Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:30):
In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a
revolutionary act.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
It's the David Knight Show.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
As a clock strikes thirteen, it's Tuesday, the second of
September of Our Lord twenty twenty five. Well, today we're
going to take a look at another ruling, this against
Trump saying that he doesn't have the emergency power sedict.
This one about the police state. Yesterday it was about
the tariffs, and this is a judge ruling that he
(01:05):
cannot operate essentially as a national police chief. We'll see
what he's going to do about this. But at the
same time, we had a strange incident we're going to
clear up here for you, perhaps maybe more questions than
we got answers. Somebody filmed allegedly that a White House
window was open and stuff is being dropped out of it.
(01:28):
Trump says it was AI, So we'll give you both
sides of this. But some people joked he's releasing the
Epstein files. Well no, actually the GOP is still guarding
our pedophiles. But there's going to be a rally today
by Epstein victims there in the Capitol. Some of them
are speaking out, and we've got al media now cheering.
(01:53):
There's only the Epic Times yesterday that was talking about it.
But now all of alt media is cheering Trump for
finally waking up to the fact that the vaccines are bad. Well,
maybe they should worry about Trump's victims instead of portraying
Trump as a victim. Well, let's begin, Travis with these
articles here on the Trump police state and what's going
to be happening with this.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
Yeah, we've got judge rules. Trump can't act as a
national police chief. That's from Politico. Chicago braces for potential
National Guard deployment as President Donald Trump points to a
violent weekend. That's from ABC seven Chicago. The police state
has a new playbook, Martial Law, One City at a Time.
That's by John and Nisha Whitehead. Trump vows to solve
Chicago crime after bloody Labor Day weekend, and Trump names
(02:39):
Juliani first Medal of Freedom recipient. Yes, second term.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Such a wonderful part. You'll talk a little bit about that.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
You think it happened like it happened with John Kyaku.
Do you think you know he said, well, you know,
I can give you the Medal of Freedom and then
he went to the bathroom and his goons were like,
well for a million dollars, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
That's right, Yeah, maybe maybe he paid the Trump off
for that like a part. Well, we have, as I said,
there's going to be an Epstein victim's rally today in DC.
Trump is so concerned about crime, and of course it's
huge in Chicago. We've been reporting for years. Every weekend
they've got about fifty people get shot, some of them die,
(03:18):
and it's awful, but it's not an emergency. It's business
as usual in Chicago, and the people have continued to
vote for the same people that run that city in
that state. And so you know, if I believe me,
I would not want to live in Chicago with that
kind of violence. But that's what they have put up with.
That is a standard situation, just like it is with
(03:41):
the trade deficit. That's been standard. So whether or not
you like that or not. And I think all these
things are problems, but we don't want to have all
of our problems solved by a dictator in the oval office.
So one of the things that he doesn't seem to
be too concerned about is the Epstein victims. This is
(04:02):
one person saying she will not be there. She's got
a statement to be presented, but she will not be
there because she's afraid to come the United States.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
Tomorrow there will be a rally in DC. That's today
epstrein victims speaking out against the horrendous crimes that have
happened against humanity, not just against the epstren victims, but
against our families and against the public. I'm really sorry
our can'tany there, but unfortunately it's too dangerous for me
to travel to America. But anyway, I will be there
(04:32):
in spirit and my speech will be read. I just
want to thank everyone who cares for everyone who's going
to be supporting the rally, because the more of us
they are, the better. These people have lied to us
for too long.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
Now, sen you will not to love. Yes. So Thomas
Massey is pushing to get a vote. We'll see if
Squeaker Mouse Johnson is going to shut down the entire
Congress to keep that from happening again. You know, they
they take pretty much the entire month of August off anyway,
(05:08):
but he shut down early so that wouldn't happen before.
So now there is the point at which that may happen.
Now judges have ruled that Trump can't do the terroiffs
by executive. Fiat and Caterpillar has come out saying that
these taxes would cost them more than a billion dollars.
(05:28):
But when we look at the martial law, this is
a new decision that is coming out. Nevertheless, Trump is
still talking about moving on Chicago and Baltimore. This is
a guy who really is concerning to see his dictatorial
impulses and his love for the use of force. And
before we get into the teriffs, I just want to
(05:49):
show you how he is now trumping at the bit
to make the drug war a literal war. Here is
footage that they released as they held a press conference.
This is a boat that's off the coast of Venezuela,
and that strike there is from the US military, and
so he wants to use the military for that. They've
been off the coast of Venezuela for a while. People
(06:12):
were wondering whether they're going to invade or what the
situation was going to be. He alleges that this was
a trendy ragua whatever. If I'm pronouncing that, I think
it's trend okay. I like trendy. I think that's good
because that's the that's what's going to allow him to
claim that he's going to go to a literal war
(06:33):
with the drug cartels. The question is can the US
military win this asymmetric war. They've lost all the rest
of them. And of course he must have seen the
rerun of Tom Clancy's Clear and Present Danger. I remember
when that book came out.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
And good movie, by the way, what good movie?
Speaker 3 (06:52):
Yeah, you like the movie. The book was better than
as usual, but yeah, it was a good book, as
Tom Clancy book, and the premise behind it. You know,
we're tired of losing this drug war. We're going to
stop drugs by the use of force, whether not the
Constitution allows it, whether not we declare war. So it
was a secret war against the drug cartels. It's not
so secret when Trump is doing it here. It's kind
(07:13):
of interesting, you know, because Steve Pachennik, who came up
with a fantasy about the sting, he was somebody who helped,
you know, helped Tom Clancy. At least he was credited
on one of the video game things that Tom Clancy did,
but I think he was helping him with plot lines
before that, just like he helped Alex with fantasy plot lines.
He helped Tom Clancy.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
Before that, Tom Clancy must have been doing the majority
of the lifting because his fantasy plot line for the
election didn't hold water at all.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Unbelievable, that's right.
Speaker 6 (07:43):
And reading a Tom Clancy novel in the forward, I
think a lot of people but also mentioned Steve.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
P Yeah, I'm wondering, Oh yeah, we can only refer
to him by his initial because he's he's so important
as a secret agent man. You know, Well, this is
just remember folks, that the drug war has failed for
I think what fifty four years is in nineteen seventy one.
It's failed for fifty four years. It hasn't done anything
(08:11):
to stop drug use. Arguably, it's worse now than it
ever was. And because we have more intense forms. That
is something else that always happens with prohibition and this prohibition,
whether or not you wanted to try to repeat alcohol prohibition,
there was no respect for the Constitution with alcohol prohbition.
At least they respected the Constitution enough to have the
(08:32):
Eighteenth Amendment. No such luck today, so they just do
it unconstitutionally. And thisgs these drug schedules. You have Schedule
one drugs that are the most dangerous and so forth.
They got four of them. I think that drug schedule
was written by the UN. It wasn't written by Nixon.
Nixon was turning in his homework from the UN. I mean,
(08:54):
this is like the ALEC network, the American Legislative Exchange
Age Council they call in for the Republicans. Democrats have
their own as well. For the Republicans it's ALEC, and
they have them go to a luxury vacation resort or whatever.
They talk to them about these issues, and they actually
hand them legislation that all we have to do is
(09:16):
put the name of their state at the top, signed
it at the bottom, and turned in their homework. That's
what Nixon did for the United Nations for the war
on drugs. So again, Trump, in addition to attacking that
ship and bragging about it, he has alleged that Trendy
(09:37):
Arragua whatever the trendy guys, are being run by the
Venezuelan government. This may be a pretext to invade Venezuela
as well. As a matter of fact, a Declassify intelligence
report contradicts that. So it looks like Trump is trying
to create a pretext to move on Venezuela. Well, the
(10:00):
the judge has ruled that Trump cannot act as a
national police force. This is about the case in LA.
Trump built his deployment of troops to La starting in
early June as a way of bolstering immigration enforcement efforts
amid protests in the city against the president's deportation agenda.
Though Trump has now withdrawn all but three hundred of
(10:22):
these troops, He's mulling sending troops to other major cities,
such as Chicago. The judge is a Clinton appointee who
was based in San Francisco, so we can kind of
tell where he is politically. These are politically appointed judges
and they have a political agenda themselves. But I agree
with him on this issue, and I think that immigration
(10:44):
is a problem. I don't want to have illegal immigrants.
I think they need to be removed, but I think
it's important how we do it. He concluded that Trump's
La deployment, overseen by the Defense Department, violated a long
standing law meant to prevent domestic law enforcement in the military,
the Posse Commatatas Act. It followed a four day trial
(11:05):
last month that include testimony from Pentagon officials overseeing the
troop deployment in La. Look, I don't think that having
your country overrun with illegals. I think it's a big problem.
It's a big problem, and it was a big problem
all four years of Trump's first presidency, and I think
it's an even bigger problem to then use that as
(11:27):
Republicans have used it. Desantus used it to say, well,
now you're going to have to have government permission. We're
going to make Everify mandatory, so you have to have
the government's permission to get a job. I don't need
the government's permission to get a job. They need to
handle this in a different way. Trump's solution is to
violate the Posse Commatatus Act and to use a military
(11:49):
as a police, and that is also not acceptable. The
Posse Commatatus Act of eighteen seventy eight Bar's military from
enforcing domestic laws without explicit permission from Congress. And by
the way, I can hear the people out there, So
what would you do, mister smarty panins you're going to
vote for Biden. That's the kind of responses, the in
electroal responses you get from Twitter. You know, That's why
(12:11):
I don't bother with Twitter anymore. But the you know, yes,
I have said for the longest time that the way
that you stop this is to first of all, protect
the border. Secondly, what you do is you stop the
welfare state. You stop the welfare state for people or
not illegal citizens at the very least, right, I'd like
(12:34):
to stop the welfare state for everybody, but certainly for
illegal citizens. Illegal citizens, illegal migrants are not citizens. They
should not be getting welfare benefits, they should not be
getting education, they should not be getting social security. Cut
them off of everything. If you're here illegally, you get nothing.
And so then that would have the worst of the people,
(12:57):
not necessarily the criminals. If they're criminals, you handle that
with a very harsh hand. Somebody's going to come here
illegally and commit crimes, they deserve harsh treatment. If somebody's
going to come here to get on the welfare state,
the cloud and pivot strategy, then what you need to
do is to completely cut them off. If somebody comes
(13:17):
here because they want to work a job, that's a
different story, and they don't should not get the police
state treatment. In my opinion, there should not. There ought
to be some sanctions against the employers who are benefiting
from cheaper labor. But there's a lot of different ways
that you can do this rather than this kind of
high handed iron Fifth that he's doing. Briyar's ruling bars
(13:42):
a Pentagon from ordering, instructing, training, or using the National
Guard currently deployed in California and any military troops heretofore
deployed in California from engaging and arrests, apprehensions, searches, seizures,
security patrols, traffic control, crowd control, riot control, evidence collection, interrogation,
(14:02):
or acting as informants without showing that they have permission
from Congress. I one hundred percent agree with that. I
don't want the military engaging in arrests, searches, and seizures,
patrols in the cities, traffic control. We're going to start
having National Guard writing tickets. We've got enough of this
stuff already. We already are too far into a police state,
(14:24):
even without using the military to do this, I.
Speaker 4 (14:27):
For one, can't get weight. I can't wait to get
pulled over by an m one.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
Abrams, Well, Obama did his best to try to make
that happen anyway. He's putting out all these m wraps
and everything during his regime. An earlier decision from Briar
against Trump's call up of National Guard troops is quickly
lifted by a federal appeals court. In that earlier decision
in June, Briar had found that the deployment was unlawful
(14:52):
because there was a little sign that the situation in
southern California met the criteria that Congress had specified for
federalizing a state's military force, such as danger of a
rebellion or difficulty in executing federal laws. The judge said,
a California National Guard contingent known as Task Force fifty
one that have to task force any one and clearly
(15:16):
finally those limits by engaging in routine law enforcement actions
like a bunch of kids. Here, the violations were not
one off acts by individuals service members, but rather the
function of a systematic and will for orders to troops
to execute domestic law, he wrote. He stressed that he
(15:36):
was not ordering a withdrawal of roughly three hundred troops
that remain in LA, but simply that they could only
perform functions that were authorized by federal law. Said, federal
troops can continue to protect federal property in a manner
that is consistent with the Possi Committatis Act. Again, the
underlying thing here is just the utter contempt that Trump
(15:57):
has for the rule of law. He sees himself as
an FDR or at Abraham Lincoln. Quite frankly, I agree
with him, and scares me about that, because I think
those are two of our worst presidents. They worked very
hard and were successful in completely changing our form of
government at the previous two fourth attorneys and so Trump
(16:18):
sees himself in that role now. I think it's a
very dangerous situation. Chicago is bracing for potential National Guard
deployment as Trump points to the violent weekend. As I
said before, it's not unusual, it's not imaginary. It's a
real problem, but it is not something that has been
there for quite some time. And the people in Chicago
(16:42):
are still staying in Chicago. They're not leaving Chicago, and
they continue to vote for these Democrat politicians. They go
soft on law enforcement. There.
Speaker 4 (16:52):
The people of Chicago actually want change and want to
do something about the conditions they live in.
Speaker 3 (16:57):
Yeah, nothing will happen, that's right.
Speaker 4 (16:58):
You can make condition worse by putting troops on the Street,
But you're not going to get these people to stop
killing each other.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
It's kind of like a domestic version of our foreign policy.
You know, you have these worrying factions in Iraq or something,
so we go in and we're going to do nation building. Well,
I guess Trump is going to do city building now, right.
So people who don't want to have peace and won't
take any responsibility for themselves to build a nation or
to build a city, you can't do it for them.
(17:26):
That's the reality of this. The fifty eight people were shot,
eight of them fatally, over the weekend. Trump said Chicago
is the worst and most dangerous city in the world
by far. I don't know about it anyway, it's definitely bad.
Pritzker posted on social media from the city's southwest side
on Tuesday, saying there's no emergency in the city of
(17:47):
Chicago to cent troops and so everything's just fine, right,
state and local government. This is great business as usual.
We only had about sixty people shot last week, so
over the weekend they're all fine with this, and so
are the people evidently who lived there. In a letter
to the president, Illinois congressional leaders reiterated say again the
Illinois congressional leaders are fine with it as well, that
(18:11):
there is no emergency that warrants military officials in Chicago.
The letter says, in part, the deployment of the US
military into American cities is not about safety of security,
it's about control. We demand that you suspend any plans
for the deployment of military personnel to Chicago. Seize your
unlawful power grabs at the executive branch overreach. They have
(18:35):
a naval station there at the Great Lakes in North
Chicago that is going to be the base of operations
for more ICE agents that are going to be there.
But he vows to quote unquote solve the Chicago crime
issue after fifty eight people shot over the Labor Day weekend.
And then we can see perhaps the type of approach
(18:57):
that he would like to take exemplified by Rudy Juli,
who was district attorney in New York before he became
mayor nine to eleven. Rudy is what I call him.
He made a name for himself as Rico Rudy the
Rico Statute, which evolved of course into civil asset forfeiture.
This is about taking the assets of people before they
(19:18):
have been convicted, and then that evolved into civil asset forfeiture,
which is take the assets of people without even charging
them of the crime. And so Rudy made his mark
coming after organized crime using the Rico statute. And then
you see where that happened. The Rico statute then became
(19:39):
it was used against abortion protesters and so forth. I've
talked about that before at Randy Alcorn who was a
pastor who was peacefully protesting and they came after him
with the Rico statute and Planned Parenthood got an eight
million dollar judgment against him. And Randy Elcorn was a
(20:00):
very successful writer and a very good writer. As a
matter of fact, I would recommend his novels samebody who
wants to read a book. But he had a lot
of income that was there, so he decided he wasn't
going to give them a penny. And you were allowed,
if you declare bankruptcy, to live off of like minimum
wage or something like that. So for twenty years, first
of all, he resigned as a pastor so the church
(20:21):
would not be involved. And for twenty years he and
his wife lived on minimum wage and took them millions
of dollars, making every year off of these books and
just donated them to charity to Christian causes and things
like that. But that was an absolute outrage how the
Ricos Statute was used. And then of course Rudy Giuliani
was on the wrong side of the Lion item veto
(20:43):
as well. If you remember back to nineteen ninety four,
you had Nuke Gingrich to his contract with America. He
had ten points which had nothing to do with the
Bill of Rights. They were burning and treading the Bill
of Rights left and right. But he came up with
ten things that he was going to do, term limits
and things like that. One of them was a line
one in veto, and you had Clinton was on board
(21:05):
with that. They passed that, and Clinton exercised that. Rudy
was not happy because there was some federal funding to
New York City that was cut. He was mayor at
the time, and so he took it to the Supreme
Court and Rudy stopped the line out of veto. There
you go, Conservatives, that's Rudy Giuliano for you. And then yeah,
(21:26):
he shows up with nine to eleven. You know, he
was America's mayor during nine to eleven. Right, he was
the one who rushed everybody in there for the cleanup
to get rid of any evidence. And you had a
lot of people who were injured, perhaps as many as
the people who were killed on the day of the attack,
and they were injured with the dust that they did
(21:47):
not have proper protection for, right, didn't have masks at
that point in time that we wanted to use, and
that's where the mask actually would have worked, but they
didn't give him to anybody.
Speaker 4 (21:57):
That's the kind of particular matter that actually gets filled
are out by these things. Yes, it's large enough.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
Yeah, so you know, he he had reckless disregard for
the help of the people who were actually you know,
the people that called heroes who are doing the hard
work of cleaning that up, and he killed a lot
of them with respiratory illness because it was so important
to hide the evidence. And then we had the giant
Karayaku issue where he offered his people offered jount kiyaku
(22:26):
billions of dollars.
Speaker 6 (22:27):
Yes, got some breaking news from a comment I'll find
who posted that. In a second, Rudy Giuliani was just
injured in a car crash.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
Yeah, that happened the day before this happened. He was
he was injured in a car crash. But he's gonna
be okay. He's feeling much better now. He's kind of metal.
So yeah, he's had a rough couple of years there. Rudy. Yeah,
Rudy through his lot in with Trump and all he
got was US Medal.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
One of the things that's fun to me is his
entire career. He's been a scumback. Nothing has changed. But
until he associated himself with Trump. If you brought Rudy
Giuliani to anyone from New York, it seems like he
was this deific figure almost. They loved Rudy Giuliani. Yeah,
he could do no wrong. You talked about Rudy, Oh
he was the best when he was mayor. Things were
good here, things were good in New York when Rudy
(23:20):
was mayor.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
Yeah, well he did the.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
Same guy he's ever been. But now he's associated with Trump.
