All Episodes

August 4, 2025 136 mins
01:00:39 – UK Online Safety Act Turns Orwellian
Opening segment warns that Britain’s new law now requires ID for everyday activities — from adjusting Nvidia graphics card settings to ordering a pizza — and is rapidly expanding into a full surveillance regime.

01:07:09 – VPNs, Xbox & Age‑Locked Internet
Discussion on UK plans to ban VPNs and force age‑verification IDs for online gaming, social features, and even accessing support forums — a sweeping restriction on free expression.

01:15:24 – Feminist Group ‘Collective Shout’ Driving Game Censorship
Exposes how the Australian activist group is working with payment processors to ban games globally, pushing moral‑control agendas under the guise of child protection.

01:45:06 – Trump’s $200 Million White House Ballroom
Critiques Trump’s plan to add an opulent ballroom to the White House as an ego project, mocking his claim that past presidents “always wanted” one but couldn’t do it until him.

01:50:16 – Trump, Epstein & Mar‑a‑Lago Connection
Details claims that Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre worked at Mar‑a‑Lago before being trafficked, and speculation that Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer to a low‑security prison could set up a pardon.

02:17:17 – U.S. Debt is $151 Trillion, Not $37 Trillion
A Zero Hedge report reveals the real national debt — including unfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare — is over $151 trillion. The host mocks the government’s “it’s not debt until we pay it” logic.

02:26:15 – Stablecoins as a Stealth CBDC
Discussion of the new Genius Act regulating stablecoins, described as a backdoor to a central bank digital currency. The host warns it will allow total financial surveillance and instant “de‑banking” for political speech.

02:52:19 – The “Five‑Hour School Week” Homeschool Model
Story of parents who discovered they could teach their child all required material in just one hour a day, leading to better results and more time for real‑life learning.

03:00:54 – Homeschoolers Outperform Public Schools
Data shows homeschoolers scoring 15–30 percentile points higher than public school students, even for low‑income families. The host calls public schools Marxist indoctrination centers.

03:08:50 – Canada Dumps Academic Standards
British Columbia drops subject‑specific standardized testing in favor of “literacy” and “numeracy” assessments, replacing A–F grades with vague labels like “developing” and “proficient.”



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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. It's the David Knight Show.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
As the clock strikes thirteen, it is Monday, the fourth
of August, year of Our Lord twenty twenty five, and
the UK is already feeling the tutulitarian effects of the
Online Safety Act, for not being able to adjust settings
on graphics cards to requiring ID to order a pizza.
A United Kingdom is going completely insane, and the US
debt is far higher than you might think, because thirty

(01:01):
seven trillion dollars wasn't bad enough. Stay with us, Welcome

(02:10):
to the show, folks. We had some technical difficulties this morning,
not on our end. A fiber optic line got cut somewhere.
But we're live, glad to be with you. As I said,
we're gonna look at what's going on with the United Kingdom,
but first we're gonna take a look at some brief
other news. Apparently people are waking up to the organ
harvesting scam. You can see this interest over time in searches.

(02:35):
It has spiked, it dropped down back a bit, but
it is now climbing again.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
People are beginning.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
To realize that perhaps being an organ donor isn't the
best idea. You can see it right there. It jumps
up and drops back down a little bit, but is
on the rise again. So people are beginning to realize, oops,
they might just cut my organs at I mean, well,
I still need them. There was this New York Time

(03:04):
It's article NYT's favorite doctor thinks he's entitled to your organs.
Not a New York Times article, but they were referencing
a New York Times doctor and people, this is a tweet.
People on Twitter have been talking about prettymaure organ harvesting
for years. I'll be honest, I thought it was a
conspiracy theory.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
I was wrong.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
It's real and it's horrific. Some people only wake up
when the mainstream media begins to cover something. This guy
is like, I thought you were all crazy. I thought
you were conspiracy theorists, but I was wrong. Yeah, amazing
how that tends to happen. If only these people would
actually do a little bit of thinking. You don't know

(03:42):
who Robert M. Sterling is, But welcome to the club, buddy,
I guess you're finally awake. And now we can move
on to the UK censorship stuff. This is a tweet

(04:03):
from a guy named mister Obvious at Obvious Rises. I've
heard this guy is a bit of a weirdo in
his personal life. Not too much detail, but apparently he's
covering this breaking Zoomers cannot adjust their in video graphics
card settings on their gaming pieces anymore anymore because they

(04:24):
aren't eighteen thanks to the Online Safety Act.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
And see that.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
There is some language in the tweet which I will
not read. It says I have to be eighteen to
use the Nvidia app. Now you can see that you
are not eligible to use this application based on the
information we have. You not meet our age requirements. We
appreciate your interest and encourage you to come back later.
That's right, you can't adjust your graphics card settings if
you're using Nvidia. Apparently it's got some kind of chat

(04:51):
function built into the app, and as such that are
required to take your ID when you use it. Now,
isn't that wonderful? On the next one, this is from
a guy named Max Tempers. At first it's from Charlie.
This is about him having to provide ID to get

(05:13):
his pizza delivered. Says, in case anyone thinks I'm lying,
you've got a tweet there simate delivery time nineteen minutes
twenty through nineteen thirty. I guess they're using twenty four
hour time pizza deliveries. Preparing your order, get your photo
ID ready or writer will need to see it when
you arrive.

Speaker 3 (05:32):
Update.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
My driver actually had to look at my passport to
get a pizza. This is Starmar's Britain. And then Max
Tempers retweets and says in the UK, you're a legal immigrant.
Delivery delivery guy checks your identification papers. That's right, got
to make sure that you're old enough to be ordering
a pizza. I suppose this took no time at all

(05:54):
to become completely and utterly or Wellian police state has
gone out of control, and it doesn't seem like very
many people in politics are pushing back on it at all.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
And of course the other side of this is the
surveillance aspect of it that you know, they have a
photo ID and government issued a passport and selfie of
everyone that wants to change the settings on their graphics
cards or ordered a pizza at such and such a time.
You know, it's a huge surveillance state.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
Step Yeah, got to have your info at all times.
This is from someone called Pippi, a v tuber. One
of the most insane aspects of the modern world.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
I called it.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
I literally said on one of my posts the other
day they'd be going after VPN soon.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
This is never about protecting children.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
This is about controlling the population, clamping down on any
and all anti immigrant and anti government posts and punishing
those who don't follow along. Of course, this was obvious.
VPNs are a way people can get around this sort
of thing, and so they can't allow it, and they can't.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Let you have that.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
It says labor support for VPN restrictions after Online Safety
Act fail, but they're probably going to keep coming after it.
You're not gonna let this one go. They might let
it rest for a bit. However, it's not done now
this one. There's a legitimate chance Norman Readers will not

(07:29):
be able to make online accounts because AI will be
trained to reject his likeness. That is being used to
prevent age verification. It's because Norman Reads is in Hideo
ko Jima's death Stranding games. I haven't played them, but
he was used as the model for them, and people
have been using him as their identification to prove their
old enough. Look, I'm an older guy. I'm in my

(07:53):
I'm middle aged. Because the graphics are extremely realistic, and
that apparently it's been getting around there. They're scanners or
whatever they're using their identifiers. So maybe Norman Readis will
be locked out. Sorry, Norman, you can't have an account.
Your face was used to bypass our security checks. Now

(08:14):
people are trying to petition to get this repealed. There's
a petition that's already got three hundred and fifty nine
nine eighty eight signatures as of when we pulled this
could be more now.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
But.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Petitions are of vague utility. You know, they're just kind
of a poll of what people are feeling. If the
government doesn't care about what the people want, there's no
reason for them to care about the petition. Sanford police
tweet here says anyone caught using or attempting to use
a VPN to get around the Online Safety Act will

(08:50):
be identified.

Speaker 1 (08:51):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
If we think you're trying to circumvent our rules, we
will find you. We will track you down. You'll be identified.
Once I identified, your online usage will be monitored and restricted.
You must do as you are told. Isn't that right
you must do as you are told. Not going to
put up with you ignoring our rules. This is from

(09:17):
at Pirate Underscore Nation on Twitter. Xbox users in the
UK will soon need to verify their age to continue
using key social features like messaging and voice chat with
people outside their friends list. So if you're playing a
game online, if you want to access to team chat
or whatever you're doing, you're gonna have to provide ID.
You're gonna have to let people. You're gonna have to

(09:39):
let Xbox, Microsoft and the government know who you are,
link your identities.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
And people are already pretty loose with what they say
on these game chat things. Now that's going to be
tied to a government issued ID. In selby.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Yeah, you're having some banter with somebody in the lobby, Well.

Speaker 3 (10:00):
Too bad. You might have committed hate speech.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
And now it's not just Xbox that will ban your account,
but they'll probably report you directly to the government. Make
sure that you can be punished properly. This is from
at MENCV on Twitter. The UK Online Safety Act means
subreddits like our Cider and support Forum for our Sexual
assaultant or Stop Smoking are now blocked for people under

(10:23):
eighteen that's right. In case you had, you know, in
case you were sexually assaulted, or you're trying to stop
smoking as an underage person, you're denied help from forums
like this. Isn't that wonderful? You have to add your birthday,
and if you're beneath a certain age you're not going
to be able to access them. Now we're going to

(10:45):
talk a little bit about who is behind this. It's
a group called Collective Shout and they're a feminist.

Speaker 4 (10:53):
Collective Shout isn't connected to the UK Censorship Act. They're
connected to the push from payment processors to shut down
the or sensor games. They ostensively claim that they were
just trying to remove porn games from Steam, but then
they've immediately gone after quite a lot of games that

(11:15):
are not in any way pornographic.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Yeah, so Collective Shot feminist censorship through payment processors, and
I see this is all tied into together. It's all
part of the censorship of free speech and free thought.
These people are working, as he said, they started as
a well, we want to get these weird, you know,
pornographic games off of Steam, off these other websites. You know,

(11:42):
they're very gross, they're things that as a general rule,
no one in the right mind is going to fight
back on. But it gives them a wedge in the door. Well,
if you let us censor this, then we can censor anything.
They're doing it through payment processors. That's their favorite method
of attack. Of course, you've seen what's happened with other places.

(12:02):
We were debanked by PayPal as well, PayPal and Venmo.
This is how they do it. If you can dbank someone,
you can make it impossible for them to do anything.
This is from v at not underscore v v ee
on Twitter. You may have seen some of his videos
on YouTube. He's a Romanian guy. Things you've missed. UK

(12:25):
talks about banning VPNs. Russia talks about banning VPNs. Cloud
Flare asked to ban VPNs in the UK. Kids bypassed
the age verification with AI generated pictures or Fortnite characters,
making me believe that in the future facial scan will
be removed in favor for ID verification only.

Speaker 3 (12:40):
Very likely.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
Itchio removed thousands of games. Horror games are now banned.
You mentioned Mouthwash, but Fear and Hunger also got banned.
Collective shout claims innocence. They never wanted this, asked people
stop engaging with them. Oh yeah, this is how they do.
Oh no, oops, no, this isn't what we wanted. We
didn't mean for this to happen.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
Leave us alone. We didn't mean for this. They are lying.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
He was passing a Digital Safety Act next year, which
is the reason the sites are restricted. Australia's passing an
act too, which is just as iconic, if not more
so than the one. In UK, protests and anti immigration topics,
including a speech in the UK Parliament by a politician
is labeled as not safe for kids, despite kids at
the age of sixteen we able to vote in the UK.
Sorry you can't watch this speech from one of the

(13:30):
guys in parliament. It's problematic. This is another tweet from
mister obvious collective shout the group hine visa payment processors
banning anime breasts on stream and attacking Japanese devs. Just
got SCP containment breach removed for a naked non humananity
called peanut. This whole thing is just a continuation of

(13:51):
gamer Gate, but more ridiculous. You can see that's the
creature that got the game banned. I don't think that
counts as nudity. In my opinion, it doesn't.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
Really seem to have anything going on at all. This
is again. The insanity.

Speaker 4 (14:12):
Is explicit as the Pillsbury dough Boy.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
Yeah, if you're gonna ban this, next go is the
Pilbury dough Boy than Donald Duck, Porky Pig, any one
of those anthropomorphis cartoon characters that doesn't wear pants.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
This is again.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Gamer Gait was a ridiculous time on the Internet, and
it's coming back around. It's truly amazing that what's old
is new again. Gamergate, of course, being this sort of
rejection of games journalists that were being bribed for their views,
interjecting politics into their reviews of video games, and it

(14:52):
had a lot of big players, people like Sargon of
a Cod Mister medicer v was one of them, as
well Ethan Ralph. It had a whole litany of people
that have now gone on to do other things. It
kind of came crashing down when Sarkanavicad mentioned if we
could just get Donald Trump to tweet about gamer gait,
if we could just do that, and it was such

(15:14):
a ridiculous statement that it sort of imploded from there
because people started making fun of him for that, even
in his own side was like this is this is something.
This is from at Chibi Reviews on Twitter bombshell information.
A lot of Collective Shout members are connected with the
Australian government. This means their group is very likely getting
support from the government behind the scenes and explain how

(15:36):
in eight days Steam was forced to remove hundreds of games.
Of course, we continually see this, this interplay between these
corporations and governments, people moving back and forth. Whether it's
here with lobbyists or in Australia, they continually pull this
sort of thing. They have power players, people that know

(15:59):
how to get acts to people in government and to
get what they want. You know, it'd be a shame
if we just had to ban Steam in Australia. But
if you don't do what we say, might have to
do that. That's I'm assuming how it went.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
This is from Vice.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
The group hind Steam censorship policies, have powerful allies and
targeted popular games without landish claims. Group has targeted nearly
five hundred games to removal on Steam. And of course
this is just the beginning. There probably were a bunch
of really gross games that got removed, which none of
us would be sad to see go based on our morals. However,

(16:36):
if they can target these, they will very rapidly move
on to anything they don't like, anything with vaguely right
wing views, anything that doesn't immediately promote communism.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
This is from Well.

