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May 3, 2024 • 75 mins
Reading from RFK Jr.s book "The Wuhan Cover Up" and Robert Ardrey's, "Jeb"

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(00:00):
Hello, Welcome back to Brainbow.Today on the podcast, I'm going to
be reading the book The Buhan CoverUp and the Terrifying Bio Weapons Arms Race
by RFK Junior. This book recentlycame out and I just received it in
the mail yesterday, so I barelytook a peek at it. I just

(00:23):
want to check the cut. Whenwas this published twenty twenty three? Okay,
so this is a first edition bookhere, and I am going to
get to that in just a minute. But before that, I wanted to
go over Robert Ardery and one ofhis plays that he considers to be his

(00:45):
best work. This play was writtenin nineteen forty six, and it was
before Robert Aarory got into evolutionary psychologyand became a naturalist. He began his
career more of a playwright and hewas actually one of the best writers in

(01:06):
Hollywood for a while, and thenonce he got into evolutionary psychology, he
kind of got he kind of disappearedinto oblivion. And so anyways, I
want to go over this book.Those are in nineteen forty six. It's
a play, not wrote a book. But yeah, this book that I

(01:29):
have here is contains three of threeof his his plays. So the reason
why I wanted to get into thisis not because I've been putting it off
for so long because I've been talkingabout I really want to delve into a
lot of his work because it's importantthat this stuff doesn't get buried under the

(01:53):
rug and forgotten about. There havebeen a lot of great discoveries and insights
into psychology that have been ignored orcensored and covered up. And the reason
why is because there's this group thatbenefit from mystifying psychology and medicating people to

(02:21):
make money if we were to nowthere's that profit side, but then there's
also a religious component to it alsobecause for a long time, humans weren't
considered animals. And Robert Ardrey wasone of the first site. He wasn't
a psychologist. I mean, psychologywasn't even a field until it was after

(02:46):
Freud. It wasn't even like youcouldn't go get a psychology degree. They
would They had this thing, youwould be an alienist and you would deal
with people that were on the fringesof society for whatever reason. And they
were treat it in experimental ways becausethere wasn't a protocol. They were just

(03:08):
figuring the stuff out at that time. A lot of mental illness they figured
to be spiritual in nature too.They just they really didn't have an understanding
of what caused it would cause certaindisorders. And there's a lot of reasons

(03:30):
why. I mean, some ofthem could be based in biology, that
there's something that you know, personsborn with and that would show up at
an early age. And then thereare things that happened throughout our lives when
we're damaged or brain changes. Now, I know I've been going on and

(03:50):
on about you know, my catand stuff, right, I'm sorry about
that, but this is what naturalistsused to do. They would just look
at the animals around them. Theywould watch the birds, watch their pets.
They even watch goldfish right like HandaLorenz like he he would he would
get these insights from watching the animalkingdom and apply it to human nature.

(04:13):
And then they would later on aroundthat time, they call it anthropomorphosizing,
so they would just completely discredit itand say that the observer was just attributing
traits that were human onto an animal, and humans were something other than animal.
Well, naturalists pretty much, Iknow it's a generalization, but naturalists

(04:41):
just except that humans are animals,and when you're studying the psychology of a
group or a person, you woulddo it in the in the context that

(05:03):
we we're basically just animals that arewere social animals. Okay, So the
reason why I wanted to read this, I wanted to just talk about this
first place by Robert Ardrey before webegin this is there's this group belief.

(05:30):
The general consensus is that RFK Juniorhas no chance of winning. And I've
heard it from a few people whoreally like him, and they used to
think he's too good to be true, like he's incredible, right, and
so is his running mate Nicole Shanahan. It's like they're just it's great,

(05:53):
but it's kind of like a fairytale, like why throw away your vote?
So they're calling him a spoiler.And so there's this two party system
and you're only supposed to choose betweenthe Republicans and the Democrats. And Hillary
Clinton was recently on the Jimmy FallonShow saying, you know, Jimmy Fallon,
ask her, what do you thinkabout Americans who don't want just a

(06:16):
two party They want to vote forsomebody else? She says, Oh,
get over yourselves and everyone's clapping,Yeah, get over yourselves. Stop being
so selfish. That's what it is. That's what it is. And so
this mentality, if that's what itis, is really what the plague jeb

(06:36):
is all about. It's like,that's what it is, and you have
to adapt to it now. Andseeing what happened to my cat when he
was traumatized, you know, becausea lot of cats, they've actually done
studies where you could take a catand you could trans you could transport them
and the cat will make its wayback to you. Cats have a better

(06:56):
sense of smell than dogs do,but they have a mind of their own
and they're very good at adapting.But they also the brain can shift,
and once your brain shifts and you'vebeen traumatized, everything just goes haywire.
And so modern psychiatry has yet toacknowledge this, that abuse and trauma can

(07:24):
cause can cause brain damage. Basically, PTSD is brain damage. It's when
your brain just just changes. Everythingchanges, all of your neurology, the
neural transmitters, your responses, yourbeliefs, because your whole worldview has been
turned upside down. What you thoughtwas safe and what who you thought you

(07:47):
could trust all of a sudden ischanged. So part of the reason why
it's hard to accept these truths isbecause to do that, we're all going
to have to go through some kindof trauma. It's traumatizing, and I

(08:09):
just want to warn you about thatbefore I begin this book, because like
with the real Anthony Fauci, that'sthe experience that I think many of us
had as we read that, ifwe didn't already know that beforehand, And
that's why a lot of people don'teven want to read. It's like,
no, I don't you know.I just want to live in my happy
little bubble forever. And ever so, when when everybody agrees that, oh,

(08:35):
well, there's nothing you can doabout it, then it's easy to
not put yourself out there to dosomething different, or to go outside of
the group, which takes a lotof courage. It takes a lot of
courage to believe something that most peopledon't believe, or to go against the
group. All right. So inthis play, Jet, it's a story

(09:01):
about a black soldier from the Southwho goes off to war and he rescues
a few of his soldiers from death. He saves their lives and he gets
a he gets the purple star,you know, the purple heart, and

(09:22):
he gets the silver star. Sohe comes back with these metals and also
he comes back educated. Now,back then, black people weren't taught,
and they were specifically kept down sothat they would impose a threat to the
people in power. They wanted tokeep him down. Well, what happened

(09:43):
with Jeb is that he was soproud of himself that he learned a skill
and to be good at something.I don't know with what it does,
but when you're good at something,and this is gonna sound really petty,
but okay, what he was goodat was a keyboard, the you know,

(10:09):
like the old fashioned numerical keyboards.They used to hire people to be
for data entry jobs and they wouldhave to like be really accurate and fast,
and so he was like a savantwith that. He's like really good
and he just you know, peoplewere blown away by and they're like,

(10:31):
wow, he's like the best.Like they back then they called it a
computer, but you know, it'snot really a computer, but it was,
you know, in the nineteen forties. It was one of the first
computers. And he was just fascinatedwith computers because it's something that black people

(10:52):
weren't allowed to touch or deal with, and a lot of you know,
white people weren't exposed to this technologyeither. I remember I used to work
at RPS. It's like a packagesystem, like Roadway Package Service and it's
basically like you know, like amail truckloading thing where they would should packages

(11:13):
okay whatever. There's this thing calledit was like swipe way key and it
was like swack and so they justcalled the swackers and that's what we would
do. So we had to,you know, in order to be a
swacker, you had to be ableto operate this keyboard. And I loved

(11:35):
it too. I mean, it'slike it's weird. It's like your brain
and your finger become like connected tothis computer and it just it's it's fun
to be good at it, youknow, and it's just like you go
into this other world where it's justall you're doing is like typing in numbers,
and I mean, if you're nerdylike that, it's really fun.

