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December 16, 2025 86 mins
Eugenics and Philanthropy traces how elite philanthropy helped turn population control from an openly coercive ideology into a polished system of policy, metrics, and “care.” Beginning with early American eugenics, the episode follows the money and institutions that reframed social problems as biological ones and elevated experts to manage reproduction, poverty, and dependency from the top down. What once relied on laws and quotas evolved into benchmarks, grants, and administrative pressure, with accountability consistently pushed onto those closest to the harm.

This investigation connects figures like Andrew Carnegie and the foundations he inspired to research centers, courts, and modern development pipelines. It examines how ideas about “fitness” were laundered through science, law, and later humanitarian language, migrating from heredity labs to health systems and development programs. Along the way, it exposes how narrative funding, litigation engines, and international bodies normalize outcomes while insulating architects from responsibility.

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Website: https://www.thefacthunter.com

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Show Notes:
Anti-Semites https://x.com/seethroughit2/status/2000612792794034370?s=20
Fake News Pro-Palestine https://x.com/bennyjohnson/status/2000587471667560664?s=20
Rabbi Kaploun https://x.com/Megatron_ron/status/2000624202202718649?s=20
Costs of War https://costsofwar.watson.brown.edu
Google trends  https://x.com/RealFactHunter/status/2000647417708863831?s=20

Carnegie 990: https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/131628151

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
The following presentation is Del Marvis Studios Production.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
You're listening to the fact Hunter Radio Network.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
Here is your house, Steuge Hubbs.

Speaker 4 (00:15):
Welcome back to truth seekers from around the world. It's
time for another edition of the fact Under podcast. As
we record on this moody Blues Tuesday afternoon, December the sixteenth,
twenty twenty five. I hope this message finds you well
and you're healthy. Still frigid temperatures here, I guess this

(00:38):
is the third day in a row sub freezing, you
know in the twenties. Still got a couple of inches
of snow on the ground. But that should break, I
believe tomorrow. So looking forward a little warmer day. We're
only nine days away from Christmas. Do you have your
shopping done? I hope so. You know, with the Internet
and shopping on Amazon and everything, you don't really need

(01:01):
a reason to go out too much. But hey, remember
the reason for the season. As they say, we have
lots of talk about today. We really do. Before we do,
just a couple quick promos. The website is up and running.
Stop by Thefacthunter dot com say hello twenty four to
seven streaming radio chat room and we have links some articles.

(01:25):
I'm going to start putting some articles in there as well.
Don't forget to subscribe to our substack. We released part
three Bill Gates today. We have another article coming out Friday.
We have a bonus episode podcast coming out for you
this Sunday. I hope you enjoy it. Lots of big

(01:45):
things coming in the future. There's certainly, like I said,
there's not a lack of things to discuss, and obviously
what happened in Australia a few days ago, Gaily, I
think censorship is going to get ramped up to a

(02:07):
level we've never seen before. And again, as we state,
false flags aren't always you know, what do they call
them crisis actors? Right? We know in nine to eleven
real people died in these events. They will sacrifice their
own to get to the greater good if you will, right,

(02:30):
We've said that many times before. And that's not the
reason I'm bringing that up. I'm not speaking a lack
of compassion in this case. But again, it's to get
to their end goal and that's what everything's about. Whether
it's our main topic today on the fact unner eugenics
in America, how it's evolved, how they turned abortion, into healthcare,

(02:55):
those type of things. And that's what that's all about. Satan.
He takes what is good and perverts it. He can't
create anything, so he creates lies and he deceives. By
the way, in a couple weeks, we're going to go
back and look at Genesis six. Right, we had Gary
wayne On a year and a half ago, two years ago.
I'm going to give you a fresh perspective on it

(03:16):
that you may have never heard before. Looking out for that.
But I think, pardon me, we're in a timeline that
we're going to see censorship like we never have before.
Like if you thought what we saw in twenty twenty
and twenty twenty one was bad, right, I think this
is going to eclipse it. And the thing is the

(03:39):
word they use is anti Semitism. But what does that
mean If I question what Israel is doing? Is that
anti semitism? That is how I was classified for it
many years ago when I was debanked, Right, I didn't
say anything out of hate Christian Jewish supremacy in America.

(04:05):
How they seem to run many of these, whether it's
the pornography industry, the music industry, Right, should I not
question anything these are important things to ponder because in
the very near future, and Trump's behind it all, what

(04:29):
do they say. The movers and shakers in this world
are going to bring censorship if you say anything bad
about Israel. If you don't tow the company line, you're
in for some hard times. And that's the bottom line,
and I've got the receipts to prove it. We'll start
with audio. I'm not going to play the entire six minutes.
The Stop Anti Semitism founder wants anti Semites hunted down

(04:54):
and killed financially, legally, socially, and economically. I want you
to listen for just a couple of minutes. This isn't
George speaking. These are the people who are running the narrative.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
I would now like to welcome to the stage Leoraz,
founder and executive director of Stop Anti Semitism, a watchdog
organization that publicly exposes anti Semitic behavior creating consequences for
those who espouse bigotry toward the Jewish people.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Leora, tonight, I speak not just about a problem, but
an actual fight, a fight that the Jewish community did
not choose, but one that we are now fully engaged

(05:48):
in confronting. The global explosion of jew hatred unleashed since
the attacks of ten to seven. Stop anti Semitism was
built for this. For years, we exposed hate, pressured institutions,
and delivered consequences. But after ten to seven, this scale

(06:08):
of threat and the urgency of our mission changed dramatically overnight.
Since that day, we have featured more than one thousand
anti semites on our platforms. One thousand not theorized about them,
not quietly documented them, feature them publicly, clearly, and with evidence.

(06:33):
The results speak for themselves. Approximately four hundred of these
jew haters have faced real consequences, including firings, suspensions, and expulsions.
More than three hundred of them remain in an active
investigatory state across universities, corporations, DEI departments, unions, hospitals, nonprofits,

(06:59):
and yes, unfortunately, federal government agencies and yes, five arrests
to date tied directly to threats and violence of anti
Semitic conduct we helped expose. This is what accountability looks like.
This is what action looks like. This is what pushing
back hard looks like against the tidal wave of hate

(07:23):
that has consumed the United States and global population from
our founding stop anti Semitism has operated on one guiding belief.
Anti Semitism thrives when there are no consequences. So we
created consequences, a lot of them. We created visibility. We

(07:44):
turn the spotlight towards those who targeted on our community,
making silence impossible. On campuses where Jewish students were hunted,
through libraries, where professors glorified Hamas and has terrorists, where
mobs shut down our buildings and administrators hid under desks,

(08:07):
we stepped in. We documented the offenders. We worked with attorneys, lawmakers,
and victim families, and we ensured the message was not mistakable.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
If you target.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
Jewish students, your actions will not disappear into the darkness.
We will shine shine a light on you that, thanks
to Google and SEO, will follow you for the rest
of your life. When you look for a job, when
you look for a spouse, when you look for a nanny,
when you look for anything. Our work will always be
documented again thanks to Google and SEO. In corporations where

(08:43):
DEI leaders smeared Israel excuse Hamas, we pressured CEOs, some resigned,
many were terminated, but policies were changed, thankfully from governmental
to art institutions online where anonymous accounts spread violent threats.
We trace patterns, elevated evidence, and worked with authorities leading