People like, oh that Rudy Giuliani.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
He did reduce crime, but he reduced crime and doing
things like Rico Statute and then other crime. He had
institute stopping frisk, so you know, they gave the police
the ability to just walk up and stop and frisk
anybody that they wished with, you know, hardly any probab
probable cause, if there was any probable cause. Quite frankly,
(23:50):
I don't see that as a victory. This is always
the tension between security and liberty. I come down on
the side of liberty over the security issues. Like the
woman who said, yeah, it was carjacked and they broke
my arm, but I don't want the military in here,
and I heartily agree with her. He had the MAGA.
People said this woman is crazy, you know. But I
(24:13):
think the people who want the military, they want a
national police force. I think they're the ones who are crazy.
They don't understand. The worst gang you could possibly have
is a government gang that has a monopoly on force
and is feels that they're entitled to kill anybody that
resists what they tell them to do. This is the
first metal freedom that Trump is awarded in his second term.
(24:36):
I think he gave one to Rustling Bab But you know,
they hand these things out. I don't know. I guess
you can stick it on your wall. Giuliani served as
Mayor of New York from ninety four to two thousand
and one. Gained national recognition recognition for his leadership following
September eleventh, says Breitbart, Yeah, and he never got the
(24:57):
recognition they deserve for trying to sell pardons. I've had
John Kiyaku on a couple of times talk about that.
He said he wanted to talk to Rudy Giuliani because
again they convicted John Kiriaku for exposing the lies based
on torture so they could start the war in Iraq.
(25:19):
And it was the person that did all that and
ran that and produced the lies was Gina Haspell. Trump
made her head of the CIA, And so he went
to Rudy and he said it was a meeting, and
Rudy was there with two of his assistants, and he
starts to talk about the pardon because John Kiriaku served
(25:41):
his prison term and he wanted to get the pardon
to clear his records so that he could get his pension.
And the pension was less than a million dollars. It
was like seven hundred thousand dollars or something like that,
think it fifty. And so you know, Rudy. As soon
as he mentions that, Rudy goes, I'm got to go
to the rest Struman. So he gets up and leaves,
(26:01):
and the other two guys that are there.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
His two goons.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
So that'll be a million dollars. He goes what he goes,
I'm not paying to get this pardon, he says, it
doesn't make any sense for me to pay a million
dollars to get the seven hundred thousand dollars pension anyway.
So and John Kiyaku, I like John, he's uh, he
does not shy away from telling the truth about powerful people.
But that was something that did not get the media
(26:26):
attention that it really deserved.
Speaker 4 (26:28):
That. I pulled up a list of people that he
awarded the Medal of Freedom to in twenty eighteen. The
first one on the list is Miriam Adelson.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
Oh, definitely were a million dollars. That's uh, yeah, that's
what one is.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
Orrin Hatch so, Alan Page, Oh, Elvis Presley got one
posthumously of course. Oh okay, there's one, Babe.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
Ruth, Yeah, so posthumously again.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
Yeah, antonin Scalia again posthumously, and Roger stallback quarterback.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (26:58):
They really do just hand these out, like can if
he sent to hand out.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
These awards posthumously, when does he give going to Jefferson?
That's right, he would disagree with Jefferson politically on everything.
Speaker 4 (27:06):
Yeah, just why not down the line, you know, Washington Jefferson. Yea,
every founding father gets a medal of freedom.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
Yeah, that's right. Well we come back. Well, I actually
I get some more I want to talk about with
a police state, because we had an interesting statement from
Squeaker Mouse Johnson, who is now when he went on
the Sunday Show, somebody asked him and said, well, you know,
there's a lot of crime in Shreport Louisiana. And I
always remember I always laughed on I see the name
(27:33):
of Screport Louisiana. Yeah, I had those. Richard Burton was
on a program once and saw the clip from that
and the person said, you sound so impressive when you speak.
I bet you could read the phone book and make
it sound good. So they had them a phone book
and he goes shre Port, Louisiana. It's like, yeah, that's
(27:57):
why he can read the phone book and sound in prison.
But anyway, that's actually the district of Squeaker Mouse, and
Squeaker Mouse will saying yeah, we might have to do that.
You know, if Trump wants to do it, he'll be
all for it. Absolutely yes, sir.
Speaker 4 (28:12):
Whatever you say, sir, how high would you like me
to jump?
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Sir?
Speaker 3 (28:15):
But when we're talking about a police state. This is
from Technocracy News, Patrick Wood. Do you feel safe now?
License plate readers are tracking you everywhere you drive? And
he talks about the flock cameras that I've mentioned many
times before. It was founded in twenty eighteen and it
was funded by andreasen Horowitz that' Smart and Dreason and
(28:38):
also the founder's fund Peter Teel. They have a scalable device.
It can be mounted anywhere. It sucks data from every
passing vehicle. It is self powered with solar panels and
communicates via Wi Fi. So you just self contained, self power,
solar powered and it communicates with Wi Fi. So they
just put anywhere and it's constantly recording license plates. You
(29:02):
can be mounted on any type of pole and they
also will sell you a pole. I bet they will.
These cameras can capture every license plate passing by on
a busy four lane freeway, but doesn't stop there. It
records the make and the color of your vehicle, any
identifying features like windows, stickers or vehicle damage. Thus it
fingerprints your car. So it's not just a license plate.
(29:26):
It gets a complete profile of the idiosyncrasies of your car.
Police systems integrate these so they can track the movement
of any vehicle in real time, even across jurisdictions, states
and nationwide. Your Fourth Amendment rights are being ground into
the dust. He is absolutely right. And they're doing about
(29:47):
twenty billion vehicles per month that they're scanning, with over
forty thousand cameras installed nationwide. I start talking about this
because even here in East Tennessee and some small around here,
they've been putting them. In Cities that are literally saturated
with flock cameras include San Francisco, Loudon County, Virginia, Atlanta, Georgia,
(30:10):
Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Scottsdale, Arizona, leading the pack by
integrating about four thousand live video streams of different brands
into their flock system. And this is the Technocracy on
steroids here, and this is where they want to go.
So this article here on Technocracy News, the guy said,
(30:34):
I'm going to print some flyers and hand them out
to drivers and give them a Technocracy brochure to boot
and ask them if it bothers them that they're being
surveilled like a criminal without any search ones. But of course,
you know, you can have your car stolen without being
charged of the crime, and then you have to sue
them in court. So now Flock wants to partner with
(30:57):
a consumer dash cam company because it's not enough to
put them on every pole. They've got to put them
on cars as well. And they have a a nextsar
is the name of the dash cam company. I don't
know who they are. I would I would say, you know,
I think dash cams are good. They can protect you
in an accident. They can even protect you from aggressive
(31:20):
police who are over policing. I've had that situation, not
the accident, but the police. I've been pulled over. I says,
you went through a red light, and I pointed to
the dash cam and I said, I've got a dash cam.
I say, go ahead and charge me and we'll take
it to court and I'll show you what I did.
And so he'd let me go. He says, well, I'll
give you a warding.
Speaker 4 (31:39):
A nice stay.
Speaker 3 (31:40):
Yeah, he just backed off because I had the video
evidence there, and otherwise it would have given me a ticket,
would have been his word against mine. But a dash
cam is a great thing to have, and so nextsar
he's going to team with the flat cameras and of
course they'll record the vehicles precise GPS location and make
(32:03):
that a part of the data as well surveillance everywhere.
And while we have surveillance everywhere, it's kind of interesting
to see that AI is now being used to unmask
the masked ICE police. Can Washington do anything about it?
This is politico a new twist in the debate over
(32:24):
surveillance tech raises tough questions for policymakers. You see, they
want to know everything about us. They don't want us
to know anything about them. So now they're wearing masks
as part of their quote unquote. Law enforcement technology is
a two edged sword. This is an activist who likes
immigration and he's in the Netherlands, and so he has
(32:47):
started using AI to identify ICE agents beneath their mask.
He says he only needs to be able to see
thirty five percent or more of their face and they
can recreate it with artificial intelligence. And then he's got
humans or maybe some actually he's got AI that is
then going through and trying to take the AI generated
(33:10):
face and there is a program actually that is available
to everybody that and this should concern you. They can
take a face and match it up to a massive
database that they have.
Speaker 4 (33:24):
It's great, we're fighting police state with some guy's AI
invasion of privacy. There's no there's no winning this one.
This guy's some liberal moron that is pro immigration. There's
a police state.
Speaker 6 (33:37):
It'sations of privacy versus theirs.
Speaker 4 (33:40):
Yeah, it's stuck in the middle.
Speaker 3 (33:42):
Yeah, and actually the the there's a company that does
reverse image search engine. It's called pim eyes, and so
once they have their AI generated face, they feed it
into pem eyes and it comes up with people out
of it state database. And then I think he said
that they've got people who who check it before they
(34:04):
doxs these people. But again he's in the Netherlands, and
so it makes it hard for them do anything about it.
A twenty nineteen study from Georgetown Law Center on Privacy
and Technology found that police departments digitally altering pictures and
using artists sketches as a basis for finding suspects through
facial recognition. And so that's something that they've been doing.
(34:28):
Now it's being done to them. He said, I don't
believe in public justice, but I do believe in public
shaming and public accountability, said the man in the Netherlands.
He acknowledged that the technology is flawed. He said that
about sixty percent of the AI generated results on facial
recognition searches led to wrong matches on social media profiles,
(34:49):
he says, a group of volunteers verifies them through another
process before they post the names online. So that's the
society in which we live now. Trump declared is DC
to be crime free after a federal crankdown. And I
just have to say, you know, I'll ask you a
question if that's true. If that were true, would you
(35:12):
be okay with federal law enforcement, with the military on
the streets. And that's the real issue. I go think
back to COVID, right, if the price to be safe,
let's say that the virus was real, that the pandemic
was real, and if the lockdowns and all the rest
(35:33):
of the stuff, that we're done closing everything, if that
was effective, and of course it wasn't, but let's say
that it was effective, would you accept that trade off.
I don't find that as an acceptable trade off, not
at all. And I said that at the time. I
don't care whether this thing is real or not. In
very early days in January, he said, I don't support
(35:55):
this kind of lockdown. So to violate the constitution poss
comatants anything. What is more dangerous and out of controls
thirteen A pandemic or an out of controlled government? And
I say the government. I even said in the early days,
I said, this reminds me of when David King. David
(36:21):
got God upset because in his pride he did a
census of his military and things like that, and as
all based in pride, and so God said, well, I'm
going to give you a punishment. You know, what do
you want? And he gave him a multiple choice of punishment,
and one of them was a plague, and one of
them was an attack by his enemies. And he said,
(36:47):
I'll take the plague. I don't want to be at
the mercy of man. I don't want to be at
the mercy of the federal government and a standing army.
I'll take the plague of violence. I'll take the plague
supposedly of a virus. Anything other than that, we should
understand how that kind of wisdom David certainly did so
again coming back to Squeaker Johnson, he says it may
(37:09):
be necessary to send the National Guard to Shriporlt. Louisiana.
He was asked on one of these Sunday shows, I'm
going to ask you might be confident national Guard and Shreeport,
part of your district is shreport. FBI statistics show violent
crime for one hundred thousand residents higher in Shreveport than
in Washington, d C. And he says, well, it's because
(37:31):
we've got a Democrat da you know, let's put in
there by sorrows. That may all be true, But what
is remedy for that is a remedy that's send in
military troops. He says, well, I don't know. Let's take
one city at a time. That's the way they're gonna
do it. It's going to be one city at a time,
martial law. We have to address a crime pom in
any city where this problem. In large cities like Chicago
(37:52):
that you mentioned, be a big help there, that would
be great. We don't care what the law says. Let's
just do this. And you know this is the way
that they operate. Did the War on drugs? Right? I
don't care what the constitution says, we got a problem here,
and I'm going to use force, and I'm gonna use
federal police to solve this problem. And we look at
how they both the drugs and the corruption have metastasized
(38:16):
like a cancer based on that kind of decision. Well,
we're gonna take a quick break before we do. You
want to read some of the comments.
Speaker 4 (38:24):
Yeah, we've got lots of comments here from b. L. Hoten.
So it was already attacked by MAGA this morning on
Legal af America first. Maybe or maybe that's something else
after I said Trump won't ever release the full unredacted
Epstein files because too many presidents in high level government
names are on the list. Yeah, there's still so many
people in MAGA that refuse to see the writing on
(38:46):
the wall. The Epstein list is never coming out. It's
not happening, folks. It's just not grow up. Learn a
lesson for once.
Speaker 3 (38:54):
Zoxavoxa's Yeah, maybe he'll he'll tell us who actually shot
JFK Right.
Speaker 4 (39:01):
Learn about Tower seven, you know all those things.
Speaker 3 (39:04):
Yeah, we can't even get any truth on nine to
eleven because of people like nine to eleven Rudy.
Speaker 4 (39:10):
He's going to declass by the Epstein files and give
you all a personal tour of area fifty one. Guys,
that's what's going to happen, Q told me so zoxav oxas. Yep,
the number of deaths in Chicago isn't any higher than
it has been. They're using it to be the military
on the streets, not for your safety or your u
or effectiveness.
Speaker 3 (39:28):
Yeah. Yeah, that's the whole thing. We all see through
this fraud. You know, It's just it's like the trade deficit.
The trade deficit was about the same and was not
an emergency. There was any big change in it. But
now he wants to be able to just issue edicts,
so he pretends that he's got an emergency. And as
I said the other day, you know, the trade deficit
doesn't threaten us as much as the H one B visas.
(39:51):
It doesn't threaten threaten us as much as the federal
deficit in terms of spending. He's not going to do
thing about the bigger problems. He's going to focus on
something and make that a problem so he can act
as a dictator. You know, he's out there saying Mago
was saying, he's just kidding. You know, Yeah, I'm going
to be a dictator. I'm only going to be a
(40:13):
dictator for a day or two. Yeah, right, he was
throwing that stuff out there, and he wasn't really kidding.
Let's see.
Speaker 4 (40:20):
Yeah, it's just Chicago has been a crime ridden nightmare
for years now. It's no better or worse than it
has been. If you don't want to live in that
sort of scenario, you have to get out because the
people that do want to live there are just going
to continue to vote for the same sort of policies
that made it what it is. Yeah, got x Monacs, Epstein,
(40:41):
and Trump best buds documented, Yet MAGA cannot connect the dots,
same as Trump shots. The father of the vax cannot
connect the dots. It's like talking to a lefty about
the dangers of the vas and then close to one
hundred children vaccine schedule. It's so sad.
Speaker 3 (40:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (40:55):
Yeah, MAGA is completely blind to the sins of Donald Try.
Speaker 3 (41:00):
Yeah, it's because they got people in media that are
aligning to them that they trust, and they follow people
who betrayed them and it's absolutely amazing.
Speaker 4 (41:10):
Yeah, a lot of people again, they need someone that
they trust to tell them who to believe in and
if some if you know someone in authority tells him
Trump is a good guy, you got to trust him.
That's what they'll do. We've got bl hoton. Trump apparently
can't make gas two dollars a gallon, bring down inflation
(41:30):
to zero, and stop the housing market crash. So he
has to go to war. Yeah, well, all that stuff
is impossible, but going to war is real easy.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
He's not going to stop the Ukraine war. He just
wants to start more wars.
Speaker 4 (41:42):
Big business Nibiru twenty nine. Steve P's plot lines are
all printed on watermark sheets of script paper. That's right,
they're on the blockchain.
Speaker 3 (41:53):
Quantum computers. He used that for a word processor exactly.
Speaker 4 (41:58):
Hi, boost David. I thought the fentanyl crisis was at
the Canadian border. Why is Trump shooting boats off the
coast in Venezuela.
Speaker 3 (42:05):
Huh, Well, they were on their way to Canada. That's
a I guess they had father manifesto.
Speaker 4 (42:10):
The roundabout trip, you know. Yeah, KWD sixty eight. Trump
can invade Venezuela and bring peace, no bell, that's right,
or invading Venezuela. Get ready, North American house hippo. So
I got pulled over by the Orange County by an
Orange County deputy last week on my way to work
two in the morning. The pretense was my clear license
(42:30):
plate cover. I should have invited him to Canada. The
fishing's great up there, Steuth Patriot. Trying to show Trumpsters
what he is doing is like trying to convince a
doting parent that their little angel is actually a little monster.
They say that was other kids, not mine, all emotions.
Speaker 3 (42:47):
That's good analogy. I like that.
Speaker 4 (42:49):
Yeah, No, he would never do that. It's all the
other kid's fault. Yeah, opossum king. Freedom cities are coming,
Yeah right, Yes, sadly.
Speaker 3 (42:58):
You know, if Trump's hoarded the rule of Vaught and
wanted to push back against all this surveillance and all
this data mining and all the rest of this stuff,
that'd be a different thing. You know. You could look
at this and say, well, maybe he really is trying
to do this. I would still oppose it because I
think it's wrong to violate the law. But when you
(43:18):
look at all the rest of this stuff, it's all
of a pattern, and we know what this is all headed,
and it's all been planned out with a technocracy, and
they've been these guys have been talking about this stuff
for over fifty years. It's back in the nineteen seventies
that it's a big new Brazinski talked about the technocratic
state and he said we are now between two ages,
and this is the age that he said was going
(43:41):
to becoming. These people have been wargaming this stuff, people
like the big new Berzenski, people like JCR. Licklier at DARPA,
and now people like Alex Karp are implementing JCR. Licklier's dream.
So all this stuff flows into that, and there's no
question what the plan is not even a upfront issue
(44:03):
about the trade off of liberty versus safety in terms
of law enforcement and cities where crime is out of control.
It's not even about that. It's a bigger agenda.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
We have skunk Hollow Rose Gardens, and we'll be buying
a lot in the Freedom City. If it comes standard
with a Starlink subscription, Golden dome and Patriot battery coverage.
I'm sure it'll come with all of those things. It'll
be the perfect utopia that we've all dreamed of.
Speaker 3 (44:28):
Yeah, that's right. Well, you know, speaking of Rose Garden,
I talked about the White House window and this is
what we saw. Everybody speculating what's going on. You can see
that window there on the second floor there, somebody dropped
something out of it. He was like, what's going on
the White House. Somebody's propping stuff out of there? Well,
(44:48):
the White House put a let's see where is it? Here?
The statement about that, They said that the culprit was
a contractor who has performed routine maintenance while Trump was away.