Speaker 4 (16:50):
The thing is they're also going after very left wing
games that literally do promote communism. The game that they
have here in the thumbnail is Detroit Become Human, which
is one of the games that they've targeted because it
features themes of domestic abuse. And the thing is, it's
a detective game. You're investigating stuff like that. It's going

(17:16):
to have, you know, dark themes. It doesn't celebrate that.
It's not pornographic in any way. I mean, maybe there's
some parts in it. I don't know, but I played
through it and didn't see anything like that. And it
was very left leaning, very political.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Yeah, it was extremely left leaning. This next tweet, it's
from Anna Valen's. It says Vice's owner Savage Ventures has
requested the removal of my collective shout articles. This is
due to concerns about the controversial subject matter, not journalistic complaints.
EFFECTI immediately I will no longer contribute to Waypoint. I

(17:56):
suggest letting Vice's owner know if this upsets you.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Now.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
I'm assuming Anna Valens was very pro collective shout.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
I haven't.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
I'm not an expert on these collective shout people, but
Anna Valens I do know something about. Anna Valens is
not a woman. Anna Valens is a man who has
written a gross rape breeding fan fiction about women. There's
actually audio of her talking her him talking about it,

(18:28):
talking about how in the future we're going to set
up these compounds where all women will be sent for
the trannies to go and use them for their own
sexual deviant purposes. That's who Anna Valens is. This person
is incredibly sick. These are the people that are involved
with this. It's amazing that these same cast of characters

(18:54):
crops up over and over again. They have been around
and harassing people in the gaming sphere for years. Anna
Valens has been an annoyance and a detriment for a
long time now, and I don't understand how this man

(19:15):
continues to get work after everything that they've said. This
is a tweet from someone named Haley Elra on Twitter.
I knew the woman. She says woman, but it's a
man tranny behind at Collective Shout was unhinged. She believes Therecroft,
Hanoka Qortan and others are pornified and sexist. Yes really,
she claims no woman can have large breasts without implants.

(19:37):
Excuse me, that's an insult to millions of women, including me.

Speaker 3 (19:40):
That's because Anna isn't a.

Speaker 2 (19:43):
She, It's a he and would require surgery to even
become a pale imitation, a shallow mockery of what a
woman truly is. And she and Anna whatever his real
name is, doesn't like the idea that someone could have
a feminine body without needing surgery because it is a

(20:05):
reflection of what this guy can never be.

Speaker 4 (20:08):
And also, Laura Croft, you know, you can say what
you will about the character design, but it's clearly not
a pornographic game. It's just a popular, normal video game.
These people will not stop.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
They parade as advocates for women, yet they shame our
bodies and irobiologi, spew sexist nonsense, and push a narrative
built on judgment and control. That's because there is no
one that hates women more than a trans guy. Because again,
they are everything they can never be. They are real women.

(20:46):
Trans men hate women, they despise them. Collective shout is
ideological sewage and at Mel Tankard Reist is disgusting. Don't
know who that person is, but I'll give you. I'll
take your word for it. The chance they would ban
or censor Dead or Lives, teller Blade, the first descendant, Halo,
and so many at their games. In a heartbeat, Halo
is the only one of those I've ever played.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
It doesn't fit their world view. They want to race.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
If it features freedom, beauty or choice, they want it gone.
They scream harm. But really it's all about control. These
people are completely and utterly insane. Anything to do with
freedom of choice has to be banned, even in video
games where it's a time wasting endeavor, where it's just escapism.

(21:34):
The ideology has to be controlled. You can't even escape
into your own world and be free of these people.

Speaker 4 (21:42):
And of course it's always packaged under the guise of safety.
It's to protect the children from these horrible pornographic games. Meanwhile,
they're going after things like Detroit Become Human, Halo, Laura Croft,
tomb Raider.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
This is from at Disclosed TV. Just in YouTube. Just
in YouTube will begin using AI to monitor user behavior
in psychology to determine whether viewers in the US are
over the age of eighteen. They're gonna unleash an AI
to scan everything you watch, and if it seems like
you're watching stuff a childhood then they're going to make

(22:19):
that judgment call. I'm going to force you to prove
you're not under eighteen. Well, as my dad has said,
you can probably just watch some old music or TV shows.
He recommends Glenn Miller watch some of that, and they'll
know you're not under eighteen. This is from a Daily Mail.

(22:44):
All new UK cars will have breathalyzers in black box
style recorders under labor plans to align.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
With the EU. These uh.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Again, the UK and the EU are insane. They are
going full totalitarian. There is nothing they want more than
to be able to control every aspect of your life. Sorry,
I know that you've never done anything wrong, but we're
gonna put a breathalyzer in. You're gonna have to blow
into it every single time you get into the car.

(23:14):
People in the US have talked about this before too,
but they've backed off of it for now.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
We'll see what happens.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
I wouldn't be surprised if the UK actually does it.
Now this is uh, We're just kind of going through
miscellaneous news at this point. But the guy who got
caught on the Coldplay kiss cam is apparently going to

(23:41):
sue them over the scandal. It's truly despicable. I can't
believe that Coldplay would force this man to engage in
an affair. As Greg here points out, shame on Coldplay
for forcing him to cheat on his wife. Yes, shame
on Coldplay. I can't believe that they must have pulled
the gun on him and said, if you don't do this,

(24:03):
you know it's curtains bud. He is the one I
was engaging in an adulterest relationship. This is from Newswire.
Gilaine Maxwell's schedule congressional deposition and definitely postponed. This is
from Political just In. Gilaine Maxwell's new minium security prison

(24:26):
prohibits cameras and other recording devices. Yeah, they must have
learned their lesson after what happened with Jeffrey. No cameras at.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
All, getting a move to a.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
At best, she's getting moved to a cushy prison where
you know she's going to have a better time.

Speaker 4 (24:43):
There will be no missing minute, all of the minutes
are missing.

Speaker 2 (24:47):
This is from raw alerts. Breaking shocking revelations showed that
one hundred million rays for Los Angeles wildfire victims was
funneled to non governmental organizations, many of which had no
direct involvement in fire relief efforts.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
This is raise serious.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
Concern about mismanagement and accountability, more graft and corruption, more
scamming people.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
Where did it go?

Speaker 2 (25:08):
One hundred million dollars raise and it's just gone, it
vanishes into the ether. And now briefly about bitcoin. This
is from at BTC underscore archive. Just in bitcoin held
on exchanges for three plus years? Will we be transferred
to the state in California under a law pass by
the Assembly? That's right if you hold it in an exchange. Eventually, Sorry,

(25:31):
you know, I think that's ours now, says the State
of California. They're just gonna take it, can't keep it there,
got to be. They're always coming up with new ways
to take your money. Bitcoin is no exception. Bitcoin is
no exception at all. Now it's a just moving right

(25:59):
through this I thought was interesting, someone points out. Stephen
King tweeted out the Epstein client list is real, so
is the tooth fairy in Santa Claus and someone pointed
out that he has been criticizing Trump daily for over
a decade and he finally defends Trump and it's over
the Epstein list.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
Why would that be?

Speaker 2 (26:19):
I wonder one of what's going on with mister King there.
Of course, Stephen King is a known weirdo. There's the
book It where he wrote a child orgy scene. He
claims that it was because of the amount of drugs
he was on, but who can say. Really, perhaps Stephen
King is just a weird, degenerate freak. This is from

(26:44):
at GB again, we're just going top briefly through miscellaneous news,
giving brief overviews on things. It's from at GB Politics.
The UK covertly transported eighteen five hundred Afghans to the
country following a data breach, housing them at a cost
of seven billion, despite some having them in all records.
A total twenty three nine hundred Afghans are scheduled to
be resettled in Britain and will require housing. Many are

(27:08):
now likely to sue the UK government, claiming their lives
are in danger due to any data breach. The mystry
of defense and government attempt to suppress this information. The
influx of migrants to the UK is not stopping, it's
not sewing down. In fact, now it seems like they'll
be able to sue the government for more money. Isn't
that wonderful. They're just gonna get everything that they want,

(27:33):
no hesitation, nothing to worry about. Well that's our sort
of topical news section. We're gonna take a quick break
and actually, well we've got lots of comments. I have
been ignoring them. That is shame on me, Ratisboro. Thank
you very much, Ratusbro. That's very kind. We appreciate it.

(27:55):
Only fans is their values. Though, why this is funny?
What was that in relation to perhaps drop a comment?

Speaker 3 (28:04):
Ratis Bro?

Speaker 2 (28:05):
Give us some context because I've ignored it for too long.
I cannot place it. Thank you though, really do appreciate it.
Tunnel Lord on three through seven. I have no idea
why Vidiot requires you to have an app or an
account to access their apps to download their drivers. Yeah,
it doesn't make any sense anytime I have to update
a driver. It's very obnoxious, tunnel Lord in three three seven,
Lo the tour browser is how to easily avoid this

(28:27):
Internet censorship. Learn how to use the tor browser, get
familiar with it, figure it out. It's going to be
your only way forward in the future.

Speaker 4 (28:35):
And for the record, if you're on Linux, you can
use open source drivers or in videographics cards if you want,
or you can use the proprietary ones, which works better
in some cases.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
Tune Lord one three three seven. I read that Audi MRR.
Public welfare has always been the alibi of tyrants. Albert Camus.
That's right, it's for your own good. We're doing it
to help you and as such, you're just gonna have
to do what we see. I know we're trampling on
your rights. I know we're trampling on your freedom, is
making you miserable, but it's for your own good tunnel

(29:07):
Lord one three three seven. Why Steam capitulating to Australia
That who knows? I I would never I would never
capitulate to Australia.

Speaker 4 (29:17):
It's even worse. They're capitulating to a bunch of angry
feminist activists and training Elia. Yeah, with likely backing from
the Australian Conment.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
Maybe, Yeah, we're gonna have to send Harps in to
do a man on the Street report.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
Nights of the Storm.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
My wife got put in a Facebook time out for
posting a pick of our grands on swimming at the river.
It was flagged as CP. It's not that good at
parsing this stuffyet. They pulled the trigger on placing it
in charge. Yeah, it's it's very trigger happy. As you
point out, it is going to continually make mistakes, but
they don't have to care. Denver Addaway. One guy is

(29:55):
suing or trying to sue from Software for Eldering being
too difficult, that's not playable or accessible.

Speaker 3 (29:59):
By and others.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
I've heard I've heard different stories about this. I've heard
he said that it's so difficult that no one has
been able to access the true game, that there is
an underlying game beneath elden Ring that is being hidden
from him and everyone. And as such, you know, you know,
you're entitled to be able to play the game you buy,
and since you're not able to play that game because

(30:23):
the base game is too difficult, you know, from Software
owes him reparations or something. If that's the same lawsuit,
that is, it could be a totally different one. Maybe
there's multiple lawsuits going on from software. But I'll be
the first to tell you, uh, it's not too hard.
Elden Ring is a lot of fun. The difficulty is
just right, and uh, yeah it's difficult. But you know

(30:47):
what's really difficult is like going outside and digging a
ditch or roofing. You know, it's a video game. If
a video game is too difficult, just don't play it.
Go find something else you enjoy.

Speaker 4 (30:57):
Suing a video game for being too difficult it is
worse than suing McDonald's for making you fatally, suing a
book for being too complicated or something.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
He used a lot of big words.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
I don't understand, but yeah, if that's the same lawsuit
that you're talking about, the guy is kind of nuts.
Kind of nuts. Don't frag me, bro. All aspects of
pop culture are being destroyed by contrived, false binaries. They're
after everything. Politics is downstream from culture, so if they

(31:28):
can infect the culture, the politics eventually follow suit, or
at least they no longer have to pretend Nights of
the Storm. What we need is a realistic video game
of a three hundred pound woman where the goal is
to find any donuts.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
Donuts.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
I actually got to eat some donuts for the first
time in years, since we were able to find some
gluten free ones, and boy, nothing like a nice pastry
again in moderation, don't go out and eat Crispy Kreme
every single day of the week. But if you can
find a fairly healthy alternate a donut now and then

(32:02):
we're very choice. Radus bro don't worry who will remake
Lara to Berry and it's true, Raider, that's right, the
future true, that's a quality word, Ratus Broo. They are
targeting anything straight people like. If you haven't noticed, you
can see they are phasing out being normals straight. They
want everyone either by or gay. Yeah, being straight is

(32:25):
a problem.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
They hate. They hate straight people.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
They hate children, and straight people produce children, so that's
a problem. Don't frag me, bro because man and woman,
male and female are true brianaries they want to destroy.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
Well, as I said, we're going to take a quick
break and we will be right back.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
Stay with us.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
Defending the American Dream. You're listening to the David Knight Show.

Speaker 5 (35:32):
Hello, it's 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

(35:55):
he told me to get lost. Maybe one of you
American suckers can buy me some at the David Knight
Show 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 3 (36:13):
Gallas and social events.

Speaker 5 (36:15):
If you want to save on shipping, just put it
in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from
the USA.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
Welcome back, folks.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
We've got coin base launching a new ad about broken Britain.
This is from the Daily Skeptic. New coinbas ad about
broken Britain shows we become the laughing stock of the world.
We're gonna play that video for you now, actually, and
then we'll talk about it.

