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September 20, 2024 • 39 mins
America is under control of aspiring monopolists with war fever to expand their empires
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
In general. I'm feeling a little feistier than normal. Look
it is my oh my, hey. Welcome to America, everybody,
and thank you for continuing to listen. It's for the Defense.
I'm Attorney Brad Koffel. That is Attorney Eric Willison, affectionately
known as the Snarkmaster General. A couple of things I
want to get to right at the top, General, and

(00:23):
remind me. I want to get back to this in
the show. Michelle and I went to New York City
every weekend. I for thirty I've loved New York City,
loved past tense, loved New York City. We met up
with our son Cameron and his girlfriend and go to
dinner and a couple of Broadway shows and the energy

(00:45):
has changed New York And we're going to come back
and talk about this. It's this immigration is really a
migration pattern. There's a migration pattern, much like the Serengetti
where you could watch from a satellite and see the
hordes of animals move through the planes. There is a

(01:07):
migration pattern. There's a migration happening destination Main Street, USA.
And we're going to talk about that. I saw it
in New York City. I was just there in December,
picked up some bits and pieces. It was wintertime. Everyone's
kind of buttoned up, and you're hustling through the streets
this time the summer. It's a if New York is

(01:33):
a trailer for our future. I don't like it.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
You need to bring back Frank Sinatra and straight and
stuff out.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
I don't mind the folks that I met. Of course, individually,
we spent a lot of time in ubers. It seems
like every restaurant my son picked was on the exact
opposite end of Manhattan where we needed to go. But
I spent a lot of time with Uber drivers, and
the Uber drivers were from countries that I'm pretty sure

(02:01):
our CIA has DNA and fingerprints all over. So we
have these refugees. We're going to talk about this. This
is a big deal because this picks up what's happening
in Springfield and what's happening all over America. And we
have some very strong thoughts and observations, and we are
going to tie it, of course, because this is the

(02:21):
show for the defense of the American people. Back to
the other high crimes and misdemeanors that this creature known
as the Federal government. This blob has committed against its
own people. So New York City migration migration patterns. Is
migration a human right? Keep an eye on this. I'm

(02:43):
telling you keep an eye on this. You're going to
start You're going to hear this that that it is
a fundamental human right to migrate to any other part
of the Earth's crust. Borders be damned.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Yeah, somehow they missed that in the US Constitution. Yeah,
well those founding fathers not that sharp.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Number two. Let's see, there was something under three things.
I want to mention New York City number one, number two. Oh,
the assassination at number two, Number twossassination timp on Trump.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
That's the second assassination we.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
Have said, we predicted last year. There's no way they
can let Trump get this too close to November. Well,
they're averaging one a month now, and they're going to
pick up the pace on that they have to. I
didn't realize how. I didn't think it was this hard
to kill somebody, especially Trump, who's out there all the time.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
Well he's Boris the bullet dodger from Snatch. That guy
sat in his little rabbit hole. What do you call
where rabbits live a warren.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
A warren. He sat in that warren for.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
Twelve hours, unfortunately for him, with a barrel sticking it out.
That's like a sniper like leaning out the window with
his rifle. Thoughts.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
I got some thoughts on, mister Ruth, and I own.
We have thoughts based upon information that we receive. The
rest of us are getting. So take it with a
grain of salt. Number three, for the first time in
four years, interest rates, and I want it. This is
a snoozefest, but this is extremely important. Interest rates are

(04:19):
extremely important to what's happening in America right now. And
the deconstruction of the government is by the people for
the people no more. And we haven't been by the
people for the people for over one hundred years, and
it's taken this long for people to wake up to it.