(11:56):
And I really enjoyed it. Andso when I read this play, I
was like, yeah, I getit. I get it why he was
so fascinated. Okay, so theguy winds up on his way back home.
He has to travel from the northto go back south. So he's
he's in some bar and there's acash register there and he sees the numbers,

(12:20):
like the key the keypad he reachesover because he's like, oh I
miss I miss the feel of thenumbers and stuff. Well, they think
he's going to steal, and thenhe has to explain to him, no,
I just like I really love thesenumbers, and they just think he's
really weird. Okay, Well,before he leaves, they wind up getting

(12:41):
him drunk. Okay, I gottasay this too. He goes it's an
all black type of jazz club,and so he's sitting in there and they
keep feeding drinks. And he's fromhis South, so he's like this,
you know this uh country boy,And they're the city slickers that take advantage

(13:01):
of him his own his own people, and so they're like, well,
this is the way the world is, and this guy better learn. They
take his purple heart and his silvermetal and they send him on a train
back home. And he shows uphome. He doesn't have any money,
the money that the military gave andhe doesn't have his purple heart or anything.

(13:24):
He has to tell him that hegot really drunk and they put something
in his drink to get him extradrunk too. By the way, Well
the guy is like a really goodguy. He doesn't cheat, he doesn't
steal. He's you know, veryhe's very good. He just he loves
this keyboard and he loves he wantsto work in a job that only white

(13:46):
people were allowed to work in backthen. From the where the town he's
from, the keyboard guy who doesall of the digital inputting, like the
only keyboard in the town or whateveris he's like a drunk and he they
call him back then, you know, be like a white trash. So
there's somebody who doesn't have any moralsor anything like that, but because they're

(14:07):
white, they can get away withanything. Well, he thinks, like
this guy makes mistakes all the time, he shows up late. You know,
he's he's not trustworthy, and he'slike, I am like way better
at the keyboard. And plus heneeds he's going to retire soon too,
like he's just a couple more years. So he's he knows the boss that

(14:31):
employs this keyboard operator, and hegoes and he talks to him and he's
like, all I want to dois just I want to get married and
I want to work as a keyboardoperator and I would be better and you
wouldn't have to pay me as muchblah blah blah. And he's like trying
to you know, He's like,I should get his job. And it's
like, well, yeah, basedon everything you said, It's like yeah,

(14:52):
but that's just not how it works. It's like, you can't just
take a white person's job. Youcan't take a white job period, even
if nobody else is, you know, having it. And he doesn't understand.
He's like, well, no,things are going to change. They
should change. It's logical that theychange. Why would they not change?
Why would you Why would you keepsomebody who's irresponsible and who drinks on the

(15:16):
job and all this stuff, likewhy would you keep them? That doesn't
make any sense. And everybody aroundhim is looking at him like he's this
like naive country boy. Everybody aroundhim they're not willing to help. They're
like, yeah, what you sayis great, Like that would be nice
if there was equality, but you'vegot to get with it. This is
not the way it is now.The people of the town the black people

(15:41):
who didn't want a baby part inhelping them get a white person's job or
whatever. They remind me of thepeople who won't support our K Junior although
they like him. If you don'tlike them for whatever reason, that's understandable.
But if you think he's so great, but you just don't think he
has a chance, because like whowould they would never allow the powers that

(16:03):
be would never allow someone like OURFKJunior to end corruption. If that's how
you really feel, then that's thetype of people that have held Jeb down
and who And they do it outof fear basically, because when you've been

(16:27):
living in fear for so long,your brain changes and you think that some
things just aren't possible, like there'sno way you can escape. Why even
try? Well, the fact is, you know this book was, I
mean, this play was in thenineteen forties. But now it's like if
you don't hire somebody because they're black, it's like you're a racist. And

(16:48):
now it's the opposite. It's likeyou to be racist, it's like you
you are hurting yourself. And backthen it was like, well, you
know they would if you if youtry to help a black person you were
like somebody who is even worse thana black person, right, trying not

(17:15):
to say words I'm not supposed tosay. So things do change even though
nobody and that you know, likeit's and there's many situations will nobody will
help you. But what happens ischange is inevitable, especially when it's right,
When it's when they're when all logicsupports change. The emotions that keep

(17:41):
people from wanting to change, whichare fear and power and greed. Those
feelings come and go, But whatdoesn't come and go is truth and our
values and honor and most important RobertArdry talks about this a lot is a
sense of home of this belongs tome, This is where I belong and

(18:04):
this is my home. If youeliminate somebody's sense of belonging and they're autistic
and they have no friends, youyou basically disempower them to the point where
they're not going to stand up forthemselves. If they have nobody else standing
around them, why would they whywould they put their neck out? Also,

(18:29):
if they don't have a home,there's nothing to fight for, then
there's no there's not that territorial instinctthat supports you with courage of like,
this is the right thing to do. This is true because even in the
animal kingdom, if it's your home, the power that you get from this
is my home, I'm going toprotect it. Or this is my business,

(18:51):
I need to protect it. Well, these are my children, my
family. If it belongs to you, if it's your home, you protect
it, and others just instinctively willacquies to it because it's just that's that's
our instinct. It's a universal humaninstinct unless you're a complete psychopath and you
have no sense of well, I'mgoing to say morality. I'm going to

(19:15):
use the word morality in a contextthat animals have morality too. If it's
defined by right and wrong, andif this belongs to you, I don't
have a right to take that fromyou, and animals do have that.
If an animal owns a territory,it has to fight for it, and

(19:37):
it has to win without it can'tjust like go up and take it and
cheat. That just wouldn't work becauseother females would be observing all the time,
and they would they watch males competefor territory the same way that you
know, we watch athletes compete winsomething, and if you cheat then it's

(20:02):
like it doesn't matter. So it'slike there was you know, you don't
see like deers raping each other.The males will fight, and then whoever
establishes himself as the rightful king orlordship of the whatever he rules, he
gets all of the females. Now, this instinct of territory is what keeps

(20:27):
Jeb fighting for what he knows isright and fair, despite the fact that
in nineteen forty six in the South, what was right and fair was that
black people could not work a whiteman's job and they definitely couldn't date a
white girl. So all right,without further ado, thank you for that.

