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July 10, 2025 85 mins

Michael Yon and Ben Rubin traverse 500 years of global power struggles, armed conflicts, and the strategies and tactics of tyrants.

Read the write-up: https://www.ukcolumn.org/video/who-runs-the-jungle

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Episode Transcript

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(00:07):
Hello and welcome to UK Column. I'm Ben Rubin, and today I'm
delighted to be joined by Michael Yon.
Michael served with the US Special Forces in the 1980s.
He became a freelance writer in the 1990s, specialising on
reporting on frontline conflictsall around the world.

(00:28):
It's included spending more timethan any other journalist pretty
much embedded with US and British forces in Iraq and
Afghanistan. And over the past few years,
he's been reporting on what he calls a holistic war, a global
war that is being carried out against the whole of humanity,

(00:50):
which we're going to be talking about today.
Welcome to UK column Michael. Thanks for having me on.
I'm in Nagoya, Japan, and actually, believe it or not,
I've never been a freelance writer, although there's like
thousands of articles saying that I've always been
independent, which is a remarkable difference.
And I'm just completely independent.

(01:10):
And so freelance implies that you're like lawn care service
knocking on your doors. Can I, can I publish an article
for you? It's like, Nope, they're always
knocking on my door. It's very rare that I do it.
Very, very rare. It's been, I think probably
years since I've even done 1. So in, in any case, I, I went to
the wars. I went to Iraq actually was the
first major war that I went to because two friends got killed.

(01:34):
It was three years into the war before I actually went.
So as, as I actually went to theIraq war, a lot of people
started to say, oh, you're a, you're a, you know, an
adrenaline junkie because I did so much combat in the Iraq war.
And in fact, I was with the current sitcom commander for
five months before he got shot right in front of me.

(01:55):
So he's the, he's the current Eric Carrillo.
He, he's running the war right now between Iran and the US part
of the, you know, Iran, Israel war, Eric Carrillo who got shot
in front of me. I spent five months with him in
combat. But I was never an adrenaline
junkie. I went to the wars because I
didn't trust media and I had reason not to trust them based
on previous life experience whenI was in the Army, right?

(02:18):
And so, so I didn't trust him when I went to the wars.
But I didn't go until three years into the wars.
But once I went, I went hog wildlike Rain Man.
I went, you know, four years, two years in Iraq, 2 in
Afghanistan, massive amounts of combat with British forces, U.S.
forces, Afghans, Iraqis, Lithuanians and some others.

(02:38):
And so I was out all the time, you know, and, and, and, and I
learned a lot. You learn a lot by going to
different wars, right? You learn a lot by, by coming
and going. I've noticed too, I always tell
young people, go to at least countries and you'll learn a lot
more about yourself by leaving your country and just travelling
around. Just go to like 5, you know?

(03:00):
And so I've been to a lot of wars and spent years and
different conflicts and whether it's Nepal with the Maoist or
entirely and watching the coups and these sorts of things,
watching these low level wars often, like for instance, what's
happening now in Panama, successfully predicted a lot of
what's happening. In fact, if people that follow

(03:20):
my sub stack and on my sub stack, if you watch my sub stack
and then watch the news two or three years later, you'll often
go, oh, wait a minute, where didI see that?
Oh, Michael, sub stack, right? Because and it's not like I'm
Youngstradamus. That's what they started calling
me in Afghanistan. I'm not that I'm not.
I'm just an average intelligenceperson with a very high above
average drive to figure out what's going on, right?

(03:43):
So and so I just read a lot. I go to wars a lot, I study a
lot, I travel a lot. And I'm with the right people a
lot, right? Whether it's top scientists here
in Japan or in the United Statesor top military people, Intel
people all around the world. And I learn a lot of things and
at some point, you, you should always pay very close attention

(04:05):
to the enemy, right? Because the enemies typically,
well, some in some form or another, they're going to tell
you what they're going to do if you know how to read their
language, right? When I mean, for instance, let's
say their body language. But, but right now we can see,
for instance, the World EconomicForum.
Here's an example. The World Economic Forum is a

(04:25):
conglomeration of oligarchs, right?
Just like the CCP, the Chinese Communist Party is and the
Russians. There's all these different
ecosystems of oligarchs, right, which are frenemies and and the
enemies at times, right. So these oligarchs are fighting
over global resources right now.They're fighting over routes and
resources, mainly about routes and resources, right?

(04:45):
So they're fighting over Panama Canal.
That's why I spend so much time down there.
Very successfully predicted what's happening right now.
I think Panama is going to end up being split apart.
I think Thailand's going to be split apart as well.
By the way, I spent a lot of time in Thailand, a great deal
of time. If you web search my name in
Thailand, you'll see me flying around with the Prime Minister
of Thailand and it's jet or you'll see me in a lot of

(05:06):
fighting. Like really in the fighting, not
like in Thailand during the fighting, but actually in the
coups, right? 2010 and 14, right?
I spent months out in that fighting. 3000 casualties,
right? And so and so in Hong Kong, I
was there when they were when the, you know, they kicked me
out after seven months of the fighting between 2019 and 20,

(05:27):
right? I'm seeing these things all over
the world. And what I'm getting to is our
enemies. They tell us what they're going
to do either through actually saying it like the World
Economic Forum constantly. It's like we're going to
depopulate the world. I mean, they say it with their
mouths, right? They're doing it with their
actions, right? And, and that's one of the ways
that Masako Ganaha and I successfully predicted the Nord

(05:52):
Stream that would be cut. We predicted that many times in
advance. We even went to, we went to BASF
plant in Ludwikzhoffen, Germany twice in advance, right?
So the things that I'm telling you, you can find online, we
went to Ludwikzhoffen, BASF, that's where they started doing
the Haber Bosch process in 1914,which is the Yuma Canal open

(06:14):
1914. Haber Bosch process is where you
take the natural gas and you combine it with the hydrogen
that's in natural gas. You combine the nitrogen that
we're breathing into ammonia, right?
And you can make ammonium sulphate, ammonium nitrate,
urea, all these things, right? So those are your nitrogenous
fertilisers. Now we know that the enemies

(06:34):
want to the, the, the ones that are allegedly on our side want
to depopulate us. They want to flood our countries
like you, United Kingdom. They want to flood all of
Europe. They want to flood Canada,
United States, Japan, with people all over the world and
destroy us in, in in various ways.
But they also want to create massive famines.

(06:54):
Massive famines will create now they say this right This isn't
me conspiracy theory. They say it, they write it.
They, I mean, it's everywhere, right?
You got to be a blind monkey notto see this, right?
And so I mean. They're certainly communicating
strategy. Yeah.
I mean, if you go and read any kind of UN documentation, World

(07:15):
Economic Forum documentation, the whole thing's laid out right
now. They have a very clear road map.
And because of the way the system operates, they have to
communicate this stuff publicly because they need other people
to, to, to kind of participate in this system that they're
building. There's you just, you mentioned
that. Thank you.
That's a fantastic introduction.And I wanted to wind back to one

(07:36):
of the first things that you mentioned there, actually.
And there's a quote that I'm going to take from a really
powerful post from your sub stack, which you called the
hardest post I've had to write. And it was about Eric Carrillo.
And maybe we can come back to him.
He's clearing him in a very important position at the moment
and commanding U.S. central Command, basically overseeing

(07:57):
the war in the Middle East, right?
As you said, from a from AUS perspective and and you said in
that post, we are being destroyed.
We are being destroyed. We have no border.
America is being destroyed. I mean that that is quite an
incredible set of statements foryou to make, particularly with
the kind of level of access thatyou have to top people in the US

(08:18):
military. And actually that in many ways
was directed towards Eric Carrilla himself.
Like what? When did you first start seeing
this? And when you say America is
being destroyed, like, what doesthat actually mean to you?
You know, our, a lot of our grandparents actually saw it.
So I mean, so it wasn't, it's not like anything new, right?

(08:39):
It's just that it's been a long time coming.
Like these wars that we see unfolding, they're actually not
new. They're just new to a lot of us,
right? Like the pharma wars and that
sort of thing. And you know, Eric Krill by the
way, on my, I was just over in Texas and, and I was, I just got
to help. This is like last week.
So I was in Texas about a week ago and I had some young people

(08:59):
that I'm training up to so that they can see these things taking
them around all over the place. So I got a helicopter and took
them over a place called Colony Ridge last week, right?
And so I'm showing them this town there.
I'm going somewhere with this. I showed them this 200, a city
for 200,000 illegal invaders north of Houston.
And I took them over this and, you know, and showed them in the

(09:20):
helicopter, right. And then and then, and I've
already taken people like daily Wire there and Chris Martinson
and I didn't take Chris there. I took them to Darien Gap and
Brett Weinstein took them to Darien Gap.
But I took, you know, I took a lot of people there.
I took congressman in the helicopter over the day.
I've taken them down into, I mean, down to the Colony Ridge
and that sort of thing. But what I'm getting to is so I,

(09:41):
I did that in Texas. This is last week, had them up
in the helicopter and I go to the airport and, and I'm flying
out from Houston, right? And so and I fly, I'm going
business class because first class is a waste of money and
economy is a waste of time and Ihave to work, right?
I have to study. So I'm in the business class
lounge now at my connection in, in, in LAX Los Angeles, right?