That was reported by the New York Post. They contacted there.
So Fox News reporter, this is the son of I
(45:10):
can't remember what his name is, but the son of
the guy that has Fox and Friends or something asked
Trump about it, and I'm looking, Lance, I'm having trouble
finding where that is on here. Do we have the
video of Trump's statement?
Speaker 6 (45:26):
Uh? No, I didn't see that.
Speaker 3 (45:27):
Okay, well I won't play that in the Trump uh
was asked about and he goes, oh, that was ai.
But then he did make a good point. He said,
first of all, those windows are sealed and their bulletproof,
so he's got there six hundred pounds. Said you wouldn't
easily be able to open that even if it wasn't sealed,
and so you know, I don't know really what's going
(45:48):
on with that, what that was about. Maybe that was AI,
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (45:52):
We've still got more comments here North American House Hippo.
I try to convince the maggots that everything Trump is
doing is setting the state for the next Democrat. They
want Newsome having this power. No Republicans will always be
in office, that's right.
Speaker 3 (46:05):
Just like you prepped the vaccine bio weapon for Biden
to require it. You know, it was always that was
always the plan. They've been practicing it for decades, since
two months before nine to eleven.
Speaker 4 (46:19):
We have don't frag me bro cops already murder anyone
that resists a long streak of murdering people with mental
challenges and dogs. Yeah right, That's why I always say
the cops don't have the right to do these things.
They don't have the authority, but they do have the power.
If you get pulled over, know your rights. But if
they tell you to get out of the car, if
(46:39):
they tell you to get down on the ground, if
you don't do that, chances are they are going to
kill you. Bite them. In court, you can potentially get
a settlement. Don't end up one of these bodycam footages
that we see on the.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
Your relatives posthumously can get a gold medal from the government.
Speaker 4 (46:54):
So don't do that. Yeah, yo, wanna Annie Wodi. The
US breaks every agreement, promise and treaty, and the Constitution
is merely a peace treaty between rulers and the ruled.
Speaker 3 (47:05):
I absolutely agree. And Russell Means said that in his
book Where White Men Fear to Tread, He said the Constitution.
He says, they've broken all the treaties with the Indians,
and he goes, your constitution is your treaty, white man.
They've broken every aspect of that. Way you got to
do about it? I guess the answer is nothing, right.
Speaker 4 (47:26):
Lou g four liberty? When is Epstein getting his meddle
of freedom? Oh he must not be dead yet.
Speaker 3 (47:32):
Oh that's good. I like that.
Speaker 4 (47:33):
That's right. You know he's not dead because he hasn't
gotten one. We've got x manax. Is that federal overreach?
Federal government have authority to do that? Send National Guard
to democratic cities? Not sure if I asked that correctly.
So he's asking if they have the authority to do that.
Speaker 3 (47:48):
Yeah, it's a violation of the posse commutatis like the way.
I mean, they could send federal troops, like the judge said,
to protect federal assets. So if there was you know,
something that they felt like they needed to protect, he said,
you'll had to remove the three hundred troops. If you
think that you need them to protect a federal property,
you can leave them there, but you cannot use them
for law enforcement. That's very clear black letter law and
(48:12):
violates not just a posse Coomatitis Act, but it really
also violates so many different aspects of the Bill of
Rights that are really folded into that as well. As
John Whitehead pointed out and I covered it last week,
it's really what the Third Amendment was about. You know,
they're not having these troops live in the homes of
(48:34):
the people that are there. That's the only difference. It's there.
But fundamentally, what the Third Amendment was about was not
just about well, you know, we're not going to make
make you, you know, give up your couch and give
them chips while to watch TV. It was really about
troops occupying, you know, and the intimidation of a standing army.
Speaker 4 (48:56):
We have dugged double O seven that is so creepy.
If they can't see your face, they'll be able to
find you by locating your car.
Speaker 3 (49:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (49:04):
Yeah, it's always moving more and more towards a surveillance
state technology they.
Speaker 3 (49:08):
Have and that's not even including your surveillance device of
your phone, you know, which they're constantly getting gspacial intel from.
Speaker 4 (49:15):
Oh yeah, continually Pezzodo Avante seventeen seventy six. Contractors often
throw things off roofs and out windows instead of dragging
the refuse through the house. Yeah, it's especially a house
as large as the White House. I imagine it's sort
of labyrinthian in there.
Speaker 3 (49:30):
Yeah, and that was the first statement from the White
House and the contractors that did that. And if it
was contractors, they might have been able to open that window.
Speaker 4 (49:39):
Maybe they have a jack underneath it or something like that.
KWD sixty eight local news and lexingon Kentucky likes you
to a story every week about how flop cameras caught someone.
Speaker 3 (49:52):
It's a feature, not a bug, right, I think I
think it's a bug. Well, when we come back, we're
going to take a look at the double standard.
Speaker 4 (50:00):
Say flock is for the birds.
Speaker 3 (50:02):
Yeah, it is like Albert Hitchcock's The Birds the way
those birds that come in and accumulate one at a time.
You know. That's that's what's happening with these cameras, and
they are watching us. It's kind of like that combination
of that Negar Allen Poe's raven.
Speaker 6 (50:16):
You know.
Speaker 3 (50:17):
But yeah, when we come back, we're going to take
a look at a double standard of what's going on
with the trans and boys, a standard ever double. So
we're gonna take a quick break and we will be
right back.
Speaker 2 (52:07):
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 7 (52:11):
Here News now at apsradionews dot com or get the
APS Radio app and never miss another story.
Speaker 3 (52:19):
All right, let's take a look at what's going on
in trans world. Another trans has been arrested for shooting
a father dead. This happened right after this trainee attacked
that Catholic school and church, and the media has completely
ignored it. Really, so this is a trans guy. I
(52:41):
don't know they say transidentifying man, I don't know when
they use those phrases whether they're talking about a male
or a female. And quite frankly, if this person is
so confused that they don't know, don't expect me to
know either.
Speaker 6 (52:55):
If they're calling it a man. It's probably a woman.
Speaker 3 (52:58):
Yeah, it could be, but this is a conservative outlet,
so I don't know. Again, you know, you're trying to say, well,
the conservatives will try to identify the person the right way.
But anyway, as he points out, tiny sliver of the
population is responsible for a shocking amount of violence. Just
one day after the anti Christian transhooter open fire inside
(53:19):
a Catholic church in Minneapolis, a trans man accused of
the cold blooded murder of a father who had just
dropped his six year old son off at school. The
person's name was snaw Hall. Shrivastova is from India, gunned
down fifty seven year old Kevin Doughty of Shrewsbury. This
(53:41):
is up in Massachusetts. The Massachusetts police and the media
are trying to keep a lid on this. He was
walking home after dropping off his six year old son
at school, and after the victim had taken pictures of
the suspect who his painting graffiti on sidewalks, he told
him to stop. He took a pic of it, and
so this guy hunted him down and killed him. He's
(54:04):
a foreign transgender man here illegally accused of murdering an
American father, a father who was simply trying to keep
his neighborhood safe and clean for his family. The confrontation
started when the father called out the trans for spraying
free Palestine graffiti all over the place. This guy identified
as a trans and he uses the name Sasha. He's
(54:25):
an Indian national who has come here so illegal trends.
And he got an illegal gun that he used as well.
By the way, because it's up in Massachusetts, who're pretty
much having a gun is going to be illegal.
Speaker 4 (54:41):
This guy is hitting almost every square on the bingo cars.
Speaker 3 (54:44):
You know, yeah, yeah. The whole gentle victim of society
narrative is completely turned to dust. This wasn't Shrivastava's first
brush with violence either. Despite the seriousness of the case,
Shrewsbury Police and the Worcester County Shriff Office have so
far refused to release the name of the suspect so
they were covering him up. But the paper did some
(55:07):
investigation and they said his residence displayed numerous leftist slogans
including BLM, Free Palestine, defund the police, and stop cop city.
This is not his first run with law enforcement either.
In September twenty twenty two, Westboro police arrested him after
brutal violent attack. Officers spoke with witnesses who stated that
(55:31):
the alleged suspect drove his vehicle toward the victim in
an attempt to run him over, then exited his vehicle
wielding a machete, which he used to cut the victim
during the altercation. The violent assault was then dismissed by
the Massachusetts courts and they turned him out on the
street again. Now after spraying graffiti on the sidewalk and
(55:53):
getting called out by his father, he kills the father
with an illegal gun. Where is the outrage. Well, you
can't even get this reported by the police, and the
system had him there. He's here illegally. They didn't deport him,
they didn't keep him in jail for trying to run
somebody over with a car and then attacking him with
a machete.
Speaker 6 (56:14):
And this, I think is the perfect story to follow
up the whole police state thing, because yeah, just do
what you can now, like, clearly they could be doing
more without overstepping the constitution. They are creating this problem
by letting this guy go after he tries to run
someone down and then attacking with a machette and cutting them.
(56:35):
He's here illegally. They have him in custody and they
just let him go. It's not an issue of oh, well,
we need the military to do this. The military would
have stopped that, I'm sure. Yeah, it's the bureaucracy that
was very much as an excuse for the military.
Speaker 3 (56:50):
Spot only. It is exactly like the conservatives want to
have a constitutional convention to completely rewrite the Constitution, and
it's like, well, wait a minute, they're not obeying the
Constitution as it is, So first of all, that's not
going to solve anything. Secondly, the people who would rewrite
the Constitution are the ones who are violating it right now.
So do you really want them to give themselves legal
(57:13):
cover for this? And that's the whole point that rather
than address the core issue, rather than executing the laws faithfully,
these people are doing just the opposite, and we don't
want to give them more power. So when we look
at that, here's another here's the other side of this,
because remember we have this double standard. We have a
double standard in America and a huge double standard in
(57:35):
the UK. So this is a comedian. His name is
Graham Lyonhan, a British comedian, and he was just on
Joe Rogan a couple of weeks ago and talking about
the police state in Britain and the attacks against free speech.
So he heads back to London from Arizona. When his
(57:57):
plane lands and he steps off the plane, he's escorted
to a private area where he has informed that he
is under arrest for what for three tweets that he
put out about trans because trans must be protected. The tweets,
which he says police arrested him over. One was from
April twentieth that said, if a trans identified man is
(58:19):
a female only space, he is committing a violent abusive act.
Make a scene, call the cops, and if all else fails,
punch him in the genitals. We'll just say. Second tweet,
April nineteenth, was a picture of a trans rally with
a caption a photo that you can smell. The third
(58:40):
one was a follow up to the tweet we said
I hate them misogynists and homophobes FM. He said, so
that for this he's under arrest and the the police
actions got him upset so much as blood pressure was
recorded at over two hundred on the top end by
(59:02):
a nurse, and so they got this guy really upset.
They had to put him in the hospital because his
blood pressure got so high. In a country where pedophiles
escape sentencing, where knife crime is out of control, where
women are assaulted and harassed every time they gathered to speak,
the state had mobilized five armed officers to arrest me,
(59:25):
a comedy writer. His single bail condition is that he
not go on X and speak, so they put a
gag order on him. So this is coming from a
free speech union. They said, we do not believe Graham's
arrest or the bail conditions imposed were lawful. We will
be backing him all the way in his fight against
(59:47):
these preposterous allegations and the disproportionate response from the police. JK.
Rowling has also jumped in on this. She commented on
the arrests that it was utterly deplorable. She said, what
has the UK become? This is totalitarianism. It's utterly deplorable.
She's absolutely right about that. In his twenty twenty three
(01:00:09):
memoir titled Tough Crowd, How I Made and Lost a
Career in Comedy, he claimed that his unfashionable views on
trans writes had led him to being blacklisted in the
entertainment industry and cost him his marriage. I get was
he was he married to Blair White? Or was that Alex? Anyway,
(01:00:31):
A lot of them's initial reaction was one of disbelief
and humor. When I first saw the cops, I actually laughed.
I couldn't help myself. Don't tell me you've been sent
by the transactivists, he said. He said, my belongings were confiscated,
including his belt, his bag, and his devices. He was
placed in a small, green tiled cell with a bunk
(01:00:52):
and a silver toilet in the corner, and a message
from crime stoppers on the ceiling next to the concave mirror,
presumably there to make you reflect on your life choices.
During the police interview, Lineum remarks that the tone became
more intense. An officer questioned him about each tweet, He says,
with the sort of earnest intensity that is usually reserved
(01:01:13):
for discussing something serious like I don't know a crime.
He defended his posts. He explained that the punch tweet
was a serious point made with a joke, explaining men
who enter women's spaces are abusers and they need to
be challenged every time the conversation touched on terminology. When
(01:01:34):
the officer used trans people prompting lineum to challenge, I
asked him what he meant by that phrase, and the
officer said, people who feel their gender is different than
what was assigned at birth. I said, assigned at birth.
Our sex is not assigned. He dismissed the officer's response
as semantics and accused him of using activist language. He
(01:01:59):
lamented that quote the damage that Stonewall has done to
the UK police force will take years to men. He's
one hundred percent correct. He recounts that the stress of
the situation took a huge physical toll on him, and
when a nurse checked on him, it was discovered that
his blood pressure was over two hundred stroke territory, so
he was sent to the hospital for observation. He attributes
(01:02:19):
this all to the stress of being arrested for jokes,
combined with travel fatigue, and his ongoing eight year battle
against transactivists working in tandem with police and a dedicated
persistent harassment campaign. Because I refuse to believe that lesbians
have male genitals, which is this article here. His account
(01:02:45):
paints a picture of a surreal clash between free speech
activism and law enforcement, highlighting the frustration with the system
that now prioritizes ideological complaints over real crimes. And it's
just a coincidence that he was just on the Joe
Rogan podcast talking about how the police were out of control.
(01:03:07):
I'm sure it's just a coincidence of the police and
the rest of them when he arrived.
Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
They're not vindictive at all. And you weren't sitting there waiting.
You know, he's gonna come back. We're gonna get him.
It's also nice to know that we can probably never
visit the UK ever again, even if we were ever able.
Speaker 3 (01:03:22):
To afford it, I'd probably be arrested on arrival, just
like him. He was his show. And this is some
older tweets from two years ago. This is in twenty
twenty three. Comedian Graham Linham's Edinburgh show was canceled by
the venue because of his views on trans issues. He said,
essentially a group of highly ideological cultists have taken over
(01:03:45):
institutions across society. Well that's accurate, that's absolutely why just happened.
Speaker 6 (01:03:49):
I always wonder about like the jack boots on the ground,
the guys that are the tip of the spear enforcing this.
You know, the cops in Britain, how do they live
with themselves out they're doing these obvious authoritarian actions, like
clearly you must know you're in the wrong. It's obvious
(01:04:11):
well being evil, and yet they continue. It's like, I know, genuinely,
how do you live with yourself?
Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
That's what bothered me so much about twenty twenty. The
cops that were resting people because they weren't wearing a
mask or this or that. And you had some cops
who would come out against that, and some of them said,
I swart to help the constitution. This is not constitutional.
I'm not going to do it. And the next thing
you see is that this person has been fired, and
(01:04:39):
so they puraged people like that out and that was
really the big concern. You know, when you look at
what happened in twenty twenty, you've got a quote unquote
conservative president or Republican president who's the one who's running this.
You've got supposedly alternative media that's cheering it. And you've
got the police who are running this stuff and following orders, right,
(01:05:03):
and then if you push back against it as a
cop or as a journalist, you get fired if you
push back against all this system, or if you're in
the military when they started the mandates, if you push
back against that because you've got loyalty the Constitution or
the Lord Jesus Christ, then they kick you out. A
(01:05:25):
large part of that was a purge to get people out.
Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
I'm always curious about how many of them are true
believers in what they're doing versus how many just like
wielding power, how many of them actually care about the
trans insanity, how many of them are sitting there, Well,
you said mean things about the trands, so we have
got to take you in versus just Oh man, I
can't wait to put my boot on this guy's throat.
I can't wait.
Speaker 3 (01:05:48):
Yeah, I mean there's an element of that. You know,
people will get into it because I push people and
they just had so. Matter of fact, and Pigeon Ford
is they've got a Alcatraz museum, and they've got like
a car that belonged to it's this guy. It was
a movie called Walking Call. I'm sure the audience knows
the guy's name, Buford Pooser or something like that. It
(01:06:10):
was a sheriff's name, and so they lionized this guy
and created this fan fiction movie about him, and now
it's come out many many decades. I think all that
stuff happened, like back in the seventies. I never saw
the film, But now it's come out that they believe
that this police chief who was supposedly standing call against
(01:06:33):
corruption or drugs or whatever that was there, turns out
that they believe that he murdered his wife. So you know,
it's like a lot of times you look at this stuff,
be careful who you make heroes out of. As one
person said, so in today's UK, five armed officers can't
be spared for a knife crime on the streets, but
(01:06:54):
they've got the time to storm Heathrow over three tweets.
Another person said I've read multiple counts confirming he was
strip searched, which triggered the panic attack and nearly gave
the man a stroke. I can't express how angry I am.
They're an absolute disgrace at this point. They're dangerous as well.
Another one says, I can't wait to hear how Starmer
justifies the next time a US political figure questions him
(01:07:18):
on free speech in the UK. Well is all that
is happening? And another part of Europe and France. You
have a Kuran quoting Tunisian shot dead after allegedly stabbing
several people in Marseille. Tunisian migrant was shot and killed
by police in Marseille on Tuesday after allegedly stabbing multiple
(01:07:38):
people who while we side verses from the religion of peace,
it is that he was also in France illegally. No
surprise there really. This followed an argument between the illegal
migrant knife man and a downtown hotel owner over the
lack of payment for a room. So it comes here legally,
(01:08:00):
he refuses to pay for the room. He guess into
an argument, he starts quoting the Quran and stabbing the
infidels well. FIGUREO reported that the suspected attacker had previously
been placed under judicial control. See again, they know about him,
and they prohibited him from carrying weapons, So yeah, we're done.
We told him you can't carry weapons, so he's not
going to have a knife on them, right. This is
(01:08:24):
of course, he was also in the country illegally, and
they don't eject him out of the country that he's
in illegally either. But this is this is where we are.
The double standards that you can't look at this and
not realize that this is an engineered great replacement. As
we've been saying all alone.
Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
This is one of those things where I see so
many people say, well, how can you support Palestine? This
is what Muslims do. It's like, yes, I don't want
them in my country. I don't want them mass immigrating
here and messing things up, but I also don't want
them genocided or murdered. That can't be the ant. Yeah,
this is a continue I see people make this point
(01:09:03):
all the time when this sort of thing happens. They
don't make good neighbors. I understand that that's right, but
that's you know, Israel chose to set itself up there.
