.
You just go and work for thestate and then don't worry about it,
and the state will provide you everythingand you don't have to worry about
(01:53:00):
it. You just work and that'sstill living your FEMA camp. What happens
when that's you know? That wasthe whole the whole premise behind universal basic
income was the fact that, holycrap, what do we do when human
(01:53:23):
labor becomes obsolete? What? Now? We got to figure something out.
And that's the problem with what we'refast facing is that more and more areas
of expertise and then eventually the physicalstuff is going to be replaced, and
that should be a free humanity moment, but it won't be. Well no,
(01:53:49):
because then they've talked about, well, we'll need robots to run things.
Well, that's fine, and thenwhat do we do with all these
board lazy humans laying around? Well, they either give everybody drugs to keep
everybody happy, But then these peoplearen't paying into the system anymore because they're
not paying taxes. They may notbe working, so now they're just collecting
money from the system. So whatdo we do with all these people that
(01:54:13):
would what would we call them ifwe were the illuminati or the elites?
Yes, right, you'd call themuseless eaters? And what's their plan for
useless terminating them? Bengo, That'swhere it goes I mean, that's not
where I'm saying it should go.No, but it doesn't need to go
there. But the history of things, right, look at the history things.
Populations all over the world are collapsing. It wasn't done by accident.
(01:54:40):
All these things happen for a reason. Plagues, these cures that end up
doing more damage, right, allthat stuff, it's all done for a
reason. It's all done for areason. And it's that simple. We're
hitting that point where human labor becomesobsolete and we're screwed because there are too
(01:55:03):
many people and what the hell arethey going to do? It could be
a free humanity moment. Holy crap. I would love nothing more than to
be the best drummer I could everbe. I'd love to be able to
do that all day and not haveto worry about going to work doing anything
right, Just play music. Damn. That would be cool. But it
(01:55:28):
won't happen. Instead, it's goingto be more of the same. And
it's a shame well, because it'snot about freeing humanity, Joe. Unfortunately,
it would be great if it was, but unfortunately they don't have a
free humanity in mind. Their theiridea of a new order is much different
(01:55:51):
than what you'd think. You know, a utopia to us is much different
than a utopian to them. Right, But you know, dude, now
is the time, and my humbleopinion, people of kindred spirits and like
minds should circle the wagons as muchas they possibly can, and and and
(01:56:16):
like micro communities things like that,and spread out, spread out a little
bit. And just trust me,those are going to be very important because
you're gonna have to pool resources eventually. Cushing right now is they're they're screeping
(01:56:40):
the bottom of the barrel and cushingfor petroleum. Right, so Biden of
course releases one hundred and eighty millionbarrels from the strategic Reserve. Well there's
not enough for some reason. Oh, all the restrictions, all the all
the regulations, all that kind ofstuff. Okay, well it doesn't matter.
(01:57:04):
There's a shortage and you might seefour dollars and fifty cents five dollars
a gallon by the middle of winter. And they're not really talking a lot
about it, but check out thoseinventories. It's bad. It's creeping back
up there, and it's gonna getworse. It's gonna get worse. Look
at right. Black Rock and companieslike them have totally eviscerated affordable housing and
(01:57:30):
as a result, we're back todepression era multi family dwellings. You got
to pool resources to have a dwellingand have space. It's ridiculous, and
it's all It's not done on accident. It's not a bunch of accidents,
as Bob Ross would say. It'sall done via a plan. Joe,
(01:57:53):
we have less than a minute.I want to thank you, my brother.
Two hours went by, extremely superduper, be fast man. It's
always great hanging out with you,and I appreciate your expertise when it comes
to communications and technology and stuff likethat. And I appreciate you giving your
opinion on all that with five Gstuff and helping. I hope it helps
(01:58:14):
calm some people down that may haveheard this broadcast and not to be too
upset or worried about it. Iknow you and I already talked about an
off air, so I knew itwas going to be a good convo.
Ladies and gentlemen. I will leavewith you with some positivity, as I
always do. And it's my favoritequote from Martin Luther King Jr. One
of my heroes. Darkness cannot driveout darkness. Only light can do that.
(01:58:42):
Hate cannot drive out hate. Onlylove can do that. I'll catch
you all again live next week.I love you all. We're out of here.