(10:04):
So I walk in the business loungethere and look, who do I see?
Dave Petraeus, right? Former CIA director and former
friend of mine, right? So I look at him and I'm like,
there's Dave Petraeus. And so I'm like, Hey, Dave.
And so I walk up and I talked with him.
This is just last week. I put it on my sub stack.
It's on my sub stack, right. So I walk up to and I said,
Dave, you know, or Dave Petraeus, imagine I'm like

(10:27):
wondering why is he in the business class lounge?
He works as he works for KKR Goldberg, Travis and Roberts,
which is a hugely benefiting from like buying music venues in
Netherlands and you know, from what's happening in Gaza and
what's happening in Ukraine and all these things, right.
I, I read a book about them like30 years ago called Barbarians
at the Gate. And it's a very interesting,

(10:49):
good book called Barbarians at the Gate about KKR, Goldberg,
Travis and Roberts. And so, you know, it's a huge, I
mean, very powerful, very, I mean, who else can and just hire
the former director of CIA, the DCI, right when he resigns?
He resigned because of this. They invented private equity,

(11:10):
right? I mean, literally, these were
these were the guys that invented that whole category.
Those are serious dudes. And so I walked up to Dave and
I'm like. Henry Kravis, he's he's, I think
his wife actually is the one of the Co presidents of the
Bilderberg meetings and he's also on the the steering
committee, the Bilderberg meetings.
So KKR, I mean they just it's top a top level outfit for sure.

(11:32):
These are serious players, right?
I mean, they're brilliant peopleand unfortunately they're not on
our side. If they were on our side, they
would get massive support. But I walked up to Dave and I
was like, hey, Dave And he's, you know, hello.
And some we're talking chatting there in the business class
lounge. I'm wondering why he's not on
the small Jack because he works for KKR, right?
I mean, I've flown around with him in Afghanistan and stuff in
the helicopter version. He was exactly how I left him

(11:53):
looking on his laptop. He's always working and I
walked, he's in the business class lounge working on his
laptop. So we start talking and he said
our mutual friend Eric Corilla, who got shot in front of me in
Iraq, the one that you were justtalking about, he's the CENTCOM
commander. And Dave Petraeus said that, you
know, our mutual friend is doinggreat over in, in, you know, at

(12:13):
CENTCOM right now, Central Command.
And of course, he could read thelook on my face that, I mean, we
are no longer cooperative. I mean, Dave Petraeus push the
death jab. Eric Carrillo push the death
jab. And for me, that's a line of no
return, right? I mean, if you seriously pushed
it and, and you're in a positionof severe influence to push the

(12:34):
Ukraine war, the death jab, what's happening in Gaza right
now, open borders. I was filling Dave Petraeus with
a lot of information about what was going on in the Darien Gap,
you know, when I was down there.And at one point he said, you
know, he's like, you know, something, I'd have to read his
message. But it was something like, you
know, you know, everybody needs,you know, safety and security or

(12:55):
something like that. In other words, it was a, it was
a, it was a, it was a globalist talking point, the kind that's
destroying the United States. And I'm like, you know,
seriously. I mean, I mean, he's not on our
team. And it's very distressing
because Eric Carrilla, CENTCOM commander, and Dave Petraeus,
these two dudes are brilliant, right?

(13:16):
They're brilliant, and they're both very courageous.
These are not weaklings, right? These are very serious men.
And they're on the opposite side, right?
They're the most serious men that you can imagine, right?
And, and so that's concerning, but there's serious men on our
side as well, right? There's a lot of them as well.
So it's not like, but what I'm saying is the other side is not

(13:37):
a pushover, right? And, but so in any case, so I,
I, you know, I had to get to my flight.
So I said goodbye to Dave and, and I got on the flight and I
actually published about it. Normally I wouldn't publish
about meeting somebody like thatbecause that I would just
consider that de facto off record.
But you know, he's clearly on opt for in opposing forces,

(13:58):
right? And so that's really just the
things that I'm saying. Literally, if there's anybody
that will get you killed talkingabout these are the guys, right?
I mean, they are that tight withNetanyahu, that sort of thing,
right? This it's it's there's there's
no space between them. This is this is this is for all
the marbles, the most serious people in the world.

(14:19):
I would not doubt at this point that we're going to see the
Strait of Hormuz closed. If the Strait of Hormuz is
closed, of course, we're settingup the information game.
Right now. the US and Israelis are, I call it ZF Zionist
forces. They're setting up the
information game to close the Strait of Hormuz and blame it on
Iran. Now, I mean, for instance, you
see that they keep trickling outthese reports that the, you

(14:41):
know, Iranian Navy left suddenlyand they were loading, they were
seeing loading mines on their ships and that sort of thing.
OK, this begs the question, if Zionist forces, meaning the
United States and Israel actually have air superiority
over end naval superiority over Iran, which we should have, why
is their Navy still even existing?

(15:01):
Why does the Iranian Navy even still exist if they're about to
close the the Strait of Hormuz? Now keep in mind, if the Strait
of Hormuz is closed where I'm atright now and Japan will greatly
suffer. This could literally contribute
directly to famines across the world, especially if other
things are suddenly closed like Suez, which could easily happen.

(15:23):
It happened recently, of course,with the Houthis.
And, and if the Panama Canal suddenly closed the Straight of
Malacca for any extended period of time, if you can, those 4-7
or eight naval chokeholds, that's it.
It's over. Especially, I mean, you're going
to end up with global famines iswhat I'm saying.
And so, you know, Straight of Malacca, Straight of Hormuz,

(15:45):
Suez, you don't even have to close the Baba Mandeb.
I mean Suez and Straight of Malacca.
I mean that Hormuzal de facto, right and and you don't have to
worry about straight as Gibraltar or Dana Straits or any
of that or Bosphorus. I mean that I mean, they
probably would, but but what I'msaying is if you wanted to
really reduce the population on planet Earth, famine would get

(16:05):
you there, especially famine andand pandemic and war create
something called hop. There's many causative agents
for hop. Human osmotic pressure.
Human osmotic pressure is hop. It's the push and pull of
migration. There's many, many causes of
agents in hop, but three of the major most acute agents would be

(16:26):
pandemic, famine and more, right?
That's what causes huge floods of like Ireland, you know, the
Irish in their famine, which arguably was 1845 to 1854.
Of course, people argue that specific dates, but anyway, in
that time frame, I went over to Ireland researching this
actually. But all these famines create
huge amounts of pop and you end up with diasporas, right?

(16:48):
And famines have been a weapon in war since approximately
forever in written history. You know, I mean, I read about
them all the time. I just bought some more books on
famine literally in the last hour.
And so because you know, if you're going to study war at a
high level, not just shootouts and all that, I did years of
that stuff. That's that's kindergarten level
1. I know if you're in it, it's

(17:08):
very severe. It's super severe.
If you're in the shootouts and people are screaming around you
and getting shot in the face, it's pretty serious, right?
It's not kindergarten when you're in that, right?
And I've been in that a lot, right?
I get it totally get it, but you're talking big boy war here
now you're talking information war.
You're talking psychological operations is the the the most

(17:29):
severe form of warfare is psychologic is information war
and psyop right. PSYOP is a subset of information
war right now to run successful PSYOP, one of the main weapons,
the main weapon, the main WMD used in war for centuries is
intoxicants. Whether that be any sort of

(17:49):
dope, alcohol doesn't matter. Intoxicants right is the main
WMD. That's why you know, when I when
I went back to Thailand last year, looking at the the Strait
of Malacca issues down in Singapore and what not and look
at dismiss for the you know, thetrain.
Anyway, I'll skip skip that. But then I saw all the all these
suddenly there's 9000 and some odd 9300 new licences for

(18:15):
cannabis stores, distribution, production and warehousing that
that happened in like approximately 3 years as the
bulk of that happened, right? King Rama the 9th never would
have done that. But suddenly you've got this.
To me, that's obvious what that is.
Thailand is clearly being attacked and I can talk about
this for hours. When I went down to Buenos Aires

(18:35):
last year, spent 2 two months inin Argentina going all over the
place. We went Masaka Oganaha and I
went to a cannabis Expo. They're just now you go to
Netherlands. Of course, for years they've I
spent a lot of time in Netherlands.
Sometimes I would leave Panama and go to Netherlands because
that's another key place, right?And you look at the the Dutch

(18:56):
are like, yeah, we're free. That's why we can do this.
It's like, that's not what's happening.
Monkey bait, monkey brain. All right, This is what's
actually happening. You're under attack.
You're under attack and they've actually got psychologically
programmed you to think that's an exhibition of your freedom is
to give your money to the enemy while they weaken you and they

(19:17):
diminish you. That's why I wrote dispatches
about, I don't know, 15 years ago when I was in Afghanistan
called the perfect evil. The perfect evil is intoxicants,
whether that be alcohol, prescription opium, various
dopes that you're going to smoke, whatever.
When you're using, for instance,opium, you're sending it, you

(19:38):
know, at that time, about 93, about 93% of the opium I think
that was in United Kingdom, I think was actually coming from
Afghanistan, one of the studies,if I remember it accurately.
But but so now just think about it, if you're the enemy, you're
draining money out of the pockets of British people and
you're weakening them simultaneously, right?
And everybody watching this, everybody.

(20:00):
I've never seen an, you know, anexample of where this is not
true. Everybody has personally been
involved in either people with severe.
Alcohol or drug problems or somesevere problem, whether that's
yourself or in your home or yoursomething that affects your
life. Maybe a drunk runs into a member

(20:21):
of your family and kills them orsomething like that.
We've all suffered from that. What I'm getting to is these
intoxicants affect us in severe ways, right?
If you have a family of 10 people like old school and just
one of them is a drug addict or an out severe alcoholic, then
that will disrupt the entire everything under that roof,

(20:42):
right? That's like a Hellfire missile
through your roof. That's why intoxicants are the
that and other reasons are why intoxicants are the major WMD on
planet earth. Now you see Tucker Carlson, I've
been on a show. He just came out with a video
the other day about all these Chinese dope farms all over
America. Right now, when I go after dope

(21:03):
or Joe Rogan and I've declined numerous times offers or
potential going on a show, I'm like, I'm not going on dope
head. Joe Rogan's show.
I don't care if he's the biggestpodcast in the whole universe.
I'm not going on right. And people say, Oh, you don't
understand, You can reach so many people.
I'm like, no, here's how I got alittle hatchet.