(20:51):
For listening to a long introduction,I wanted to just go over that
so to save you guys from outhow many people are gonna get this play.
They're not gonna make it, They'renot gonna I mean, it's like
it's kind of some of these oldplays that were so powerful when they came
out, now we look at themor like we don't even understand it because

(21:15):
it's like, yeah, that wouldn'tfly today. It's like Robert I'm sorry,
Rod Serling when his first movie wasabout corporate corruption, and now it's
like it wouldn't even translate. Backthen when it came out, like all
of Americans were glued to their televisionstalking about the next day and saying,
can you believe that this could happenwhere they bring in immigrants to take over

(21:40):
our jobs because it saves corporations money. Like that scared the hell out of
them. That was so scary tothem. And now it's like, well,
yeah, it's like they're gonna paywhoever they can the least amount to
do the same thing and more withoutany kind of four oh one K in

(22:00):
healthcare and all that stuff, Like, yeah, that's just how it is.
That's business. We just accept thatas But back then it was considered
like unethical and moral and it wasit was illegal too to do that.
Okay, So there's just a coupleof pages I wanted to read before I
began to be wuhan cover up,because I want to I want you guys

(22:26):
to hear this some of the talkand then think about have you ever had
a conversation like this with say ateacher when you were a kid, or
maybe like somebody an authority, ordefinitely a doctor if you ever talk,
you know, talk about the doctorsor talk to a doctor and with a

(22:51):
disrespectful tone, Oh, you justdon't do that. If you talk with
a disrespectful tone, if you wereblack in nineteen forty six and you questioned
and then you question a decision bya white person, you put yourself in
trouble and anybody who's friends with youwill be seen as a troublemaker as well.
So Jed turns out he comes backa war hero, very brave and

(23:14):
courageous. Everyone around him is like, you know, frightening, and they're
just like nervous people. And he'she calmly is able to figure out what
is going on. But yet hehas nobody around him. And so this
dialogue that I'm going to be readingreminds me of when you're sitting in a

(23:34):
room with a doctor and you're questioninghim about like things that happen to your
child or some of the medical mismanagement. If you ever, if you ever
even insinuate them that there is medicalmismanagement, they could destroy you and nobody

(23:55):
would even want to associate with you. So are we the the new black
people? It sure seems that way. So Okay, this is this is
jed by Robert Ardrey, and Jebis saying, let's see where should I
begin? Oh, okay, allright, here we go. So we

(24:25):
have Libby is his little brother,Julian is his friend, and well there's
Libby l I B b y that'shis girlfriend. And then l I B
E. I'm sure these these arelike liberty, right l I B E.

(24:48):
So I call him live live inLibby is kind of confusing. And
then there's Devour, who is thewhite guy, the employer of the keyboard
switch, and he's he's a he'sa pretty decent guy, but he just
lives in the time, and sohe's like he doesn't want to get into
trouble and it's like basically beyond hisscope of expertise, right, all of

(25:11):
this. He so, okay,here we go. White men want to
act disgraceful. That's their business.You keep your dignity, you hear he's
talking to his little brothers. Hislittle brother's like I'm gonna do this and
I'm gonna do that, and he'she's telling them like, don't act like

(25:34):
that. And Devour knocks on thedoor and he says, I want to
see Jeb Julian. His friend saysyes, sir, yes sir, and
Devour says Libby stay here. Libbyis the girlfriend. Jeb says, Libby
had nothing to do with this.Mister Gidney called me, Jeb if mister

(25:56):
Gidney said Libby was with me Devour, mister, and he didn't say she
was with you. I didn't knowshe was with you, Jeb, fighting
away the terror of getting mixed upagain. No, sir, yes sir,
that's what I meant, sir,Devour, you dan blackfool. Jeb.
I had to try that machine,sir. Okay, Oh this is

(26:21):
okay. So what happened was Jebwent into interview for this job and Devour
was willing to give it to him. But everybody else, the townspeople,
they were like, you cannot hirehim. You can't. If you hire
him, next thing, he's goingto take take away all the white girls.

(26:41):
The black guys are going to takeaway all the white girls. That's
kind of a thing. Then onceyou give him this, then they're going
to take all of that. Andso Jeb knew that mister Devour was a
decent guy, and and so hetrusted him. He thought that he would

(27:03):
just do what was fair. Butmister Devaour was influenced by the other people
around him who said that if youdo this, then your fate is going
to be worse than a black personbecause you're a black person supporter. So
mister Devaour was like, okay,well, I can't tell him no and
I can't tell him yes. Sowhat he did was he made him feel

(27:26):
so stupid and he made him doubthimself, in question his ability so that
he would just give up. Soduring the interview, he told him that
while he wants the job and hethinks he can do it, he's just

(27:48):
not as good as a white personbecause white people, by science are have
a higher brain and they don't giveinto their emotion they have they remember things
by their brain, not by theirheart, whereas black people remember things and
learned by their heart. And Jeb, because Jeb looked up to Devour,

(28:18):
he he thought he was He thoughthe was he thought it was fair and
that was right that he said that, but part of him just knew.
He's like, but I know thisguy, this other guy who is working
for you, I know him betterthan him, and he's like, Okay,
well, then he started asking abunch of questions, where's the where's

(28:40):
the number eight, where's the numberzero? And then he's like, where's
a zero row? And then he'slike, wait a zero row and he's
trying to remember. He's like,well, then Devaur said, well't spent
a long time. Maybe you thinkyou're better than you are. He's like,
if you just give me a keyboard, if you give me a keyboard,
I can show you how fast accurateI am. And he's like no,

(29:02):
no, no, no, becauseyou I'm not even going to entertain
this because you don't even know wherethe zero row is. Well, okay,
So what happens is Jeff doesn't getthe job and he goes home and
it's just bothering him and he's thinking. He's like, did he really say
that? Did I really do that? And where's the zero So he sneaks
into the office later that night becausehe's like, I don't know where the

(29:25):
zero row is. Well, thereis no zero row, and so he
realizes that he'd been tricked. Andthen after he realizes that he'd been tricked,
the guy that has that job seesthem. He comes in and he
knows that this guy wants his joband he's better than too, So he

(29:48):
he comes in all belligerent and hestarts hitting his girlfriend Libby, and then
Libby leaves and then Jeb pushes himdown and runs away. Then the guy
calls up mister Devaour and says thathe walked into the office and saw Jeb

(30:10):
fornicating with a white girl. That'sall he tells him. So then,
mister Devour, he knows Jeb,he knows how good he is, and
he knows the other guy is likea drunken, a liar and a racist,
and so he's like, he wantsLibby to be there. He wants
them all there to get their reaction. He doesn't know what's going on.

