All Episodes

October 31, 2025 183 mins
[00:22:29] – Ghost Guns & State Tyranny
Knight spotlights the case of Brooklyn engineer Dexter Taylor, sentenced to ten years for 3D-printing guns he never used or sold. He calls it proof that New York punishes defiance, not danger, and argues the state’s real crime is independence from its control.

[00:30:04] – NRA vs. New York’s Financial Censorship
Knight covers the NRA’s First Amendment lawsuit against New York regulators who pressured banks to cut ties with gun groups. He says the case proves the state now weaponizes finance to silence dissent—“Operation Choke Point reborn.”

[00:39:56] – SNAP Cuts, Entitlement, & Marxist Looting
Knight reviews viral videos of people vowing to steal from stores after food-stamp cuts. He links the mindset to Marxist indoctrination, saying “1619 Project logic” now justifies theft and dependency as moral rebellion against capitalism.

[01:11:26] – When the Government Censored Frankenstein & Dracula
Knight ends with a historical exposé on Hollywood censorship—how films like Dracula and Frankenstein were once banned for being “too disturbing.” He uses it to illustrate the cycle of censorship, warning that today’s “fact-checking” regime is just the modern Inquisition.

[01:57:25] – Trump Orders Nuclear Testing
Knight exposes Trump’s unilateral order to resume nuclear weapons testing—overturning a 1992 moratorium without congressional approval. He calls it an ego-driven stunt that violates the Constitution and risks triggering global escalation.

[02:00:51] – SNAP Shutdown & Civil Unrest
Knight predicts riots as 41 million Americans lose food stamps during Trump’s shutdown. He argues that engineered dependency and welfare chaos are deliberate tools of state control under “America’s Great Reset.”

[02:25:41] – Epstein Fallout & The Royal Family
Knight contrasts the British monarchy’s expulsion of Prince Andrew with Trump’s ongoing defense of Epstein-linked elites. He predicts Trump will pardon Ghislaine Maxwell, calling it proof of bipartisan complicity in sex-trafficking cover-ups.


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a
revolutionary act.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
It's the David Knight Show. As a clock strikes thirteen,
it's Friday, the thirty first of October of Our Lord
twenty twenty five. Well, some of us think of this
day as Halloween and others think of it as Reformation Day.

(00:57):
So we'll be talking about some really scary things today.
And I'm not talking about what's on the movies. It's
scary where our society has gone. And we do have
a story about what censorship used to look like back
in the good old days, when the only thing you
had to worry about what was the way Hollywood was
pushing the envelope. Today, censorship is about life and death issues.

(01:21):
It's about the government controlling this. And so we're going
to take a look at the history, a little bit
of the history of film and a little bit of
the history of censorship as well, and we're going to
take a look at the Epstein effect. It's kind of interesting.
The international press is all excited about Prince Andrew, the
man formerly known as Prince It seems to be happening

(01:44):
a lot lately in the royal family. And what does
it tell us about Trump. Maybe the royal family, with
their long scandal history, maybe they have learned something that
Trump has yet to learn. Of course, we're going to
be talking about the nuclear testing that Trump wants to
bring back. Yeah, you talked about something to be afraid of.

(02:06):
To be afraid of that. Well, when we look at
what's happening on this October thirty first, remember the broadcast
by Arson Wells, the War of the World. Well, we
have the War of the world views that has got
a lot of people scared in the political arena. And
that's up in New York with Mom Danny, And every

(02:28):
time I look at that name, I have to think
twice about how to pronounce it. Anyway, there's interesting up
at peace on mess And it's really the way I've
been looking at this. I've been freaking out about this guy, like,
by all means, elect him and then watch his socialist
laboratory at work, the mad laboratory of the socialists. What

(02:52):
kind of monsters are going to come out of the
socialist lab Well, it'll be an example for everybody to
see why you don't want socialism. Well, we always hear
from these people, is that, well, socialism's just never been
done right. It's the way that we need to go.
It's just the implementation has never worked. Well. He's got
a lot of things that scare people to death. On

(03:13):
this Halloween. The GOP is absolutely horrified of this agenda
of his His policies are things like rent control. Wait,
haven't they already had that? Free public transportation. Public transportation
is so heavily subsidized in New York and other places,
at the expense of fees that they put on automobiles.

(03:34):
Let's just show people what's really pulled back the curtain
and show them what's really going on. Let's just make
it totally free, right, show them what's going on and
not economically viable. These policies will lead to further economic
hardship for New Yorkers. Although Mom Danny and his supporters
are tauting his proposals of rent control, more government housing,

(03:58):
free bus transportation, free child care, and higher taxes on
the wealthy, they say that's something new. They've actually been
a part of the progressive socialist staple in American cities
for more than half a century, especially in New York.
Not surprisingly, the results of progressive rule have been predictably bad.
And so you know I'm actually to combat him. The

(04:23):
GOP has been running all these scare stories about his
connections to George Soros. Okay, that's fine, that is something
to be concerned about. But I'm a lot more concerned
about the connections of Soros to the soy Boy Bessant,
our treasury secutor who might become the head of the
Federal Reserve. And you go back and look at his

(04:44):
connection with Soros. He was much more connected to Soros.
They were joined at the hip when they destroyed the
Bank of England. More than eight years ago, I wrote
that the socialists may talk of providing a better life
for people, but their real goal is control. That's this

(05:04):
author from Mesa's Institute. So to be a true believing
socialist once the socialist system is implemented all as well.
While the economists with whom I have associated for most
of my professional life, an economy is a means to
an end, that end being a better life for people. Socialists, however,
disagree it. So I wrote this eight years ago. A

(05:26):
socialist does not and will not see things this way.
The end of socialism is not a higher living standard
or even making life better for the poor. As much
as socialists will talk about the well being of poor people, know,
the end of socialism is socialism, or, to better put it,
the idea of socialism. Once socialism is established, as it

(05:50):
was in Venezuela or in the former USSR or Cuba,
the social ideal has been met, no matter what the
actual outcome might be. This is true with nearly all
government intervention into the economy, whether it is Trump's tariffs
or Obamacare, the terrifts have had a devastating impact on
the economy. No one in power cares about removing them.

(06:12):
And oh, by the way, you know, it's not again,
as I say over and over again, it's not even
the terriffs. It's not even increased taxes. It's not even
the form of taxation. It's the chaos and uncertainty and
the fact that Trump has seized control to do it unilaterally.
What many of them say is the unitary president. It's

(06:34):
just the president acting as Caesar as czar. I think
the no Kings thing would have been better to take
that approach, because it also carries with it the idea
of crossing the rubicon and the end of a republic,
and I think that is really what we're seeing here
and have been seeing for a long time. Interestingly enough,

(06:56):
the first person to take the title of Caesar was
William Bennett. In the context of the drug war, the
drug war has been used to jettison the Constitution and
destroy the rule of law from its inception. It's not
even an American idea. It's a United Nations agenda that
Richard Nixon invoked and copied verbatim. They gave him the list,

(07:20):
they told him which drugs to put in a schedule one, two, three, four,
and he signed the paper and turned in his homework.
And it's been a horrific thing ever since because it
has been directly it's a war on the Constitution. It's
been very effective in terms of detroying the Constitution. It's
not been effective at all in terms of stopping drugs,

(07:43):
has it. Can anybody out there argue that there's been
any practical solutions coming from the war on drugs? Drugs?
Absolutely not, But you can certainly see, without looking very hard,
how it has transformed our society and given a green
light to the government to do whatever it wishes. And
now Trump is going to use it to go to

(08:04):
actual war. It's insane anyway, The tariffs have had a
devastating impact on the economy, but nobody in power cares
about removing them. Likewise with the so called Affordable Health
Care Act Obamacare. To even publicly question Obamacare is to
be seen in some circles as being secular heresy. There's

(08:25):
no doubt that Mom Danny will implement a number of
failed measures when he becomes mayor of New York. The
outcomes are predictable, but that will not matter to his
political supporters or to his candidacy. That has taken on
the trappings of a cult. And we could say the
same thing about Trump. It has taken on the trappings
of a cult. And the results don't matter. The policies

(08:47):
don't matter, the actions don't matter. Don't pay attention to that.
If it's bad, it's because it's he got bad advice
and he doesn't know any better. If it's bad, it's
because other people did it. He didn't do it. There's
those Democrat governors who did it. Right. Here's another terrifying secret.
This is the and this guy looked at this guy's

(09:10):
Halloween costume. Can you pull up a picture of this?
The terrifying secret of long haired Jim Goer and a
mask who entered a women's locker room. Now, I think
what this guy did is scary. Okay, that's what he
looks like without his costume. Scroll down there and you'll
see what he looks like with his costume. There he is.
There's this Halloween costume, almost going as cousin Net but

(09:34):
not quite. But he's got the mask, and everybody was
supposed to wear sunglasses and a long curly wig, even
though the guy has no hair. Forty four year old
guy has been busted after allegedly disguised himself to secretly
record women inside the changing room showers. I thought this
was something that was an ideal of our schools. Right,

(09:56):
Let's put the boys and the girls showers in the
dressing rooms. And if you don't do that, Obama and
Biden will cut the money to your schools. This is
supposed to be a good thing. Had this guy get arrested, you.

Speaker 3 (10:09):
See, he's not mentally ill enough. He still realizes that
he's still a man.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
That's right. If he's doing it because he thought he
was a woman, because he's totally crazy, that would be okay.
He was arrested and The guy's name is Shakundi Tati.
To Shkundi Tati a good name for somebody from Maryland.
I guess I think this guy maybe is not from
here anyway, the.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
Good old Tati family stables of the Maryland scene.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
But that first name kind of gives it away. I
think Maryland police locate him in a Planet Fitness women's
locker room dressed as a female. Wait a minute, I
thought that was something that we aspired to for our
children in government schools.

Speaker 4 (10:52):
Dress as a female is also a really loose way
of describing it. This is dressed like some weird pervert
that is going to try to do something to you.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Investigator say, he disguised himself with along black wig, blackout shades,
and a mask before unsuspectingly entering the women's bathroom to
commit the crime. He's been charged with two peeping Tom
charges along with accounts of visual surveillance and prairian intent.
So here you go. This is his Halloween. He didn't

(11:21):
use the Halloween as as an alibi. It has happened
a little bit beforehand. This comes after a similar incident
in Virginia when a transgender registered sex offender was accused
of exposing himself and he's been charged with indecent exposure,
sex offender loitering near schools. Wait a minute, sex offender

(11:41):
loitering near schools. I thought we schools and libraries. I
thought that was what our goal was, right. How is this?

Speaker 4 (11:49):
Who would have thought the trans community is a bunch
of this arranged sex obsessed perverts.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
There's a kind of double think going on here. It's
kind of like an abortion right. A great thing and
it should be applauded and facilitated if you kill your
own child, But if somebody shoots a pregnant woman and
the baby dies, you're charged with murder. This is what's
really going on here.

Speaker 4 (12:14):
I guess one thing that you notice as time goes
on is that the Troons operate on tinker Bell logic.
You have to be sitting they do.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
So.

Speaker 4 (12:24):
There's a website that started out originally it's called Something Awful.
It was a forum board. It had its own large
gaggle of trainees, and they affectionately called themselves Troons. They disappeared.
That site basically doesn't exist in its former state. Troon
is now basically a word that slips by the sensors,

(12:45):
but people only use it to make fun of them.
So the people that use it effect it's been taken
from them.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
So it's not pejoradis.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Yeah, so troonses truon but they operate on tinker Bell logic.
You have to sit there and continually affirm them. I
do believe in true and so I do believe in truons.
And if you say you don't, they I'm dying.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
Well then you go back and look at what. Yeah,
when he's been charged with in decent exposure, sex offender,
loitering their schools, and indecent liberties with children, these are
all Democrat policies. This guy had the kind of the
crime I don't know. And then in the UK, the
guy that was the sex offender that got everybody so

(13:30):
upset that they attacked the hotels where these migrants are
being housed. Uh. Then people got a picture. I talked
about this several days ago, maybe last week. People got
pictures of him being released and he was confused and
he kept trying to go back into the prison, but
they insisted on releasing him and trying to put him
on a train, but he didn't get on. He was

(13:51):
later seen walking the streets of that town, and so
this is all embarrassing for the government. They said it
was all a mistake. Was it really? I mean, reminds
me of the underwear bomber.

Speaker 4 (14:01):
It definitely was a mistake.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
And he had the lawyer Haskell, who was on his
way back to the US and he was sitting there
in the waiting area with his wife and he saw
this guy dressed very nicely in a suit with a bomb,
and that got his attention and he's watching to see
what's going on. And the guy takes the bomb up
and the bomb's not doing anything at all and kind

(14:26):
of out of it. It looked like he was drugged
or drunk or something like that. And it was the
guy in the suit that was doing all the talking
to the person to get a ticket for him or
to get him boarded, and so he kept an eye
on this guy. He thought that's really suspicious. Haskell was
a lawyer and this is the guy that turned out
to be the underwear bomber. And Haskell came on our

(14:49):
show talked about it, and he wanted to testify at
the trial, and the defense council was going to have
him testify, but Basically, the Defense Council was using Haskell's
testimony to show that this is a government set up.
The underwear bomber was a government set up. He's going
to use his testimony to basically get a plea bargain

(15:11):
deeal for this guy, which is what he did. And
so Haskell was really upset that he wasn't able to testify.
He was primed and ready to go to shut down
this whole narrative because they immediately used the underwear bomber
to say that's it. You know, we're going to roll
out body scanners and do plat pat downs all the
rest of the stuff. And they did that right at
Christmas time, and they were ready, They had the machines manufactured,

(15:33):
warehoused ready to roll out, and then came along the
underwear bomber. A false flag if ever there was one. Anyway,
Haskell then left the country. He's living in another country
now because he's on their radar. I think it's probably
pretty wise. Actually, a convicted sex migrant offender was mistaken

(15:55):
lay freed from prison, though he wasn't Now to update
the story, he's been given five hundred pounds of public money.
So not only did they release him to his confusion
and the amazement of the people in that area. But
now they're giving him five hundred dollars. This is a
system that allowed a convicted sex offender to go free,

(16:19):
endangering the public and using taxpayer money now to fix
this and to cover up their problem. Officials say the
discretionary operational payment, that's what they call it. Discretionary operational
payment of five hundred pounds was paid to him immediately
before his removal in order to avoid costly delays following

(16:42):
his threats to obstruct or legally challenge deportation. Importantly, the
Home Office says this was not the formal Facilitated Returns scheme,
which can pay money to foreign offenders who leave without
fighting the decision. Instead, the system simply paid to make
their mistakes go away. It wasn't necessarily their mistake, and

(17:04):
we look at what is happening in the UK. The stamaged.

Speaker 4 (17:10):
I think it's incredibly telling that the UK government treats
these sex offending asylum seekers better than our government treats
us generally. They're like, oh, you're free to go. Here's
five hundred dollars. How many of you in the audience.
Think if you were involved with the government in some
kind of legal dispute, that's how it would turn out.
That's for whatever. You get a speeding ticket, they're not

(17:31):
going to be that kind. They're not going to patch
you on the back and be like, oh, it's all right, buddy.
You know what, here's five hundred bucks. Scamper along.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
Yeah, that's right. Well it's not just the sex offenders.
People and neighborhoods in the UK can't even go outside
without being attacked by these wonderful migrants that have come
in being stabbed. Here's one example of this. Yes, this
man who is stabbed there, he's a garbage collector and

(18:03):
every morning he would walk with his dog. While he
was walking with his dog, this guy came up to
him and stabbed him and killed him. And there's been
many such stabbings in the UK. As one person put
down on a meme, they said, diversity is our strength.
They show this guy with a very large knife threatening
somebody inside of a car with the windows rolled up.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
He's got the mal Ninjas special.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
Yeah, And other people commenting on it said, yeah, why
is it? If Islam is a religion of peace, why
is it that the Christmas markets need to have security
barriers and you don't need to have those outside of mosques.
Why is that, I wonder. Yeah, well, that's the reality
of what is happening there.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
It never ceases to amaze me how they they will
still deny reality up until a Muslim is stabbing you
in the chest.

Speaker 5 (18:59):
No.

Speaker 4 (19:00):
No, they're peaceful, they're loving, they're friendly. It's a religion
of peace. It just so happens. It's just random that
there's just a much higher percentage of Muslims that commit violence.
It's just a misunderstanding. It's a misinterpretation of the Koran
in all those passages about killing the infidel.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
I remember the case in the UK where this Muslim
began stabbing the sky and because he was I forget
what the altercation was, but it was a verbal altercation.
And the Muslim started sabbing this guy, but he had
like a butter knife, so he didn't kill the guy,
but he was stabbing him. But while he was on
the ground, he had two other Muslims come up and
start kicking the guy. They got away. The guy who

(19:39):
was stabbing him with a butter knife was apprehended and
the judge apologized to him for his mental.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
Anguish, previous mental anguish.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
While the other guy who said guy I was going
to jail.

Speaker 4 (19:52):
Yeah, I think the guy damaged the Koran or something
like that, said something about the Koran. Anyway, it's something
that should definitely be legal, but that Muslims object to.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
Once again, words are violence to these people, and they're
you know, any protected class. If you criticize that or
that accounts as assault to them essentially, that's right.

Speaker 6 (20:14):
Well, there's a.

Speaker 3 (20:15):
Great graph that shows how as the percentage of Muslims
in a country increases, the peacefulness of the Muslims goes down.
And that's a consistent pattern in every country throughout history.
They start out as a peaceful minority, and then as
they become more and more of a majority, they enforce

(20:35):
the Sharia stuff and violence.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Yeah, you have to have a certain critical mass before
a culture is enforced. My mind is that that is
their culture, and if just a couple of them come in,
one or two of them come in, they are going
to be in the culture that is already there. But
when they get a certain critical mass, then it's their
culture that will dominate.