(21:24):
He's got a big tree and I'm chopping that thing down right?
And right now he's actually saidhe stopped doing dope, he
stopped drinking and he's going to church.
I don't know if it's true because he habitually lies, but
the point is, is what he's actually doing is he's
representing the dope interest, right?
That's when he and Elon Musk, rocket boy went on the, you

(21:46):
know, the Joe Rogan show and smoke dope in front of millions
of young people, millions of young people.
That was the two most influent, two of the most influential
people on planet Earth smoking dope in front of young people.
That was high level psychological operations and
warfare. That was not bad judgement.
That was not these two guys who are supposed to be the smartest,

(22:09):
most successful people in the world having a moment of grand
stupidity. No, that was actual war.
That was an actual attack on us,right.
And so you know, they, So what I'm getting to is the the wars
that are going on. It's a comprehensive war.
We got the death jabs. A lot of the people that
remember during the lockdowns you could go to all the liquor
stores you wanted. You get all the dope you wanted

(22:31):
and you can watch all the TV youwanted.
You can't go be with your friends.
You can't go to church, you can't go to funerals, can't go
to weddings. Because this is if you read the
book Rape of the Mind from 1956 by Juice Merlot.
He's an ecologist. Read that book Rape of the Mind
1956 Dutch psychologist. Really good book.
Read that book and read it slowly.

(22:51):
Read it in quiet. Turn off the phone and focus on
that book when you're reading itbecause you have to pay
attention to this book. You will be much more resilient
against the next attacks that come on you.
You're still you're still vulnerable, keep in mind, but
you can become much less vulnerable by knowing the
tactics, right? In fact, once you study

(23:12):
brainwashing enough, once you reach like, you know, Sun Zu
level, your mission then is to recognise when you're being
brainwashed. Like somebody's putting you in a
chokehold and you're blocking that chokehold and you're
reversing it and you're putting them out, right.
I mean, you brainwash your brainwasher.
If you get good at this, don't just play defence victim say,

(23:32):
oh, no, no, no, I know what he'sdoing.
Let's play. I accept, right?
And then, you know, I accept battle, right?
And so. I like, I like that idea you
got. You got to brainwash the
brainwasher. I mean, what you were talking
about here, Michael, for for theuninitiated, this, this might
sound slightly mind blowing, right?
Because what you were describingis a multi dimensional assault

(23:53):
on humanity that's being coordinated by, by some kind of
International Criminal cabal that is actually captured. the
US and Israeli military, by the sounds of it, is a starting
point, probably the, the UK military, the, the political
apparatus that sits around that,the entire cultural and

(24:13):
information infrastructure across the Western world.
But actually not just the Western world, because you've
been talking about Thailand, you've been talking about Japan,
we've been talking about bits ofthe Middle East, but who's
who's, who's up on the top levelof this pyramid coordinating
this whole thing? Like who are those people?
You know, it's somewhat nebulousand it's, it's actually
architectural structures, right?It's it's oligarchical

(24:35):
architectural structure. Some of it's family based, some
of, and this goes back for centuries.
So, you know, when I had Brett Weinstein down in the Darien
Gap, he, he's a brilliant man. He's a evolutionary biologist
and he did his PhD work actuallyin Panama.
So we're down in Panama togetherin the jungle.
And Brett said to me what you just said basically like, well,
you keep talking about they, meaning I keep talking about

(24:56):
they, who's they? And I was like, actually, I
don't know. Because it's like, who runs the
jungle? Who's running this thing?
I'm like, Brett, who runs this jungle?
I mean, you're a, you got your PhD in this jungle.
Who who runs this jungle? Brett, You know what I mean.
Who does run the jungle like thejungle runs itself?
But there's a, there's a, there's a power dynamic in

(25:17):
there, right? There is and there are.
There are oligarchical systems. For instance, the Chinese
Communist Party is one of the oligarchical systems, right?
It doesn't rule the world, it's trying to.
And keep in mind, globalism is 0new about globalism.
I mean, this goes back, this is biblical, right?
This goes back and and I read somuch old books like today, I
spent hours reading old stuff, right?

(25:39):
And so I'm constantly reading old books or I'm going to wars
or I'm talking with scientists or I'm on the border.
I've been across the entire US southern border and I've been to
30 countries in the last four years just looking at the
invasion, right? Just the invasions, right?
And the food issues and whatnot.I usually go and do multiple
things when I'm there, food issues, invasions, death jabs,

(26:00):
right? But in any case, case, in routes
and resources, obviously, and, but over centuries, millennia,
it's been routes and resources. Marco Polo shooting off in the
1200s, right? You know, going to China, look
at his maps, you know, he's beautiful map.
Look at look at the route that Marco Polo took and then overlay
it to maps that are today, right?

(26:22):
And, and you'll see he's actually, some of the routes are
the same routes. He went through the Strait of
Malacca. He went, you know, through the
like you see, right now Israel for instance, is, is supplying
weapons and has been for a long time to the Azeris in Azerbaijan
who are Shia Muslims who are attacking the Christians in
Armenia, right. Why is Israel supplying weapons

(26:43):
to Shia Muslims, who, you know, Iran is Shia too.
So they're constantly saying, oh, the Shia Muslims are going
to destroy the world. But then Israel supplies them
with weapons because who are, and they're doing this openly.
This isn't hidden, right? And and so they're the Israelis
are openly supplying the weapons. the United States is
openly saying, OK, supply the weapons to kill one of the

(27:07):
oldest Christian countries in the world, which is Armenia,
right, which has already had suffered genocide.
I went there about a year and a half ago with Masako Ganaha.
We spent, I don't know, maybe a month in Armenia.
Then we went up the Georgian. Looking at all this anyway, what
I'm getting to is who is who is actually protecting?
There's one country that's strongly protecting Christian
Armenia. Most people are going to have a

(27:28):
hard time guessing this, but that country is Iran, Iran,
Iran. I want to say it crystal clear.
The Shia of Iran are protecting the Christians of Armenia from
the Shia Arziris, while the Israelis are supplying weapons
to the Shia is Aziris. So you basically got not

(27:49):
basically got, you have explicitly got Israel supplying
weapons to Shia who are killing and trying their best to
genocide Christians and Iran is protecting.
Why all this drama? And Russia's involved too,
obviously Caspian C routes and resources.
Caspian C, right? I mean, there's these routes,
it's routes and resources, right?
And so when people are trying tounderstand this through simply

(28:13):
Christian versus Muslim versus Jew or whatever versus Buddhist
or whatever, in reality, you have to look at this much more
intense overview, which is routes and resources.
And one of those resources is people, right?
So whether that's converting people or killing those who
won't convert, or I'm telling you, the Panama, the, the
country of Panama will be lucky to survive 10 more years

(28:36):
because, and I've told the people of their government this,
I've spent a lot of time with them, right?
High level government like the if you better make the right
decisions right now because you are a juicy lamb wearing a
Garland of pork chops and you are surrounded by predators who
are predacious to each other andyou're in the way, right?
They a lot of people want the Panama Canal, but there's not a

(28:58):
lot of people that want Panamanians.
You better behave very, very wisely and choose very wisely.
You know, you better measure 3 times and cut once with the
words that you say because your life literally depends on it.
Your, your, your structure of, of allegedly being in charge of
Panama. They're not Chinese are moving
in hard in Panama. the US military is doing like this

(29:21):
week, they've had C fives comingand going out of Panama and, and
Executive 737 was on the tarmac at Panama Pacifico just the
other day and there was some, but that was, they were changing
out an engine on AC-5 and another one took off.
And every day we've got this kind of serious military traffic
from the US. We've got the Iranian have moved
in very hard into Panama and Venezuela, as have Chinese, as

(29:45):
have Russians. It's not like all this war is
over there. We've got huge amounts of
Iranians and Chinese and Russians and everybody else
under the sun in Canada, in the United States, right?
And you know, one of the things when the Iranians are constantly
calling us, not constantly, but occasionally somebody calls us
Satan. And it's the headline news, oh,
we should nuke them because theycalled us the Great Satan.

(30:07):
But meanwhile, we've got people in the United States, in the UK
and Israel, like turning boys into girls and girls into meat
products, right? We've got, I mean, literally,
that's Great Satan stuff right there.
We went up to Canada and the actual government, Canadian
government's handing out drugs to Canadians.
I mean, the videos that we made are horrific, right?
And for and, and, and the maid programme in Canada, medical

(30:29):
assistance and dying. You can go into the, you can go
into the maid system in the morning and be put to death in
the same afternoon. That's Great Satan stuff, right?
And so it's not like don't have a point.
That's what's coming down the track in the UK as well.
Can we just go back to Panama because people who aren't
familiar with the geography of Latin America and as that sort
of moves up into North America, this is basically the, the pinch

(30:51):
point, right? This is the, the, the, the land
route from South America into the North North American,
continental North American continent, not quite into the US
at that point, right? But what would, and this is the
Darien Gap, this kind of this tiny little sliver of land.
What were you actually seeing happening down there?
I mean, you've mentioned a lot of different players, but what

(31:12):
are they doing? Like is this, is this basically
a big like a human trafficking operation?
What are you looking at here? Of the seven most critical choke
points on planet Earth, Panama is number one for the United
States. It's this important, right?
That's Panama for us, right? If you control the Panama Canal,

(31:32):
you're literally controlling oneof our arteries.
It's that important. It's life and death for the
United States, right? We just had an attack submarine
go through last week and a friend of me, friend of mine
showed me the video because he made the video, right?
And he was on a ship behind it. And so the that was the the USS
Toledo, right? And so, but what I'm getting to

(31:54):
is it's important for our Navy, it's important for our trade.
It's also, we don't want our enemies to control it, right?
The Panama, Panama has been a vital place on Earth since
roughly 500 years, right? So the Spanish first, we're
going down there, I mean, from outsiders anyway, the Spaniards
got there in, right, about roughly 1500, right?

