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October 15, 2025 • 57 mins
https://amzn.to/4n9GzlU

THE NEW ORDER OF BARBARIAN The New World System
THE MOST FRIGHTENING TRUE STORY EVERY TOLD! On March 20, 1969, Dr. Lawrence Dunegan listened as a member of "The Order" delivered a hair-raising speech to a room full of doctors. He and the others were told not to record what they were hearing but, instead to take notes. The speaker insisted that he was doing the doctors a favor by explaining how the world was going to change. He said he believed if they knew, they would be better prepared to accept the coming changes. Anyone can read this book and know these changes are well underway. What we didn't know was where these changes have been taking us. Until now! Lock the doors, pull the curtains and prepare to see what you may never have realized. Once you understand the plan, you cannot help but to see it advancing all around you. The biggest question of all is not should we but, how can we... stop what is happening? Inside these pages is the transcript of three taped interviews on the "New Order of Barbarians," referred to on the tapes simply as the "new world system." Tapes one and two are the reminiscences by Dr. Lawrence Dunegan of a speech given in 1969 by an insider of "The Order," Dr. Richard Day, whose credentials are listed as Chairman of the Department of Pediatrics for the University of Pittsburgh; Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America and member of The Order."

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's the Opperman Report. Join digital forensic investigator and PI
Ed Opperman for an in depth discussion of conspiracy theories,
strategy of New World Order resistance, hi profile court cases
in the news, and interviews with expert guests and authors
on these topics and more. It's the Opperman Report, and

(00:28):
now here is Investigator Ed Opperman.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Okay, welcome to the Opperman Report. I'm your host, Private
Investigator Ed Opperman, and the show is brought to you
by Eleek. Email reviewer dot com. Email reviewer dot com.
Go to email reviewer dot com get an autograph copy
of my book How to Become a Successful Private Investigator.
Or you can go to Amazon dot com and get

(01:00):
a copy of the book without my stupid autograph. Who
needs the autograph, right, And it'll get you much quicker, uh,
And it's less hassle for me, you know. And I
got to tell you something. I mail these books out,
you know, and then you know, I'll get an email
I didn't get the book, all right, So then you know,

(01:22):
I send another book, you know, and then I get
other email I never got the book, and then we
got I never got the second book, you know, So
go to Amazon, get the buck. Oh my goodness, what
a night? What a night? What a band. But also
at email revealer dot com, we have all kinds of

(01:43):
professional services for you. Asset searches, locates, online infidelity investigations,
a cell phone forensics, computer forensics, all kinds of stuff
we can do for you at email review dot com. Okay,

(02:05):
I'm not allowed to say okay anymore on the show
because I get too many couple flints and my god. Okay, fine, listen, guys,
give me a break. You know, I didn't have the
next segment up in thirty seconds, and I would get
inundated with text messages. You know, Oh where is it at?

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Okay, Hey, okay, anyway, let's.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Get let's go on here. Let's start the show coming
up tomorrow five pm Pacific Standard time. We have a really,
really good show. You're gonna like this. What's this woman's name?
Oh my goodness, maybe we should cancel show. Tonight is

(02:59):
so good. I'm a little distracted this evening. Let's see,
her name was Randy something. Let me find this Randy Engele,
Randy Angle and her website is uscl dot info. And

(03:24):
it's another good show. I thought Tonight's show was a
very good show with the moon landing stuff. And then
Melinda Choma with her story which involves a lot of
other stuff, and it also involves her sister, Samantha Spiegel
from the Spiegel Catalog fame. Heir to the Spiegel Catalog fame,

(03:48):
who was Samantha Spiegel was the one who was She
was a little kid in a school and her teacher's
aide was John Mark Carr, and uh, when she sold
all this stuff on the news and stuff like that
about John Marcarr being involved with the Jominie Ramsey, she
contacted him and they sort of started a relationship and

(04:21):
he wanted her to recruit little girls in part a
cult for him, a bunch of dominating Ramsey types for
a cult for him, you know, to worship this weirdo.
And she ultimately had to get a restraining leorder against him.
And I thought it was an interesting story, so I
located her and I found her hardly ever been interviewed before.

(04:42):
And her sister is Melinda Choma, who had an interesting
story about her childhood experience through the adoption system, pretty
much sold to this family of con men and criminals
and then used and abuse in so many hearts ways
and both very wonderful woman needs a that I've met Anyway.

