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March 17, 2023 • 83 mins
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(00:05):
Hello, and welcome back to understandingPropaganda. I'm here tonight with a man
who needs no introduction, the oneand only Ryan Dawson. Ryan, what's
going on? I got my Twitterback? Isn't that amazing? That is
pretty amazing. I've gone through twoor three accounts. They just keep shutting
them down. So I don't reallyhave any faith in true free speech because

(00:28):
we all know there's a couple ofthings that we can't talk about. Well,
even when you can it. Theinundation is stupid that surrounds so many
subjects from the KUCA sphere makes itimpossible to get anything done, even when
you are saying everything accurately. LikeI have this Epstein map behind me right

(00:50):
paynstakingly put that together over the years, and people are still out there going
where's the client list? Or someonejust lazily copied the black Book and cut
and pasted all the names says,here's the list, Like you can have
very accurate information on September eleventh,which I've done on Jeffrey Epstein on JFK,

(01:11):
as you know, and it doesn'tmatter because it just becomes one of
the theories grouped in with a bunchof retarded ones as if they're all equivalent,
and they're not. And this isfor historical things, scientific things,
political things. The Kuku sphere isamplified to the millionth degree on social media,
and accurate journalists are constantly playing thewhackamole game where they're kicked off this,

(01:37):
kicked off that. So yeah,I don't know, like I hardly
ever talk about September eleventh anymore becauseit doesn't matter, right, I can
go over all the information that weknow that's in our own FBI ors Report
and Jazz Report and sell on,and it's just you know, someone else

(01:59):
can pop in and denying airplanes andtalking about thurnmite grenades or whatever, and
two million people see it, youknow. So so, so what is
the proper response from journalists to continueor well, to go do something else?
I think on the social media platforms, we found out from Twitter files

(02:23):
what we all suspected, right,Like the FBI was in there, all
the three letter networks were in there, and that's who's censoring people. I
believe that's who's also the opposite ofa shadow band, like they dial up
the nonsense, the Alex Jones,the Stupeters or whatever they would dial that
up. Jones finally got in troubleafter his school shooter denial stuff took him

(02:47):
down, but he's already been replaced. This stupiders, guys, I mean
saying the Ukraine War is fake andjust you know, virus denier all that
stuffs like you're never gonna get faucifor doing any legal gaina function research in
Wuhan, you know, because they'redoing gaina function research on a virus.

(03:09):
If you have people who don't thinkviruses are real, and I'm just like,
guys, please let the adults talk. So what I think the answer
is is we already know people shadowband and retard as stuff gets pumped up.
And that's not all just because they'regetting more juice. It's because people

(03:31):
are dumb. But sub Stack andthings like that. When cy Hirsch persisted
his article on the nord Stream bombing, we all knew Russia didn't bomber and
pipeline, and we all know itwasn't six guys on a yacht either the
unwet passport right. He put itdirectly to sub Stack. He didn't go

(03:53):
to the New York Times or theNew Yorker or any of the places where
he's written things before, because ashe knew he couldn't. He also wouldn't
just stick it on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube because A he would get banned.
B No one would see it becauseif it's truthful, they'll de rank
it. So he went straight tosub stack. We just need one place

(04:17):
to break the medium monopoly, andyou know, knock on wood, but
sub stack seems to be where it'sat. And then for video sites is
sort of a combination with the rumboleRockman Odyssey and if you're not doing live,
I guess bit shoot, but bitchshoot has been cucified, like you

(04:41):
have to turn the comments off onevery video. Is it's just Surger like
the Asperger Olympics over there. Well, one thing I find about these other
platforms is they're very clicky, andif either're in with the right click of
the people who are doing the promotionbehind the scenes, or you're not and
you're so they're making a lot ofmoney or you're making no money. So

(05:01):
it's you find the same pitfalls thatyou find everywhere else. Yeah, as
far as much, I don't thinksubsect really cares though, that it's just
put whatever. That's why I thinkthat's the best one. The rest of
them are cliquish, and you know, they don't do a good job policing
content that's not supposed to be onthere, things that are copyrighted, they

(05:23):
don't. They just let people pirateand stuff because they're all anarchists. And
so I'm like, okay, wellI'm gonna quit using you then. So
over the past many years, youand I have had many a conversation,
and I kind of feel like alot of the information that you have relevant

(05:44):
to history really doesn't It doesn't getexposed the way it should in your research
into the modern times. I mean, there's things about history that you've made
me aware of that still you nevertalk about ever, you know, even
going to the Civil War, don'tfilling with the backlash. Is why it's
like my brother too. My brotherhas uncovered the so called Lost Colony,

(06:10):
like he did, he's one hundredpercent right. And the other day the
History Channel, which is just hashistory and the name it's not really History
Channel, just were flat out denyingit. They they did the whole bit
about the lost Colony, and theyacted like they didn't know what the word
croatoe hadn't meant and they even likemaybe it means good luck factor. It

(06:30):
wasn't even the whole word. Theyjust said it said crow cro O.
It's Crowto, and that's the nameof a people and an island, and
it's where the colonists had visited inthe prior years to there being a lost
colony. There's no question where theywent. They wrote it down, but
they just make it a mystery becauseit's sells tickets, you know, it
gets people. What's that? Andthey do the same thing with Stonehenge and

(06:54):
all these other sites. It's likethese are not mysteries at all, but
you made them into it and youpretend and like no one's ever figured any
of this out, and it's justnot true. And that's what's happened is
the Hollywood has in the entertainment industry, is taken over history. Because I
can tell you one Hollywood film,even when they say it's fiction, it

(07:15):
doesn't matter whether it's Pocohontas to Braveheart. That becomes what people think of as
the history, and poor historical writersdon't have a chance, you know.
I mean like even literary plays havedone to mean, Shakespeare's Macbeth has changed
the you know, there's the actualMcBeth story and there's the bullshit one.

(07:39):
Well, which book do you readin school? You read McBeth by Shakespeare,
you don't read history about it.So the entertainment has taken over.
And it frustrates me to no endbecause I know a lot of really interesting
historical things that would change people's perspectiveon how things came to be. And

(08:00):
I just feel like I'm yelling intothe wind though, you know, because
they're like, nah, you haveto spend an enormous amount of time debunking
the nonsense and propaganda that they've beenspoon fed and from school TV and so
on, and it's like it sucksthe energy out of my soul. Oh
my god. I just I don'twant to talk to someone that's not ready

(08:24):
to listen. What is anybody?Some are? But like that's why I
talk to you, Like some ofthe stuff I've told you in private.
You're like, man, why don'tyou ever say that? How come you
don't talk about Kennedy Moore or whatever? You know all this shit? And
I'm like, because I just Ican't stand the koops man, and like

(08:45):
my plates full, I will andI have and I've tackled all these subjects,
but I do them one at atime. I'm like, no,
I got enough, like no Planerenemies right now that I have to deal
with. Because there there's true hatredthese people because they're egomaniacs and when you
make them feel dumb, when youprove them wrong, and so they take
it very personal and they will personallyattack you and fame you and follow you

(09:09):
around online and harass you. AndI'm like, why because I said an
airplane hit the Pentagon. Yeah,that's all it takes, you know,
like they get so butt hurt aboutit. And you know, I've pissed
off the note Planers. I've pissedoff like the race Realist as the new
one that's after me. There's allthese little factions, they make, little

(09:31):
cults online, and it's just notworth the headache, Like this stuff is
not if I were to lay outthe history like you were alluding to,
like the American Civil War people haveit's in books, like you can read
what actually happened, Like they lieabout that war as much as every other

(09:52):
war. With stinking Lincoln. He'sgot a giant statue in DC on a
throne. You know, like ifpeople knew who that man really was,
but it doesn't. I don't thinkthey want to know, Like they like
the fairy tale better. So that'sjust that's what becomes like he was challenging

(10:16):
the Federal Reserve. I see thismeme all the time where they've got like
Lincoln and Kennedy and Gaddaffi, andlike, none of these guys did what
you think they did. Kennedy limitedwho could issue silver certificates. He was
not anti fed. Fed didn't evenexist when Lincoln was alive. Fed comes
to night Beeing thirteen and his greenbacksdid not pay for the war. He