Speaker 4 (20:58):
Yeah, you can see that things just as simple as
you know Chinatowns. Yeah, any large enough city basically has
a China town. You go there and it's nothing but
Asian shops, Asian stall, food stalls, Asian everything, and you
realize this is an entirely different world, you know, just
you know, you take one step the other way. This

(21:20):
is normal America. There's your standard fare in here. This
is a small version of wherever they came from. Whether
it's China, Japan, Korea, it is a small version. And
you really, you know, it's okay when it's the Asians,
you know, it's it's a little bit, oh, like this
is odd. You know, they've got their own section of
the city over here. That's just theirs. It's kind of odd.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
We got some great restaurants here.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
It's like, it's not a big deal. It leads to
problems still, but they're manageable. When it's a Muslim section,
it becomes a no go zone, it becomes a place
that burns itself down regularly.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
Yeah, that's right. Yeah. And of course when you look
at Minnesota where Omar is there, they don't have a
little China. They have little mogadishue, which is not.

Speaker 4 (22:08):
What you will black lock down always made me want
to visit Mogadishue.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Yeah, well we're still visiting Mogadishu. There's bombing runs that
are happening constantly. You probably didn't know that because the
press doesn't really report it. But yeah, that's our war machine.
That's what America exports. We don't export products anymore unless
they're bombs. Our products will be delivered via the air.

(22:32):
So New York, and what's going to happen with mom Danny. Well,
here's a cautionary tale. This is from Free Thought Project
Mattagoras child predators and murderers go free in New York.
As an innocent man is riding in jail for building
his own gun. He says, they call him ghost guns
so they can scare the normies out there. So yeah,

(22:52):
we'll talk about ghost guns here on Halloween. The only
thing spooky here is a state that punishes peaceful hobbyists
rather than child predators. Dexter Taylor is not a warlord.
He's not a gangster, a gun runner, a killer. He's
a software engineer from Brooklyn who likes to build things.
He liked building firearms at home, but not in New York.

(23:14):
You're not allowed to do that. For the so called
crime of constructing unregistered firearms in his apartment, Dexter Taylor
is now serving guess what the sentence is? Ten years
ten years in prison. He harmed no one, he sold nothing,
He committed no violence, he didn't fire the guns. Even

(23:35):
his real offense, daring to be self sufficient in a
state that demands dependency. That's exactly right. They call them
ghost guns because when you're out of real arguments, slapping
a scary name on a piece of plastic is a
great way to terrify the public into compliance. You know
you have assault rifles and ghost guns. Are you afraid yet?

(23:58):
In reality, Taylor has a collection of firearm parts, kits
and unfinished receivers victimless hardware. The Big brother finds intolerable,
so they came down on him like he was El
Chappa with a three D printer. New York Police Department's
Field Intelligence team, this is a go. How did they

(24:19):
find out that he even had it? Raided his apartment,
seizing parts for an AR fifteen style rifles, handguns, and ammunition,
No evidence that he ever used them, no sale records,
no threat, Just a guy with a three D printer.
A workbench and too much independence for the comfort of
the state. In May four, Taylor was convicted on eleven
counts related to criminal weapons possession. His sentence ten years.

(24:45):
That's longer than many violent criminals will ever see, including
child rapists. Even if you get these people again, when
you look at the system, it didn't start with a
cover up of the Epstein documents. For of course, it's
been going on for a long time. The statute of
limitations for child rape for pedophilia is one of the

(25:09):
shortest that's out there, typically only about three years. And
that is put in there by our corrupt, degenerate lawmakers,
put in and kept in there because they want to
cover up for this crime. He says. Let's put this
in perspective. In the same state, the locked tailor way
for a hobby, violent criminals and predators routinely walk free.

(25:34):
According to a Fox five New York investigation, New York
City judges release defendants charge the serious violent crimes eighty
five percent of the time. That includes assaults, rapes, and homicides.
So if somebody does an actual assault, they get released

(25:54):
from prison. But if they've got a so called assault
rifle that they didn't use against anybody going to go
to jail for a long time. In New York, one
man was released after sexually abusing five victims, including children.
Another one flung feces at a woman on the subway.
He got probation. Meanwhile, Dexter Taylor built a gun, not used,

(26:17):
not fired, not sold, and got a decade behind bars.
But hey, he didn't ask permission. And that's the entire point.
Remember the Mesa story. They said that socialism is not
about improving people's material lives as they promise, It's simply
about control. And that's what this is about as well.

(26:38):
This is New York, the state of New York, the
current state of the machine. The state doesn't punish danger,
The state punishes defiance. You can shatter someone's skull and
get supervised released, but build an ar at home and
suddenly you are the grim Reaper of Bushwick. Taylor's real

(26:58):
crime was not endangering society. It was building something that
state couldn't track, license or control. And I get to
say that my time in traffic court, because I've been
there many times. If I get into something with the police,
I take them to court and I think I don't
know what the situation is there. In Tennessee, I haven't

(27:19):
had to do that yet. But in Texas, you always
had the right to jury trial, and I would always
demand my jury trial and they would always cave. By
the way, if you're in Texas, that's a very effective strategy.
Whole firm on that jury trial. That's your negotiation. That's
the one thing they do not want to have to
go through. They don't want to have to go through
that hassle. So I was kind of disappointed because a

(27:40):
couple of these cases, I really wanted to talk to
the jury about it. But anyway, I wanted to get
a jury nullification some of this stuff. But when I
sit there and watch what's going on in the court,
I've seen over and over again people who were dead drunk,
and people had a long rap sheet of drunk driving convictions.

(28:02):
Let go by the judge because he's got a job.
You know. One of them was an airline pilot and
this alcoholic had a lawyer who told him, maybe you
give him a drunk driving conviction, that's the end of
his career. So the judge says, said, Okay, we'll let
this go. But then you see people who are driving
without a license, and they throw the book at him

(28:24):
because it's not about endangerment, it's about defiance. So the
law of the land is clear, said Taylor in court.
And I'd like to have my conviction reversed. And it
is because you've had and I forget the activist. Who
is the activist that was in Austin about the three
D guns.

Speaker 4 (28:43):
He took it all the way, Cody Wilson.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Yeah, thank you, thank you. He fought this and he
got the three D gun printing instructions or anything or
protected under the First Amendment. They said, that's free speech.
You can't ban that. And so this kind of stuff
is an attack on both the First Amendment and the
Second Amendment. Second Amendment does not end at the gun store.

(29:07):
It doesn't say shall not be infringed unless the parts
are shipped in a box and don't have a serial number.
But in states like New York that clause is treated
like a relic, something to be ignored if not openly marked.
As a matter of fact. One judge even told Taylor,
the guy who is going to be in jail for
ten years for three D printing of guns, He said,

(29:29):
the Second Amendment doesn't exist in my courtroom. Isn't that amazing?
I guess unlike everybody else in government, this judge did
not swear to pull the Constitution or to be committing
perjury when he did that, swearing in statement the lines
should chill anybody who is still clinging to the illusion

(29:50):
that constitutional protections apply equally across state lines. A self reliant,
well armed citizenry doesn't need the state, and that is
what truly terrifies the state. They do not want you independent.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
And let's remember, this is a judge that had to
swear to uphold the Constitution in order to get his office.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
That's right, that's right. So this is the.

Speaker 3 (30:15):
Judge committing perjury or admitting that when he committed perjury
when he swore to it.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Yes. Well, in another gun case, you have a gun
rights group, the National Rifle Association in RA as a
matter of fact, claiming that a lower court decision defies
a major First Amendment victory of the Supreme Court. This
is Caitlin Richardson. After scoring a major First Amendment victory

(30:41):
at the Supreme Court, the NRA's returning to the justices
with their request to reverse a lower court ruling that
they claim defies the Supreme Court's decision. The Supreme Court
allowed the NRA's First Amendment claim to move forward last year,
finding the group plausibly alleged former Superintendent of New York
again the New York Department of Financial Services, Maria Vulo,

(31:05):
violated their rights by pressuring banks and insurance companies to
not do business with them. You see yet again, not
just with the gun instructions and things going over the internet,
but also in terms of New York taking the lead
and demanding that banks punish people who sell guns and

(31:27):
who manufacture guns, or in this particular case, the NRA
that talks about guns. And so when you look at
the Bill rights, it kind of all hangs together. In
the words of Benjamin Franklin, the bill rights either hang
together or they hang separately. And when you look at

(31:48):
jurisdictions like New York that are dead set against human
rights and the Constitution, the Bill rights, you'll constantly see
them coming after multiple things, violating the First Amendment along
with the Second Amendment, or violating the first and second
along with the Fourth Amendment, due process violations, all the
rest of this stuff. So the Superintendent of the New

(32:10):
York Department of Financial Services. Her name is Vulo. The
Supreme Court, sorry, the Second Court of Appeals said in
July that she should not face legal consequences because her
actions did not violate a right that was clearly established
at the time. Well, it was clearly established in the

(32:31):
Constitution as well as in a Supreme Court decision. So
Second Court said that she could not be held responsible
for this, that she has immunity. The NRA disagrees and
is taking this back to the Supreme Court, saying, here
is a state official who is violating your ruling. So

(32:55):
the government official is arguing they cannot be held accountable,
claiming that their entitles them to qualified immunity. They should
not be held to a lower standard. They should be
held to a higher standard, because, as we're just saying,
in a previous situation with that judge, they have to
swear to uphold the Constitution as a condition of their office,
and there's a reason for that. The NRA's CEO says,

(33:19):
the nterra's filed a petition for writ assert requesting that
the Supreme Court let them know when that there can
be consequences for leveraging power to harm those who disagree
with their policies. The NRA initially sued Vulo in twenty eighteen.
What they said was a campaign of selective prosecution, backroom exhortations,
and public threats. This has long been the dream of

(33:43):
New York State. They wanted banks to It was Operation
choke Point during the Obama administration, and New York took
the lead and said, we're going to create a specific
code that will identify firearm retailers. Instead of just being
a retail store, You're going to be a firearm retailer.
That way we can get banks to deeplatform them. It's

(34:06):
just another tactic of Operation choke Point. Six decades ago,
this court held that the government entity threat of invoking
legal sanctions and other means of caution against a third
party to achieve the suppression of disfavored speech violates the
First Amendment, wrote Justice Sonya Soto Mayor in the court's

(34:27):
twenty twenty four opinion. So this is not even a
conservative judge. Today, the court reaffirms what it said. Then,
government officials cannot attempt to coerce private parties in order
to punish or suppress views that the government disfavors. So
the Second Circuit's ruling conflicts with the president precedent of
the Supreme Court and of other circuit courts on the

(34:50):
limits of qualified immunity, So we'll see what happens with
that again.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
Yeah, the entire argument is ridiculous that, oh, well, it
wasn't clearly established because the Supreme Court hadn't stayed on it.
The Supreme Court states what the Constitution says when they're
doing their job correctly. It's not that the Supreme Court
decides things. They just are supposed to uphold the Constitution. Oh,
I'm sorry, we hadn't clearly stated what the Constitution already

(35:16):
clearly states.

Speaker 2 (35:18):
I agree. The problem is why our system operates. It
is a far bigger infraction to disobey the Supreme Court
than it is to disobey the Constitution. And that's what
they're appealing to, is that bias within the judicial system.
And when you look at again the means versus the ends.

(35:40):
Kudos to Soto Mayor in terms of saying we're not
going to punish people for having of course she hasn't
said that in the context of this, but using the
government to punish disfavored speech, it'd be interesting to see
if she can go along, if they give it a hearing.
It'll be interesting to see how they look at this,

(36:01):
because so many times your personal preference or are prejudiced
or whatever. In other words, she's not going to like guns.
Will she allow this principle of the government not punishing
disfavored speech to stand when the government wants to punish
something that she does not favor guns? This is always

(36:23):
the issue. It's never really about the end, you know,
when you look at this, the means is always far
more important than the end. More than seven thousand truckers
are reportedly sidelined for English proficiency violations. Texas carriers say
the English language tests are hitting their bilingual fleets the hardest,
you know. Interestingly enough, in this article we see that

(36:47):
there are more non English speaking truck drivers getting licenses
in Texas than in California. Texas has got a bigger problem.

Speaker 3 (36:58):
I also don't think these people really understand what bilingual means.
If that's wiping out their bilingual fleet.

Speaker 4 (37:08):
Well, they didn't say what languages they speak. Maybe they speak,
you know, Spanish and German, it's just English they don't.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
Maybe they're spelling that bye as in goodbye.

Speaker 4 (37:16):
English, I can't drive there anymore.

Speaker 2 (37:19):
They mean by English truckers, bye, goodbye English. You're going
to speak what ever we want. And we can't read
the signs. We can't anyway, So only about ten percent
of them that are out there. More than seven thousand
commercial truck drivers have been placed out of service this year.
Secretary of Transportation Sean duffy Is announced announced US yesterday

(37:41):
on Twitter. Well, so I guess this is you can
look at this. Is the glass half full or half empty? Well,
in this case, is the glass ten percent empty or
is it whatever I mean it's or is it ninety
percent full? So seven thousand, but they've saying that it's
between sixty and seventy thousand that have been given these

(38:05):
non domiciled commercial driver's licenses. Why in the world would
you ever issue something like that. That's kind of an
oxymoron in of itself. But Texas is the largest, not California.
Since twenty fifteen, Texas has issued more than three point
two million commercial driver's licenses, including fifty two thousand to

(38:27):
non domiciled drivers. In twenty twenty four, Texas issued six
two hundred and sixty five CDLs to non citizens so
they've just about carved back what Texas did just last year.
Texas the Republican state. So as we look at the
horror that is coming up with the cutting off of

(38:50):
food stamps and the responses that people have all over
social media. This is a WND story collecting a lot
of different videos and statements that people have made on
social media about how they're going to go out and
just take whatever they want off of the store shelves
because now they're entitled to do it since they don't

(39:11):
get the government welfare payments. Of snap. Get out there
and ravish, said a woman who said she's out of
food stamps, and she shows off the stolen goods and
urges other people to steal at will, and also to
infiltrate churches for cash. You go to the churches, you
shake them down for cash, she says, and if they

(39:31):
don't pony up, then you film it and you put
it up on social media, because you know, these people
may not be able to afford food, but they certainly
have their phones, their iPhones, right, got my Obama phone.

Speaker 4 (39:44):
One thing to notice in this picture of the woman,
there's a car seat in the back of her car.
She has a child. This woman has a child, and
she is going to raise them in this mentality. Yeah,
there are generations that have grown up feeling this exact way,
and it's not slowing Down's right. This entitlement. Oh, I'm

(40:05):
entitled to this money. You give me the free money.
And if you don't, I'm going to start stealing. I'm
going to start looting. I'll burn down whatever I want.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
This is. This is somebody who's been thoroughly indoctrinated by
the New York Times sixteen nineteen project, because she explains
all this in the sense that, well, evil white men
have stolen everything, so we just need to steal it back.
That's the basic premise of what she's saying here. She said,
whether or not you take it, he says. She said,
everything out here is yours, whether or not you take it.

(40:35):
Call that excellent free will. I call that imminent domain.
You know what I'm saying. One thing I learned from
the white man is just take it. I don't give
an f who's already sitting there. I don't give an f.
If your land was already established, it's mine now I
want it. This is what we should be preaching in
the land to the efing masses. She said, So this

(40:56):
is why we did not play the clip, because it's
it takes too much time to beep out her language.

Speaker 4 (41:04):
I more like, it's not some intellectually stimulating conversation. You're
not going to get anything else out of it by
seeing the intellectual titan deliver her speech herself.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
That's right, it is. This is all pure sixteen nineteen
CRT stuff and racism. Act more like a white man.
Take it for yourself. You won't be worried about who
don't got it. You see what I'm saying, Get out
there and ravish, last, but not least, going to that
church and infiltrate. Don't be stupid. Get in there, ask
them for some rent money, Ask them for some help.

(41:38):
You've been tithing. Say your lights is off, you don't
you need a stipend, You need some food. Go to church.
If the pastor don't help you out blast them on
social media. Quickest way to f up the church's money
is to ask for some Let's man together and take
these mother effing markets down, as you said, one man,

(42:00):
and urge people to steal irrespective of their financial aid
being cut off. He said, in light of the government
cutting snap benefits November. First, I want to remind everybody
that stealing is never wrong. Stealing from multi billion dollar
businesses is always okay, if not encouraged. Five finger discount,
that's what he's pushing. Well. At the same time that

(42:23):
the again I don't support welfare. I think it's harmful
for the recipients in long term, but there's always a
way to cut these things back and to offer some
kind of assistance to the people who want it. And
understand that, you know, these systems that have been ingrained

(42:44):
into it's just like the global system and the distributed
supply chains, which I think are an unhealthy thing for
America and it needs to be changed. But you don't
go in and just rip that out all at once.
I mean, that's like trying to take off a heavily
embroidered logo and you're just going to rip it out
because the fabric that it was embroidered on is really

(43:06):
no longer there. And so it's going to be done
carefully and gradually, and there's not any sense of that
within this administration especially, and when you look at what
is happening with the airlines as we start to come
to the busiest travel day of the year. A lot
of airlines now are feeding the air traffic controllers. This

(43:26):
is just not a one off. They're talking about the
fact that these people are really struggling without having a paycheck.
The last time we had a long shutdown government shutdown,
the lasted about a month. It was the air traffic
controllers that brought the government to its knees because they
started calling in sick because they weren't getting paid. So
now you've got United Airlines, you've got Delta Airlines, and

(43:48):
many others are donating meals for air traffic controllers and
other federal workers whose pay is delayed. We appreciate the
hard working federal employees who are keeping the air travels
system running, said United. They said that they are feeding
workers at the airlines hubs across the country, including Chicago, Denver, Houston, LA, Newark,

(44:09):
San Francisco, and DC. Delta Airlines also confirmed that it
has arranged for limited number of meals for transportation sector workers.
That's the good news. The bad news is it's airline food.
These air traffic controllers may be under some other kind
of distress soon very soon. If they then want's to

(44:30):
deal with that, you take the take the home here.
I've got to get run to the restroom here. This day,
this is day one. Day two gets harder. Day three
is harder than that. As expenses continue to roll in,
said They said that the controllers are missing their checks.
Air traffic controllers have to have one hundred percent of

(44:52):
focus one hundred percent of the time, said the National
Air Traffic Controllers Association president. I'm watching air traffic controllers
going to work. I'm getting stories are worried about paying
for medicine for their daughter. I got a message from
a controller and said, I'm running out of money. If
she doesn't get the medicine she needs, she dies. That's
the end. And this, by the way, folks, is what

(45:15):
happens when the government creates dependency for the purpose of control.
The government is not in the business, should not be
in the business of charity. But don't even mention charity
in terms of pushing back against these government programs. I
learned that the hard way. Well, I tell you, it
was just amazing to see firsthand the Democrat audience that

(45:37):
I was talking to about when Hillary Care was being
run out to a person, they flipped out when I
use the word charity because they believe that they are entitled,
and in that regard, they're no different from that woman
who was just putting up that video. She believes she's entitled,
she's sold. She's grabbed a hold of a false narrative

(46:01):
from the New York Times to justify her doing whatever
she wishes. And there's a lot of people like that.