Sadly we played a part in that with the Balfour
Agreement and all that, but they chose to go there
and be neighbors with them. These are the consequences of
their own actions. If you can't work out an amicable solution,
the solution isn't well, we're just going to kill you all,
(01:09:24):
I guess.
Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
And when Trump supports that genocide, some of them are
going to come here and they're going to have an
They're going to have a grudge, like, yeah, they're going
to be really, really angry. I mean, I look at
these pictures of people holding their dead children who have
been bombed or starved to death.
Speaker 4 (01:09:43):
I saw a horrifying video this morning of a three
year old who was the last surviving member of his
family after a bomb and his face is just you know,
partially covered and partially you know, burned and scarred, and
his arm is in a cast and broken and just
horrifying what they're doing.
Speaker 6 (01:10:00):
Yes, it absolutely yes, Yes, these people are going to
have an actual legitimate reason for hating America, not just
the propaganda from the left, which is still going to
be there.
Speaker 3 (01:10:10):
Yeah, they don't have religion that teaches them to forgive,
So you know, we should we should think about that.
When we come back. We're going to talk about the
new dream of the the gadget makers, of the technocrats
and anything. The fact that you'll be able to have
dead relatives in your pocket, isn't that what we always wanted?
(01:10:33):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 2 (01:11:25):
Joan listening to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 8 (01:11:31):
Wait a minute, where am I?
Speaker 3 (01:11:34):
Sorry?
Speaker 9 (01:11:34):
Jefferson. The scoundrels who put America on Central bank fiat
currency used our heads on their coins as some sort
of trophy. Despicable.
Speaker 8 (01:11:43):
This is outrageous, Washington. I spent my life fighting centralized power.
Now the Federal Reserve monopoly parades us around on their
monopoly money. Tell me there's some good news to all this.
Speaker 9 (01:11:56):
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 New David Knight 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 8 (01:12:11):
They say, money talks, and this coin has something worth
listening to. The truth doesn't need inflation only support.
Speaker 10 (01:12:27):
Unlike most revolutions, whether people rise against the real economic oppression,
in our case, here in Boston, we are fighting for
purely an abstract principle. Here it is, however, not nearly
so abstract as a young gentleman supposes. The issue involved
here is one of monopoly. Today, the British government will
(01:12:52):
monopolize the sale of tea in our country. Tomorrow it
will be something.
Speaker 2 (01:12:56):
Else, liberty. It's your move. You're listening to the David
(01:13:52):
Night Show.
Speaker 3 (01:13:57):
We'll speak to our dead via an a app in
five years, they claim, nobody will visit a cemetery. You'll
have your dead relatives in your pocket. You're going to
simulate them. And you know, it is very easy to
clone a voice. Showing me a couple of seconds to
clone a voice and do it pretty well. But this
is really kind of Ray Curlzweil's dream. He said he
(01:14:18):
wanted to be able to speak to a simulation of
his father. He said, speak to his father, but it's
a simulation of his father. And this is what I
said to Guy Zoltan Isfahan, who came to Austin, who
was running for president in the Transhumanist Party, which wasn't
on the ballot anywhere. But I didn't want to talk
him about transhumanism, and I said, so, exactly, what is
(01:14:42):
it that you're going to transfer into the machine. It's
not going to be you. You don't even have an
answer as an atheist, you don't even have an answer
for what you are. You have no clue as to
what you are. And you can clone and imitate somebody.
You can clone imitate yourself, but that's not going to
be you. But you know, they look at this and
they think it's going to be something like the Marlon
(01:15:05):
Brando character in the Christopher Reeves Superman my Son, where
you can interact with it. I remember saying to that
and I thought, that's crazy. But now you know they
can create a simulation, they can program it with your content.
Speaker 4 (01:15:22):
I have a story is somewhat similar to this. One
time I overheard a lady talking about how she programmed
one of these chats to with her grandmother's name and
some information about her grandmother, and she would spend you know,
some time every day talking to this ais if it
was her grandmother. And I thought that was one of
the most horrifying things I'd ever heard. And I can
(01:15:46):
only imagine that her grandmother, where she alive, would tell
her don't do that.
Speaker 3 (01:15:50):
Yeah, yeah, this is going to be you know again,
what is this? This is kind of like a seance
or something like that, you know, which God has prohibited us.
But think about how that is going to mentally affect you.
I mean, you know, we've seen how AI and the
simulations affect people and how they draw them in because
they're so good at imitating things.
Speaker 6 (01:16:11):
I'm in Yeah, sorry, I'm reminded of the thing from
that pastor talking about a person who said, what would
you say if I told you I talked to my
dead grandmother and she visited me at my bedside last night?
I said, well, I believe you. I just wouldn't believe
that was your grandmother. It's you don't want to talk
(01:16:33):
to something that's pretending, even if it's pretending well to
be one of your dead loved ones, for many reasons.
Speaker 3 (01:16:40):
That's right. Researcher at the University of Cambridge predicts it
by twenty thirty. Twenty thirty, this is when all the
wonderful society kicks in at it that we will have
dead loved ones in our pockets and we will be
able to talk with them. Almost twenty four to seven
thanks to AI.
Speaker 6 (01:16:58):
You know, they should call it semutary.
Speaker 3 (01:17:01):
Yeah, well there you go, Travis. Maybe you and I
can still host the show. You know, no, no of
a thing over here with It wouldn't be too hard.
Speaker 4 (01:17:10):
I'm gone, I'm gone.
Speaker 3 (01:17:12):
It wouldn't be too hard to program or replica me.
I mean, you got so much content, you got more
than a couple of seconds and stuff. It might actually
be able to get its head around what I would
say about issues as they come up. I think what
would happen is if they did an accurate simulation of me,
it just keeps saying, He's like, well this just happened.
Yeah I told you so, I told you about this
(01:17:33):
years ago.
Speaker 6 (01:17:34):
Anyway, accurate simulation if you it would just start to
respond and then it's giving the censored message with every
single uh thing to.
Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
Say, yeah, I would probably censor me. So what death
and morning will be like in a digital world and
how AI is going to affect your relationship with death?
It really is. You know, when we look at AI,
it's becoming more and more instead of artificial intelligence, maybe
anti crime, imitation of not just of reality. It will
(01:18:06):
seem old fashioned to visit graves instead of using interactive
AI generated technology. Having a loved one on a video
call or on an app with whom you can talk
whenever you want. You can FaceTime the dead. It kind
of reminds me of like ancestor worship. Maybe that would
become a big thing in the technocracy.
Speaker 4 (01:18:24):
I see this being problematic in another way, just that
I think it'll make people less likely to cherish the
time they have with their loved ones while they're here. Well,
you know, I'll be able to you know, well, my
friend's family is dead, but he talks to them every
single day. So yeah, even when they're gone, they'll still
be here. No, it's not going to be them, well,
(01:18:44):
best will be a pale spectral imitation of who they were.
Speaker 3 (01:18:49):
Yes, so as this is an article on the UK
Daily Star. They said the Boffin further notes that the
first instances of the so called digital afterlife industry have
already started. By the way, that term boffin that's something
is strictly British and they usually use that when we're
talking about somebody who's a scientist or an engineer or something.
Do you know where that comes from? It's kind of interesting.
(01:19:10):
We watched David Copperfield the other day and and I'd
never noticed this before, but there's a character in there
and his name is Boffin.
Speaker 6 (01:19:19):
It wasn't David Copperfield. I think it was our mutual friend.
Speaker 3 (01:19:23):
Was it our mutual friend? Maybe that was it? Anyway
it was it was a Dickens movie and uh it
was Yeah, I think you're right it was our mutual friend.
I think yeah, because we did watch David Copperfield as well.
But thank you Lance. But yeah, there was a character
in it called Boffin, and he basically ties up all
(01:19:44):
the loose ends of this problem that's happening and fixes
everything for them. And so they started calling people who
are engineers a scientist Boffin's uh. And that's that's strictly
based on that Dickens novel. Companies have launched products that
comb the digital foot Prince of the Dead. They then
use this data to create digital avatars modeled after dead
(01:20:05):
loved ones to simulate their speech patterns and their personalities.
Rod Stewart generated a video of recently deceased Ozzy Osbourne
in Heaven at a concert. Is that where you went?
I don't know anything about Ozzie Osborne, but I mean
he was into Satan worship and stuff like that, so
I don't know. So they said these are going to
(01:20:28):
be immortal AI agents. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:20:32):
Apparently Ozzy Osborne routinely identified as a Christian throughout his life.
Now I don't know what that entails or what he
really believed, but that's interesting.
Speaker 3 (01:20:39):
That's up for God. God is the one who judges that,
not us.
Speaker 6 (01:20:42):
I had heard that he had come to Christ later
in life. I hadn't heard that it was throughout his life.
That kind of makes me wonder. But I don't know,
not gonna.
Speaker 3 (01:20:52):
Yeah, who knows. It's not for us to judge. But
Rod Stuart judged. He thinks he's in heaven. So Replica
an American chatbot that mimics the texting styles of the dead,
and story File, an LA company that uses AI to
allow people to talk to at their own funerals. So
they said, this is a form of digital immortality. Well,
(01:21:15):
don't accept any substitutes. Go for the real thing. That's
why I say, ling children who lost their parents continue
a relationship with the deceased. No, nothing will be real.
That's the whole point of all this AI stuff. It's
all artificial. A consultant and the National Center for Children
and Families said, biggest concern I have as a clinician
(01:21:37):
is that mourning is actually very important. So is reality.
That's the key. It's an important part of development to
were able to acknowledge the missing of another person. But
again they want this fits in perfectly if everything that
you do is virtual. And that was a big part
of the lockdown and FaceTime stuff that happened in twenty twenty.
(01:21:59):
There was a lot of things that they began to
move the Overton window on universal basic income with the
stimulus checks. Virtual reality where you are confined under a
kind of house arrest, and the best that you can
do is if you're on good terms with the people
who control the Internet, you'll be able to communicate with
(01:22:19):
people in other areas. James Bovard had a great editorial
at Brownstone saying schools make kids crazy. Well, AI is
just going to be the next part of that. But
he said almost a third of government schools nationwide are
now surveilling the mental health of students. And of course
Millennia wants that. She doesn't want to just stop at
(01:22:42):
the school. She wants to intrude into the family as well.
Millennia Trump Illinois Governor Pritzker recently signed a bill to
bring universal mental health screening to two million Illinois students
as part of his Children's Behavioral Health Transformation Initiative. Interesting
that Pritzger and the Trump family are really on the
(01:23:03):
same page with this stuff. Again, when it comes to
core issues, you'll see that there's not any difference between
the Republicans and Democrats. Manhattan Institute fellow Abigail Schreier warned
that the new Illinois law will mean quote, tens of
thousands of Illinois kids get shoved into the mental health
funnel and convinced that they're sick. Many or most of
(01:23:27):
these will be false positives, and of course they'll probably
be be drugged with things like guessris or things like
that as well when they get put into that mental
health label. The Trump COVID school lockdowns marked nuked the
mental health of millions of young Americans, rights James Bouvard.
(01:23:47):
The investigation by a Journal of American Medical Association in
twenty twenty four found that between twenty eighteen and twenty
twenty one, young people saw an almost three hundred percent
increase in the number of hospital emergency visits for eating
disorders and suicidal ideation. Suicide attempts increased two hundred and
(01:24:09):
fifty percent during that time, and a twenty twenty one
CDC study found that forty four percent of high school
students said that they persistently felt sad or helpless in
the past year. Females were almost twice as likely to
be depressed, fifty seven percent of them persistently felt sad
and hopeless versus thirty one percent of male students. After
(01:24:31):
schools reopened, students were hassled to comply with idiotic mask
mandates that did nothing accept multiply anxiety. And then you
had the pronoun police that have been operating over this,
and James Beauvart points out that this is something that
was started well before the lockdown stuff. In twenty nineteen,
(01:24:56):
the state of Maryland issued regulations to promote viewing each student, gender, identity,
and expression as valuable. In Marilyn the Montgomery County, the
largest school system in the state, announced that it would
choose books for the curriculum quote through an LGBTQ plus lens,
and it would ask whether books quote reinforced or disrupted stereotypes, cists, normativity,
(01:25:21):
and power hierarchies. According to the brief that was filed
at Supreme Court by parents who successfully challenged the school system,
so the g HINTI books that you liked so much
as a very young child would not be allowed in
this because it was as NORMATIVI.
Speaker 4 (01:25:38):
It's very heteronormative. There's always a you know, young guy
on the cusp of manhood between sixteen and eighteen who
goes on an adventure set in a historical time when
great events are happening, meets some of the big players
and generally finds a young woman who needs rescuing and
rescues them, and then they get married and have children.
Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
That's night. Don't want any of that stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:26:00):
I say thinking about that pvery single one of them.
Speaker 3 (01:26:02):
Every book that they had in the school system had
to portray this new system to these kids. Right, had
had to push the new approach from the LGBTQ. The
The teachers are told to frame disagreement with LGBTQ ideas
as hurtful and to counter with examples of quote men
(01:26:22):
who paint their nails or who wear dresses that was
actually their instructions. The goal is to instill in children
a new perspective that is not easily contravened by their parents.
As the county school board admitted, the indoctrination produced a
five hundred and eighty two percent increase and the number
of kids who self identified as non binary in Montgomery
(01:26:45):
County schools. Disrupting children's thinking has been so successful that
almost half of the students identified themselves as non binary.
Non Binary kids are far more likely to suffer mental illness.
One survey showed that more than half a trans and
non binary youth considered committing suicide in twenty twenty two.
(01:27:05):
That has not stopped other school systems from openly or
covertly campaigning to sway children to repent or revolt from
how they were born. Schools have bludgeoned kids with Chicken
Little the Sky is falling environmental propaganda for decades as well.
This is the whole greta. We have no future. The
end of the world is near. You know, I don't
(01:27:26):
want to get married, don't want to have children, all
the rest is stuff. Fifty eight percent of American youth
are very or extremely worried about climate change and say
that it has affected their mental health as well. So
you know, when you look at this for years, I
would have people say, well, it'd be Christians. Good excuse me.
It would say to me, I think our children need
(01:27:49):
to be salt and light. And I've raised them and
they're grounded. We're going to send them into the school system,
and I said, they're not going to be able to
stand up to the entire institution. Even teachers are not
very successful at standing up to this. And if they
really do stand up, the teachers are purged. So I said,
your kid is this is not the time that you know,
(01:28:12):
there's a time for that, but it's not when they're young.
It's not when they're under the authority of a teacher
and when they're under the pressure of an entire classroom.
And I think this bears that out. Just as we
were told for the longest time that women can be
as good at sports as men, and we're seeing exactly
the opposite, thanks again to the training stuff. Now we
(01:28:32):
are seeing that if they want to influence your child,
they have the tools and the weapons to do it,
and it is a massive full court press. That is
their intention, that is their purpose. It is more important
to them to confuse your child about gender, that is,
to teach them to read or to write it. They're
graduating kids with these equity grading scores who literally can't
(01:28:58):
read their diploma. Absolute fraud. The entire system is fraudulent,
and we need to the very least get our kids out.
But I don't like having to pay for this. I
think it's child abuse, and I think that we need
to actively begin to try to shut down government schools.
Government should have no role in education. You know, they
(01:29:20):
want to talk about separation of church and state. They
should start talking about separation of education and state. Education
is not a state function.
Speaker 4 (01:29:30):
Should not be going back to what you're saying about,
you know, sending the kids in as sultan light. Just
the spiritual versus the world is always framed as a
battle or a war. Yeah, don't use child soldiers.
Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
Yeah, that's right to work out with the crusades.
Speaker 4 (01:29:46):
No child soldiers, not for real war, not for spiritual war.
Keep them protected and train them up in the way
they should go once they're of age. You can only
protect a child for so long. Eventually have to go
out on their own experience. You know, they will be
exposed to the world, but hopefully it's after a time
that you have been able to teach them and give
them the training that they need.
Speaker 3 (01:30:07):
That's right, and you should think that that way. That's
why it was in North Carolina the Homeschooling Association had
their publication. They called it the Greenhouse Report. So you
think of it as starting a plant out in a greenhouse,
and then you're going to go plant it outside in
the harsh weather and it's got to survive on its own.
But when it's young and tender, you protect it.
Speaker 6 (01:30:26):
Yeah, we had a few conversations of old ten year
old Timmy. So therefore he surely would be able to
stand up to all of these people in authority over him,
ruling over a full class of his peers and pushing
only this for the exclusion of everything else, including education.
Surely he will be able to be salt and light
(01:30:48):
and stand up to all of that.
Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
Yeah, it's yeah, we need to have some discernment about this.
Speaker 4 (01:30:52):
It's also the fact that these people are They've worked
very very hard to perfect their psychological attack techniques. This
is something that they have studied for decades upon decades.
They know how to influence people, how to bully and
subvert what you believe.
Speaker 3 (01:31:09):
That's where the science was in twenty twenty with all
the COVID stuff. It was in behavioral science. They had
practice and studied that as a matter of fact.
Speaker 6 (01:31:18):
But even if the teachers were incompetent and not good
at arguing that, just the situation of them being, you know,
the obvious authority figure and having a class full of
the kids equals that all you know respect and look
up to them, The kids are going to take on
that same respect.
Speaker 3 (01:31:36):
Yeah. I remember in July of twenty twenty, it came
out that Yale had had actually done a double blind
psychological study where they tried to push the vaccine on people,
on adults, and they had like nine different arguments that
(01:31:57):
they used, and they had them listed out, and so
they would have some adults that they did not give
the arguments to, and then others they would try the
arguments one of the time to see which ones were
effective and on which types of people they could use
these arguments. And it was all published, and I said,
look at this. They haven't even attempted to test the
(01:32:18):
ventilators or m dezevir or let alone the MR and
A stuff. Although I think they knew what they were
doing with all those things. They're not doing the double
blind studies on that. They're doing the double blind studies
on the behavioral psychology. And then a few months later
I saw people who were Christian leaders, big big name
Christian leaders who were out there quoting this Yale study essentially, Oh,
(01:32:40):
it's a miracle from God. Science is a miracle and
He's given us this providentially, and we should thank God
for the science that gave us this vaccine, and we
should love our neighbor, and we should do this sacrificially
and so forth. So this is about loving your neighbor.
