All Episodes

October 1, 2023 21 mins
2.4 BILLION Mosquitoes were released by environmentalists "scientists" but because of "Climate Change" there are now more mosquitoes? These people ...

https://WokeNewsReport.com
https://WOKEBoardGame.com
https://TrumpTrainMovie.com
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:04):
You're listening to the Woke News Reportpodcast. Your host Paul King. Welcome
to the show everyone. My nameis Paul. I'm the host of Woke

(00:25):
News Report podcast Woke NewsReport dot comand also the creator of Woke Board Game,
which you can see behind me andalso find at woke boardgame dot com.
And I do hope you go checkthat out. It's a fun tabletop
board game that conservatives, Republicans andpeople who actually have common sense will like.

(00:48):
The woke, on the other hand, will not like the game show,
and that's on them because they haveno sense of humor to begin with,
and they outlaw comedy wherever where it'sfound. But it is a good
game. I do hope you gocheck that out. And the last thing
I want to mention, just realquick, the first nine pages of Trump

(01:08):
Train the movie screenplay is available.If you want to download the first nine
pages, which is really the entireopening scene segment of the movie, you
could go to Trump trainmovie dot comand download that as well, and I
think you'll really enjoy it. Youknow, there's a lot of movies for

(01:30):
conservatives and what they are or documentaries. That's fine. There's documentaries for conservatives.
There's Christian movies, there are Christianconservative dramas, let's say, but
as far as a comedy is concerned, they're very far, few, far

(01:53):
and few between. Like you can'tyou can't find a comedy movie made for
conservatives in any way, shape,form, or fashion. And so I
wrote one. It's actually really good. It's in the hands of a lot
of people, not only conservative movieplaces, but also out in let's say,

(02:15):
Hollywood. Oh my goodness. Well, you know they're trying to cater
to an audience as well. Andjust this past week I was asked for
the screenplay by a very large Hollywoodmovie plays, let's say, producers,

(02:36):
actors, you know, you wouldknow their movies. Let's just put it
that way, And so I sentit to them. We'll see what happens.
But you know, the conservative audienceis seventy four million at least,
real voters strong for Trump in thetwenty twenty election. Real voters, not
dead people, not people that movedfrom state to state, moved around,

(02:59):
came over the border, anything else. So there's that. Now. If
you saw the episode a couple ofweeks ago, I was talking about how
woke the people that love woke somuch, are trying to help us so
much that what they end up helpingus with is actually something that could kill

(03:22):
us. And if it doesn't killus, it's going to kill other species
out in the middle of the worldand Earth. Right. So I was
talking about, you know, theywant to band straws for instance. For
example, they want to band plasticstraws, and they want to go to

(03:43):
some paper straw that biodegradable or whatever. But they could care less that they
put hundreds of wind turbines out inthe ocean and that literally kills hundreds of
whales. They don't care. Soyou got to ban something for humans straws,

(04:03):
in order to create something for themthat saves the planet wind turbines,
and those wind turbines are what's reallykilling marine life. They don't care.
This goes to figure that these peoplewho care about the climate, who care

(04:24):
about the world so much, woulddo something like this. This is a
place called griff Grist is it grist? I'm not sure what grist is.
Grist is some website. I guessthey're I don't know if they're known or

(04:46):
not. I've never heard of thembefore. But how climate change gave rise
to a monster mosquito season thanks toclimate fueled extreme weather, Mosquito are everywhere
this year. Yeah, this cameout in September twenty four, twenty twenty

(05:08):
one, So keep in mind thisis two years ago, right, a
little over two years ago, rightaround that time frame. But it's still
important because you're going to find outwhy summer may be officially over, but
mosquito season is showing no signs ofabating. If you're cursing the influx of

(05:31):
winged whiners safe from some vitral forclimate change, which in definitely plays a
role in exacerbating this year's mosquito gedding. That's actually a pretty good word,
mosquito getting I like it. Anybodyowns the dot com could probably make some
money seo making a mosquito killing productand whatever. Not telling you to do

(05:59):
that. I'm saying, mosquito geddonis pretty good word. It was an
unusually warm summer, the hottest summeron record, Oh my goodness, here
we go for the continuous United States, and that has helped mosquitoes thrive.
But experts say the chief reason forthe explosion in mosquito populations this year are
the seasons record breaking storms and aboveaverage rainfall in many states. Yeah,

(06:29):
we're gonna find out why there's arecord breaker here, just a moment.
Blah blah blah, on and on. Climate change plays a role in exacerbating
these storms. The air becomes fourpercent more saturated with water for every one
degree fahrenheit that the planet warms.I saw another thing this past weekend,

(06:55):
and it was the WEF. There'ssome wicked lady, the best way to
describe her talking about the next thingthey release. She was really disappointed at
the WF function or whatever it was, and she was talking about how climate
not climate, but COVID didn't dothe job properly, and the vaccines didn't

(07:17):
kill enough people, and we've gotto get the next one right. It's
online, it's on x, Twitter, whatever you want to call it,
and she ultimately says people don't relateeven to climate change because it's unrelatable.
We can't get that message out,so we can't kill people that way.