(30:33):
So this is we're I'm reading rightnow. I had to try that machine,
sir. I wanted you to havethat job. Do you understand,
Jeb? But I can do it, Sir. I tried. I can
do it, Devour. Of courseyou can do it, and Jeb's startled.
I wanted you to have that jobthe day you first asked me.
I respected you, I respected youruniform, I respected your medals and all

(30:59):
your rec Jeb, mister Devour,Sir, Devour. I still wanted you
to have that job this afternoon,I told mister Bards, But you black
damn fool. What did you haveto go breaking into mister Gidney's office for
Jeb getting angry? All respect,sir, but there ain't no zero row,
Devour, What Jeb you say?Where's that zero row? I can't

(31:21):
get the feel for it, Devour. He slumps into his chair. Oh
Jesus, Jeb, all respect sir, but you tricked me, You mix
me out. You do it onpurpose. You try and make me believe
I can't run that machine just onaccount of uncolored Devour. I did it
for your own good, Jeb,my own good. Where's the good convincing
of Manne's You will mind it?Devour the background of pain? Watch how

(31:45):
you talk? Jeb? I begpardon, But mister Devour, sir,
I gotta say it. I trustit you, sir, like I trust
all good white folks that's decent andChristian men. Devour rises unable to bear
Jeb's words. But mister Devour,sir, if that's how you wanted me
to have that job, mixing meup, convincing me how I'm just a
nigger, Devour harshly, who wasthe white girl you took to the mill?

(32:07):
Jeb stops in mid indictment and juststares Liddy, who's taking a chair,
and sits partly turned away, turnsslowly towards Devour and cannote more speak
than Jeb. Devour is suddenly quietvoiced. Mister Gidney says he went to
the office to check over the payrolland you were there with a white girl.
She ran away. He tried tocall the sheriff and you beat him

(32:29):
up, Jeb. Mister Devour,Liddy, it was me, mister Devour.
To Jeb, you said she wasn'tthere, Jeb, that lion drinking,
miserable old man Devour. You speakingabout a white man, Jeb.
What am I going to say IfI can't say he's lying, Liddy?
Mister Devour, Sir, Jeb wastrying to cover up for me, but

(32:50):
I was there, Sir. Itwas me, Sir Devour. I'm telling
you what mister Gidney told me inI'm sure he's telling everybody. Jeb that
awful line, old man Devour thundering. I can say that about mister Gibney.
You can, Jeb is in wordlessagony to Libby. Wasn't you or
wasn't it Libby? It was me? It was me? Ran away,

(33:13):
Jeb. He even slapped her,Sir, Devoured. Did you beat him
up? Jem? I gave hima little push, Sir. He was
trying to kill me. He brokea chair, trying to kill me,
Devour. He says you had awhite girl, Jeb. But it ain't
true, Devour. What's that gotto do with it? Now here?
Jeb stares, not comprehending. Whatdoes the truth have to do with it.

(33:35):
I'll drive you up to Baton Rouge. I'll buy you a royal ticket
to any place up north, Jeb. But I'm trying to tell you about
mister Gidney Devour. I'll buy ticketsfor both of you. Jeff. You
can't believe him, Sir. Youknow me, You know Libby Devour.
If I believed him, do youthink I'd be helping you get away?
Jem. I don't understand Devour,that dirty, old, ruling old man,

(33:59):
that damn unspeakable little trash. Doyou think I take his word against
yours? Jeb? But Devour,pack your things, both of you.
I'll get you as far of batonrouge, Jeb. But if you know
it is true, devour, Isaid, what's that got to do with
it? A white man's calling allover town telling all the white folks that
he caught you fornicating with a whitegirl. Jeb ducks his head at the

(34:22):
sickening word. What's it true orain't true? And nothing to do with
it, Jeb. But you cantell them, mister, do you think
I invented the South? So yeah, that's how it is, like you
you know, this is the wayit is. This is what you do,
this is what you don't do,and that's just the way it is.

(34:42):
But you know what, things change. We can see that very clearly
now after all this, after all, black people can get a job wherever
they want to. In fact,they are supposed to be giving special assistance
to navigate all of this racism.Which back then, if you were to
transport back in time and say,hey, you know what, in the

(35:02):
future, this is going to bethat way, Oh, how happy so
many people would have been. Theywould have stood up and fought a lot
harder, maybe not fought, butat least they would have had that sense
of courage that Jeb had all theway through this. Okay, if you
guys want to know how the playends, are you interested at all?

(35:25):
Or should I just not spoil itand just move on. I'm not gonna
spoil it. I hope you pickup Robert one of our Robert Ardury's books
or plays and read it. It'svery well written. He's got a great
understanding of human behavior. And sowhen he talks about like the little nuances

(35:46):
and what they say and what theydon't say, and the little movements they
make, Yeah, it's pretty coolbecause it's hard to just get this point
across with just words. A lotof this is what drama is. Drama
is like the whole experience of thissituation happened, and that situation happened,
and it's like one thing after another, and it all is because of basically,

(36:09):
well, you're not standing up foreach other, you're all betraying each
other, and it just you know, let that go on and definitely and
you get corruption. So okay,now let's move on to this book,
the Wuhan cover up and the terrifyingbio weapons arms race. Right, so

(36:35):
let's see, the book is dedicatedto one of your mom's He says China,
Chinese CUIs Okay. I dedicated thisbook to all the warrior uns who
inspire me each and every day,and to the millions of people who were
harmed or lost their lives during theCOVID crisis. Okay. And then the

(37:00):
introduction says that on my seventh birthday, January seventeenth, nineteen sixty one,
three days before my uncle John F. Kennedy took his oath of office as
United States President, his predecessor,President Dwight Eisenhower, appeared on national television
to deliver his farewell address, whichhistory increasingly regards as one of the most

(37:24):
important and prophetic speeches in American history. In the councils of government, he
says, Missus Dwight Eisenhower, wemust guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,
whether sought or unsought, by themilitary industrial complex. Potential for the
disastrous rise of misplaced power exists andwill persist. We must never let the

(37:49):
weight of this combination endanger our libertiesor democratic processes. President Eisenhower took special
care to include an expanded definition ofhis term military very industrial complex that would
include the top bureaucrats at the NationalInstitute of Health, the NIH. Eisenhower
warned that the federal government's rising medicaland technocracy technocracy it's a good word,

(38:15):
posed its own unique threats towards ourdemocracy and freedom. In this revolution,
scientific medical research, this is Eisenhowertalking, has become central. It also
becomes more formalized, complex, andcostly. A steadily increasing share is conducted
for by or at the direction ofthe federal government, partly because of the

(38:38):
huge costs involved, A government contractbecomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity.
The prospect of domination of the nation'sscholars by federal employment, project allocations and
the power of money is ever presentand is gravely to be regarded. We
must also be alert to the dangerthat public policy could itself become the captive