Speaker 4 (46:08):
And there's also the fact that's a post hawk defense
of behavior she was going to engage in regardless.

Speaker 2 (46:15):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (46:16):
This is not oh, well, I've absorbed all this knowledge
and now I'm going to put it into practice. Stealing
from Walmart is truly Marxist praxis. This is, oh, I'm
stealing from Walmart, and someone is telling me that I
should do that because it's good because it's part of
Marxist theory. Okay, well, sure, I'll use that justification. The
stealing from Walmart was already happening.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
It was going to happen one way or the other.
That's right, Penny. That reminds me of a pastor told
the joke. I don't even know if it's true. He's
a new convert guy who was had been a convict,
and he said you know that that passage here said,
I think they got the comment in the wrong place.
Says let him have stole steal no more, but work

(46:59):
with his hands, he says, I think it should say
let him who stole steal no more, work with your hands.
Penny shortages leaving retailers struggling to make change. This is
a good example of how the means and the kind
of means that Trump is using. Just basically doing it

(47:20):
all at once, very quickly, creates chaos and expense for people,
harms people. There's a way to get rid of the pennies,
and a lot of people don't like the pennies. As
a matter of fact, the National Association Convenience Stores has
been asking for pennies to be removed for quite some time,
but because it was done very quickly, very abruptly, a

(47:40):
lot of stores are having an issue with this, as
well as banks. This is Trump's decision to stop producing
a penny earlier this year is leaving merchants short of
the one cent coin and struggling to give customers exact change.
Unable to order fresh supplies of pennies. Banks are now
rationing them. Pennsylvania based grocery chain Giant Eagle is holding

(48:03):
a one day event this weekend where you can exchange
your pennies for gift cards worth double the value of
the coins. Benjamin franklinuld be so excited because in his day,
we had not suffered the kind of devaluation of the
currency that our government has done since the creation of
the Federal Reserve. Sheets, a convenience store chain is also

(48:25):
running a promotion offering a free soda to customers who
bring in one hundred pennies. Chief operations officer, So, you're
not a.

Speaker 4 (48:33):
Free soda, you're paying a dollar soda.

Speaker 2 (48:37):
Which is usually pay anyway.

Speaker 4 (48:38):
Right, Are people really getting suckered by this? It's a
free soda if you just give us one hundred pennies
one hundred penny, mea one hundred penny paying a dollar
for the soda.

Speaker 2 (48:51):
If you go one of those pieces of paper, I'll
give you a free soda exchange for that. So the
chief operations officer to bank said he's had this have
enough pennies on hand for his customers since August. So
we got an email announcement from the Federal Reserve that
penny shipments would be curtailed. Little did we know those
shipments were already over for us. He said. The eighteen

(49:13):
hundred dollars in pennies that the bank had were gone
in two weeks. His branches are keeping small amounts of
pennies for customers who need to cash checks, but that's it.
The lack of pennies has also become a legal minefield
for stores and retailers. In some states and cities, it
is illegal to round up a transaction to the nearest
nickel or dime because doing so would run a foul

(49:35):
of laws that are supposed to place customers, as well
as debit and credit card customers, on equal playing field
when it comes to item costs. So this is one
of the things I really did, and some of you
talked about at the time. Believe that the purpose of
this is to wean people off of cash, and one
of the ways that they would do that would be

(49:58):
that stores would round up more expensive if you paid
by cash. But actually this is going the other way around.
The issue though, is that if it's illegal to charge
people different amounts when they are paying cash or debit
or credit card, depending on how the law is written,
that might backfire and go the other way as well,

(50:20):
so we'll see to avoid lawsuits, retailers are rounding down
with two or three cents. May not seem like much,
but that adds up over tens of thousands of transactions.
A spokesperson for Quick Trip, a Midwest convenience store chain,
said it had been rounding down every cash transaction to
the nearest nickel and that is expected to cost the

(50:44):
company roughly three million dollars this year. See. This is
another one of these deals where Trump just assumes that
the companies, like with the tariffs, are going to absorb
the costs. Well they will they if they do absorb
all the cost they will go out of business. The
National Association and Convenience Store says, well, we've been advocating

(51:06):
the abolition of the penny for thirty years, but this
is not the way we wanted it to go, you see.
And that's the issue with Trump. You know, whatever you
want to think about in terms of tariffs and other
taxes and so forth, the way that he is doing
it is where the devil is.

Speaker 4 (51:25):
I also got to say, it amuses me to summon
to the fact that they said, we've been arguing for
this for thirty years, like there's just been this group
of warriors out there crusading for the destruction of the
penny for thirty years now, and it's just no one's
paid any attention. It just happens one day overnight and
they're like, this isn't what we wanted.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
So the penny, which goes back to when they met,
was first established in seventeen ninety two, now costs more
to manufacture than the coin is worth. One penny costs
about three point seven cents to manufacture and distribute. Why
is that is that because of GOV created inflation. You know,
it's interesting because nowhere in this CBS story do they

(52:05):
mention the evaluation of the currency. The Treasury Department said
in May that it was placing its last order for
the copper zinc plan chets that's the blank metal discs
that are then minted into coins. In June the last
pennies were minted, and by August those pennies were distributed
to banks and armored vehicle service companies. Despite looking like copper,

(52:29):
the pennies are mostly zinc. They have a thin veneer
of copper. It's just like we were talking about the
other day, Our government is completely Hamiltonian with a thin
veneer of Jefferson on there to make you think that
it's about liberty, but it's not. The problem with pennies
is that they are issued and given has changed and

(52:50):
they are rarely recirculated back into the economy. Americans store
their pennies and jars or use them for decoration. This
requires the Mint to produce significant sums of pennies each year.
As a matter of fact, I saw this thing on
YouTube where this guy who had it's been a lot
of money doing really crazy novel things in this house

(53:10):
that he built, and in one room he called it
penny Lane, and he had pennies that were they had
like a layer of you know, clear coating on POxy. Yeah,
POxy something, yeah, and uh, but you know, pennies are
different colors depending on how they've been in circulation or whatever.
And so they used that to create this this image

(53:31):
all the way across the floor and put it all
under a POxy and he called that room the Penny
Lane Room. Be worth a lot.

Speaker 4 (53:39):
Somedays, the Federal Reserve is coming to his house. They're
going to rip up his floorboards.

Speaker 2 (53:44):
The US isn't the first country to transition away from
small denomination coins or to discontinue coins. But in all
of these cases, the government wound down the use of
their out of date coins over a period of often years.
This is what it is about Trump. It's capricious, it's arbitrary,
and it's immediate. You got to do it right now.

(54:05):
That creates chaos. It doesn't matter whether you're talking about
tax policy or whether you're talking about coins or whatever.
It is everything that he does is designed to It's
all done arbitrarily on his whim, and it is very destructive.
And we're going to talk about his now, his demands
about nuclear testing. That's incredible. I mean, people are going

(54:26):
to think that we called the Boomer generation was called
the boomers because of the nuclear test now I guess.
But anyway, this one particular Boomer is going to start
going boom real soon. Canada announced, for example, that it
would eliminate its one cent coin in twenty twelve, transitioning
away from the one cent cash transactions starting in twenty thirteen,

(54:48):
but they're still redeeming and recycling one cent coins. A
decade later, Trump removed the penny from commerce abruptly, without
any action by Congress or any regulatory guidance for banks, retailers,
or states. The retail and banking industries rarely allies and
Washington on policy matters related to a point of sale,

(55:09):
are now demanding both of them that Washington issue guidance
or pass a off fixing the issues that are arising
due to the shortage. It's kind of like farmers and
ranchers who have been hurt by these capricious, arbitrary, instantaneous
tariff policies that are constantly changing. We don't want the

(55:29):
penny back. We just want some sort of clarity from
the federal government. That would be Trump on what to do,
as this issue is only going to get worse, said
the National Association of Convenience Stores. President chaos yet again,
caesar and dictator, and as always about the means versus

(55:50):
the end. Even if you have a good goal at
the end, if you have bad means, it's going to
negate that good goal. Look at this, the MAGA people
need to look at all of these powers that are
being usurped by Trump. They need to understand that these
are powers that Trump is getting to Democrat presidents that

(56:13):
are coming on besides him. He is a Democrat, but
all these powers that Trump is getting are being handed
on a silver platter to the next Democrat president. I
don't want that. And so even when I agree with
him on the stated goal, the way that he's doing
this is just one hundred percent wrong. Meta stock has

(56:37):
now plummeted as investors are horrified how much Zuckerberg is
spending on AI. The total dollars spent is kind of
what hangs us up a little bit, said one of them.
And so after the company's earnings call on Wednesday yesterday,
their stock dropped significantly. He said, before they were saying

(56:57):
that Meta was estimated it was going to be spending
between sixty six and seventy two billion dollars on AI,
which was already a phenomenal amount, and then they came
back and said, well, it's going to be more like
seventy to seventy two billion on this year on AI.
So the question is is Zuckerberg a visionary or is
he blind to the flaws of AI and the fact

(57:20):
that it's not producing any money. You know, you've got
a lot of people out there who are saying, you know,
show me the money, Jerry, and they're not saying the money.
Show up on AI. This is exactly the same thing
that happened with the dot com bust. And this is
why I said from the beginning, this is the way
that it was going to go. And now you've got
Sam Altman, you've got Bill Gates, many of them who

(57:43):
are involved in the AI industry, so that the expectations
and the hype and the narrative have gotten ahead of
the reality and have fueled a financial bubble. But it's
going to pop, just like it did with the Internet bubble.
Meta shares then slid by more than eleven after they
talked about their massive investment coming up in AI.

Speaker 5 (58:06):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (58:06):
The drop comes in Spider Meta's revenues exceeding Wall Streets estimates.
In other words, out of control AI spending is starting
to rattle investors. And why is this important? Well, because
even if you don't own Meta stock, Facebook stock, then
this whole stock market is built on the AI bubble

(58:29):
and when that bursts, as one person said the other day,
you know, Sam Altman or AI has the entire global
economy in their hands, and once they wants this bubble burst,
you're going to see a massive global recession or depression
based on the expectations in this all.

Speaker 4 (58:48):
This the economy is always a house of cars. This
is generalule. All it takes at any given time is
for one person to go, I think I got to
get out of this, and that can start this chain
reaction of oh that guy sees something, what does he know?
I better follow suit. That's all it takes for at
any given time, any single one of the industries. It

(59:08):
seems like two collapse because it's all propped up by
Wall Street nonsense.

Speaker 2 (59:12):
It's the fear of missing out right, so you know
everybody else's good. I don't want to be the last
guy to get into it, and then.

Speaker 4 (59:18):
You're sure, I don't want to be the last guy
to get out of.

Speaker 2 (59:21):
It, and so that you know, getting out of it.
It's even more so that way. And as Bill Gates
is talking about the AI bubble yet again, somebody asked him,
They said, is this going to be like a tulip bubble?
And he says, well, no, you know, the tulip bubble
that wasn't anything of any real value. He said, this
is more like the dot com thing. Because even though
the Internet was very valuable and it changed our society

(59:44):
and so forth, very valuable from a financial standpoint. He
thinks that that same thing holds true of AI. But
the issue is that people got way ahead. The expectations
got way ahead of the reality. As a matter of fact,
this is the good thing. Bill Gay says, within ten years,
AI will replace many doctors and teachers. Humans won't be

(01:00:06):
needed for most things. And I mentioned this yesterday in
light of his pulling back from climate alarmism. I look
at this prediction. Folks, don't be afraid of this. Don't
be afraid like the teenagers who think the world is
going to end because of CO two. The world is
not going to end because of AI. If they start

(01:00:27):
moving in this direction, I think it'll be a healthy
thing for people to get themselves weaned off of large
corporations as the daddy warbucks that are going to take
care of them through life. I think it's just as
dangerous to be dependent on large corporations as it is
to be dependent on the government. And we've got a
lot of people who I know in my generation, well

(01:00:49):
my parents' generation. You found a large company could work for,
like say IBM or something, you expected that you could
work there your entire life. And what I saw is
an engineer. IBM had created this idea that they don't
do layoffs. But I knew people whose fathers worked for IBM,

(01:01:10):
and they worked for IBM for a short period of time,
and they saw what IBM was really doing. IBM would
not officially light people off, but they would have at
a particular location, say in Fishkill, New York, was one
I knew about. They had a particular operation that was there,
and they decided that they were going to have a

(01:01:32):
reduction in workforce. The way they would do that, rather
than laying people off and getting a reputation for firing people,
what they would do is move that entire operation to
another state. They would move it to Texas or something,
and they would tell the people that they wanted to keep,
we'll pay for your move, but we will if we

(01:01:54):
don't want you to come, you can come along, but
you'll have to pay for it all yourself. And in
most cases the people whilch just voluntarily leave and do
something else. They were willing to go through that extra
expense just to keep the reputation that they don't fire people.
So this is where we are with this. And I
think that you know when you see Bill Gates making

(01:02:16):
these statements and other people saying all the jobs are
going to be taken by AI. Well, maybe they will
turn over their business to AI, and that'll be an
opportunity for other people, and it'll be an opportunity for
us to get away from some of these people. Who's
going to buy their product anyway, Ed Millman said, when
power is worse than we thought, so we're going to

(01:02:36):
need to have more subsidies so we can buy even
more of it. And this shouldn't surprise us because this
is always what the government does. Whenever the government has
a big failure, then they say, well, the problem is
is that we just didn't have enough people. We need
to actually expand that department. I'll give you a good example.
Even though nine to eleven was an inside job, the

(01:02:57):
narrative was that they failed to find these guys who
took down three buildings in New York with two planes.
And so we need to have a bigger federal law
enforcement footprint. We've got to have Department of Homeland Security,
we have to have consolidation, centralization. So the government's not
the problem. We just need bigger government in order to

(01:03:19):
solve this problem. And so this is what's happening with air.
So they are not turning back from their net zero goals,
and it's going to be a little bit harder for
them now that Bill Gates is turned back from that.
So this is still scary and still stupid, but they're
still going down the same path as Daily Skeptic says,

(01:03:42):
how can such a plan possibly fail when you have
trusted messengers still claiming that wind is nine times cheaper
than gas and it isn't all Hope is surely not
lost when The Guardian can have a recent story headlined
wind power has cut one hundred four billion pounds from
UK energy costs since twenty ten, says a study. Well,

(01:04:06):
this veteran Guardian headbanger reporter is reporting on a statistical
modeling from UCL which is an academic organization that has
hardly covered itself with mathematical glory during the COVID pandemic.
In other words, it's another one of these places like

(01:04:27):
the Imperial College of London that should have blown its
reputation forever, but unfortunately it didn't. In the real world,
of course, this further dismal downplaying of wind power is
a nail in the net zero Coffin. It means that
much higher electricity bills for UK consumers, further and d
industrialization and the loss of currently well paid jobs, increasing

(01:04:49):
likelihood of blackouts and runaway public finances. And this has
been admitted by the UK government. They came out and
said we've got updated MO modeling of the predicted efficiency
of wind turbines and now we are reducing that by
more than a quarter. So it's still not telling you

(01:05:10):
the truth. By a long means, by twenty thirty the
hated gas turbines will be running down with no immediate
prospect of replacement. Well, nuclear will still be in short supply.
If your ultimate political aim is command and control, again,
this is what the socialists do. It's not about improving
people's lives, it's not about improving the environment so called.

(01:05:32):
It's about command and control. And if that is your aim,
then what are a few blackouts when an elite ordered
socialist nirvana is the ultimate prize. And then they get
to the science of it. An Oxford mathematician and physicist
Weighed Allison, Professor, did a short paper they concentrated on

(01:05:56):
working out what happens with these windmills as the end
fluctuates in speed, which it always does at twenty miles
an hour, calculated Professor Allison, the power produced by wind
turbine was six hundred watts per square meter at full efficiency.
But if only the wind stayed at twenty miles an
hour all day and night, power generation would be a

(01:06:17):
lot easier. Unfortunately it does not. If the wind speed
drops by half, the power available drops by a factor
of eight. Think about this factor of eight if it
drops in half. Conversely, and even worse, notes Allison, if
the wind speed doubles, the power delivered goes up eight times,

(01:06:38):
and the turbines have to be turned off for their
own protection. So this is a stupid design, isn't it.
They need to wait until they've got a real design,
which is what the marketplace would do, But not when
you have a command and control economy that has a
goal that is not in the interest of the people there.

(01:06:58):
So whatever way you look at it, empower is inadequate.
It is intermittent, it's unreliable, it is exposed and vulnerable,
and it is weak with a short lifespan, he concluded.
So think about that it gets when it gets up
to eight times its nominal power they have to shut
it down for its own protection. It's crazy, too much power.

Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
Yeah, it's just they're inefficient in every single way possible.
There's no reason to use these things, that's right.