(07:38):
But what we can do is water, because everyone needs water, So watch
out for that. The next thingthat's coming may or may not be.
I don't think it will be.I think they're gonna weigh you know they
telegraph things five six, seven,ten years, twelve years even in advance.

(07:59):
So this lad is telegraphing that thewater supply is a either going to
become contaminated beyond belief or b isgoing to be used as a transmission in
order to kill a bunch of people. Right, that's my thought. That's
my theory. I could be wrong. Leave a comment if I am wrong
and you happen to see that onTwitter X. It seems like to me,

(08:26):
if you want more water warm theair, if water is going to
be a problem and climate change isnot working, and you can get four
percent more saturated with water for everyone degree fahrenheit that the planet warms,

(08:46):
tell me how that works scientifically,if anybody knows we need another degree or
two to solve whatever problem they comeup with next that intends to kill everyone.
Do you see what I'm saying?Do you see? You understand?

(09:07):
I got a smart audience. Ishouldn't ask that on certain videos like this
one. I have a very smart, intelligent audience. You totally get it.
Climate change bad. We need tolower the temperature. Wait, we
have a water crisis coming in five, ten, fifteen years. We already
know it. The w EF hasalready planned it. How do you get

(09:30):
more water out of the atmosphere,Well, you heat it a degree or
two four percent more saturated with waterfor every degree fahrenheit that the planet warms.
Yeah, so what does that?Saying a warming planet is good for
the planet, good for the watersupply, increases the water supply all around

(09:56):
the planet. If people are goingto be needing water, lay at the
wef. If water is going tobe the next problem that everyone understands according
to your own words, why notjust let climate change do its course because
it's naturally made anyway, Humans don'thave anything to do with it. You

(10:18):
can get more water. You couldprobably stop your plans for whatever you have
for killing people with water. It'scrazy. The most torrential downpours in the
Northeast now unleashed fifty five percent morerain compared to the nineteen fifties, according

(10:39):
to the most recent National Climate Assessment, and could increase another forty percent by
the end of the century. Howis this a bad thing? Watch that
video? Man, I wish Iwould have put it on here, and
maybe maybe on a subsequent video orsubsequent show, I'll actually show her but
if you haven't seen it after youfinished watching this, go search Twitter for

(11:03):
it. This lady at the WEFis like, we're going to target the
water. That's next. We gotfifty five percent more rain. Unfortunately for
humans, the abundance of mosquitoes variesmassively with rainfall. The more rain there

(11:26):
is, the more scattered pools ofwater there are across the landscape that insects
can use to lay their eggs in. This summer's rain basically turned half of
the US into a perfect beating breedingground for mosquito larvae. So they go
on to say a bunch of stuffand blah blah blah, and it's all
of this. But this is whereagainst interestings, some of those mosquitoes are

(11:50):
more than just a nuisance. Theq lex or if you say it like
that, who knows genus of mosquitoescarries West Nile virus, a disease in
the yellow fever family that causes nosymptoms in most people, but severe disease
including high fever, headaches, tremorousparalysis, and even death in older and

(12:13):
immunocompromised people. So in older andimmunocompromised people, they might experience all of
this getting bit by mosquito that hasWest Nile virus. It's been around for
a long time. Arizona, Arkansas, California, IDOO, New Jersey,
and Texas each have reported one ortwo deaths related to the disease so far,

(12:37):
and many more states have recorded humancases of West Nile. West Nile
is very is relatively new in theUS as far as a vector born disease
go. By being about a boomon and on. Essentially it rains a

(12:58):
lot because the climate change. Becausethe climate change, there's more mosquitoes.
But wait, is that really whythere's more mosquitos? No, not at
all, of course not so thatlast article was from twenty twenty one,

(13:22):
right, this is March thirtieth oftwenty twenty two. Why a US company
plans to release two point four billiongenetically modified mosquitos. You can't make it
up. This is not the BabylonB. I love the Babylon B.