(05:08):
In two weeks we have coming up. It was gonna
be next week, but we have It's gonna be the
Kate Boyce from The Falcon and the Snowman. She's the
wife of the Falcon and she she helped write the
book and stuff like that. So we have her coming

(05:29):
on in two weeks on Saturday evening American Free and Radio.
But tomorrow we have this woman, Randy Angle, and it's
a fascinating story she presents us with her. First we

(05:52):
start talking about this doctrient that she has her hands on.
You know, before we get into that, I want to
hit you with a couple of things here, because Rush
Limbo has been going nuts. Every time I get in
my car, I gotta hear Rush Limbo, this oxy cotton addict.
You know, he took so much oxy cotton that he

(06:14):
went death. Okay, you gotta love this guy, you know.
And then by the way, too, don't forget the whole
thing where he was visiting Haiti with all this viagra.
You know, everyone talks about the Clintons down in Haiti.
What the hell was Rush Limbaugh doing down there in
Haiti with this viagra up to no good.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
We know that.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
But Rush Limbo has been going on and on and
on about the Steel dossier, the Christopher Steele dossier, and
I just want to clarify a couple of things. One
is that there's this idea that the dossier is faulty because, oh,

(07:04):
Christopher Steele didn't like Donald Trump. You know, I'm an investigator,
you know, by the way, and every bit an investigator
as christopas Steel were equals okay, professionally okay, you know,
and he's everybody's an investigator as I am. So what
we do is equal, okay, under the same guidelines, the

(07:29):
same ethics, all the same procedures, and we do everything
in the same Now, the idea that the client that
hires you is in opposition to the person they're hiring
you to investigate, like somehow that disqualifies the results of
the investigation is the most ludicrous thing on the planet. Obviously,

(07:55):
the client has a beef with the person you're investigating
on their behalf. Okay, it goes without saying, if there
wasn't a problem, they don't need me. This is that, Okay.
Then there's the idea that well, well, then somebody information
placed in the in the dossier was came from the Clintons. Again, yes,

(08:20):
your client's gonna give you some information you know that
you're gonna proceed with in your investigation. That's all perfectly normal. Okay,
that's what And and then you're gonna what you do
then is when you're investigating somebody, is one of the
first things you look for is, well, who has a
beef with them? Are there any lawsuits? Is there a divorce,

(08:44):
are there any outstanding leans or debts? And then you
go talk to those people that are in an adversarial
relationship with the person you're investigating to get the dirt
on them. They're the ones that want to talk. You
don't call up their friends or their their priests or
their pastor of their roommate. You know, hey, what do
you know about you? Oh, he's a great guy. No,

(09:05):
you find their enemies and you talk to their enemies.
But that's what are you out of your mind? Of
course that's what you do. This whole lie is crazy,
But anyway, I'm gonna make believe that's a legitimate argument.
The other thing is, okay, is this business about these

(09:30):
two FBI agents that were having an affair and all
their text messages are becoming public, and there was a
text message in there about how well potus wants to
be updated on what we're doing. And this was you know,
kind of doctored up to be some kind of nefarious
quote or whatever. Now I've been doing cell phone forensics

(09:53):
when it was first invented, not not doing it first.
I hired the people that who invented it. Okay, you know,
you know, let's get back to that. Go look at
my bio. You know online you can find it. You know.
When I first came into contact with the idea of
cell phone forensics, you know, is brand new, and I

(10:15):
met the guys who invented it for the CIA because
they were tracking down Bin Laden. They cloned been in
his phone, okay, and they had developed the software to
do to recover data from a cell phone, undelete deleted
texts and you know, phone numbers and stuff like that
from the cell phone. So I've been reading other people's

(10:39):
text messages since two thousand and two or two thousand
and three. I've sat down and I've read hundreds and
hundreds of thousands of other people's text message communications. And
I got to tell you this, it's not something it's
not easy. You can't read someone else's text messages and

(11:04):
pick up their voice and their structure and their habits,
and their their lingo and their little codes they're using
and stuff like that. You really got to sit there
and read it. And that's a lot of work. It's
a lot of time. And then even then you can
get stuff wrong. And I can give you one example.

(11:26):
We were doing an infidelity investigation and I thought I
picked up something, you know, great in this communication with
this woman's husband, and it turned out that what they
were really communicating back and forth via text with this
man and another man was about backing up his boat

(11:46):
into a boat slip and the two it's sexual activity.
But when you read the text, you can't tho, what
are they talking about here? You know. So you know,
and when I gave it to the wife, you know,
I said, hey, hoope, we found she's on hunter. They're
talking about his boat.

Speaker 4 (12:05):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
So the idea that you know, people can take these
texts and post them out of context, it's so easy
to do that. It's very simple. You know. You got
to really you got to know the cadence of people's conversations,
and you've got to really read a lot of text.
You got to be in there and know what you're
doing and to understand all this stuff and be able
to make an educated assessment of what's in a text message.