(10:37):
paid for the war by selling warbonds, which were repilled paid by stolen
gold from the South. Gaddaffi wasnot making a gold denar. That's not
why Libya was invaded. Libyas invadedafter the revolution in Egypt reopened the Suez
Canal for the Maritimes Silk Road chilloudrainy Libya's ships to trade without having to

(11:01):
use the Israeli middleman. Saddam wasnot doing the petro dollar nonsense. See
that Europe did not attack Iraq withthe United States to save the dollar or
Libya but Israel did get three fourthsof its oil from Irockly these things are
always this petro dollars stuff. That'ssaying about Ukraine too, like that is

(11:22):
a swerve to get you barking upthe wrong tree, so you don't see
the Israeli hand behind Syria, Iraq, Libya and Ukraine. I mean all
the war were coming up in thetwentieth anniversary of the Second Rock War twenty
years ago, right two thousand andthree, they invade March twenty that it's

(11:43):
all of these things. It wasn'tabout it wasn't about the Petro dollar.
It wasn't about limiting China or anythingeither because China did get the oil.
It was the Office of Special Plans, like they literally put a group of
Zionists and the Pentagon that lied aboutyellow cake, uranium from this year,
aluminum tubes weapons under the palaces.That was Williams Sapphire and then before the

(12:11):
anfracts with James Woolsey, Red Barnes, Gary Schmidt, Robert Kagan, William
Crystal and then the Office of SpecialPlans this lined about this is Doug Fife
and Richard Pearl. Right later PaulWolfoot Michael Laden, David wormser to start
to see a Patter's not a Presbyterianissue here. There's like a bunch of

(12:31):
Scionist Jews lied about a rock becausethat's his reel's enemy and America whenever they're
impounded the hell out of them.And they did not have antfracts or mobile
weapons labs, or chemical weapons underthe palaces or any other kind of WMD.
And they knew that, but itwasn't the oil companies that lied about
it. And these all these Israelisweren't making this up to save the dollar.

(12:54):
They already invaded a rock in theFirst Gulf War and there was no
eurobeck and like it, they justhear this story like well, petro dollar
or oh you know what that does? That increases the demand for I was
like, I know what it is, but you're wrong. Has nothing to
do with why they invaded a rock. Like every single pre war lie came

(13:18):
from a neo Kon cabal of Zionists, all of it, and they hated
sit On. They literally wrote policypapers for a foreign leader like people in
the United States like Richard Pearl arewriting policy of paper Spinett and Yahoo.
Right, the clean break strategy andsaying how they have to topple a rock

(13:41):
in Syria, pap you can andcommentary the roads of Damascus runs through Baghdad.
Rock had to be taken out first. That wasn't his rayleig war And
they don't know. I mean thisall seems to go back to and yes
it does. Yeah in the eighties, Oh Didona. I've put a big

(14:01):
chunk a paragraph in my movie aboutSyria in there where they describe dividing a
rock along sectarian lines between kurd Shiaand Sunny and getting internal fighting every Arab
on Arab conflict benefit says Reel DadDa Da, And yeah, clean Break
was building off of Oda yon OnAnd how many people know about Like I

(14:26):
kind of put that out there,but I do almost have to personally know
you for you to know about it, because even when you stick it in
the film and you source it andyou screenshot it and you put it in
front of the face, the nameand the document just you know, and
I don't know what to do.Like we're dealing with a generation of people,

(14:46):
like some of the women can't namethree countries, and people are just
they're doing a lot of drugs andentertainment, and they they can't retain information,
they can't retrieve in from I askedsomeone of the you know, stuff
that happened in two thousand and three, forget about it. It's not just

(15:09):
zoomers, it's millennials, it's genx, it's all of us. Something
happened. And this is funny andnot funny. But if you think about
in the past, things like hookwormand lead poisoning. When lead was put
in gasoline in the twenties, thatwent on for decades and it had a
global effect on lowering night Q byabout fifteen points because people are driving around

(15:33):
this stuff and they're getting slow braindamage, and that should scare everyone that
they put a substance in something ingas like so automobiles because day mixing lead
with their octane and everyone everyone wasgetting mild lead poisoning or worse, and

(15:54):
everyone got more aggressive and dumb.And then Japan phased it out way phases
out. The US didn't get ridof it until the eighties. You could
get leaded or unletted, you know, and that's a mental toxin. I'm
wondering if there's something else like thatgoing on now, Like we don't it's

(16:15):
not lead, it's something else becauseeveryone's dumb. It's idiocracy, and I'm
wondering, what is there something intofood? Well, how much of a
role do you think the pandemic playedin that? But how could you have
even gotten the pandemic if you didn'thave chicken little panic culture to begin with?

(16:36):
Like these are the people that maycreated toilet paper shortages because Facebook told
them too, and then it becamea self fulfilling prophecy. Say, if
enough people go out and hoard toiletpaper, then you really do run out
of toilet paper, even though therewas nothing wrong on the supply side.
People are going around buying trucks fullof it like it's a game. So

(16:59):
they're they're all always this close topanic, right that doomsday clock at all
to be like, you know,two minutes to panic. The freakazoids kind
of like to be afraid, liketool song, you know, very curious
lee from a distance. They wantto watch things die. Yeah, the

(17:22):
scandemic, pandemic, whatever you wannacall it, Like they lost their minds
and they just we just have todo something, and like you don't just
do something to do something if thatsomething is dumb, and it was dumb
low lockdowns. The mask and thevaccine were all pointless. It doesn't stop

(17:44):
the spread, it doesn't stop theseverity, it doesn't stop you from getting
it. There was no point invaccines or boosters. While all the lockdowns
did was depreciate the value of commercialand residential property so that places like black
Rock and Vanguard could go gobble itup. Black Rock and Vanguard, to
give a historical analogy, are kindof like the modern day East India Tea

(18:08):
Company where you've gotten to a point, you know what I mean, Like
where a corporation is the size ofa state or many states. These corporations
are bigger than some countries, aswas the Dutch and the East India Tea
Company. They were huge and we'vegot that going on now. And they
were they used the pandemic to manipulatereal estate they could buy it up.

(18:33):
Well. That was also important becausethe Dutchies India Company was the first that
was a creation of a new assetclass in stocks and that transformed the world.
Also, yeah, the whole,that whole ability to kind of piggyback
off, like all the wealthy piggybackoff through speculations so referencing the Yunan Plan

(18:55):
again, would you say that what'shappening to the West and attempted to the
world as a modern day extrapolation ofthe Yeonan Plan. I wish everyone would
go read it. I posted iton my forum. I guess I can
repost it, but I just can'thelp see the similarities between the Yenan Plan
and what's happening in all throughout theworld and particularly the West. It's been

(19:18):
followed to the letter pretty much.And yeah, I mean, I agree.
They did their plan in Iraq.They kind of got halfway there through
the Syria. I mean they it'sbecause Russian intervention that ICE has failed.
They were winning. In twenty thirteentomorrow or is Saint Patrick's Day in the

(19:45):
US. That's the anniversary of whenthe Syria shot down in Israeli F sixteen
the US paid for and gave himwith an S two hundred that they got
from Russia. Yeah. Literally,it seems Israel has been very emboldened.
The attack in Iran has gone unansweredthus far. They again, too,

(20:08):
well, it's unanswered because it wouldbring down the wrath of the United States
Iran in Syria. Know how muchwrath is that really today? It's bad
because US is not going to fighteven pier. They're not gonna fight with
Rush or China, but they'll messwith Syria like they just found today where

(20:30):
the US China sit in humanitarian tentsand the US confiscated them and use them
for themselves in Syria, Syria.If Syria word, Syria could take on
Israel on one on one, butit would never be the case, like
Americans will not even do anything fortheir own interests, but they'll do it

(20:51):
on behalf of Israeli interests in asecond. You know, if Israel got
attacked, then like you better beready almost for nuclear war because as they
own our politicians, they own ourmedia, and you know, Israel can
and has attacked Syria several times thisyear, all through last year, year

(21:12):
before that, year before that,they've been doing airstrikes and using cruise missiles,
attacking Damascus and killing people. Nota single incident of this has been
on any three letter network or majorpaper in the US. They don't even
talk about it, which lets youknow, you know, to learn who

(21:33):
rules over you see who you're notallowed to criticize, you know, God
damn well, if Syria attacked Israeleven in response Israel attacking them, that
the story was starting in the middleand that it was unjustified and unprovoked attack,
just like they said about Ukraine thathave been murdering over fourteen thousand people

(21:53):
and the don boss for eight yearsbefore Russia moves in. But they don't
they start the story the middle andgo That's a pattern throughout history. Israel
is attacked out of the blue becauseof anti Sembodism or something, and you
know Syria just wanted another Holocaust orwhatever, and then completely ignore how the

(22:17):
West and Israel. Israel has beenphysically attacking Syria with missiles. That's a
complete violation of a sovereign state.Like you're shooting missiles into their capital.
What if they shot missiles into TelAviv, which is the capital of Israel,
not Jerusalem? Right? You thinkwe'll ever see that? I wish.