(32:16):
And, and, and you know, Balboa was there, he was the first
governor of, of, of Darien. They called it the Isthmus of
Darien at that point. And ever since that time, people
dreamed about making a canal across approximately that time,
but they were making routes across, for instance, the
Scottish came and 1698 ish or soand, and they tried to make a

(32:38):
colony in Darien. It's called the Darien scheme or
the, there's a Fort there calledFort Edinburgh, Edinburgh
actually. And so the Scottish, this is
very important for UK history, like extremely important for UK
history. Like the, the, the, the, the
Scottish tried to make a path between the seas And actually
the best book I've read on Panama and I have like a whole
library on Panama. There's a is is called the path

(32:59):
between the seas. That's an incredible book.
Everybody should read the path between the seas.
It's about maybe 40 or 50 years old.
And so the, the path between maybe 40 years old.
But the path between the seas, the Scottish were tried to make
a path between the seas and theywent there.
They, they sold a bunch of bondsin Scotland, raised a bunch of

(33:22):
money and and they went down there and they tried two really
serious attempts, lost about 2000 Scots and they were beated,
defeated by the yellow fever andeverything else under the sun.
There was more than that. But in any case, so Scotland
goes bankrupt, right? So this is key.
This is effects you right now, right When Scotland went

(33:44):
bankrupt, then comes the articles of union, which you're
very familiar with. And then articles of union in 17
O 6 and 17 O 7. Finally, in 17 O 7, Scotland
joins England into the United Kingdom.
They joined England into the United Kingdom because they went
bankrupt in Bury and Panama, right?

(34:05):
That's how important Panama is for people now.
The Scottish don't seem to know that now.
I think it's kind of erased fromhistory, but it's actually
quite, there's old books about it.
You can find them instantly, like in minutes.
And again, I've got a whole library on this, but it's, it's,
I got all the old maps and stuff.
And so then others came, many others came.
The Dutch came. They didn't do too, basically

(34:26):
Panama's, the Afghanistan of Central America.
But many people tried, right? And then finally the French
come. They sold bonds and they gave it
a good shot. They lost a lot of people,
thousands and thousands. I've taken many people to their
yellow fever cemetery near Panama City.
They saw they they basically went bankrupt as well and it

(34:46):
anyway, they didn't succeed. Then the United States came in
and arrogantly thought we could make the Panama Canal and
somehow actually did it and actually to create Panama.
And because the path Panama is arguably well for the United
States is easily the most strategic piece of land on
Earth, easily hands down for a lot of people in the Middle
East, it would be Suez or Straitof Hormuz or or in Asia, Strait

(35:09):
of Malacca, right? But for US, Panama and for a lot
of people in the world, Panama, right?
And so, so for us to create the Panama Canal after the French
then failed, well, Panama was part of Colombia at the time.
So we had to create Panama first.
So we because Panama was part ofColombia and Colombia didn't
want to play ball. So we did all these huge

(35:29):
reconnaissances in, in Mexico, actually in Nicaragua, of course
everybody knows about that 1 Andin Colombia and various
reconnaissances in Panama for where should we put the canal.
And I've got all these old reports, by the way, like from
1870 report from Seward and all this stuff, right?
And the ones from Mexico, the ones from, I've got the, I've
got the reports from that time, they're not reprints, right?

(35:52):
So that nobody could change the writing, right.
And so in all the old maps, I'vegot like a stack of them like,
you know, 5 feet taller, probably 10 actually.
I mean, it's unbelievable. It's, it's, you know, and so
they did a lot of work is what I'm getting to.
I mean, the fact that I've got that many that are from
contemporaneous tells me that there must have been much more.

(36:13):
But so then, you know, so we start to build the canal right?
Now. Keep in mind when you look at
the totality of what was going on, it wasn't.
We're just building the canal. This was global.
Like we were mapping out Japan where I'm at now.
I've got the old maps that we did of Japan in the 1890s.
And it's all about resources here.
Like here's where the camphor is, here's where the copper is,

(36:33):
here's where they grow rice. We're doing the same in
Philippines, same in Formosa. Taiwan was called Formosa.
Then all over the world, I got all these maps, man, like over
100 right, of all these different countries, routes and
resources, how these new routes like Suez, which was already
open in 1869 and and how these different things, how we're
going to be able to globalise the world, right.

(36:54):
And so, and so it was, it was much, much bigger than just
building a, a path between the seas.
But to do that, we had to createPanama.
So on November 3rd, 19 O 3, we sponsored a revolution, which
actually then happened on November 3rd, 19 O3 and the
Republic of Panama was born. And then we instantly made an
agreement with Panama that we have 10 mile sliver through

(37:16):
Panama and that's America, right?
We're going to build a canal right in the middle of it, 5
miles on each side, 10 miles wave.
The rest of it is your country. And and we spent a lot of effort
the United States on stabilisingPanama.
So because one of your main security systems is that Panama
be stable, right? We wanted Panama to be super
stable. We wanted people to get along

(37:37):
with each other. We wanted everybody speak
Spanish. You can speak Kuna language.
You can I'm out with the Kuna Indians all the time.
You can speak Embera language. I'm out with Embera all the
time. We message back and forth all
the every day when I'm not in Panama, right?
I mean, so I, I know all these people, right?
So I mean there's seven different tribes there, right?
You can speak all your languages, but must speak
Spanish because we need a way tobind everybody, try to make them

(38:00):
get along. Because the kuna and the wound
on man, they were duking it out genocidally with each other.
That's not stable, you know. So, so you know, we got
everybody calmed down and and and somehow it works, right,
because you could. Anthropological warfare is like
drug warfare. You, you study, you know, all
the, all the, you know, the different groups and, and, and
you got your anthropologist involved and, and you study

(38:23):
their firmwares and you find ways to make them get along
right now, if you want to make them war with each other, you
just reverse the polarity on the, you know, you won't
believe. I got a whole library on
anthropological warfare. Nobody calls it anthropological
warfare but me. But when I first started
studying this in special forces.But it it seems like a.
Very good one. It's, it's amazing.

(38:44):
Some people call it human terrain and all that stuff.
But anyway, but the, but the but, but the bottom line is for,
for a long time, we've done everything we can to try to make
people get along in America, to try to, you know, one of the
things that the English were good at were the Dutch for the
opposite. They're always divide and
conquer. Like in Indonesia or whatever.

(39:05):
They're like, they Dutch wanted everybody speak their own
languages, right? English are like, everybody
needs to speak English. Like when you're, when you're in
India, I spent about a year in India.
You know, they'll spend the Indians, they'll spend half
their time talking bad about English when we, when we, when
we talk about that subject. But then the other half they're
like, but the English are actually very good because the
English actually helped us learnhow to do the railways and all
this stuff. So they kind of like, you know,

(39:27):
they see the pluses and minuses.I'm the same way.
Like we got a lot from the English.
It's extremely +1 is they did want everybody speak English,
mainly because the only people that the only English that speak
a foreign language, they're either foreigners or they're
spies, right? English just speak English,
right? But they wanted everybody speak
English. They want everybody to get along
because they wanted to have the English, wanted to have colonies

(39:49):
that were reasonably harmonious when they weren't making
famines, right? You know, the Victorian famines
and that sort of stuff. I mean, you know, when I was in
the Iraq and Afghan wars with British soldiers, I spent a lot
of time with two rifles and all those.
These guys, green jackets, I wasout with those guys in a lot of
combat, different British units.And one of them at one point
told me he goes, you know, we'veall had to go at somebody at one

(40:12):
point or another. He's talking about in our
history when we, I was like, youknow, you know, these young
infantrymen, they always say themost brilliant things.
At one point I was on the Iranian border with a, with a
English, with a British captain.He was actually England.
We were we were on the Iranian border in Iraq.
And so I'm an American. I said, just think about the
irony of all this. You're a British captain.

(40:34):
We're on the Iranian border in Iraq.
And and that's weird in English and English war correspondent
the British infantry captain in Iraq on the You have to
understand some history to see how ironic.
That is, that was drawn by some some British imperialists about

(40:56):
150 years ago, right? They were just, like, drunk with
a crayon and made the border right.
And, you know. Yeah.
And so it was just, you know, the things that you, you know,
This is why you have to study history so much because you see
what's happening now is actuallya continuation.
It didn't just start right. Like when I say I think the

(41:17):
Strait of Hormuz will be closed,I don't know if it will be, but
I'm guessing just like, I don't know, BASF was really going to
get blown up. I just kept saying, I think
something's going to happen to it.
And I know it sounded crazy at the time.
Groning in gas field was the same way.
We predicted it many times. And then they did close it.
And so I mean, but in Strait of Hormuz I can see a direct.

(41:38):
You're looking at, you're looking at the great game,
right? I mean, this is what we're
talking about here. This is the great global impact.
This is game. This is.
Kim. This is Kim, right?
This is a great game, right? Where's Kipling when you when
you need him? I mean, if Kipling were alive
today, he'd be running around going, wait a minute, just
change the names And it's the same thing, right?
It's the same thing. You know what?

(41:59):
I found this old vaccine book from a British doctor.
What's his name? It's from 1889, I think.
And I read the whole book is about smallpox, might have been
1882, I can't remember. Anyway, I've got the book and I
read the whole thing and all youhave to do is change the names.
And that's what exactly just happened.
The title of the book is something like smallpox vaccine

(42:22):
is more dangerous and it causes more deaths than it saves or
something. And he goes and you read the
book. It's quite brilliant.
It's, it's not, you can read it in a couple days and and he goes
through all the statistics. He's laying out the fact
pattern. He's like, and they're forcing
us, they're taking our freedoms away and forcing us to get this
dangerous jab that doesn't even stop smallpox.
People that don't get the jab still, you know, you know,

(42:44):
people that get the jab are still getting smallpox.
It just change the names and, and actually there's at least
there's at least 20 or 30 books there similar to that and that
are from that same time frame, actually 17 to 1800s.
There's a tonne of them man. And they're, and all these
doctors are like death, you know, they don't call them death
jabs, but again, change the names.
It's the same with what's happening in Iran and Israel

(43:06):
right now. If you look at this from a
greater perspective, you'll stoplistening to what Netanyahu even
says. He's just the latest piece of
fruit on the tree, right? So, but look at the larger, look
at the larger this, you know, the flows of the currents of the
currents of history of the, you know, if you're listening to
what they're saying day to day on CNN or some of those trash

(43:27):
things, right? That's just ripples across the
water that people are. But underneath that is are
currents like the Gulfstream, right?
And the Gulfstream is routes andresources.
There will be war for those routes and resources because it
never ends. It's always on.
It's just the newest names. And, you know, people that are

(43:48):
new to history are, are very young, so they haven't had a
chance to study much yet, as we all were at one time.
And you know, then you and olderpeople are always talking about
stuff and it sounds crazy. But then as you get older, you
keep seeing it. Like my grandmother, my
grandmother told me when I was young, she she said one day you
children will be buying bottled water out of the store.