(12:32):
And there's a lot of code that goes on, and
kids talking about drug use, you know, instead of saying
the LSD or acid, they'll say SID you know. Or
when that whole thing was that the scissor stuff was
going around. So yeah, you got to keep your on
a kind of simp all right. So we have this guest,

(12:54):
Randy Engel, coming on tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
And I was.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
Going to interview her by homosexuality in the Catholic Church,
but she sent me this document called the New Order
of Barbarians, and we discussed it for about an hour.
But there's a lot of stuff that we glossed over
that I'd like to get into here. Now what this is.
There was a speech by a man named doctor Richard Day,

(13:26):
who was the chairman of pediatrics at the University of
Pittsburgh from nineteen fifty nine to nineteen sixty four, and
then he went to become the medical director of a
planned Parenthood Federation of American and he gave a lecture
at the Pittsburgh Pediatric Society in March of nineteen sixty nine.

(13:52):
Now there's other gentleman here who was a friend of
Randy Engel. His name is doctor Lawrence Done. He attended
the lecture, and he sat at this lecture and at
the beginning of the lecture, doctor Day says, please turn
off your recorders and don't record what I'm about to say,

(14:16):
and don't take any notes. But doctor Dunaghan disregarded that,
and he took some notes. This is nineteen sixty nine.
Now I went into over this with the doctor with
a Randy Engele to try and authenticate the date of

(14:37):
these notes and this interview of Lawrence doctor Lawrence Dunn again,
and I believe we did. We did, so we did
authenticate this this that he was there at this lecture.
That but even if we didn't, Okay, he attended the

(14:58):
lecture in nineteen sixty nine, but he did this interview
and he wrote down the transcript of the lecture in
nineteen eighty eight. And when you hear so ofch things
that are brought up in this lecture, but it's doctor
Gray this plan that they had for the new world

(15:18):
order of barbarian activity. Even if we were to give
them a betefit of the doubt and say, well, okay,
doctor Donagan made this up in nineteen eighty eight. Still
he's predicting things that took place that were not known

(15:42):
or under prediction in nineteen eighty eight. Now we're to
believe doctor Donagan says he took these notes in nineteen
sixty nine. Then what we're seeing here is earth shattering, okay,
And that there's no doubt that what's going on here
on the planet in the United States of America has
been in planning since prior to nineteen sixty nine. One

(16:05):
of the first I'm gonna give you the highlights of this.
One of the first things that doctor Gray says is uh,
Doctor Day says doctor rich Day. By the way, you

(16:25):
can find this at uscl dot info and you can
listen to the entire interview tomorrow evening. We plan to
enter the twenty first century with a running start. Everything's
in place and nobody can stop us now. Then he

(16:46):
goes on to talk about he insists that nobody have
a tape recorder and nobody take notes and then he
says people will have to get used to the idea
of change, so used to change that they'll be expecting change.
Nothing will be permanent. A society where people seem to

(17:09):
have no roots or moorings, but would be passively willing
to accept change simply because it was all they had
ever known. Look what's going on in our white, white
house today, constant chaos and change. People are too trusting,
People don't ask the right questions. So being too trusting

(17:37):
was equated with being too dumb. Everything has two purposes.
One is the ostensible purpose, which will make it acceptable
to people, and second is the real purpose, which would
further the goals of establishing the new system and having
it frequently. He would say, there is just no other way.

(18:01):
There's just no other way, he said. The population's growing
too fast. Numbers of people living at any one time
on the planet must be limited or will run out
of space to live. People won't be allowed to have
babies just because they want one, or because they care

(18:22):
or because they're careless. Most families would be limited to two.
Now this didn't happen yet, that most families are limited
to two babies. So this is one prediction in this
document that didn't come true, but most of these do.
And you'll see because I gotta remember this is in
nineteen sixty nine. The strategy then would be not to

(18:43):
diminish sexual activity, but to increase sex activity, but in
such a way that people won't be having babies. Contraception
would be very strongly encouraged. Now you look how they
created aids in order that we would all have to
but prophlectics on to prevent transmission of sexual restraining BND

(19:06):
to diseases versus herpes. And it was eights. Herpes wasn't
scary enough, so you know you're gonna put that that
plastic barrier, that rubber barrier. Contraception would be very strongly encouraged,
and it would be connected so closely in people's minds
with sex that they would automatically think contraception when they

(19:29):
were thinking or preparing for sex. How true is that
the sex education was to get kids interested early, making
the connection between sex and the need for contraception in
their lives. The younger you are now, yeahs, guys, this
is me talking now. The younger you think, these young

(19:49):
girls now they don't even consider having sex without the prophylactic.
No other contraception is in their mind. This was back
in nineteen sixty nine, four years before Roe versus Wade.
He said abortion will no longer be a crime. Abortion

(20:10):
will be accepted as normal and would be paid for
by taxes. And see people listening to this today right
that are young in their thirties and their twenties, And
I know we have a lot of listeners in the young.
Back in nineteen sixty nine, the idea that abortion wouldever
be legal was unheard of. The idea that you would