Speaker 3 (36:48):
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting will shut down. We ain't
got her troubles, no reason to complain. We're cozy heat
at home even though it's not on. But wait a
few more years and humans say everything it's just fine

(37:11):
because lights go out, it's grid your life.

Speaker 4 (37:15):
You can go back where you're living by the.

Speaker 3 (37:17):
Letter creature covered in trash is rats.

Speaker 6 (37:22):
Everything is just fine.

Speaker 5 (37:25):
Everything is great, thee cotton clean, the rattening any Lena.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
He's just fast, right everything What a jaunty little number.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
Thinkers are a steale.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
You know there's too many white people in this sad
about great and make a sainty person. Hey, it could
be worse if he was. Prices are going up to
change your cree alignments. They've been fired.

Speaker 4 (37:56):
Get for myself.

Speaker 3 (37:58):
Yeah, you've really taken their time with this one.

Speaker 1 (38:37):
Off to do baw, It's time to jump ship.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
It says, if everything's fine, don't change anything. Coinbase, that's right, Coinbase.
Of course that was kind of an homage to Oliver twelve.
The musical says titled everything is Fine. The video opens
with a man in a leaking house and a woman
drowning in bills, as cheery lyrics proclaim, we ain't got

(39:11):
no troubles, no reason to complained, because here in great
old Britain we love it. We just love it when
it rains now. Of course, Coinbase is mocking the fact
that Britain is pretending, you know, we're still great, We're wonderful.

Speaker 3 (39:26):
England is the.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
Same as it ever was, But it's not I that
is collapsing in in itself. The people that built the
country are being phased out for a new stock of immigrants.
They're being replaced that way. They're being priced out of
their homes, They're being turned into permanent renters, until, of course,
they are removed from existence. But the problem is coinbase

(39:52):
actually engages in d banking themselves. Coinbase fun fact, if
you donate to a site called the Kiwi Farms, they'll
ban your account, They'll kick you off, They'll make it
so that you can't do business with them anymore, which
completely negates the purpose of cryptocurrency, completely neutralizes the entire

(40:15):
reason you would want to utilize them.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
And the reason for that is they claim Kiwi Farms
dots his people, but whether or not they actually adopts
people is kind of available, because they he said they
were only posting publicly available.

Speaker 7 (40:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:28):
So the guy that runs Kiwi Farms is a guy
named Josh Moon. He is a free speech absolutist. He's
an absolutist to the point where he actually left the
country and lived in Eastern Europe for a while because
so many people were mad at him. I don't know
the exact details. I don't know if it was because
he wanted to put the server there and didn't want
to deal with us anymore, or if people were so
mad at him he was worried about his safety. But

(40:49):
he has a long history of that sort of thing,
and he's free speech to the point where says, look,
if your information is publicly available on the web, if
it's out there and someone wants to eight and put
it up on my website, I'm not gonna ban it.
I'm not going to take it down. You should have
engaged in better security. That's his position on things. He

(41:10):
is just as long as they're not posting anything illegal,
he's not going to stop them.

Speaker 4 (41:15):
Kii Farmers kind of borderline, but I still don't support
d banking. It's a little bit questionable if they're getting
these from real obscure sources, even if it is publicly available.

Speaker 3 (41:27):
Kind of but you know, again, it's a free speech
absolutist stance. He's like, no.

Speaker 2 (41:32):
Kiwi Farms started as a way for people to keep
track of a specific low lole cow. It's now spiraled
out into many many lole cows, and as such a
lot of people do not like it and have serious
problems with the proprietor, Josh Moon. He has gotten on
the bad side of quite a few different people, notably

(41:53):
one person being Liz Fong Jones. Another another trans guy
who works for Google and has a lot of influence
in pull there. Liz Fong Jones is a very strange
individual and has the power to make people's lives very
miserable through the people they know.

Speaker 3 (42:17):
Ratus Bro.

Speaker 2 (42:18):
Payment processors banning video games all Visa MasterCard promote eighteen
year old prostitutes on only fans can't buy video games.

Speaker 3 (42:24):
But you can be a whore.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
That's right, Yes, I get what you were saying, ratus Bro.
I appreciate the clarification, and you are completely right on that.
A Syrian girl sad thing about this latest UK suppression
of human rights is that in its history, Great Britain
contributed so much that is good to the world. It
hurts to see them now developed into a third world tyranny.
Not saying Great Britain didn't have its issues even in

(42:47):
its past but their devolution has been so rapid in
the modern world.

Speaker 3 (42:50):
I agree. I'm not one of those people.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
It's like Britain was never great this I think Britain
was a remarkable country, is storied and just full of
great men who did incredible things.

Speaker 4 (43:06):
I have a video not of Britain, it's of Paris,
but it shows decline of Europe in general.

Speaker 3 (43:14):
Let's go ahead and roll that. Actually, yes, look at
those Parisians. Just a typical day in Paris.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
There's no Paris left.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
Yeah, there's there's not a single what I would consider
frenchmen in view, except for maybe that police officer. It's
going to be that way across all of Europe. They
will destroy the countries that I've given us most of civilation.

(44:01):
They will replace them with people that have no respect
for the culture, who didn't contribute anything to the culture,
and we'll be happy to replace it with their own.
Europe will cease to exist. Let's take a look at
some other stuff, move on from this topic. Trump's we
can review higher tariffsan two hundred million dollars white house ballroom.

(44:22):
That's right, Trump is having a ball while he's trying
to have a ballroom.

Speaker 3 (44:27):
Actually, but.

Speaker 2 (44:32):
What's the point again, this is another thing to just
feed his ego. We're going to add a ballroom to
the White House. That's great for him. I'm great, wonderful.
I'm sure the taxpayers will love to fit foot that bill.

Speaker 4 (44:46):
Yeah, and then he said that the presidents have wanted
a ballroom for one hundred and fifty years, and none
of them have managed to get it done for some reason.

Speaker 3 (44:53):
I guess that's right.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
They've been wanting a ballroom at the White House for
one hundred and fifty years. It's high on their list
of things. They've been desperate for it.

Speaker 4 (45:03):
It required the greatest president ever. He's gonna do the
warp speed ballroom.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
You canna have the biggest ballroom, the best.

Speaker 2 (45:10):
Trump's plan for White House ballroom sparks outrage from his critics. Yeah,
this guy, Donald Trump is just a ridiculous individual. President
Trump's plans to add a massive two hundred million dollars
ballroom to the White House's angering critics who see him
moving forward with the long sought project as part of
his desire to leave a lasting mark not only on

(45:31):
the Office of the Presidency, but the First House as well.
Now they probably name it the Trump Ballroom, so he
could have his own room in the White House dedicated him.
Anytime someone goes through, it had to be like, that's
the Trump Ballroom. When they take the White House tour,
this is the Lincoln Bedroom. This is the Trump Ballroom.

Speaker 4 (45:50):
How much you want to bet it's going to be
gold even though it's the White.

Speaker 2 (45:53):
House ostentatious and tacky. It'll be the ugliest part of
the White House. The construction of the ballroom, the cost
of which the White House says will be covered by
Trump and other donors, will begin in September. Oh well,
at least they'll be donating the money. Isn't that wonderful.

Speaker 4 (46:10):
I don't think it's the construction costs that people are
upset with. It's, you know, a historical building.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
Yeah, yeah, that's right. We should just willy nilly start
adding things onto the White House. Maybe we can put
a Walmart in there as well.

Speaker 4 (46:24):
I mean, with the amount that the government wastes all
the time, the construction costs for changing and renovating the
White House would be absolutely nothing relatively speaking. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
Trump is also paving the White House rose garden. You know,
the rose bushes will be saved, which the White House
says is necessary so people can walk more easily if
events held in the space.

Speaker 3 (46:46):
That's right. You got to get rid of those roses.
They're in the way.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
Trump says he sees the ballroom as a way to
add to his legacy. Again, this is about him. This
is all about Donald Trump. It's about his legacy. I
think his legacy is more defined by the warp speed
bio weapon, not exactly a ballroom. I think that might
be the defining characteristic, the defining event of his career.

(47:13):
I don't think adding a ballroom to the White House
is going to compare to that the White House where
the East wings sit. The goal is to complete construction
before the end of Trump's term in January twenty twenty nine.
Trump's vision is for a space where he and the
future presidents can host state dinners, large gatherings with business leaders,
and other ritzy parties or functions.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
It will be a fancy ballroom for him and his
friends to get together and have dinner.

Speaker 4 (47:39):
Don't you think the White House already had places where
they could have dinner with diplomats? Like a major purpose
of it.

Speaker 2 (47:50):
Not large enough, not fancy enough. Maybe he can take
some cues from what he's got going on in mar Lago.
We've been planning for a long time. Trump said they
wanted a ballroom at the White House for more thane
hundred and fifty years. There's never been a president that
was as good at ballrooms.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
I'm really good. Ah. Yes, he's a noted ballroom enthusiast.
Noted ballroom expert. Is what I've heard.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
People have been saying for years, man, that Donald Trump
really knows his ballrooms.

Speaker 4 (48:18):
I've been saying he's really good at ballrooms, whatever that means.
People always say I'm good at ballrooms.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
It's just I have to imagine what he's trying to
convey is that he's great at having them constructed. But
does anyone actually believe that, for one, he is involved
with the architectural design or in any way construction. Is
he out there swinging the hammer? Is Donald Trump going
to be the foreman on the job, just out there? No, no, no,

(48:48):
that that wood isn't high quality enough. Sorry, I ordered
cherry This is not cherry wood.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
Got to hand it to Maguz.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
For about a week, they really did have everyone convinced
they cared about kids in the Epstein files. Journalists and
pundit Seth abramsoon wrote on social platform x on the
more important things that hear Trump is building a two
to million dollars balled room at the White House.

Speaker 3 (49:09):
Wowie, wowie.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
Indeed, it is amazing how many people I still see
online that flat out do not care about the Epstein list,
that are buying into this whole. Well, it's a his
name's only on it because Obama and Biden put it
on there. How gullible are you? How desperate are you

(49:32):
to have this man be your savior, to be your daddy.
It's disgusting. Just desperate to excuse him in any way possible. No, no,
it can't be true. Not Donald Trump. Ignore the pictures
of him with Jeffrey Epstein. Ignore the continual pictures that

(49:54):
show up over and over again where they're together hanging out.
Are the videos of them having a great time together?

Speaker 3 (50:01):
No, don't pay any attention to that.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
And on that topic, young girls were sexually trafficked at
Trump's mar A Lago, same as at Epstein Island. This
is by Brian shul Hobby for Vaccine Impact. Trump publicly
admitted that Epstein victim, Virginia Guffrey, who was sexually trafficked
to Prince Andrew and others, worked at his resort at
mar A Lago before Epstein stole.

Speaker 3 (50:26):
Her from him.

Speaker 2 (50:28):
She was sixteen at the time. She allegedly committed suicide.

Speaker 3 (50:31):
Earlier this year.

Speaker 2 (50:33):
It was also reported today that convicted child sex trafficker
and Epstein's handler, Gilaine Maxwell, has all of a sudden
been transferred from the prison in Florida where she has
been serving her twenty year prison term, to a famous
low security prison in Texas. It was more like a
country club than a prison. It really does seem like
he may pardon her. It really does seem like she's

(50:56):
going to get out of jail, assuming they don't kill
her or just absconde with her in the night.

Speaker 4 (51:03):
Just the fact of it being a minimum security prison
is insulting with everything that she's done. Those minimum security
prisons are not any kind of like retribution on the prisoners.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
Now.

Speaker 4 (51:18):
It's there's a case to be made for them for
many cases where you know it's.

Speaker 3 (51:22):
About not in Guilayne's case, but yeah, for.

Speaker 4 (51:26):
Instances where someone is trafficking a large number of young girls,
it's disgusting.

Speaker 3 (51:37):
This is from Zero Hedge.

Speaker 2 (51:38):
Mysterious orange figure spotted outside Jeffrey Epstein's cell night before
his death. So now there are multiple theories going around
what it could be. You know, there's of course the obvious,
there's Donald Trump orange man himself. But I've seen people
speculate that it could have been Garfield the cat. We
don't know what he was up to during this time period.

(51:58):
We don't know what he could have been doing. We
do know he loves lasagna and is therefore easy to bribe.
I've heard Jeffrey Epstein did have a remarkable lasagna recipe.

Speaker 4 (52:09):
This headline sounds like something out of the Babylon Bee.
Mysterious orange figure and it's just gonna be like a
silhouet of Trump or something.

Speaker 2 (52:16):
Yeah, but no, you can see it there highlighted. There's
something it almost looks like somebody in a prison jumpsuit.

Speaker 4 (52:26):
So I don't could be that they cut it a
little bit too late and you start to see levers
moving into the frame and they just didn't want to
have too much of a footage missing.

Speaker 2 (52:41):
It is very possible, but mysterious orange figure and then
identified orange object seen in the surveillance video near the
jail cell deceased pedophile Jeffrey Epstein on the evening before
his death is prompted a flurry of questions from forensic experts.
Pixelated shape first witness by CBS News, I mean shifting
towards Epstein's cell block the Metropolitan Correctional Center around ten

(53:03):
forty pm. According to federal investigators, the object was a
corrections officer carrying linen or inmate clothing. However, experts told
CBS News that could in fact be an inmate wearing
a jumpsuit. Based on limited video, it's more likely a
person in an orange uniform. Connor McCourt, forensic video expert,
said in a statement, which again based on the fact

(53:24):
that it's roughly human sized human shape from what you
can see in the outline, and the fact that it's
in orange, I would assume it's some guy in a
prison jumpsuit. Myself Stealth's patriot. Thank you very much for
the tip. We appreciate it.