(39:00):
of scientific technological elite. So thereyou have the new white people, the
scientific technological elite. Eisenhower ended hisspeech with an admonition that echoes now and
rebuke as we emerge from the COVIDera that trampled the core principles that had,
for two hundred and four years maintainedAmerica as the global exemplar for democracy,

(39:24):
constitutional government, and personal freedom.It is the task of statesmanship to
mold, to balance, and integratethese and other forces new and old,
within the principles of our democratic system, ever aiming toward the supreme goals of
our free society. Okay, sofast forward to twenty twenty. We now

(39:49):
have evidence that COVID was man made. The man who discovered the virus for
HIV said so himself that this couldnot have occurred in nature. The virus
that causes HIV has been around formillions of years, and it's only recently

(40:14):
been killing people. And if yougo back and read the real Anthony Fauci,
there's a lot of evidence that clearlyshows that AIDS was an immune system

(40:36):
response to a virus that was causedby over antibiotic use. And the way
these gay men were treated by thedoctors and the medicine that they're given actually
was killing them. I don't knowif you guys, I mean, I

(40:58):
guess an easy thing to to reviewall of this will be to watch the
Dallas Buyers Club where all these peoplewere dying of AIDS, you know,
and then they started not using themedicine and started taking supplements, and then
the government started regulating the supplements andforbading them for treating people with AIDS with

(41:24):
vitamins and supplements even though they weregetting better. They didn't they didn't want
them being cured. They said,you can only use these certain drugs pharmaceuticals
that were being prescribed for anybody whohad who had HIV. And to this

(41:44):
day, I think most people justbelieve that HIV causes AIDS and it's not
like a complex immune response, becausesome people could contract HIV and not be
affected by it. And if you'reinterested in that, then there's other sources

(42:06):
that see That's that's traumatizing to readbecause then you're like, Okay, so
our government's killing us and they inventeda bio weapon to destroy their own people,
to experiment on us and to andto cause harm to so that they
could profit off of our illness.That's a really hard thing to believe.

(42:34):
I'm sure it's I mean, onceyou once you believe it, though,
then it's like, okay, wellwhat are you going to do about it?
Well, then it's just scary andit's like, well, let's just
not talk about it. So whatRFK Junior wants to do is to just
have complete transparency and to and toshow that that this was this was a

(42:57):
man made virus that was released maybea little prematurely, or maybe it was
released as inpendent. I think itwas released accidentally myself, but some people,
I mean, we know that itwas manufactured in Mupan. It didn't
come from a boat. It's gota mixture of HIV and malaria, so

(43:20):
it's like these two strains of ohand also influenza, so it's like these
three viruses came together. The manwho discovered HIV virus I can't understand right
now. Oh gosh, you haveto go look them up, and you
know what. A lot of ithas been censored too, But he basically

(43:43):
said that there's no way that thesethree viruses could come together and create it
COVID, like, that's just it. They've been around for millions of years
and they've never interacted that way.So this was created in a lab all
right, So it's creating a labour. Government's saying no, it's not.
Why are you saying that? Ifit's I mean, if they intentionally

(44:04):
released it on the public, thenwhat are we going to do about it?
Or can we do anything about it? Or is it like we're the
Blacks in nineteen forty six South andthat's just the way it is. And
you're going to get in trouble ifyou even say that this person, you
know, this guy who's a drinkeror he was lying, Like you can't

(44:24):
talk about that. They can talkabout it, like if it's another scientist,
they can say something. Maybe theywill get themselves in trouble too.
Well, now you're not just likean N word lover, but now you
would be a conspiracy theorist, whichis basically the same thing, you know,

(44:45):
like from that time period. Okay. So that was a little bit
of the introduction. Let's school overyou guys. No, I like to
skip a lot because this is notan audiobook. It's just a it's just

(45:07):
a reaction. Okay. So thenafter the introduction, the first chapter is
called the Soothsayers. So these wouldbe like a pair of Cassandra's Cassandra,

(45:27):
so, okay, a soothsayer isa psychic and a pair of Cassandra's well,
okay. So Cassandra was that thegirl in mythology, the daughter of
the King of Troy, who kepttelling her father, you cannot win this

(45:49):
war, okay. And they calledher crazy and said, well, we
are going to win this war,but she said no, you can't,
and so that they wanted her toshut up because they have a censor her
because she would bring down the moraleof the troops. So like a pair
of Cassandra's, Bill Gates and AnthonyFauci spent a decade prophesizing a worldwide coronavirus

(46:14):
pandemic with what, in retrospect seemseerie precision. Have you guys watched any
of those videos where they do They'relike, there's going to be a virus
Sunday and there's going to be anoutbreak and we gotta be ready for it,
And nobody really pay attention to thembecause they're like, Eh, all

(46:35):
right, you're just paranoid. I'mnot going to buy it. Like we're
doing fine preaching their doomsday jeremides onthe favored rostrums of the global elite,
the World Economic Forums Round Table andDavos, the United Nations Podium in New
York, the World Health Organizations Platformin Geneva, Silicon Valley stages, and

(46:57):
Form network television studios. The SavvySears waged their frantic crusade to rouse the
complacement public press and politicians to theimminent threat of calamity by contagion. Yeah,
they were seeing as sort of likesaintly saviors that had this prophetic knowledge.
And then finally when it came true, like everyone was like, oh,

(47:20):
they they're the ones who know everythingabout it because they're the only ones
who have been talking about it.So I remember, and I'm sorry to
say this, but I remember,like I had that kind of like do
wide, Like what are we gonnado? Batman look up to Anthony Fauci.
If Anthony Fauci said let's wear masks, I was like, yeah,
let's do that. Sorry, guys. And I thought the Gates too,

(47:44):
is like this like genius, likeassy guy that you know had all the
answers. Well, he has allthe answers because he created all the problems.
Okay. So in March twenty fifteen, Poison a Day beneath a Goliath

(48:05):
screen depicting the now familiar pincushion coronavirusORB, Gates warned his Ted Talk audience
that the defining catastrophe of our timewould be not missiles, but microbes.
Got you think that if these guysare so smart about microbes. Why didn't
they like teut oh, you know, what you eat and what's in our
soil is very important to our health. Like, if we deplete all of

(48:29):
the microbes in our soil, thenit's gonna be bad for us because we're
not going to have like a goodimmune system and we could develop allergies because
we don't have the beneficial bacteria thatour ancestors have had over the course of
all of human history. Because youknow, it's only this kind of agribusiness

(48:50):
has only been around for like onehundred years, where they just like take
away all the stuff in the soiland they're like, oh, this is
new science, and it's like gone, we're just going to grow everything in
water and it's hydroponic and it's likeclean and everything is like sterilized and stuff.
They have no understanding of how microbesinteract with the body to sustain us,

(49:16):
to sustain our our our our abilityto fight off viruses by our own
microbes. It's not just our cells. We're not just cells. We also
are we have bacteria in our bodythat help us defend ourselves against I guess