(09:08):
to arrests from Florida, South Carolina, New York, California, and Texas.
And we're not slowing down sadly today stop anti Semitism.
I'm proud to say runs one of the most robust
anti Semitic enforcement operations in the United States, monitoring campuses,
digital networks, activist groups, and public officials, documenting incidents in

(09:33):
real time, and mobilizing millions of people of allies that
are quietly by our side. But the fight is bigger
than the exposure, and it's about securing a future.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
I want to pause there. You get what she's talking about.
But one of the phrases that jump out is Google
and SEO will follow you for the rest of your life.
That means they're telling you right up front that they
control it. Now, it's got to be completely understood that

(10:07):
criticizing the actions, the policies or the government of the
State of Israel is one hundred percent distinct from anti semitism.
We are told anti Semitism is a hostility or discrimination
against Jewish people. Because of their religion. That when people

(10:31):
question that a country controls our government, that another country,
Israel controls our government, how is that anti semitism? How
is that hateful of a religion? But they're telling you upfront,
there's by the way, obviously you have the audio, not
the video. Behind them, like everywhere else in DC, there's
a United States flag and Israeli flag, and it continues.

(10:57):
This is I'll save that for last. Actually this was
a little out of order, my bad. Next, this is
Rabbi Koplun. This is Trump's pick for combating anti Semitism.
And while I'm playing this, I'm going to see if
Trump has someone who is who his pick is for

(11:17):
defending the persecuted Christians around the world. I'll let you
listen to this. This is only about a minute forty five.
The president is sending a very strong message. Think about it.

Speaker 6 (11:26):
Ironically, I get off a plane, I am the president's representative,
and I am walking off with the Yamalka, and I
have kosher food and embassies will have kosher food. It
is a game changer. The appointment is a game changer.
And it's not about history. It's about education and how

(11:48):
do we educate. Indonesia has three hundred and fifty million
Muslims living in the country. How do we change their textbooks?
How do we hold the people in Gaza accountable that
if America is for un textbooks and supposedly the changes
are made, why are those textbooks not being used and
why are they using their old textbooks. We have to

(12:09):
teach people it's not okay to educate your kids to
be a martyr okay, And we have to hold those
countries accountable. How do we battle anti Semitism on the internet?
How are we doing better on algorithms? What companies can
we work with? We are going to have a whole
division within the Office of the Special Envoid of Combat

(12:31):
Anti Semitism that is going to work on technology and
working with the greatest leaders in technology, many of whom
are Jewish and.

Speaker 4 (12:40):
Have offered their assistance.

Speaker 6 (12:42):
The office is going to be revamped entirely to be
one of the highest profile offices in the State Department,
because that's what the Secretary wants, and that's what the
president wants.

Speaker 4 (12:52):
That's what the president wants. And if you have a
dissenting voice against the geopolitical state of Israel, be silenced.
They don't even have to tell you. They can just
silence you. Right when I first wrote on substack my
first article weeks ago, you know, lots of interactions, and

(13:13):
then you look at the statistics for the one today,
it's if you talk about negatively about the state of Israel,
you will quietly be canceled. If you're a bigger voice,
then maybe they'll go to greater links. But they don't care.
They're telling you they're bullies. They're going to tell these
companies you know, you're going to listen to us or else.

(13:34):
You're going to listen to us or else. And that
is not what this country was supposed to be based on.
You know, when we're sitting out there in the middle
of nowhere in Iraq, knowing they had no weapons of
mass destruction. Those people over there, while again yes many
of them are Islamic and it's not compatible with Christianity,

(13:58):
doesn't give us a right to invade their country. With
all that being said, you know, they have the right
to live their life the way we do. They do
as well as we do. And if you do just
a little bit of searching, for instance, Google, the Google trends,

(14:19):
pardon me, Okay, the recent shooting at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia,
which occurred at approximately six forty seven pm local time
on Sunday, December fourteenth, was at nine forty seven am
Israeli time on the same day. Sydney Australia is nine
hours ahead of Israel. And then if you go to

(14:39):
Google trends, well, what you know at Israel local time,
the name navide A crime started populating on December thirteenth
at five pm. That is, you know, pardon my public

(14:59):
sae school math, sixteen hours ahead of the actual event.
And I'll link my tweet with those screenshots proving it.
And somebody else pointed it out to me, asked to
remain anonymous, and the Google Trends was taken from Israel

(15:19):
at that time. So somebody say, oh, I don't know
when the messade was looking up his name. Let's look
at how much the cost of war, not the Golf war,
not Iraq, not af Krakistan. We are talking about the
war supporting Israel. How much has it cost the United States? Right?

(15:44):
This is from the Coostowar dot com and again I'll
have that linked in the show notes as well, here
is a summary of the key findings. In the two
years since October seventh, twenty twenty three, which was a
false flag enabled attack. Again, yes, people died Hamas attack
on Israel. The US government has spent about twenty two
billion dollars on military aid to Israel. We can't provide

(16:08):
dental insurance for our soldiers who served three tours in Iraq,
but we gave twenty two billion dollars of military aid
to Israel in twenty six months. The people who had
a hand in nine to eleven received about twenty two
billion dollars in aid to Israel. The US has spent

(16:32):
an additional nine to twelve billion on military operations in
Yemen and the wider region since October seventh, twenty twenty three,
in support of Israel on the Post ten to seven wars.
As of October third, twenty twenty five, over sixty seven
thousand people in Gaza had been killed in two months.

(16:57):
I'm sorry in two years from October seventh, twenty twenty
three October third, twenty twenty five, just a couple days
under two years, sixty seven thousand and seventy five people
in Gaza have been killed. Now as brothers and sisters
in Christ, as many of you are listening. We don't

(17:20):
trivialize any one of them, right, Nor do I champion
the death of in Israel, a Jewish person, a Muslim person,
Islamic person. I pray for their souls because they didn't
know Christ. They're in the lake of fire. That's just
our beliefs. It's the truth. That's what we speak here

(17:42):
on the fact Hunter. But the fact that over sixty
seven thousand Palestinians have been killed and a drop in
the bucket gets the attention. Something's wrong here. That is
not George being an anti Semite. That is George Hobbes

(18:03):
being a realist speaking truth. Right, there's a mall on
fire with twenty five hundred people in it, raging out
of control. A mile away, there's a garden shed on fire.
Why did the fire company go to the shed? And again,

(18:28):
I'm not trivializing anyone, but I am just giving you
the optics. Right. By the way, let's not mention the
one hundred and sixty nine, four hundred and thirty people
who were injured. Does that mean I'm pro Palestinian? If
I don't cheer on the Palestinian. Does that mean I'm

(18:49):
pro Israel I don't like Trump? Does that mean a libtard? No,
you can be an honest observer of everything that's gone
on without being a part of a team. Still, sadly,
most of the population can't see through the nonsense. They
really can't. You add those numbers up, the injured and

(19:14):
the dead, that's two hundred and thirty six thousand, five
hundred and five casualties. That is more than ten percent
of the pre world population. And you're missing the big
picture here. In two years, the population dropped by over
ten percent, and it gets worse than that because you're
missing the big picture here. Let's look at Africa. One

(19:39):
report suggests that over twenty two thousand Christians were killed
by Islamist militants across Africa in the year ending June
twenty twenty five, which covers most of twenty four ninety
nine percent of those fatalities occurring in Chad and Somalia. Then,

(20:01):
the NGO Open Doors reported that about forty five hundred
Christians were killed for faith releasons in another area. You've
got Congo, et cetera, et cetera. And if you go
to opendoors dot com. More than three hundred and eighty
million Christians suffer high levels of persecution and discrimination for

(20:24):
their faith. Saudi Arabia another big one. Christians are being
persecuted around the world. You look at the numbers in Syria.
You know we talked last week or the week before.
There was about two million before twenty eleven when the
civil war started. Now they're down to about three hundred thousand.