Speaker 3 (53:38):
Would you like to sign a petition to stop pedophiliate?

Speaker 7 (53:40):
No?

Speaker 3 (53:41):
Thanks, I'm maga. That's right.

Speaker 2 (53:44):
We got other things to focus on. Trump's building a ballroom.
I'm very excited about that. Don't have time to think
about the kids. He's gonna have fancied dinners, ritzy get
togethers with flashy individuals. Whoever they bring into replace Jeffrey
Epstein can probably get a ticket to the ballroom as well.
It's truly amazing how this sort of thing keeps happening

(54:08):
in politics. Every so often, somebody gets exposed as being
some trafficker of children to these politicians and elite individuals.
I've told you, I'm reading a book about the Franklin
Saving a Loan scandal and the guy involved there, Lawrence E.
King Junior, and just he was friends with George Bush.

(54:33):
He's saying the national anthem at the RNC two years
eighty four and eighty eight, and he gets exposed and
they don't convict him of pedophilia or anything to do
with that. It's racketeering, I believe, was the charge. Guy's
still alive, apparently lives around the DC area still and
he basically doesn't exist if you google him. If you

(54:54):
look him up on Google, there's not a single picture
of this guy, but not many articles either. If you
go to yandex, though you can see his picture at
any time. They make anything disappear from Google. It's immediately questionable.
Why would you want to remove this? How come this
information is something you want hidden? But these people continually
show up near politicians, near powerful people. Whether it's someone

(55:16):
like p Diddy in the entertainment industry or Jeffrey Epstein
for the political crowd, there's always seeming to be someone
who provides this kind of service and gets rewarded handsomely
for it. Night to the storm, the White House still
uses fancy gas ranges to cook as they are taking
hours away. That's right, they get to cook with the

(55:37):
good stuff. They get to use gas ranges which actually
heat up and cook quickly.

Speaker 3 (55:43):
You're not dealing.

Speaker 4 (55:44):
Trump is going to be installing the new inductional whatever
with his renovations exactly.

Speaker 2 (55:51):
To be fair, though, he probably just wants a McDonald's
installed on the premises, since apparently that's all he eats.
All he needs is one McDonald's employee that can make
him a big mac and serve him diet coke, and
he'd be fine.

Speaker 3 (56:05):
What a man of the people.

Speaker 2 (56:07):
Don't frog me, bro Trump is the perfect puppet for
the collapse of our republic. They're daring us to keep it. Yeah,
just how far can we push you guys before we
get a reaction. The thing is they push, push, push,
right up until people get fed up and they back
off just a little bit. And you'll see these people
continually crow and croon, Look we did it. They're backing off.

(56:30):
They learned their lesson. Haha, that's right, patriots in control.
Hollywood is losing money and now they're gonna make more
right wing movies. They're backing off on the propaganda. But
it never goes back to the way it was. They
just step it back a little bit. The Overton window
was shifted, and what people will accept has moved forward,
just so long as you're not openly disgusted by it.

(56:53):
Right now, they realize they've won, and in a.

Speaker 3 (56:56):
Few more years they'll come back and push again. It's
how they operate.

Speaker 2 (57:02):
And as such, all these people celebrating, Look we're winning,
we're winning. The woke agenda is dead. It's dying. They're
simply fools or grifters who don't understand how this works,
or covering up for how it works. It's about the
Overton window and gradually, over time, shifting how you feel

(57:23):
about things. Trump's doj met with convicted felon and Epstein
associate Gilaine Maxwell today. Was she offered a deal before
she appears before Congress? I imagine Trump doesn't want this
woman anywhere near Congress, doesn't want her testifying at all.
Gotta know what she knows before they know it. And

(57:50):
of course you can see Gilaine there in a photo
with her and Jeffrey. Don't they look like such a
happy couple. Don't they look so nice together, Just a
true power couple providing underage girls. Deputy Attorney General Todd
Blanche with ag Pambondi in the background. Blanche met with

(58:10):
convicted felon and fellow child trafficker with Epstein behind closed
doors today prior to subpoena for Maxwell to appear before
Congress in early August. Oops, gotta make sure she's not
going to spill the beans. Maybe we do need to
give her a pardon. Now we're going to talk about
again the racist beating that happened in Cincinnati. This is

(58:35):
from WorldNetDaily. It's by Joe Kovac's very brad, very bad
brain trauma. Watch Holly speak for first time since Cincinnati beating.
His black pasture wants white victims arrested and mugshots publicized.
Eye Handy says Trump's legacy is all the turbo cancer's,
rapid permanent neurologic diseases, and more via m RNA. I
agree that's his legacy. It doesn't matter if he builds

(58:58):
the world's biggest fanciest ballroom. It's a legacy of death
and destruction of destroyed families of poison. Handy is a
first responder. He works in ems and he has seen
it firsthand what this has done to people and how
things have gotten worse. But as I said, we're going

(59:19):
to look at this video or this woman who took
the beating. We are going to play that for you now.

Speaker 7 (59:28):
I just want to say thank you so much to
everyone for all of the love and support. It is
very humbling that you have said, your prayers, your blessings.
It's definitely what's keeping me going, and you have just

(59:48):
brought back faith in humanity.

Speaker 4 (59:53):
So God bless you all. Thank you.

Speaker 7 (59:57):
I appreciate everything that you're doing for me.

Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
My family.

Speaker 7 (01:00:04):
It's been very very hard and I'm still recovering. I
still have a very bad brain trauma.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
And it's.

Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (01:00:16):
Thank you everyone.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
For those who are watching, or for those who are listening,
her entire side of her face. The right side of
her face is bruised and discolored. She had a severe
black eye that is still very visible. The other side
of her face is mildly bruised and discolored. She was
savagely beaten and as you heard her say, she has

(01:00:46):
very bad brain trauma. And again, if this was reversed,
I know this is something people say anytime something like
this happens, But if the roles were reversed, if this
was a white man beating a black woman, the outcry
would be unceasing. There would be riots, cities would be burning.

(01:01:09):
But what we're getting is, you know, black pastors saying, well,
the white people shouldn't have been there. Why aren't they
being arrested. I know they were victims, but you know, hey,
they tried to defend themselves.

Speaker 3 (01:01:22):
That's got to be a crime. This is the state
of America.

Speaker 2 (01:01:29):
The white woman who was viciously pummeled by black cin
Cincinnati last weekend is now speaking for the first time,
while the black pastor in the city is calling for
the white victims and the beat down to be arrested
and have their mugshots made public.

Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
We actually have that video and we're gonna play it
for you.

Speaker 8 (01:01:46):
For those who want to politicize it. The JD Vances
and they've a Ramaswamis and the Bernie Marinos and the
Christopher Smitherman's and many others who want to politicize it,
they have not yet said something that I always hear
when a black person say that runs from the police
and then is met with disproportionate force, sometimes ending their life.

(01:02:12):
What we hear is, well, why did they run? Why
didn't they just comply? We hear that every time, But
I've yet to.

Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
Hear Gil lost video, why didn't he.

Speaker 8 (01:02:22):
Just walk away? So let me back up, so you
understand this. Two combatants, one black, one white. A black
man steps in, breaks it up. The white guy re engages,
slaps not the black man that he had just squared
up with, but slaps another black man, and nobody's asking
why didn't he just walk away? And So when I

(01:02:45):
see and I don't know who else the chief is
looking for or a CPD is looking for, but when
I see the mugshots, I only see people who look
like me. I don't see the person who re engage
slapped not the initial person, but slapped another black man.
So I don't see the slappers mugshot, and so sadly,

(01:03:10):
I have to agree with those who are politicizing this
and racializing this. I have to agree with the Smitherman's,
the Ramaswamis, the Marinos, Corey Bowman. This is racial because
it is unequal justice. And so until we see all

(01:03:30):
the mugshots, this is still a racial issue. So let
me say again to those in Cincinnati, it's Friday night,
when we know people like to go out on Friday night,
Here's what I would ask, because of what happened this
past weekend, we don't want to see it happen again.
Drink responsibly, take care of one another, and everybody get

(01:03:51):
home safe.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
God bless you, thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:04:00):
I'm well. Ah.

Speaker 2 (01:04:04):
So, Actually, if you've watched that video where he's talking
about the white guy goes in and slaps another guy,
you can see the guy he slaps at takes a
swing at him first before that even happens, So he didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:04:19):
The way he presented that was absurdly biased to claim
that they need to be arrested. They were clearly being
attacked and beaten by a mob. It wasn't a oh well,
there were faults on both sides. A woman tries to
pull a guy off when there's several people beating a
guy on the ground, and then he turns around and
punches her in the face, knocks her to the ground,

(01:04:42):
like we just saw did all that damage. That's not
a matter of well, what hasn't she been arrested? She
tried to pull him off that guy?

Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
This is yeah, this is simply again the hatred of
white people that has been engendered.

Speaker 3 (01:04:58):
This is ethno narcissism. Our tribe can do no wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
I mean to look at that video and come to
that conclusion. The only way you can do that is
if you are rabidly racist and actively hate the victims
of this mob.

Speaker 2 (01:05:18):
And of course mobs generally don't care if you're violent
towards them, they'll be violent towards you. But if you
run away, it creates this sort of again like pray
instinct and people, we've got them on the run. If
you run from a mob, chances are they will follow you.
This isn't as simple as why didn't they walk away?

(01:05:38):
Why didn't they try to disengage? Because chances are if
that happens like you saw with that woman, you're gonna
get sucker punched in the back of the head. Someone's
going to hit you from behind. I'm not saying that's
a guarantee, but that's a very likely outcome. Mobs are

(01:06:00):
dangerous and they're keyed up and angry. Simply trying to
disengage is not going to be enough. It's not going
to dissuade them from trying to track you down and
stomp your face in.

Speaker 3 (01:06:14):
Don't frag me, Browth.

Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
The powers that we would like nothing more than for
us to murder each other over skin color, rather than
humanity turning their collective eyes upon them. It is a
divisive tactic, divisive a way of division. Shelley A Racists
that are taught that white people are white demons. I've
actually been called a white devil. We encountered the black
Hebrew Israelites in Memphis one time, and they were going

(01:06:38):
about their business with their bullhorns as they do, you know,
the main guy out front doing his soliloquy about whatever,
and then his you know chorus of backup guys, you know,
just giving ad libs and exclamations. As he goes on,
and the guy singles me out as we're walking back
to the car and goes, that's the white devil, something

(01:07:00):
along those lines. Apparently I was the whitest guy he'd
seen that day, just with how pale my.

Speaker 3 (01:07:04):
Skin was Like, oh, it's me. I'm flattered, truly, I'm
honored to be considered.

Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
And you know, that's really more of the Marxist doublethink stuff.
The people that call themselves anti racist will call people,
you know, devils based on their race. And they can
hold these two opposing theories because you know, they've just
had that propaganda pushed at them for so long that
now it just makes sense to them.

Speaker 2 (01:07:31):
Yeah, they've redefined racism to be prejudice plus power. You
have to have some kind of power to be racist,
otherwise it's just prejudice or something along those lines.

Speaker 4 (01:07:44):
And of course, no amount of privilege or power that
is given to the blacks will ever count. You know,
they can do all these riots and not have any issues,
whereas or you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
Can point out the facts like, hey, look what's going
on in South Africa. They have it's a majority of
black country, the government is run by black people.

Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
Is that racism?

Speaker 2 (01:08:04):
And they'll do all kinds of dancing around the issue
and then if you're able to pin them down eventually
just like, yeah, it's actually good that it's happening, because
you know, the white people are bad and.

Speaker 4 (01:08:16):
It all comes back to the Marxist march through the institutions.

Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
Don't frag me, bro says pastor of what now, that's
a good question.

Speaker 4 (01:08:26):
Yeah, that's another part of this is this guy is
preaching under the name of Christ presumable way, which is
a whole other level of disgusting.

Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
Pastor Damon Lynch of the New Prospect Baptist Church in
Cincinnati is now urging the rest of any white person
who may have started the violence, even if he or
she were a victim. When I see the mugshots, I
only see the people who look like me. I don't
see the person who re engaged slapped, not the initial person,
but slapped another black man. So I don't see the

(01:08:56):
slapper's mugshot. Well again, the guy who did the slapping
tried to bat at somebody like that guy took a
swing at him first. You can see it in the video.
You can literally see it happen right on film. It
doesn't matter though, really this is about racial hatred, racial antipathy.

(01:09:19):
They have been trained that white people are evil, that
white people are the source of all their problems, and
as such, any actions taken against white people are justified. Anytime,
anytime I see a video like this, and there's quite
a few videos like this, there's just a chorus of comments,

(01:09:41):
just dozens, two hundreds deep.

Speaker 3 (01:09:44):
Well that'll teach them, that'll show.

Speaker 2 (01:09:46):
That white boy, that white person, whatever it is that'll
show them, or the continual Well, I bet they said
the N word.

Speaker 3 (01:09:54):
I bet they said this. I bet they said that.

Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
What's the context, as if there's some content that makes
savagely beating someone on the ground acceptable. Nice of the
storm says, we're getting it pulled out. I am white
and have a gun pulled on me while reaching from
my registration. Cops are trained not to discriminate, but to profile.

(01:10:17):
I was profiled because of the time I fit that profile. Yeah,
it's a Again, it goes back to the fact that
this woman, the Cincinnati police chief, theat gee or whatever
how you pronounce your name, has been following DEI policies
and hiring more women of minorities, which doesn't fix the problem.