It's about accepting the gift of science that we got.
All the rest of this stuff, they went right down
the list. It was so reprehensible. But yeah, they know
(01:33:04):
exactly what they're doing. According to the Indiana State Teachers Association,
sheriff deputies this is they also have the school shooting drills.
This is what James Bohart is talking about next. So
you know, besides the LGBT insanity, besides all the COVID stuff,
they have the school shooting drills as well. So Indiana
(01:33:25):
State Teachers Association said that sheriff's deputies ordered teachers quote
into a room for at a time, told them to
crouch down, and then shot them execution style with pellets
in rapid succession, leaving several of them bloodied and many
of them screaming. I'm assuming that they shot them close
(01:33:46):
with these pellets, which can you know, when you guys
have done the pellet gun stuff, you know they can.
You don't want to be hit with this stuff at
a really close range.
Speaker 4 (01:33:54):
It must be had to be airsoft, right.
Speaker 3 (01:33:57):
There's no I don't know. Well, I don't think airsoft
make people bleed.
Speaker 4 (01:34:02):
Some of them have a very high velocity. They've improved
airsoft paintball stuff would But if he did, I feel
like this must in airsoft because if they're using an
actual pellet gun, they're insane.
Speaker 3 (01:34:13):
This is yeah. Yeah, it would not have been a
pellet gun. Pellet guns, yeah, definitely. But if they get
them to kneel down like they're going to do execution us,
how they would be doing it up close paint gun
or something like that. So teachers are terrified, but they
were told don't tell anybody what happened. Teachers waiting outside
heard the screaming and were brought into the room for
(01:34:35):
at a time and the shooting process was repeated. He said,
this is crazy. This is our crazy schools, folks. Yeah,
and you're crazy if you send your kid to these schools.
We're crazy to pay.
Speaker 6 (01:34:46):
The least damaging things they do to your children.
Speaker 2 (01:34:49):
There.
Speaker 3 (01:34:51):
Schools are increasingly turning their hallways into an imitation of
real mass shootings, complete with police officers firing BB guns
and drama students enlisted to play victims made up of
fake blood and bullet holes. Occasionally, the drills are sprung
on teachers and students without warning. A Pennsylvania teacher commented
that she was quote more traumatized than trained after teachers
(01:35:13):
were shot with airsoft guns by a false active shooter.
We had colleagues shooting colleagues. We had people getting hit
with plastic pellets. People were screaming, trying to run, people
were tripping over each other. Horrendous. She said, well, again,
this is an insane asylum, and we've got to stop
these governments. So called schools. They are behavioral conditioning centers,
(01:35:36):
propagandist centers, and they're there to destroy your child's body
as well as their mind and their soul. Plenty of
students are bummed because they recognize they have practically no
escape from surveillance. Schools boast of giving kids free laptops,
but that becomes the equivalent of wearing an electronic ankle
(01:35:57):
monitor to track everything a person rights and every step
that they take online. A recent study found the vast
majority of companies that schools hire to surveil students online
actually track kids twenty four hours a day, seven days
a week, using school issued devices. Study found that twenty
nine percent of the companies generate student risk scores based
(01:36:19):
on their online behavior. Yeah, they're putting on your permanent record.
I mean that was what Facebook was really about from
the very beginning.
Speaker 6 (01:36:26):
I remember seeing a story a while back about some
kid that got in trouble I think they sent police
to his house or suspended him or something because he
was eating a candy that looked like pills in front
of his school issued computer, not while working on school stuff.
They saw that someone was looking through his webcam and
(01:36:48):
thought that he was taking drugs.
Speaker 3 (01:36:50):
Yeah. Well, you know, God created an institution to train
children and the way they should go. It's called the family,
and you're not going to improve on that, especially not
with the deliberately crazy institutions that the government calls schools.
It does not take a village to raise a child.
(01:37:11):
The village raises monsters. That's what I need to do.
I remember when we took our daughter the first Christmas
we had her, we thought we'd introduce her to some
of the culture that happens around Christmas. So we decided
would take her to the Nutcracker Suite. She thought we
were crazy. I think looking at the ballet stuff. I
(01:37:33):
like the music, but the ballet stuff. I just can't
can't get my head around that. Anyway. Before that, we
decided we would take her to build a bear and
let her make a build a bear thing and then
go to that, and she really liked that. But as
we're waiting for them to put this thing together, I'll
(01:37:55):
look up at the ceiling and they had up there.
It takes a village to raise a I said, I
don't know if we want to be doing business or not.
You know, they're quoting Hillary Clinton. That's one of the
most reprehensible ideas that the state should be raising children.
Taylor Swift's engagement will do more for marriage than any
(01:38:18):
government program could. Do you think that's true? What do
you think about that, Travis? Do you think that she's
going to make marriage great again? I think it's.
Speaker 4 (01:38:25):
Sad that anyone would put that headline into print.
Speaker 6 (01:38:28):
Yeah, I Taylor Swift's divorce.
Speaker 3 (01:38:31):
Yeah, that's right. It's going to be swiftly followed by
a celebrity divorce.
Speaker 4 (01:38:35):
I think Taylor swift fan base is legitimately psychotic. I
have seen posts online people saying I never need to
find love, I never need happiness, just so long as
she has it. That's perfect for me. It's just you
people need to get a life. You are seriously ill,
You aren't effective. You need to find God, you need
to go to church.
Speaker 3 (01:38:57):
It is a cult, like the Trump thing I have been.
Speaker 4 (01:39:00):
I've never seen a fan base that is more psychotically
devoted to a less talented individual. There is nothing inspiring
or redeeming about Taylor Swift music. It is all such
middle of the road nothing pop that I cannot fathom
anyone having this kind of reaction to it. It is
(01:39:21):
truly unremarkable in every single way.
Speaker 3 (01:39:23):
It's all from MTV as far as I'm concerned. That's
that's what killed music. Made it all about visual spectacles
and everything. Yeah, yeah, they said. When she started dating
Travis Kelcey, NFL viewership among women aged eighteen to forty
nine surch by sixty three percent, teenage girls seeing a
fifty three percent increase in viewership, His Jersey sales skyrocketed
(01:39:49):
four hundred percent. Well, the thing is, I don't know
how many girls aged eighteen forty nine were watching the
NFL in the first place. Have you got a sixty
three percent increase? You know, it went from two or
three of them to five or six, I don't know.
But the but the issue is this, for these people
are very excited about the possibility that she's going to
(01:40:12):
make marriage cool for these people, you know, but it'll
be just a fad and it'll be quickly followed by
a celebrity divorce.
Speaker 4 (01:40:19):
There's also the fact that anyone that's this devoted to
Taylor Swift, that she sways their opinion on marriage, you
shouldn't marry them.
Speaker 6 (01:40:26):
Yeah, I don't know if I'd want to get married
to someone that got married because she wanted to be
like her idol Taylor Swift.
Speaker 3 (01:40:34):
Well, you know, they talk about this. They said MTV
had a show called sixteen and Pregnant about a decade ago.
It was supposedly very popular. Research suggested that it led
to a four to six percent reduction and teen burses
in just two years because they saw the very real
(01:40:55):
difficulty of raising a child without the guarantees of a
married partner. And of course, you know, you can see
things like that. I've talked before about how when I
was very young, I watched The Jack Woman and Lee
Remick Days of Wine and Roses, and that what.
Speaker 4 (01:41:13):
A depressing movie that is.
Speaker 3 (01:41:16):
It was a scary movie. Scared me to death, and
you know, I was like, I'm not doing any alcohol.
You know, I came from a teetotaling family anyway, so
it wasn't much of a temptation there. But you know,
when you look at that, it was a real cautionary tale.
I mean, there's a lot of power in film and
in entertainment. But the problem is.
Speaker 4 (01:41:36):
Yeah, Dark Star made it, so I never wanted to
go to space.
Speaker 3 (01:41:40):
The problem is that it was Hollywood itself that destroyed
marriage long before a Bergefeld. And so they talk about
the damage that the Supreme Court decision of Bergafeld dead
to marriage and to the family, but the key was
really Hollywood normalizing divorce when I was young. Elizabeth Taylor,
(01:42:03):
you know, Carrie Fisher's parents were Debbie Reynolds and a
guy that you've never heard of. His name is Todd Fisher.
I think he was a singer. I don't even know.
But anyway, because of DeBie reynolds fame, the family was
fairly well known, and Elizabeth Taylor kind of set her
cap on stealing him from Debbie Reynolds because whatever reason,
(01:42:28):
and so he divorced Wie Reynolds and married Elizabeth Taylor,
and everyone in my parents' generation was scandalized by that.
I mean they were talking about that a lot, and
then it became normalized. You know, it's like, can you
believe Elizabeth Taylor, She's been married like three or four times.
Now we've got Trump who's been married three or four times,
and he's got all these big name pastors who tell
(01:42:49):
us that he is, you know, God's blessing to us.
And so you know, when when you look at the
ability of celebrities to normalize his kind of behavior, I
think that was as damaging, if not more so, than
this Supreme Court decision legalizing same sex mirage. I think
that the Hollywood normalizing the fact that marriage is just
(01:43:13):
a temporary thing and it's not for life, and you
don't have to really try to make this thing work,
and it's just a fad. Kids don't thrive and married
homes merely because those homes tend to have more resources.
They flourish because marriage binds them to their mother and father,
the most enduring investment, and they're good. And this is
(01:43:35):
coming from the people who wrote this op ed piece
carried by Lifelight News. The group is called them before us.
They said, we start with a simple conviction. Children have
a right to their mother and father, and adults should
do hard things so that children don't have to. Well,
all that's great, you know, that's great, goals about what
(01:43:55):
you're doing, altruism and all the rest of stuff. But
I got to look at this. I got say, where's
love in all of this? You know, that's the thing
that is missing from this. This is not just duty
that we have there, but it's love. You know when
you look at it, and this love between the parents
and this love between the children, that's the key issue.
(01:44:16):
And that's why as Christians, we see the love of
God to us as his adopted children, and that's what
we should try to be modeling in our homes. And said,
married biological parents experience the strongest outcomes, not because marriage
is a proxy for money, but because it secures relationship, identity,
(01:44:38):
and protection. Again, we're not looking in this life necessarily
for identity and protection and financial success. Those are all
good things, but they are not the ultimate goal. And
I remember, now I've mentioned it before. There's a guy
who said that he's a pastor who's talking about education,
(01:45:00):
said when his kid was in kindergarten. He went in.
They were all excited about this new technique that they
had done, and they were telling everybody about something that
some activity had the kids doing. And he raised his
hand and said, so, what's the purpose of this? And
they just kind of stopped because they know what the
purpose was. They're just going through the motions because they
were told to, and they're not thinking about what the
(01:45:20):
end result is. And so when we do these things,
they need to be done intentionally. And we understand what
the intentions of the government institution is. Our kids are
being discipled by what they follow. So who are we
letting our kids follow? What content do they attach to
their hearts? Are we running our own pr firm at
(01:45:42):
home modeling a life that commends commitment, sacrifice, and family. Well,
guess what, even if you do that, it's going to
be wiped out. If you send your kid to school,
you're going to be modeling that before them. Let's say
maybe one or two hours a day, and they're going
to be doing other things. When they're home. They're going
to be doing homework or whatever to contact their friends,
but they're going to be spending like eight to ten
(01:46:03):
hours a day in this school institution, especially when you
factor in the bus ride time and all the rest
of stuff. It's you're not going to you're not going
to be able to outdo that quantity of time, no
matter how good the quality of time that you have
with your kids, it's the quantity of time you have
with your kids as they.
Speaker 4 (01:46:24):
Load them down with homework when they get home. You
probably got things that you have to manage when you
get home, whether it's cooking and cleaning, taking care of paperworker,
who knows what. So realistically, you're probably going to get
two to three hours with your kid during the day
at that point.
Speaker 3 (01:46:40):
Maybe, And yeah, and it's going to be it's going
to be difficult to have that be something that is
meaningful as well. So the question is how do we
steward the influences of the pop culture like Taylor Swift
and that type of thing. We should use whatever platforms
we have at home, in our churches, in our neighborhoods,
online to celebrate the right things. Notice how they left
(01:47:03):
out school left it out for a reason. But you know,
when we look at what is going on with the
Supreme Court decision of a Bergafeld, there was an interesting
piece by Joe Rigney. So another shot at a Bergafeld
And again, as I said, before divorce celebrities, Hollywood celebrity
(01:47:25):
divorce did a lot to destroy marriage long before the
Supreme Court decided that they would just essentially outlawed. Chief
Justice Roberts noted that the decision, the Abergafeld decision quote
creates serious questions about religious liberty, and unlike the imagined
right invented by the Abergafeld majority, the freedom to exercise
(01:47:48):
religion is actually spelled out in the Constitution. Religious liberty,
the Chief Justice argued, is not merely about the ability
to teach religious principles, but instead it revolves around the
freedom of action in terms of matters of religion. Generally
echoing this sentiment, Justice Thomas and his descent highlighted the
potentially ruinous consequences for religious liberty represented by the judicial
(01:48:12):
usurpation of the Democrat process. Justice Alito argued that the
decision will be used to vilify Americans who are unwilling
to assent to the new Orthodoxy. Ten years later, our
nation continues to feel the reverberations of it. As a
matter of fact, all those predictions came true in the
case of cam Davis, the county clerk from Kentucky who
(01:48:34):
became famous in twenty fifteen for refusing to issue a
marriage license to two gay men despite the Abergefeld ruling.
Because of her refusal, she spent six days in jail
and was eventually held liable for hundreds of thousands of
dollars in emotional damages and legal fees. She recently appealed
the verdict against her, arguing that the First Amendment protects
(01:48:56):
her from personal liability for her refusal to issue the license,
and it's important that she made the case in the
way that she did. As they point out in this
she could have easily said I deserve to have qualified
immunity because I was operating in a capacity as a
government official, and we see that stretched to the limits
to protect police from being sued for things that they do.
(01:49:20):
But she refused to do it that way. They treated
her as an individual and private citizen who lacks qualified immunity.
The state actors typically have to inslate them from personal lawsuits.
She was a state actor when the Ntalaristas required her
to be, and then they made her a private individual
(01:49:40):
when they required her to be. The common thread is
that she is the punching bag and they must make
an example out of her. So she said, first of all,
she said, the freedom of religion issue is my right
as an individual, and they said, no, you're there in
an official capacity. But then after they said no, we're
going to come after you because you're there as official capacity.
(01:50:02):
They did not offer her any community as an official
in that particular case, which they normally would do. So
she has taken this in terms of her appeal. She
is not going for the appeal saying that you came
after this even though I was doing my job as
(01:50:24):
an official, and I should have a community for that.
She is coming after and holding to the idea that
they are persecuting her for exercising her First Amendment rights.
So good for her, I mean, she's standing up for
everybody's freedom and all this stuff. She could have taken
the easier route, and she's been fighting this for ten years.
(01:50:45):
It is a threat to the family, not just to
our religion, and of course it's a threat to society
as well. She could have limited her appeal asking the
court to resolve her personal status and remove the judgment
against her, but she chose to challenge the legal fiction
at the heart of a bergafeld itself. For Christians who
are praying for the end of a bergafeld, this is
(01:51:05):
no small matter. Christians ought to pray that the Supreme
Court takes up her case and revisits the fundamental error
at its heart. Yes, we should pray with confidence. We
know that the King's heart is like a stream of water,
and the Lord can direct it as he wishes, and
so that's what our prayer should be in this particapal case.
She has fought this fight for ten years, and she
(01:51:29):
is now fighting this fight not just for herself, but
she's fighting it for the broader religious issues. And so
we should pray that not only would they hear her case,
but that they would decide it in the correct way.
A bergafeld is a threat to religious liberty, to families,
to children, to society. It's set in motion a fundamental
redefinition of every aspect of family law, from paternity and
(01:51:51):
custody to birth certificates in motherhood. Subsequent Supreme Court cases,
such as Pavan versus Smith, have cared for the judicial
tyranny of a burgahf Essentially ruling the categories such as
male and female and mother and father are unconstitutional in
the realm of state statutes involving parentage. I'm sorry. Bergafeld,
(01:52:12):
along with its legal cousins, has fundamentally reclassified what parents
and children are. Parents are no longer naturally vested authorities.
They are simply provisionally accredited custodians. In other words, it's
not by God given rights that you are a parent,
right because you had them naturally, but it is now
(01:52:33):
you've been awarded this as a custodial privilege essentially, and
the government can take away that privilege. That is a
key key issue. If you wonder why Supreme Court justices
are unable to answer simple questions like what is a woman?
Look no further than O. Burgafeld. If you wonder why
convicted pedophiles are able to purchase children through an unregulated
(01:52:53):
surrogacy market, look no further than O. Bergafeld. Acts of
tyrannical of judicial tyranny must be maintained by further acts
of judicial tyranny. Because courts have ordered a simple county
clerk to pay two sodomites hundreds of thousands of dollars
and emotional damages because she acted in accordance with her
(01:53:14):
Christian beliefs. There's a chance that a Bergafeld might be overturned.
And they finished by saying, may it be so absolutely,
that's what you should be praying for.
Speaker 4 (01:53:24):
I like how we ends at Obergafel delenda.
Speaker 3 (01:53:27):
Est yeah, yeah, which translated means Obergefell must be destroyed.
Speaker 4 (01:53:33):
Hearkening back to Cato the Elder, he would always end
his speech Carthago delenda st because Carthage.
Speaker 3 (01:53:39):
Yeah, Carthage must be destroyed and some of the berg
That would broaden it a little bit to say that
the whole concept that the Supreme Court can arrogantly define
what life is, that they can arrogantly define what marriage is,
and that they can do it in contradiction to God,
Man and state constitutions is abhorrent and hopefully there will
(01:54:06):
be a majority for that. But already Amy Cony Barrett,
who they thought was going to be somebody who was
deeply religious in Christian beliefs, but she's shown to be
exactly the opposite. She said that there's a big difference
in terms of the abortion issue and the marriage issue,
(01:54:28):
meaning essentially that a murder is not evolved, I guess,
but so she's signaling that she's a bit soft on this.
Scientists say they may have just figured out the origin
of life. Really yeah, it comes down to some very
simple chemistry.
Speaker 6 (01:54:45):
Really, oh good, it was simple. This whole time. We
thought it was going to be complicated, but these scientists
have it all figured out.
Speaker 3 (01:54:53):
Yeah, yeah, it actually is very complicated. The DNA code
is so complicated that they couldn't figure it out. Took
them decades, a team of scientists and computers trying to
figure out they still didn't figure it out.