(20:44):
Look at Iraq, man, that that's a country you don't
talk about. There was a lot of Christians in Iraq
and it has dwindled. I think even in twenty eleven,
which more obviously before the war started. I think there
was one point two million Christians in Iraq in twenty eleven,

(21:06):
and in thirteen years it's down to one hundred and
twenty thousand. So the numbers in Iraq mirror the numbers
in Syria. We don't ever hear and he would talk
about this well. Trump appointed Franklin Graham. He's busy with
his thing. He's not doing anything of significance, I should say,
to help persecute a Christians around the world. The focus

(21:31):
is always on Israel. Why is that and why are
people like Ted Kruz falsely, you know, telling us old
Covenant things about Israel. If we bless them, they'll bless us.
You know, you better read, you better read the Bible.
You better read the Bible because the only way to

(21:52):
God is through Christ. And then, of course we have
the false flag, the New Year's Eve terrace bombing in
Los Angeles.

Speaker 7 (22:03):
FBI now reports that it's disrupted a planned New Year's
Eve terror attack in Los Angeles. Four suspects in custody,
the FABI identifying them as members of a pro Palestin
extremist group. They're suspected of planning coordinated ied attacks targeting
five different locations in Los Angeles. But based on the reporting,

(22:24):
now that plot has been foiled, we will wait for
more out of LA or out of Washington, d C, FBI.

Speaker 4 (22:33):
There you go. And of course you know they would
find all these flags in their cars. I think they
were called what the Turtle Island Liberation Front. I haven't
even done Ja Matri or anything Hanigram finders on that.
But all of this is happening for a reason, and
it's to get the narrative push across, because let's be

(22:54):
honest with each other. People like Jimmy Dore and others
were coming out and speaking true and they had to
control it. That was one of the reasons why they
took over TikTok, because it was the one place where
they could speak truth without being censored. So they took
it over. Right, if you're catching flak, you're over the target.
That goes without saying if you're catching flak, you're over

(23:17):
the target. And all hands on deck now, right. They
tried to be nice to us, they tried to warn us.
Now they're coming after our freedom of speech, and we'll
see what else comes. We will see what else comes.
So that's it on Israel. And I'm sure when we
come back next time there'll be a whole other bunch

(23:40):
of stories we'll have to cover. But for the time being,
we've talked about this in the past, right, eugenics and
how it really took you know, roots here in the
early twentieth century in the United States. And again, good

(24:00):
is always presented to us, or evil, i should say,
is presented to us under the guise of good. Rarely
do they come out and say I'm evil. Right, but
we were total lie. America was total lie. Some people
say it was a misunderstanding of science that went too far.

(24:21):
But that's too convenient and it's a lie, because eugenics
was not a mistake. It was a strategy like everything else.
We often say that the quote unquote elites of this
country of the world, right, they played the long game.
Our long term calendar goes out to maybe the spring, right.
I don't plan much further than that. These folks are

(24:43):
generational planners fifty sixty years down the road. It was
born in the minds of men who believed society was
a machine and human beings were replaceable parts. Men who
believe democracy gave the wrong people too much to say right,
men who believed poverty was not a moral failure of
systems but a biological flaw. In bud lines, they called

(25:05):
it science. What else said they call it? They call
it progress, It's compassion. Right. They always use the nice words.
But what they were really doing was deciding who gets
to exist? Right. It always goes back to that first
guideline on the Georgia guidestones, keeping the population down right

(25:28):
to five hundred million, perpetual balance with nature. But who
gets to choose? That's the whole thing of everything we
speak about. My whole article basis my three part series
on Bill Gates was why are these non elected bureaucrats NGOs, nonprofits?

(25:52):
Why do they have any say in our lives? Whatsoever?
The bankers do they control much of our lives? They're
not elected. The pharmaceutical industry did they control our lives
for about eighteen months and still do to a certain extent.
Your child goes to public school, I guarantee you that

(26:15):
many of you out there had were made to were
mandated to have vaccines injected into your children's body before
they could attend school. How is that freedom? Eugenics didn't
ask how how can we help the poor? It was
more about how can we reduce them? It didn't care

(26:39):
for the disabled. It was asked, how to prevent them
from being born? Right? These are hard to listen to,
but it's the truth, and it came from doctors. The
judges signed the orders, the professors published the papers. And
we're going to talk about you know, Francis Gaulton, Charles Darwin, Carnegie,

(27:03):
Irving Fisher, you know all these people who are part
of the humanist right that humans are superior to God,
and that's their mindset, that's the mindset. You have to
understand these people are in right. And eugenics came about.
It wasn't because the public demanded it. It's because again,

(27:25):
the elites were just that's the kind of the word
we use. Okay, I don't think of them as elite
to me, but that's the term we use to point
them out right. And this is where people get distracted
by symbolism and structure. The power was not in robes
or rituals. It's all about closed networks in many of

(27:47):
these cases, whether it's the Royal Society, elite universities have
so much power scientific boards, you have the United Grand
Lodge of England that functions as trust networks among men
who are deep into finance, law, medicine and government. And

(28:09):
these mattered because they created consensus without accountability. And that's
the thing we always discuss, where's the accountability? If you
or I did one thousandth of the things we talk
about on this podcast, we'd be locked up in Gitmo
with sandbags over our head, never to see the light
of day again. You know, the ILKs of the Clintons,

(28:32):
the Gates, the Obamas, the Bushes, the Rockefellers, the roth Ja,
there is one hundred percent rules for thee but not
for me. Right, that's the world we live in. Ideas
were vetted internally, protected socially, and then released outward as
a settled science. You know, we mentioned Francis Galton. He

(28:57):
didn't need approval, he had institutionetional approval, the ones who
write the laws. Charles Davenport, he didn't need public debate.
He had a foundation funding and I wanted to I
should have said this from the get go. Today we're
planning the Seed and the following podcast we're going to
be focusing on many of the individuals we talked about.

(29:17):
Carnegie's a big one, the staggering funds. Today we're going
to point to the people in the institutions who are
behind this, and then the coming podcasts we're going to
be looking at the people, how they influenced, why they
influenced those type of things, right, Harry Laughlin, Right, these

(29:38):
are how control systems are built. That's everything is a
gain to them. They want to control us. COVID was
let's see how quickly these people fold, how long they
hold out, and then just when they're about to explode,
like gather up together in the streets, and start making
things happen. They pull back, and it was important for

(30:01):
them to do that. So the next time they put
the hammer down, they're going to make the adjudgment adjustments.
You know, anybody can drop a bomb. These people think,
like Bernee, if you can control the mind, you control
the world. Right, we always talk about controlling the money.