(44:08):
She used to say that. And I'd be like, Granny, that's
crazy. We're never going to buy bottled
water out of the store. And now every single time I open
a bottle of water, I think of mygrandmother telling me that
crazy stuff. And she's like, you know, you
read a lot of those books, Michael, but your grandmother's
been in a long time. And I'm just telling you, I know
what I'm seeing. And she was like Granny Alex
Jones. Yeah, history was it.

(44:31):
They say it doesn't repeat, but it certainly rhymes.
I think that's what you're describing.
Just to go back to the Darien Gap, I watched something I can't
remember now. It's about 6 months ago you were
talking about, I think it was Alejandro Mayorkas, who at the
time was the the homeland director of Homeland Security
under Biden was that was down inthe Darien Gap.

(44:51):
Like what? What was he doing down there?
Like because it again, like whatwe've described is essentially
that the US political, military,economic infrastructure has been
weaponized against his own people.
So you've got key actors like that are actually coordinating
what amounts to an invasion of the American nation.
So what was he, what was he doing down there?

(45:13):
Like what was the actual on the ground operation?
And he was installed by Zionist actually, actually this is
important background. Actually Mayorkas was a Zionist,
are not Jews, by the way, Zionist is a political
organisation. And actually British
intelligence was a lot behind, you know, Theodore Herzel and
all that stuff. And, and anyway, in 1899,

(45:34):
they're actually selling bonds there, which I actually got one.
I bought it in Panama antique shop from 1899.
Theodore Herzel's on it, right? And you, you can buy these are
pretty expensive. But I mean, it's really
important. I mean, for me and in my
research, it's important. I like to have stuff like that
on the wall, you know, because it reminds me, you know, I
arrange things in the order thatthings happen, either draw on

(45:55):
them out or whatever. But but you know, when you're
arranging things, that helps yousee things better.
And, and, but what I'm getting to is let's go to Alejandro
Mayorkas because that's what you're asking about.
And no, he, he was a child of Sephardic Jews.
He's Sephardic Jew. They can't, they were, they were
migrants from Cuba. So they came to United States.
Now, Alejandro Mayorkas was installed as a board member on

(46:20):
HIAS, which is the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, right,
The Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.
He was a board member. Now, if you go to hias.org,
hais.org, you can go on my sub stack and see a lot of this
stuff. If you go to hias.org and you'll
see they're congratulating him with the letter.
You know, they've written a letter like, hey,

(46:41):
congratulations, you're basically moving on up in the
world and you're the Department of Homeland Security now their
office down in Darien Province in, in, sorry, in Panama, the
Afghanistan of Central America, you know, where I spend so much
time. The, the, the highest office in
Darien is right beside what I call China Camp, which I've been
in China camp many, many times. I've, I, I almost leased their

(47:04):
office actually, but they got highest got the office before I
got it. It's right beside one of the
invasion camps in there, an invasion camp between South
America going through Panama andthen up to the United States,
right? And so it's called San Vicente
camp. So I almost got that and highest
got it. Highest, the Hebrew Immigrant
Aid Society is one of the main factors invading the United

(47:27):
Kingdom, right? United Nations along with
Highest and some others like Catholic Charities in the United
States, Lutheran Services, Who'swho in the zoo.
It's hundreds of these guys, right?
But Highest is one of the major players.
In the United Kingdom or the United States, you said Kingdom,
but I don't know these days. Both OK.
Both. Oh yeah, I, I went to United.
I was in that giant mosque in London a couple years ago.

(47:49):
Pretty, pretty interesting, right?
I mean, you know, I was in Ireland looking at this, what,
two or three years ago, warning about what's happening.
And, you know, I'm, I've been all over Europe looking at this
and, and also not, not that you're, you're, you know what
I'm saying? So, but what I'm getting to is
Alejandro Mayorkas moved up to, moved up to, you know,

(48:09):
Department of Homeland Security.Then he came down to Panama.
He came down to the Darien Gap and he went in the camp with the
highest people. How do I know that?
Because I was there. I was physically present.
I had waited for him because I was told that he was coming.
So I was just like, if he's coming to Panama, I bet he's
going to land in Blackhawks right here.
So I waited for four days like, like, you know, like the, you

(48:31):
know, in the pumpkin patch, you know, and then sure enough, 4
Blackhawks on the 4th day landedright in front of me.
I'm like, there he is. And you know, I, I thought that
he would do it, but you know, you're still always surprised
when you're right about something like that.
And I'm like, well, there he is.And so he comes right in front
of me, goes into the camp, I gotthe drone up and, you know, and
he's there. He is, right.

(48:52):
And and so and, and you know, he's down there getting a
briefing, which they put on Twitter.
Here he is, you know, they put their own photos on Twitter and
and I put, you know, drone footage up and other things and
other photos. So yeah, he was there with HIAS.
So I mean, highest Hebrew immigrant aid society in the
United Nations and all these people are the ones doing this
and they are the the number one funder of the United Nations is

(49:16):
the United States, right? United States is the number one
funder of our own invasions, right?
Right. And this is the thing I think
people really struggle to understand because actually it's
the weaponization of the institutional infrastructure
against the nation state itself,right?
Because this is all about destabilisation ultimately,

(49:36):
right? They want to destroy the
existing nation state system andimplement A centralised global
system. And that to me, ultimately
that's the end point of Zionism,right?
It's the ultimate goal is to install a single global
government. Yeah, through, through centuries
of intermarriage and stuff. Now keep in mind they don't have

(49:57):
to wait till the end to, you know, ring the bell and get all
the gold. They're making a huge amount of
gold all along the way, right. So it's like this is a highly
profitable business, like ultra profitable business or
architecture of businesses. Globalist.
There's again different species of globalist, but over a period

(50:17):
of many generations, they're allintermarried.
And, you know, they're next thing you know, they're the
director of CIA, the director ofFBI, whatever, you know,
Homeland Security, NSA, whatever, director of National
Intelligence, you know, I mean, they're, you know, top generals
in the military, you know, president, right?
I mean, so you, you've literallylike hijackers don't create an

(50:39):
aeroplane to hijack. They just hijack an aeroplane,
right? I mean, it's the same with these
governments. Like, you know, the Zionists,
they can't even run a country atwell, like, like, you know, Al
Qaeda, when I was in Iraq, Al Qaeda was very good at taking
over towns and cities like Bakuba.
Like I was in Bakuba quite a lot.
Al Qaeda took it over, right? But Al Qaeda couldn't get the

(50:59):
water on, Al Qaeda couldn't keepthe electricity on.
Al Qaeda couldn't do crap exceptkill people and take the
country, right? The Zionists are very similar.
They can't run a country withoutcreating just more.
They just, they're a walking war, right?
They're a walking disease, right?
And so the so at the so at the end of the day, they it's easy
if you apply pressure and you'revery conniving, not ultra

(51:22):
intelligent, but just conniving and you work as a tribe, you can
eventually take over architectures you it's not
difficult to do right. And it's like everything you
touch touches you when you, you can entangle, intentionally
entangle these vines, right? And over a period of years,
you're running the big pharma, you're running the banks, you're
running everything, you're in charge of all the information

(51:45):
operations because you've got orlist a significant part because
you're running the media, right?And so these things are easily
doable and they are done. They are.
That's why when I first moved toPoland many years ago, you know,
when the wall fell and the east opened up and all that.
So I lived in Poland for a couple of years and and I read
their their what was it called? Anyway, I was there.

(52:08):
It was their new book on on commercial law, right, and
something hand lobey right. It was the handbook on law,
right, And I read it was a shortbook at the time.
Now, it probably would fill up this room, but, but, but in, in
one of the main things that theystressed was no foreign, no
foreigners or foreign companies can buy any Polish media, ports,

(52:28):
railroads, airports, nothing. You can't get any critical
infrastructure, including information infrastructure.
But the United States cleverly allows Chinese and, and, and,
and, and we've got we've got huge amounts of, of a dual
citizenships with Israel. There's no dual citizenship
there. Israeli, right?
I mean, straight up. And so I mean, at the end of the

(52:49):
day, right, because where is, where is the actual loyalty?
It doesn't appear to be to the United States.
It does not, not the critical mass anyway.
The critical mass of the loyaltyis always Israel first, 1st and
it's always they're saying it, they're saying it, they say it
with their mouths, they hold up signs Israel first.
They're doing it right in front of Trump with Trump, right?