(22:41):
I mean, like I said,they deserve. I don't want anybody
firing missiles at anybody, but atIsrael is like there is you have erased
all other options, like violence isthe only thing they listen to. You
can't negotiate with psychopathic cereal wires andreceivers like they don't care. They know
what they're doing is wrong. Theyknow it's not defense. They're trying to

(23:04):
expand territory. So if it happens, I'm like, well, it was
predictable. I mean the same thingwith Russia and Ukraine. It's not like
I wanted a war, but Iexpected one. It was like, well,
you know, you keep poking thedog or to bear, it'll bite

(23:25):
you. What you think was gonnahappen, just gonna sit there and murder
people and don Boston definitely, you'rejust gonna colonize Palestinians for infinity, Like
they're gonna fight back, They're gonnaresist, and eventually they're gonna catch you
on the nose. I just don'tsee Iran just taking this one on the
chin. I mean, this isthe first time that I can recall that

(23:48):
it was such a blatant attack inIran and taking place by the Israelis.
Iran is not worried about a USinvasion. They're worried about like a Azerbaijan
Azeri rebellion from within the Iran sponsoredby the CIA. Is that a real
possibility. If I would think CIAand I wanted to mess up and ran

(24:14):
like going in with the air forceis not a good idea. Iran's got
mountainous terrain, good defense. Irancould counter that by hitting Saudi Arabia with
cruise missiles and wiping out the northernoil fields. With the whole world on
economic lockdown, so it's kind oflike you're all going down with this situation.

(24:34):
But a rebellion from within, especiallyif they got the Azeris and even
two percent of them participated, They'relike twenty five percent of the population in
the north, so it would reallydisrupt things in Iran and did have another
AJAX moment, like the intelligence isthe weak point there. They have a

(25:00):
very tribalistic society and it's very easyto get factions to fight with other factions.
They don't have a sense of likepan like Persian or Iranian nationalism.
It's this click versus this click,which was intentionally sewed that type of division

(25:22):
and identity politics so that you keepthe plebs divided and fighting with each other.
So well, Iran has seemingly beenenemy number one always for the Israelis,
but for US seventy nine once theyactually kicked us out. Coincidentally,
the year of the birth of Islamicterrorism. Israel was cool with Iran until

(25:45):
seventy nine as well, and theyreceived a large amount of oil from them.
Jimmy Carter's book piece Not Apartheid wentover that, and I'm sitting there
going, they're getting everything from theSinai Peninsula and Iran. But in seventy
nine that's cut off because of therevolution, and so what happens within two

(26:06):
years the Iran I Rock War.All throughout the eighties, these two are
fighting each other, and Israel waslaughing all the way to the bank.
I just can't help but think backto quotes from like Ben Gurion specifically talking
about just smashing the entire Middle Eastand taking it all over. So,
you know, I just anytime Isee they that they have good diplomatic relations

(26:30):
with the country, I mean,it's just always on the surface, because
you guaranteed sewing them somehow behind thescenes, they'll stab you in the back
every time. I don't know whyanybody would listen to work with the Israelis.
You know, Ben Gurion as theprincipal architect for stealing uranium from the
United States and illegally building and secretlybuilding nuclear weapons. So one of the

(26:52):
biggest clues for me on in regardsto the relationship between the United States and
Cuba throughout the period post Bay ofPigs was that, you know, I
can't even realize that the Israelis andthe Cubans were doing covert opts under the
guise of like, um, somesort of relations organization, right, And

(27:15):
so that made me realize, youknow, the CIA is working with the
Israelis, of course, and theCubans are working with the Israelis, of
course, what are the odds that'sreally going against See classic excuse for the
Bay of Pigs. Right, there'sa lack of air support, right right?
Is the quite opposite, there's alack of ground support, and partly
because a lot of the weapons youthought were the air had been diverted Israel,

(27:37):
right right. And that and thenthat brings in like inter Armco out
of Virginia, and then Samuel Cummingsand that whole network and infrastructure of arms
importing and exporting which directly connects toKennedy and a dozen other things. So
it's really amazing when you start tosee the web of history and how it
all interconnects. It's like whole it'sthat whole Miami cell would sad shack Lee

(28:00):
threw back to Laos in the wholewar in Vietnam. Yep, it's unbelievable
that that the jam wave station gotbooks on that too. Oh he's the
best. As far as uh Strengthof the Pack and Strength of the Wolf,
I mean, those are like mandatoryreading. But it's just amazing that
the jam wave station got to operate, you know, for as long as

(28:22):
they did on American soil. Andthere were a bunch of American CIA stations
at the time that were all underthe guise of like domestic business, which
is like the Washington Post or Lifemagazine, you know. And our our
boy, CD Jackson is always afavorite character that no one knows his name.

(28:45):
You know. I tell people aboutwhat happened in Buchenwald, and then
I'm like, yeah, that's theguy who picked up you know that the
Zuppruter film on November twenty second.It's like, really, that's supposed to
trust that fucking guy. That's amind blowing moment, or ought to be.
But if you're talking about like thedenocification bringing in the city of wein
Maarning, if you can Wald hasshowing them just this utter like believe it

(29:07):
or not kind of Hollywood displays justridiculous trunken heads and lampshades or whatever,
you know, like you're not allowedto debunk the alarmist propaganda without someone throwing
the baby out with the bathwater andgoing, oh, so you think the
whole thing was fake? Like sixmillion crisis actors and you love Hitler,

(29:30):
and it's like, look, bittingthere, aren't They didn't build soap out
of furniture out of body parts.Isn't promoting Hitler or like denying anyone was
thrown in camps and killed. Itjust means they didn't make ashtrays out of
pelvet bones and stuff. But thefact that they went on this like circus

(29:53):
type of dumb, dumb portrayal ofevil and lie to all these Germans they
brought in there shows you that thisHollywood's style, and in Hollywood and no
assessor like this. Right, propagandabled into the general public later, right,

(30:15):
it didn't stay contained. There's stillpeople today they think that Alshwitz was
turning people into soap and that differentbodies had different colors smoke kind of stuff
like uh, and that kind ofretarded stuff needs to be debunked, because
if you don't debunk the alarmist propaganda, then it's a slippery slope to saying,

(30:38):
well, maybe this is fake andthis is fake and they're not these
are real, but it's covered intrash. There are some really good older
videos put out by a guy nameddeny Er Bud. You ever seen those?
Those are top quality that guy.Yeah, it's awesome. But in
regards to all this the subject inparticular, what I fintating by the way,

(30:59):
about though assess and the Nuremberg Trial. Oh really that's what I'm getting.
I'll have to look for that one. But yeah, what if I'm
most fascinating is the mindset of theguys who worked in psychological operations, Because
the more I learned about psychological operationsand guys like rh NAP and these guys
who actually wrote out the manuals onhow to do this stuff, it's absolutely

(31:22):
it's it's unbelievable, like seeing thespinning and Squirrel. Of course, a
couple of guys who ever put thattogether definitely deep into psych warfare for sure,
But those guys like are I'm fascinatedwith guys like CD Jackson and R.
H. Nap and even General McClure, who was in charge of the
psych warfare. I mean, they'rebringing in Alfred Hitchhock and Billy Wilder like

(31:45):
the Hollywood the Spielberg's of the day. I love the props with like the
head split in half in the casein like the formalde high. I mean,
that's it's Scott shock value for sure, But I just don't see the
point in it. They piled upa bunch of bodies too, like look
at this pile of corpses like thatgot stacked like legos, Like, oh
really the Germans do that and leftthem out there in the yard. Come

(32:07):
on, Like, it's shocking enoughthat you don't need to add all this
ridiculous stuff. Just say what happenedand it's horrifying. You don't need to
fromaldehyde heads and I see it.I envisioned that there was a distinct turn
in our understanding of history post thecreation of these intelligence agencies and psychological operations.