Speaker 2 (01:07:30):
Well, you know, we've talked a lot in the past.
Lot has been said about Wikipedia and how biased it is.
A lot of leftist radicals use this so called encyclopedia.
Now Elon Musk has said the same thing, and so
has the co founder of Wikipedia. It was a good
idea to start with, but it was taken over by

(01:07:50):
the radical left who evidently have got a lot of
time on their hands to mess with this. And so
Elon Musk has come out with Grokipedia, and this will
be a so called encyclopedia that will be compiled by
AI rather than by radical leftists. So it debuted this

(01:08:10):
week and the Exposa looked at it to see how
it compares with Wikipedia, specifically what it said about them.
And it's kind of interesting because Wikipedia is going on
offense and saying that a lot of these articles look
exactly like ours. We think that AI is lifting this

(01:08:30):
right off of Wikipedia. So there we go. It's not
necessarily that it's going to be a choice of an
encyclopedia that is put together by AI or an encyclopedia
that's put together by leftist radicals. It'll be either the
leftist radicals encyclopedia Wikipedia, or to be one that was
put together by AI that copies the leftist radicals. There

(01:08:51):
you go, that's our choice in the current scenario that
we have. So right now, they've got about nine hundred
thousand AI generated articles. And Wikipedia published a page on
Grokipedia which essentially reads like an advert for Wikipedia and
a threat to Grokipedia for using Wikipedia content to build

(01:09:14):
its pages. But Growkipedia is not hiding that it used Wikipedia.
As a matter of fact. Elaon Must said, I'm aware
that Grokipedia is using Wikipedia articles and we should have
this fixed by the end of the year, and so
we'll see what happens with that. Interestingly enough, they went
through and they looked at the article about them. It'd

(01:09:38):
be interesting to see if it's gone through. Remember when
chat gpt made up all kinds of false allegations about
Jonathan Turley, who was a lawyer, and talked about the
fact that he had been charged with sexual harassment of
students in such an Alaska or something says, well, first
of all, I've never been to Alaska. I've never had
any charges or anything like this. It absolutely false. So

(01:10:02):
be interesting to see if that kind of thing comes
up in Grockipedia. But in terms of the expose, they
made the point of looking at how defamatory and false
Wikipedia entry was and how the sources that they had
they're no longer even exist. So they slandered them with

(01:10:24):
a lot of sources that, if they ever existed, don't
exist anymore. Kind of like the same type of thing
that chat GPT did with Jonathan Turley, except this was
malicious leftists who are doing this expose really came into
force with the pandemic. They started pushing against that, and
that was how they began and it's what they're still

(01:10:47):
basically doing, and that was reflected honestly in Grockipedia. They
said the publication rose to prominence during the COVID nineteen
pandemic by examining vaccination rollout data, especially excess mortality figures
and lockdown impacts, frequently identifying patterns that diverged from official interpretations,

(01:11:08):
such as correlation between vaccination rates and subsequent health outcomes.
So it was pretty objective in their case. They seemed
to be happy with what was done by Krockopedia. One
more thing I want to cover before we take a break.
This is an interesting article that was on Reason and
it was about when the government censored Dracula, Frankenstein and

(01:11:31):
King Kong. I didn't realize that they had done that,
but I should have figured that they would because there
was a famous case, and I've mentioned it many times,
of a movie that was called The Spirit of seventy
six and the guy who produced it was actually sent
to jail. He got a massive fine. He was somebody

(01:11:54):
who put together the historical scenes for d. W. Griffiths's
Birth of a Nation. And if you look at the
historical scenes, things like the signing of the Robberie Lee
and Ulysses Grant signing it appomatics, or the assassination of
Lincoln and other things like that, it truly was amazing.

(01:12:14):
So it might have been a pretty good movie, but
it's been lost now because he did it. It was
about the American Revolution. Why would the American government censor
the American Revolution? Well, it was because Woodrow Wilson was
trying to get us into World War One on the
side of the British, so we don't want to have
a movie put out there that shows the British as

(01:12:36):
the bad guy, which they were. It was true to
history in that sense, and so when it premiered, the
federal government under Woodrow Wilson put a lot of pressure
on him. In Chicago, they censored it, so he pulled
it out of the theaters, and then he went to La
to show it. Because this is I forget the exact dates.
It's in the twenties, I think. And when he did

(01:12:59):
it again, then the federal government came after him with charges.
I forget what the charges were, but nevertheless they gave
him a print prison sentence and a massive fine which
would have been equivalent to millions of dollars today. And
there was no I've mentioned this many times in the
context of censorship. When the left was pushing the censorship,

(01:13:20):
Now the right is pushing it as well. And I said,
all these people in Hollywood who are pushing for the
censorship of us, those of us who were talking about
this COVID stuff, and there was a lot of that.

Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
He had.

Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
All these people in Hollywood were crawling all over each
other to be able to do a PSA to tell
you to take the shot and fear the fact, to
fear the plague that was not a plague, and to
wear a mask and all the rest of this stuff. These
people wanted to be fully on board with all of that.
And I said, they don't realize that movies were also

(01:13:54):
heavily censored. And it wasn't until the mid nineteen fifties
that you had the Supreme Court recognize that the First
Amendment also applies to movies. Prior to that, it didn't,
and so you had very heavy censorship. And that's what
this is about. They said, when Dracula was released in
nineteen thirty one, do you remember Lance, when the first

(01:14:16):
talkie came out? It was we were talking about that
the other day because we pulled up Singing in the Rain,
which was done twenty five years after the It was
done only twenty five years after the I think it
was in the late twenties. I think it's like twenty seven,
is that correct. I think first talkie which was Al

(01:14:38):
Jolson's Blackface Minstrel Show. What was the name of that,
Al Johson? Were he? Anyways? The jazz singer, jazz singer,
thank you, And so you know, we're watching Singing in
the Rain, which was about how the talkies changed changed Hollywood,

(01:15:01):
and it was kind of a funny musical comedy. And
that was done twenty five years after the first talking film,
and so I think it was in the early nineteen thirties, yeah,
nineteen twenty seven, Yeah, so nineteen thirty one was when
they released Dracula. And I remember when we had this
in the video stores. You know, these old universal movies

(01:15:26):
which I grew up watching, and they were not rainting
and anything. So I don't want to try something, and
we did our I got into video editing back in
the day when we had that, and so I created
trailers for a lot of classic movies that we didn't
have trailers for. So if you look at Dracula, what
is really striking about it is how silent it is.

(01:15:46):
I mean, it is a talking film and Bell Lugosi
became very famous for his speech, the way he talked,
but for the most part, it's very slow. He's walking
through this castle or whatever, and you just hear the
hiss of the sound that's there. And it actually started
with a piece of classical music when they ran the credits,

(01:16:07):
and I thought, you know, I've got some classical music
that would fit with that. I used Mitzorski's pictures on
exhibition and I really chatted it up in a sense,
given a lot of drama that it didn't have, and
it really kind of illustrated I think how important sound is,
especially the music for a movie. When you look at

(01:16:29):
John Williams, I think John Williams and Steven Spielberg would
acknowledge this as much to do with the success of
Spielberg's films, if not more than Spielberg himself. When you
go back and there was a tribute to John Williams
where Spielberg showed the scene from Et, which is not
a movie I'm a real big fan of, but I

(01:16:50):
like the soundtrack to it. So he shows it with
and without the soundtrack, and it really does bring it
to life. But anyway, I did that, and when people
would see that movie, they would stop and look at it,
and it's like then they'd rent it, they'd bring it
back and they're very disappointed in it. But in nineteen
thirty one, when it came out, and remember this was
only then four years after they'd been doing sound the
early days, they released Dracula and then right after that

(01:17:15):
they had Frankenstein with Boris Karloff, and these were very
heavily censored. And I think it tells us something about
how our society has changed, more so than what has
happened with the government, because our government is still censoring
anything they don't like, but it was demanded by the public.
Modern horror fans might find these films to be too slow,
too tame for their liking, but they were genuinely frightening

(01:17:38):
or disturbing to many audiences. Back in the day, they
were upsetting to some people. In fact, the official censorship
boards that then existed in multiple states took a page
from doctor Frankenstein and they sliced off the best parts
right there. Today, paying adult customers will be laughed out
of court on First Amendment grounds, so they said. It

(01:18:01):
wasn't until nineteen twenty five that the Supreme Court first
recognized that First Amendments guarantees of freedmom speech applied to
the actions of state and local government. Some sorry, they
wrote nineteen twenty five, and it's actually fifty two. They
switched those two numbers. It was nineteen fifty two. And
they do catch that further down in the same paragraph.

(01:18:21):
In nineteen fifty two, they applied the First Amendments protections
against state censorship for the first time to movies. They
don't get into the Curious case and the guy's name
was Goldstein or something that they did the spirit of
seventy six. Anyway, Dracula and Frankenstein both faced the censor's knives.
In Massachusetts. They mandated several cuts to all Sunday screenings

(01:18:44):
of Dracula, including the removal of a shot showing part
of a skeleton and a casket, as well as one
of a beetle like insect emerging from a miniature coffin. Yeah,
one of the things I thought was funny was in Dracula.
You know, he silently walked through the place. There's no
music and no folly or anything like that, no sound

(01:19:05):
of him walking, nothing, And they wanted to show people
cobwebs and other things like that they'd get him scared.
And at one point they show a couple of armadillas,
And I thought, I didn't know dra Killa was from Texas,
But I guess most of the people that would see that,
I would just think they were like gigantic rats or something.
But in Frankenstein. One of the most commonly maimed scenes

(01:19:25):
involves the creature encountering a young girl who is tossing
flowers onto a lake and watching them float. Seemingly charmed
by the girl's joyful actions, the creature, behaving like a
sort of childlike innocence of his own, tosses the girl
onto the water to watch her float like a flower,
but she predictably drowns, compounding the creatures pathos and isolation.

(01:19:49):
Many censors objected to that upsetting scene. It was typically
cut in a way that removed the sight of the
creature actually tossing the girl into the water. Yet such
an edit ironically left viewers with the impression that they
had been spared the spectacle of some shocking molestation. In
other words, the sensors arguably made the scene more disturbing

(01:20:11):
by forcing audiences to draw their own conclusions about the
full nature of the girl's fatal meeting with the creature.
This is a tactic that was used extensively by Alfred Hitchcock.
He did that deliberately, he said, it's far more the
human imagination is far scarier than what he could create
on the screen, so he would leave details that would

(01:20:34):
be somewhat ambiguous, and unlike today they love to show
things and high detail and slow motion slasher films and
stuff like that. He would leave it ambiguous because he
knew people would fill in the details.

Speaker 3 (01:20:46):
I've seen people talking about how that's what made Jaws
such a classic movie is they had a ton of
technical problems with their animatronic shark, so they wanted originally
a whole lot of shots of the shark, but they
just couldn't manage it. So they wound up making a
much scarier movie because they had to just rely on

(01:21:07):
people's imagination.

Speaker 2 (01:21:09):
That's exactly right. Several years later, the Brider Frankenstein faced
its own angry mob of sensors. I wonder if young
Frankenstein I didn't have that problem. I guess the list
of eliminations ordered by the Ohio Sensor Board, complained one
of the Universal staffers in report that was quoted by

(01:21:29):
an author. Skull said they were very drastic and very
harmful to the success of the picture. Perhaps the fullest
record we have of that era's heavy handed government crackdown
on horror movies comes from the nineteen thirty three pamphlet
published by the National Council on Freedom from Censorship. It
was called What Shocked the Censors, A complete record of

(01:21:52):
cuts and motion picture films ordered by the New York
State Censors New York again from January thirty two to
March of thirty three. And so they talk about what
was demanded to be cut from King Kong, for example,
and also extensive cuts to universals, lesser known shocker murders

(01:22:14):
in the re Morgue where Dracula himself by the Lagosi starred,
an extremely loose adaptation of Aggar Allan Poe's Great Tale
of Mystery and Macob. So they said state censorship lasted
until nineteen fifty two. It finally suffered defeat before the
Supreme Court. And I guess it wasn't until the Supreme

(01:22:35):
Court could support a film that attacked the Lord Jesus
Christ that they found the First Amendment. They could always
find a rationale for doing that. So this was a
film that came out of Italy and it was called
The Miracle, and in it, a girl imagines that she
has given birth to Jesus Christ. Noisy protesters soon the

(01:23:00):
other in front of theaters to object to the films
of blasphemous content. Then, in a clear win for the
Heckler's veto, state officials sided with the protesters and order
the theater to cease operation. The theater owner sued and
ultimately won in the Supreme Court. We conclude that expression
by means of motion picture is included within free speech

(01:23:22):
and free press guarantee of the First and fourteenth Amendments
of the Supreme Court. Again, I've used this to talk
about both censorship and the fact that the Supreme Court's
decisions are not full and final. You had the Supreme
Court had agreed that that guy who did the spirit
of seventy six did not have free speech protection and

(01:23:44):
could be punished severely with fines and jail term. And
then you had in a few decades later, the Supreme
Court reversed itself. And I would talk about that a
lot in terms of the law of the land. Is
abortion nonsense? I said, well, we've had. The Supreme Court

(01:24:05):
has reversed itself many times. It's not the law of
the land. It never is. It's just an opinion, and
their opinions can change. They don't like to do that
because it undermines how important they perceive themselves to be
the basic principles of free speech in the press, like
the First Amendment's commands do not vary, said the Supreme Court.
Those principles, as they have frequently been enunciated by the Court,

(01:24:29):
make freedom of expression the rule. There is no justification
in this case for making an exception to that rule.
So now we see the flip side of censorship, and
that is really I think there's another story to be
shown here, and that is the moral declined that Hollywood
has actually pushed. They would excuse what they were doing

(01:24:50):
in many cases by saying, we don't set what the
ethics of society are, we reflect that. Now I say
that they push it, and I say that from first
Haan experience. We had the video stores. We used to
go to the annual conventions where they would Hollywood executive
would show up and talk to people about the projects

(01:25:12):
that they had coming up. One year we went up
to Atlantic City and they had an executive from New
Line Cinema, same people that did The Lord of the Rings.
Later on, and I've mentioned this before, it was a
seminar to encourage video retailers to carry DVDs, and we'd
been carrying them for quite some time. And one of

(01:25:34):
the things that I had told people was that it
had the ability to be able to program into it
jump arounds, and so when Hollywood would put scenes in
and deliberately and gratuitously put in things that had nothing
to do really with a story, but it would get
an R rating because it have somebody go to a
strip bar something like that, or nude women there, so

(01:25:55):
they could get their R rating. So you could set
this up and go around. And then there was actually
a company in Utah that made a living doing that,
and they have been sued for decades by Hollywood, one
after the other, just relentless trying to stop them from
doing that. And so I went up afterwards and I
told him that we'd been carrying it for some time,
and I told people that they could branch around that,

(01:26:17):
and said, why don't you do that? And he said, well,
the directors don't like that. You know, I knew that
if all of us who were looking at box office
numbers and how movies did in rental sources, well knew
that if you wanted to make money, what you would
do back in the early nineties, would you make some
new animated film that made a ton of money, and

(01:26:39):
it was all a family film, and it would also
you could have deals that you could make toys that'd
be sold toys or US or whatever, or the toy
usually they had a deal when the movie came out
on video they would give away toys at McDonald's or
some other fast food chain. So there were a lot
of tie ins with that, and there are a lot

(01:26:59):
of ways that they make money, but they didn't care.
They were far more interested in their agenda and in
the respect of their peers in Hollywood, who were, to
a man, perverts. And so I talked to him and
he said, no, they hate that kind of stuff. They
absolutely hate it. When we do airline versions of their
movies so that we can know they had to cut out,

(01:27:22):
that's exactly what they did, and so you can make
that available on the DVDs. People could make their own choice.
And I said, it would really help with a lot
of your films. Well, it wasn't long after that he said, no,
they wouldn't like that. It wasn't long after that that
they came out, and I remember the movie was James
Spader and it was this disgusting, absolutely disgusting film called

(01:27:44):
Crash and James Spader plays this guy who's got some
kind of a fetish about car crashes, and it's only
kind of perverted thing that you could imagine. Who come
out of Hollywood. It's David Cronenberg, who did The Fly
with Jeff Goldbloom. Is it Goldbloom? Goldberg? Yeah, gold Boom. Anyway,

(01:28:04):
he did this movie and it was really he did
a lot of really disgusting stuff. Scanners was another one,
people's heads exploding with blood and anyway, the crazy stuff
when you look at it, when you look at the
tame things of Dracula and Frankenstein, and you look at
the kind of stuff that was accepted and celebrated by Hollywood,

(01:28:27):
it really gives you an understanding of just how Hollywood
has been this seminal cesspool into our society. And so
when Newline came out with Crash, that James Spader film,
they came out with one that was bad enough as
an R rating, and then you could if you wanted to,
on the DVD, you could choose to watch their X
rated version. I said, that's exactly it. They don't want

(01:28:50):
to use it to give people a choice to clean
things up. They'll give you a choice to go further.
And that's the way they operate these things. So we
will get the questions and comments. I think when we
come back, we're going to take a quick break, folks,
and we'll be right back. While we're talking about monster films,
remember that the real monsters are the people who sold

(01:29:13):
us the pandemic and the JAB. Five years ago, I was.

Speaker 7 (01:29:23):
Working on the news late one night for my eyes
beheld and recite for the monsters head rehearse.

Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
To my surprise, the tactics to inject what they divide.

Speaker 6 (01:29:37):
The job, the monster.

Speaker 2 (01:29:39):
Is the jobs. The job, the spikes a graveyard stand.
I caught on in a flash.

Speaker 4 (01:29:47):
The job.

Speaker 6 (01:29:48):
The monster is the Jab, last in the cast.

Speaker 2 (01:29:53):
So least to the FBA with a form of vampires feast.
The goold rehearse before now had a poison us, which
is what they've done. The monster is the Jazz job.
The spikes are graveyard stab. He'll put you on a slab.

Speaker 6 (01:30:15):
The job.

Speaker 2 (01:30:16):
The monster is the Jab. Big Pharmah was having fun.
The party had just begun. The guests included Fauci Trump,
then Biden. Scene was a lockdown. All we're fearing the
news supply chains were broken. We were singing the blues.

(01:30:39):
The coffins they told us we're about arrive. You can
see it all on Channel five. The monster is the
Jaz job. The spikes a graveyard stab, It'll put you
on a slab.

Speaker 4 (01:30:56):
The job.

Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
The monster is the Jab. Old office. His voice did ring.

Speaker 6 (01:31:03):
Hospital cash registers went a ching.

Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
When people caught on to keep on the list, they said,
whatever happened to the Wu hand Lab Jab?

Speaker 6 (01:31:14):
The monster is the Jab Monster Job.

Speaker 2 (01:31:18):
The spikes of graveyard stab, He'll put you on a
slab is the job. The monster is the Jab. Now
everything's cool. Lab weeks a part of the plant. Their
ally echoes throughout the land for you, the living. They'll
try it again when they get to your door. Tell

(01:31:39):
them farmer, no more.

Speaker 5 (01:31:41):
Is the job.

Speaker 6 (01:31:42):
The monster is the Jab.

Speaker 8 (01:31:44):
Jab.

Speaker 2 (01:31:45):
The spikes a graveyard stabs, It'll put you on a slab.

Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
The job.

Speaker 6 (01:31:52):
The monster is the Jab.

Speaker 2 (01:32:00):
When talking about Mama y.

Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
Liberty, it's your move. And now the David Night Show.