(04:39):
Interest rates. For the first time in over four years,
General J. Powell stepped up to his little podium and
announced an interest rate cut.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
Fancy that.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
Now, if you're a political scientist or you're paying attention
to current events, of course they're going to announce a
rate cut right this close to a presidential election. Nixon
wanted this. Reagan wanted. That's they all want.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
They want their They're on the phone with the with
the FED chair going, I need this economy to be
in better shape so that I can have a better
chance of campaigning and winning.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
So the machine drops rates.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
Kamala didn't even know enough to call though. They just said, well,
we better, we better, just preemptor and just you know.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
So there's there's not just a twenty five basis point,
but a fifty basis point. Now you tell me, everybody,
are you seeing prices dropping at the grocery store, the
utility bills? Are you seeing prices drop? Because they're saying, well,
inflation's under control, we can now drop the interest rates.

(05:44):
Not twenty five basis points, but fifty basis point. It's
it is. This is as political of an issue as
it exists. And this is why our founding fathers did
not want a central bank. They didn't want men to
have a monopoly on money, and they did not want
a small group of men to control the credit of

(06:06):
our nation.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
The borrowing cost well, and it's not going to cut prices.
I mean, have you seen the cost of cats in Springfield?

Speaker 1 (06:13):
They are hot commodity.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
Yeah, and I eventually yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
There there's the rise in in Okay, let me let me,
let me, let me reset this. This is important. Everybody
interest rates the reduction in borrowing cost. That's what we're
talking about, the reduction. This is where your country is
right now. This is where your children's future is. This
is where your grandchildren's future. That the biggest economic news

(06:43):
for several decades, back to Alan Greenspan, even before him,
how much is it going to cost to borrow money?
It has become so ingrained in our psyche that we
think that we can only live by borrowing. Oh well,
guess what. That's the way it was set up over
one hundred years ago with the Federal Reserve. We are

(07:05):
the moment the Federal Reserve was created, and we're going
to talk about this after the break, The moment the
Federal Reserve was created, the moment the Hamiltonians beat the Jeffersonians,
the moment the bankers beat the Andrew Jacksonians. We lost.
We gave the keys to our government over to a

(07:30):
small cartel of bankers and thieves.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
Yes, And now Pale cites two competing He's forced to
acknowledge there are two things that are flies in the
ointment on lowering rates. He cites the rise in unemployment,
and he cites a housing shortage. An unemployment and a

(08:02):
housing shortage. What's a good thing. We're bringing in millions
of the global poor. Think about that. Number one, are
the biggest economic factor for your life, for your society,
for your free country is the cost to borrow money.

(08:25):
Number two. We have a housing shortage, but we're importing
millions of the global poor, and we have a global
incarcerated uh and we have a rise in unemployment. Yet
we are bringing in millions of the global poor. Our

(08:45):
economy runs on how much it costs to barrow.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
This is exactly why guys generations are smart.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Man opposed a central bank and giving a monopoly over
our money. Supplyed with smart group of men. One more time,
let's explain American money after the break. Hey, if you're
just joining us, we are talking about We're gonna be

(09:14):
talking about the migration, the migratory patterns of humans across
the globe into parts of Western Europe and into North America.
We're gonna talk about that. We're gonna get to that.
But before we get to that, we're gonna talk about
interest rates and interest rates for the first time in

(09:36):
four years were dropped, and it was quite predictable. I
think we might have mentioned over the winner, Yes there's
going to be an interest rate cut. It doesn't matter.
They'll fudge the numbers, they'll fudge CPI, they'll fudge the calculus,
they'll they'll figure out a way to justify reducing the
borrowing costs, because that is it's a presidential election, and

(10:01):
it's very important that the machine keep its people and
power and interest rates. Just as Jimmy Carter, you know,
interest rates are such a big deal to the American
psyche right now because we live in debt and interest
rates are our cost of living in debt. We became

(10:24):
a debtor nation the moment we created a central bank.
But j. Powell mentions two problems, two flies in the ointment.
We have a housing shortage and we have a rise
in unemployment. At the same time we're bringing in this
giant migration of other the global poor. And it doesn't