(30:22):
In my article today we talked about the seed vault
in Norway. I think it is controlling the food, but
controlling the mind that's a whole other level. Right. And
eugenics thrived in a place where everyone agreed they were
smarter than the masses, more qualified to decide the future. Right.
That's why progressive era intellectuals loved it so much. They

(30:45):
believe society should be run by experts, not voters. The
poor were never in the room. The sterilized people, they
were never consulted, and the institution, or i should say
the institutionalized, they were never heard. Silence isn't accidental. It's engineered.

(31:06):
And when you follow the funding, especially through the Carnegie Foundation,
you see the spine of the operation. Money stabilized ideology
and that that very ideology produced policy. This isn't chaos,
This was coordination I mean, we're talking about forced sterilization

(31:32):
to choice. Right. In the twenties, things were a lot
different wording, and as time came forward, as times changed,
they used softer words to make it compassionate. Right. Sterilization
became family planning, abortion became you know, health right, population

(32:01):
control became reproductive health. That's what I should have said, abortion,
reproductive health. There's nothing health about ending a life. Nothing.
The targets didn't change. It wasn't an accident that Bill
Gates took that world vaccine to was it India or

(32:23):
Africa and just killed all those children. Right, And you
have Margaret Sanger right, she was explicit about aligning birth
control with eugenic goals. Maurice Stops was even more explicit.
In Britain, they spoke openly about reducing the reproduction of
those they deemed unfit. And that's where all of this,

(32:48):
whether it's the First Amendment speech right, who gets to
decide what are the rules? Right? Most people, if you
walked up to them on the street, do you support
the restriction of hate speech? Absolutely, there should be no
hate speech. And then you look at the terms and

(33:10):
conditions and you're like, well, wait a second, why is
criticizing Israel hate speech? But I don't see anything on
here about criticizing Christianity. Well, you said you wanted to
stop hate speech, sir. It's always in the terms and conditions.
Like the car commercials on the radio, it's you know,

(33:31):
get your twenty twenty six f one point fifty, and
then the end, the guy's speaking real fast, right, because
they never are good for you, right, Whether it's a
pharmaceutical commercial. You know, mom and Dad bouncing around outside
in the flowers, and how wonderful the new drug is

(33:52):
if you have light to moderate whatever it is, and
then the next forty five seconds are all the side effects.
Abortion is sold as healthcare. I mean, that's so evil.

(34:13):
In twenty twenty, I think it was. And I know
I've said this before. There are more abortions than live
births in New York City. You think God looking down
at us is happy with that. It's population management. That's

(34:34):
exactly what it is. Right. The same communities once targeted
for sterilization are now saturated with abortion providers. Notice who
is encouraging these things? Gun control? Isn't it awesome when
you see a politician standing behind a podium sturing us

(35:00):
on gun control with the armed cards surrounding these people, right,
you know, when Obama used to speak, the entire for
a half mile would be surrounded by men with weapons.
So again, the elites are about being able to protect themselves. Now.

(35:22):
Are they personally carrying a weapon, of course not, but
they have protection. They don't want us to protect ourselves,
and it's for a reason because they know down the
road they're going to drop the hammer on us. And
the less able we are to protect ourselves, the easier
it is going to be for them to carry out

(35:42):
whatever's coming. And again, with everything being digitalized now, it
really trivializes the need for war, although I still think
there is going to be, like Albert Pike said in
his book of World War three, because it is a
quick reducer in population. But listen, digital money, if you

(36:11):
can keep someone from buying your seller, I mean you're
telling me that if you're facing not being able to
paint electric bill or to be able to get groceries,
how many people will fold like shrimp to accept the mark.
You know, it's honestly, it's all fun and games. I
saw people who I never dreamed, you know, would take

(36:34):
the shot back in twenty one. You know, but it's
always the same people, the wealthy, right, the other class.
Maybe it's the people that they speak of in Genesis six, right,
maybe it's the Cane bloodline. Who knows. But that's not freedom.

(36:58):
And that's why I say we live in an up
in their prison. We're told we have all of these freedoms. Now, granted,
do we have more freedoms than in Saudi Arabia than
in many countries? Yeah? As Christians, yes, But I guarantee
you we have more rules than any other country in
the world. We have more laws than any other countries

(37:21):
in the world. How many countries do you need to
go get a fishing license? To go fishing? You pay
ten percent? States? Where did I see, man? Where did
I see that? Receive? Somebody sent me. I want to
say it was Nashville, Tennessee. If we have a listener
from Nashville, please take five seconds and email me to

(37:44):
verify this is your local tax now, like when you
go out to a restaurant or whatever, nine point seventy
five percent. Right when I had my retail store in
Texas ten years ago, it was eight and a quarter percent,
eight point twenty five percent, but I could have sworn
somebody told me it was like nine point seventy five
percent in Nashville. Now that's crazy. Ten percent. What unbelievable.

(38:14):
But again, now does the state need for sterilization when
it can normalize self elimination through cultural pressure, economic despair,
medical farming, or framing, I should say, not really farming.
But that's really the genius of how they rebranded everything.

(38:35):
And people tell me all the time eugenics failed, George, No,
it evolved. What it did was it learned that coercion
works best when people believe they chose it. It's all
in the brain, right. It learned that control is most
stable when wrapped in care. It learned that elites never
have to say we don't want you if the system

(38:58):
convinces people to remove themselves completely from it. Right, we
can start with here's the thing. We've been working on
this for a while and I have so many notes,
and last night I struggled to put this in an
order that made a lot of sense. So how I

(39:19):
wanted to start first, and I'm going to just go
for about ninety minutes. When I hit I'm stopping because
there's so many networks institutions financials to deal with. So
I'm just going to go line by line with the notes.
We're going to start with in the United Kingdom, the
seed institutions and these elite networks. So the first one
is the Royal Society, which we did a podcast on. Right,

(39:41):
we're talking about Francis Galton and he moved inside top
scientific prestige circles, right because it turned in ideology into
serious science that got pushed right. And Harvard even has
a whole thing on him, which I'll put in the
show notes for you to look at, and maybe we'll

(40:03):
go back at some time and do another podcast on him.
It's very influential. But the United Grand Lodge of England
and English Freemasonry, and this is a long running elite
fraternal network. I think they go back to seventeen seventeen.

(40:27):
They historically function as a high trust social system amongst
you know, to say influential men would be like saying
the Atlantic Ocean is a little wet, right, This is
a kind of environment where consensus is formed in private, right.
They they're like, this is how we're going forward. And
of course if you go to the United Grand Lodge

(40:49):
of England, it'll tell you how great they are. And
there's a lot of conspiracy theories out there, and again
amongst the lower level. Sure they don't know what's going on,
but the Bible is very direct about you should not
belong in a secret society if you are a follower
of Christ. And that's you cannot debate that. Let's look

(41:13):
at some of the US research in operational institutions. This
is a big one. The cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Right,
their own institutional history states that the Davenport founded the
Eugenics Record Office in nineteen ten and appointed Harry H.