Speaker 8 (01:33:59):
Hello me, Voladimir Zelenski. I'm so tired of wearing these
same T shirts everywhere for years. You'd think with all
the billions I've skimmed off America. I could dress better,
and I could if only David Knight would send me
one of his beautiful gray mcguffin hoodies or a new
black T shirt with the mcguffin logo in blue. But

(01:34:22):
he told me to get lost. Maybe one of you
American suckers can buy me some at the Davidknightshow dot com.
You should be able to buy me several hundred. Those
amazing sand colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful. I'd wear
something other than green military cosplay to my various.

Speaker 4 (01:34:40):
Gallas and social events.

Speaker 8 (01:34:42):
If you want to save on shipping, just put it
in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from
the USA.

Speaker 9 (01:34:59):
Here news now at apsradionews dot com, or get the
APS radio app and never miss another story.

Speaker 4 (01:35:08):
Welcome back, folks, We've got a lot of comments here.
I want to say thank you to the Love of
the Road. He gifted a sub on Rumble and on
Kick as well, So thank.

Speaker 2 (01:35:17):
You for the Love of the Road. Yes, thank you
very much. I appreciate it.

Speaker 4 (01:35:20):
North American house Hippo, thank you, says in my youth.
I got a ticket in Ontario for driving with a
radar detector. The justice of the piece said, I'm going
to give you one hundred forty five or one hundred
and forty five dollars fine or thirty days in jail.
I said, I'd take one hundred and forty five dollars.
She said I had to pay her North American house, hippo.

Speaker 2 (01:35:38):
I got my radar detector confiscated in Virginia, which the
only place that it's against the law, and years and
years ago, and the guy stole my radar detector and
then gave me a ticket. And I didn't pay the ticket.
And you can do that because and even though I was,
you know, living in North Carolina, they don't recognize that
as a crime, and so that wasn't didn't have reciprocy

(01:36:01):
at that point. I don't know if that stole the
case or not, but I refuse to give him any
more money after they stole my radarchitector.

Speaker 4 (01:36:09):
North American house, hippo, thank you again. I had a
friend who was a Justice of the peace in Ontario.
He said his favorite part of the job was officiating marriages.
It was the only time you could impose a life sentence.

Speaker 2 (01:36:21):
That's good, not anymore though, right, Yeah, I was even
thinking about that when I put a radarchitector in the Miata,
It's difficult to do that right because where do you
hang this thing where it's not visible. That was the
issue in Virginia. It wasn't that I was speeding or anything.
I was just in normal traffic on the Interstate three
or four lanes and the guy saw the light because

(01:36:42):
I had it up there hanging from the visor. So
I didn't want to do that. So I got a
wind breaker on the visor on the Miata that keeps
the backlash of when from coming out, and it's clear plastic,
and I got a suction cup and stuck the radarchitector
on there. And then I got last to three D
print me a plastic enclosure so they can't see the

(01:37:05):
lights and I can see what's happening with it because
I got a wireless connection on the front. But anyway,
these are the measures that we go to living in
a police state, so there will be a way for
us to do. They do their measures, We do our countermeasures.
They do their counter countermeasures. We do our counter counter countermeasures.
It's the way it's going to go.

Speaker 3 (01:37:25):
I preay the housing with some gaps in it for
the antennas and things.

Speaker 2 (01:37:29):
Yeah, that's right, that's right, of course, Yeah, it'd be
fine with the Yeah, you have to have the line
of sight there, so where the sensors where we put caps?

Speaker 4 (01:37:38):
Dougal Ug, thank you very much. Doug Lug says, the
gas tank is at half, so I stole a little
money from a rich guy for the tank. Happy Friday,
and thank you for the great show.

Speaker 2 (01:37:46):
It should be a little bit higher than that, we're
not at It should be at five ahs, but we're
not at three quarters, so I really do appreciate the sport.
We're here the last day of the month, so and
we're pretty low this month, so I really do appreciate that.

Speaker 4 (01:37:59):
Thank you all very much. Without your support, the show
goes away. So we cannot thank you enough. Irs. Machine
Gun says, I siphoned some gas for you out of
a Cadillac at Walmart. Well, thank you very much. We
appreciate it. Honor Secret, we've had.

Speaker 3 (01:38:14):
So many socialists in the audience.

Speaker 4 (01:38:17):
There's your sharing the wealthy, Honor Seeker, thank you very much.
If we don't pay for good news and commentary with
you guys who will really pay for it later We
continue to listen to con Ink. Thank you guys, thank you,
thank you, Honor Seeker Jim's seven, thank you very much,
Monster jab going right to the top.

Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
Of the charts.

Speaker 4 (01:38:38):
That's right, new number one hit coming your way. And
for the Love of the Road. He was responding to
Steve Ebbs. Steve was asking a questions about getting a
gifted sub on Rumble. He says, gifting means the person
gets an ad free experience for a month. I think
I believe for Love of the Road is right. If
you're gifted a subscription to a channel, I believe you
get their content without ads on Rumble. I don't know

(01:39:00):
if that means you get all content without ads or
just ads on that channel, but if you get a
gifted sub on Rumble, you should be ad free at
minimum on our videos.

Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Yeah, just a weird way that some of the science
have some of them. That's the only way that they
let you contribute. You can't leave a contribution rather than
a gifted sub.

Speaker 4 (01:39:16):
Yeah. For Love the Road video archives DoD talks push
America closer to mandatory vaccinations Friday, October thirtieth, twenty twenty,
and he had the link there, so that was in
the kick Chat Yeah, North American house hippo. Having lived
in two socialist countries, Canada in the UK, I am
sorely disappointed to see it follow me here. As Ronald
Reagan said, after America, there's nowhere left to run to.

Speaker 2 (01:39:39):
Yes, Reagan did great speeches. I had a lot of
problems with his policies in terms of especially the drug
war and many other things like that. But you know,
this back and forth that we had with Trump and
Reagan last week really was not even transcended the issue
that was immediately before people as to what it showed

(01:40:01):
was that Trump was lying about what Ronald Reagan said
and showing that it was not an emergency. It was
his temper tantrum when he put the ten percent charge
against all Canada because in one town they ran an
ad and so it showed that it was all about
his own personal preferences rather than a real emergency that

(01:40:23):
was out there. And it also showed that the man
is an incorrigible liar and that people will will support
him in that if they're on that side of the
political aisle. So it was a very important thing I
think last week, this week, beginning of this week.

Speaker 4 (01:40:40):
Yeah, Steve evs, the illegal war on drugs, filled private
prisons Nibaru twenty twenty nine. Tricky Dick Nixon instituted of
the health monopoly oligarchy HMO. Well, when the president does.

Speaker 2 (01:40:53):
It, that means it's He also did the EPA as
well as several other things that were out there.

Speaker 4 (01:41:01):
My main exposure to Richard Nixon is from Futurama, where
he's a head in a jar. Oh Nixon's back.

Speaker 2 (01:41:09):
There are many people who wanted to put his head
in a jar at the time he was president.

Speaker 4 (01:41:12):
Yeah, defy tyrants seventeen seventy six. Is diversity for the
sake of diversity destroys nations. You need a cohesive a
cohesive group of people, a shared culture, a shared people,
a shared religion. You need to have those things in place.
Otherwise everyone just tries to loot what they can out

(01:41:35):
of the country. It becomes a US against them mentality,
and there's not really anything you can do to stop that.
Once the population is fractured enough, once there's enough different subgroups,
it's human nature to split off and identify people you
identify with and join their ranks as a general rule,
So the more different factions you have, the more likely

(01:41:56):
that is to happen, Hi Niburu, twenty twenty nine. Back
during Obama's pestilence, for every Christian church closed in the US,
three mosques were opened.

Speaker 2 (01:42:05):
Yeah. I think that's a judgment from God. You know.
It also shows the moral vacuum that has developed in
our country as.

Speaker 4 (01:42:11):
Well, Hi Boost, I've lost every traffic court case I
ever tried to defend myself in. It's U versus the
cops and judges. Judges word, and they don't care.

Speaker 2 (01:42:20):
That's why it's important to do a to do a
jury trial. What's even better is to have a dash cam.
You know, when they say that you ran a red
light or something.

Speaker 4 (01:42:31):
So I've got a dash camp.

Speaker 2 (01:42:32):
I've got dash cam's got that recorded. So yeah, go
ahead and give me a ticket. Let's take this to court.
I have a jury trial. They walk away. So I've
had that happen to me as well.

Speaker 4 (01:42:41):
So North American house hippo, I'd like to see this
English proficiency apply to bus drivers to plenty of my
coworkers are challenged. Most Puerto Rican. Huh, really, that's interesting.
Puerto Rican didn't realize they were so big into bus
driving Tonne Lord one three three seven. If you can

(01:43:02):
steal food, you can work.

Speaker 2 (01:43:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:43:04):
That's another thing. All these videos they look like able
bodied people. Yeah, yeah, you know see what, I've got
my hammer and i got my steel toed boots. I'm
gonna take what I want and let's see anyone get
in my way. And it's like, well, maybe you should
use that hammer and steals toed boots and try and
look for a job.

Speaker 4 (01:43:24):
Well, you know, they're physically fine, mentally they're a little
bit short of what we need. North American house Hippo
a brand new driver and my place decided to make
a U turn with a sixty foot bendy bus. It
didn't work out. He had so many accidents they ended
up making him a manager. Listen, you're too stupid and
incompetent to be given a bus to drive. How about

(01:43:47):
you manage the guys that drive the buses.

Speaker 2 (01:43:51):
All about the Peter principle.

Speaker 4 (01:43:52):
If you're too incompetent for the grunt work, they'll promote
you to someplace where you can just interfere with people.
So goy twenty point six million illegal aliens on welfare. Whoopee,
that's right, isn't that great, we get to pay for
all that our taxes, our tax dollars. At work. They
don't even speak English, so they can't say thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
And that's why I say, you know, the means that
Trump is using. If he were to cut off the
welfare magnet, a lot of this stuff I think would
work itself out. They go back to where they came
from because it's cheaper for them to live where they
came from than to try to live in the United States.
But again, he wants conflict. He doesn't want to really

(01:44:36):
end this issue.

Speaker 4 (01:44:40):
North American house hippo. So what do they do if
the stories stores decide to just close down so they
can't get in in the first place. Well, you see,
they don't consider these things. It's about what's happening right
now and what my response can be right now. The
future doesn't exist, the past was real either. There is

(01:45:01):
only the eternal now and what you can do to
satisfy your needs and wants in this moment. So goy,
if there's forty three million on welfare and forty percent
are illegal immigrants, question mark.

Speaker 2 (01:45:14):
That's how we're getting back to that twenty million on welfare.

Speaker 4 (01:45:19):
And of course we also have Ronald Reagan to thank
a lot for that with his sweeping oh just yeah, amnesty.
Here you go, here you go. If you make it
into the country, eventually, we'll just give you amnesty.

Speaker 2 (01:45:31):
He also betrayed the Second Amendment for his friend is
the Brady's because that failed assassination attempt that horribly injured
as Press Secretary Sarah Brady became this gun control person
and so he wanted to honor them, and he did
it by dishonoring his oath to the Constitution.

Speaker 4 (01:45:52):
Looks like we've received to note Gerald Silente has had
to cancel today, so Gerald will not be joining us.
We understand he's very busy. He's gonna lot of stuff
going on and sometimes things come up. We'll miss him today,
but we will continue the show.

Speaker 2 (01:46:05):
He's working on this costume for the party to night.
I guess I'm no, but that's good. We'll have him
have him in a couple of weeks again.

Speaker 4 (01:46:14):
Absolutely, Citizen of AMERICAKA. Food and security in the state
of Arkansas is higher than any other state in the nation.

Speaker 2 (01:46:23):
Wown't yeah, And the farmers are going being put out
of business by Trump's tariffs as well.

Speaker 4 (01:46:27):
The only thing I know about Arkansas is that it
has some of the worst roads I've ever driven on.
And my wife and I go back and forth between
here and Texas. We frequently pass through Arkansas basically every time,
I believe, and it has some of the worst roads.
You can immediately tell when you get into Arkansas because
it's just blah.

Speaker 1 (01:46:44):
Blah bah bah bah bah blah blah blah up.

Speaker 4 (01:46:46):
All the time continually.

Speaker 2 (01:46:47):
So we have the Quentins and the Huckabees to think for.

Speaker 4 (01:46:51):
That ah, good old slick willy Walrus. What I've seen
with the food stamps program is people get seven D eight
hundred in snap if they have a couple of kids
in the cupboards are full of junk and refrigerator full
of broughting food over buying equals security a Syrian girl
these There have already been women in Massachusetts who have

(01:47:12):
hit the news broughtling and beating market basket employees who
tried to stop them from running off with t bones, truffle, butter,
et cetera. Nothing cheap, mind you. I mean, if you're
going to steal, you might as well little saying go
big or go home.

Speaker 2 (01:47:24):
Go for the luxury goods. Exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:47:26):
Yeah, might as well steal a t bone as some
as well as some twinkies or whatever. Niberu twenty twenty nine.
Thank the Bush Reagan maga of the nineteen eighties for
the federalized air traffic controller issues ILI and poop evolution
really bothers me to work toward retirement. And see drug
addicts chilling on disability and food stamps. It's you look

(01:47:48):
at them and you think how free they are, slave
only to their own desires, not the federal government, Guard Goldsmith.
So in essence, the airlines, not the government, could handle
the air traffics, hire them and not charge people taxes,
only charge the people flying a private paradigm can handle it.

Speaker 2 (01:48:05):
Good point, Guard, a very good point. And you know
that is the issue. If we didn't have the government
jumping into all these different areas, everything could be handled
much better. I mean, we're talking about people who are
really poor and desperate, because that really is a thing.
Churches always used to handle that, and it's much better
if you've got charity that is operating at the local level,

(01:48:27):
because they can quickly see the people who need it
and the people who don't need it. That visibility is
lost when the government takes it over. And it's also
lost when you see your welfare payments and your food
stamps and anything as being an entitlement rather than something
that somebody is giving you out a load. And it

(01:48:48):
also disincentivizes people helping others. You know, when you give
something to somebody and you see them help by it,
that's a reinforcing thing. And it is truly better to
give than to re and so it's a reinforcing thing
when that happens. And so that's yet another example how

(01:49:08):
all these different things we think government is necessary for
are not really necessary. We could do this by voluntary means,
we could do it by market means, and all the
rest of this stuff A good point. Guard liberty, conspiracy.

Speaker 4 (01:49:19):
Yes, check them out six pm on Rumble North American
House Hippo responding to guards. Is Canada, of all places
privatized It's air traffic control system decades ago. No reason
that can't happen here. If Canada can do it, we
can do it. You got to have a little bit
of friendly rivalry there. I like bullying Canadians making fun
of them, but I believe they also have the right
to make fun of US. You got to have that

(01:49:41):
rivalry between neighboring countries and states. Defy Tire at seventy
and seventy six. What about government corporations purposely making it
impossible for people to afford anything anymore, including food. Yeah,
it's a huge issue. The price of everything goes through
the roof beyond health point.

Speaker 3 (01:49:58):
You know, all the people in the breadlines in the
Soviet Union were also you know, on the government dole,
but they didn't have any other options. Once this thing
gets going, it can get very hard to stop. That
is killing the economy, it's killing the alternatives. But at
a certain point, there simply is no alternative.

Speaker 2 (01:50:18):
That's right. Yeah, And it really is about control. That's
what sold Nitzen was saying. We said love not by lines,
I'd say, he said, I know that if you criticize
the government, they'll come after you. They'll kick you out
of your home, they'll kick you out of your job,
and that sort of thing. And that's why the socialist
governments do all this. It gives them a great deal
of control over people. You know, you toe the line
or else.

Speaker 4 (01:50:36):
Yeah, they have total control over how you are able
to live or if you're able to live at all
beyond hell, responding a Dougaloug the gov. The government took
over mutual aid, charity, nonprofits and churches that helped people
in time of need.

Speaker 2 (01:50:50):
That's right, and it really was a real thing. You know.
When you had Alexis to Tofiel come to America from
socialist France, he was truly amazed at how Americans would
organ eyes on their own and create private charities and
create their own volunteer fire departments and libraries and schools
or whatever was needed to take care of the community.
And he said that would never happened in socialist France.

(01:51:13):
And now we have become worse than what socialist France
was at the time that he was there.

Speaker 4 (01:51:17):
Yeah, Honor Seeker says, what is happening in America is
socialism all grown up? The plant of communism is maturing. Yes,
And of course many communists have said socialism is merely
a transitional phase. You implement socialism so that you can
bring about communism and Marxism. It's simply what you start with.

Speaker 2 (01:51:35):
It's a marketing term.

Speaker 4 (01:51:37):
Everyone here is communists and Marxist. They think, oh, millions
of dead. Perhaps that's not what we want. Citizens, Citizen
of americaka the Bride of Christ is failing miserably. The
hands and feet are not existent, and people only see
the face and body. That is frivolous.

Speaker 2 (01:51:53):
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, it's It's very true. It has
pacified everything, including the body of Christ.

Speaker 4 (01:52:03):
Stealth Patriots says, sorry to change the subject, but did
you hear this man released from jail in Tennessee after
thirty seven days for posting a Trump meme. I'll leave
the link of the comments if you want to look
into that.

Speaker 2 (01:52:14):
Yeah, I didn't know they'd released him. I covered the
fact that they had put him in jail for a
meme and that it was in Tennessee, and the sheriff
was really defiant about it. You know, he put some
stuff up that they didn't like, and they said, well,
we're not going to punish free speech. But he claimed
he put up a meme that said something about shooting
up a school, and it wasn't. It was a meme

(01:52:35):
that other people have put together. It just so happens
that at that school shooting where Trump said you got
to move on, it was the same name as this county.
That school was. He was not making a threat against
the county. He was just reposting the fact that Trump
said after school shooting, you got to move on, and

(01:52:55):
these people did not want to move on from Charlie
Kirk's shooting. That was his point.

Speaker 4 (01:53:01):
Yes, Jersey Boy eighty nine, thank you very much for
the support, says hello. Supreme Court was when the country
started going downhill like Marbury versus Madison, And I think
Jefferson talked about that case. How do we overturn all
the bad Supreme Court decisions.