Speaker 4 (01:55:03):
An article like this comes out at least once a
year really to say scientists have cracked the code, and
then you actually read it and said, well, you know,
it couldn't really happen, but you know, we're getting closer.
Speaker 3 (01:55:13):
And that's exactly what this article is about. You know.
They first they make their case and the Journal of Nature.
Team of biologists say they've demonstrated how RNA molecules and
amino acids could combine by purely random interactions to form proteins.
They're going to study RNA when don't they try to
help life continue by coming after the mRNA poison. That's
(01:55:37):
out there. Yeah, RNA. If they're going to start with RNA,
RNA is already highly highly structured and itself is evidence
of intelligent design. So that's not going to be your
starting point. Your starting point is going to be some
raw chemicals, or maybe not even the raw chemicals. You know,
go get your own sand if you're going to make
out them. You know, it's the DNA. How did the
(01:55:59):
DNA they come together? It all came together randomly, really,
so based on instructions carried by RNA, they said, leads
to a chicken and egg problem. Cells wouldn't exist without proteins,
but proteins are created inside of cells. Now we've gotten
the glimpse of how proteins could form before these biological
factory factories existed. Really. Yeah, that's the other thing too
(01:56:20):
that I remember Michael Bahee when you talked about Darwin's
black box. He said, when you start to go into
as you as biologists look at this and go deeper deeper,
they see systems within systems, They see machines within machines
and so forth, and it's like, you know, to look
at that and to think that that all happened randomly,
you would never say that about an automobile that's parked
(01:56:42):
in the parking lot. The question is who made that thing,
you know, whether it's good looking or bad looking. But
it's just stupidity. They said the chemistry is spontaneous and
it could have occurred on early Earth. This reminds me
of Darwin's spontaneous generation fantasy, you know, had he thought
they've left a glass of water sitting there. After a
(01:57:04):
while it got cloudy and they said, look, life is
coming out of that water, just spontaneously. Well, he did
not realize because all he had was a handheld magnifying glass.
He didn't realize that there was already bacteria and small
living things in that and what he was seeing in
the cloudiness was just the multiplication of these bacteria. But
(01:57:24):
he thought it was actual, actual life that was being
generated inside that water. And we see those types of
articles all the time. Oh look, they did a spectrum
analysis and they think there's water on this asteroid or
this planet or whatever. That means that there's life there
as well. It's like, no, water is a necessary condition,
but it's not sufficient in and of itself to make life.
(01:57:47):
It's a big difference. Amino acids have been around far
longer than the life on our plant. How do they know.
We've even found amino acids on some asteroid samples from
outer space. Well, guess what, God created the heavens as well.
You create the stars. Also said, they just kind of
throw you know, that's just kind of thrown out there
created They created the stars also, yeah, that as well.
(01:58:10):
The curious thing about amino acids, though, is that they
don't easily link together. Something has to kick start the chemistry.
So again they understand, there has to be some event,
you know, the Big Bang, What lit the fuse for
the Big Bang? You know what started this chemical reaction?
When you get these chemicals just setting around, and then
this is how it ends. As you point out, Travis,
(01:58:30):
they always get to the point where it's like, well
never mind.
Speaker 4 (01:58:33):
Because they leave it until the very end.
Speaker 3 (01:58:36):
So here's the punchline. The catch is, and this is
coming from a secular atheistic publication, they say, the catch is,
as far as we can tell, this pan theme that
is crucial to making this all happen wouldn't have been
found and high enough concentrations. Uh and the Earth's primordial oceans,
where many scientists believe that life may have originated, Well,
(01:58:59):
why they think it's found only in smaller bodies of
freshwater where it would be less diluted. An original life
scientist at ucl who wasn't involved in the study, cautioned
to Science magazine that the amino acid chains being produced
are random and chaotic, unlike the orderly arrangements produced by
(01:59:21):
the ribosomes by the RNA. You know, the bottom line
is is that, you know, they say, well, we have
some force that acted all all this stuff. And it's like,
let's say that you've got on your desk a bunch
of papers and you open up the window and the
wind blows in. What's going to happen to those papers
(01:59:41):
that are just randomly scattered on your desk. Is the
wind going to sort them orderly into stacks of papers
arranged alphabetically. No, it's going to make them even more disordered.
And that's the fallacy behind all their evolutionary stuff. They
still have not cracked that problem, he told the magazine.
And so then their final statement is, however, but given
(02:00:04):
these chemicals billions of years to bounce around, anything can happen.
Not a chance that this would happen. You know, again,
if I just keep the wind blowing long enough, I
know that it's going to organize the papers alphabetically and
nice and neat stacks. Not a chance, there's not a chance.
You can have an infinite amount of time, but that
is not the same thing as intelligence. You know, if
(02:00:25):
you can have an infinite amount of time, but the
sand is not going to turn itself into integrated circuits.
And what we're talking about is far more complicated than
integrated circuits. And then you've got the other issues like
sexual reproduction. You know, how do you get these two
complementary systems, you know, set up at exactly the same time.
(02:00:47):
It doesn't make any sense to have one or the
other can have male or female. Maybe that's why they
want to have the transgender stuff. Well, we're going to
take a quick break and when we come back, we're
going to talk about pharmaceutical stuff because we got some
updates about that as well.
Speaker 4 (02:01:01):
Before we do, we have a lot of comments that
we should get through. Yeah, we've got North American house
Hippo says. That's probably why the cop pulled me over.
His license plate reader couldn't sue through my plate cover.
I told him I only had the cover because my
plate was stolen once. You'll get in trouble if someone
steals your license plate.
Speaker 3 (02:01:18):
Yeah. They don't like a window tent either, for that.
Speaker 4 (02:01:21):
There's always some little process manufactured nonsense. They can get
you with KWD sixty eight. Lexington needs flock cameras to
catch people vandalizing their rainbow crosswalks. I gotta get those nasty,
nasty hate crimers. Nights of the Storm. When we start
using facial recognition to pay for things, I'm gonna get
me an elon mask and go on a shopping spree,
(02:01:44):
that's right, Gonna get everything you could dream of.
Speaker 3 (02:01:47):
Or Jeff Bezos, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:01:49):
Maybe one of each. You know, you can alternate them
day by day.
Speaker 3 (02:01:52):
They can afford it. They wouldn't even notice a bit.
Speaker 4 (02:01:54):
Someone spent two hundred who cares, don't even bother ndp IO.
If your society becomes moral, than tyranny becomes inevitable. Yes, Audi,
Mr R. Biden set the stage for Trump to order
the DoD to use military weapons on American civilians. Both
parties are collaborators and as they work together. Good to
see you ou do you hope you're doing well? Nights
(02:02:15):
of the Storm. I need Geesebusters to clear out the
flock in my city.
Speaker 3 (02:02:18):
That's right.
Speaker 4 (02:02:19):
Geesebusters is the one that can save us. Yeah, Phonsie
Bear says, what's your take on Owen leaving Info Wars
David Travis, Well.
Speaker 3 (02:02:28):
You know, Alex has really lost it. He has seen that.
I mean, he is a raging man. Of course, that's
his card and trade, you know, to do that. So
he lets himself go to do that. But I saw
yesterday that he he actually brought me up too. You know,
he's calling Owen a snake and a rat and all
this other kind of stuff. And all these poor people
(02:02:48):
who took advantage of Alex, and I'm supposedly one of
these people as well. Look, Alex took advantage of his
own supporters. He has ripped them off one way to
the other. You know, he ripped them off in twenty twenty,
he ripped them off. January the sixth, a lot of
people went to jail because of Alex Jones. And he's
(02:03:09):
got people sending him money for his lawsuits over lies
that they told. And you know, he's making out like
a bandit of that stuff. He's not going to have
to pay one half billion dollar lawsuit. He's got a
couple of million dollars and his dad can more than
easily afford that, so can Alex. I listened to some
of these statements back and forth. There's no way for
(02:03:30):
me to know what is true. I just know that
when Alex fired me and fired Travis, he told everybody.
As I was leaving after he didn't even say anything
to me. I worked for him for eight years. He
didn't say a word to me when I was fired.
I was fired by his producer Daria and by Rob Doo.
And when I got in the car, I turned it
(02:03:51):
on to see what he was listening to what he
was saying, and he was out there begging for money.
He needed more money because he had to fire me
and and afford me and Travis. What an absurdity. And
everything that he does is about greed, and he will
betray anybody over money. But the thing that bothered me
about at all was that over the next couple of days,
(02:04:13):
he took over the show the next morning and people
are calling in and they were criticizing him for firing me,
and that got him furious, so he started making up
stuff about me, and I joked about I said, Alex
has more reason, more reasons he guess that he had
to fire me than Hillary Clinton had about Benghazi. And
(02:04:36):
they changed just about as frequently as Hillary Clinton's excuses
on Beggazi. It was ridiculous the stuff that he was saying,
and that got me upset, and I contacted him and
told him to stop, and he goes, yeah, sue me
get in line. You know, that's the kind of guy
Alex shonesay is. Let me tell you, there isn't anybody
that ever worked for the man that wants to work
for him again. Owen, whatever happened, Owen is going to
(02:04:58):
be far far better off on his own that he
ever would be working Forryle Ex shimns.
Speaker 4 (02:05:04):
I agree, Oh, and we'll do just fine on his own.
He'll be he'll be fine. Everything. He already summed it
all up. So Hibou says, Okay, most of us are
here now sign for David to reply to AJ calling
him out yesterday on the IW broadcast. Well you already
handled that.
Speaker 3 (02:05:21):
Well, I'll tell you what you know, Alex is. It
just amazes me how Alex and Trump can betray their
own supporters, rip them off, get them in trouble on
January sixth, and that's why he fired me, by the
way he fired me on the seventeenth Thursday. On the fourteenth,
(02:05:41):
I talked about the fact that the Electoral College votes
were that day, and I said, that's it. There's nothing
else that's going to be done, So you're not going
to stop the steal by going on January sixth. And
I said from that point on until I got on
air up to January sixth. Morning of January sixth, you
can see I'm on record. I told people, don't go.
(02:06:02):
There's going to be agent provocateurs there. It's a setup.
I knew that Alex was setting people up. He's a
controlled up. He really is. You need to wake up
and understand who this guy is. He's got people sending
him nine million dollars in bitcoin in a single transaction.
Do you who you think is paying him that kind
of money and who's paying him to tell the kind
(02:06:23):
of lies to send people to January the six But
who the people get upset with. They don't get upset
with Alex, they get upset with ray Epps. Let me
tell you something. Whatever ray EPs is, whatever he said
that day, Rey Epps is not the reason that people
went to January the sixth, Alex Jones is he entrapped
those people. He should be ashamed of himself. He betrayed
(02:06:43):
his own supporters after for the entire year of twenty twenty,
Alex Jones betrayed the Constitution to suck up to Trump
and to make money. He is a disgusting whore. That's
what you are, Alex. You're a whore, greedy horror.
Speaker 4 (02:07:00):
Got North American house hippo moving on. Just their reminder,
it's been twenty years since the military went door to
door in New Orleans confiscating weapons from compliant homeowners in
high and dry neighborhoods. So yeah, they will do that. Yeah, absolutely,
they're not going They'll purge anyone that says no. Anyone
that refuses that order will simply be kicked out. Or
(02:07:23):
you tried dugged a double O seven. It's funny how
they presume that nobody will go to cemeteries anymore, as
if they can speak for everyone. A lot of people.
I assume he's talking about AI, you know, having access
to your dead grandparents in your pocket or whatever. Yeah,
and unfortunately I think they are right about a lot
of people. They'll say, well, you know, it's inconvenient, it's annoying,
(02:07:45):
I don't have to make the trip, and instead of that,
they'll just talk to the AI in their pocket.
Speaker 6 (02:07:52):
Still, it is kind of a arrogant thing to say, Oh,
cemeteries are going to be gone.
Speaker 4 (02:08:00):
They were the best. Imagine the future no cemeteries Solo Cat,
nineteen eighty. Lazy parents make stupid excuses for sending their
children to Luciferian public schools.
Speaker 3 (02:08:12):
Yeah. Yeah. The reality of it is is that they
want to pursue their own careers and they don't want
to be bothered with the kids.
Speaker 4 (02:08:20):
And I understand that a lot of parents, because I mean.
Speaker 3 (02:08:23):
You look at it when they shut the schools down,
lock them down, like, what am I going to do? What?
You know, I got a job, I got to do this,
and so you know, and you hear that whenever they
would shut the schools down for one reason or the other,
where there's a snow day or something, that they get
furious about that because for them it's daycare and you know,
they got their job that they in many cases that
(02:08:44):
they need to do. Why because taxes have gone up
so much. You go back in the nineteen fifties and
a family of four that had a median income, they
were paying about two percent in taxes income taxes. Look
at what it is now, it's more than ten times
that and so and that's I've made this argument for
a long time that to send the mother to work. Uh,
(02:09:06):
you know, we were better off in the fifties with
one parent working. We had intact families, and financially they
were better off and better off than many other and
every other way as.
Speaker 4 (02:09:18):
Well, Audi m r R. The powers that shouldn't be
absolutely overplayed their hand with COVID. The silver lining is
that it woke up millions of people. Yes, a lot
of people did see through it. A lot of people
did realize, Wow, this is a massive overreach from the government.
This is a huge abuse of power. Audi m r R. Again,
No Child Left Behind was part of the dumbing down
(02:09:39):
America agenda.
Speaker 3 (02:09:41):
That's right coming down. That's what Charlotte is said.
Speaker 4 (02:09:45):
Anyone that thought George W. Bush could help make their
kids smarter, I don't know what to tell you.
Speaker 3 (02:09:50):
I replied that no Child left Behind and said, yeah,
it's really no child left alone. You know, they want
to get every child and mess with them, and that's really.
Speaker 4 (02:09:58):
The We've got some comments here about the cops shooting
kids with airsoft guns break the skin, that's the storm says.
Japan has hobby shops that you can hop up your
airsoft guns. They can break skin. Our soldiers are made
to lock them in the arms room. I imagine that
probably did lead to some chaos on base before that
rule was implemented.
Speaker 3 (02:10:17):
Well, you know, you're shooting people baby guns as well.
They can break the skin. But you know it's but
people do use them, shoot each other with BB guns
and that kind of.
Speaker 4 (02:10:26):
Stuff that kids will. Kids do a lot of dumb things. Yeah,
the real Octo spook. Years and decades of these schools
have left us with parent victims and teaching that victimization
to their children.
Speaker 3 (02:10:38):
Yeah. Yeah, Well, we're going to take a quick break
and when we come back, like I said, we're going
to talk about pharmaceutical stuff. So stay with us. Will
be right.
Speaker 1 (02:10:46):
Back making sense common again.
Speaker 2 (02:12:24):
You're listening to the David night Show, U Defending the
(02:15:09):
American Dream. You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Speaker 4 (02:15:16):
Welcome back, folks. In this segment, we're gonna talk about pharma.
We're gonna start with World Council for Health Florida declares
mRNA injections are weapons of mass destructions. That's from the
expos I want the answer, says Trump. You demands Phiser prof.
mRNA jabs work from zero Hedge and again, I want
the answer, and I want it now. Trump demands drug
(02:15:37):
companies justify success of COVID shots. That's from WorldNet Daily
by Joe Kovacs.
Speaker 3 (02:15:42):
Before Yeah, everybody is jumping in on this bandwagon now.
First it was just the Epic Times reporting it, and
then yesterday afternoon they all jumped on it. It's like
Trump is awake. Now, that's great. He's gonna save us now.
After pushing this thing and bragging about it for five years,
now he's awake and he's gonna call us a truth
about it.
Speaker 4 (02:16:01):
He's a slow learner, apparently.
Speaker 3 (02:16:03):
I don't think the man's going to tell the truth.
Speaker 6 (02:16:05):
Saying that he's going to have them justify their success
isn't the same thing as criticizing them.
Speaker 3 (02:16:11):
That's right.
Speaker 6 (02:16:12):
We need to prove to these idiots that these shots
work well.
Speaker 3 (02:16:16):
I said as soon as I said it yesterday, as
soon as I saw this thing, I said, this is
going to be another one of these commissions or inquiries
that is set up to whitewash this stuff and to
supposedly get you to be confident in their ridiculous narrative,
like the JFK commission that wanted you to believe the
magic bullet story and a single shooter story. So we're
(02:16:39):
gonna wind up with some kind of magic bullet equivalent
for the vaccine.
Speaker 4 (02:16:43):
They always come up with a more ridiculous explanation than
you could ever believe. But briefly, I do want to
let everyone know that if you'd like to support the show,
there are many many ways to do that. If you'd
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(02:17:04):
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you want to start getting some gold or silver to
get outside of The fiat monetary system.
Speaker 3 (02:17:24):
Today and never, forget we have A Subscribe star as. Well,
yes that has been a base of our support for
a very long. Time we really do appreciate the people
that subscribe, there and we've not given them the attention
that they. Deserve it's hard for me to get to
the comments that are.
Speaker 4 (02:17:39):
There, yeah Subscribe star dot, Com Forward slash The Davidknight.
Show we really do appreciate everyone. There and there's Also
Trends journal dot. Com with promo code, night you get
ten percent off The Trends journal that works out to
two dollars and fifty cents a. Week there's OUR nc
store dot, com where again you get ten percent off
with a promo code. Night they've got a lot of
(02:18:00):
different products, there some of them maybe what you're looking
for when it comes to your, health so go check them.
Out and of course there Is Homestead products dot. Chop
they have, many many different high quality products that they
source From. America you've got stuff like This beatroot. Powder
beatroot is a very good vaso. Dilator it's really great
for keeping your heart up and running. Optimally it helps
(02:18:23):
with exercise getting blood, flow so beatroot powder is excellent for.
That you can also go To jackloss and books dot.
Com let me reach over here and get The Civil Defense.
Manual it is a two volume.
Speaker 2 (02:18:36):
Set it is.
Speaker 4 (02:18:37):
Massive it has all kinds of information that you will
want in case of. Emergencies it has stuff about protecting,
yourself protecting your, community how to find, water how to
find a procure. Food so go to jacklosson books dot
com and get.
Speaker 3 (02:18:53):
The, food, water friends and, allies you, know.
Speaker 4 (02:18:55):
All things you will. Need you want to be prepared
in case of. Emergency you don't want to be left
in a scenario where you don't know how to defend.