(01:10:38):
You can put in as many women or black people
are Indians or Chinese. It doesn't matter the race of
the person. If the institution has bad policy and they
are trained in that bad policy, they will still engage
in the same behavior. A black cop is just as
likely to brutalize black people as a white cop is

(01:10:59):
or engage in a excessive force, because that's how they're trained.

Speaker 3 (01:11:03):
There is.

Speaker 2 (01:11:05):
It's not simply a fix to put in a different race.
Hye handy, Travis, you are a black man already to
people are black people? I heard it from a black
woman online.

Speaker 3 (01:11:13):
It must be true. That's right.

Speaker 4 (01:11:15):
I should have told that to the black Israelites.

Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
This was before this was a known phenomenon. The science
hadn't yet been discovered.

Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
But it's true. I am a black man.

Speaker 2 (01:11:27):
I am I am a proud man of color, and
as such, I think I'm entitled to reparations or something.

Speaker 4 (01:11:36):
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (01:11:36):
I'm not sure how I'm going to go about getting
them up rest assured that this is you know, it's
one struggle my brothers and we will fight the good
fight together. I am proud of my heritage. I just
need to figure out what part of Africa. I'm from
I think well. Cincinnati beating suspect claims schizophrenia, judge claims grandstanding.

(01:11:58):
During his arraignment the following day, Attorney Caleb Baum told
me Municipal Court Judge Gwen Bender he has paranoid schizophrenia
and she should take into consideration the context of his situation.
He was scared, Baumb explained. He was an impressionable person
that night, just that night. He was an impressionable person

(01:12:18):
that night. All the other nights he's you know, pretty normal,
but that night he charged with an M one and
everybody got charged.

Speaker 3 (01:12:24):
With the F four. He was scared.

Speaker 2 (01:12:28):
You can see in that video that there is a
vast there's a much larger group of people that are
interested in harming the few white people there and there
are in defending him. There are several black people there
that are trying to help them up and you know,
you know, de escalate things. But there's a larger group
that are interested in, you know, beating them down. So

(01:12:51):
to say he was scared doesn't really hold water with me.
His group is in the majority. Everybody that was involved,
Baumb continued, except for the man that thrown the first punch,
and the man that said the N word multiple times
with black people, which I find to be very it
gets cut off. Bomb was then cut off mid sentence
by Bender, who accused him of grand standing, the act
of making exaggerated or theatrical statements or actions primarily to

(01:13:12):
impress an audience, other than to genuinely advance their legal
arguments or to contribute to the court's understanding of the case.
Benders set Kittle's bond at a total one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:13:26):
What now a ridiculous argument from the defense attorney to say, oh, well,
it's not my fault that my client attacked people they
said the N word.

Speaker 3 (01:13:37):
No, that's you see it continually. This is the justification.

Speaker 2 (01:13:42):
They said a word they don't like, and as such
they are entitled to beat them as savagely as they wish.

Speaker 3 (01:13:49):
And if you think otherwise, you are a racist. You're
a problem.

Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
And this is nothing but racial hatred. This is something
that needs to be addressed. And again, everyone, all people
are children of God. Everyone is.

Speaker 3 (01:14:10):
Equal in God's eyes. This is not about like, oh
we are better.

Speaker 2 (01:14:14):
We're falseooze, sorry a click something technical difficulties today, But
I don't want this to be like some sort of
racist tirade, some screed.

Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
We but things do need to change and need to
be addressed. Audi Mr R.

Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
Why is it that the only black racist I see
are on TV and in the media. I don't know
any black people who have hatred for white people. My
black dud in his fifties question everything. People there are,
That's what I'm saying. Even in the video, there are
black people that are trying to help the guys up,
trying to help the people there. This is not you
should not immediately go out and join the KKK as

(01:15:00):
some kind of racial retribution that is not going to
get us anywhere.

Speaker 4 (01:15:04):
Yeah, most people are perfectly normal, wouldn't attack other people, obviously.
It's just pointing out the propaganda and the double standards
that we see with.

Speaker 7 (01:15:16):
All this.

Speaker 4 (01:15:18):
Well worth mentioning.

Speaker 3 (01:15:20):
We are going to take a quick break, folks.

Speaker 2 (01:15:23):
That is this section of the news, and we've only
got one hour left because we started about an hour late. Well, well,
do our best to bounce through the headlines more quickly.
So stay with us, folks, We'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
You're listening to the David Knight Show.

Speaker 3 (01:17:17):
Welcome back, folks.

Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
As I said, we're gonna kind of bounce through things
fairly quickly. We're gonna start with the mountain of debt
that we're all buried under.

Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
This is from zero Hedge.

Speaker 2 (01:17:29):
You think Uncle Sam owees thirty seven trillion, it's far
worse than that. Americans will tell you the national debt
has reached thirty seven trillion. As distressing as that official
number is, America's true fiscal situation is even worse, far worse.
The actual grand total of Uncle Sam's obligations is more
than one hundred and fifty one trillion dollars. Huge description

(01:17:51):
springs from the fact that the federal government doesn't hold
itself to the same accounting standards it imposes on businesses.
Rather than using a cruel accounting which recognizes expenses and
they're incurred, are Washington overlords self servingly use simple cash accounting,
only recognizing expenses when they're paid. As a result, discourse
on federal obligations solely focuses on the national debt, comprising

(01:18:16):
treasury bills, notes, and bonds. That's right, Debt is only
debt when it's paid. If you just have it on
the books with something you're supposed to be paying who
cares An obscure report delivers a more accurate version. Treasury
Department is required to submit an annual report to Congress
detailing the government's financial condition. Critically, the nineteen ninety four

(01:18:37):
law compelling this report mandates that it reflect unfunded liabilities,
that is, commitments made without any dedicated assets or income
streams to ensure.

Speaker 3 (01:18:47):
They'll be kept.

Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
So, just so long as they're not even figuring out
how to pay them, the debt doesn't count, isn't I'm
sure you and I could get away with this. Just no,
it's not debt. You see, I don't have any means
of paying it. I don't have any plans to. Therefore,
it's not debt. One of the larger categories of those

(01:19:10):
unfunded liabilities is future federal employee and veterans benefits. At
the end of the twenty twenty four fiscal year, this
s willon represented a fifteen trillion obligation. However, by leaps
and bounds, the largest unfunded liability spring from America's social
insurance obligations, primarily Social Security and Medicare. At fiscal year end,
these liabilities totaled a towering one hundred and five point

(01:19:32):
eight trillion dollars one hundred and eight one hundred and
five point eight arrive at a grand total of one
hundred and fifty one point three trillion at the end
of the twenty twenty four fiscal year, offsetting that by
an estimated seven point nine trillion in the US government
commercial assets, including property, plant, equipment, and purported gold holdings.

(01:19:53):
So US holds a total of seven point nine trillion
dollars and we owe one hundred and fifty one trillion dollars.
I think it seems a bit unpayable, doesn't it.

Speaker 3 (01:20:08):
Uncle Sam? Set Uncle Sam at an.

Speaker 2 (01:20:10):
Overall net negative of one hundred and forty three trillion.
One hundred and forty three trillion amounts to eighty five
percent of the net wealth Americans have accumulated since the
nation's founding. So everything that has been accumulated by Americans
since it was created, this debt is eighty five percent

(01:20:33):
of it.

Speaker 3 (01:20:35):
If we were to sell everything, ever, we would just
be able.

Speaker 2 (01:20:40):
To pay it off and have a little bit of
excess left. Estimated by the Federal Reserve to be one
hundred and sixty nine trillion.

Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
That's the total.

Speaker 2 (01:20:49):
This includes all their assets and savings, real estate, corporate stocks,
private businesses, and even consumer durable goods like automobiles and furniture.
The proportion of total federal outlaser by mandatory spending has
more than doubled since nineteen sixty five, from thirty four
percent to seventy three percent twenty twenty four. It was
at seventy one percent just two years earlier. In twenty

(01:21:09):
twenty two, Donald Trump the bankruptcy King, our bankruptcy king.
He's spending and spending and spending. That is not something
that's unique to Trump, of course, He's just doing it
a little bit better than the others did bigger and better.

(01:21:30):
Interest payments also represent a steadily growing share of total
outlays and will total almost one trillion this year. Within
ten years, interest is projected to reach two trillion dollars.
Makes sense why Trump is obsessed with getting Powell to
lower those rates. The national debt is becoming your local problem.

(01:21:53):
This is from reason Federal overspending a squeezing states and cities,
forcing him to raise taxes, slash services, pile.

Speaker 3 (01:22:00):
On more debt.

Speaker 2 (01:22:02):
Twenty nine trillion dollars in federal debt held by the
public is becoming an increasingly local problem. Fiscal challenges have
led to increased borrowing costs, as well as reduced to
federal aid to states, cities, and other local governments who
may soon have to reconsider their budgets as they face
a difficult choice cut services, raise taxes, dippinty reserves, or
incur further debt. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which

(01:22:22):
is expected to significantly deteriorate the country's fiscal outlook. Federal
debt is expected to grow from one hundred and twenty
four percent of gross domestic product in twenty twenty five
to two hundred and thirty five percent in twenty thirty five.
As a result, investable capital investible capital will flow at
increasing rates to US debt, making it necessary for other borrowers,
including state and local governments, to offer higher interest rates

(01:22:43):
on their bonds to compete with US Treasury. Debt is
also going to impact home mortgages as well. Federally, net
interest costs are forecasted to surpass all of their spending
categories besides social security by twenty fifty two. This trend
of rising interests crowding out or their spending is likely
to trickle down to state and local governments. Federal grants

(01:23:04):
are currently the largest single source of revenue for state
and local governments, and they are decreasing, which I mean,
I'm not sad to see the federal government not able
to inject as much money into local governments. That's how
they get a lot of control. Well, if you don't
do what we say, we're going to cut off this money,

(01:23:26):
we'll cut off your supply, so you better follow our directions.
This could actually end up being in net positive in
certain ways. Besson says Trump accounts for kids are back
door for privatizing social security. Treasury Secretary Scott Beston said
an interview this week that the Trump accounts, which are
aimed at helping parents, say for their children's future, are

(01:23:47):
a backdoor for privatizing social security. Under the bill, parents
can contribute up to five thousand yearly five thousand yearly,
as they spend us into a living they'll contribute one
thousand dollars themselves to the federal garment that is, and
then you can contribute five thousand a year. Of course,

(01:24:10):
by the time your child can access it, it'll probably
be worthless. No matter how much money you put in there,
they're gonna switch to something else. Federal government will contribute
a thousand dollars into the accounts for children born in
the United States between January first, twenty twenty five December
thirty one, twenty twenty eight, which means that my son

(01:24:32):
missed that window, born just a little bit too early.
He could have got his thousand dollars from the government,
could have really raking in.

Speaker 3 (01:24:39):
That cash one thousand dollars. Of course, I'm sure.

Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
We're not gonna cut down on our spending for Ukraine
or Israel or foreign aid to these other countries which
is bleeding us dry. We're not gonna do that. Never
do that, Hi Booz Travis. When you throw these numbers around,
so just two trillion interest a year, how much has
the tariffs collected? Tariffs are just taxing us further. Yeah,

(01:25:07):
tariffs are never going to make a dent in one
hundred and fifty one trillion dollars. It's not going to happen,
even if that was their purported reason for doing it.
It's not going to have any meaningful impact on the debt,
and it will raise the costs for the average American.
It will mean that we're paying more for things. It's

(01:25:28):
going to be a cumulative effect, a trickle down effect.
It's going to impact everything over time. It'll start in
certain areas and then work its way outward. Bessant calls
for fundamental reset for Federal Reserve. I suggested that the
technocrat piranhas in Washington would try to devour the Federal

(01:25:50):
Reserve to make way for their alternative financial system. Scott
Bessentt is the man for the job. After all, he
was the guy who helped George Soros break the Bank
of England on September sixteenth, nineteen ninety two, just a
little bit after I was born.

Speaker 3 (01:26:02):
Also note as Black Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (01:26:05):
The central bank system has been in trench for over
one hundred years and is led by the Bank for
International Settlements.

Speaker 3 (01:26:11):
Could it all go down?

Speaker 1 (01:26:13):
This is.

Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
I believe it's by Patrick wood Best on Monday called
for a fundamental reset of financial regulations to ensure they
are aligned with the nation's domestic international priorities. Could almost
say it's a great reset, could almost say that, hmm,
we need to have a reset of our financial system now.
They're not gonna bring in CBDC or stable coins using that. No,

(01:26:38):
they would never do that. They would never completely say, well,
your dollar's worthless, you're gonna have to switch to this.
Genius sets new stable coin rules, but remains vague on
foreign issuers. The Genius Act leaves a foreign stable coin
loophole that puts US issuers at a competitive disadvantage, says
former CFTC chair Timothy Masad. Not that Masade different, Masad.

(01:27:04):
The signing of the Genius Acting to law establishes the
first comprehensive regulatory framework for US issued stable coins. This
is coming down the pipeline. They're working on it.

Speaker 3 (01:27:13):
This is what they want, the CBDC getting it centrally planned.
People were a little bit skeptical about that.

Speaker 2 (01:27:21):
It was a bit too on the nose, like, I
don't know, this seems sketchy, but stable coins are going
to be issued by individual companies. It'll equate to the
same thing, though it'll still be a way of continually
tracking every purchase you make in a way of instantly
turning off your wallet, deleting your entire bank account. You
won't be able to keep a stable coin in your

(01:27:42):
mattress and keep it safe from the government. They'll simply
be able to remove it. All all at once on person.
You dbank you instantaneously, and you won't even have a
cash supply to rely on banks, FinTechs and even largely tailors. Essentially,
anyone with significant consumer institutional distribution will all be considering

(01:28:05):
issuing their own stable coins.