(49:37):
it would be like, you know, if you have a garden and you
want to get rid of dandelions,so you just like spray everything with pesticide.
Oh I got rid of We gotrid of everything, including the danda
lines. So now what now yougot like all these other things you got
to deal with. Now you're goingto be plagued with like a whole bunch

(49:57):
of freaking squash bug because there's nothingelse there to eat them or to compete
with them, and there's monocultures.And then so the agribusiness is all about
monocultures. It looks all like roboticand like superior because it's not like all
hodgepodgy, you know, where everything'sgrown together, it's all diverse. It's

(50:22):
like, no, everything's got tobe like a whole line of corn.
Well, what happens is like whenwhen when plants don't have to compete with
each other, with other species,they become weaker because, you know,
competition and friction that's what gives lifevigor and using that kind of adaptability,

(50:52):
you know, like when a planthas to adapt, when a plant also
has that symbiotic relationship with microgues thatprotect it, if you just destroy all
the microbes so you have nothing onthe planet defending itself from just like one
virus invasion. And we see thatall the time. It's like then,
like all the crops could be wipedout with just with just like one bug.

(51:16):
Ah. So what do they do. They just make more and more
pesticizes. They gotta change of pesticideevery year because the insects adapt to it.
And we're just eating this stuff up, like, oh, it doesn't
affect us because we're not a partof the animal kingdom. We're human.
Well we're human, but we're notrobot. I mean, it affects all
animals. I remember I probably saidthis in my other podcast, But like

(51:37):
when the bees were dying, whenpeople would just start realizing how the bees
are dying, you know, thiselike there's no bees here, bees on
the street, flopping around like fishesout of water. What's going on with
the bees? And I remember likeall these theories. Well one of the
theories was there's a magnetic pull shiftand all the bees are like getting confused

(51:58):
because it's some like missical like plateshifts and it's just like nonsense. But
because it sounds so scientific and gobblingbook, you're like you're like ooh,
doid, like looking at Fauci backthen, you know, like, wow,
you're so smart. It's like,no, it's just because of the

(52:19):
pesticides. But it kills the andso the salespeople for like you know,
the pesticides, they were told,will you drink it to show people that
it's safe. Well, yeah,it's not gonna kill you just one,
but over time eating it, likeit's like you can put off on you
know, I don't want mosquitos onyou put off all over you. Well,
if you do that every day,eat food that's spray with it,

(52:40):
it's like you're probably gonna get sickfrom it eventually. If it's why do
they why do they even do animalexperiments if it doesn't apply to humans.
I've been told this too by doctors, you know. I remember well I
said this before there were doctors,and I was like, well, you
know, the tumors could be growingbecause of toxins in the environment. Oh,

(53:07):
that hasn't been established at in humans. It's yeah, well we know
it happens in rats. The samemedicines. If you take if a rat
takes a medicine and it gets tumorsor it has reproductive issues, like,
why are you doing those experiments,if you say you can't apply it to
humans. That's what they say though, And like having those kinds of conversations

(53:28):
with doctors where they're just like theylook at you, it's like, Oh,
you're a troublemaker. Okay. Twoyears later, on January tenth,
twenty seventeen, ten days before DonaldTrump took the oath of office, just
twenty four months before COVID nineteen foundits US beachhead in Seattle, doctor Fauci,

(53:49):
speaking at a pandemic preparedness forum atGeorgetown University, predicted the precise timing
of the coronavirus pandemic. He said, there's no question that there will be
a challenge to the coming Trump administrationin the arena of infectious disease. Fauci
at it there will be a surpriseoutbreak. The thing we're extraordinarily confident about

(54:10):
is that we are going to seethis in the next few years. He
was right, it'd be almost exactlythree years later. Both men agreed that
the only strategy for averting this inevitablecalamity was an apollo to magnitude, private
and public investment and a new generationof a turnkey mRNA vaccine technology, which

(54:32):
they predicted was the only remedy thatcould save humanity from the coming plague.
Gates also was so certain of theimpending pandemic for which his mRNA vaccines would
be the only remedy, that hecommitted vassal organizations the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness
Innovations in Gabbying formerly the Global Alliancefor Vaccines and Immunization to raise hundreds of

(54:57):
millions of dollars for the development ofvaccine platform technologies enabling rapid deployment for as
yet unknown emerging infectious diseases designated asdisease X. The Gates Foundation pledged US
seven hundred and fifty million dollars tosett up Gavey in nineteen ninety nine as
a vehicle for diverting the foreign Abudgets of Western countries to promote vaccine uptake

(55:22):
and developing nations. The Bill andMelinda Gates Foundation afterward poured billions into Gavey's
vaccine program. Gates created CEPI atthe World Economic Forum meeting in Davils,
Switzerland, in twenty seventeen to encourageglobal collaboration in promoting and developing vaccines,

(55:42):
including new ones for emerging infectious diseaseslike disease x CEPI promised that its innovative
mRNA vaccine platform would allow it torapidly manufacture vaccines against many different types of
disease. No one seemed to thinkit's reckless to spend millions and grievously needed
public health dollars for inoculations against amalady that did not yet exist. It's

(56:06):
noteworthy that both Gates and Fauci hintedthat the anticipated pandemic might come from a
deliberately weaponized virus. A month afterdoctor Fauci's twenty seventeen Georgetown's speech, Gates
asked the annual conclave of Western intelligenceagency leaders at the Munich Security Conference to
imagine that somewhere in the world anew weapon exists or could emerge that is

(56:29):
capable of killing the loans of people, bringing economies to a standstill, in
casting nations into chaos. Gates scoldedattendees at a masked Chussett's Medical Society a
New England Journal of Medicine event Unablestwenty seven to twenty eighteen, saying if
it were a military weapon, theresponse would be to do everything possible to
develop countermeasures. A sense of urgencyis lacking, he said when it comes

(56:52):
to biological threats. In March twentynineteen, the Wuhan Institute of Royologies gain
a function and Impressario Shi Zengli akaBatwoman and her colleagues forecast is highly likely
that future stars or mers like coronavirusoutbreaks will originate from bats, and there

(57:15):
is an increased probability that this willoccur in China. The peculiar accuracy of
this prediction of an impending coronavirus pandemicwas especially impressive since in the recorded history
of mankind, coronaviruses had never causeda pandemic. While flu, particularly Amian
flu, could be both deadly andcontagious, the daily coronaviruses did not transmit

(57:38):
easily among humans, which is whythe two thousand and three SARS outbreak waned
so quickly, with only seven hundredand seventy four deaths among the world's six
point two billion people. Okay,so maybe they actually let's just say,
maybe they are psychics, Okay,and maybe they predicted that. Move on

(58:00):
to the next thing. What elsehere? He has a timeline at the
end of this chapter The Road toWuhan. Nineteen fourteen, European militaries explored
German warfare in World War One.Nineteen twenty five Geneva Protocol establishes no first