(10:50):
make sense, right, It just doesn't compute. Nothing this administration
has done makes sense. There hasn't been an administration that's
done on this much damage to the United States people
since Woodrow Wilson's administration, another new Left progressive puppet candidate

(11:13):
that was controlled by a cabal of businessmen. And what
the what the late eighteen hundreds, early nineteen hundreds, what
the robber barons were able to do in the private marketplace.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
The so called Robert Barons, which would be a great team,
name the Robert Bears.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
That's fair, that's fair if.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
We get it, if we ever get like a professional,
like a professional other professional sports team, I think we
should be called the Robert Barons. I like it when
I first heard the phrase Robert Barns in school, Like
that's a I like that. Robert Bears. What they what
the robber Barons did in the private sector, they did
in the public sector the moment they were able to

(11:54):
get into Congress, get in, get a few senators, few
key senators, and then get their president, who was an
academic nerd who was easily controlled, especially after the stroke
guy by a Nama Woodrow Wilson. So for centuries, all right,
let's start. Let's start here. This is important. Everyone needs

(12:16):
to understanding the government. Your government needs money to spend
and give away, because that's what our government does. It
spends your money and it gives your money away. For
centuries it was gold. Other governments it was gold and
other precious metals that it collected in conquest, tariffs on imports,
or confiscating from its own people in exchange for not

(12:38):
taking their land. If you think you own your home,
you don't try not paying your taxes. The government has
a superior interest in your real property. Am I wrong? General?

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Very few things that you can own. Some radio wag
several years back said the only thing you can really
own is a couch.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Are we wags.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
Semi wags?

Speaker 1 (13:04):
So for centuries, the government, the ruling class. The ruling
class needed gold and other precious metals to protect itself,
to have a standing army, to be able to do business,
to build a build up the military, a navy, to
protect their shipping, the shipping lanes, their commerce. We've talked

(13:26):
about this.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Didn't FDR outlaw the private ownership of gold, so only you.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Got ahead of me by about twenty five years. The
ruling class also uses tariffs on imports to get the
money into the government accounts that it can then spend
with its preferred vendors or give away to its.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
Preferred investors and friends and donors, or.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
They can confiscate money from its own people in exchange
for not taking their land or other proper organized crime
does the same thing to businesses in their cities.

Speaker 2 (14:04):
Be ashamed if anything happened to it.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
So, the more money and assets the ruling class has,
and you have to have a ruling class. I'm not
saying we don't need it. We don't want anarchy. We
have to have a ruling class. And the system that
our founders created was a pretty damn good system, but
it was predicated on some foundational principles that were way way,
way way past. The more money and assets the ruling

(14:29):
class has, the healthier it is in terms of not
being able to beat it via war or insurrection. Tariffs
became a dirty word because it raised prices on imported
goods and those prices were passed on to the people.
So tariffs became a big thing to talk about in
the second half of the eighteenth or late eighteen hundreds

(14:52):
and a lot of the nineteen hundreds, right, so you
had big political battles on tariffs. We still do the
other way to get money to the ruling class to
spend and give away direct taxes, but direct taxes were
strictly forbidden in America via the US Constitution.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Right, that's right, they needed an amendment.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
Do you know the direct tax on the colonists, The
income tax on the direct colonists was a one percent
income tax. We went to war on a one percent
income tax.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
Well, a little bit of reputation either, Yeah, I mean
there was a stamp ax and all those sort of
stuff without representation.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Right, So ask yourself today, listeners, friends of the show,
Not are you better than you were four years ago?
But how much are you? How much is being confiscated
from you through all the taxes, and how much representation

(15:53):
are you really getting an exchange?