Speaker 3 (01:28:07):
It'll be anyone with a.

Speaker 2 (01:28:10):
Large enough capital base will be able to do at
any company will be able to issue their own. Of course,
decentralization is generally a good thing, but not when it's
something like this, Not when it equates to the same
thing as a central bank digital currency. It will be
effectively identical. A major weakness of the Genius Act is

(01:28:33):
what the Atlantic Council calls the tether loophole. The US
think tank argued in a blog post that the US
stable coin law did not adequately regulate offshore stable coin issuers.
All aims to bring order to US stable coins by
imposing strict rules on reserves, financial disclosures, and sanctions compliance.
Make sure that if we sanction someone, you do what

(01:28:54):
we say. The FED says it is data driven, but
the data isn't any good. This is from miser the
Mises Institute. Of course, the government lies continually, so there's
no reason to trust any of their data about anything.
They lie about the economy, They lie about the jobs numbers,
They lie about viruses and where they come from. They

(01:29:15):
lie about the existence of viruses. They lie about vaccines.

Speaker 4 (01:29:20):
Data driven. We made up the data, but it's still
data driven.

Speaker 3 (01:29:24):
We created it out of whole cloth.

Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
We fed this into a computer, and it gave this
back to us. Of course, we told the computer to
give us data that would work with our agenda. Don't
pay any attention to that. Garbage in, garbage out, and
the federal government and the Federal Reserve are big, heaping
piles of garbage. It's been a big week for the

(01:29:49):
data quote unquote. At Wednesday's FOMC press conference, FED Chair
Jerome Powell announced that the FED was holding its policy
interest rates study at the current four point five percent.
Powell noted there was no need to cut the rate
because the job market is solid. Powell engage in the
usual song and dance of declaring that the Federal Reserves
monetary policy is data driven or data dependent, and assure
the attending members of the press that FOMC policy is

(01:30:10):
carefully implemented in accordance with Federal employment data, among other
data points.

Speaker 3 (01:30:16):
Data, data, data, it's all about data.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
You can trust us unless than forty eight hours later,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its July report, which
revealed that the solid job numbers that FED had allegedly
been using for the past two months were actually very wrong.
And this is the same thing they do all the time.
They come in, They make an assessment and say, look,
we think the job's numbers are doing really really good.
Look at how high they are, and then they revise

(01:30:42):
them back down. Later, once people stop paying attention, they go, oh,
actually it was bad. The numbers were bad.

Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
Sorry, our mistake. Won't happen again. And so it repeats,
over and over. Gold price is sore after much weaker
US jobs.

Speaker 2 (01:30:58):
Data, Gold prices are sharply higher in early US trading Friday,
swallowing a very downbeat US economic report that fell squarely
into the camp of their monetary policy doves. December golden
December gold was last up forty eight dollars sixty cents
at three three hundred ninety seven dollars and twenty cents.

(01:31:19):
September silver prices were last up zero point two four
to three at thirty six dollars and ninety five cents.
Powell struck a hawkish tone early in his press conference, stating,
we have made no decisions about September. Within the hour
at gold fell nearly thirty dollars, or about one percent
of its value. Pass Forward to Friday and disappointing employment

(01:31:41):
data completely turned the market around. Within two minutes of
the report's release, gold jumped thirty dollars. Spot prices continued
climbing and ended session at twenty three hundred and sixty
one dollars fifty cents an ounce, more than two percent
on the day. So they come out and say, no,
we're not changing anything. Things look good. Goes down and like, oh, well,

(01:32:01):
I guess things are stable, and they revise it immediately.

Speaker 3 (01:32:04):
Who are like oh no, oh no.

Speaker 2 (01:32:06):
So if you would like to get some gold, if
you would like to get outside the Fiat monetary system,
you can go to David Knight dot gold. Tony Arburn
has set that up and he has set up wolf
Pack as well, So if you want to start accumulating
it on a monthly subscription baseist, you can get gold
or silver that way. Again, David Knight dot gold. This

(01:32:29):
is more of an interest story. This is about the
disappearing Satoshi statue in Lugano. Stolen is your point one
bitcoin offered for its return that's about eleven thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:32:41):
There is a.

Speaker 2 (01:32:44):
Sort of outline statue of a guy on a laptop.
It's supposed to represent Satoshi Nakamura, the guy who developed bitcoin,
or the group of people. Again, I don't know if
it's ever been confirmed that it's one guy or if
that was just the name chosen to represent a collective
of people. But the statue got vandalized. You can see

(01:33:04):
the statue here. It's again a guy on a laptop.
When you view it from an angle, it becomes more visible,
but viewing straight on it's sort of amorphous, hard to
discern what it is the disappearing.

Speaker 4 (01:33:25):
It's a cool statue.

Speaker 2 (01:33:27):
Yeah, it's very interesting, the disappearing Satoshi statue symbolizing bitcoins anenimity.
It was stolen in Lugano. Now, personally I'm more of
a fan of you know, marble statues and that sort
of thing. But when it comes to modern statuettes and
that sort of thing, that that's pretty good.

Speaker 3 (01:33:40):
That one's I mean, not bad.

Speaker 2 (01:33:43):
It has like a reason for it to get that way,
it's supposed to be, you know, represent anonymity and yadayata.
It gets its message across now. The theft was confirmed
by Satoshi Gallery, the group behind the Global Satoshi Statue initiative,
which is now offering is your point one bit coiner
of board worth over eleven thousand dollars. As I said,

(01:34:03):
for information leading to its recovery. Where's Satoshi? The group
posts it on X and Sunday. On Sunday, you can
steal our symbol, but you will never be able to
steal our souls. That's an interesting way of phrasing it.

Speaker 3 (01:34:17):
Bit bombastic, kind of dramatic.

Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
I don't think anyone's trying to steal your soul.

Speaker 2 (01:34:21):
Yeah, I'm curious as to maybe this is an English
second language type deal. Cannot steal our souls. I mean,
you're right, they can't, they can't, But strange phrasing.

Speaker 4 (01:34:33):
I mean, if you see your soul as being tied
to crypto and money, that's kind of not a good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:34:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:34:41):
The statement read reaffirming their commitment to install the statue
in twenty one cities around the world despite the setback.
Can to install this thing in twenty one cities around
the world, which I mean, okay, but seems a bit
pointless to me. Where's Satoshi? You can see the tweet
there the statue, and then the block where the statue

(01:35:06):
once sat. But we actually the statue was found Iconic
Satoshi Nakamoto statue recovered by Lugano Municipality. We can see we've.

Speaker 3 (01:35:21):
Got some pictures here that was recovered and it was
in the water.

Speaker 2 (01:35:28):
Someone had kind of looks like cut it in half
and dumped it in water.

Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
They were not happy with it.

Speaker 2 (01:35:39):
You can see the platform that used to sit on,
and there you can see it in the water. Water's
lapping up onto it. Someone apparently doesn't like bitcoin, though
personally i'd be curious to. I would imagine this is
more just an act of random vandalism, not necessarily directed

(01:36:00):
at Bitcoin or the ideas behind it.

Speaker 4 (01:36:03):
I don't know. Could be someone that lost a lot
of money.

Speaker 3 (01:36:07):
This is because I can't find my wallet. That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:36:11):
If anyone ever puts up a dog coin statue near me,
I'm going after it. But they did recover the statue.
It is in pieces, but I guess the money is
not getting paid out. This is from zero hedge. Can't
stable coin save the US dollar or just delay its collapse?

(01:36:35):
I'd be surprised if they could even really delay it.
If you're tying the stable coin to the US dollar,
how on earth does that mean anything? How does that
even how does that even insulate you against it? If
the dollar goes to zero, then surely the stable coin
follows immediately afterward.

Speaker 4 (01:36:52):
Right, Well, this gasoline, put out the fire or simply
delay it's burning the house down.

Speaker 2 (01:36:59):
With thirteen point seven billion in profit last year and
only around one hundred and sixty five employees, that's over
eighty three million dollars in profits per employee. This is
about Tether and it being the most profitable company in
the world. It's a staggering figure, blowing in Vidia and
every other company out of the water.

Speaker 3 (01:37:17):
It's literally off the charts.

Speaker 2 (01:37:20):
Has any business in history ever generated this much profit
per employee?

Speaker 3 (01:37:23):
If there is, I've never heard of it.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
You can see that chart there, and the next closest
is in Vidia, and it is not close at all.
With a cap With a market cap exceeding one hundred
and sixty two billion climbing us DT, Tether is the
world's largest stable coin and fourth largest cryptocurrency overall, though

(01:37:48):
calling it a stable coin as something of a misnomer.
The government paper currencies, government paper currencies with their steadily
eroding purchasing power or anything but stable in that sense.
They're less stable and more like guaranteed loss coins. This
is what I've been saying, just I don't understand. I
think it's another one of those. Well if we name it.

Speaker 3 (01:38:07):
The exact opposite of what it is, you know, sort
of like the Patriot Act. They always do this.

Speaker 2 (01:38:12):
It's a stable coin. What makes it stable, Well, it's
tied to the US dollar. What makes the US dollar stable? Oh,
the US dollar is not stable at all. It is
completely unstable.

Speaker 4 (01:38:21):
It reminds me of that comedy sketch about the two
thousand and eight financial crash and they're like, why did
they support them? Oh, well, these firms had very good names,
you main, they have good reputations. No, the names are
very reassuring, stuff like Prime and I forget exactly what
it was like, Oh, yeah, I'd invest in anything that
has name like that.

Speaker 2 (01:38:40):
Yeah, it was those two Australian guys, I want to say,
an Australian comedy duo.

Speaker 4 (01:38:45):
Yeah, I think they're the ones that did the front
fell all.

Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
Yeah, if you guys happen to know who those guys were,
drop it in chat each other. Claims to have over
four hundred million users globally and is adding three thirty
million more every quarter. That's explosive growth, reminiscent of Facebook
at the height of its expansion.

Speaker 3 (01:39:06):
People are buying in.

Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Suckers tethered directly to the US dollar, and this, of
course is what they want. This is the future they're
looking toward. Everybody using stable coins, everybody tied to their
digital wallet, your ID tied to it as well, knowing
exactly who you are every time you make a purchase.

(01:39:29):
It's not just a matter of digital ID for the Internet.
It's digital ID for every single purchase, no matter how small,
no matter how menial. If you go buy yourself a
stick of gum, you're gonna have to use stable coin,
and they're going to know about it. They're going to
make sure that if they don't approve of what you say,
you get banned on Xbox Live for saying something naughty,

(01:39:51):
well maybe your bank account goes along with it, Maybe
your entire life savings goes up. In flames because somebody
reports you. The AI just automatically skims something it decides,
you know what. I think that goes against terms of service.
Maybe he deserves a little bit of a time out.
Maybe he freezes his accounts indefinitely because he said something

(01:40:13):
we don't like on X or Facebook. Well, that's enough
about the technological dystopia they're building for us. That's enough
about the debt, the stable coins, the future of finance
and the coming collapse. We're gonna take a quick break.

(01:40:36):
When we come back, we're gonna look at what's going
on with Christianity.

Speaker 3 (01:40:41):
So stay with us, folks. We will be right back.

Speaker 1 (01:42:19):
Liberty, it's your move. And now the David Night Show.

Speaker 3 (01:42:28):
Wait a minute, where am I?

Speaker 6 (01:42:31):
Sorry, Jefferson. The scoundrels who put America on Central Bank
Fiat currency used our heads on their coins as some
sort of trophy. Despicable. This is outrageous, Washington.

Speaker 3 (01:42:42):
I spent my life fighting centralized power.

Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
Now the Federal Reserve monopoly parades us around on their
monopoly money.

Speaker 6 (01:42:50):
Tell me there's some good news to all this. Well,
there is a coin they can't control, one that isn't
backed by the FED, but backed by the fed Up
the All Knew David Night Show commemorative coin. Now patriots
can support a show that won't sell out with a
limited edition coin that's sure to sell out quickly.

Speaker 3 (01:43:08):
They say, money talks, and this coin has something worth
listening to.

Speaker 6 (01:43:12):
The truth doesn't need inflation, only support.

Speaker 2 (01:43:26):
Welcome back, folks, You got to comment for love of
the road. Please do me a favor and check if
y'all got that tie I sent. You need to give
the seller feedback, so let me know if it looks
good or not. I'll check on that as soon as
we get off the air and get you an answer tomorrow.
People are apparently so sick of me not wearing ties
they're sending them in. I'm a monster. I've been not

(01:43:47):
wearing a tie and it's driving people insane. Can think
has been He has been the foremost defender of the
tie and insisting that I put one on once we
get the air conditioning back on and here, I'll wear
the tie. I'll wear the tie. That's the storm twoat
in the studio for a tie that's right right now.

(01:44:08):
I am sweating. AC still is not working. We are
doing our best to get someone out here to fix it.
But being the summer, they are on a backlog. We
are in the system, so hopefully it'll be up and
running again soon, because right now it is warm. It
is unpleasant. This suit is not built for warm weather.

(01:44:32):
China arrests pastor on charges of illegal business operations make
she wondered if they have five oh one c thres
in China. Chinese authorities have arrested a Protestant pastor on
charges of illegal business operations, weeks after he and several
church members were detained amid the Chinese Communist Party's crackdowns

(01:44:52):
on unregistered Christian activity across the country. Unregistered gotta going
to the approved churches, got to make sure you're registered properly,
teaching only the approved party line.