(20:33):
even live with somebody you weren't married with was unheard of.
People will be given permission to be homosexual. Homosexuality in
nineteen sixty nine was illegal. It was considered a mental illness.
Everyone will be given permission to have sex to enjoy

(20:54):
however they want. Anything goes, which is what we have today.
Families would be limited in size now this we don't have.
But the rest of this list of this divorce would
be made easier and more prevalent. Did you know that
back in nineteen sixty nine when this speech was given,
that you would go to the judge. Sometimes the judge

(21:15):
wouldn't grant the divorce there was no no fault divorces.
You had to petition the court to get divorce from
your wife. Sometimes they wouldn't allow it to be allowed
to be divorced. Unmarried people would stay in hotels and
even live together. That would be very common. Would even

(21:35):
ask questions about it. Now again, look at the movie
The Graduate where he's checking into the hotel with missus
Robinson and there's a big scandal that he is. He's
a fake name and he's checking in. Oh, and she's
hiding around the corner. It's back in nineteen sixty nine.
You couldn't check into a hotel with someone you weren't
married with. Okay, it was a scandal back in all this.

(21:59):
And to live even as roommates and different sex roommates
living in the same apartment unheard of. Look back to
the seventies. Threes company with a man with two women
living in his roommates was a scandal. Back in the
other day. He had to pretend he was homosexual, which
again was conditioning program. Everybody has a right to live,

(22:26):
only so long the old are no longer useful. They
will become a burden. Be ready to accept death. The
course of medical care listen to this, then this is
nineteen sixty nine. The cost of and even if this
was nineteen eighty eight, stop and think the cost of
medical care would become burdensomely hum high. Medical care would

(22:51):
be connected very closely with one's work. They didn't have
employment health programs back in nineteen sixty nine, and even
in eighty eight it was more common, but it wasn't
every you know, but also would be made very very
high in cost, so that it would be simply unavailable

(23:13):
to people beyond a certain time. Now, back in nineteen
eighty eight, you could go down through your er with
one hundred and fifty bucks in your pocket and walk
out of there without a bill. You go to the erarto,
you got a ten fifteen thousand dollars bill for nothing.
If you got no insurance, there could be like a

(23:38):
nice farewell party, a real celebration Mom and dad had
done a good job, and then after the party was
over they take the demise. Pill medicine would be much
more tightly controlled. We other ways to control healthcare. All
healthcare delivery would come under tight control. The courts will

(24:00):
be forced up so that people won't be able to
afford to go without insurance, which is what we have
right now. If you don't have insurance, I gotta hurning
right now and can get it fixed. I've never had
insurance my whole life, except under my father's insurance. Never
had insurance. I've paid for surgeries before in my life. Okay,
courts would be forced. Everybody's made dependent on insurance and

(24:25):
if you don't have insurance then you paid directly. The
cost of your care is enormous. That's what we have today.
They didn't have this in nineteen eighty eight, eighty eight.
I've not surgeries and stuff like that paid cash. Then
it talks about how the whole billing is fraudulent and

(24:47):
access to hospitals will be tightly controlled. Now, this is
an important one that we didn't get into on the
show tomorrow. The need for ID for idea identification would
start in small ways, hospitals, some businesses, but gradually expand

(25:09):
to include everybody in all places. In nineteen sixty nine,
a lot of people didn't have ID. You could you
could get away with driving without a license back in
those days, but in eighty eight you could check into
a hotel with that ID. In eighty eight you could
go to the hospital and give them a fake name.

(25:31):
When you went to the hospital I did. You could
fly with a fake name in nineteen eighty eight.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
Get on a plane, give them a fake name. Check
into a hotel, give me a fake name. It was
not go to a hospital, give them a fake name.
The solo practitioner would become a thing of the past.
A few diehards might try to hold out, but most

(25:58):
doctors would be employed by an institution.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Of one kind or another. Now, when I was a kid,
we actually had a doctor, doctor Pearth, who was this
Cuban doctor. He delivered my mother and delivered my brothers
in Cuba. Then he moved to the Bronx. I've told
some stories about doctor Pearth before. But when we were sick,
the doctors would do something called make a house call,

(26:23):
where the doctor would come to your house with his
little medical bag and give you a shot there in
your bedroom, come visit you in your bedroom, check your throat,
and give look at you. A house call, the doctor
would come to your house. Okay, believe it or not.