(32:32):
One of the first things they didwas start whitewashing history. Yes,
but how much of history was whitewashedbefore that? How many you know,
how many kings rewrote history or howmany presidents and other countries rewrote their rewrote
their own history, I mean asany of it real. Well, they

(32:53):
all have always lied about history,but not to the level of soap and
lampshades, like that's a wild win. And think about any other war,
right, any other war, FrancoPrussian War, Napoleonic wars, whatever,
You never heard that, right likethat, and then they turn the bones

(33:15):
into a chair or something like it'sjust because it's too over the top and
it wouldn't work without TV. Youjust wouldn't be able to reach enough gullible
people. Like there's a limiting effect. A lot of people will go along
with the group think because they fearopposing the group. They don't want to

(33:36):
be ostracized. Their opinion is notbased on what's reasonable to them, it's
based on what do I have tosay to be on the winning team.
And so television is able to reachthe lowest common denominator, and they all

(33:57):
think like this is why late nightcanmedians are so effective for political propaganda.
No one wants to be the onebeing laughed at. So if they have
a laugh track or a crowd andthey are like, well, everyone knows
it's so stupid, dude, thenthat's what they're gonna say and repeat.
If they all hate Trump, thenthey hate Trump. And you could hate

(34:21):
Trump because of the dumb stuff youdid. But that isn't it. It
was identity politics. Well, like, oh, obviously it was. All
the comedians are attacking the same person. All the late night comedians are attacking
this guy, but not the opponent. What does that mean? They lie
about everything? All right? Howcould you not be having a field day

(34:43):
with Hunter Biden? Like, where'sthe SNL skits about that? You don't
even have to write anything, youjust tell the truth. It's already a
comedy gets you know, looking forcrack and parmesan cheese. And he slept
with his dead brother's widow, cheatson her with a prostitute who he gets

(35:08):
pregnant, and then he tries todeny it's his kid, but it was.
I mean, who goes after theirdead brother's wife and then he goes
to a hooker and then gets herpregnant and then it just goes on and

(35:30):
on. That should be I mean, the amount of drugs he's doing and
getting foot try and it's all onvideo. It's all on this laptop him
doing the deals and all the corruptiongassed and just it's insane. They made

(35:51):
these deals with Barisma and then theseoligarchs in Russia and then Feels in Romania,
and all the deals with the CommunistChina, including nuclear energy. It's
all right there. They should beslinging the jokes. The mud on the
Biden syndicate is enormous and could getpicked apart. And you know they would

(36:12):
have if the donor class was,you know, not behind Biden, all
the comics and stuff would be dicingthem into bits. Instead, they're still
talking about Trump. He's not eventhere. So allegedly the Biden financials made
their way to the House Oversight Committee. Is that anything? Is this fluff

(36:37):
or what's up of this? It'sto me, it's like I believe it
when I see it. You know, it's a blah blah blah waving your
finger. It's like it's like theun condemning people that break resolutions. Nothing
happens unless us saw on board.I mean, look at okay, recently,

(36:57):
Tucker Carlson blows the lid off ofJanuary six and the Republicans can gain
troll of the House and they gotthis footage release goes on Fox News shows.
Yeah, it was not an armedwhite supremacist insurrection. It was like
mostly cointelled pro and a couple haplesscharacters that are being led around the building

(37:20):
escorted by police. And they zoomedin on that Jacob Chancy guy Chandley where
his name is, because he lookedlike a goof. He's wearing a buffalo
hat and he's got like a flagand no shirt and tattoos and it was
like everything the left fears. Somebody'stall and kind of in shape and like

(37:40):
loud and whatever. But it wasjust some QAnon suckered you know, drug
addict that was like, oh hefell for all of it, and go
and tell pros like, we gota guy, right, and so they
let him in. They just lethim in. Now follow him around,
put the camera on him. Thiswill be the post their child of this
event. He's just walking around prettymuch by himself, no army behind him

(38:06):
or anything with hey man, itjust like in pocket of cops and they
just let in these characters and createan event and then coin tell pros outside
breaking windows and stuff and being likecome on, you know. It was
good and a lot of people weren'thaving it. They're like, what are
you doing, Like the doors open, why are you breaking the window right
next to it? Because they're doingit for the camera and had photo wops.

(38:29):
The whole thing was staged like theyneeded to disrupt the hearing on election
fraud when it got to Arizona.They're gonna make their case of what they
honestly believe were anonymalies in the election. It had to be physically shut down.
They're like, we're going to disruptit, and they did, and
they got these Queuton suckers to gointo building. The camera just zoomed in

(38:52):
on anywhere they could create a pocketof violence, which they had agents stressed
as Trump supporters in the air actinga fool and being violent and trying to
get others to do the same.And when asked about it, they couldn't
answer, did you have lane clothedagents? You know, addresses, magga
hats and things. Oh, wecan't answer that, Like so yes,

(39:15):
you know Ray Epps and a lotof others. It was cointell pro.
The whole thing was pretty obvious.I mean I remember I was probably sitting
there watching their messaging three or fourpeople, and all of us were just
like, this is this is whatthey're doing, this is what's going to
happen. But gave it away.It was like all these people were they
were, you know, rampaging throughthe capitol, but they were staying between

(39:37):
the roped off areas. That Ithought was that was a dead gift away
because it was not an insurrection.They didn't bring weapons. It definitely wasn't
white supremacists. I mean, theyjust throw that on everything, right,
because that's that's a conversation ender.When you say white supremacist, Nazi da
da, it's like, well,gotta be against that because just that accusation.

(40:00):
Shit'll do it. They'll say it, well, we all know Nazis
are bad. That's the one wedidn't do, right, So that's um
drilled into your head. It's likethe only thing you're allowed to say is
evil because everything else is cultural relativism. Right, they'll make excuses for it.
The only things ever evil in historyare Nazism, slavery, and colonialism.

(40:21):
That is the only bad things thatyou're actually allowed to condemn. And
so if they just call them whitesupremacists, then even when an innocent woman
gets shot an unarmed woman is shotand killed. They're like, they're defaming
her by acting like Ashley Babbitt waspart of some white supremacist insurrection of you

(40:43):
know, treason against the United States. It's completely the opposite. Yeah,
and they've defamed her. They murderedher and then basically called her a Nazi
to justify their violence. Well,since the States started killed some protesters were
like, yeah, well those wereyou know, basically, if there was

(41:06):
a real insurrection and people were violentlybreaking into the Capitol with weapons, then
they would have shot everybody who camethrough that door. Well that is probably
have been Swiss cheese. If itwas an insurrection, they wouldn't have needed
to get to the door. Theywould have shot it from a distance.
If it was an insurrection, theywouldn't have even gone through the door.
They would have walled them in andburned it. I mean, like,

(41:29):
yeah, stay in there, you'reall gonna die of smoking. Relation.
Like, if it was an insurrection, you don't even need I mean,
if all those people had been armedand were like actually trying to take over
the government, they could have Imean, but they never would have gotten
to that point because they wouldn't thecops wouldn't have allowed them in and waved

(41:51):
them in and moved the barricade andunlocked doors, like none of that would
have happened. They were allowed inand waved in, and then internal doors
and things were unlocked for them becausethey needed to disrupt what was happening below,
and what was happening is Arizona becauseit went alphabetically was making the case

(42:13):
of erection and irregularities, and therewas no way they were going to let
the American public hear that because allanybody had heard since YouTube and everybody was
censoring everything reasonable was the nonsense fromlike Lynnwood and Sydney Powell and stuff.
Now all that Q stuff went allover Twitter, all over YouTube, and
they left it alone because it wasstupid. And so they're like, the

(42:37):
election wasn't stolen. I've heard thosearguments and all of them were dumb,
like you heard Lynnwood, Sydney Powerarguments, because they dumbest as always the
loudest. Because the actual irregularities thatsomeone like Larry Johnson could point out,
or something like even myself that definitelyhappened. You don't get to know,

(43:00):
I mean, don't you don't evenhave to worry about the mail in votes
or any of that. Just thefact that they had three liberal moderators in
a row for all the debates,and they flat out wide about Hunter's laptop,
saying, not that's been debunked.All the people in your own administration
said so. Trump. They evencalled it Russians. All the Russians made

(43:21):
that up. No, it wasreal. It's a real laptop, three
of them. It's full of incriminatedevidence. Hunter Biden should be in prison.
Is not? That alone? Iselection manipulation When you're going to censor
one side who's telling the truth,how about their opponents who are engaged in

(43:45):
criminal activity that if you or Ior anyone else did it be in jail.
Well, the thing it emphasizes tome is that none of the systems
that we have in place in thiscountry are legitimate at all anymore. It's
become pretty obvious they can't even geta train from point A to B anymore.