Yourself you aren't, prepared and you don't want to be
the person that is relying on stealing from others in
a scenario like. That so prepare so you don't end
up one of those.
Speaker 3 (02:19:13):
People that's, Right, well let's take a look at what's
going on with THESE mRNA. Injections earlier this, year Doctor
Joseph sansone drafted a. Bill they called it The. Sansone
If i'm pronouncing it's not the name, correctly NOT i
apologize THE mRNA Bioweapons Prohibition act for all fifty states
in THE us and for other countries to introduce into
(02:19:34):
their respective. Legislatures it was introduced into The minnesota legislature
In april of this. Year and that's exactly what it,
is a bioweapons. Prohibition it is a bioweapon and we
should prohibit. IT i know that at the very beginning of,
this and now the mainstream media and the establishment both
political parties are jumping into This lablik theory thing and
(02:19:56):
gain a function. Nonsense but it was always a out
this vaccine being used as a. Bioweapon and we can
talk about The conventions On chemical And Biological, weapons and
it's great that we talk about that and try to limit.
It but this is the. Way you, know just because
they delivered it in a vaccine and called it, healthcare
(02:20:18):
it was still a bioweapon. Attack and somebody, said so
what does it mean to gain a? Function, look if
you TAKE mRNA and you weaponize, It, okay that's what
we're talking. About it can be weaponized in any number of.
Ways his proposed legislation is groundbreaking because it is the
first proposed legislation that recognizes that m r IN a
(02:20:40):
nanoparticle injections are already illegal according to existing state laws
regarding bioweapons or weapons of mass, destruction and it creates
a criminal and civil offense if it's not. Enforced see
that's the key, thing, Right why is The trump administration
not arresting people they want to go out? There If
(02:21:01):
navarro wants to, claim, oh it was, faccy well then arrest. Him,
Right you're not going to arrest, him just like you're
not going to Arrest. Epstein it tells us that you're
part of the. Group and you know that's that's the bigger,
outrage EVEN i think because of the millions of people
that have been killed by. This The World council For
health In florida appears to be the first medical health
(02:21:23):
freedom organization to DECLARE mRNA nanoparticle injections as biological and
technological weapons of mass, destruction the first such organization to
endorse This Bioweapons Prohibition. Act and good for, them because
most of the mass mass media and alternative, media all
the government officials are trying to sell you this alibi
(02:21:46):
of a lab bleak. Thing and we really need to
stress that what came out of the lab as a.
Bioweapon was THIS mRNA stuff developed by The pentagon IN
darpa long before this ever. Happened The World council For
Health florida is a grassroots movement that emerged In may
of twenty twenty four in response to THE covid. Pandemic
it is part of the Global World council For health
(02:22:08):
group of, organizations a collaboration of local councils and thirty five.
Countries it's going to come from the bottom up if
we're going to do anything at all with. This so
now we got all these different alternative Media trump supporting
media Quoting trump SAYING i want the, Answer trump. Demands
(02:22:29):
pfizer proved THAT mRNA jabs. Work this is a zero
hedge article. Here, yeah lots of Articles after The Epic
times reported this On, monday a lot of people followed
up with. That as part of the, review they will
look at gaps and existing knowledge relating to, biodistribution, pharmacokinetics
(02:22:50):
and the persistence of the spike, PROTEIN mRNA and lipid
nanoparticles to inform immunization. Recommendations said the, Document, well we've
known about the biodistribution thing for a very long. Time
as a matter of, fact again it Was japan that
realized that this was going all over the body that
wasn't staying at the site and saw that it was
(02:23:13):
accumulating primarily in reproductive organs other than reproductive organs in the,
spleen because the splane's job is to filter out. Contaminants
but the other close behind was male and female reproductive.
Organs and so the guy who reported that up In
canada got his medical license. Pulled but now this is
(02:23:34):
the actual, fact that is the terrorist bioweapon That trump
put out. There trump issued a somewhat cryptic social media
post Challenging pfizer and other vaccine makers to make public
the same great claims that his administration was shown in
order to justify operational warp. Speed he, Said i've been
(02:23:57):
shown information From pfizer and others that is extraord but
they never seem to show those results to the. Public why?
Not he pretends now that he's never heard of me
this stuff that maybe you, Know mayo And perry carditis
are just a couple of twins from some. Where he's
never heard of them. Before, look the bottom line is
(02:24:18):
is that if you're going to rush out some novel
treatment that has never. WORKED i, mean they had ten
years of history AT moderna about how none of THEIR
mRNA treatments had been safe and they were all shut
down when they were. Reviewed but instead what he does
is he rubber stamps. It and his Whole Warp speed
(02:24:39):
plan was to do this stuff without any, testing and
now he pretends that he relied on their information and
he was. Deceived.
Speaker 4 (02:24:49):
COLLEGE i just believed what they told.
Speaker 3 (02:24:51):
ME i hope Operation Warp speed was as brilliant as
they say it. Was he, said if, not we all
want to know about. It and, Why AS i said,
yesterday you all, knew but exactly what was going? On
this beggar's belief that The trump delusion would be this
strong with people who listened to this, guy that they
would think that he had absolutely nothing about. It but
(02:25:12):
it is as a matter of FACT wnde.
Speaker 4 (02:25:14):
Sorry, Interrupt but they continually paint him as this you, know,
oh he's playing forty. Chess he's this ultra genius. Yea
and yet either he is a part of this or
he is so monumentally stupid and incompetent that he. Is
it's effectively the same. Thing he was a.
Speaker 3 (02:25:30):
TRADER i mean what he did was unconstitutional in the.
Extreme and just as you talk about forty, chess that
Was Alex jones's term that everybody picked up, on AND
wnd has his tweet, here Says Alex jones tweeted, out
this is. Massive President trump calls for an investigation About
(02:25:51):
operation Warp. Speed, yeah five years. Late and you didn't
bother to investigate it, Either. Alex and this exclusive REPORT
i lay out why this development is a total game
changer and sending shockwaves throughout the global. ESTABLISHMENT i thought
it was sugar.
Speaker 4 (02:26:06):
Water so did this?
Speaker 2 (02:26:07):
Matter?
Speaker 3 (02:26:07):
Yeah trump knows he was set, up And trump knows the.
Truth you knew the truth as, Well, Alex but you
told people a lie.
Speaker 7 (02:26:15):
Week attenuated classic viruses with a very low amount of
adjivant in. It trump's looking at basically sugar water for.
Folks can we take a little bit of an, attenuated
microwaved or radiated.
Speaker 3 (02:26:30):
A deal as a freaking Legally that's why he chokes
on that when he's. Lying, yeah, Well, alex if you
knew how this, stuff maybe you should have Told trump
at some point in. Time don't you think you should
have told him to stop the poison to stop the. Bioweapon,
instead you're just a sycophant lying about this, stuff telling
people it's a dead. Virus there's not even any such
(02:26:51):
thing as a. Virus but of, course you, know you
can take a little bit of aluminum and, uh mercury
and stuff like. That that's not bad for. You it's For, trump.
Right he's talked for twenty years about these adjuvants of
mercury and, aluminum warning people about. Them but you, know,
hey when It's, trump you can do. That it's just
like sugar. Water you, know it's a dead virus and
(02:27:13):
aluminum and. Mercury it's good for, you good For, trump
and good for my bottom. Line trump demands answers from
drug companies on effectiveness of THESE covid treatments five years.
Late and while you're at, it why don't you ask
for some explanations from that sack of, Bricks Peter, navarrow
that is your. Advisor ask him about the, ventilators and
(02:27:34):
why don't you ask Rimdesevir and you can Ask Rand
paul about Ask gilliad about. Rimdzevir he made a lot
of money off of stock trades of. That On trump
On monday called on drug, companies Including, pfizer to disclose
the evidence regarding effectiveness of coronavirus. Treatments should we Tell
trump at this, Point, alex should you explain To trump
(02:27:57):
that they never did any. Testing? Yeah, right thank you
for your attention to this very important. Matter he ends up,
saying Says, trump he did no due diligence. Whatsoever there
was generational slaughter in care homes DURING, covid but it
wasn't caused by a. Virus, yeah let's understand this is
out of THE Uk daily. Skeptic let's understand that it
(02:28:21):
was the globalist plan to lock down the, community especially
the people and the nursing, homes and to deny them medical,
care to pit people that had any kind of a
respiratory illness on a. Ventilator it was those things That
trump was doing and paying people to do. HANDSOMELY i,
mean he ran massive bonuses through THE cms payment program
(02:28:46):
to the hospitals to kill. People don't tell me that
he doesn't have any culpability in. This that makes me
so angry to hear. That, yeah there was a generational
slaughter and it was All it was all done by
the governments every, government doesn't matter what their political philosophy,
was doesn't matter which. Countries they were all in. Lockstep
(02:29:08):
And trump was the leader of all of this. Stuff,
so as they say Daily, skeptic the shocking evidence that
was heard in The SCOTTISH covid, inquiry again it was,
nothing but they had shocking, evidence but they covered it all.
Up AS i said, yesterday it's just like what they
did with the climate. Gate they ran an inquiry so
that they could push back against. It they ran THE
(02:29:29):
jfk commission so that they could push back against the
rising skepticism about a single. Shooter and that's what's going
on with. This that's What trump is preparing to, do
and that's What alex is preparing to help him with controlled.
Opposition that's What Alex jonesa is and you can tell.
HIM i said THAT covid has now been echoed In.
(02:29:51):
England this inquiry and The scottish inquiry together they held
a panel, discussion including the voices of whistleblowers that had
not been, heard and addressed fears that the inquiry will
not join the dots on the evidence and that damaging
new laws will embed those, practices if any kind of
emergency is announced in the. Future exactly if you don't
(02:30:12):
put these people in jail for the bioweapon attack that they,
did they'll do it. Again And i'm sick and tired
of These trump media. Places we talk about WorldNet daily Or.
Breitbart they're out there Portraying trump as a hero, now
and he still hasn't even confessed up to what was.
Done if he had confessed and said that he did
it and told people what it was and that we
(02:30:32):
shouldn't do it, again he would be a. Hero but
that's not what he's doing at. All this is the cover.
Up mainstream media picked up on civil servant Alistir donaldson
saying there had been a generational. Slaughter, however this was
framed as being due to the, virus not to the
discharging of residents from the, hospital and the discharging of
(02:30:55):
residents from the hospital has spread the virus and care.
Homes but in his, Evidences donaldson was clear that the
government public health response quote unquote TO covid involved a
series of catastrophic policy errors and overall system performance that,
was with notable, exceptions a profound, failure perhaps the greatest
(02:31:16):
governmental policy failure of modern. Times So he wasn't talking
about the fact that they were too lenient with. People
he was talking about the fact that they used it
to call elderly people and sick. People the measures that
were introduced claimed that they would protect THE nhs and
the national health, system but no one seemed to ask
(02:31:37):
what THE nhs was. For it was surely for these
vulnerable people who used THE nhs the. Most the hospitals
were so protected that they lay empty while healthcare was
denied to those that needed. It of, course excess mortality,
resulted and we saw this Across. America we saw this
across every industrialized. Country the only place we didn't see
(02:31:58):
the virus in the pandemic was in The third, world
where they weren't doing these types of. Things there was no,
pandemic but visitors are. Banned you had blanket do not
resuscitate orders issued on residents so that healthcare was denied to. Them,
again grace share is such a crime to see, that
(02:32:20):
and the way they would isolate relatives who would try
to protect their sick relatives in the. Hospital it was
assumed that anyone with respiratory symptoms HAD, covid and when
care was, sought the cares were, told we don't TAKE
covid positive residence to the hospital order the end of life.
Pack and that's frankly What Matt hancock. Did at the
(02:32:43):
very beginning of. This he got a whole bunch of,
madaslam massive amounts of. Madaslam they started handing that out like,
candy and that's used at the end of life in most.
Cases Amanda hunter went on to describe how her mother was,
bedbound unable to drink and, eat and needed round the clock.
Care when lockdown, hit the quality of care. Plummeted she,
(02:33:05):
said she deteriorated, rapidly shrinking from a size twelve to
size six and became skeletal despite rare. Access once a
weak for an, hour families saw the idiocy of the
pantomime ppe alongside a dire lack of basic. Hygiene, alex
this is what your guy. Did this is What trump,
(02:33:26):
did and you helped him to do. It that disgusting
a man to fought with social services for over a
year to remove, her but even with the lasting power of,
attorney she was denied the right to bring her own mother.
Home according to care home, operator a married couple in
her home who'd refused THE covid, vaccine were subjected to
(02:33:47):
persistent pressure from visiting. Staff it was absolutely. Criminal it
was systemic and, institutional and it came from the top
in every one of these. Countries italy is raising alarm
over the skyrocketing turbo cancers among those who've been vaccinated
with A trump. Shot by the, way you, know again
(02:34:09):
when we talked ABOUT rnc store, earlier go TO nc
store dot com and take a look at the products
that they have. There take a look at the book
From GEdward, GRIFFIN A World Without. Cancer it's never been
more important with a skyrocketing turbo cancer Rates italy.
Speaker 4 (02:34:27):
Real quick for you move. On we got a good
comment here from Guard. Goldsmith he, says by the, Way,
gilead which was headed By, rumsfeld was one of the
BioResearch firms that opened a lab In ukraine after The
Orange coup and.
Speaker 3 (02:34:37):
Five, yeah very important labs.
Speaker 4 (02:34:39):
Set up By obama And.
Speaker 3 (02:34:40):
Lugar, Yeah rumsfeld's connections to. That it's very very, important
THE ms And, ukraine all that stuff. Together it is
such a criminal, enterprise and then it spreads across both political.
Parties that's WHY i say that any inquiry That trump
these people are telling You trump is going to do
is going to be there to excuse and cover up this.
(02:35:01):
Stuff italy had a bomb share peer reviewed study confirmed
deadly turbo cancers are surging among people who receive The
TRUMP mRNA quote unquote. Vaccines the findings have blown apart
carefully crafted narrative pushed by big. Pharma for the first,
time a population wide cohort of nearly three hundred thousand
(02:35:23):
people was tracked over thirty, months and it shows alarming.
Signals this is Why trump is working to pull this,
back because they can't cover up the truth. Forever they're
going to try to spin it and say they did
the best they, could but it was put out By
fauci and The. Chinese they've already started with.
Speaker 4 (02:35:42):
That this really goes to show how incredibly damaging and
awful these vaccines. Are they've managed to keep a lid
on vaccines for years, now for, decades, yeah and these
in just a few short years have become such a.
Problem they've caused so many different kinds of cancer and
everything else that it's impossible to keep a lid on it.
(02:36:04):
Anymore they are orders of magnitude more damaging in many
different ways than any of the previous vaccines have.
Speaker 3 (02:36:11):
Been, yes they followed every resident aged eleven years and
older and One italian province From june twenty twenty one
Through december twenty twenty, three three hundred thousand people thirty.
Months the researchers found that so quote, unquote vaccinated individuals
had a far higher hospitalization rate for new cancer diagnoses
(02:36:34):
than the, unvaccinated particularly for, breast, bladder and colorectal. Cancers
hospitalizations for cancer were thirty five percent, higher and the
vaccinated the risk spike was strongest amongst men and those
with no PRIOR covid. Infection in other, words if the
only thing you didn't HAVE covid but you got The trump,
(02:36:56):
shot you weren't diagnosed with the cold or whatever and
cold cod but you got The trump, shot and those
are the ones who had the highest. Risk overall cancer
risk after just one dose were twenty three, percent but
a lot of people got more than one, dose so
overall it was thirty five percent higher than. Vaccinated for breast,
cancer a fifty four percent increased, risk for bladder cancer
(02:37:20):
a sixty two percent increase. Risk so there we, go
and they go through the different statistics for various forms of.
Cancer in this nearly all other cancer sites showed an
upward trend among the so called. Vaccinated only lung and
prostate cancers showed no evidence of an increased. Risk The
(02:37:42):
Grace act is aiming to restore religious exemptions to student
vaccination requirements in all fifty. States this is a bill
that would prohibit colleges or any educational institute to get
any federal funding if they have a student vaccination. Requirement
AS i, said they all understand. This trump understands. This
(02:38:06):
trump cut off the massive funding To harvard because he
didn't like what they were. Doing don't Criticize. Israel but,
hey if you want to continue to have a student vaccination,
thing as long as you don't Criticize, israel we'll continue
to send money to, you even though you're injecting your
students with this bioweapon THAT i. Created that's where The
(02:38:27):
trump administration. Is all this, stuff and every time you
look at, this this is always very well understood By.
Trump he has done it himself for educational things he didn't.
Like it wasn't just the speech Against israel that he
Punished harvard. For he has done the same thing for
the trainee. Issue The republicans have withheld funds for trainee,
(02:38:51):
issues and The democrats have done the same thing as.
Well democrats want the trainees and the women's restrooms and.
Showers republicans don't both of them do that by withholding.
Funds they all know that's the way that this. Works
you just can't get that through the thick skulls of
THE maga. Crowd they just can't understand That trump is
responsible because he funded. It he paid people to do.
(02:39:14):
This he doesn't have the authority to order. It there
would be legal challenges and he would, lose just like
he's losing these legal challenges on tariffs and on the
police state. Stuff so he didn't do a direct order to.
Them what he did was he paid them to do,
it and he, said, yeah, yeah we'll do that if
(02:39:35):
you pay. Us that's what the hospitals. Did they got the.
Bonuses Woody allen has Praised Donald trump and blasted the cancel.
Culture seems like pedophiles always hanging, together don't.
Speaker 4 (02:39:45):
They this Is oh, yes the Coveted Woody allen endorsement
that people are so desperate.
Speaker 3 (02:39:52):
For, yeah we're going to THE gop guarding our. Pedophiles
but this was back in nineteen ninety. Eight this Is John,
nolty and Now John noulty who does a lot of
movie reviews and things like that For. Breitbart he is
cheering On Witty allen Because Witty allen is cheering On
trump to some. Degree in nineteen ninety, Eight allen cast
(02:40:14):
The president himself in a movie Called. Celebrity nolty, said
this is an underrated gym Where Kenneth branna plays a
celebrity journalist pulled into the heart of that world and
all the lunacy that goes with. IT i can't think
of anything That i'd rather not. See why WOULD i
want to spend time in that perverted? WORLD i don't.
Speaker 4 (02:40:35):
Know oh, Boy, YEAH i can't wait to watch this
one added directly to my.