(26:47):
Now my daughter just broke her foot and you have
no idea what we're going through. Well, you gotta get
approval here from this, and sure before you can get
a referral from the first doctor we saw to see
the pediatrist doctor to put the cast on. We couldn't
get them to put a cast on for four days,

(27:09):
back and forth. I want to negotiate with people and
demand it. You know, you know me, I got a
pissed off I start, you know what, I get things done.
We'll tell you that. But but my god, what we
had to go through. The kids got a legit broke foot.
The term HMO was not not used at the time,
but as you look at HMOs, you see that this

(27:30):
is the way that medical care is being taken over. Ultimately,
there would be no room at all for the solo practitioner.
After the system is entrenched, which is pretty much you
don't see that the solo practitioner anymore. New diseases would
appear that had never been seen before. They'd be very

(27:52):
difficult to diagnose and be untreatable at least for a
long time. See this over and over. Autism aims all
this kind of stuff. All right, let's say what we're
doing here with the commercial time. It's time for a commercial.
I am pooped, I am really, really tired, and I gotta.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
Look up the freaking commercial again and every week.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
Nope, that's something I wanted to I actually rushed home
tonight to do this show for you. I was out
on a date, a really cool date, but I know
how much the audience loves the show. I sacrificed my
own person of the life just for you. And now

(28:50):
a word from our sponsors, Archival Revival, the Christian Film
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So that's Archival dot Revival at gmail dot com, or
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Remember all these shows on a wake are brought to
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(31:58):
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(32:41):
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you can use in court. That's Email revealer dot com.
Or you can contact me at Opperman Investigations at email
dot com. Mhm, okay, welcome back, Welcome back to the

(33:41):
opera report. I'm your host, Private nescater ed opera. So
we're talking here about this this lecture from doctor Gray
in nineteen sixty nine. And then he says nineteen sixty nine,
he says, we can cure almost every cancer right now.

(34:02):
Information is unfiled in the Rocketeller Institute. If it's ever
decided that it should be released, it should. If it's
ever decided it should be released. But consider if people
stop dying of cancer, how rapidly we would we become overpopulated.
Then he says, there is now a way to simulate
a real heart attack. It can be used as a

(34:26):
means of assassination. Only a very skilled pathologist who knew
exactly what to look for at an autopsy could distinguish
this from the real thing. Now, there's there's a point
I want to make here, and there's something about the
whole medical profession in general. That's where I think that
the doctors are tipped off in advance about plans and

(34:50):
population control and things like of that nature. And to
tell you the truth, that most are so greedy and
sellouts at the you know, look what they're doing with
the prescription drug corruption that they go along with it.
But I was trying to look this up, but I
heard about this conference every year that prosecutors go to

(35:14):
and judges go to this conference every year. They have
regional conferences and where pretty much they decide, hey, you know,
you know, this is how we're going to do things.
You know, defense attorneys aren't invited to this. Maybe some,
but it's really for prosecutors and judges. And this is
all part of the establishment's control over society. People would

(35:36):
have to eat right and exercise right to live as
long as before. Most won't stupid people who had no
right to continue living anyway. They would ignore advice and
just go on and eat what was convenient and tasted good. Right,

(36:00):
what do we have now? Nineteen sixty nine, fast food
wasn't all you know, it was a brand new thing.
Now I got this fast way. They put that pink
slime in the McDonald burgers. Oh my god, that disgusting.
What the hell is in chicken McNuggets? What isn't that?

Speaker 1 (36:17):
You know?

Speaker 2 (36:20):
The convenience foods would be by the way to this.
Back then they had TV dinners and it was almost
a legitimate food and a TV dinner except for that
mashed potatoes, but it was almost legitimate food there. Now
you buy some of the stuff, who the hell knows
what's in it? The convenience foods would be part of the hazards.
Anybody who was lazy enough to want to want the
convenience foods rather than fixing his own also had better

(36:43):
be energetic enough to exercise. You know, look at that
that documentary that guy did about spur Off, Morgan spur
Off about supersize me. You know that you're going on
a of Jess McDonald's. It practically kills you. The old
religions will have to go, especially Christianity. Then a new

(37:08):
religion can be accepted for all for use all over
the world. It will incorporate something from all of the
old ones and make it more easy for people to accept.
In order to do this, the Bible will be changed.
It will be written to finish to fit the new religion. Gradually,
keywords will be replaced. Now, I got to tell you, man,

(37:31):
you know there's a lot of people who before any
little word has changed in the Bible, there's a lot
of debate over that, and a lot of people who
would reject that. So that hasn't come about. But this
thing about how they started creating new religions, just think
in nineteen sixty nine, that's when all least cults started,
Jim Jones scientology, you know, the Moonees, Harry krishna Is,

(37:57):
something was going on. You know, they were experiment something
creating this new new religions. Now, some of you think
that some of you probably think the churches won't stand
for this. And he went out to say, the churches
will help us. Now, this is something I've seen in
my own experience, that the churches have changed so much

(38:19):
since I've gotten saved in nineteen eighty, whether they're more
new age and more watered down. As regards to education,
he indicated that kids would spend more time in schools,

(38:40):
but in many schools they wouldn't learn anything. They'll learn
some things, but as not as much as before. I'm
not sure what he said about a long school day.
I do remember that the school was planned to go
all summer, which we have a year around school here
in Nevada. To get that originally had been in a

(39:03):
bachelor's program would now require advanced degrees and more schooling,
so that a lot of school time would would just
be wasted. Now, I got to tell you this. If
you think back to when we were kids.