Speaker 2 (15:55):
In fact, people like Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris are
talking about a wealth tax, which would also be unconstitutional.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
So taxes, tariffs or the old fashioned way just go
and take what you want from weaker countries. That requires soldiers,
You need to pay feed, build out supply lines, have
a pension. And so we stayed out of war with
other nations basically for one hundred year because we couldn't
afford it. Yeah, it's costly, it's costly. You know the
Civil War, the Civil War which was kind of thrust

(16:25):
upon us was we had a brief income tax, We
had a draft. First time ever federal government said sorry, emergency,
we're taking your wages and we're taking your boys and
our federal government. For one hundred years, over one hundred years,

(16:48):
our federal government was small. And it was the private
market that made America great. That private market had corporations.
The corporations the robber barons. They had to borrow money
to do it. They had a cartel, they had monopolies
and trusts. The federal government decided to do what the
robber barons did. In other words, the robber barons seized

(17:10):
the federal government. We now have a monopoly. There is
now a group of men and women that have a
monopoly on our money and a trust of a few
bankers who control this. Gone was gold coins. Here comes
fiat currency. Explained fiat currency one more time.

Speaker 2 (17:29):
Fiat currency is a currency that is not based upon
anything of actual value. For many many years, when coins
first came out, they actually had real gold in them
and intrinsic value. Yeah, and you could only the government
could only quote print up as much money as they
had gold for. But now they've gotten completely away from that,

(17:53):
and they're saying, we will assign the value to this.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
So now we have a cotton and linen note paper.
It's a cotton linen blend like a bed sheet, like
a pillow cover, that has the signature of the US
Treasurer official looking icons that make it look like it
is handed out by the US government, and it was

(18:18):
backed by gold. It is no longer what we could
not get from war, which was horribly expensive, and we
found that families didn't want to send their boys to
go fight in wars. Two big reasons why we didn't
have foreign entanglements until World War One. Tariffs were politically

(18:40):
unpopular and taxes were unconstitutional and horrible and popular. So
a group of men, robber barons, created a new bank
that would make bank notes out of thin air. This
new bank to rule all of their banks, was called
the Federal Reserve Federal Reserve Bank, and they had their

(19:04):
own cotton and silk piece of paper note, not piece
of paper, This new banknote or bill that was called
a Federal Reserve note. Then an Act of Congress declared
it to be the official currency of America, legal tender
for all debts public and private. There's a lot more

(19:25):
to this, hang on, catch us after the break. Oh boy,
good funny Chez Round Automotive Group. You want to say
a nice word about Chez Round for us.

Speaker 2 (19:39):
Well, it's always struck me that if you want people
to succeed that share your political beliefs, then you want
to deal with people who share your political beliefs or.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Your fundamental beliefs. Yes, your operating system exactly.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
And if you want successful people who are good, honest,
straight forward to succeed, then you go and you give
your custom, as they used to say in England, to
those people. And all you have to do is get
on twenty three and drive north and you will find them.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
If you're coming from north of Delaware. True chose Run
Automotive Group. And thank you very much again, Ryan Gil
the Gill family. Godspeed to the health and recovery of
everyone in your family, and thank you for continuing to
take care of us and our production costs that we

(20:32):
can get on and do this show. I think it's
very important because the messaging we're trying to stay away
from the laser pointer cat phenomenon, which is the news
cycle we're all you know, so many of.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Us those cats that have survived.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
Those cats that have survived catch out red laser pointer,
and they're just so distracted. And so we're really trying
to zero in on what's happened to the United States government,
what's happening now, and what's instructional is to look back
in time. We are looking back to when our federal
government actually became a debtor nation to a group of men,

(21:12):
the Robbert Barons, actually were successful and creating a monopoly
over currency. They actually were able to eliminate gold as
a standard on a gold as a a method of

(21:32):
transacting business, and its place was a cotton silk note
called a Federal reserve note. And it was ordered by
Act of Congress that that piece of paper that gosh,
it's not paper, that Federal reserve note was to be
used as legal tender for all debts public and private.