(53:09):
This is he is a Zionist. He's actually, if you get down
to his his down to his skin level, he's a narcissist.
If Muslim architectures were more powerful than Zionist, he'd
be a Muslim. If it were Catholics, he'd be a
Catholic because deep down inside on his body level, he's a
clear narcissist. Days that I've supported Trump

(53:30):
remain at 0 about 10 years ago. You know, what's his name?
Newt Gingrich called me and he is the speaker of the House.
You know, people know Newt Gingrich.
He calls me up and he's trying to rummage up support for Trump
on the first election. What was that nine years ago?
I can't, I can't remember. It was a long time ago, right?
So he's trying to get support for the, that, that the, the

(53:50):
first election, right. And, and, and I'm like, well,
I'm not going to vote for Clinton, for Hillary Clinton,
obviously. I mean, but can't you get
somebody better than Trump? I mean, I don't trust that guy.
And this was before the 1st election.
And of course, then you get to the point where, well, now, I
mean, now there's a lot more people that have actually
started the real, but they always get you with the red

(54:12):
pill, blue pill, blue pill thing.
Who did you want Biden? Who did you want Harris?
Who did you want Clinton? This is the Red pill, Blue pill
Cyclops Corporation. They say the lesser of two
evils. Yeah, so let's jump out of the
99th floor instead of the 100th floor, right.
So why don't we just take the steps and get out of here,
right? And So what what I'm So what I'm
getting to is, is, is the red pill blue pill thing is a basic

(54:37):
false choice. This is this is like one O 1
brainwashing. Like they give you right it
right out of the matrix red pillor blue.
I'm like, I don't even know yourlast name.
I just met you for the first time.
You're offering pills and something which is allegedly
water. You know what I mean?
And so I'm going to take. OK, take the red one.
Yeah, I'll take the red pill. That one looks more tasty.

(55:00):
I'm sure it's different than theblue 1.
You know, it's like The PrincessBride.
You know both both things are poison, right?
Right. Yeah, exactly, exactly.
That's a great movie. So, so you, you've OK, so, so
it's so much happening here, right.
But you mentioned that you've been in been in Ireland.
Was it last year or the year before?
And actually it sounds like fromsome of the reports that I've

(55:21):
read, and I was watching a videothat you shared on Twitter, or
should I say XI think this was last year.
But yeah, about 12 months ago. The actually it looks to you
basically looks like an actual military invasion has taken
place already in Ireland, right?Like they've they've completely

(55:41):
taken over Dublin strategic positions all around the city.
You know, like, is that is that your interpretation?
This is essentially a full blownmilitary operation at this
point. It must have been about 3 years
ago. I'd have to look at my own, what
I was publishing, but I was roughly 3 years ago I think,
when we were in Ireland, right? Anyway, there's so much going

(56:03):
on, but it, it was very clear, like I was over in Netherlands,
we were over in Germany looking at Nordstrom and all that stuff.
And, and often Hungary and Austria, we're looking at all
these places and you know, back to Netherlands.
I'm like, let's shoot over to Ireland because Ireland, they're
going to take Ireland, right? So we shoot over there and the
first Uber driver, taxi driver, whatever he was, he's from

(56:25):
Nigeria. I remember that.
I said, oh, are you from Igbo tribe or how so?
What tribe are you from? I think it was from Igbo.
Anyway, I said when you come here, do you look for people
from your tribe or other Nigerians or other Africans or
you know, people are just stay alone or whatever?
He goes, Oh no, we go go for ourtribe and and sub tribe and that

(56:45):
sort of thing, which is what they do.
I already knew that would be theanswer because I spend most of
my life out of the country, right?
I spend most of my life out of the United States.
I would say I don't know. I've spent most of my life in
almost 100 countries, right? So, I mean, I, I've been out
with tribal people a lot. And, and so the idea that
they're just coming in and they're going to blend in like a

(57:07):
melting pot, that's bull, man. It's like they're going to,
they're going to come in with their own tribal law, their own
languages, their own ecosystems,their own what I call anthro
insula human islands. And, and they will be, we will
be Balkanized, right? And, and destroyed, literally
destroyed. And it's happening across the
United States too. It's happening in Texas.

(57:28):
It's happening in the UK and we had a million Nigerians coming
to the country last year, right?And, and as you say, they're,
they're tribal. They're they're, you know, we're
told that, well, first of all, this is necessary.
I mean, there's absolutely no argument to be made that this is
necessary, but also that they'rejust going to sort of peacefully
integrate and everything will befine and just become like normal

(57:49):
English people. And, you know, that's some
incredibly dishonest of the people delivering that message
and the people that believe it are extremely naive.
And, you know, this is it's getting to the point now where
it's becoming a genuine existential threat to the
nation, right? I mean, I don't know how much
more of this we can actually deal with here in the UK.

(58:11):
And as you say, it's even further ahead in Ireland at the
moment. Yeah, I, I think you've already
crossed the Rubicon in, in my view.
I, I, I don't, I'm not sure thatyou can recover from this.
And if you were going to, it will take extreme effort, put it
mildly, and to put it softly, because you're going to have to
send them back, right? And they're not going to want to

(58:33):
go, right? And so, and you don't have a
structure that's willing to do that.
And, and, and, and so there you go.
Because it's the structure that's allowed them in.
And if you stand up to it, they'll put you in prison,
right? And so, you know, your own same
in Ireland, same in Netherlands,same and all over the place,
right? Because these structures were

(58:53):
captured in advance or captured before we reach this point.
And so look what happened to Rome.
And at the end of the day, the people that are coming in, they
can't even run their own little villages, right?
And so they're not, and keep in mind when you're a globalist,
what you're doing is you're putting in a lot of people here,
divide and conquer, Tower of Babel, you're putting in

(59:15):
Afghans, Pakistanis, Hazar, all these different people, right?
And, and, and, and most of them are not, they're not going to
have any sufficient numbers to influence the whole system,
right? And so when it comes to
anthropological warfare and targeting them through their
phones and all kinds of other ways, you're going to be able to
manipulate them to fight each other and eventually as first

(59:38):
they need to what what's happening is first they're
killing you and me. That's what's happening.
First. They're killing us, the white
people straight up right. And that's it unambiguous.
It's obvious they say it, right?You know, and, and Zionists like
Ben Shapiro has completely nakedly obvious and clear terms,
right? The Browning of America, he's

(01:00:00):
totally good with it. You know, he's a total jab
pusher and all that stuff, right?
He's the whole ecosystem, right?And, and they'll kill us off and
run us off. Who's not killed off?
And then they'll have just all these disparate groups and then
they'll kill a lot of two. Like, you know, they want the
the globalists want Panama. They don't want Panamanians.

(01:00:20):
They'll do it the same. They're not, not, not just going
to do this to white people. They're going to do power
structures everywhere. Like you can see it in Thailand
now. They're they're the the Thai
government is being usurped and you can see it also in.
I see it all over the place. Yeah.
And Australia. And Thailand.
'S an interesting one actually, I noticed a couple of weeks ago,
I think the new Prime Minister has just been made a young

(01:00:42):
global leader of the World Economic Forum and that and
that's that I was like, OK, because there are a lot of
people thinking hey, I'll go andlive in Thailand, I'll get away
from this craziness in in Western Europe.
It's like you're not. Kind of escape this.
No, you won't. So what do you spend a lot of
time in Thailand? You're going.
To do in Thailand, you mentionedthat you think they're going to
partition it like well, how would they?
Actually, I've spent quite a bitof time there as well myself.

(01:01:03):
Like how would they actually manifest?
Like what? What are the different sectors
that you think it would break upinto?
Yeah. Now keeping in mind Thailand is
the is the hyphen in Indo Pacific security, right.
It's a very important place, very, very important.
And China knows that. America used to know it and
that's why we put so much, we invested so much into keeping

(01:01:24):
Thailand stable when in fact, after World War Two, we pushed
the British and the French away from Thailand, right?
And because like the French wanted to take a big part back
and yadda yadda. Anyway, skipping past all that,
how will they do it? First of all, you know, the
southern 3 provinces down there by Malaysia already are pretty
fractious and so that should be quite easy.

(01:01:45):
But then the southern part of Thailand, the CRA isthmus, which
is where they're building a railroad like another path
between the seas there, between the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of
Thailand. And that's critical actually,
because that'll allow China to bypass Strait of Malacca,
especially with the canal that they're building from the Mekong
River through Cambodia right now.
So that will allow them to through that canal from the

(01:02:07):
Mekong to bypass Vietnam and go right through the Gulf of
Thailand, over across the isthmus and bypass the Strait of
Malacca. So it gives China a lot more
resilience because the Strait ofMalacca is like this to China,
like Panama Canal is to us, right?
It's, it's very important. And so, but they're finding many
ways around it, like they're a belt and Rd initiative.

(01:02:28):
They got a train that goes all the way to Spain and Rotterdam
and down them to Thailand and over to Tehran.
It just opened that they're trained to Tehran just opened
up. So I mean, so they've got all
these, you know, for those who study Mckinder and man, you know
what I'm talking about. But and, but the, but at the end
of the day, the Thailand, it's easily split with keep in mind,

(01:02:52):
we help Thailand stay stable in the way that we help.
You know, a lot of Thais don't know this.
Maybe 1% of 1% will know what I'm talking about and they'll be
the most serious educated in history, you know, But what we
did in Thailand, we helped King Rama the 9th, an excellent king,
do the Thai ification programme.And with the Thai ification

(01:03:14):
programme, you got to keep in mind an eson area of Thailand
alone. There's, I think 17 languages
I've forgotten, like Khmer and Lao and, and so many languages,
right. And so the and and and so and up
in north and, and there's other languages and down in the South
and there's all the, if you, if you landed in Thailand, you'll
see all these different faces. They're not like homogeneous

(01:03:35):
people, right? But so with the Thai Thai
efficacious programme, King Ramathe 9th got everybody speaking
Thai. You can speak your old language
is fine. Not saying that you can't please
do and, and but you should be able to write Thai in, in very
nice script, very well. You're pronunciation of Thai
should be very good and everybody should speak Thai and

(01:03:56):
that's and and rallying around the king of Thailand is like the
chain that they can you know, the the the the anchor point
right. And it was very effective.
And so he fought against drugs, fought against the opium, fought
against things. He taught the Thais to be
extremely resilient. That's why people call Thailand
F Lilian high plant. Thailand is extremely resilient.