Speaker 4 (39:14):
And you know, I had a great education, Adam, a
Catholic school education up until eighth grade, then a public
school education, a public college you know, city university they
call it, you know, And.

Speaker 2 (39:33):
Compared to what I say, these kids getting today, these
high schools here in Nevada, man or a joke. They
just turned these kids through. But all their backpacks are
so heavy, my god. Then they're carrying these all these
books and stuff back and forth on their backs. For
what reason? We never had those that many. We would

(39:55):
leave your books at school. You know what changed to
make the kids carry these books back and forth? Especially
now they got laptops. Every kid brings a laptop to school.
Students would have to decide at a younger age what
they want to study and get into their track early.
If they would qualify, it would be harder to change
from another field of study once you get started. Now

(40:16):
that's kind of true too. They have high schools, you know,
they have high schools here in Nevada where you want
to be a lawyer, you know, to the medical field,
to the arts. Education would be lifelong. Adults would be
getting would be going to school. There will always be
new information that adults must have to keep up when
you can't keep up that in addition to revising the classics,

(40:39):
which I alluded to a while ago. With revising the Bible,
he said, some books would just disappear from libraries. We
just saw that today and they just removed books from
the school required reading. Gamblings would be repealed or relaxed
so that gambling would be increased. Then he indicated that
government would be getting to gambling. If this is really

(41:01):
in nineteen sixty nine, they didn't have OTB, they didn't
have lotteries back and then you know, they didn't have
gambling in Atlantic City in nineteen sixty nine, that was
the first next second state after Nevada, then the Indian casinos. Right,
the increased availability of drugs would provide a short a
sort of law of the jungle whereby the week and

(41:23):
the unfit would be selected out. Now, right, what have
we got? Now we got they're pumping out this fentonyl,
this OxyContin is, these opiates, one of those things, the
xanax and the diazepans. The same thing would happen with alcohol.
Not everybody should be free to travel the way they

(41:45):
do now in the United States. People don't have a
need to travel that way. In nineteen sixty nine, and
even in the eighties, okay, the early eighties. Anyway, in
the sixties, you got your wore suit and tie to
get on a plane. Okay, it was dignified, right, you know.

(42:07):
And then even in the eighties you'd still see people
in a suit and tile plane. So ifing that it
was dignified and there was certain respectability about it. But
now they treat you like an animal. You know. People
you see they got jailed. But every airport has a
jail in it, you know, I want you to know that.
And they take you, you know, you acting up or whatever,
they'll take you to that jail. But also too, I

(42:29):
started noticing this back in the eighties that every airport
in America is constantly under construction, where you can't get in,
you can't get out, there's cones everywhere, and there's get
on this bus and go to it's chaos. You know,
it's made to be inconvenient. It's made to be exhausting,

(42:52):
the whole thing traveling. And now you gotta have idea
to travel. Now you know you got to go through
these metal detectives to travel. It's made in convenient. Back
in sixty nine, this was unheard of. You got on
a plane without ID, you got a play without metal detector.
You know, they kiss your ass, you get on a plane.
But now travel is being restricted. And they predicted this

(43:15):
back and either in sixty nine or eighty eight, we
know this. This came out in eighty eight, so we
know even if this came out in eighty eight, it's
these predictions. Buildings and bridges would be made so that
they would collapse after a while. There would be more
accidents involving airplanes, railroads, and automobiles. All of this to
contribute to the feeling of insecurity, that nothing is safe.

(43:36):
What do I talk to you about all the time
about these DWY laws, these DUI laws, where they make
you think that hundreds of thousands of people are getting
or dying from drunk driving accidents when it's barely ten
thousand a year. Many of those are single car accidents
where no one's other person is injured but the drunk driver.