(44:06):
Right, So, speaking of trains, so I'm up in northern Colorado
and I hear a train pretty frequentlyevery night pretty much. That's probably about
a mile and a half away.So I went and looked up the trains
here in town. There's a threethat come through. Two of them are
mostly local that go just throughout Colorado. One of them is a Union Pacific,
and so I go to the UnionPacific website and the first thing I

(44:29):
see on their website is that theyare proud of their board that is fully
diverse, equity inclusionary, whatever,whatever the fuck that means. Happen to
these banks that are family It isso much time on equity, hires and
diversity, and it's nonsense. Well, because these people think that these corporate

(44:51):
jobs are just show. They justshow up there, they can get their
four hundred dollars a day lunch stipendand they don't really have to do any
act wal work. They just haveto pretend that have to be of a
particular category so that they can saywe hired us such and such. I
really don't understand how, particularly withthe LGBT thing, how who you fuck

(45:13):
should determine how who gets that position. It's unfucking believable. I mean,
this is beyond clown world to me. The notion that's the government has the
balls ridiculous. Lgb is a sexualorientation. T is not a sexual orientation.
T is a a person pretending tobe the other sex. Correct,

(45:36):
if you ask me, these arejust a female impersonators. I think they
got the term correct in the seventies. Yeah, and sometimes male impersonators,
but it's mostly dudes that want tobe chicks. They confuse feminine and masculine
with female and male. Well,when I start to look into this,
it's it's the ultimate prejudice because it'sit's teleology, right. They're like,

(45:58):
well, girls are supposed to belike this and like these things, and
guys are like this and like thesethings. That's why they can't define a
woman, because woman is just whateveris in their head, is being someone
that enjoys being effeminate. Right,Um, it seems as though all of
these things are being pushed on usintentionally, and when you look at who's
actually behind this, it always leadsto the same places. Particularly, um,

(46:24):
I think you and I I don'tknow if you and I discussed this,
but the Aspen Institute and the Pritzkers, which connects to their weird occult
nonsense that their whole knit seems inthat Aspens Institute, the Operation Northwood's Guru.
Yeah, that's some weird chick becauselike they get their money from the
federal government. That's when Judith Millerwas in jail for eighty five days.

(46:45):
It was getting poems with leaver wits. They're talking about Aspens connected at the
roots, because the trees connect likethat. But it was a cryptic message
about the Aspens Institute. And thenI realized that this isn't the first time
in history that this has happened.This happened before, particularly in Germany post

(47:08):
World War One, with the influxof seemingly mass numbers of Jewish communists who
started to push these kind of ideologiesand an intentional and an attempt to undermine
the culture of Germany, which reallyis probably a quarter of the way through

(47:29):
the story of Adolf Hitler, right, because they like to start the story
in the middle again, but thiswell, they skip World War one before
PSI. It was just like therewas just this maniac and he just this
magic orator and convinced millions of peopleto go along with these crazy ideas and
then he attacks all his neighbors forno reason at all. Like that's the

(47:52):
World War two story, and right, skip World War One and skip Franco
Prussian War before that. It is, but I think the most important thing
that most people never are taught aboutWorld War two is that prior to that,
the the cultural undermining of Germany whichwas going on, which speeches.

(48:13):
Yeah, I mean, the inflationis out of control. The our culture
is completely being attacked. Every system, education, transportation, you name it
are they're all being intentionally destroyed.You've seen those guys with the trench coats
that they used to open up andthey like, you don't you want watches?
I got watches. Nowadays they're likethe guys walking around, you know,

(48:35):
opens up the trench coat and it'slike cartons of eggs. Yeah,
so eggs. You know, Idon't know what happened with eggs because eggs
came back down to normal prices aroundhere, and I live in a place
that's normally everything's expensive. Um,but yeah, eggs are back down.
This is what they do. Eggsare three bucks, right, then they
go to ten bucks, and thenthey would go back down to five bucks
and everyone's like, oh cool,they're back down to five bucks. So

(48:59):
but yeah, the squeeze is onfinancially, everybody is fucking hurting. That's
where they do the gasoline too,Like we'll make it take it from two
dollars to four and then lowered tothree or three and a half, and
they're like, oh, well,at least it's not four. Yeah.
All the after the election, theprices dropped like to like two fifty.
Uh. Now they're back at almostfour bucks again. But there's been no

(49:20):
reason why. There's been nothing onthe news, nothing specifically that prompted a
spike. It just all of asudden stopped leaping through the strategic reserves.
Ah. I see, they werethe only reason that was floating it temporarily.
Is they burned through the reserves,and but now they can't. So
you know, I know this countryhas a ton of oil and if we

(49:44):
made a deal with them, wecould get it really cheap. It's called
Russia. You ever heard of them? Were natural gas too, We can
have like dollar fifty fucking gas.Again, Europe is prosperous because of its
relations with Russia. They cheap oiland gas. They've run that away possibly
forever. See this, this hatredof Russia goes back. You know,

(50:07):
the more I researched, the moreI realized this thing goes back like a
thousand years. And ultimately I seethe hatred for Russia today as a direct
result of the Russian expulsion of theKaizars into Europe in twelve to twenty a
d which corresponds with the Oshky Nazisettlements in Germany and Poland around twelve twenty

(50:28):
to twelve forty. So I thinkthis is a thousand year fucking grudge against
Russia. Is what's been happening aslong as as long as we've been alive.
It's in recent times it's been specificallyon Putin can see through all these
Jewish oligarchs out of the country,and he stood up for Syria, he
stood up for a Ran and he'sa Russian nationalist. He puts the interest

(50:50):
of the state in the nation abovea particular ethnic group. That whereas before
the oligarchs, the interests of thatdonor and class ethnic group always came before
the nation. Is he the firstRussian leader to do that? I mean,
is it is he that significant inthis respect? We'd have to go

(51:12):
all the way back to like bizarreI mean, because yeah, from from
like you know, yell Sitting Yanger, Guidar and obviously Stalin and all all
trash and till Putin pretty much wellthey were all it was weak, like

(51:35):
Yelsen was completely by the all thatarcs. I mean he was a drunk
in and out of the hospital,yeager guider in that country, in the
ground, he was, you know, Boris Rozovsky's media petrified Yelson. You
know what are you gonna say?They knew the power of the press,
they knew it. Poutin just dadahate, are gonna hate that he doesn't.