(01:04:18):
You can hit them with a tsunami and like we don't need help.
You know, everybody else like begging for help.
Thailand is not we got it. We got this thing 200,000 dead.
We got it. You know, cave rescue.
We don't need SpaceX. You know, Thailand is Thai man,
I love them that you know, I wasin all I was in many, many
firefights in Thailand in the inthe KUS in 2010 and 2014.
As soon as it's over, you know, a lot of people from a lot of

(01:04:40):
countries will be running off tothe psychologist.
Thais are like, it's over. It's like the The Lion King
where the guy gets hit over the head.
He's like, and he's like, it's in the past.
Thais are like, it's in the past.
You know, I love Thais, man. They're like, that's why I call
them. They're like bamboo, man.
You ran up, run over them and they just stand right back up.
And so, and that's partly because of their character and

(01:05:01):
their whoever they are, this is just strong.
And but King Rama the 9th and nurtured that string and he
taught them you should have, youshould have fish ponds.
You should have food security. You shouldn't be depending on
the government for food. You should have a fish pond,
garden, you should save in gold.You should, you know, you should
all these things, right? You go to their museums in
Thailand and it's all about women should be strong.

(01:05:23):
Women should be leaders. But women are women, men are
men. You, we have own
responsibilities, but women should be also leaders in the
military. I've been in a lot of fighting
when there was women in the fighting and they're serious
people, right? And So what I'm getting to is
that was that was what happened.You got a, you got a country
where the national sport is kickboxing, right?
These are these are not weak people.

(01:05:43):
They don't play around, man. Ties don't play around.
They smile a lot, but they, theyknow how to get up.
You know, when it comes to fighting, they're, they're good
at it. And, and so but, and they're
very resilient and very love Thailand.
When ties go on vacation, I spent years in Thailand.
You got like 10 ties going. I've done this with them.
Like I went out with a bunch of ties to Bhutan on a vacation,
right? You know what the ties do before

(01:06:05):
they go on vacation, they all have a big dinner together.
Often they'll do like a picnic and they make a load plan on
Thai food. And you know, they're like, you
bring the Maki sauce, you bring the noodles, you bring the
whatever. And then they all have enough
Thai food so that they, and whenthe Thai food runs out, it's
time to go back to Thailand, right?
I mean, they just, they just love Thailand, you know, and I

(01:06:26):
do too. It's that's resilience.
That's resilience, right? Yeah, yeah.
OK. Can we talk, let's talk a bit
about the cultural conditioning that's been going on.
We could bring it back to Europelike because one of the things
that you mentioned, in fact you did, you brought it up earlier
in this discussion and it's in that blog post which we will

(01:06:49):
share a link to about David Petraeus, where you bumped into
him in LAX. And you were talking in
particular about KKR, the private equity firms investment
in this European festival business called superstruct.
And there's been a lot of debateabout this because people in the

(01:07:10):
cultural community, the music community here in the UK and
more broadly across Europe. And actually I have quite a lot
of friends who work in that space, know a lot of artists who
work in that space have really taken exception to the fact that
KKR involved in this. And but I don't think that all
of them really quite understand the importance of this cultural

(01:07:35):
asset to this this globalist Zionist assault that we're being
subjected to. You know, what is it about
culture that is so crucial for them to to have control of in
terms of executing their agenda?Right, like, for instance, they
don't want the Dutch to use the word Holland, right?
They don't want to. They don't want to.

(01:07:56):
They don't want to even don't use the word.
And, and I love the Netherlands despite their problems, but they
are under severe attack, right? And, and, you know, they're as
good as they are at business. They're subject to being fooled
just like everybody else. Tulip mania from what, 1634 to

(01:08:16):
37, I think, you know, that swept the nation that, that
there's still a little bit of that in them, right?
And so they're vulnerable too. But what I'm getting to is
music. You know, we talked earlier
about psychological operations, right?
And the WMD, which is intoxicants, right?
The next level from that is music.
Music, music is power. If you control the music, that

(01:08:39):
is a that's a that's now intoxicants are a higher level
WMD. So that's hydrogen bombs and
music is atomic bombs, right? You know, I mean, and, and you
mix those two together, I mean, seriously.
And so the, So what I'm getting to is music, you know, often,
you know, despite all the combatI've done, I don't have any

(01:09:01):
PTSD, right? And people have often asked me,
how do you do it? And you know, I'm depressed or
whatever they tell me. And I'm like, I'm not depressed.
Obviously I say here it is. Don't do intoxicants.
No alcohol, no prescriptions, none of that crap.
No dope at all, period. Stop and let me see your music
playlist, OK? Sad music, sad music.
Sad. Give me that shit, right?
No sad music, right? Nothing.

(01:09:23):
Because you will instantly feel sad, right?
All that country music, which I have loved growing up and all
that. It's always about when you think
about it, though, it's always about my dog running away.
My dog got drunk and, you know, went hunting with the neighbour
or something. You know, my, my, my, my woman
stole my dog. You know, it's all and, and, and
then rap music is like, let's goget high, get everybody pregnant

(01:09:45):
and kill a cop, right? I mean, that is straight up
warfare. Kill each other as well.
That's the thing, we rap music. Now keep in mind the same people
that are involved in investing in that music are investing in
prisons, right? Oh yes, so, Oh yeah, so prisons,
all that. This is all an architecture, an
evil architecture, an architecture of perfect evil,

(01:10:08):
right? And so listen, if, if, if, if
you're, if you're a Moody person, try this, Stop listening
to music or listen to old music like, you know, Beethoven or
something. You're not going to be Moody and
crazy anymore, right? I guarantee you if you get rid
of all that music, it's going to, you're not going to see your
moods go like you're having a sugar high every 15 minutes or

(01:10:30):
something, right? And, and, and, and, and, and I
don't know how all these different mess with your mind
when you're like, here's a song that makes me happy.
Here's one that makes me sad here.
It's just one after another, like 3 minute clips of emotional
roller coaster, right? But if you just get rid of it
and go walk in the sunshine likeI, I walked up to Mount Everest
a couple times, right? Just the bottom, you know what I

(01:10:50):
mean? I'd like, I would take breaks
from the wars and just go walk around in the Himalayas.
I got tired of going home, right?
So I because whenever, whenever I would leave from Afghanistan
or Iraq and be in a lot of combat, everybody wants to see
you and everybody wants you to fly somewhere and come over and
I'll, I'm like done. I need a break.
I'm going off to, you know, Himalayas.

(01:11:10):
You know, I'd go walk around Annapurna or something, right,
and, and just chill out. Then I'll go back to the wars,
right? But I'm not listening to music
while I'm doing that. You know what?
I had somebody had a Pelican case filled with books, because
back then, you know, you didn't have iPads here or no iPads.
And so and, and I would just bring my books and my candles
and I would read at night, you know, that sort of stuff.
So I mean, if you if you, if youif you don't listen to any sad

(01:11:32):
me, I would stop listening to any music that you don't look at
critically first. Like look at it.
What's this music designed to make me do right, Because music,
you know, you play, you play theTop Gun song and you'll join the
Air Force or Navy. Not sorry, not not the Air Force
Navy guys. You know, you listen to Top Gun
and next thing you know, I got to get me an F-14 and, you know,

(01:11:53):
go around and shooting up the place, right.
You know, you listen to the songGreen Beret.
You have no idea when I was a Green Beret how many people are
like, Oh, I used to listen to that song when I was a kid,
right? You know, and then everybody the
movies come out for, you know, GI Jane or whatever.
Navy Seals are the best ultra super duper in the world.
Next. You know, everybody wants to be
a SEAL, right? It's just information war.
You can make everybody want to be a SEAL or everybody wants to

(01:12:15):
be a fighter pod or everybody want, you can make everybody
want to be an accountant. It would not be difficult with
information war. You know, accountants get all
the chicks, you know. So there I am, rolling in the
hood with my accountant friends at KKR.
Finance dudes at KKR, man. They're in the big jet.
Yeah, yeah, if, if, if look at how the KKR people live, you'd
want to be a finance guy. Yeah, well, I mean, there's

(01:12:37):
plenty of, you know, you follow liquidity or one of those
accounts on Instagram, then they've they've made the Wall
Street lifestyle look really cool.
You know, even though it's actually, I mean, it's well,
well paid, but really extraordinarily boring, you
know, when you get into what they actually do day to day.
But I think that's that's a fascinating term that you use
there. The these are the intoxicants in

(01:12:58):
the music is basically a WMD, right?
Because actually one of the reasons that I think that
they've been able to get so far along in progressing this, this
programme that they're pushing, not least because they've been
doing it for centuries, as you've, as you've described, is
that people are basically just distracted.
It's like the shiny lights and the escapism of these festivals

(01:13:18):
and the music. And yeah, the world's real
crazy. But actually, we'll just give
you a way to come over here and ignore it for a couple of days.
And, you know, you know, maybe it'll sort itself out while
you're while you're still in a field cheering away listening to
these these DJs or whatever it might be, you know, and a lot of
the messaging that gets pushed as well, you know, because
there's a very particular progressive, liberal world view

(01:13:42):
that gets promoted through thesechannels that are owned by KKR
that are used as part of this all out assault basically on on
humanity at the moment. Yeah, smoke dope and go have sex
with a rave and get hit by next to Gaza.
You know, I mean, who set that up in Gaza, right?

(01:14:02):
I mean, that was a clear green flagged attack.
That was obvious green flag attack.
That was clearly a Zionist instigated attack.
You know, of course United States and and Israel have
supported Hamas since forever and we blame it on Iran, which
they probably support them some too, but we openly support them
openly, right? Like like the not ambiguous.