Speaker 2 (01:53:14):
Over the years, Yes, exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:53:17):
Personally, I think we just say this was never your
job to interpret law. It was never your job at all.
All your decisions are invalid if they relate to the Constitution,
we don't care and we will no longer respect them
enforce it.

Speaker 2 (01:53:30):
I think the proper response is nullification. And I said
this all along about abortion, when everybody was saying abortion
is a subtle issue. We've got Roe v. Wade. It's
a log land it can't be changed before the Supreme
Court actually changed it. And I said, no, if you
look at it, what should have happened with Roe v.
Wade is that was a Texas case, and Texas should
have said, well, you've made your decision, Let's see you

(01:53:51):
enforce it, which is what Andrew Jackson said when the
Supreme Court reversed itself and went against what he wanted
to do. I don't like what he wanted to do,
but he was right to say that they couldn't stop
him from doing what he wanted to do. That was
about the relocation of the Cherokee. I think he was
wrong on that policy, but I think he was right

(01:54:12):
in the sense that the Supreme Court did not have
the legal authority to stop him from that policy. They
had reversed themselves within one year. First they said he
could do it, and then they saw how bad the
actual implementation of that was being done, and so they
reversed themselves. And he said, well, you know, you made
your decision, let's see you enforce it. And so I
think that's the appropriate response is nullification. But we have

(01:54:36):
to have politicians who have a spine, and we don't
have anything that even anyone who even remotely looks like that. Well,
let's talk about the thing that really should scare us
on this Halloween. Got one more comment.

Speaker 4 (01:54:48):
North American House Hipposa is one of the new electric
buses I drive at Universals Frankenstein theme, I'm sure, but
doesn't catch fire. That can be awkward.

Speaker 2 (01:54:58):
Yeah, that let out a war phone. It catches on
fire like Frankenstein. That was. That is one of my
favorite movies. Jean Frankenstein. I got it is such a
great send up of the Frankenstein thing. And I think
it was Gene Wilder who he got to mel Brooks
to do it for him. But I think it was
Gene Wilder's idea and I think he put the whole

(01:55:20):
thing together.

Speaker 4 (01:55:21):
I believe you're right. Yeah, Gene Wilder is a truly
iconic actor. Yeah, one of the comedy great along with
people like Guy from the Naked Gun, White Hair, Leslie Nielsen,
Leslie Nilsen, truly an iconic comedy actor. Yeah, incredible, how
funny he is while playing everything straight. He's not overacting,

(01:55:45):
he's not giving Yeah, he was.

Speaker 2 (01:55:46):
Like a leading man romantic interest. That was his early
career and then Naked Gun and other things like that.
He had a second career as a comedian and they
did a great, great job with that.

Speaker 4 (01:55:57):
So just his continual like straight laced keeping the serious
face does a great job with it. Just the the
comedy is all built around that.

Speaker 2 (01:56:06):
Yeah, but Young Frankenstein that was by far and away,
Melbrooks is best movie, except that it was not his movie.
It was. It was Gene Wilder's movie. I'm remembering now
that the anecdote that Gene Wilder told he said that
scene where they're doing putting on the rits, he said

(01:56:27):
that he was that that. Mel Brooks fought him on
that and he said, no, it's either that or the
movie's done, so let him do it. I used that
scene when I was talking about the the Saudi's had
kidnapped a bunch of their fellow elites, and you know,

(01:56:47):
we're hanging them by their feet or whatever and torturing
them to get them to give up money or whatever
it was. And I played that scene from because then
the Ritz and then they're putting on the riots. It
was like franken Stein monster think that anyway. Trump has
ordered nuclear weapons tests, and again this should concern anybody

(01:57:10):
who knows anything about history, and there's absolutely no reason
for him to do it. This boomer who wants to
go boom said he had to do it. And we're
going to talk about why he said he had to
do it. Here's what He said, what about.

Speaker 1 (01:57:26):
Presuming nuclear testing?

Speaker 3 (01:57:27):
What prompted you to do that?

Speaker 1 (01:57:29):
Right before the meeting?

Speaker 2 (01:57:30):
That had to do with others?

Speaker 10 (01:57:31):
He said, it won't be nuclear testings. We have more
nuclear weapons than anybody. We don't do testing, and we've
faulted it years, many years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:57:41):
There's a reason for this. You might want to figure out.

Speaker 3 (01:57:44):
Why that we do also, and around the testing sort
like we're when we would be, it'll be announced, you
know we have testes.

Speaker 10 (01:57:52):
It'll be Anus give you it.

Speaker 2 (01:57:55):
Well, there we go. Yeah. So Trump is ordered the
Pentagon to resume nuclear weapons testing, citing strategic competition with
Russia and China. This is another knee jerk ego reaction
from Trump, just like the Canadian thing. Trump made the
announcement ahead of the meeting with Chinese President Shijiping in
South Korea on Thursday. He said, Jordan say, we've got

(01:58:18):
more nuclear weapons in any other country. This was accomplished,
including a complete update and renovation of existing weapons during
my first term in office because of the tremendous destructive power.
I hated to do it, but I had no choice,
he said. On truth social Russia is second and China
is a distant third, but even within five years because

(01:58:40):
of other countries testing programs. They will be even within
five years because of other countries testing programs. I have
instructed the Department of War to start testing our nuclear
weapons on an equal basis. That process will began immediately. Well,
we halted nuclear tests in the US in nineteen ninety two,
a congressionally mandated moratorium. But he doesn't care about the law.

(01:59:05):
He doesn't care about what Congress did. Members of Trump's
cabinet reportedly discussed reversing the moratorium during the first term
after the US accused China and Russia is secretly conducting
an underground low yield nuclear test, a claim that Beijing
and Moscow denied. And so the question is if Congress
stopped this in nineteen ninety two, then does Trump need

(01:59:28):
to get Congress to put it back in. Of course,
he could easily get it passed in the House. Don't
know about the Senate. But would he even bother to try.
He doesn't care about the rule of law. That's the
whole point as we look at whatever Trump does. Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute says the US has five one
hundred and seventy seven nuclear warheads Russia has four hundred

(01:59:51):
and fifty nine and China is protected projected rather to
reach fifteen hundred by twenty thirty five. So well, again,
he doesn't quite get that right. He doesn't want to
say that we're number two. But here's the question, how
many nuclear weapons do you need? Right?

Speaker 3 (02:00:08):
I was going to say, aren't we done? I thought
they were powerful enough. Can't we destroy the entire planet?
Do you need to destroy a second planet?

Speaker 2 (02:00:16):
Yeah? What is the point? Why do you need to
have so many of them? The US test fired and unarmed. Well,
the reason that you have here's the spoiler alert. The
reason is because there's the military industrial complex that needs
to be fed, So we need to throw some more
money at them so they can make some more nuclear weapons.
Talk about overkill. The US test fired an unarmed nuclear

(02:00:39):
capable Minuteman three intercontinental ballistic missile in February, and they
launched for tried two missiles from a submarine in September.
Now that's not a nuclear test, and that's the whole point.
Trump is either a liar or too stupid to know
the difference between testing a delivery system exploding a nuclear bomb.

(02:01:02):
I think he's both stupid and dishonest. But earlier this month,
Russia test fired its new nuclear capable Bura's Vestnik cruise
missile that is powered by a small nuclear actor that
gives it virtually unlimited range. That was not a nuclear
test Russia has shown recently. Of course, they've given a

(02:01:23):
live demonstration of the hypersonic missile by defeating the West
and the American anti missile systems. They actually delivered that
with conventional explosives. It can also carry nuclear explosives, but
the hypersonic missiles are one thing. Then he shows this
Breashnovik or whatever the thing is called, cruise missile, which

(02:01:46):
can go indefinitely with a nuclear engine, but it could
have a conventional warhead on it as well as a
nuclear warhead on it. And then they also have the
Poseidon underwater missile which also has kind of a londlimited range,
and that's the one that they said they could create

(02:02:07):
a radioactive tidal wave to threaten the UK or other
countries with that as well. But these tests that they're
doing are just like the tests that the US did
with the missiles that were fired from submarines. They're not
nuclear explosions. They are simply testing the delivery mechanism. This there.

Speaker 4 (02:02:30):
So I just have to say, you know, these ever
circling nuclear missiles sound like something out of a science
fiction novel, you know, set in the far future after
everything has collapsed. Now, every once in a while, these
things just rain down from the sky. They're relics of
a bygone age. These weapons developed to circle the world eternally,
to scour any area with nuclear fire if they so desired. Yeah,

(02:02:53):
which is this horrifying concept of Yeah, we're just going
to launch this nuke into the stratosphere. It's going to
be up there waiting, waiting. It's just going to circle
until it decides, until we decide to send it a signal,
or if something goes wrong and it plummets out of
the sky.

Speaker 2 (02:03:07):
Well, they're doing the best to recreate Doctor Strangelove, aren't they.
Kremlin has walked back their nuclear test claims as Trump
orders US atomic weapons testing. He said, because other countries
are testing their things, I've instructed the Department of War
to start testing are nuclear weapons on equal basis. He said.
He's doing this in response to Russia's recent tests of

(02:03:28):
nuclear cruise missiles as well as their nuclear powered underwater drones.
But again, as I just said, testing a missile delivery
system is not the same thing as blowing up a
nuclear bomb. So Putin counted the successful test of his
new invincible nuclear capable cruise missile. But it was not
a nuclear test, and Trump's warning didn't deter the Kremlin,

(02:03:53):
as it was only on Tuesday that Russia's military conducted
a second nuclear related test, this time of a law
in development, nuclear capable, state of the art underwater drone
named the Poseidon. And again that's that's zero hedge characterizing this,
and it was not a nuclear related test. It was

(02:04:15):
a test of a delivery system that could be equipped
with a nuclear bomb. But it's not a test of
the nuclear bomb.

Speaker 3 (02:04:21):
I think the operative word here is related a nuclear
related test. It's adjacent to a nuclear test.

Speaker 2 (02:04:27):
Yeah, a near nuclear test. It's like a near death experience.
You didn't actually die, you had a near death experience.
This is a nuclear a near nuclear test. There we go.
So again, that's the key issue that is missing here.
And Trump may want to wonder why for over thirty

(02:04:48):
years we haven't been doing this. He might want to
ask why that is, And he might want to think
about escalating this, and we also might ask why he
is allowed to do this unilaterally when Congress has passed
a law to the contrary. So Russia conducted these two
significant weapons tests an under week. However, nowhere in Russian

(02:05:14):
statements was it suggested that there was a detonation of
atomic warheads. But Trump's order to Pentagon PETE to start
resuming nuclear explosive tests could mark a first since nineteen
ninety two. That last test was an underground detonation in
the end of the Cold War and has clearly alarmed

(02:05:35):
and rattled the Kremlin. A Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov is
apparently seeking to de escalate by walking back the nuclear
aspect of the recent Russian tests, describing that given these
newly tested weapons only feature nuclear propulsion systems and there
was no warhead test, if Trump in some way refers

(02:05:58):
to the Bureau of Burrough vethnic tests as a nuclear
test carried out by another country, that is in no
way accurate. He said. All nations continue to advance the
development of their defense systems, but this does not constitute
a nuclear test. Russia's test of that missile did not

(02:06:19):
fall under the category of nuclear weapons tests restricted by
international treaties. And that is true. The problem is can
Trump really grasp that. You know, we just had a
situation this last week. You know, he's talking about how
he had to go to Walter Reed and he got
his MRI test, and he was talking about what a

(02:06:42):
genius he is and how he didn't think that AOC
Occasional Cortex or others could pass the kinds of competency
tests that he could pass, and he kind of backfired
on him. Listen to what the guy said.

Speaker 10 (02:06:55):
They have just been dropping a low IQ first, and
they have AOC's low IQ. You give her an IQ test,
have her passed? Like the exams that I decided to take.

Speaker 6 (02:07:08):
Listen to this, well, Ter Reed, I took very hard.

Speaker 10 (02:07:12):
They really have to tests. I guess at a certain play.

Speaker 2 (02:07:15):
But Nick cognitive tests, you're hard.

Speaker 10 (02:07:17):
Let AOC go against Trump, Let Jasmine go against from
I don't think jasmine. The first couple of questions, there
is a tiger, an elephant that your rest when you
get up to about five or six, and then when
you get up to ten and twenty and twenty five,
they couldn't come close to answering any of those questions.

Speaker 2 (02:07:37):
You don't. Yeah, it's like they gave him a test
for a two year old or something. At one point,
he says, I put the star in the star hole
and things like that, and they first they ask you
about an elephant, a tiger and this that can you
identify those types of things. This is what he thinks
is a great accomplishment, which is kind of self damning

(02:07:59):
for this. If he thinks that is a great accomplishment, clearly,
if he's struggling to determine an he thinks it's accomplishment
to tell a tiger from an elephant. He can't tell
a nuclear test from a missile test, and that's very concerning.

Speaker 11 (02:08:13):
Almost shook me with the tiger versus very high, very
similar bullcats, very large cats, but they're cats.

Speaker 2 (02:08:19):
And I had the square peg in the round hole.
I got those two things right. Yeah. Great for him,
I had no choice, he said, as he orders the
Department of War and Pentagon PETE to restart nuclear weapons tests.
And so some of the Trump outlets are trying to
pull it back and say, well, maybe he's just talking
about delivery systems. No, he's not. They made it very

(02:08:41):
clear that it's about warheads, and it is a escalation.
It is not a response to what other people are doing.
He said that he's going to have the Pentagon resume
US nuclear weapons testing for the first time in more
than three decades. When you say this, it means that
it's going to be the actual nuke warhead exploded. Because

(02:09:01):
other countries are having testing programs, So we're going to
do it on an equal basis. No, he's escalating it.
It is the first time in thirty years. No one
else is doing this thirty three years. Actually, Trump denounced
Russia for testing nuclear powered missile. The Kremlin says that
its tests were not nuclear. He also said China's nuclear
program will be even with ours within five years. And

(02:09:24):
again that is how may do you need? You need
five five hundred, five thousand, What do you need fifty thousand?
So Russia says it's going to now respond that they
have to respond because of Trump, and so again, all
this stuff is just stupidity, idiocracy. The underwater trone that

(02:09:47):
they did had some nuclear propulsion to it, but as
Putin said, there are no methods of intercepting the poseidon
and that's the real issue, and that's why Trump is
trying to save face because they have this nuclear powered
cruise missile that can has basically an unlimited range. Same
thing with this nuclear powered Poseidon underwater delivery vehicle, as

(02:10:10):
well as the hypersonic which both Russia and China have
and the US does not have. And so for all
of these different issues, the US, which wants to be
the world's policeman and the most powerful nation, is falling behind.
So Trump needs to have some big fireworks display to
remind everybody that we've got a lot of nuclear weapons.

(02:10:32):
It's ridiculous and dangerous inside Washington's one trillion dollar nuclear triad.
Trump wants to modernize our stockpile of over five thousand
nuclear warheads, and he's going to spend nearly a trillion
dollars to do it, nine hundred and forty six billion
dollars over ten year period. Guess what, It'll be way

(02:10:54):
over a trillion dollars because all these defense contracts, as
they are doing them over a multi year period, increase
in cost. So another trillion dollars of waste. You know,
Trump is Trump is John McCain and Lindsey Graham combined
on steroids. I guess we could say, rather than being

(02:11:14):
the Manchurian candidate, he is the Meccanian candidate. He is
a mechaniac. North Korea is now flexing with missile tests
while Trump tours Asia. But again it's missile tests. Not
even Kim Jung un is exploding above ground or blowground
nuclear warheads. So they declared a successful test of a

(02:11:39):
C to surface cruise missile, the second such missile test
by North Korea in two weeks. Some sources have dubbed
it as a strategic test, indicating that the missile was
nuclear capable but didn't have nuclear weapons on it. And
again it is the fact that what Trump is feeling here,
when he feels that he needs to respond, it's not

(02:12:01):
responding in kind. It's just that we're falling behind in
terms of delivery mechanisms. So he's got to put on
a big show. That's what he always does. Well, we're
going to take a quick break, folks, and we will
be right back. Stay with us.

Speaker 1 (02:13:49):
You're listening to the David Knight Show.

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Speaker 4 (02:14:12):
Welcome back, folks. We're into the third and final hour
of the show. I want to say thank you all
for your support. It's because of your support that we're
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(02:14:35):
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It'll charge monthly and you won't have to worry about it.

Speaker 2 (02:14:51):
And there are links at Davidnight dot news because it
can be hard to if you get to the even
when you go to the platform, it can be hard
to find us. Yeah, they do make get hard to
find us.

Speaker 4 (02:15:00):
Yes, So you go to David Night dot news to
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David Night Show is a great way to support us,
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(02:15:22):
dot Comford Slash the David Night Show. Getting a little
bit of mushmouth, And I want to remind you that
at Homestead Products Dot shop they are having a sale
on their freeze dried scrambled eggs. They're kept in milar packaging.
They can last up to twenty five years when properly stored.
They're a great camping and survival food, and of course

(02:15:42):
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it goes well on everything I've tried it on. I
bet it goes great on scrambled eggs. Get yourself some
of that and you'll really be eating good when things
are when things are a problem. So Homestead Products Dot
shop sale.

Speaker 2 (02:16:00):
It's a lot easier and cleaner than having your own chickens.

Speaker 4 (02:16:03):
Yes, I probably should get some of those as well,
but yeah, that.

Speaker 2 (02:16:08):
You know, eggs are such a good source of just
nutrition in general, not just protein.

Speaker 4 (02:16:12):
Yeah, so check out Homestead Products dot shop. You can
use promo code night for ten percent off any product
in the store. But they are currently running a sale
on their freeze dried scrambled eggs. It's high quality. They
come from free range chickens, not just cage free free range.
There's a big difference. So go check them out, get
yourself some and start stockpiling in case of emergency or

(02:16:36):
just in case you want to go camping. It's a
great thing to have. So Homestead Products dot shop and
promo code nite for ten percent off. And while slun
Day will not be joining us today, you can go
to Trends Journal dot com and use promo code night
for ten percent off Trends Journal as well. Yes, and
I also got some comments here Jersey Boy eighty nine,
Thank you very much, says Hello, David. Do you know
someone who knows a cure for people who took the

(02:16:58):
COVID vaccine and its boosters? I think doctor Marcola wrote
an article about it a year or two ago, turning
it off. And he also wants to know what's the
abortion cartoon called Please.