(51:55):
He's losing the pr war and thepress word horribly. Like as good
as Russia is on the battlefield,they are as bad on the newspaper ARTI
got banned telegrams, even banned people. They aren't allowed on any of the
other platforms except for sort of Twitter. Theybitten crushed in the pr in the

(52:22):
fantasy war, Ukraine's winning according toTwitter, Reddit, Sphere or whatever,
right, even though they're you know, they already lost a big chunk of
black moutner fixing on mosing the restof it. But you know it was
just Snake Island, ghosts of Kiev. The Russians can't do this, or
Putin's got every cancer known to man, but it's a bunch of hopium and

(52:45):
it's like no, no, here'sthe reality. Ukraine already lost Prima and
the whole land Bridge Approves Aprosia andthe entire down Boss minus Black move and
they're gonna lose some more. Andthey've run through a whole generation of men

(53:06):
dead by they continually throw them intothe meat grinder, and you know,
the Wagner group and others are justwiping him out. How do you think
it ends for Zelinski? And howmuch more? How much patience do you
think Putin's going to have before hejust takes out Kiev? My dream would

(53:27):
be tarred and feather, but it'sunlikely that that's what we used to do.
He looked like a chicken. He'sprobably rolled played that out anyway.
He's a freak, you know,him and his stilettos and his weird leather
and that's it. He's a comedian. Kalamoyski picked a Jewish comedian and made

(53:51):
him president. Disgusting? How's itin? Though? For real? Like
probably other Ukrainians will have to takethem out because if they continue to just
you know, throw more fresh bodiesoff a cliff, I mean, Russia's
not going to end it. They'relike, well, you're the one's getting

(54:13):
killed. Then um, there'll bea coup again from within Ukraine. That's
one option. Another one is he'llhave to flee after Russia crosses the Jennifer
and he'll be exiled somewhere and everyonewill look at him like he's a big
hero, like they did doctor Fauci. But Ukraine is done. Yeah,

(54:40):
with or without Zelinski, it's overfor them. They don't have any chance
of winning this war. Is itat Syria levels? As far as destruction,
No, Russia's not wiping out civiliansthe way isis did. But as
far as like wiping out the personnelin the army, I think it's worse

(55:04):
than the Syria like they're they're thrownin teenagers and old men. At this
point, it's you know, it'smillions of them fled the country. It's
the refugee is the biggest thing.But they've lost one hundred thousand guys,
one hundred and twenty thousand guys,and that's a big chunk if for a
country that size. He was onehundred and twenty thousand able bodied young men.

(55:25):
That's just gonna be hard to replace. And then they lost the don
boss like all the people that livethere that's no longer Ukraine, that's part
of Russian now. Yeah, Sothey lost millions right there, and they
lost all that territory which was worthbillions and billions of dollars right and then
they've lost all this personnel. Sowho actually rebuilds Ukraine? Well, Vladimir

(55:51):
Putin step in and do the rebuilding, like I assume he would because he's
that kind of guy. The sidehas all already started reconstruction. So whatever
he ends up taking, whether it'sif he stops at the Jennifer River or
not, that will be rebuilt byRussia because that will be part of Russia.

(56:13):
As far as what he doesn't take, if he just levels Odessa or
whatever, Ukraine doesn't have the purseor infrastructure or personnel to rebuild, so
they'd have to invite in Western powersfrom the US to Japan like to come

(56:34):
in there and rebuild it all.Or they could form a relationship with Putin.
I think that I think him movingin and doing the noble thing of
rebuilding the country would be it wouldyou know, it would go back to
the benevolent leader who I think you'retrying to make sense of what they ought
to do. Your question is whatwill they do? What they ought to

(56:55):
do is not what they will do. Yeah, M so recently, Uh,
your last film was New mech Um. That was incredible film. It's
it is a beast. It's abeast to watch, um some of it
right there, the black Man there, I see it. Um. Yeah,

(57:17):
this is distracting right around here,but there is there's just too much
information in that to digest. Imean, I've probably I think I've watched
it four times now and I stillneed to go back and pick some things
out from it. To see thatsecond generation of the Sunborn Institute led right
into the mega group of less wexterrenose Goods with Jeffrey Evestein. Yeah,

(57:40):
that's wild. But I see theSongborn Institute more morphing into the official aid
package for Israel. I mean,it's like it just went legit. Because
the Sanborn went for twenty twenty fiveyears. We can say with certainty that
David Ferri's activities from sixty one sixtytwo, the breaking into the bunkers and
Homer and he broken two other bunkersthat no one ever talks about, um

(58:01):
all run by the fucking CIA,all all those arms end up getting sold
to inter Armco, which was thecompany out of Virginia. Right, So
we know that because of Gordon Novelle. You know, I love when some
of these guys just they just runtheir fucking mouth and they tell things that
they don't understand the significance of.And that's the best. Like Gordon Novella,
schmuck didn't know the significance of interArmco in the in the bigger picture

(58:23):
of things. He just knew that'swhere they sold the weapons to once they
sat it. David Ferry, Right, what does the public know about David
Ferry? They know the movie jRight, That's all I really know about
David Ferries. He was just wasit Joe Pesci Payne played him. Yeah,
yeah, it's I mean it wasa great role. You have to

(58:45):
mean it was a propaganda film,but it was a great propaganda fellow Apcia
too. And he didn't have aWhoppia, you know, he didn't have
the movie said just chill out themovie with arnand milcham At is a executive
producer. The largest arms secure forIsrael is the executive produce. They didn't

(59:06):
mention Israel. They did mention Permada. Oh, here's one thing. Here's
what they here's let me let mestop you right there. One of the
Easter Eggs, there's a scene wherethey're in the fucking room with Garrison and
he's like in this, you know, with the other lawyers, and they're
all talking and one of the guysis reading a newspaper and inside the newspaper
is an article on Israel's nuclear program. They just a little yeah, we

(59:30):
know, yeah, I mean it'scrazy. There's a bunch of things like
that in there. He mentions.When he's talking to clay Shaw, he
brings up centremundial commercial and then hejust brushes over it like it didn't exist.
They say like, oh, youthink the mafia could cover things up
for the X number years? Youthink the mafia is just an independent criminal

(59:51):
organization with no ties the States,Because you're wrong. I mean, it's
unbelievable the reach of the US Mafiavia Myra Lansky reached around the world.
I mean, holy shit, isthe Black Widow in the middle of that
web? I'm sorry, who wasI didn't heard? Yeah, um yeah,

(01:00:15):
he's a fascinating character, and Ithink it's unfortunate that it has taken
uh, this long for a lotof information to start to come out about
him. It's only been the pastcouple of years that I've actually seen interest
in him. Um, there wasthat Lansky film actually came out with,
um the Bad Lieutenant I forgot alwaysforget his name. Harvey Kite tell well,
they limit Lanski's activities just his Frenchconnection and Lucky Luciano, or they

(01:00:40):
don't get into Kennedy or Israel's weaponsor any of that. Never. No,
Yeah, but I think Lansky's rolein like the global drug trade,
um, going back to the nineteenforties, that that's some fascinating stuff right
there, that to me before hisreal well, I mean you could say

(01:01:00):
his rise to power came in whatthirty one, Yeah, thirty one,
right when he took out sal Maronzanol. But you don't ever really hear too
much about his involvement with the drugtrafficking throughout the forties, which is to
me, just some of the morefascinating stuff that he did. I don't
you know. It's in books,so like again Valentine's written about it.

(01:01:22):
There are a lot of authors thathave dug deep into Landski and written about
the mob and all that the problemis, as I stayed in the beginning,
the Hollywood narrative is always the dominantthing, right, and just that's
all the people most people are gonnaknow. And what's the other problem is

(01:01:44):
they they think they know things thatthey don't know, and they're like,
oh, I know about that.I'm like, no, no, you
you watched the movie and most ofit wasn't real. So before you didn't
know anything, and you knew youdidn't know anything. Now you still don't
know anything, but you think youknow things. So you're worse off from

(01:02:05):
watching the movie than if you happenbecause now you believe in all this propaganda
that they slid in. And ofcourse, yeah, Lanski could be a
course, but all the things thisguy did very intelligent, man, you
gotta give him that. I thinkthe most fascinating aspect of Hollywood that no
one ever talks about is the controlof Hollywood, particularly from sixty six to

(01:02:30):
two thousand and four, which Ibelieve is an error that shaped the minds
of goddamn every single person we knowthrough all the Hollywood propaganda that came out
at the hands of the head ofthe MPa. Of course, that's a
really great point yep, it sureis most important man and one of the
most important men in American history thatno one's ever heard of, because think

(01:02:52):
about it, like, this isthe error of they. It wasn't like
when TV was invented everyone got one. It wasn't in every household, right,
But by the sixties it kind ofwas like every family had a TV
and it overtaken the radio for propaganda. And that's where it's in everything.