(01:14:24):
We say it and do it, right, because we need them as an
enemy, because they're part of the game.
They're part of the game. You need the, you need the
kayfabe, you need both wrestlersfight.
We, we need, you know, that's that's why, you know, so many
Americans now are expecting, youknow, some massive, you know,
false flag attack in the United States to blame it on Iran,
right? And because, you know, because,

(01:14:47):
because, I mean, if if you kill 100,000 Americans, suddenly, you
know, Americans are going to be like, yeah, go ahead and nuke
Iran, right? Yeah.
I mean, they will instantly do that, right?
And we're talking about people that will set up, you know, a
911 or attack the USS Liberty oror do the the October 7th
attack, which was very clear black, black operation.

(01:15:09):
Yeah, 100%, yeah. October 7th, I think, you know,
I mean, anyone who believes the official narrative about
anything these days, I've got toquestion your sanity.
But October 7th, I mean, that, that that's, that was pure
artifice, the whole thing, the idea that I mean, because that's
basically one of the most heavily surveilled pieces of
land on Earth, right? I mean, so the idea that the
Shin Bet and, you know, all of the other pieces of the Israeli

(01:15:34):
intelligence apparatus are just going to allow that thing to
play out for like 6-7 hours without any kind of
intervention. And they didn't know about it
ahead of of the time. It's just, it's just lunacy,
isn't it? And it took 7 or 8 hours for IDF
to respond, right? Now keep in mind, they have
Blackhawk helicopters. And I've been in a lot of
Blackhawks, as you can imagine, in combat.

(01:15:54):
And let me tell you how long it takes to crank up a Blackhawk. 4
minutes. 4 minutes if it's a cold Blackhawk.
I mean cold, not like hot cocked, and, you know, not like
having the pilot sitting there strapped in already.
But a cold Blackhawk can go wheels up in 4 minutes, right?
And so the QRF should have been off the ground.
Now maximum 6 minutes, quick reaction force and they go 180

(01:16:15):
knots. If you, even if you were on the
other side of Israel, you shouldhave been in combat just very
quickly, right? You know, 20-30 minutes, right?
You should have been in combat instantly.
Now, I've said that before and people say, no, you don't
understand how this works. You know, we got to make a plan.
Just be quiet. Listen, I was in Special Forces
and I did a combat as a combat correspondent as well.

(01:16:37):
Let me tell you what this is howit would really work.
If you're shooting Americans andand I'm the commander, it's
going to be like this. Go to where the shooting is,
find them and kill them, right? Mitigate them immediately.
You put your body between the enemy and our people.
You be it's time to be it's timefor heroes to do hero shit,
right? And so and, and and so you get

(01:16:59):
out there and if we lose you, ifwe get some helicopter shot
down, we'll bring more, right? If, if, if, if we lose 3050 a
hundred guys, we'll bring more, right?
We're going to get you. We're going to going to get
every one of you right and you just get right on it.
You don't mess around, you don'tbe like we're going to make a
plan because we're afraid to fight.
It's on bro, it's on. You know what I mean?
That's how it should have been. They should have been in contact

(01:17:20):
with the enemy 2025 minutes. It should have been like that.
They should have been like, you know, shooting from the
helicopters. They should have been.
If it was me and my neighbourhood and I heard
shooting like that and I thoughtwe were under attack, I would be
like taking my position, waiting.
Soon as he steps in that road with a rifle, he's going to get
popped, right? I mean, seriously, it's like
that's the way it should have been.
The Israeli Defence Forces and the police are everywhere,

(01:17:44):
right? They should have been responding
within minutes and laying LED down.
Keep in mind it doesn't mean you're going to stop the enemy
immediately, but once they have to engage in you, they're not
engaging in your people, right? So you want them to, I want you
to come fight me and you might get me, but you at least I'm
slowing you down and my friends are going to come right?
And my friends friends are goingto come right?

(01:18:05):
And then we're going to eventually turn the tide on this
thing. We're going to whip your ass,
right? And that's the way it should
have been, but it did not happenlike that.
It did not happen because it wasintended, right?
They allowed it to happen and they allowed the hostages to be
taken because they need the hostages as perpetual causes
belly cause for war, right? They need those hostages to not

(01:18:26):
be released because the they, the hostages are the energy that
keeps people going. Oh, it's Iran now, It's a
hostage. Oh, it's Iran now.
Keep in mind, throughout my timerunning around this world and
reading so many old books and being with so many different
types of people, I've realised that I've realised a few things.
One of those is professional victims are always predators.

(01:18:48):
It's like a Principia Mathematica, right?
PV equals P, professional victimequals predator, right?
And so all these professional victims out there, you know,
that's a predator, right? And so, you know, when they
start throwing the professional victim, oh, you just don't like
me. Oh, yeah, whatever.
No, I don't like you, actually. And your magic wand is broken,

(01:19:09):
right? You know, you're going to say,
oh, you know, we, we shouldn't, we should just allow them, you
know, listen, people have a right to self defence and that
includes us. That includes us, right?
And, and, and the predatory actions that are occurring, like
invading the United States and those sorts of things.
It's time for Americans to say that is enough, right?

(01:19:31):
It's time for English and Scottish and Irish and everybody
else and the whalers or whateverthey call them, the Welsh.
It's time for everybody to say that's enough.
It's time for the French and theSpanish to say that's enough.
The Italians stand up, right? Germans be Germans again.
Yeah. Now that's great actually,
because I was, I was, I was going to ask you.
I feel like we could sit here all afternoon, like quite

(01:19:52):
literally, to be honest with you.
And I'm really enjoying the conversation.
But just just one final questionfor you.
And you've really you, you've kind of segwayed into it
perfectly, which is what, what is your, what would your advice
be to people in in Britain rightnow who are looking around at
the situation and thinking this is untenable?
What are we going to do? Like what what?
What would be your your your words of advice to us?

(01:20:14):
The, the, the, remember, cowardscan all contain the germ of of
treason. Now, I'm not saying people won't
get afraid because fear is natural among most of us, right?
Despite all the combat I did, I can still get afraid, obviously,
right? Otherwise I probably wouldn't be
alive. I'm lucky to be alive anyway.
But cowardice contains the seedsof treason.

(01:20:36):
Some people are just more, they're very cowardice.
But when a, when a cowardly, a breeze will come through and
they'll just switch sides because they're afraid, right?
So you've got to be cognizant ofthat sort of behaviour.
And you've got, I mean, this is straight out of the Bible and
you've got to kind of cleanse your ranks of people that does
that. Those people will be traded to

(01:20:57):
you, right? And so and that's why courage
and remember, courage and cowardice are both infectious.
So you must demonstrate courage to create more courage.
If you demonstrate courage, you will create courage.
If you demonstrate cowardice, you'll you'll create cowardice,
right, right. So you have to straight courage,
right? And so, and that's very

(01:21:18):
important as leaders. And so the next thing is making
sure that we don't just put our head down and just do my job,
Sir, like American Border Patrolon the border.
You know, it's like ordinary men, right?
You know, a lot of the Nazis were just ordinary men, right?
They were just doing my job, Sir.

(01:21:40):
So I've been across the entire US southern border.
It took months to do that, right?
And I saw our Border Patrol loadup thousands of people on the
buses that are invading us. And I would ask them, they're
like, why are you doing this? And they'd be like, I'm just
doing what? They would say it all the time.
They'd actually say it in those words.
Yeah. I don't know if you saw the
video of me in Hong Kong confronting a British police
officer. He was Hong Kong police officer,

(01:22:01):
he was a British, he was a whitecommander.
And, and, and, and, and I call him out on the street and they
come up to me. He put his, he puts his hand on
his weapon, right? He's got his hand on his pistol.
His guys are getting ready to tear me to shreds, right?
And I'm confronting him on the streets.
And he actually says on that video, I'm just doing my job.
He said it and the Hong Kongers went absolutely nuts and went

(01:22:22):
viral. It was on video, many different
angles because it was a it was fighting, going on the streets,
tear gas and all that stuff. He actually said, I'm just doing
my job. And So what I'm getting to is
don't just do your job. Job is treason.
If your job is treason, that's not your job, right?
And I asked when I would ask Border Patrol, why are you

(01:22:42):
helping load the buses? They would say, oh, the Mexican
cartels are doing bubble. I'm like, no, no, no, no, no,
no. Ceasefire, lock and clear the
Mexican cartels, unless you're in the Mexican cartel, are not
letting loadings up. You are right.
Yeah, they would say yeah, but Ilook, I got to, I got to get a
paycheck, right, Like everybody else.

(01:23:02):
You know, most of them would be.They didn't.
Most of them did not get angry. Most of them are like they
didn't want to load those buses.Most of them, some of them are
like totally enthusiastic about it.
But others, you know, they they were like, yeah, I'm supposed to
be here to guard the United States, and yet I've been
ordered not to. So what's your job?
Is your job to take orders or your job?
Your job is to defend the UnitedStates, right?

(01:23:23):
It's your job to defend United Kingdom.
Is your job to define Republic of Ireland right and so or is
your job to be Mary Lou McDonald, the leader of Shen
Fain? What a clown man.
I was with her in a bar, you know, and she's AI don't drink.
But anyway, we're in this, you know, You know, Mary Lou
McDonald, leader of Shen Fain, right?
And and she's she's so proud, you know, like, oh, you know,

(01:23:47):
we're helping them get in. And I'm like, you should be in a
dungeon, you know what I mean? It's like, seriously, you know,
Seriously, you know. When last time the.
Last time I looked. I think Shin Fang's upper ranks
was occupied by a bunch of African women.
The last thing I saw, which is, you know, just madness.
When you think back like 20 or 30 years ago, what Shin fame was

(01:24:08):
and what it was supposed to stand for is just just complete
lunacy. Michael, this has just been
absolutely fantastic. Fantastic.
Thank you so much for taking thetime.
I really, really appreciate it. There's some some really strong
words there and loads to revisit.
I'm particularly excited about the idea that courage breeds
courage and I think that that's what I'm personally going to
take out of this the most. But for now, just thanks for the

(01:24:32):
conversation. Thanks for joining us on UK
column for everyone at home. Thanks for watching.
Thank. You, Sir.
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