(41:33):
Laughlin to direct it. You had the Eugenics Record Office
in cold Spring Harbor from nineteen ten to nineteen thirty nine.
It was the central data engine, right. It was a
pedigree collection. They had questionnaires, they had field workers, they
had literature designed to influence policy, and basically it was

(41:57):
up and run in nineteen thirty nine and then they
had to start directing those funds toward the war effort.
But the big one that anyone who talks about eugenics
must mention is the Carnegie Institution, the Carnegie Foundation, that
is the funding spine for eugenics it's a major institutional

(42:22):
backer that is tied to establishing and sustaining the network. Right,
this is the money to policy bridge is exactly what
it is. And again Cold Spring Harbor, New York, the
Eugenics Record Office. It was a research institute that gathered

(42:45):
so much information biological information, social information. They're talking about
Big Brother nineteen eighty four, they were already gathering this
information one hundred and fifteen years ago. Again, Carnegie money.
They had a station for experimental evolution. They had something

(43:06):
administered by its Department of Genetics. The founder again was
Charles Benedict Davenports. He was a guy out of Connecticut.
And again it's these quote unquote elitists. He was a biologist,
and it was all about, you know, we just want

(43:27):
the perfect people. We can't have too many of the cattle, right,
we're looked upon as cattle. But what's also interesting is
he has ties to the University of Chicago. How many
podcasts have we done that go back to the University
of Chicago Because the Rockefellers, when they hijacked the medical industry,
that's where Carnegie and Rockefeller. When you get the richest

(43:51):
people in the War of the world joining forces, they
can accomplish anything whatsoever. And then you know, he gets
into the American Philosophical Society, which is you are part
of the world's movers and shakers. When you get into
that society, that is the end all be all. It's

(44:13):
been around since seventeen forty three. Before this country became
a country, it only listened to this. You're talking three
hundred and what did I say? It was seventeen forty three,
so a little less than three hundred years. But over
three hundred years, think of how many Americans have come

(44:34):
and gone. Only five thousand plus members have been inducted
since its creation. And we're talking about again the end
all be all of people. Ben Franklin, John Dickinson, George Washington.
What are the big names, because I've read this fifty

(44:56):
thousand times, Charles Darwin, Okay, Louis Pasture, pasteurized milk, right, Audubon,
the Audubon Society, Thomas Edison, Woodrow Wilson. But many members
of the Society of Cincinnati were among them. And that
goes back to seventeen eighty three. The Society of Cincinnati

(45:17):
and the American Philosophical Society. These are the most elite
groups in the world. If you're a member there, you
have a say in which direction. You know, this country moves,
and as you know, as the United States goes well,

(45:37):
so does the world. And you know, obviously Margaret Sanger
played a huge part of it with the birth control institutions,
and multiple mainstream historical treatments document her engagement with eugenics language,
but also noting historical debate about of an interpretation right

(46:03):
eugenics rhetoric was used to broaden elite support for both control.
So how do we get that into the city's well
planned parenthood? Right? Planned Parenthood itself states that Sanger believed
in eugenics. It's not an accident, right, It's right on

(46:24):
their website. By the way, if you go to plan
Parenthood website, the first thing is going to happen. It says,
we need your support. Can you please donate? You can
make your tax deductible year end gift before midnight on
December thirty first, so we can continue to protect and
provide care no matter what we can protect. Can you

(46:49):
imagine having the nerve to run a murderous institution and
the little pop up as soon as you go to
the website says, make your tax deductible year end gift
before midnight so we can continue to protect and provide care.
Let's see what the over under is. How many abortions

(47:13):
planned parenthood? How long do you guys want to go?
Let's just go to the last ten years, last ten years,
and I'm not trying to make light of it, but
over the last decade, planned parenthood has performed millions of abortions,
with numbers increasing reaching just in one year twenty twenty two,

(47:35):
four hundred and two thousand abortions in one year. There's
only three hundred and sixty five days in a year,
and in twenty twenty two there were four hundred and
two thousand abortions. Data from annual reports show approximately three

(47:55):
point four million abortions over ten reports show so in
ten years, about three and a half million abortions, three
and a half million souls. And that is a so
in ten years from twenty thirteen to twenty twenty three,
three point four million abortions, which is a twenty three

(48:17):
percent increase in those ten years. I don't even know
what else to say. So this is the history of
planned parenthood. In nineteen sixteen, the idea of Planned Parenthood
began as the first birth control clinic in Brownville, New York. Brownsville,

(48:40):
pardon me, it's on their website. Today there are nearly
six hundred Planned Parenthood health centers around the country operated
by forty eight local affiliates. Say it like they're proud,
like they created a franchise that's successful, Like you know
Wetzel's Pretzels or Arby's. Look at us locations everywhere. Planned

(49:02):
Parenthood is the nation's leading provider and advocate of high quality, affordable,
sexual and reproductive healthcare. Again, it's in the wording. That's
the point of all. This is how they present it
to people. So when Joe Normi Jill Normy is not
having a sandwich, and you know that nasty Christian couple
next week, we're talking bad about Planned Parenthood. It's the

(49:24):
wording they use, and they repeat it over a notice,
so you accept it as normal. It's reproductive healthcare, saving lives.
How could anybody say it's healthcare after the numbers I
just gave you. They even say here more than two
million patients each year rely on Plan Parenthood. Then they

(49:46):
have a whole great thing on Margaret Sanger planned trace Sorry,
Planned parenthood traces its roots back to a nurse named
Margaret Sanger. She grew up in an Irish family of
eleven children in Corning, New York. Her mother, in fragile
health from many pregnancies, including seven miscarriages, died of fifty.

(50:09):
Her mother's story, along with her work as a nurse,
inspired Sanger to travel to Europe study birth control methods
at a time when educating people about birth control was
illegal in the United States. Oh, to bring those days back, right?
How what do you think a woman her mom who
had eleven children would think that her daughter would be

(50:33):
responsible for millions of abortions? Now? You know, can you
blame all that on one person because it takes one
more than one person to build on that ideology. No,
but think about it, right, And I'm not going to

(50:53):
read anymore because it gets super liberal and woke. I'm
not even going to read it. If you want to
go to planned parenthood and the history and all that,
it's it's it's pretty unbelievable. How they can you know,
I just picture never mind, I'm going to move on
what I wanted to talk about next, because there's other

(51:15):
individuals but I will leave a link to the Carnegie
Corporation of New York's nine to ninety their nonprofit tax return.
I wish there was a way I could put the
PDF in there, but it's just going to be a
link to it, and you personally, you can save it
on your phone or your laptop or whatever. It takes

(51:37):
a long time, and we have been scouring this for
about a year, and this is just some of the work.
Like you know, we could do an hour every day
for two months to try to cover the entire nine ninety,
but today we're just giving you the highlights. So the

(51:58):
institution itself, Carnegie Corporation of New York. It's been tax
exempts since nineteen thirty eight. Their assets are about four
and a half billion dollars fair market value, and they
are this is what makes me laugh. This is a
nonprofit and their headquarters is on Madison Avenue in New

(52:22):
York City, and I know it's been one of the
I had to give a lecture before we came on today.
So if my voice is a little rusby, I've been
talking all day just to say a nonprofit in Madison Avenue.
And that's like every year I do my little article
and reads across America. I think it's wonderful the act