Speaker 4 (01:45:07):
And it's shocking, but how long until Britain gets to
you got a license for that church meeting? I mean
they're already.

Speaker 3 (01:45:16):
Arresting people for praying outside of abortion clinics.

Speaker 4 (01:45:19):
Arresting people for that. They're also you know, declaring any
talk of immigration as being eighteen plus. How long before
it's integration and religious things? Because you know, the Bible
goes against LGBTQ religion, so therefore you have to be
eighteen or older to hear anything against the gays?

Speaker 3 (01:45:39):
Yeah, how long until preaching the gospel means you get banned?

Speaker 7 (01:45:44):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:45:44):
Sorry, you mentioned Jesus. Therefore, no one under eighteen can
view this video. It's a very salient point. Two of
the five are released on bail last Friday, while the
remaining three, including Huang, remain in custody. Under China's criminal
procedure law, public security officials are required to submit a

(01:46:04):
request for formal arrest to the PROSECUTORIAT within thirty days
of detention. Wong's representative believe the case was transferred for
view on July twenty fifth, the last permissible day for
detention without formal charges. They love dragging these things out,
no matter what country you're in. They love to drag
out these proceedings to punish you as much as possible.

(01:46:25):
Wong had previously been detained in twenty fourteen for protesting
the demolition of church crosses, and when jou And served
a one year prison term. Less than a month after
his release, he was detained again on September twelfth, twenty fifteen,
on charges of endangering national security and held for nearly
five months, and he designated residential surveillance location. Before the demolition,
his church had operated as a state approved three self

(01:46:48):
patriotic movement church. China really really hates home churches. They
don't like not knowing exactly what's going on. They don't
like you are freely preaching the gospel, telling people the truth,
because the gospel is always a threat to these types

(01:47:08):
of governments, which is always a threat to them because
they want to be worshiped. They want you to view
them as God. They want to be in that place.
If you serve a higher power, you may not unquestioningly.

Speaker 3 (01:47:24):
Do whatever they say.

Speaker 2 (01:47:26):
You may refuse to abide by their rules and say no,
I have a higher calling. I cannot do what you
say because it is evil. It goes against what God says. Separately,
in April, nine Christians were convicted in Inner Mongolia for
reselling legally published Bibles through an unregistered house church.

Speaker 3 (01:47:47):
Sentences.

Speaker 2 (01:47:48):
Sentences ranged from one year to nearly five years, with
fines reaching as high as one million. You want, that's
one hundred and thirty seven thousand dollars. Bitter Winter reported
ondividuals were convicted on the same charge used against Pastor Wong.
They don't like home churches and they don't like homeschooling
in China. We covered that recently, within the last thirty days,

(01:48:12):
I want to say, we talked about how more and
more people in China, despite the pushback and the oppression
and the consequences, are homeschooling their kids because they want
to make sure that they're taught the Gospel, that they
aren't brainwashed by the CCCP or the CCP excuse me,

(01:48:34):
Chinese Communist Party, and they are dedicated to it. They
care enough about their children and the truth the Gospel
if they're willing to incur the wrath of this brutal
authoritarian state. This is actually the next article is actually

(01:48:56):
about home schooling. It's from the New American, the homeschoolers
who proved that school is a waste of time. As
I said, is from The New Americans by Selwyn Duke.
Work expands to fit the allotted time. That's as the
saying goes. Some will say, when pondering homeschooling, I'm not

(01:49:17):
qualified to teach my kids. But inform homeschooling advocate, informed
homeschooling advocate Brett Pike, it's not just that you can
teach your kids, you can do it splendidly. I've said
this before, but Lance and I generally, you know, we
had homework to do, but it wasn't a massive amount.

(01:49:37):
It was enough so that they could be sure we
were learning and that we were keeping up on things.
But they didn't feel the need to give us hours
upon hours of things to fill our day with. We
did the work, and then we got to go outside
and play. We got to go into the woods, ride
our bikes, play with the dog. I spent many many

(01:49:58):
hours in the summer catching fraud in a small pond.
It was a great time, and I don't feel that
I was deprived of that. I'm behind the people that
I know who went to public school. I don't feel
as though I missed out on anything when it comes
to education. A lot of it's funny, a lot of

(01:50:20):
public school kids were quite jealous over the fact that
we had so much free time to do what we
wanted that we actually got to enjoy our time as children,
because they would go to school and they'd be there
for you know what, six eight hours. They'd come home
and they'd do homework for multiple hours, and then whatever

(01:50:41):
was left they could do with as they pleased. But
then you know, they have to get to bed early
because they've got to get up early and go to
school the next day. And as such, their childhood was
much less fun than ours was. We actually got to
enjoy ourselves. We weren't so on this rigid schedule and

(01:51:01):
this continual you know, rat race, hamster wheel of keeping
up with this arbitrary nonsense that was foisted upon us
by the government. Said you can do it in a
fraction of the time schools do. Referencing teaching children, That's
what I was talking about. You know, we got they
gave us coursework, and when we completed it, there wasn't

(01:51:25):
this sense of, well, you know, they've got to do
more and more and more. In a Friday X video post,
Pike relates the story of parents Aaron and Kalina Mucha Stegwi.
I don't know if that's how it's pronounced, That's how
I'm going to pronounce it. The Mucha Stegwies were typical
Americans who believed in the system. You send your kids
to school, they ascend through the grades, go to college,
and then start a career. But as luck would have it,

(01:51:47):
at they at some point found themselves needed to teach
their elementary school daughter at home for a couple of weeks.
Was the parents who learned the biggest lesson. They found
they could teach their girl all the prescribed material in
just one hour a day. I were able to do
everything that the school does in a torturous, laborious, slow,

(01:52:10):
dull fashion over the course of hours, shuffling kids back
and forth between classrooms meaninglessly in a single hour. This
revelation completely changed their lives and inspired them to write
a book, Two five Hour school Week, an inspirational guide
to leaving the classroom to embrace learning in a way
you never imagined. I've always been curious, too, what's the

(01:52:32):
point of shuffling kids between classrooms? I assumed, if you're
doing something like science, maybe you've got, you know, different
implements that you really need. But if you're doing something
like math and history and English, wouldn't it make more
sense to just shuffle the teachers back and forth. That way,
you're not continually having the kids flow. I don't know,
it just seems like a waste of time, like bad

(01:52:54):
just poorly thought out. Again, I've never been to school,
so I can't say why.

Speaker 3 (01:52:59):
That wouldn't make more sense. It wasn't.

Speaker 4 (01:53:02):
I just ever thought of this before you mentioned it
just now, But yeah, it does seem like it would
be easier for one person to switch classrooms and just
have like all the kids books and everything right there
at their desk all the time.

Speaker 3 (01:53:16):
Yeah, I don't get it.

Speaker 2 (01:53:17):
Maybe there's a reason for it, if if any of
you went to public school and can give me a
solid reason as to why it makes more sense to
shuffle the kids between classrooms and not the teachers, explain
it to me, because I don't understand.

Speaker 3 (01:53:30):
It seems just more efficient. It wasn't just that the
parents the saved time either.

Speaker 2 (01:53:36):
Piko is the YouTube channel Classical Learner reports that the
mucha Stegwi's daughter actually improved educationally. For example, after just
two weeks of homeschooling, she was finally able to spell
and pronounce her last name, which is something I can't
do for them. I'm the pronunciation is still eluding me.
Probably fake news alert that was a joke.

Speaker 3 (01:53:57):
By the way. The girls didn't though.

Speaker 2 (01:54:00):
And what's more, the time saved could be used for
ancillary activities, you know, like actually being a child, actually
going to do things muchas steguies could consequently more effectively
cultivate their daughter's interest. She became a successful entrepreneur while
just a teenager, states Pike. All of a sudden, cooking
and gardening and field trips became amazing opportunities for learning.
And that's what home school families understand. Yeah, anything that

(01:54:24):
you engage in you can relate to learning.

Speaker 3 (01:54:26):
You can. If you're outside with your kids, you can show.

Speaker 2 (01:54:31):
Them this is this animal, this is that, this is
how that relates. You can talk to them about trees
and forests and how the ecosystem works. It's a lot
more engaging than sitting in a classroom with a book
in front of you having some guy lecture you. Bueler,

(01:54:51):
you don't need that much time for formal education, he continues.
This leaves so much more time for less formal things
that your children love they look forward to. My best
friend and I both attended the Bronx High School of
Science in New York City. As it's known as a
somewhat famous elite institution known for academic rigor. Students must
pass an entrance exam to attend intoellectual The intellectual level

(01:55:13):
ie average IQ of the student certainly was impressive too.
To this day, my fellow classmates are still the most
intelligent large group of people among whom I've ever circulated.
Despite this, Around our high school days conclusion, my buddy
and I both had the same realization agreed that we
could have easily absorbed the entire four years.

Speaker 3 (01:55:28):
Academic load in six months. In six months.

Speaker 2 (01:55:32):
Yeah, it's just again, they drag everything out. They waste
a monumental amount of time. It's a meaningless exercise in
following rules, making sure that you are a good little.

Speaker 3 (01:55:46):
Automaton, willing to do what they say. Tunnel Lord.

Speaker 2 (01:55:49):
When three through seven, when I was homeschooled, I was
done by twelve o'clock every day.

Speaker 3 (01:55:52):
Yeah, that's about when we would get done.

Speaker 2 (01:55:54):
We would get up, have breakfast, do some schoolwork, and
then you know, twelve o'clock rolls around. We're basically done,
get to go out and do what we want, enjoy
our afternoons. It was always a bit annoying when people
we wanted to hang out with were in public school,
because you know, we're free, we've got basically you know,

(01:56:15):
our days in the afternoon are fine, but they've got
they had schoolwork to do. They had all kinds of
stuff that was eating their time up. Taylor Saunders. I
went to public school. None of it made any sense.
It was prison like regimented into a coercive manipulation my control.
I'm happy to say I hated it.

Speaker 3 (01:56:34):
Yeah, my dad. My dad hated public school.

Speaker 2 (01:56:39):
He thought it was a monumental waste of time, and
he hated being compelled to do things. He has a
friend that he would always introduce as You're like, oh,
this is my friend such and such. I was incarcerated
with him for four years. His friend didn't like that.

Speaker 3 (01:56:52):
But that's how my dad viewed high school and so.

Speaker 4 (01:56:56):
And the prison like aspect of it is somewhat intentional
of how it was designed. It's to teach people to be,
you know, good little factory workers, to obey the state.

Speaker 2 (01:57:08):
Yeah, I believe it's what the Prussian model. I think
that's where it was originally pioneered, something like that, Celia fourteen, Travis.
It's possible the teacher has all the materials in their
own class books, sides, et cetera. Perhaps, perhaps I'm not
knowledgeable about what it takes to teach a class. I
still think it might be more feasible for one person

(01:57:28):
to cart their stuff around in a backpack than flooding
the hallways with children.

Speaker 4 (01:57:33):
Don't like a cart, you know, put it around in
a literal cart. Yeah, seems well, who knows.

Speaker 2 (01:57:40):
I'm not gonna sit here and try to figure out
how to more efficiently brainwash children. Don't frag me, bro
We homeschooled our daughter and most of her days were
filled with figure skating and four H until the age
of about twelve, and it was four h and seal
scouts did all schoolwork at her own pace.

Speaker 3 (01:57:54):
See, I'm sure she loved it. I'm sure she actually
got to.

Speaker 2 (01:57:57):
Learn some useful life skills that are still helping her
to this day, and that she doesn't look back on
those years with some kind of dread. She's starting taking
university level courses at age of fifteen. Yeah, you guys
were able to get her up to a proficiency level
at fifteen that people in public.

Speaker 3 (01:58:19):
School would reach at eighteen. You're years ahead of time.

Speaker 1 (01:58:25):
And now.

Speaker 2 (01:58:25):
In fairness, though, a critic may point out that the
above is anecdotal, So what does the data show? What
Fingernews answers this question. According to what finger public schools
inefficiencies explained by bureaucracy, the need for crowd control, an
emphasis on ideological issues, well, brainwashing. They've got to spend
a lot of time making sure that you absorb the

(01:58:47):
neoliberal New World Order talking points. Can't actually teach you
anything because they have to beat the sense out of you.
This is indoctrination, not education. Actual learning time is limited.
Homeschooling is a common sense oriented solution to government educations,
declining standards, well conductrination, and union agendas. The HSLDA data

(01:59:12):
demonstrates that homeschoolers score fifteen to thirty percentile points higher
than government school students are standardized exams, regardless of income
or parental education. So even if you're poor and dumb,
you can do a better job teaching your kids than
the government school does. There's again, people will look at

(01:59:33):
it and say, oh man, how could I teach my
kids this? The question is not that, it's how could
you do any worse than what the public school is doing.

Speaker 3 (01:59:45):
You can't.

Speaker 2 (01:59:46):
You physically cannot do a worse job than what the
public school does, and you get to pick what they learn.
You're not going to bash them over the head with
this propaganda. You're not going to have to sit down
and give them critical race theory lessons. You can actually
devote your time to learning the important things, and you

(02:00:06):
don't run the risk of them coming out a gay communist.

Speaker 3 (02:00:09):
Shelley A.

Speaker 2 (02:00:10):
The public schools are modeled after Soviet styled indoctrination. They
do a very good job within doctrination. Education not so much.
Education is lagging behind. But my goodness, do they.

Speaker 3 (02:00:23):
Produce some good little soldiers that will do what they're told.