Speaker 2 (02:17:09):
Okay, So I don't know of a cure for the
COVID vaccine. I do know that since one of the
main things that it begins with, you know, the main
ways that it attacks people with the blood clots as
well as with inflammation, and so a lot of things
that are good for inflammation, which we all should be
taking anyway, would be in line there. In terms of

(02:17:31):
the blood clots. One of the things that I take
for thinning my blood I didn't want to take because
I have aphib that can create blood clots, and so
the go to response by the established medicine is to
prescribe a Pfizer drug called eloquist. It's one of the
most frequently prescribed drugs that are out there, and I

(02:17:54):
don't want to take that. It's very expensive, Plus it's Pfizer,
and it's got a lot of really bad adverse effects
to it, and so I had people recommend to me.
There's a couple of different things. One of them is
from China, Chinese medicine. The other one is out of Japan.
Limb broken ase is one that I take. This out

(02:18:15):
of China that was basically an enzyme that they found
that Chinese medicine has been using for a long time.
It was an enzyme that they isolated from earthworms. They
would basically give them earthworms as a blood thinner, but
they isolated the aspect of it as an enzyme. And
so you can take one broken A'SE for that. And
then there is another one that is similar in name,

(02:18:37):
but it's different and it's from Japan, and I don't
remember what that's called. I can't remember what that is,
but anyway, look that up. I would recommend those. There's
some other things out there that will that will help
you in terms of keeping the blood moving and that
type of thing. So something that you know, look at

(02:18:57):
something regarding blood class but stay with from the pharmaceutical stuff,
and then also take a look at there's a lot
of natural things that you can take that are anti inflammatory.
But that's the best I can do, I'm sorry. And
then in terms of the abortion cartoon, I think you're
talking about that animated film that was narrated and it

(02:19:19):
was a story the account of what a technician who
was an ultrasound technician saw. He wasn't expecting to be
assisting in an abortion and he was called in and
was horrified at what he saw and they did that
as a cartoon. They narrated that and then showed what

(02:19:40):
he was describing in the cartoon. Very very powerful, and
I believe that it's called the Procedure. It's best I
can remember. I think that's what it's called.

Speaker 4 (02:19:48):
That sounds right to me.

Speaker 2 (02:19:49):
It's Kevin Sorbo who narrated it, so maybe you can
find it by his name if I got the name wrong.
But I think it's called the Procedure. I've shown that
several times and it is extremely powerful. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:20:00):
Yeah, it's a very upsetting, very upsetting. Junk Silver, thank
you very much. Chunk Silver. Really do appreciate it. It says
I stole this from the pile a big pharma ad
revenue over at CNN. Well that's right. You can just
sneak in there and snatch a few dollars off the pile.
They won't miss it. Thank you, will surely appreciate it. Yes,

(02:20:22):
thank you so much, Chunk Silver. Hope you're doing well, bulldog.
Get real, this is going to get real ugly when
angry people are looting from food for food food tomorrow.
That's right.

Speaker 2 (02:20:32):
Well, I agree, I'm not downplaying that. Actually, I think
that's the intention of Trump, you know, just like when
we look at the the immigration stuff, right. I want
to have the people who are illegually taken out but
understand that this is a although it is against the law,
and although they should be deported, this is a misdemeanor.

(02:20:52):
And to send the police around and to get in
people's faces, and to you know, slam their cars into
other cars, and to say that you can't protest us,
and unleashed tear gas against people when they're having a parade.
All of these things are over the top. And even
though I agree with the end goal, I disagree with
the means. And I think that what they're doing with

(02:21:14):
this whole situation with snap, the Trump Department, the US
Department of Agriculture that has the funds, could release these
from an emergency, but they're saying we're not going to
release them because this is not an emergency. And so
I think you are going to have some conflict there.
I think really that is going to happen. I don't

(02:21:35):
think that these people are entitled to it. I think
their attitude is wrong, but this is something that they
have put people in this situation. They have trained them
to be and that they've been conditioned for this. And
just like we're talking about you don't like the way
the global supply chains are, well, you can't change them overnight.

(02:21:55):
And when you just change all the global supply chains
just like that, you're going to create all kinds of problems.
And I think they're not unintentional. I think it is intentional.
I think Trump is the guy that they put in
place to do the great reset, to take things down.
Look at twenty twenty. He kicked all this stuff off,
he led it. He is not anti globalist. He's leading

(02:22:16):
the globalist agenda to take everything down. And so I
think this is just another aspect of it. I really do.

Speaker 4 (02:22:22):
Yeah, I've got a commentary from Christian constitual Conservatives, says David,
can you post the medications and health recommendations that we're
talking about on your substack recap?

Speaker 2 (02:22:32):
So yeah, I'll try to find the Japanese one as well.
I'll do a search.

Speaker 4 (02:22:36):
One person in chats that it might be NATO canes.

Speaker 2 (02:22:40):
That's it, that's it, that's it, Thank you so much.
NATO Canes and Umbrokenes. Like I said there, they sound
a little bit alike and they are similar to each other.
But those are more natural ingredients that are there.

Speaker 3 (02:22:53):
Yes, so aren't you also taking some sort of beat
supplement there?

Speaker 2 (02:22:58):
Yeah. One thing I found that lowers my blood pressure
more than any other thing that I thinks stole a
natural thing is nitric oxide. And there's another supplement with it,
and it's from a place. It's called N oneh one.
And I found this because I was looking for stuff
about blood pressure. And the guy who put this together
has been researching the connection between nitric oxide and blood

(02:23:22):
pressure since the nineties, is one of the leading researchers
on it. He's got his own company where he's selling
these supplements and they're not cheap. But it's the only
thing that I've taken that gets my blood pressure down,
and it got my blood pressure down to normal because
I've also got an issue with an aneurysm that I'm
not going to have surgery on, so I've got to
find some way to keep this thing from ballooning out

(02:23:43):
even more than it is. So anyway, I would also
recommend that, although I don't know that that directly goes
to the COVID vaccines, the covid vaccines. First thing we
saw was blood clots, and then we saw the inflammation
issues who had attacked the heart with myocard itis, some
pair card itis and things like that. So again, focus
on inflammation, focus on thinning the blood. And that's the

(02:24:09):
only advice I could give you. I'm not a doctor,
I don't even play one on TV.

Speaker 4 (02:24:14):
But we'll try and make sure that the list gets
put onto sub stack today. So we'll compile it and
put it up there. But of course this is not
medical advice. We would never advise you on medicine.

Speaker 2 (02:24:26):
Yeah, I just tell you to blunt ending medications that
are out there. Besides the pharmaceutical stuff, they're much much
much cheaper, and even if you've got insurance, far far cheaper.
And I had cardiologists who said that he had somebody
who was on it who was costing them like a
thousand dollars a month or something for eloquis. You know,

(02:24:46):
for the most part, it's older people around it who
have Medicaid supplement that helps to pay for some of it.
But if you've got to pay for all of it,
it's unbelievably expensive. Because again it's pfiser. What do you expect?

Speaker 4 (02:24:59):
More profits are needed? High boost says that dashcam for
me would be incriminating evidence. So all pass, that's right,
you don't wanna, you don't wanna.

Speaker 2 (02:25:08):
I have turned off the function on my dash cam
that shows what the speed is. So it's mainly used
for situations where they say you didn't stop long enough
at a stop sign, or that you ran a red
light when you went through under yellow.

Speaker 4 (02:25:23):
You know, if only means the speed up. If only
I had the speed turned on, you could see I
wasn't exceeding the speed limit. But I don't have that
turned on. So sadly it's my word against yours. North
American house hippo says, cops love going to court, they
get overtime.

Speaker 2 (02:25:39):
Oh yeah, Well, let's talk a little bit about what's
going on in the UK in terms of the Epstein contamination. Uh.
And this is something that boy, I tell you. The
international press, especially in the UK, is just all over
the fact that Andrew has lost his duke title. So

(02:26:01):
you can no longer be referred to as the same
title that John Wayne had, and he is no longer
a prince. He is now the man formerly known as Prince.
We've got two people in the royal family formerly known
as prince now, and so they are taking the royal
purple away from these guys who used to be prince.

Speaker 4 (02:26:18):
How will they survive?

Speaker 2 (02:26:20):
And so when you look at this the Royal family,
part of it is a fact that Virginia Guthrie's book
has just come out posthumously and it has brought up
this whole issue again. But he is a tremendous albatross
around the neck of the royal family and they have
to be concerned about this because there's a lot of

(02:26:41):
people who would like to see that whole institution go
away because of the amount of money that they make
and the special privilege that they have. Nevertheless, I think
it's interesting to the fact that the Trump people and
the GOP are really not aware of just how damaging

(02:27:03):
this whole Epstein thing is. They are embracing this covering
up for the people who were with Jeffrey Epstein, and
as a result, they're owning it. So you got the
Royal family that is pushing away as hard as they
can and ditching one member of the royal family completely
and stripping his titles. He'd already said I'm going to

(02:27:26):
give up some of these other titles that he had
but they took the key ones from him. They're kicking
him out of the home that he was in, and
their big response was to say that we stand with
the victims. Well, clearly Trump and the Republican Party are
not standing with the victims. They're standing with the purpse
who did all this stuff. And you have Thomas Massey
talking about that. As a matter of fact. Let's see, yeah,

(02:27:49):
here he is right here.

Speaker 5 (02:27:50):
There's two reasons he's flipped on Epstein. One, his rich
and powerful friends who've donated to him or go to
his dinner parties.

Speaker 4 (02:28:02):
He doesn't want to embarrass them.

Speaker 5 (02:28:06):
And because and they may in fact not even be
guilty of a crime, they may just be very embarrassed
that they were having extramarital sex, you know, with these
women for instance.

Speaker 4 (02:28:22):
So that's that's one thing.

Speaker 5 (02:28:24):
But I think there's also the intelligence aspect of this
that goes even deeper. Maybe Trump is on one plane
and he's thinking, I can't embarrass my friends, but there
may be people in the administration who are career people
who are thinking on another plane, they're like, well, let's

(02:28:44):
convince Trump he's going to embarrass his friends, when in reality,
what we're trying to do is protect our sources and
methods which may involve sex trafficking, and we don't want
to embarrass our partner, Israel in this time when the
popularity for their war or support for their war is
at an all time low. And now we're going to

(02:29:05):
find out that their defense minister, Ahud Barack, you know,
met with, was documented with Jeffrey Epstein three dozen times,
probably even while he was Defense minister, had previously been
Prime minister. I don't know that he knew Epstein during
that period. I'm not sure how much of those dates overlap,

(02:29:26):
but there are reasons that they want to protect them.
There are reasons he's flipped. And I don't think his
children or jd. Vance or even Pambondi or Cash Mattel
were read into all that when they originally said all
of this stuff should be released. I mean, if it's
a hoax, what were those binders that Pambondi gave out?

(02:29:51):
Was she just fueling a hoax?

Speaker 2 (02:29:55):
He's exactly right. And of course when you look at Andrew,
he's stripped of his prints title. He has to leave
the Royal Lodge. He had a thirty one room mansion.
The Royal Lodge. He's being kicked out of that and
he's being formally removed from any connection to the royal family.
And when you go back and look at the timeline

(02:30:16):
of what got him in trouble, what was it that
Andrew did. He had a single encounter really with one
underage woman, not to mention what Trump has been involved in.
As a matter of fact, the Wolfman, Michael Wolf came
out with a statement I've played for you, I'll played

(02:30:37):
again here in a second about the connection one connection
between Trump and Epstein and what broke that up. But
he also said that he has seen several pictures that
have not been made public, and he's seen them on
multiple occasions that was shown to him by Jeffrey Epstein,
and Trump had underage girls who were topless, sitting on

(02:30:58):
his lap and other things like that. So there is
some real damning evidence there. But just take a look
at what Andrew did versus what Trump did. In nineteen
ninety nine, Andrew was introduced to Jeffrey Epstein through Glaine Maxwell,
and Epstein is invited to Balmoral Castle a year later

(02:31:21):
the Duke, the former Duke, I should say, the man
formerly known as Prince joined Epstein and Maxwell at Trump's
Florida resort mar Lago, and then he had Epstein as
a guest at Windsor Castle. Then the following year, two
thousand and one, was Virginia Roberts Guthrie then seventeen, claims

(02:31:43):
that Epstein trafficked her to London where there were sexual
relations with Andrew at Glaine Maxwell's flat. And you can
see that picture that has been shown all the time
with Andrew standing there next to Virginia Guthrie and in
the background is Glaine Maxwell. Now, just imagine what's going
to happen when Trump pardons Glayne Maxwell. And I think

(02:32:06):
that he will, I really do think. I think he's
that tone deaf, and I think he's that arrogant to
think that he can do whatever he wishes and Mago
will still support him. And I think to a large
degree he's right.

Speaker 3 (02:32:18):
I think he might not have a choice.

Speaker 2 (02:32:20):
I think that's true.

Speaker 3 (02:32:21):
She might have enough on him that she could force
him to give a pardon.

Speaker 2 (02:32:26):
That's true. So imagine when that happens. I think a
lot of this stuff about p Diddy and George Santos,
these pardons that are happening I think he's preparing the
public for what's coming down the road. And that is
the pardon of Glayne Maxwell. You know, if he pardons
somebody like p Ditty, it's just he can say, well, yeah,

(02:32:47):
that's just what I do. I'm just a generous guy.
I hate to see people in jail. So he also
made a mistake by denying this is the man formerly
known as Prince who's now known as Andrew. He made
a massive mistake by denying that he had ever met
Virginia Guthrie to think that Trump is going down this

(02:33:08):
road as well by saying that it's a hoax at
the same time that he was the informant, at the
same time that his little puppet Mike Johnson said that
he was an informant. It made him look ridiculous. His
past is caught up with him in the most astonishing way.
I thought he would be forced out of the royal lodge,
but to take away his prince title as extraordinary, said

(02:33:30):
one observer of the royal family. The King and William
obviously decided enough was enough. This had to be dealt
with once and for all before William became king. They
don't want this cloud hanging over them. Maybe the GOP
should think about that as well. The former Duke of
York had always denied any wrongdoing. He maintains that he

(02:33:52):
never met Virginia, and yet we have that picture. And
then despite giving her or somebody I don't know if
she got it or somebody else did twelve million pounds,
he says that he never met her. And even though
he paid millions of dollars to settle a civil sexual
assault case with her in twenty twenty two, he claims

(02:34:14):
he never met her, but just out of the kindness
of his cart heart, he gave twelve million pounds to
her right and never met her. But there's the picture
that is there. So King Charles has stripped him of
his remaining titles in a terse statement, saying our sympathies
will remain with the victims of abuse. Again. There is
no sympathy, by the way, from Prince Charles for the

(02:34:37):
victims of his mass migration policies. There's no sympathy from
these people for what has been done during the COVID
lockdowns and vaccination campaigns. There's no sympathy for the attacks
on free speech and religion, which are also happening now
in Britain. As one person said, Britain no longer believes

(02:34:58):
and free speech for Christians. Christians in Britain do not
enjoy free speech. According to Felix and Gole, a social
worker who is appealing a court ruling that found that
he was not discriminated against when he missed out on
a job because of his traditional Christian views on LGBT issues.
This is a guy who's not Church of England liberal.

(02:35:19):
This is a guy who immigrated to the country and
he is originally from let's see it's in here, Cameroon, Okay,
So he's a black guy who came from Cameroon, and
he's a serious Christian. Not Church of England that has
a Prince Charles as it's head and has just newly
appointed the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.

Speaker 4 (02:35:43):
Henry the eighth, would not stand for that.

Speaker 3 (02:35:46):
We finally found the one thing that can make them
not give new immigrants of the country preferential treatment if
they're actually Christians.

Speaker 2 (02:35:55):
That's right. So he had been hired for a job
and then they looked on Facebook and they found that
he had posted things about his Christian belief about homosexuality,
and what real marriage was, saying that homosexual same sex
marriage was a sin. And so then they fired him,
so he sued them, and the ruling now has ultimately

(02:36:18):
set a dangerous precedent. It gives employers the freedom to
block Christians and anyone who doesn't promote LGBTQ ideology, you
can block them from employment. He said, if we get
to the point where if you don't celebrate and support
LGBT ideology you can't have a job, then every Christian

(02:36:39):
out there who doesn't have a future, you can study
as much as you like, but you'll never have a chance.
The UK is no longer the country that I heard
about all those years ago when fleeing Cameroon. The UK
then was a bastion of free speech and expression. But
again no more because it has been supplanted by a

(02:37:00):
new religion, a religion of intolerance. And so you know
this is all happening as we see the London police
now demanding us. I showed you that video earlier of
the man who'd already been stabbed, and I think there
is a video out there of him being stabbed, but
it's not necessary for us to see that he was

(02:37:22):
stabbed to death. But he was stabbed fifteen times, a
forty nine year old man who was simply walking his
dog down the street, and the security footage shows the
officers chasing again they call him a suspect. Why do
we do that, Well, because until somebody has a trial

(02:37:43):
and it is found guilty with due process, you still
refer to them as the suspect. That's why what Trump
is doing is so dangerous and egregious when he is
murdering people, blowing the boats out of the water. Anyway,
the suspect is a twenty two year old Afghan who's
snuck into England in the back of a cargo truck.
In twenty twenty, he was granted asylum in the UK

(02:38:06):
two years later. The Metropolitan Police are now cautioning citizens
against sharing the video online. So we don't want people
to know what is actually happening in our country. Elon
musk Wade in on horrific killings, saying enough is enough.
The deceased man again was a local garbage collector who
walked his dog every evening in the neighborhood, stabbed and

(02:38:29):
killed fifteen times by this Afghan who came into the country. Well,
we're going to take a break, and before we come back,
Before we take a break, why don't you go over
some of the comments.

Speaker 4 (02:38:40):
As right, Columbo twenty seven, Thank you very much. We
really do appreciate it, says in Christ love the show.

Speaker 2 (02:38:46):
Well, thank you, collect thank you.

Speaker 4 (02:38:48):
Lieutenant Oracle of Truth, thank you as well, says no tricks,
just treats. We appreciate it. We appreciate it very much.
Guard Goldsmith. By the way, did you Oliver read about
why ABC canceled police Squad? They said, seriously, it was
too intelligent and people wouldn't understand the humor. Stop calling

(02:39:09):
me Shirley w V w V, simple man. People are
going to be rushing grocery stores. Let's fire off some nukes.
Yeah nothing, don't panic, Yeah, just remain calm. We're cutting
off your benefits. You're gonna starve. By the way, here's

(02:39:32):
some nuclear testing.