(52:42):
of putting a wreath on a grave and saying that
service member's name and leaving a penny. But the fact
that the company who runs it racks up thirty million
dollars a year is abhorrent. And I mean that's a
drop in the bucket compared to these other ones. And

(53:04):
why this matters is this isn't a charity that reacts
to need, right, and we are the most giving country
in the world. When something goes down, we are quick
to help our brothers and sisters out. We truly are.
But what this is, this is capital preservation. This is
a deployment vehicle with multi billion dollar assets that are

(53:26):
designed to shape long term outcomes. Whether it's the Bill
and Militni I think now it's just called the Gates
Foundation because you know they split the Carnegie, the American
Heart Associate, the big ones. Right, They are, without a doubt,
deployment vehicles that shape long term outcomes because while the

(53:51):
money is in the trust, it's monitored, but once it leaves,
if you see how much money goes to the CAYMANI
from some of these like what's going on? Why is
a nonprofit sending tens of millions of dollars to a bank?
And that Cayman like people talk about the problems. Yep,

(54:13):
the taxation is a huge problem. Property taxes is a
huge problem. Right. The parasites the matrix itself isn't a problem.
I've told you before. Interviewing a guy from Huntsville, Alabama,
I think, forgive me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty
sure it's Huntsville, which per capita, is the wealthiest city

(54:36):
in Alabama, and it's not close. And it's because the
military industrial complex has so many, like I think red
zone arsenals around there. Maybe, honeywell, you know all of
the big military companies are based there, so you know,
an hour south you got people making twenty thirty thousand
dollars a year, and there you've got hundred ten. And

(54:58):
I asked the gentleman, I said, if you asked everybody
in Huntsville that if we could end all war today,
would they be willing to swap it if it meant,
you know, losing all those jobs? And he was brutally
honest he said probably not. Now again, if it's a

(55:22):
guy who's sixty Ford about to retire, he'd probably be
down for it. That guy who just got done spending
one hundred thousand dollars at Duke University to get his
business degree, who just started at you know, insert company
in military industrial complex and he's making one hundred and

(55:43):
twenty five thousand dollars a year, just bought a house.
He's not going to give that up. It's not the people,
it's this system that we allow ourselves to be involved
in the usury, right, and so much of it. It's
the system. And they use these NGOs as deployment vehicles. Right.

(56:05):
You have to remember the Carnegie Foundation. They also funded
Cold Spring Harbor and the Eugenics Office themselves. But what
they funded next was the rebrand. Right, the Rockefellers they
went through a rebrand. The Gates he went through a rebrand, well,

(56:28):
so did Eugenics. It was all about diffusion, the advancement
of diffuse I should say, sorry, the advancement and diffusion
of knowledge and understanding. Right, that's their stated purpose. Diffusion
means ideas are injected outward into society. Right. Carnegie is

(56:54):
not neutral. It does not simply research, right, It disseminates frameworks,
It funds messengers, and it shapes consensus. This exact language
was used a century ago to justify funding heredity, science,
end quote, social improvement. So again it's the same structure,

(57:16):
it's simply a new vocabulary. Then you have the financial engine,
and this is how control is possible. Right. You have
total investment income, which is capital gains alone, two hundred
and ninety one million. You have annual qualifying distributions one
hundred and seventy six million, and that leaves an undistributed

(57:38):
income carried forward of seventy seven million dollars. You said, well,
what does that matter? Because the foundation doesn't depend on donors,
But it also doesn't depend on voters. Not that at
the federal level it really matters, right, gotcha. But it
generates power autonomously through capital markets, then deploys that selectively.

(58:00):
If you think that Blackrock and Vanguard didn't get help
from these foundations, you're wrong. That's how it works, and
that's the genius of this evil. They raised so much
money off of your good hearts, our good hearts. Right,

(58:23):
do you remember every labor day when you and I
were growing up, Jerry Lewis, go look at that nine ninety,
Go look at the muscular sclerosis nine ninety. You know
which one actually has. And I'm so sorry to the
listener who emailed me this one of the cleanest nine
nineties I've ever seen. It's not perfect, but it's pretty

(58:43):
darn clean. It's the Ronald McDonald house. I've personally had
a military member tell me that it bailed them out
while their child was getting you know, the healthcare. If
I remember, Ronald McDonald house is housing for the family
can be there with the child during their difficult times.

(59:07):
And he said, isn't it interesting that a food that
sells poison is so benevolent on the backside? Right? And
at first I didn't know if he was throwing me
a bone to investigate or he was being sincere. And
I pulled the nine ninety and it was clean as
a whistle. Not one salaried employee. Now again, I can't

(59:27):
track every dime, but in regards to everybody else's nine
ninety that I usually look at one of the cleaner
ones I've ever seen, and it's it's true. Isn't it
interesting that a company that sells poison right disguised as
food is so benevolent? To the children, shout out to you, brother,
I'm sorry I forgot your name. But then we get

(59:51):
into who decides right the structure, and if you look
at the trustees on these nine nineties, you'll see former
media executives. You'll see former government officials, university presidents, foreign
policy elites, right, high level investment managers. Now the Carnegie Foundation.

(01:00:15):
This is not a very clean sheet. The president gets
compensated over a million dollars. So again, why is it
all these reporters, whether it's Fox News or well, I
know why not, But why can't we get one reporter
to ask one question about a nonprofit? Why can an
organization afford to pay it's CEO seven figures? But they

(01:00:39):
are not, but they're tax exempt. The chief investment officer
makes more than the CEO the president. I should say,
these are not community representatives. These are I should say,
this is a man gerial elite class deciding which ideas

(01:01:04):
deserve to be to be seen and which ones don't.
All about eugenics. And then it's the big one program areas.
You know what number one is, and it's it's what
I talk about the most education. And I told you

(01:01:27):
last week and I think I put it in the
show notes the Delaware report card. It's unfathomable child to
spend twelve years in school and have those kind of numbers.
One hundred and eighty days a year, that is like
six full years. Right, the children in school for twelve
years half a year, that's that's six full years if

(01:01:48):
we're counting, And that's the best we can do. And again,
it's not the teachers, it's the system. Number two International
Peace and security. And again it's supporting those who they choose. Right,
that cost of war from Brown University. I read you

(01:02:08):
earlier the summary of key findings. Right, the twenty two
billion on military aid to Israel in just two years.
Trust me, they're not just getting government money. They're getting
foundation money. And you can look on every nine to
ninety from the American Cancer Society to the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation to the Carnegie Foundation. Look how much

(01:02:29):
money goes to Israel. It'll come up many times. It'll
just say Middle East. It ain't going to Saudi Arabia,
it's not going to Iraq. Number three International Development and
number four strengthening US democracy. These are population scale leavers. Right.