Speaker 2 (02:00:29):
Tailored deficient homeschooling model surpasses government schools one size fits
all mandates. Heritage Foundation reports that homeschoolers medium test scores
are in the seventieth to eightieth percentile. Government school students
languish in the fiftieth or over. The gains for black
homeschoolers are especially robust. National Review attributes the fifteen to
thirty percentile point advantage to avoiding government schools social welfare

(02:00:49):
distractions such as gender ideology lessons. Yeah again, you're not
going to waste time feeding them this nonsense on oppression
or this feminist nonsense where they end up hating men.
They can actually learn useful life skills. National Review points

(02:01:12):
to homeschool graduate, superior college readiness and graduation rates. Critics
claims critics claims of lacking socialization or rigor debunked by evidence.
Homeschoolers do not live in bubbles. They have co ops,
church programs, play dates, siblings, organized sports, and so on.
Lance and I we always had plenty of friends growing up.

Speaker 3 (02:01:32):
We didn't have to. We weren't isolated or worried about
the fact like, oh no, we're we.

Speaker 2 (02:01:39):
Don't have any friends. We had plenty of friends. Church
was a great way of meeting people.

Speaker 4 (02:01:45):
Al homeschool kill ops or another resource that you can use.
That's a thing that we did some classes with with
the local kill op where it's more of a traditional
classroom setting and they have, you know, one person volunteers
to teach a subject.

Speaker 3 (02:02:01):
Yeah, which is against a much better option.

Speaker 2 (02:02:09):
HSLDA correctly predicted that homeschoolers would outperform government schoolers during
COVID shutdowns. Yeah, if you're homeschooling your kids and you
don't bind this propaganda at that point, basically nothing has
changed for you. Things carry on as normal. You get
to do their work, and you get to tell them
a SE's son, see daughter, this is what a syop

(02:02:31):
looks like in real time homeschool encounters cultural Marxism, emphasizing
real skills over destructive radical agendas.

Speaker 3 (02:02:40):
And that is the main point.

Speaker 2 (02:02:43):
When you send your kids to school, that is what
they're going to get. They're going to get a Marxist agenda.
They are going to get the product of the Frankfurt school.
These people have wormed their way through the institutions. These
professors in college who finish out the teaching of people
that then go back into education are almost all to

(02:03:04):
a man or woman Marxist in some form or fashion.
Your child won't be caught taught he can switch sex
as it will. He won't be instructed on how to
put a prophylactic on a banana. He won't be inundated
with anti white propaganda. He won't be instilled with nihilism
and the doom and gloom message that naturally occurring gas
is joining the world.

Speaker 3 (02:03:25):
It is truly again.

Speaker 2 (02:03:28):
We had some people that we knew, some people that
went to public school, and there they bought into global warming,
and they know I had discussions with some of them
about like, oh man, the world's in a bad spot,
this that and the other, and you see it so much.

Speaker 3 (02:03:45):
In modern media, these articles why even have kids? The
Planet's ending?

Speaker 2 (02:03:49):
Were these people that I'll go online in any comment
section talking about having a child, like, Oh, I would
never have a child. The world is in such a
bad spot, the world is going to burn up. They
have completely given into the propaganda. They have voluntarily ended
their family lineage. I have decided that it's not worth it,

(02:04:14):
and that is truly sad. The propaganda is another way
they get you. They want you to abort your child.
But if you're not going to abort your child, maybe
they can get you to put it in a government
school where they'll feed at Marxist propaganda and eventually, if

(02:04:37):
they absorb enough, maybe they'll decide that they just don't
even want kids at all. Guard Goldsmith, I'm with you, Travis.
When I taught, it was at two schools, and I
had to leave the first almost immediately get to the second.

Speaker 3 (02:04:49):
I lectured in the library for kids already there.

Speaker 1 (02:04:52):
Worked.

Speaker 2 (02:04:52):
Well, Hey, look at me, I intuitively figured out a
solution to a problem.

Speaker 3 (02:04:58):
Good to see your Guard. Hope you're doing well.

Speaker 2 (02:05:01):
Hi Boost, I don't know why you think homeschooling is
not in doctrination. Do you think these maga helicopter moms
are teaching the real truth?

Speaker 3 (02:05:06):
Please?

Speaker 2 (02:05:07):
The point is not that it's not indoctrination, it's that
you can teach the kids what you want to some extent,
education is always indoctrination.

Speaker 4 (02:05:14):
Yeah, the kids aren't going to come out with a
worldview fully formed and not need any influence from any
outside force. They're going to get their worldview from someone.
It's better they get that from the parents rather than
from the state. The state is going to propagandize them
with all of the gender ideology stuff. And sure there's
going to be some crazy parents that are just as

(02:05:35):
bad or even worse in some cases, just like how
you know, there are parents that are worse than foster
care in some cases. But in general, it's better for
the parents to do the teaching.

Speaker 3 (02:05:48):
Yeah, it is the best option.

Speaker 2 (02:05:51):
It's not a perfect option, because there is no perfect
option because people are imperfect, but it's much better than
sending them off to a state run Marxist facility. And
nobody ever has an ideology that's all of their own.
No one has a fully unique viewpoint on anything. We
are all, you know, products of being molded by people

(02:06:13):
around us. For Lance and myself, it's largely our parents,
since that's where we got the vast majority of our education,
who we spent the most time with when we were young.
But for a lot of people it's the government schools.
It's the state, and like Lance points out, it's much
better to have the parents instill an ideology in them.
And again, homeschooling also teaches better critical thinking skills. In general,

(02:06:37):
the state run schools are about slavishly following orders, giving back,
you know, the doing the problem and the way they prescribe,
and giving back the answer that they want over and
over again. It's about making you a good little automaton
and as such you are less likely to question that.

Speaker 1 (02:06:55):
Now.

Speaker 2 (02:06:55):
Of course, homeschooling can follow in that model, and you
will have parents that are simply there to make sure
that the childholds all of their personal beliefs down to
the letter. But as a general rule, if you instill
critical thinking in children, they will start to develop their
own beliefs. They will start to branch out on their own.

(02:07:17):
They're not going to agree with you one hundred percent
of the time. That's just how it is. But again,
I think, and I agree with Lance. The parents are
the best solution, not a perfect solution. Here's why Western
education is doomed. This is by RT World News.

Speaker 3 (02:07:34):
But no, I do agree with you, high Boost.

Speaker 2 (02:07:36):
These maga people are not going to be They're going
to be indoctrinating their children. But they're their children, and therefore,
you know, I suppose they're entitled to pass.

Speaker 3 (02:07:46):
Along their worldview as well. It's wrong.

Speaker 2 (02:07:49):
I don't agree with their worldview, but it's their child,
and I would I would not want to come into
their house and try to tell them what they can
and can't teach them. I would not want to come
between a parent and their child. Again, that sets a
bad precedent. Here's why Western education is doomed. The meteoric
rise of feelings first schooling has ended academic excellence. This

(02:08:12):
is from RT dot com. As somebody who hat and
set foot inside a grade school for decades, I knew
something was amiss when I visited my former Canadian high
school for a craft fair. Oh no, a Canadian high school,
Canada is even further down the pipeline than we are.
Or did all the photos on the walls of the
atrium go of all the top achievers from academics and

(02:08:33):
sports throughout the years, I wondered wanting to laugh at
my early nineties style hairdoo. Turns out they were taken down,
perhaps around the same time that rainbow and Native tribal
flags went up beside Canada's National One. Achievers that previously
adorned the walls were replaced with evidence of successful collectivist cooperation.
We pursue excellence was the school's longtime motto, but now

(02:08:53):
on the wall was the result of a student survey
showing that seventy five percent of students felt uncomfortable to
even use the washroom. The participation trophy generation now has
to have a portable safe space in the form of
a bubble around them at all times. Everything is seen
as a potential threat, especially standards of excellence, which would
explain why the entire province of British Columbia in Canada's

(02:09:13):
Left Coast Stitch standardized tests and subjects such as math, physics, chemistry,
and languages, which allowed for a form of ranking in
comparison among all students in the entire province in favor
of just two types of tests, general literacy and numeracy.
A sample final high school year literacy test, for example,
features and excerpt from The Inconvenient Indians, suggesting that explore

(02:09:35):
Christopher Columbus contributions are overrated. Asks which type of magazine
would most likely feature this description of Columbus's landing in
the Caribbean, the description let's not forget all these sunny weather,
the sandy beaches and azuer lagoons. The potential multiple choice
responses chronicles of history, business ventures, travel world, or living well.
So they are going to be interpreting Shakespeare's classics and

(02:09:56):
essays next or not?

Speaker 4 (02:10:00):
This is.

Speaker 2 (02:10:02):
Why you got to put your kids in public school, folks,
so they can identify which sentence might come from which
magazine more efficiently disampled tests from two years earlier in
the curriculum. The numerousy assessment asks questions like the size
of this fish trap? We depend on the size and
species of fish that people were trying to catch. Which
of the following factors would be most important in designing

(02:10:24):
a cone shaped fish trap? One of the answer choices
the size of the fish in the river. We're certainly
a long way from the mathematical proofs that we were
doing thirty five years ago around the same age. This
is the testing that they're doing. The size of the
fish in the river might. Two years ago, the same

(02:10:45):
province moved away from any and all letter grades for
students up in including to about age fourteen. Instead of
a's and d's, teachers could only assess whether a kid
was emerging, developing proficient, or extending I wonder, emerging developing
proficient or extending all kind of pseudo meaningless words without

(02:11:06):
any definitive, without any definition to them. The rationale apparently
they didn't want to highlight any deficits. Sometimes it's not
hateful if you're not excelling at something. It's not hateful
to point out you're not excelling at it if someone
If you're bad at your job, and someone comes along

(02:11:27):
and says you're bad at this, they can do it
in a hateful way, but it's still technically helpful in
the sense that you now know you need to improve.
In France, the attempt to institute a similar post knowledge
educational system has seen middling results. High school math classes
were ditched entirely in twenty nineteen under President Emanuel Macron.
The outcome was such a disaster that it reversed for

(02:11:48):
the twenty twenty three through twenty four school year, French
media publish a bunch of instructions that were given to
the test grades greaters to dummy things down for France's
future Nobel Prize hopefuls. The first is to not deduct
points for spelling or grammar mistakes. What matters is not
compliance with the spelling code, but intelligibility. Of course, this
is probably my opinion due to the fact that they've

(02:12:11):
flooded their country with migrants who don't really speak, write,
or understand French that well, so if you're going to
deduct points for that, all of your migrants are going
to basically fail over and over and over and over again.

Speaker 4 (02:12:25):
It'll be spelling a part of legibility, you know.

Speaker 2 (02:12:31):
You would think, and if your migrants are failing over
and over again, it sort of breaks that conditioning where
it says, oh, they're future doctors, lawyers, scholars. They don't
even speak the language. They don't speak the language, and
they come from countries that have not achieved anything of

(02:12:52):
note when it comes to culture. They're not going to
be a benefit to yours. They are not going to
improve your country in the lightest. They are simply going
to drain resources and burn your cities down. We see
that happen in France over and over again. The minority
immigrant population gets upset and decides, you know what, I

(02:13:15):
think it's time we lit some cars on fire. I
think it's time we smashed some windows. This is going
to happen in every country where this becomes commonplace. There
is no there is nothing to gain from importing an
endless supply of people from the third world. There is

(02:13:36):
nothing that will improve. The GDP might go up because
companies have an endless supply of cheap labor, but that
is not That is not going to make life better
for the average American, and it will certainly make it worse.

Speaker 3 (02:13:53):
This is just common sense.

Speaker 2 (02:13:56):
If again, I like my culture, like our culture here,
like American culture, and I think we should be allowed
to keep it, like I think other people should be
allowed to keep theirs. It seems like only white countries
are the ones that are forced to abandon their culture
for whatever reason.

Speaker 3 (02:14:14):
We are almost out of time.

Speaker 2 (02:14:15):
We've got less than one minute, and I haven't plugged
yet today, not seriously, so please go to Davidnight dot
News check out all the ways you can support the show.
There is cash app. There is cash app zell and
a bitcoin address. Peobox David Knight pobox nine nine four
codeac tennessee three seven to six four subscribe Star dot
com forward slash to the.

Speaker 3 (02:14:33):
David Night Show.

Speaker 2 (02:14:33):
A lot of different tiers. Please go and check it
out see if one fits your budget. David Knight dot
Gold you can go and start accumulating gold or silver.
RNC store dot com promo cod night for ten percent off.
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Journal dot com promo code night for ten percent off.
There as well at home stead Products dot shop or
again promo codnite will get you ten percent off all

(02:14:54):
their high quality, handmade in America products, and of course
jackloss in books where you can.

Speaker 3 (02:14:59):
Get the Civil Defense made all.

Speaker 2 (02:15:01):
I want to thank you all for tuning into the
show today and we'll be back with a full length
broadcast tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (02:15:06):
So God bless you all have a wonderful rest of
your day.

Speaker 9 (02:15:23):
The common Man, they created common Core and dumbed down
our children. They created common Past track and control us.
They're Commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing
and the communist future. They see the common man as simple,

(02:15:43):
unsophisticated ordinary. But each of us has worth and dignity
created in the image of God.

Speaker 3 (02:15:53):
That is what we have in common. That is what
they want to take away.

Speaker 9 (02:15:57):
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation. They desire
to know everything about us, while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they
want to hide. Please share the information and links you'll
find at Thedavidnightshow dot com. Thank you for listening, Thank

(02:16:19):
you for sharing. If you can't support us financially, please
keep us in your prayers. Ddavidnightshow dot com
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