(21:54):
How do you get this money? How do you get
this new money? You had to borrow it from the
banks to get it and pay interest. You had to
borrow it, and there was a borrowing cost. So in
order to be an American, to do business, to pay wages,

(22:18):
to pay bills other debts, to pay your taxes, your fees,
you had to have this green, inky, official looking silken
cotton fixed note, and the only way to get it
was to borrow it. Well, the federal government didn't have

(22:42):
any money it needed to borrow from this as well.
So the federal government overnight became indebted to this private
bank instantly when it borrowed this brand new form of money.
And this is the Federal Reserve Act, and it was
nineteen thirteen. But this new bank, as all bankers, they

(23:06):
want collateral. I'm not just going to give you their
fictional silk cotton instrument without some something told on to,
you know, collateral. So the US government issued IOUs known
as bonds. So the government would would say, here's here's
a bond. We promise to repay you, uh, and give

(23:30):
us some of that new stuff you got there, give
us some of that new crack you got there. Thus
the bond market for US Treasury bonds. But the US
Treasury is broke, isn't it?

Speaker 2 (23:41):
It's true?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Aren't we? Thirty six trillion in debt?

Speaker 2 (23:44):
That's if you don't count social Security obligations?

Speaker 1 (23:47):
Who buys who takes an IOU from a debtor who's broke?
And thirty six trillion in debt back attic, I like
your crack addict, who's buying those bonds? The Federal Reserve
is buying those bonds. Wait a minute, are they propping

(24:07):
up our economy? They sure are not to be outdone.
The same group of men that gave themselves the monopoly
on money supply and a cartel on banking also created
the movement for an income tax in direct violation in
the US Constitution. This same robber barons the same group
of men because the US Treasury needed h there was

(24:32):
a way to get more money, and it would be
a tax, and so you would extract from the people
their taxes. And it's a direct tax, which is unconstitutional
until a particular constitutional amendment that made it constitutional.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
There's two ways to amend the United States Constitution general.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
That's right through Article five.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
And what are the two ways.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
Well, one is that you can have the House and
the Senate pass the amendments with a sufficient majority supermajority
two thirds, and then you have to have thirty seven
of the fifty states ratify that proposed amendment. I believe

(25:18):
the last one that went through was the one where
Congress could not give itself a raise until they'd stood
for election again. And then the other way is to
a constitutional convention.

Speaker 1 (25:30):
Through the States. Yes, another way I would say it
if I was teaching history to kids. There's two ways
to mend the US Constitution. The people can call for one,
or the creature itself can amend its own operating coulde.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Or the progressives think that you can do it through
just reinterpreting the words.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Well there's that. Take a guess which way this constitutional
amendment occurred. The creature did it itself? What else did
the same group of men do? So right now we've
got a They've created a brand new fiat currency. They
control it, they print it, They're going to loan it
out to the government and to the people at it

(26:10):
with an interest rate. They then am in the constitution
for direct taxes on its own citizenry. And then they
get us into World War One. We had I submit,
and I'm open to hearing from World War One historians
to correct me on this. To this day, I still

(26:34):
can't see the national security interests America had in the
thousand year old series of conflicts in Europe. What should
have there did not appear to be a national security
interest and the Chris scuffle in Europe, what Germany was
doing and what England didn't like, and what France was

(26:55):
worried about, and somehow it all started because of thing
happening in Serbia. This none of this makes sense to me.
We're busy building our empire in our own hemisphere, but
getting into World War One kicks off the great World Wars.
There's one World War. It has the first half, halftime

(27:17):
and the second half World War. All this happened. All
this happened. The creation of a fiat currency, a federal
central bank, a direct tax on the people, and a
president who openly campaigned in nineteen sixteen that he would
not get us into World War One got us into

(27:41):
World War One within a few months of him taking
office for his second term. Woodrow Wilson and guess who
the Biden Harris presidencies look a lot alike. The ultra progressive, expansionist,
globalist federal government of Woodrow Wilson, the reordering of fun
to Middle American principles, busting up of things in its way.