(43:57):
Some of those accidents are caused by sober Okay, But
they arrest hundreds of thousands of people a year. But
these little ten thousand deaths, probably millions a year, they
probably rest. There was no related sympathy for those who

(44:23):
were left behind in the jungle of drugs and deteriorating neighborhoods.
That's pretty true, right. We don't care about poor Vipan anymore. Okay,
this is interesting. The stated plan was that different parts

(44:43):
of the world would be assigned different roles of industry
and commerce and a unified global system. The continued pre
eminence of the United States and the relative independence of
the self sufficiency of the United States would be changed.
In order to create a new structure, you first to
tear down the old American industry was one example. Of

(45:04):
that our system would have to be curtailed in order
to other countries a chance to buildup their industries, because
otherwise they would not be able to compete with the
United States. Now, we used to have the biggest order
industry on the planet, right, and now all of our
cell phones, the iPhones are made in China, you know.
So these kinds of things, so different countries and different
regions that be assigned different things. The United States would

(45:26):
be kept strong in information communications, high technology, education, and agriculture.
The United States was seen as a continuing to be
the sort of keystone of this global system, but heavy
industry would be transported out. We've got Detroit's gone, right,
no more order industry, no more steel industry. Right, But

(45:48):
we're now we're technology, education, agriculture. This is true even
in eighty eight. If this is this was predictled in
eighty eight, this is unheard of. This is profetic. Hey,
I'm the entired. There were talks about people losing their
jobs as a result of industry, and opportunities for retraining

(46:09):
and particularly population shifts would be brought about. People got
to move out of Detroit, right, final place to live
because there's no jobs in there. You're in a new town.
You don't have those roots, you don't have connections with
your neighbors. Everyone here in Vegas is all new, you know,
and they don't talk to each other. There would be
a sort of people without roots, and their new locations
and traditions are easier to change in a place where

(46:30):
there are a lot of transplanted people. I see it
outside my door every day. We take control of the
port cities New York, San Francisco, Seattle, the idea being
that this is a piece of strategy. The idea being
that if you control the port cities with your philosophy
and your way of life, the heartland in between has
to yield some heavy industry would remain just enough to

(46:54):
maintain a sort of seed bed of industrial skills which
could be expanded things didn't work out as planned. One
of the upshots of all this is that with global independence,
the national identities would tend to be de emphasized. It
would all become citizens of the world rather than citizens
of any one country. Then he's to talking about baseball.

(47:25):
The way to break down baseball would be to make
salaries go very high. If this was in nineteen sixty nine,
The idea that baseball salaries would be this high unheard of.
The idea behind this was that the salaries would get
ridiculously high. There would be a certain amount of discontent
and antagonism as people resented athletes being paid so much

(47:46):
and what are they doing right now with the NFL.
The idea is that gun ownership is a privilege and
not everybody should have a gun. We definitely have that
now and sixty nine that was unheard of. People had
guns over the place. You can buying some guns. You
know nothing. Athletics would be pushed for girls. This was

(48:06):
intended to replace dolls. Baby dolls would still be around,
a few of them. Dolls would not be pushed because
girls should not be thinking about babies and reproduction and
what happened right and talk about the girls should beginning
into sports. What happened in nineteen seventy three, Bobby Riggs
versus Billy Jean King was promoted all over the place
around the world. Movies would gradually be made more explicit

(48:29):
in regards to sex and language. In sixty nine, this
was unheard of. We'll see people in the movies doing
everything you can think of. Violence, would be more graphic.
Think of the Walking Dead, this TV series. They put
this marathon on, this graphic, disgusting, horrific violence on that
show on a single episode. Our minds should be scarred

(48:49):
watching it. Back in the sixties, you had that show,
The Night of the Living Dead was horrific. You watch
that thing, you were terrified. And now you can watch
a whole marathon, this Night of this Walking Dead thing
like nothing happened, and sit there and joke about it
and laugh. As regards music, he said rather straightforward, a

(49:11):
statement like music will get worse. Music sucks now. Older
folks would just refuse to hear the chunk that was
offered to young people, and the young people would accept
the junk because it's identified them and their generation and
help them feel distinct from the older generation. Entertainment would
be a tool to once the young. It won't change
the older people, they are already set in their ways,

(49:32):
but the changes would all be aimed at the young
or in their formative years, and older generation would be passing.
Travel them would become very restricted. People would need permission
to travel, they would need a good reason to travel.
Everyone would need id How did he predict this even
in eighty eight, How did they predict this? It was
already planned that the latter on some sort of device

(49:53):
would be developed to be implanted under the skin that
would be coded specifically to identify the individual. Now we
don't know if they have that or not. Now they
could be doing it to us when we were born.
Food shortages would be created in a hurry, and people
would realize the danger of over population. The food supplies
to be brought under consensualized controls that people would have
enough to be well nourished, but they would not have

(50:15):
enough to support any fugitive from this new system. Walmart,
we have a system a few food distribution in this
country right now. The Walton family, the richest family in
the world, controls our food. If they would have shut
those doors, what would happen to this country? Then he says,

(50:38):
we can or soon we'll be able to control. But
whether he said, I'm not merely referring to dropping I
had eyed crystals into the clouds or participate rain, that's
already there. But real control to determine the response you
want to you want, you need only control the kind

(50:59):
of data or information that they're presented, or the kinds
of circumstances that they're in, and being rational people, they'll
do what you want them to do. We're running out
of time here, boy, so much hear and I'm losing

(51:23):
my voice to tell you the truth. I don't know
if I could read the rest of this.