Speaker 3 (02:40:39):
List so this is What nulty. Says, yeah he had
an interview With Belle maher and they discussed this Is
John nolty's, words the appalling blacklisting that this genius has
faced over a crime he did not, commit a crime
that did not, happen a crime were two separate state
investigations to clear him. Innocent, well what he's talking about
(02:41:02):
here's allegations that he abused his adopted, Daughter Dylan faroh
Now Mia pharaoh and her, son who was there at
the beginning of these allegations of sexual. Harassment he, says
largely because of what happened in his own. Family they're
convinced that did. Happen and the prosecutor said, that, yeah
he believed there was probable. Cause he believed that really did,
(02:41:25):
happen but they said it's going to be a difficult
case to prove to a, jury so he did not charge.
Him that does not mean that he wasn't found. Guilty
that doesn't mean that he was, innocent far from. It
when you look At Widdy allen's, career he seems to
be obsessed with this and he also appears to Be
(02:41:46):
he married the adopted daughter Of Mia, fara which he
never adopted. Her, so but he does seem to have
a predisposure to ancestuous. PEDOPHILIA i gotta say that About Woody,
allen and of course he poses now as a victim
of cancel culture and. Blacklisting if you're going to be
(02:42:09):
canceled by, culture Said Woody, allen this is the culture
to be canceled By this is not a culture to
be proud, of you, know thanks to people like. Him
it's not a culture that we should be proud. Of
mar then brought Up trump and all this has not
turned you into A? Trumper he, said, No i'm not A.
TRUMPER i am one of the few people who can
say that he Directed. Trump he was a pleasure to
(02:42:32):
work with and a very good. Actor yet we noticed
what a good actor he is. Polite now that is
hard to. Believe hit his mark did everything, correctly had
a real flare for show. Business, yeah that was something
that was noted By Wilba ross working for The. Rothschild people, said,
okay you use the. Sky, look he's quite a celebrity
(02:42:52):
AND i can draw crowd and manipulate him as. Well
he's been an excellent actor for The, globalist Hasn't?
Speaker 2 (02:42:58):
Trump he?
Speaker 3 (02:42:59):
Was he has a charismatic quality as an, actor And
i'm surprised that he wanted to go into. Politics, well
there's a lot of money in, politics a lot more
than there is in. Acting, actually so this is not
the only time that the two of them rubbed. Elbows
but of Course John nolty would not bring that up
On breitbart when you look at the back and forth
(02:43:23):
about whether or Not trump For epstein's birthday drew a
naked woman and a note to him and all that
kind of. Stuff they want to, Say, oh he didn't draw,
that he can't draw it. All there was also as
part of that birthday, celebration there was a long note
From Witty. ALLEN i, APOLOGIZE i don't have it, here
but to paraphrase, it What Woody allen was doing was
(02:43:46):
Praising Jeffrey, epstein saying that you, know we were here
from one of your very first, parties and we've noticed
how you've made everything so much, better and the company
is always so, interesting and on and on and, on
and it's kind of like these people would say they
Read playboy for the. Articles he would go to These
Jeffrey epstein parties because of the company that he would, meet.
(02:44:08):
Right and so he was talking about how he and
his well not adopted, daughter but his and and actually
not his actually HIS i guess his stepdaughter that he.
Married you, know how they were how they loved the
food and all the rest of the stuff that was.
Speaker 4 (02:44:25):
There and SO i go To vegas just for the,
buffets you, know.
Speaker 3 (02:44:31):
Actually we, did But, anyway THE i think the two
of them were probably rubbed elbows together there at The
Jeffrey epstein, parties or maybe other body, parts So, RUBBIE
i don't, know but, anyway he wrote a glowing praise
Of epstein's quote unquote Parties Woody allen. Did and, Meanwhile
(02:44:56):
Galine maxwell has hinted At epstein's time To trump. Officials
why wasn't she pressed for names right to The? Guardian
and it's interesting to see this because The, guardian which
doesn't Like trump, politically will talk about. This breitbart will.
Not neither will Alex As DEPUTY Us Attorney General Todd
(02:45:18):
blanch announced last, week The Justice department released transcripts of
the interview With Glene, maxwell which Is Chris christie, said highly,
unusual highly unusual to do something like, that and. Suspicious he,
said except for the names of, victims every word has,
included nothing, removed nothing. Hidden blanche said of his two
days sit down With, maxwell who was convicted of sex
(02:45:41):
trafficking and relationship To Jeffrey epstein's abuse of teenage. Girls
but there were no people. Involved she was sex trafficking to,
people these, miners but we don't know who the men
were that were. Involved the same, Day James, comer The
House Oversight committee, chair so The Justice department had sent
(02:46:02):
a large tranch Of epstein investigative documents in response to congressional.
Subpoena while those supportive Of trump have counted these actions
as a show of, openness many others appointed to the
questions left, unasked and the people who have not been
asked anything at all as indicating that these disclosures From
(02:46:23):
epstein were more of a show than any real push for.
Truth for, Example blanche Asked maxwell for the people Around,
epstein including the numerous high profile and powerful men who
had known, him were associating with him for the purpose
of sexual. Encounters in her, Reply maxwell said that some
of the cast of characters Around epstein were quote in
(02:46:45):
your cabinet who you value as your co? Workers but
he doesn't, ask, well then who are? They? Right that's
the amazing. Thing the dog that did not, bark and that's.
Interesting moving, On, yeah she, said, yeah there's a lot
of a lot of your friends people on the cabinet
that were there as. Well oh, okay, well next. Question
(02:47:06):
despite the fact That maxwell had just openly Mentioned epstein
associates as being In trump's current. Cabinet, blanche a hardened
lawyer not known for missing a trick and a trial,
argument did not pause to Ask maxwell to identify the.
Cabinet remember she was referring. To he asked her if
she had ever had contact With, Massad israel's intelligence. Agency,
(02:47:28):
well not, Deliberately maxwell, said in other, words Channeling James
clapper when he was, asked are you spying On? Americans,
oh not, Deliberately.
Speaker 4 (02:47:38):
Senator also a little known, fact Every massad agent is
trained to say their massade when, Asked so you can
definitely believe, her because right you, know they're known for
their honesty and. Integrity that's.
Speaker 6 (02:47:49):
True if you ask, them they legally have to tell
you that they're.
Speaker 4 (02:47:52):
Massade Are massad? Agent you gotta tell?
Speaker 3 (02:47:55):
Me of, course we're being facetious, Here blanche. Responded he,
says she, said, well not, deliberately said pardon. Me she said, again,
well not. Deliberately again The James clapper. Answer she then
moved on to a question about Whether epstein was receiving
money from any intelligence. Agency, blanche prefacing a, question was.
Phraised then let me just interject her before we Go,
(02:48:15):
further remember when people were, saying why isn't she being?
Arrested remember she deliberately set up a had a friend
of hers take a picture of. Her she's setting at
a table and she's holding a book up about espionage.
Agencies and that was the message that she was. Sending it's,
like leave me alone Because i've got information here they
could put out. There and she didn't do it because
(02:48:36):
then you had all the you, know either the murderer
or the stage murder Of Jeffrey epstein where they took
him out or.
Speaker 6 (02:48:44):
Not, also it's just. RIDICULOUS i need to point out
the ridiculousness of the. Question have you ever had any
contact With? Masaud asking Gislayde, maxwellbert have you ever had
any contact with your, father who a Known massad asset
and was even given a hero's funeral By?
Speaker 4 (02:49:05):
Masad, yeah that's.
Speaker 6 (02:49:06):
Right do you know your, Father? ROBERT i have ever
heard of.
Speaker 3 (02:49:13):
Him So blanche prefaced the question with a, PHRASE i
understand you don't remember anything With President trump or a
lot about the book, anyway do you remember Asking President
trump to submit a letter for? That she, SAID i do,
Not so he prefaces it by, SAYING i know you
don't remember anything About. Trump, right you can confirm me
you don't remember anything at all about.
Speaker 6 (02:49:34):
Him?
Speaker 3 (02:49:34):
Right do you remember would you have been the one
to do? That or could somebody? Else would somebody else
have done? THAT i did ask some. PEOPLE i don't,
remember Mister, TRUMP i don't remember WHO i did. Ask
But epstein also asked people himself. Directly, again that's the,
book the birthday book THAT i. Mentioned Woody allen talked
about how things had improved from the very beginning of these.
(02:49:56):
Parties blanche, Responded, okay he did not pursue the obvious
line of thought That maxwell's response suggested that Had epstein
reached out To, trump he just moves on with that
one as. Well Niama, romani a former federal prosecutor who
was a founder Of West Coast Trial, lawyers said many
(02:50:17):
Of blanche's questions were surface. Level they didn't drill down
the way, lawyers especially prosecutors do when they want to catch. Inconsistencies,
well he wasn't trying to catch any. Inconsistencies he's trying
to cover up For. Trump she has zero. CREDIBILITY i
don't believe for a second that she saw nothing and knows,
nothing Said. Romani Perhaps blanche's questions were more of the softball,
(02:50:41):
variety but there was no world Where maxwell was going
to implicate herself when she has Her Supreme court appeal,
pending or anyone in the administration when she's trying to
get a presidential. Pardon for, victims representatives and, advocates the
issue with unasked questions also extends to who who hasn't
been asked. Questions several attorneys representing more than a total
(02:51:04):
of Fifty epstein And maxwell survivors Told The guardian that
The Justice department has not reached out for sit downs with.
Them despite the fact that we've successfully represented Eleven epstein,
victims no one has reached, out said Attorney Lisa. Bloom
nobody is doubting That Jeffrey epstein trafficked young. Girls nobody
(02:51:25):
is doubting That Jeffrey epstein was not the only man
who raped these young, girls said Ros. Roginsky all we
need to do is listen to these survivors as they
tell us who these others. Are and they are now
today meeting In washington This epstein. RALLY i played this,
BEFORE i played again.
Speaker 5 (02:51:46):
Tomorrow they'll be already IN. Dc that's today extreme victims
speaking out against the herendous crimes that happened against, humanity
not just against The epstein, victims but against our families
and against the. Public i'm really sorry our can't be,
there but unfortunately it's too dangerous for me to travel To.
America but any that will be there in, spirit and
(02:52:09):
my speech will be. READ i just want to thank
everyone who cares for everyone who's going to be supporting the,
rally because the more of us they, are the. Better
these people have lied to.
Speaker 3 (02:52:20):
Us for too.
Speaker 2 (02:52:21):
Long, now that's.
Speaker 3 (02:52:23):
Right so she's afraid to come to The United. States
but other people are going to be, there and these
victims are putting together their own story since The trump
administration is not interested in doing, it so they're going
to put together their own. Story and you have a
bipartisan movement which is now picking up. Speed it began
(02:52:44):
With rokahanna And Thomas massey and several other people joined
it yesterday as well and are speaking out people in
The Republican. Party so there may be an accounting and
reckoning for. This we'll have to wait and.
Speaker 4 (02:52:58):
SEE i would be extremely surprised if we ever see
anything come of.
Speaker 3 (02:53:04):
This, well, WELL i mean a, RECKONING i mean a
political price For trump to. Pay, yeah you, know with
his own. Supporters there's got to be something somewhere someday
sometime that'll wake up these, clueless maga. People and AGAIN
i say that about the j sixers as. WELL i
interviewed three of them because what was done to them was.
Outrageous What biden did to them was, outrageous and they
(02:53:26):
talked about that as well as their conditions in the.
Prison but not a one of them understands how they
were set up and betrayed By Donald trump And Alex.
Jones they just don't get.
Speaker 4 (02:53:38):
It to this, day they're willfully. Blind at this, point
the evidence has become so monumental and obvious you have
to be deceiving yourself to not see. It they have bought,
in AND i think they, feel you, know if he
doesn't do, it it's never going to. Happen he has
to be on our side because if he's, not it's. Over,
yeah which is such A you don't put your hope.
Speaker 3 (02:54:00):
In, man, no especially a political.
Speaker 4 (02:54:03):
Man, no politics is not the. Answer you shouldn't stick
your head in the sand and completely disassociate yourself from.
It but politics is not the. Answer christ is always the,
answer and that's who you put your trust.
Speaker 3 (02:54:15):
In you hoping that's. Right we got some, Comments.
Speaker 4 (02:54:19):
We've got lots of. Comments the Real octose book, says
same thing is when they used to demonstrate spontaneous life
by a piece of meat left under a bell jar
and maggots and flies would spontaneously quote unquote. Develop that's.
Right it's spontaneous. Life, guys that's an evolution at. Work
you can see it with your own two. EYES i
(02:54:40):
Boost David alex said he fired you because you Said
jones was censoring.
Speaker 3 (02:54:44):
You care to, Reply, yeah think about. That he fired
me BECAUSE i said he was censoring. Me so he
fired me to censor. Me, look he had been censoring
me for a long, time AND i talked about that
as a matter of. Fact his Slogan Tomorrow's news. TODAY
i said that because they wouldn't cover WHAT i was
covering until a week, later and then the writers would
(02:55:04):
pick it. UP i, Said, so if you want to
hear this, stuff you can get tomorrow's news. Today tomorrow's
news that'll be On Info. Wars you can get it
today here on this. Show alex never acknowledged, that never
did anything about. That, instead what he did was he
adopted that as his. Slogan but he fired me BECAUSE
i called him a. Grifter, alex you are a. Grifter
(02:55:26):
you're a, Liar you're a. Thief you betrayed your own,
supporters and more, importantly you betrayed this. Country people died
because of your. Lies i'm sick and tired of your.
Lies go ahead and throw out your temper. Tantrums you
lied about, me but more, importantly you lied about everything
that happened in twenty, twenty From march on until The.
January the sixth, stuff the whole stop the steel stuff
(02:55:48):
was a, Grift Roger stone, said and it was recorded
by the documentary crew that was. There he, said this
is going to be easier to raise. Money raising money
is going to be like falling off a log with this.
Stuff we're going to start stop the. Steel roger had
coined that phrase back in twenty sixteen when they said
that they were going to try to Maneuver trump out
(02:56:08):
at The Republican convention that after he had won the,
primaries and so he, said we're going to start a
stop to steal movement to keep them from moving him,
out which is, Right but then they revived that over this.
Nonsense When trump had rigged the election by the lockdown
things that he had done and the ballots being mailed
(02:56:28):
out to, people that was All. Trump he did all
of that. Stuff that was him who did. That now
he's pretending that he's the victim of. THAT i wish
they'd give him some. Boosters that's ALL i can. Say
DO i get A Secret service visit IF i say
That trump to GET mRNA? Boosters is that a death?
Threat you want to admit that these things are, bioweapon
(02:56:51):
that he killed people with his shot while he's boasting
about saving millions of. Lives he's doing exactly the, Opposite
and you were covering for. Him you were giving him
and feeding him the alibis and all the rest of this,
stuff and feeding these lies to these dupes who follow.
You that's my.
Speaker 4 (02:57:08):
Comment nothing more to be said. There Solo cat nineteen.
Eighty the jabs do work for their real intended, purpose. Depopulation,
yeah that is their intended. Purpose audi MR. R Did
trump issue a retraction for when he Told Candace, owens
no one has died from this. Vaccine, Nope, no he has, not.
Speaker 3 (02:57:32):
And candace wasn't going to challenge him on. It there
are certain things that she won't do just Like alex
want to.
Speaker 1 (02:57:37):
Do.
Speaker 4 (02:57:37):
It won't challenge him on, that but he's going to
go to the mat For micron's wife being a.
Speaker 3 (02:57:41):
Man because she wants. Access, right you get an interview With,
trump you don't want to ruin that, forever you, know
by confronting. Him and the same thing is. True you
Know alex got that interview With trump and then he
was owned By trump after. That you, know he wanted
to have that access To, trump and he won access
To trump's mob because they're going to buy his. Garbage go, ahead.
Speaker 4 (02:58:05):
Got a lot of. COMMENTS i gotta get through him.
Fast North American House. Hippo i'm somewhat skeptical That trump
is demanding anything From biser as he struts around With
Albert borla to this, Day nights of The, Storm trump
keeps doing. This he gets people's hopes, up then moves
on before there are any. Results, yes he, Does Audi MR.
R people Want if people want hope, him it's out.
There all you have to do is be completely non
(02:58:26):
discerning and a tad stupid. Reminder Per, WikiLeaks Hillary clinton
Picked trump to be THE gop nominee in twenty sixteen
and coordinated with corporate news media to Elevate trump's. Profile why, yeah,
yeah got.
Speaker 3 (02:58:38):
SO i hope you for love of the.
Speaker 4 (02:58:40):
Road got the. Https My World Without cancer dot com
is a website link to get that free dot pdf of.
G Edward griffin's. Book so you go There My World
Without cancer dot.
Speaker 3 (02:58:52):
Com, yes do that and will That lincoln and get.
That you need to understand what She Edward griffin did
is a man of great integrity and it's something natural.
Remedy and of course you can get that natural remedy
AT rc store dot com as well.
Speaker 4 (02:59:09):
And use promo code night for ten percent off if
you buy. Anything And clidus five five five says the
Beat root powder FROM ronc works. GREAT i take it
to keep my blood pressure numbers low SO i don't
have to be on. Mets well that's good to Hear.
Clidus i'm.
Speaker 2 (02:59:22):
Glad.
Speaker 4 (02:59:22):
Yeah beatroot, Powder AS i, said it's a very good
vaso dilator helps with blood. Flow it can be really
good for working out as.
Speaker 3 (02:59:28):
WELL i need to be taking that as, well got
my blood pressure. Up, Okay well that's it for today's.
Show i'm going to try to get my blood pressure.
Down and thanks for joining.
Speaker 4 (02:59:39):
Us serenity now that serenity That oh, yeah that's.
Speaker 3 (02:59:47):
Okay i'll Keep i'll keep changing. Myself thank you so
much for joining. Us have a good, day see you all.
Speaker 11 (02:59:54):
Tomorrow the Common man.
Speaker 3 (03:00:11):
They created Common core and dumb 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 unsophisticated. Ordinary
(03:00:32):
but each of us has worth and dignity created in
the image Of. God that is what we have in.
Common that is what they want to take. Away their
most powerful weapons are, isolation, deception. Intimidation they desire to
know everything about, us while they hide everything from. Us
(03:00:54):
it's time to turn that around and expose what they
want to. Hide please share the information and links you'll
find at The davidnightshow dot. Com thank you for, Listening
thank you for. Sharing if you can't support us, financially
please keep us in your. Prayers D davidnightshow dot.
Speaker 2 (03:01:17):
Com