(28:05):
That's what we have going on right now, guys. That's
what we have going on. And I'm not even going
to get into I'm not going to tread into the
creation of the state of Israel, and we don't even
need to go there, but we could do a whole
show on that because that also happened under the watchful
eye of the same group of men. So General, we're

(28:28):
gonna take a break, we'll come back. Let's talk about
what's this generation's version of what happened under Woodrow Wilson.
And I'm saying this migration thing that is the same crime.
That's a crime community committed against the American people in

(28:51):
the same timeframe under an ultra progressive localist vision new
World Order, folks, and I think instead of banking, it's migration.
And after the break, we'll pick that up and kind
of explain it to you. Final segment. Thanks for listening.
Catch the show on Spotify, Apple iTunes. For the Defense

(29:15):
of the American People with Brad Kaufel Monday through Friday.
General and I are actually low mules. We're running from
courthouse to courthouse, county to county. And if there's an
unwanted government intrusion on you or one of your loved ones,
give us a ring six one, four, eight, eight, four,
eleven hundred and you can always email me. I do

(29:35):
respond to all my email eventually, and that's Brad at
Koffel Law dot com. Brad at Kaffel law dot com. General,
the men who declared independence from government tyranny and fought
a costly war for personal liberty would burn the deep
state to the ground and drive its ashes right into
the sea. The rise of this vast administrative state over

(29:57):
the last century has been an absolute body blow for
the American people and the US Constitution, and the American
concept of limited government is almost gone. Every couple of years,
political parties rile up the voters. Everyone heads to the polls,

(30:17):
and from that frenzy, we send a few hundred people
to DC to apparently represent our interests. At the same time,
three million civilian employees who actually do the day to
day work of the federal government, we're totally outnumbered. For
every elected official who is sent to the nation's capital

(30:40):
to do the people's bidding, there are six thousand federal
employees who never face the voters. So for every one
rep there are six thousand federal employees who never face
the voters.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Many with much the same power.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Where do their allegiances lie? Well, if the twenty twenty
election totals in Washington, d see reflect the ideological bent
of the administrative state. Then over ninety percent of the
bureaucratic blob votes Democrat.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
And herein we see the alarm that people raise when
someone like Elon Musk comes in and says, I got
rid of eighty percent of the people on Twitter, because
you just don't need that many people if you're not
trying to censor everybody.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
And inexplicably, this government is literally flying millions of poor,
unskilled foreigners and flying, flying.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
Not driving or dropping off, flying them on jets. Yeah,
chartered jets.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
Millions of poor unskilled foreigners into our heartland. And Springfield,
Ohio is the most recent stop for the news. So
the creature, the creature, the imperial cities. Journalists, journalists, reporters,
they go and they find the pastors, the nice old

(31:56):
lady volunteers who are just trying to help these reps.
You g's out, and then anyone who is in defense
of their city going, we are fifty five thousand people,
and where did these fifteen thousand Haitians.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Just come from? Cry twenty.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Actually those people are vilified. Springfield, Ohio population around fifty
eight thousand before it was overwhelmed by what fifteen to twenty.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
Thousand Haitians twenty thousand.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
We have ongoing reports of venezuel and games.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
There are fewer cats, so that evens it all out curiously.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
Ron DeSantis, remember when when Governor Ron sent a mere
fifty immigrants to the very wealthy sanctuary city of Martha's Venue.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
They called out the National Guard.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
How terrible that was, how hard it was on those people.
The community wasn't prepared for such an influx, you know.
So let's drill down on what's really happening in our
remaining minutes. General. This migration is coming in under a
temporary protected status program. Although temporary is far cry.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
It's not temporary, it's extended.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
My belief is with the risk of reshoring American industry.
These American industries know that they're probably going to be
taxed if Trump takes the white Republicans get back in control,
so to prepare for that, they need to reshore their manufacturing.