(13:43):
This is not the Babylon B.This lady's over here complaining about all these
mosquitoes being, you know, becausethe climate change. And then you find
out that the mosquitoes didn't necessarily comefrom climate change. They came from people
who care about climate change trying tosolve the climate change problem. So what

(14:07):
do they do? They released twopoint four billion mosquitoes. You can't make
it up. The insects created itby biotech firm Oxytech will be non biting
males engineered to only produce biable mailoffspring, per the company. The EPA

(14:33):
Environmental Production Agency has cleared the releaseof two point four billion genetically modified mosquitoes
in California and Florida, which,of course I live Florida. The mosquitoes
created by biotech firm Oxytech will benon biting somethings males engineered to only produce

(14:54):
viable male offspring, per the company. Oxytech says the plan will reduce numbers
of the invasive whatever, which cancarry diseases like zeka, yellow fever,
and dan or dinghy. However,you want to say whatever, you want
to say that, but yellow feveris obviously tied to the other thing.

(15:16):
But yellow fever is not necessarily theother thing. Female mosquitoes will die,
while males will reproduce and spread theself limiting gene to the next generation,
eventually leading to population declines. Whilethese diseases aren't yet spreading in California,

(15:39):
so they released it in California asthey trial a run. You people in
California, you are so lucky.You got homeless living on the street,
you got a bunch of drug addicts, you got fintanol coming across the border
like a sieve. You got extremelyhigh gas prices, extremely high taxes.
People making twenty dollars at McDonald's rightnow. Nobody's gonna be able to afford

(16:02):
even a burger before too long.And you're not gonna be eating burgers because
you're gonna be eating either soy whichis three D printed, or you're gonna
be eating bugs. California is areal mess. Good luck to you.
Don't move anywhere else, though,and bring your politics with you. If
you're going to leave California because ofall this crap that's going on, leave

(16:29):
your politics back there. Okay,we don't want everything that you have in
California. If you want all thatstuff, leave it with you. I
used to have a business partner,right My business partner came from Chicago.
She came down here to Florida.Florida is a no state tax, no
incomes state tax, and it hasvery low taxes it's very business friendly.

(16:52):
It's a great place to live,with a great atmosphere, whether the whole
nine yards. It gets cold aboutsixteen days a year mostly, and the
mid temperatures is probably around eighty eightyfive something like that. It's just a
very nice place to live. Thislady was complaining that the taxes were She

(17:12):
came from Chicago. Keep in mind, the taxes are so low. We
could be doing so much more thegovernment. We should be doing so much.
Lady shut up, and I toldher to him her face, quite
frankly. We're sitting at dinner,her, her husband, a group of
people. We don't want that.You can go back. Sorry, I'm

(17:38):
no longer a partner in that place. By the way, that didn't work
out after about five years. I'mout. I'm done. You know,
if you want to do that andbe that kind of person, stay where
you're at. Female mosquitoes will die, while males will reproduce and spread the

(18:00):
self limiting gene to the next generation. The invasive insect has been flagged as
a growing risk as their numbers increaseacross the state, reports Guardians. Some
whoever that person is given the growinghealth streat This mosquito poses across the US.

(18:21):
We're working to make this technology availableand accessible, says this person.
These pilot programs wherein we can demonstratethe technologies effectives in different climate settings,
will play an important role in doingso. So you know, there's obviously

(18:41):
people against it. Supporters say themosquitoes rarely travel more than five hundred feet
were where they're born, reports thisperson. EPA regulations require that the mosquitoes
cannot be released within quote five hundredsof water wastewater treatment facilities, commercial citrus,

(19:03):
apple, pear, nectarine peach growingareas, or commercial cattle, poultry,
and pig livestock producers. Now,if it's perfectly harmless, if this
mosquito that they're releasing for the goodof humanity is perfectly healthy for humans,

(19:25):
it doesn't bite, they tell us, it doesn't bite. Well, how
come you can't release it near citrusapples, nectarine peach growing areas, commercial
cattle, poultry and pig livestock producers. What's a few more mosquitoes near these

(19:45):
things? It makes no sense,right, So you see what's going on
here? Whoa the top down systempeople in power put in place in order
to depopulate they are all the timeclaiming one thing and doing another thing.
We're here to protect you and saveyou. Climate is causing mosquitoes to grow,

(20:11):
and like the population is expanding.We're going to release two point four
billion mosquitoes in only two states.These two point four billion that they released
are safe, are they? Well, no one knows. I saw another

(20:34):
report that I don't have here,but it was saying that that mosquitoes are
growing much larger nowadays. The bioengineering, I guess, But they didn't call
it bioengineering. They actually said itwas because the climate change that mosquitoes are
getting much larger. Give me abreak. Well, if you enjoy the

(20:59):
commentary, enjoy at your show.Thank you for tuning in. My name
is Paul. Woke NewsReport dot com, wokeboardgame dot com, Trump trainmovie dot
com. It's going up on allplatforms like usual, like subscribe, tell
your friends, leave a comment.Thank you for tuning in.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.