(58:21):
use of chemical or biological warfare.I didn't know that. In nineteen twenty
five there's Geneva. There's not supposedto be any chemical or bio so like
chemical agents that cause harm to peopleeither through their reproductive organs or that's actually

(58:46):
illegal. Nineteen thirty two Shiro issueopens a lab and Harbin, China as
ground zero of bioweapons research. Nineteenthirty three Germans test biowepon ability in Paris
Metro in London's Piccadilly Circus. Nineteenthirty six, Sharo Ehi forms Japan's notorious

(59:08):
Unit seven thirty one. Nineteen thirtyseven j Pan uses biological weapons against China.
Nineteen forty. Unit seven thirty onetest plague infested fleas unoccupied Chinese.
Oh my god, they released plagueinfested fleas like the black plague. That

(59:29):
should really be illegal, Like youshouldn't be what the freak like they're making
diseases like that should not be Whyis that legal? How come, you
can't grow marijuana in your backyard,but you could create freaking viruses that could
wipe out half of the population inthe world. Like, why would you

(59:52):
Why is this being allowed nineteen fortyone. Oh, because there's money,
you may allow money. You careateproblem. Oh, then you get the
vaccine. So I was like,well, if you get the vaccine,
then you can release it and thenyou'll be fine, and then everybody else
will have to buy it. Butthey didn't foresee like like in the laboratory,

(01:00:13):
Yeah, everything's controlled. You canhave a virus, and that virus
is the same, same virus,same exact fight. You inject the virus,
you treat the virus, but theydon't show like how the immune system
makes the virus adapt. This iswhat that Project Veritas video is all about,

(01:00:34):
where the guy from Fiser was sayingthat they were upset about how it
was evolving, that that they didn'tknow that the virus would evolve once it
was out of the laboratory and there'dbe a bunch of variants, and so
that's what that's why Pizer said,well, let's direct the evolution, and
if we can learn how the evolutionwill be directed, then we could make
more vaccines that are more effective vaccines, so you don't need boosters like every

(01:01:01):
three months or so, and eventhen even if you get a booster.
It's just like the flu. It'slike one person could have a strain of
flu that could be the dominant strain, but there's other strains too, and
once it gets into somebody who haslike a very weakened immune system, that's
dangerous because then the viruses gets strongstronger than it would And if it was

(01:01:23):
like in if it was a virusfrom like a kid, like a very
robust immune system, then that strainwould be easier because it was not given
the time to get stronger. Itwould be like you know, you nip
it in the bud. It's alot harder to get rid of dandelions when

(01:01:46):
they are just beginning to sprout andthere's not a lot of them. Then
if you have a whole field offreaking dan lines. Like so, I
mean, that's kind of the analogyI'm saying, Like what it's like with
a dead person. If there's adead and then they have a virus,
if you touch that dead person's body, you're going to get a very potent
strain of whatever that virus is comparedto if it was like a baby that

(01:02:09):
has a cold, and you caughtthe cold from a baby, you'd probably
be easier to get over because theimmune system has already did a lot of
that work for you. But thisis why we don't touch dead things because
or if if you are with theimmune compromised population with a weekend immune system,

(01:02:36):
the viruses can incubate and those mutationswould be more severe. And so
if you have like a population andeverybody in this population all has compromised immune
systems, and yeah, that wouldbe AIDS partly. There is some material

(01:02:57):
that I've read like why is itthat some people don't And they say it's
genetics. So if you have certaingenes that those people that have certain genes
get don't get AIDS, they couldbe infected with HIV, but they won't
be like they won't have the symptomsof it. I don't know if that's

(01:03:17):
true, but that's that's what allthe material says of why is it that
some people are in fact by butthen other people they could have it and
then years down the road, afterthey've treated their immune system and they change
their diets, and they do allthat, then they no longer even test

(01:03:38):
positive for HIV. So I thinkit's about time we start looking more closely
at our immune systems and stop lookingat us like we're machines, like in
a laboratory setting, because in naturethere's a lot more variables that happen.

(01:03:59):
And I know that there's a tendencyof like, well, let's just keep
it simple. We can't be likeall like whoa, it's this way in
that way and just be like flyby my hair, my pants, you
know, like they want no.This is like this could be repeated a
laboratory over and over and over again. But that's not how the world is.
The World's not a laboratory, okay. Nineteen forty for detrich breeds superbugs

(01:04:28):
to spread pathages, all that's nice? Who was allowing all this stuff to
happen? Nineteen forty one WBC Committeeconvenes the Determined Feasibility of Bioweapons. Nineteen
forty two, WBC Committee endorses biowarfareas a promising new line of weaponry.
Nineteen forty two. Muster gas experimentsbegin on us. Oh that's nice.

(01:04:50):
So all these servicemen who joined theArmed forces are like getting experiments on because
they signed a waiver saying, nowthe Army owns me, so you can
do what you want with me inmy offspring. Nineteen forty three. The
US Army biological warfare laboratories set upCampdetric Nineteen forty three, after our pledge

(01:05:14):
is no first use of biowarfare chemicalweapons. Nineteen forty five. First US
officials go to Japan to gather datafrom Unit seven thirty one. Nineteen forty
five, Operation paper Clip begins importingNazi scientists. Nineteen forty six. Ishi
is detained by US agents who retrievehidden data and specimens. Nineteen forty seven.

(01:05:35):
CIA takes control of Operation paper Clip. Nineteen forty seven Edgewood Arsenal begins
human experiments with tabin gas. Nineteenforty nine. Russia detonates their first atomic
bomb. Nineteen forty nine. CIAconducts biological infection testing through the Pentagon air
conditioning system. The CIA conducts biologicalfreak of these these people are freaking crazy

(01:06:03):
nineteen forty nine. December, theUS co ops Japanese war criminals to develop
biological weapons. Nineteen fifty MAYBE beginstesting effects of airborne vectorian civilians? What
how could they do that? Allright, Wow, did you guys know

(01:06:25):
that was happening? Okay, yeah, I shouldn't probably look it up,
but not just believe it right firsthand. And nineteen fifty maybe begins testing effects
of airborne vectia. Okay, I'mgonna read it. I I mean,
you know, you guys know howI trust rfks when you're you know,
completely, So I just assume thathe's done his research on it. But

(01:06:47):
wow, this is this is howhis writing is. It's like you have
to like read the footnotes and doyour research on the footnotes and it's just
and I did that with the lastbook, and it just it's very time
consuming and dense and genius really,but it's a huge eye opener. And
it's like, how do you getpeople to read this stuff? Because it's

(01:07:11):
a lot to take on. It'slike, I have you know, a
lot of us have a hard timepicking out a movie on Netflix. What
are we going to focus on?What do we you know, like I
don't want to commit to a dramamost of the time. And it's like,
all right, this is what's happeningnineteen fifty zinc cadmium sulfi gases released
over major US cities throughout the fifties. What nineteen fifties, I'm sorry,