Speaker 6 (51:30):
Let me see how much more there is. There's quite
a bit more. Oh yeah, there's too much men to read. Boy,
let me see. We'll go back up very a little bit.
There's quite a bit here.

Speaker 2 (51:56):
He says that admitting that some tipic research data could
be and indeed has been, falsified, in order to bring
about desired results, out of all this was to come
the new international governing body, probably to come through the
UN and with the World Court, but not necessarily through
those structures. People would willingly give up national sovereignty in

(52:21):
order to achieve peace, and thereby this would bring the
new international political system. If there were too many people
in the right places resisted, there might be need to
use one or two possible more nuke weapmons. He said
something about this negotiated peace would be very convincing. That
the whole thing was rehearsed, but nobody would know it.

(52:43):
People hearing about it would be convinced that it was
a genuine negotiation between ho style enemies. Think the fall
of Berlin Wall. Another justification for war was expressed if
you think the many million casualties in World War two
and World War One. Will suppose all these people had
not died, but had continued to live, then continued to

(53:07):
have babies, we would already be overpopulated. So these two
great wars served as a benign purpose in delaying overpopulation.
But now there are technological means for the individual and
the government to control overpopulation. So in this regard, war
is obsolete. Last time true, we let have war bus
because it's such a big business. Terrorism at that time

(53:28):
was thought would be necessary in the United States. It
could become necessary in the United States if the United
States did not move rapidly enough into accepting the system.
But the implication being that it would be used if
it was necessary, and just think a little bit of
terrorists terrorism would help convince Americans that the world indeed

(53:48):
is a dangerous place, or it can be if we
don't relinquish control to the proper authorities. Nine to eleven.
The school shootings, basically the idea being to prevent people
from accumulating any wealth which might have long range disruptive
influence on the system. The next step would be to

(54:11):
replace the single card with a skin implant. Now, by
the way, he's talking about debit cards and credit cards
way back in nineteen sixty nine, before these things were common,
they didn't have cards until the mid to late seventies.
Would be not losable or counterfeitable or transferable to another person,

(54:31):
and your accounts would be identified without any possible error. Now,
what do they hype twenty four hours a day on
the news on the new TV Identity theft, identity theft,
identity theft, identity theft, because they want you to get
a chip. You'll be watching the television and somebody will
be watching you at the same time at a central
monitoring station. They won't know that they're on there. At first,

(54:55):
this was described by being what we now know is
cable TV. The cable would be the means of carrying
the surveillance message to the monitor. There was some discussion
of audio monitors too, just in case the authorities wanted
to hear what was going on in the rooms other
than where the television monitor was. Anywhire that went into
your house. For example, your telephone wire could be used

(55:18):
this way. They have the Harmonica transmitter or the Infinity tap.
Any telephone can be used as a room monitoring device.
But now what do we have too? They put this
Alexa right device in our homeboy, listening to everything we
say all day, Well, we welcome it. Privately owned housing

(55:38):
would become a thing of the past. The cost of
housing and financing housing would be gradually made so high
that people could afford it. They kind of did that
with the housing bubble and the housing crash, where now
many banks own these houses. Gradually, more and more of
the population will be forced into small apartments, which would
not accommodate very many children. Homes could be taken by

(55:58):
increased taxes or other regulations that would be detrimental to
home ownership and would be acceptable to the majority. Ultimately,
people would be assigned where they would live, and it
would be common to have non family members living with you.
The roommate thing right here in Vegas, everybody's roommates. When
the new system takes over, people will be expected to

(56:20):
sign allegiance to it, indicating that they don't have any
reservations of holding back the old system. There just won't
be any room, he said for people who won't go along.
The system was not going to support them. When they
would not go along with the system, people just disappear.
And then there's like a question and answer. Quite a

(56:43):
bit more goes on here that you can read what
We're out of time and I am officially exhausted. And
so it comes up next to Pierce redvmand but check
out this show tomorrow with this Randy Angle and it's
a very good show. I want to thank everybody so much.
Don't forget To support the show, you go to Opperman

(57:05):
Report dot com and become a a member. We have
exclusive content in the member section and that's what keeps
this show alive. We're able to do a free show
for you on Friday nights and Saturday nights because of
the member section. Also, if you want to advertise on
a show, We've got a great newt sponsor coming on
the show, this new tea sponsor. I'm gonna be preparing

(57:30):
and testing this tea out and if I like it,
we're gonna be sponsoring that. They're wanna accept their sponsorship,
So check that out. But if you want to get
on the show and sponsor the show advertised on the show.
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