Speaker 2 (02:39:33):
Hey watch this. Yeah, always distraction. He is the master
of distraction and red Herrings, isn't he.

Speaker 11 (02:39:40):
They're gonna cut off your food. You're not gonna be
able to eat. They're gonna be shooting off nukes. It's
gonna be a great, great time.

Speaker 2 (02:39:46):
Well, we're gonna take a quick break folks, we'll be
right back.

Speaker 1 (02:40:22):
In defending the American dream. You're listening to the David

(02:42:31):
Knight Show.

Speaker 7 (02:42:40):
I was working in the news lady one night for
my eyes beheld.

Speaker 6 (02:42:46):
The e recite for the monsters had rehearse.

Speaker 2 (02:42:49):
To my surprise, the tactics to inject what they divide.
The monster is the jab Jab. It's a graveyard stand.
I caught on in a flash. The job.

Speaker 6 (02:43:06):
The monster is the Jaz last.

Speaker 2 (02:43:10):
In the castle, least to the FBA with a farm
of vampire's feast.

Speaker 6 (02:43:15):
The goold rehearse before nine one.

Speaker 2 (02:43:18):
One had a poison us, which is what they've done
each The monster is the jazz Jo. The spikes a
graveyard staff. I'll put you on a slab. The monster
is the jab. Big Pharma was having fun. The party

(02:43:40):
had just begun. The guests included Fauci Trump, then Biden.
Scene was a lockdown. All we're fearing the news supply
chains were broken. We were singing the blues. The coffins
they told us, were about arrived. You can see it all.

Speaker 6 (02:44:01):
On Channel five. The job, The monster is the Jaz.
Mister Job.

Speaker 2 (02:44:08):
The spikes a graveyard stab. It'll put you on a slab.

Speaker 6 (02:44:13):
It is the jab.

Speaker 2 (02:44:15):
The monster is the Jab. From the Oval office. His
voice did ring.

Speaker 6 (02:44:21):
Hospital cash registers went a ching.

Speaker 2 (02:44:24):
When people cat on to keep on the lift, they said,
whatever happened to the Wuhan lab? The job? The monster
is the jab, Monster Job. The Spike's a graveyard stab.
He'll put you on a slab.

Speaker 6 (02:44:41):
The job.

Speaker 2 (02:44:42):
The monster is the jab. Now everything's cool. Lab leaks
a part of the plant. They're all of my echoes
throughout the land for you, the living. And they'll try
it again when they get to your door. Tell them
farmer no more.

Speaker 6 (02:44:58):
It is the jab. Monster is the job. Job.

Speaker 2 (02:45:03):
Spike to the graveyards, dab It'll put you on a slab.
The job, the monster is the job.

Speaker 9 (02:45:33):
Whether you're feeling like the booze or bluegrass, APS Radio
has you covered. Check out a wide variety of channels
on our app at APS radio dot com.

Speaker 4 (02:45:48):
Welcome back, folks, We got more comments. Jersey Boy eighty nine,
thank you again, as were most of the COVID vaccines
that people got fake. And of course he's reverencing the
fact that some had I believe different amounts of things
in them, and it's hard to say.

Speaker 2 (02:46:02):
Yeah, there was a huge difference. They went back and
this is research that was done by Naomi Wolf, and
they went back and they looked at the different batches.
I remember, you know, the plan from the government was
back in August of twenty twenty that they wanted to
track all your personal information, name, addressed, social security, all

(02:46:24):
that kind of stuff to identify you. But they also
wanted the batch number of the vaccine that you got.
And I said, that's a real warning thing. But there
was also another warning in there because on that form
that the health people were to use, there was a
box to be checked if you refused the vaccine. I said,
they're going to use that against people as well. But

(02:46:44):
they were tracking the batches. They wanted to keep track
of that, and I believe the whole thing was an
experiment because they went back and I forget what the
multiple was, but it was something like thirty times the
difference between the in terms of active ingredients from the
least to the most. And when Naomi Wolf went back
and looked at these batches, they found that the higher,

(02:47:06):
you know, the higher batches were the ones that were
everybody was having some adverse reaction like dying or serious
health effects. You know, when you look at any medication,
part of the testing is to test the dosage. You know,
if you had a real medicine, if you have too

(02:47:26):
little dosage, it doesn't work. If you got too much,
it's going to kill you. I mean even too much
water can kill you. And this is an excuse that
they always use. Uh So the real the reality is
that the dosage was a part of the test. This
whole thing was a big test. It was a test
of us behaviorally, psychologically. It was also a test of

(02:47:47):
the m R and A and how much they needed
to kill people and how much they could give people
to keep it under the radar and make it a
long term health threat, I believe. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:47:59):
He also want to know about books that are not
in the Bible. Do you believe them? Are they true?
Books of jasher Enoch, Jubilee and the War Scrolls? So
sorry for the million questions. Well, Alex Jones lied about
Bill Cooper.

Speaker 2 (02:48:11):
Yeah that's true as well. But if you go back
and look at what books are in the Bible, understand
that there wasn't some council that just made an arbitrary
thing and say this. We're going to say they went
back and they looked at what had been commonly passed
around for centuries, and they made the termination based on that.

(02:48:32):
And so there was some debate about some of the
things that were included, but for the most part, they
went with what had been generally accepted by everyone as
having been you know, traditional and people who had firsthand
or secondhand knowledge of these books that were there. That
was the way it was put together, even to the
extent that the the text that was used for the

(02:48:56):
early translations for the King James and others around that time,
Tendel Bible. They were it was called the textus receptives,
in other words, the received text. It wasn't mandated by council.
This is the text that everybody had always received as
being the actual writings of apostles and others who were

(02:49:16):
there at the time. And so a lot of these
things that have come up that have been put in,
like some of the books that you referenced there, these
are things that were not generally tied into it. And
so you know, there's always that issue there, but you
can kind of look at those texts and you can
kind of see that they're a little bit in a
different perspective. You know, one of the things when I

(02:49:36):
read the Bible that really sticks out to me is
the fact that it's not written typically in a way
that we would write things. What's the first thing that
somebody does as a human writer. You typically go in
and you describe the appearance of the different characters, right,
You go into a great deal about the environment that's there.
You describe everything, You build a picture of the person,

(02:49:58):
what they look like, what they're backstory was, and the
surroundings there. God looks at the heart and he doesn't
really talk about that kind of stuff. We have very
little description of the physical appearance of people throughout the Bible.
We're told that Saul was tall. We're told that David
was good looking and he was ruddy. Whatever that means
they have read hair, we don't know. But you know,

(02:50:22):
you look at there's very little description. There's no physical
description of most of the people in the Bible whatsoever.
That's not what a person would do. They always begin
with the description of that. And so when you look
at some of these other books that are there, as
I start to read them, I start to see things
that look like they're written by human rather than by God.

(02:50:44):
You know, that's just my own personal thing. But again,
it is a tradition as to what was generally accepted
and understood by a large number of people from the
beginning as to what were legitimate books that were there.
And I also believe that God can not only inspire,

(02:51:04):
but he can preserve the text that he wants.

Speaker 4 (02:51:07):
Yeah, that's always been my thing, is people get into
these arguments so like, well, so many people have gotten
their hands on the Bible and it's been retranslated a
million different times. You really believe that it still contains
the message? Like, yes, I do believe the all powerful
God of everything is more than capable of maintaining his
message throughout translations.

Speaker 2 (02:51:25):
Yeah, everything that you look at in the world. I mean,
we're talking about chuality the other day, but I mean,
you know, sexual reproduction, or the fact that all animals
are bilaterally symmetrical. You know, we have to cut us
down the middle. It's the same amb us. Why would
that be the case if we were products of random
chance and mutation. None of that makes any sense. You

(02:51:45):
couldn't have sexual reproduction, you wouldn't have bilateral symmetry all
these other things. And that's just the beginning of it.
Then you start getting into the things that have been
unraveled and recently in terms of science like DNA and
other things like that. There has to be an intelligence
that is there, an intelligent design that is there. And
then the question is why wouldn't that intelligent design communicate

(02:52:07):
to us? And did he communicate to us through the Bible?

Speaker 4 (02:52:11):
I know I bring up Chesterton a lot, but I
promise this is actually tied into talking about bilateral symmetry.
He has a really great part in Orthodoxy where he
talks about if there was some man on the moon,
an alien that were to be observing, you know, human race,
he would soon come to the conclusion that a man
is two men, the one on the left exactly mirroring
the one on the right. And he would go about

(02:52:32):
this catalog. He would say, he's got an arm on
the left and an arm on the right. He's got
an eye on the left and an eye on the right,
And just when he was lulled into a false sense
of security, he would assume, well, he's got a heart
on the left, therefore he must have a heart on
the right side. And that's where he would go astray
and Chesterton points out that the Bible not only points
out the fact the obvious truths, but the hidden truths

(02:52:53):
that a man only has the heart on his left,
and no matter how many other people say you know
anything else, the Bible stands for on it and says no,
the hidden truth is real, whether you see it or
agree with it or not. So I think I mentioned
this before, but the Bible is, you know, it's obvious
and intuitive about things where it should be obvious and intuitive,

(02:53:14):
and then it's imparsable and ununderstandable about things that are
obviously imparssable and understandable. The nature of God, we're all
finite beings and he is an infinite being. How could
you hope to understand that? Could you drink an infinite
amount of water? No, because you're a finite being, how
could you hope to understand an infinite God and his
nature and the things surrounding that. So again, like I,

(02:53:35):
like I've said before, you know, all these other man
made religions, all the gods are very very humanish. Zeus
has all the same foibles that a rich, powerful man has.

Speaker 2 (02:53:45):
The image of man.

Speaker 4 (02:53:48):
And so to me it's just that's something very very
special and unique about Christianity, and you can pretty easily
see that when comparing it. So we've got more comments
be Wolf or maybe it's bay Wolf. Thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (02:54:02):
B Wolf.

Speaker 4 (02:54:03):
Oh seven says, let's fill up the tank. Love the show.
I've been watching since the days of Info Wars, and
DK has always seemed to have a clear view of
what's going on. I agree even back further than that,
Alex has bought and paid for Now, when did that
change from my perspective, It really changed with the twenty
sixteen election.

Speaker 2 (02:54:21):
Yeah, and that's when it all came out. You know,
part of that. He had been against the police state.
He'd been against these foreign wars and anything. Now look
at where he is. He's this last weekend he had
a program where he and Patrick Burn, the billionaire from Overstock,
they created Overstock. You know, they're sharing this Venezuelan war.
And Alex used to not be like that. Of course,

(02:54:42):
he doesn't have a problem with Trump enacting a police state.
And when you look at the kinds of things that
Trump is doing, the fact that they are doing a
lot of training of the military for cities and things
like that, and they know that they're creating this kind
of conflict because you've got people from the Trump administra saying,
we're worried that people are going to violently attack us,

(02:55:04):
and so they're moving on to military bases in order
so they can have safe protection for their own for themselves.
They know that they're creating this type of thing. It's deliberate.
Alex knows that too, and there's no question about it.

Speaker 4 (02:55:18):
Yeah, And I personally, I think it really only happened
in the second election term, like everything was mostly fine, Like,
you know, I disagreed with him on some things, but
you disagree with everyone on some things. There was nothing
I saw up until the vaccine pushing that made me go, well.

Speaker 2 (02:55:37):
Well, it became incredibly partisan with the twenty sixteen election,
and then when you look at twenty twenty, it was
just a complete betrayal of everything that he had ever done.

Speaker 4 (02:55:46):
Stop the steal and the vaccine pushing was where I
immediately looked, It was like, this is insane. Before the
stop the steal, if my Twitter account still existed, you
could go back and look and see that I tweeted
something along on it. So like, did we learn nothing
from Charlottesville? These large events are always used to demonize
and frame the right. They fill it up with these

(02:56:08):
bad actors, whether it's you know, Antifa or the FBI
or the CIA. It makes it incredibly easy when you
have a massive group to sneak people in. You're not
going to know everyone. You don't know who these people are.
You can't be certain.

Speaker 2 (02:56:21):
Agent provocateurs is obvious thing.

Speaker 4 (02:56:23):
And with a large enough crowd you simply cannot keep
tabs on and manage all these people. It makes it
incredibly easy for them.

Speaker 2 (02:56:29):
It's far worse than having somebody who's dressed as the Cloud.
It's you know, you get associated with any of these things,
Like I said, you know somebody, you know, all these
people passing out these I'M with anti five t shirts
and anything. They may mean one thing by that, but
it's going to be used obviously in a different way.
I mean they look at that and say, well, you know,
you're I don't think that Antifa is even an organization,

(02:56:51):
and so you're going to say that they're terrorist. That
means that you can identify anybody as a terrorist. So
then they put on the label that they had, and
I think that was a foolish thing to do. If
they do not know what antiphont is. They need to
figure it out and not say they're antiphon. But I
also agree with them that the president should not have
the ability to label an institution as a terrorist organization

(02:57:13):
and punish them. We've seen that happening in Germany with
AfD for example. Let's get some of the questions about
out of time.

Speaker 4 (02:57:19):
Ratist Bro says, well, to be fair, ninety eight percent
of Congress would fail an IQ or cognitive test.

Speaker 2 (02:57:25):
Could they put that square peg in the round hole
or will they be able to figure out where it goes?

Speaker 4 (02:57:29):
President Avante seventeen seventy six, they should have given Trump
a test on the US Constitution.

Speaker 2 (02:57:35):
Yeah, he would fell that, just like AOC and Crockett would.

Speaker 4 (02:57:40):
Ratus Bro says, he's literally describing the idiocracy IQ test
ll Yeah, I thought that was amazing.

Speaker 2 (02:57:47):
Yeah, I had. First, there's the easy part, you know,
like elephants and tigers or anything, is like what in
the world are they telling them? Did they really think
that he's that far gone? That's that's the other question
is like.

Speaker 4 (02:57:58):
Being so out of it that you rag about it
that you don't you can't tell this is something that
you keep to yourself, like.

Speaker 2 (02:58:04):
Okay, we're in Biden territory.

Speaker 1 (02:58:06):
Here.

Speaker 4 (02:58:06):
They gave me the easy one. They're ashamed of me.
Better not talk about this, Shelley A. Here comes the
nuke fear porn. Hide under your desk, kids. That's right,
We've got a desk here, so we'll be safe. So
lookat nineteen eighty Nato kayans or A pair of gold
enzymes and other enzymes taken between meals can help fight
the effects of the clock shot. So write that day.

(02:58:26):
Check it out for yourself. Nato kayes and golden enzymes
ben laden BERNANKI life expecting see in America has been
solely creeping downward since two thousand and three. The one
hundred year old's big media parades and TV is a
cover for the baby boomers and gen xer is dying
off at a rapid rate. Well, they have pumped baby
boomers and gen xers full of different medications and all
kinds of poisons over the years. It's no surprise that

(02:58:47):
people are dying, but.

Speaker 2 (02:58:48):
So target them for all this CONVID nonsense.

Speaker 4 (02:58:51):
Yeah, that's a I know I've said this before, but
I know a lot of people have problems with the Boomers,
the Boomers. Every generation has their own foibles. The Boomers
were the first gen to get hit with the twenty
four to seven always on TV news cycle. No generation
has been brainwashed and had their mind messed with to
that extent before the Boomers were the you know, the

(02:59:14):
beta project of this, well we're receiving now. The Boomers
got it, and there was there wasn't anyone that was
looking at this with the benefit of hindsight, going this
is this is bad. We're able to look at it
and go, yeah, man, they screwed us over, but we're
able to look at it the benefit of hindsight. Like
I said, Hindsight's twenty two.

Speaker 2 (02:59:29):
A minute, I'm a boomer. I resemble that remark. God,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 4 (02:59:34):
I'm just saying like people have, like they get very
mad at boomers, but because they sit there with the
benefit of oh, like I can go on social media
and I can find these dissonant voices that will tell
me things that are actually true. Boomers really didn't have
the benefit of that. And Guard goldsmith final comment, the
King might want to think about his own association with
Jimmy Saville, but a disgusting pair of brothers, those windsors.

Speaker 2 (02:59:54):
Yes, and of course all this pretend about Epstein helps
to inoculate him against that. Perhaps. All right, thank you
for joining us. Have a good weekend and a happy Halloween.

Speaker 6 (03:00:12):
I was working in.

Speaker 7 (03:00:13):
The news late one night for my eyes beheld and
recite for the monsters head rehearse. To my surprise, the
tactics to inject what they divide the job.

Speaker 2 (03:00:27):
The monster is the Jabs job. The spikes a graveyard stand.
I caught on in a flash. The job.

Speaker 6 (03:00:37):
The monster is the Jab labs.

Speaker 2 (03:00:41):
In the castle least to the FBA with a form
of vampires feast the goold rehearse before nine one one
and a poison us, which is what they've done.

Speaker 6 (03:00:53):
Job.

Speaker 2 (03:00:54):
The monster is the Jazz job. The spikes are graveyards.
He'll put you on a slab job. The monster is
the Jab. Big Pharma was having fun. The party had
just begun. The guests included Fauci Trump, then Biden sne

(03:01:21):
was a lockdown. All we're fearing. The news supply chains
were broken. We were singing the blues. The coffins. They
told us we're about arrive. You can see it all
on Channel five. The monster is the Jazster job. The
spikeser graveyard stab. It'll put you on a slab the job.

(03:01:46):
The monster is the Jab from the Oval office. His
voice did ring. Hospital cash registers went a ching. When
people caught on to keep on the lid. They said,
whatever happened to the woo hand lab? The monster is
the Jabs, the spikes of craveyard stab. He'll put you

(03:02:11):
on a slab is the job. The monster is the Jab.
Now everything's cool. Lab leaks a part of the planet.
They're alllly echoes throughout the land for you living, and
they'll try it again for they get to your door.
Tell them farmer, no more the job. The monster is

(03:02:32):
the jaz the spikes a graveyard stabs. It'll put you
on a slab. Job.

Speaker 6 (03:02:41):
The monster is the Jab. You and I spoke
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