(01:07:32):
laughs, Like, why did allthis happen? I never do I didn't
learn about any of this in school. Nineteen fifty two, six hundred and
sixty nine page UN report accuses USof violating Geneva protocol using biological weapons in
Korea and war. Nineteen fifty two, CIA begins Project m k Naomi to
stockpile and test biological and chemical agents. Nineteen fifty three, CIA's mind control

(01:07:57):
Project MK Ultra begins. Nineteen fiftythree, Frank Olsen is dosed with LSD
by CIA colleagues and dies from asuspicious fall through a hotel window. Nineteen
fifty four, Operation White Coat beginstesting deadly pathogens on seventh Day. Adventists
that's not nice. Nineteen fifty five, CIA releases unknown bacteria over Tampa Bay,

(01:08:19):
Florida. Nineteen fifty nine. Arsenalweaponized insects developed nineteen sixty. Pentagon
and CIA actively researched biological and chemicalweapons by the mid nineteen sixties. Nineteen
sixty one, Eisenhower warns against therise of a military industrial complex and public
policy captured by scientific technological elite.Nineteen sixty two, US begins using defolians,

(01:08:44):
including Asian orange, in Vietnam.Nineteen sixty two. Cuba charges CIA
with instigating Newcastle outbreak. Nineteen sixtyfour, Army and Navy deployed missiles with
biological warheads attached. Nineteen sixty five, CIA sprays bacteria into the air Washington.
Okay, so yeah, goes onand on and on till the nineteen

(01:09:08):
ninety one Desert storm. Bioweapons blowbackon US forces and desert storm forcing the
dangerous use of anthrax vaccine that likelycontributes greatly to the mysterious Gulf War illness
suffered by returning veterans. Okay,so I'm I'm gonna read this on my
own, But yeah, that's alot of stuff that happened. I nobody's

(01:09:30):
heard about, So this would justbe another little blurb in our human history.
Bioweapons and American values. General DouglasMacArthur said in nineteen fifty seven,
our government has kept us in aperpetual state of fear, kept us in
a continuous stampede of patriotic fervor witha cry of grave national emergency. Always

(01:09:51):
there has been some terrible evil athome or some monstrous foreign power that was
going to gobble us up if wedid not blindly, really rally behind it.
One of the focuses of this bookis the dark lines between America's military
intelligence intelligence agencies, particularly the CIA, and our public health bureaucracies. Following

(01:10:11):
the collapse of the Soviet Union,the military and intelligence apparatus erected the biosecurity
agenda as the new sphere tip ofAmerican foreign policy. These agencies definitely replaced
the fear of the Soviet monolith andcreeping communism with the fear of infectious disease,
which they have successful successfully stoked tojustify vast expansions in power, including

(01:10:35):
the aggressive assertion of America's imperial presenceabroad in the study erosion of constitutional rights
at home that accompanied the rise ofa surveillance and security state. The third
leg to this stool is America's medicaland scientific bureaucracy. The US bioweapons program
purchased at the confluence where the darkambitions of the industrial complex mingled with those

(01:10:59):
of the medical industrial complex, composedlargely of the federal scientific technocracy, the
pharmaceutical industry, and the armies ofacademic researchers who receive funding from those entities.
Jeez, if all this stuff hasbeen going on, I think that
since okay, so since the fiftiesthey were thrown around all this bacteria,

(01:11:20):
chemical warfare agents and stuff. Imean that would cause genetic damage over time.
And you know, people are talkingabout like, well, why are
all these children now getting cancer andautism and all this stuff. It could
be a lot of things we don'teven know. There's not even an open

(01:11:41):
discussion about it. It's like it'sjust genetic. It's just your parents have
faulty genes and it's genetic, andthat's it. It's like there should be
talk about, like what about allthis other stuff that's been happening for decades.
It may not affect the person,but it could affect their genes,
and when they pass on their genes, you know, could degenerate and after

(01:12:02):
a couple of after a couple ofgenerations, I mean, I don't know
why. It's like, Nope,it's just generic. That's it. That's
it. Don't even think that it'snot the food. That's there's I mean,
oh, it's just frustrated to evenI do feel like a black person
in the nineteen forties trying to havea conversation with whitey. It's like they

(01:12:25):
will not listen, and it's likenope, and this would be notibate bla
ba ba no no, no,I could say, you cannot say it.
I'm gonna I'm gonna have to putan end to this episode right now.
I Am going to read this onmy own fort a bit and then

(01:12:45):
get back to you guys when Ifind some interesting things that I could prove.
You know that our Cajuni You're like, oh, there was a case
and it was found in court that'sthis, this and this blah blah blah,
because otherwise it's like oh mk ultra, Like a lot of people don't
believe that that was real, Likethat's not real, Like you think you

(01:13:06):
believe in mind control, like yourconspiracy there is. Well, it actually
went to the Supreme Court and itwas and Sia was found guilty of performing
experiments on their own Americans and usingmind control. I mean, Sovie has
been doing that too on other people. At the same time. It's kind
of like a mind control race.There is this one movie with Toby McGuire,

(01:13:29):
the chess player. Oh jeez.Anyways, it's what I can't say
that for sure, but what Ithink that the movie was actually about and
what this guy was really what wasgoing on with this chess player, Bobby
Fisher. But I don't know,But so Bobby Fisher, I looked him

(01:13:49):
up after I watched a movie.I'm like, is this guy like was
he was he being mind controlled?And I'm pretty sure he was. And
I think the whole chess tournament waslike a game between the Soviets and the
United States, see like who hasa better technology? Because Bobby Fisher was

(01:14:10):
saying like he thought that there weresounds coming and his like his seat was
vibrating and a bunch of weird stuffthat made him sound crazy. But he
was a really smart guy. He'sa great chess player, and he's like,
no, there's something wrong about this. And he didn't want to he
didn't want to compete because he butback then they didn't know, Like he
was looking up by the light bulbsand he was like, they're listening to

(01:14:31):
me through the light bulbs, andyou know, back then they didn't nobody
knew about the technology now we know. Yeah, you could buy it on
Amazon. You could buy like listeningdevices on in light bulbs on Amazon twenty
five dollars. You can get apen that like it. So it was
like, who knows if they hadthe if they thought that technology could never
happen, that that was just likescience fiction fantasy, and now it's real.

(01:14:58):
Imagine what we don't see that's happeningnow that will be proven in twenty
five years. Thank you so muchfor being with me, Jess. Thank
you so much for being with mehere on Brainbow. I hope to see
you next time. Probably gonna goover the Wuhan cover up a bit more

(01:15:18):
because I only just cracked it open. I got, you know, just
like not even the second chapter intoit. So yeah, thanks for being
here with me today. I hopeto see you next time.
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