(33:29):
They need to reshore their industry, but they don't want
to hire Americans. Americans are entitled. You gotta have you
got to have this minimum wage, this living wage, they'll unionize,
They'll they want health insurance, they want a pension, they
want all this stuff. They're too expensive, So just bring
the global pore here to work in your factories. That's

(33:52):
my take. There are other benefits associated with this rerouting
of the migration into America and Western Europe. There's a
political benefit as well for the ruling class. There's a
major corporate benefit. Look at all the business owners that
have construction companies, landscaping companies, roofing companies. How about the

(34:18):
when you drive by, you drive through main street small town, USA,
and you see these manufacturing plants. You can't see who's
in there working. But I'll tell you right now, if
they were those were If all those industries and manufacturing
plants had glass windows and you could see who's in there,

(34:39):
you'll see the same people that are roofing, cutting your lawn,
doing construction. They're not the American middle class. They're not
the American The American dream is too expensive for corporate America.
There's a cheaper way to do it. So what's your
take on this.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
Well, it used to be that immigrants were so welcome
in our country because they came here wanting to become us.
They wanted to assimilate. They didn't want to import all
of the problems that they had from the places that
they left. But now what we see is that the
government is intentionally bringing them in in these large tranches

(35:22):
and depositing everybody at the same time into the same neighborhood.
And so how can you assimilate? How will your children
ever learn to speak English if they don't have to.
If you were to put one Haitian family in Lexington,
and one Haitian family in banger Main, and one Facian
family in Seattle, then they would have to change into

(35:43):
Americans and adopt our culture. But if you put twenty
grand of them into a city that only has fifty
or so thousand people, then you don't have to assimilate
a bit. You can go on speaking their combination of
French and Creole all you want. Think of the class
side is in Springfield and how suddenly you've got ten
extra kids in your class who don't speak English.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
And what does that do for the educational setting of
the the kids they already here?

Speaker 2 (36:11):
Well, they learned a lot about plumbing because it goes
right down the toilet.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
And you've got to slow everything down. It's there's so
many evils associated with what we're doing. But there's one
moral high ground I predict you're going to start to hear,
and that is that migration is a basic human right.
The moment they go there, there is an excellent philosophical,

(36:39):
cognitive perch they can go to to justify this. There
is a way that they can explain this as a
as a fundamental human right, that nations and borders and
walls are there violate human rights. Just wait, that's where
we're headed. And once you have a board, once you

(37:03):
have the elimination of nation states and borders, you have
an open society. Now it's whoever is in power at
the time, you can control this world. Parliament, the United
Nations takes off and becomes a key player who all
the global agencies, the IMF, NATO. This is the direction

(37:27):
we're all going. And just what if the robber barons
did to the federal government from nineteen seven to nineteen sixteen,
what they are, what these kleptocrats are doing from twenty
sixteen to twenty twenty five. They're doing the same amount

(37:51):
of damage or more to our country as they did
in those years. With the creation of the Federal Reserve,
the granting of a monopoly of money to a group
of men UH and then make eventually making it illegal

(38:13):
to possess gold, and then the government getting into World
War One and World War one and World War two.
What I just simply say, the Great the first half
and second half of the Great War resulted in the
utter reorganization of Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. If

(38:33):
you're going to pay attention to Ukraine and Russia, you're
going to see that is the goal we are in
for a total reorganization of Europe, your Asia, Middle East,
and Africa. It is inevitable. Unfortunately, in my opinion, it

(38:57):
is inevitable that we will will not be at war
at some point in time with Russia UH. And then
China is going to have to figure out.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
What to do.

Speaker 1 (39:07):
But it's what we're doing. What's happening right now in
Russia with these deeper incursions into their territory. Here's there
a point where Prudent's gonna say, you can't do anymore.
You can't do it anymore. That's what this group is
doing to the world. We cannot lead. Let Kamala Harris
into the White House thanks for listening. Talk to you

(39:31):
on the next show. I'm Brad Kauflin.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
That's you General
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