(01:03:15):
It's it's not just the news,it's this like later it would be the
sitcoms and the shows and things wouldall subtly push this propaganda. Right,
and you're only talking about a couplechannels for the news and a few studios
for all the movies and everything everyone'sgoing to see. And they realize,

(01:03:36):
the hell with mk Yultra and allthat this TV is the best thing ever
for controlling what people think because youget to control what they see, which
is tant them out to controlling whatthey think because they can only pick cocer
pepsi like it's this one or thisone. We're not going to show you
the other ones. So this iswhat you're going to think. And you
have to look at the creation ofThe rating system particularly was a censorship mechanism

(01:04:00):
because at the time, if youhad a rate it R, you weren't
getting advertising money, you weren't gettingadvertising on television. You were you know,
you were getting delegated to page six. So they were able to censor
movies by implementing the rating system andlimiting what people saw by that, which
means you can't show the realities ofwar because that would be gore or whatever.

(01:04:23):
But I think adults should see thatsaving private Ryan scene or whatever,
Like, if you knew how horribleit was, wouldn't be so excited to
run in and do it. Yeah, yeah, we're show affected by depleted
uranium. Looks like that's not goingto be in the news because that would

(01:04:46):
be the end of DU. Thatwould be if the public knew, if
there was a widespread understanding that aDU exists and what it does, and
show the birth defects and things thatit called, that would not be a
weapon we use. But there isn't, so there won't be, and so

(01:05:08):
they keep using it. There's evendepleted uranium armor and stuff. I mean,
it's just unbelievable. So Ryan,what are you working on now?
What's any new movies in the works. What's your go going on? So
yeah, right, well, Ijust finished the new mech maps and the

(01:05:29):
movies done. The map just cameout this month and got our shot fixed.
I've got some influencers coming to Japanin a few days and I'm gonna
be working with them on their projects. I'm more or less trying to get
out work I've already done because I'vejust got my Twitter back in January,

(01:05:53):
and so we're kind of rebuilding sinceI was thrown off YouTube and meta and
everything else, rebuilding a and Creport And I think the next film will
probably be on the RFK assassination becauseit's just way more doable than JFK.
I think it will. I don'tknow, but I think the security guard

(01:06:14):
did it. Yeah, thing EugeneCaesar shot RFK, like that's who killed
him, like but just knowing aname and that's just who shot under the
mean anything without the story. Soright, Yeah, I don't know anything
about the background of RFK pretty muchprobably in the and as far as like
you know, I hear things likeJim Braden was in the hotel earlier that

(01:06:39):
day, you know, just weirdstuff that connects to Kennedy, but honestly,
I don't find it nearly as interestingor intriguing as Kennedy and Kennedy.
I still have like another decade togo. I think also, the JFK
story is more interesting. It wasone of the coolest puzzles I've ever cracked.
I'm just saying, you asked me, like, which movie, and
I just felt like, well,I can do and complete an RFK film

(01:07:00):
quickly, whereas JFK, I'm like, I don't wanna like I wanna,
and I don't want to so muchwork and so like Newmac just about killed
me. And then I'm like,oh, yeah, let's map out all
the JFK and I know the ethera stupid that's coming my way after I
put that out right, like Ialready deal. I still deal with nine

(01:07:20):
eleven kuks, and I'm going toget all the people that think he was
challenging the FED, or that hisdriver killed him or you know, all
the my damn nonsense. And I'mlike, oh, there's not as much.
There is some kookie stuff about RFK, like oh the Polka dot dress
MK Ultrara, but there's nothing comparedto JFK. They buried that on our

(01:07:44):
mountains is stupid and misdirection and youknow you know how long I mean it's
taking you while get your head aroundit. And there's a whole bunch of
dead ends. July is five yearsthoroughly enjoyed watching you run into sound all
the same crap that I dealt with. And yeah, yeah, oh you're
only on that part. Okay,okay, but it certainty that you spent

(01:08:06):
more time on the Israeli connection thanI have. Um, But as far
as like the micro details of shitthat you tend to not delve into,
I've pretty much fucking got I understandall of it. Like it's ridiculous,
it's the story we're told. Imean, once upon a time I did.

(01:08:27):
But if like, uh, it'sadpting, actually, like oh do
you know this? Because it allit leads into there's a lot of other
crimes and things that all relate,Like we were talking about the gun running
out of Cuba and stuff and Nicaragualater and it ran Contra and all these
things are birthed out of this networkthat killed Kennedy and it's endlessly fascinating.

(01:08:50):
But I could try not to.I try to just stick to the macro
picture because I've run out I entered, like I just I'll talk to you
about it, and it's fun.But I'm like, yeah, because you
get it, you know, andyou're doing your own research and coming up

(01:09:11):
with it, which is I don'twant to tell you an answer. I
wanted you to come up And thenthen I'm like, now I have more
confidence than what I come up withbecause you came with to the same thing
completely independently. But yeah, anytimeyou've ever given me a hand on anything,
I usually spend a lot of timefucking trying to figure it out.
And then once I figured out,I'm pissed that I knew it at all.

(01:09:33):
It's like, damn, I wishyou didn't tell me that you know
so. But there's a couple ofthings I wouldn't have practiced. There's a
couple of things I can't crack atall right now, Like like Clay Shaw,
I can't crack that fucker at all. You need to look into this
Swiss. I know about the Swiss, but I can't crack that either.
Like there's a hook somewhere, Likeevery every aspect of research has a hook

(01:09:54):
that you can get That hook pullsyou in. I can't find the hook.
I can't find the hook. Soit's out there and I will,
but I just can't, and driveme fucking nuts to where after like an
hour of like god damn it,I can't do this again. In this
notebook right here, all the answersI got stacks and notebooks. That was

(01:10:19):
I had been really kind of onand off looking into Jeff cases. I
was ten years old first. Allthis reput to film in fifth grade and
it's fascinating, and later the moviewould come out. Kind of One thing
that movie did do was light offire under people and get them interested in
the whole case, right, getthem. That's because everything these people do

(01:10:42):
backfires. If you haven't noticed,every fucking thing these people do backfires,
they put it out off their hands. Man, It's like when the Olive
her Soon when came out, itwas you know, they did declassify big
chunk of documents, and what Trumpdeclassified was hard hitting and it was like,
yeah, but he didn't get allof them, Like but look at

(01:11:05):
what he released. This is reallydamning information and you just don't even know
what you're looking at. So thatone document, I know you're talking.
Yeah, we've actually found that onebackers. Now i'd seen that before.
I found it from a nineteen sixtiesbook. But I found that all the
stuff that came out in the sixtiesto late sixties that was pretty fucking accurate

(01:11:27):
got squashed, Like there were booksout there you cannot find anymore that I
have been able to find, liketwo or three pages from that have shit
in it that's like been totally squashed, you know, just like that gets
re verified with the document dump,right, that's like the day of the
newscasts on the day of an event, they're always different from the ship you
see following. Yeah, there's alot of stuff and twelfth that never got

(01:11:50):
set again, like, oh,police have found a van with explosive device
inside. We took it to thechurch to day and with Kenn they talk
about on the news how they arrestedtwo people in Daily Plaza and that they
found the weapon, which was anArgentine mauser. I mean they found all
this stuff comes out on the dayof the event and then the next you

(01:12:10):
know, then after that it's justgone. So but there's always like a
play Bill Decker would was dishonest BillDecker. He might have been one of
the most crooked lawmen that's ever beenhim and his relationship with Bill Alexander the
DA like those guys were fuck Likemodern day Dallas police had to like exonerate

(01:12:31):
like thousands of people because of thecorruption in the sixties and seventies. Remember
when that happened. I just almostfell off the couch when I heard about
that. Yeah, you know,what do you do if you solve Kennedy?
Can you walk into the Dallas PoliceDepartment and just drop the ship on
the desk and be like, thisis the case. Reopen it. Well,
you almost sound like a maniac becauseit's like, hey, let me

(01:12:53):
talk to you for the next ninehours in a row, and you just
sound like like weaponize autism or something. But it's that's so like I think
you'll get to be like me eventually, where it's like, don't they don't
need all those details, like you'regonna scare them, like you gona slowed