(01:02:49):
You look education shapes belief. Development shapes fertility and dependency.
Democracy programs shape except participation and the big one security programs. Right.
The strengthening US democracy that shapes compliance. You either play

(01:03:11):
with us or you're going to get kadafied. Right. This
is governance by grant because money. People answer to money, right,
and grant strategy along with American tax dollars, bring about
compliance internationally. Right. This is a top down influence. There's

(01:03:36):
no grassroots empowerment, there's no bottom up correction. This mirrors
what we saw one hundred years ago, the progressive era
expert rule philosophy that brought about eugenics. Right. And then
you know we can get into the immigration, the demographics,
the population flow, how all of that works. Right. How

(01:04:02):
the open borders this country, you know, tilted this country
so quickly. Carnegie directly shapes the population movement in this country. Right.
You'll hear Joe and Josephine yelling out demn Dems. It's
those Dems. Well, actually, maybe the leaders of the Carnegie

(01:04:25):
Foundation and the Bill and Melinda gets found out. Maybe
they are Dems. But they're part of the elite class.
And if you think, if you think these people are
enemies like the Clintons and the Bushes and the Trumps
and the Obama If you think they hate each other,
it's a show. Right, there's a big club at the top,

(01:04:47):
and we're not in it. And that's a fact people
still can't see. They still I still see people posting
Q stuff on Twitter saying that Carl Roiner was executed
by you know, I'm not making fun of the situation,
but saying that Trump sent his men and executed Carl
Reiner and his wife. Right, Q posts seven to three,

(01:05:09):
a Q four to one. It's just man anyway, I digress.
But you know what they also fund is the media,
the Institute for Nonprofit News. You have media campaigns that
target dangerous conspiracy theories. Those folks that you heard at

(01:05:31):
the beginning of the podcast receive money from these foundations.
This is narrative enforcement and goes against everything that this
country was supposed to have been founded under. And listen,
whether you're listening in Spain or Portugal or Brazil or Norway,

(01:05:56):
you have the right to say what's on your mind.
I have never, in my fifty six years on this earth,
seen a word kill anybody. Never, But they want you
to believe. Now, is it rude and unchristian like to
yell and scream at somebody and call them names or
to be racist because the color of their skin. God

(01:06:21):
made everyone in his image. Okay, but this is narrative enforcement.
Once eugenics lost legitimacy, controlling the story became their top priority.
That's why they hijack the news. That's why you during COVID,

(01:06:44):
all the news agency said the same thing. They all
parroted the same narrative. But then they got into science right,
technocratic control, right, next generation science standard projects. This is
measurement culture. Again, eugenics thrived on metrics that are raised

(01:07:05):
environment and morality, and today's framework still prioritize this quantification
over context. So it's the same instinct with new instruments.
And there is a heavy focus on international development. And
while this filing avoids explicit abortion language, right, that's what

(01:07:31):
it says. On their nine to ninety they have to
show how their money is distributed and number ten says
international development and reproductive framing. And again they don't explicitly
use the word abortion, but it does have a focus
on international development and it partnerships with institutions Historically linked

(01:07:54):
to population policy, and it has a heavy emphasis on sustainability,
stability in governance. Now, historically this is where the reproductive
control hides. Folks. Eugenics did not die, it did not
go away. It migrated into development policy where fertility is

(01:08:17):
discussed as risk, where fertility is discussed as population burden.
So from this document alone, just from the first ten
sections that there's so many subsections in this you could

(01:08:39):
spend a year really breaking this down. But it talks
about centralized capital, elite governance and expert driven social planning,
population movement management, narrative enforcement, and measurement based human evaluation.
So this is the same architecture that supported eugenics. But

(01:09:02):
what they did was they stripped of it its old
vocabulary and reintroduced it as a benevolent administration. And that's
what they do with everything that is inherently evil. Right,
So what time is it here? Or an hour ten in?
You know, we could talk about you know, Davenport, Carnegie

(01:09:27):
and the Cold Spring Harbor and how all these things
you know, came to life. Where the money went. It's
a lot there's look at the Virginia Sterilization Act of
nineteen forty nineteen twenty four. Let me pull that up.
Just bear with me here. I have so many documents
up here, and I'll try to share as many of

(01:09:49):
these links with you as I can in the show notes.
Here we go. The Virginia Sterilization Act of nineteen twenty
four was a United States state law in Virginia for
the sterilization of institutionalized persons afflicted with hereditary forms of
insanity that are recurrent idiocy, imbecility, feeble minded, feeble mindedness,

(01:10:16):
or epilepsy. It greatly influenced the development of eugenics in
the twentieth century. The act was based on model legislation.
When Harry Laughlin and challenged by a case that led
to the United States Supreme Court decision Buck versus Bellen.
We covered this about four years ago. The Supreme Court

(01:10:38):
upheld the law as constitutional and it became a model
law for sterilizational laws in other states, which I think
at its peak was thirty Now I'm going to read
that again for all of you who think this is
just hyperbole, you know, not real. And George, what do
you talk about? This never happened in this country. That act,
the Virginia Sterilization of nineteen twenty four was based on

(01:11:03):
a model legislation written by Harry Laughlin, who was a
not a good dude challenged by a case that led
to the United States Supreme Court decision of Buck versus Bell,
and it upheld the law as constitutional, and other states
began sterilizing. Now some of you may say, well, George,

(01:11:26):
do you really want these feeble minded people to have children,
brothers and sisters. It all goes back to who gets
to you know, who gets to be that judge? What
is hate speech? What is a person who is feeble mindedness?

(01:11:49):
The government could come down and say this, listen to
this crazy guy talk. He obviously has all the things
he says, you know, he needs institutionalized and sterilized. What
this does is this blots out a lineage of people
who dissent. That's what the bottom line is. They want

(01:12:13):
compliant people. They want like minded people. That's who these
people want left in the world. They want a nation
of people who don't think, who work right, leave a
small carbon footprint and comply. They don't want people like
you and I. Why does that guy keep talking about christ? Right?

(01:12:38):
That guy actually he didn't get a vaccination. He homes schools.
He doesn't think we're on a ball that's spending one
thousand miles per hour. You ever think of somebody parachuting
in Australia. Isn't that weird? But this is real. The
Virginia Sterilization Act of nineteen twenty four between nineteen twenty

(01:13:03):
four nineteen seventy nine. Let's play the over undergame. I'll
give you five seconds to guess how many people the
state of Virginia sterilized between nineteen twenty four, and yes,
I said nineteen seventy nine. They were sterilizing people in
the state of Virginia up until nineteen seventy nine, over

(01:13:23):
seven thousand people. Here's the mind blowing part. The Act
was never declared unconstitutional. However, in two thousand and one,
the Virginia Assembly passed a joint resolution apologizing for this misuse.

(01:13:46):
But listen to how they say it. It's just like
somebody you know in these lawsuits. They I think it's
like they plead guilty, but they don't admit wrongdoing. And
they I think the the Purdue family did the same thing.

(01:14:08):
They were able to pay like seven billion dollars in damages,
but they never admitted they were wrong, and they were
never had to go to jail. That's basically what this was.
They passed a joint resolution and they apologized for this,
for the misuse of a respectable scientific veneer, right, and

(01:14:31):
they blamed it on racism, and they actually did. They
compensated the families of the individuals who were sterilized under
the Act, over seven thousand families. You know, how many
people knew that happened in the United States of America.

(01:14:52):
Like when anytime there's a World War two conversation, whether
I'm at a restaurant or a fellowship, you know, breck
fists something like that, and one of the old fellows
brings up World War Two? You know, So how about
them concentration camps? And I always say which one? The
ones in Germany are the ones in the United States?

(01:15:13):
What do you mean? United say? Oh, we had ten
cos you didn't know. That's how history is. It's one sided,
completely one side. And listen, one evil does not just
find another. I'm not here to do that right. In
no way, shape or form am I here to do that.
But we already talked about Buck versus Bell. A lot

(01:15:33):
of administration, coercion right, any modern state system that allocates
rights through forms. Right, they want to replace feeble minded
with modern categories. Right, you can't go up to somebody
and say, hey, you're your cousin's feeble minded. We're going
to sterilize them. That they had to change how they

(01:15:56):
went upon their style known as coercion. Right, that's exactly
what they did. But abortion and development policy is used
as sterilization by consent. And again we have planned parenthood. This.

(01:16:20):
They talk kindly of her, but then they quickly denounce
her belief in eugenics and what that is. It's an
institutional admission that eugenics language and alliances existed in the
early birth control movement. Right, I think time was she
the woman of the year at one point. Right, I

(01:16:42):
have to fact check myself. We'll see was margaret because
sometimes I get people mixed up time woman of the year.
I could be wrong, but I remember somewhere there was Okay,
while Margaret Sanger was a hugely influential figure in reproductive rights, say,

(01:17:04):
there's another word, reproductive rights. I have the right to reproduce.
I'm reproducing. I need to stop it. Founding planned parenthood
and championing birth Control. She was not named Time Magazine's
Person of the Year. Instead, she received other significant honors
like the Margaret Sanger Award, And if I'm not mistaken,
they did just change the name of that. Why does it?

(01:17:30):
So she was named one of back in the day,
she was named one of the one hundred March fifth,
twenty Dude. You know what's interesting this article from Time
magazine that just happened to populate under my search engine

(01:17:53):
March fifth, twenty twenty at six thirty three am. So
this was just about a week before the scamdemic kicked off,
and this article from Time magazine is all about her.
She I guess this was like the most one hundred
women influential women of the twentieth century nineteen twenty five,

(01:18:15):
so it's one women per year nineteen twenty five was
Margaret Sanger and then talking about how brave she was
took the stage in an international birth control conference to
argue for the health and happiness of the unborn child. Hmm,
that's interesting. Yeah, so she was considered one of the

(01:18:41):
one hundred women of the year, So she was number
whatever this is and it goes on and usaid, right,
the big hoopla people had everybody to do something with
US AID what was directly involved with abortion and what

(01:19:03):
they call family planning. And what they did was they
took it and used it as US foreign policy, built
population programs, as you know, stake craft starting in nineteen
sixty five. So the United States has been helped fund
abortions for the last sixty years. And you saw the people.

(01:19:24):
Even one of our local churches, like wrote a really
nasty letter to Trump for cutting off USA because apparently
it affected some of their money that had to do
with maybe their food closet. I don't recall exactly what
it was, but I talked to the pastor. I said, look, bro.

(01:19:45):
I didn't say look bro, I said, you know, it
wasn't until the nineteen thirties that when people were hurting,
they needed food, they needed clothing, they need to sheltered.
They didn't go to the government. They didn't go to
local office. They went to the church. And you know,

(01:20:08):
why are you involved with the government at all, especially
our government who looks away when Christians are persecuted. But
that's to be honest with you, that's the same church
that believes Israel is in a special place, right They

(01:20:29):
don't understand John fourteen six. They don't understand it, and listen.
We're not going to change the world overnight, but we
got to try, right. I've been sitting in this chair
for five years. That's saying that I'm right about it.
I'm not. I'm not better than anybody. I'm broken just
like everybody else. But many of our brothers and sisters

(01:20:52):
have been deceived, right, and that's what all of this
is really about. And I'm losing my voice. I can't
really go on anymore. I apologize. I had to give
a lecture this morning, and then I spoke with my
friend afterward for an hour and we're hitting about ninety
minutes here. My voice is about done, so we're going

(01:21:13):
to continue this. I do have a special presentation Sunday night.
I hope you'll take the time to listen to it.
We put a little bit of work into it and
it's a little different than what we normally do, but
it's Christmas time and it's a special Christmas podcast and
I hope you'll take the time to listen to it. Again.
Please visit our website, The Fact Hunter dot com. Check
out our substack. Would you subscribe for me? And if

(01:21:34):
there's an article you like, hit that like button and
share it with other people so we can gain some traction.
And if you'd like to send me a note, there's
two ways. You can send me an email the fact
Hunter atmail dot com, or you can go to the website.
At the bottom there's a little contact me and it'll
send a message right to my email. And I'm I
think I'm almost caught up. If you send me an

(01:21:55):
email and it's been a couple of weeks, re send it.
Sometimes I'll be in the car, I'll see it and
i'll forget to market and I think I've read it already.
I'm bad about that, and I apologize, but I'm gonna
wrap it up for today. I hope you have a
great rest of your week. God bless you. If you're
in the cold, be safe, and we've had a lot

(01:22:16):
of ice here the last couple of days. Don't want
to see anybody slipping and hurt themselves. But just God
bless you. Well, keep your head on a swivel and
Christ in your heart until we meet again, my friends,
we will see it.

Speaker 3 (01:22:33):
I know it's been a struggle. I don't know you've
had spain I do not feeling tie.

Speaker 4 (01:22:45):
Hell down all the way.

Speaker 3 (01:22:48):
Yeah, I know you feel it.

Speaker 4 (01:22:53):
You smile. I ain't the same.

Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
I still yeah, feel like you've lost your weight. Don't
give up. No, don't give it. Never is home. Don't
let call the primise. He ain't done yet.

Speaker 4 (01:23:16):
He's got a glad.

Speaker 3 (01:23:17):
Why it's a right? God up? Let me come? Why wait?
God he recalled.

Speaker 8 (01:23:36):
I can see the street beside you.

Speaker 4 (01:23:40):
Child's are putting up the fid.

Speaker 9 (01:23:44):
Oh you're stronger than anything. You Yeah, you're gonna be
all right. You're accepting it. A dead found you.

Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
Beautiful.

Speaker 4 (01:23:57):
You're shoving ride.

Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Yeah, you live in beauty.

Speaker 4 (01:24:04):
You can hold you head.

Speaker 3 (01:24:10):
Don't give up. No, don't give in.

Speaker 10 (01:24:14):
Never loss home. Don't they go on the primies. It
ain't Dunion's got a plan. Wat some raintel the God
of me come, don't give up. No, don't give in,
never live home. Don't let call the primies. It ain't

(01:24:35):
doun likeness worth living in?

Speaker 3 (01:24:38):
What's a way town? The god? Maybe cold? Why surprase down?
God cold? Oh? Yes, what surpray now the god? Baby? Come?

(01:25:00):
Oh yeah, God, don't give up. No, don't give in.
Never solved. Don't they go of the primis in and done.

(01:25:23):
Yeah's got up plan?

Speaker 8 (01:25:26):
Whats re die? God of ivy cops and don't give
it no dog given whatever hold do they go of
the primes? It ain't done, other's worth living?

Speaker 3 (01:25:42):
Watch and died, the god.

Speaker 2 (01:25:44):
Of every coors ah, the god of need cos. What's done.

Speaker 4 (01:26:08):
You're listening to the Fact Hunter Radio Network.

Speaker 10 (01:26:14):
Just the facts, ma'amy mm hm
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