(01:13:14):
down and just talk about like Leon, Jacob Rubinstein, Jack Ruby and just
the main characters and here's the justwhat happened and why they shot him,
and who did it, who theyhired, and how they covered it up.
But if you start getting into like, oh and guess what they did
in Mexico And guess what this dada, and you know, talking about

(01:13:35):
all these names that are unfamiliar withyou. Only the basic like Normy knows
Oswald, Ruby, Fairy Shawl,like the Banister cell, the stuff that's
in the movie. That's all theyknow. And that's kind of where you
have to begin to get your footin the door if you want to be
effective. And all those people areimportant, but it's just so much bigger

(01:13:59):
than that. Get in George dumoronShield and well, the entire story is
a series of staged, pre arrangedevents, um that are assembled very much
like a movie would be pre plannedwritten out. Hey look to the left
while we do something over here tothe right. Um. Really it's a
masterpiece of tradecraft. It's unfucking niable. I mean, you could tell all

(01:14:20):
the mistakes, so it was likenot hard to cover up. Just I
mean, look look right now,right even right now, Like look at
all the lies about Ukraine, ghostof keV and all this crap. It
gets debunked in real time. Theywere so audacious. They said the Russians
bombed their own pipeline that's what theywent with. They could have they should

(01:14:44):
have used the Ukrainian yacht story fromthe day one, but like, okay,
well then Ukraine has attacked Germany.Should we institute Article five on Ukraine?
It's a native member, right.It's just the bullshit. They don't
even worry, Like why didn't youplant some weapons in a rock You said
it are all these WMD's, andthen there weren't. I mean you could
just put something there and then pointedto them like you did Operation Washtub.

(01:15:08):
Yeah, why the fuck didn't theydo that? I can't believe in twenty
years, I never thought of thatbecause because it didn't matter. They're like,
they'll the public will forget in theday. They have goldfish brain,
And they're right, they did it. There were no weapons. They didn't
even they didn't even like lie well, because it doesn't matter. It's like

(01:15:28):
what we own the TV stations sothat they'll think what we tell them too.
And they're right, there's people likeus. They're like, hey,
they all there's nods, but thereit's like wherever you conspiracy furious here,
like okay, you'll find out theymurdered so many Rocky people and children suffering,

(01:15:48):
and they tortured to Banaga grave andthey masculated the country that it's horrifying,
and then they just move along tothe next one live about Syria.
Oh you gass his own people.Whe it's not true. But if you
don't defeat the deception, then youcan't stop the wars, the starvation,

(01:16:13):
the bailouts, everything that comes afterit starts the propaganda. That's why the
truth will set you free. Andthe most crucial thing we can do is
not fiddle fucking around with trying tovote in the right people or the system
of government or whatever people argue aboutincessantly. It's the media. You have
to fix the media to fix allthe stuff that comes after it. They

(01:16:36):
couldn't lie about Iraq. There's nowar in Iraq. If they couldn't lie
about Syria, there's no war inSyria. Right If they weren't able to
deceive, they wouldn't be able.My question, my question about that is,
like people who actually watch mainstream newsis such a small percentage of what

(01:16:57):
it used to be when you gotpeople like Joe Rogan doing twenty times the
numbers of primetime CNN, you know, like, is that really as important
was a good force against the COVIDpropaganda. Like when he took ivermectin,
they lost their minds. CNN,MSNBC were up there going Joe Rogan's taking
horse to worm or hurt and no, he's taking ivermectin for people. Uh,

(01:17:24):
because that anti parasitic is effective onCOVID. I mean they they panicked
because like, this guy's reaching elevenmillion people, we gotta act like he's
some sort of nut that just lovesUH, DMT and lead and he's you
know, don't listen to this guy. But it's the propaganda from the late

(01:17:45):
night comedians and the sitcoms and themovies. It's not just the news.
They all uniform the same jokes andstuff like, look, we're all in
on it, aren't we Huh.And I have to have to add all
those things. And then social mediatoo, Zuckerberg and the Google which was

(01:18:06):
Jimmy Kimmel on the list. Hedid know him, but there's no like
hard evidence of kitty fiddling. Um. Not everybody they met or took a
picture with or got wrote on aplane is guilty of white collar crime or
rape. There's a lot of peoplethat did not know any of that was

(01:18:27):
happening. We have to admit thateven if they suck otherwise. But Jimmy
Kimbell sucks otherwise. He sucks anywaywho cares, But no evidence of that.
He actually had a very bad relationshipwith Sarah Silverman is just like dating
him. It wasn't giving him sex, and it's pretty bad whatever. While

(01:18:48):
he's trying to do like a aman show or something too, it's like,
you're not a man, like whysto the man's showing your dort whatever.
The media, though, that's key, like breaking the media monopoly is
how you stop all this stuff.They couldn't have gotten a this COVID panic

(01:19:10):
without global media control. They werecensoring doctors. There were anybody that says,
hey, I don't think it asbad as you say. Why do
we have restrictions on travel based arounda vaccine that doesn't work. Why are
you making it mandatory when you don'tknow what the side effects could be.
The way they won is that theyjust didn't let anyone talk censorship, and

(01:19:34):
then the second was the coucifcation.Just getting to Q and on and Sue
Peters and stuff the microphones so thatthe anti vax community looks like a bunch
of lunatics when it isn't. Thisis some small faction that's been given media
privilege to make us all look dumb. It's a hard thing to fight,

(01:19:59):
but we I think sub Stack andagain, Rumble Odyssey, rock Fan.
These video platform sites seem to bea way where you can segregate it.
The problem is it is kind ofcliquish. But I just don't see anything
else Telegram to degree. I guess, well, there's a new there's a

(01:20:23):
new protocol that was built by oneof the Bitcoin core developers called Noster,
which basically acts as a series ofrelays. Um, this is this Swan's
thing too. I mean people aretrying this out, but like even rock
Fan, right they're paying crypto.Well what about people like me that are

(01:20:45):
banned on exchanges? Like what amI going to do with a rato?
Could look at it like I can'tdo anything with it. So it's good
for most, but it's still notgood for all. And it's like,
look, you're you're setting yourself upbecause they can it all bottlenecks that exchange.
You can keep it on the wallat all day, but if you
ever want to turn it into realmoney and use it. You need an
exchange, and all these exchanges areinsolvent. They've taken out IOUs on their

(01:21:08):
customer deposits and stuff, and likeit's very fragile, and I think the
government's going to tank those things onpurpose, be like see how dangerous crypto
is. It didn't have to bethat way, but you know when in
your equations you always have to divideby Jay because you get these FTX and

(01:21:29):
all this scandal. I was like, well, why did you spend your
customer funds? You're not supposed todo that, and you did, and
now they can't cast out and itcauses a cascade. And you know a
lot of the like silver Gate,these like basically a bank just for crypto
transactions. They're gonna all fall becauseit's it's built like this, I mean,

(01:21:51):
there's no foundation, and so ifyou screw with the bottom, the
whole thing falls. So the nexttime someone comes up with some great idea
like we're gonna Blockchain of Love,everyone's just gonna go. But heard that
before, because they've ruined it,right, Well, what you're gonna see

(01:22:11):
is you're going to see a massiveloss and confidence in all of these crypto
exchanges and all cryptocurrencies, with theexception of Bitcoin, because again all the
sins and yep, Ethereum is theworst chitcoin of them all. It is
the gate keeper of shit coins,um and so, but I basically perceive
it like that. They don't becausethey're stupid, but the target so what

(01:22:32):
they are. So that's what's gonnabe though unfortunately I do. I mean,
I think we'll see the ten twentythousand dollars Ethereum unfortunately. UM.
That that right there is the biggestfucking ponzi of them all. UM.
But Bitcoin is completely It's the onlycryptocurrency really in the world because part of
being a cryptocurrency is decentralization, andBitcoin is the only decentralized cryptocurrency that exists

(01:22:58):
period. But we've had this conversation. Definitely the giant like the one that
it will be the survivor at theend of all this stuff. But they've
got internal problems. I have togo. Corey got hey, I'm glad
I got you for this long,so I appreciate your hanging out and I
will I will check the very interestingtopic at the end. But I got
a of course, all right myfriend. Um, thanks a bunch,

(01:23:21):
and to everybody out there, thanksfor tuning in and I'll be back with
you later on in the week.Thanks everybody.
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