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Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Released Monday, 11th March 2024
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Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Ep. 4625: | The Time to Play Nice is Over | John Moore & Doug Hagmann | March 9, 2024

Monday, 11th March 2024
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Episode Transcript

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0:00

Coming to you from the

0:03

hagmanreport.com studio, located in

0:05

the Keystone State, birthplace of a

0:07

mighty nation, it's your host, Doug

0:09

Hagman. And

0:21

welcome ladies and gentlemen to this edition of the Hagman

0:24

Report. It's Monday, March 11, 2024. I

0:30

know you don't like it when I do

0:32

this, but Eric detected you have a good

0:34

weekend. I did. A

0:36

little under the weather, but I'm good. I

0:40

know that. Yeah, a little bit under the

0:42

weather, but you know what? He's

0:45

looking good. He just sounds a little

0:47

bit off, but walking

0:50

around like a zombie. I think he, I

0:53

think he, were you bitten by a

0:55

zombie? You know, no, that's all

0:57

right. You don't have to answer. All right. He's

1:00

got to actually reach over a couple

1:02

of boxes to get to the mic, which

1:04

we got to fix that for you

1:06

so you can more readily respond as

1:08

opposed to having to do gymnastics over

1:10

there in your production

1:14

spaceship. Anyway,

1:16

have a great show lined up for you today, folks.

1:19

A lot of things to get into. Really

1:23

laying things out, but before

1:26

laying how everything is playing out,

1:28

laying it out. But

1:30

before I do two things, folks, if

1:32

you haven't done this already, make

1:35

sure you join me in

1:37

Wausau, Wisconsin. You might say, what?

1:41

That's right. Wausau,

1:43

Wisconsin. And that is going

1:45

to be on April 12th and 13th. Wisconsin

1:49

Christian News. Hey,

1:51

Coach Dave Dabenmire, Mike

1:54

Spaulding, many others. I

1:57

mean, I'm going to tell you what. a

2:00

class, if you take me out of that

2:02

lineup, a class lineup, I'll

2:05

pull up the end. But

2:08

folks, I'm gonna be bringing actual crime scene

2:11

evidence. I'm

2:14

signing out, never before

2:16

seen, and probably

2:18

will never again be seen

2:21

in person. And

2:23

that's from, actually, from

2:26

a couple of satanic

2:28

ritual abuse cases. I

2:32

can guarantee you, when you look at this stuff,

2:34

you're gonna be, whoa, whoa, whoa. Because

2:37

I certainly, that was my

2:39

reaction. And this may,

2:41

in fact, be the last conference I do. So,

2:44

and I say that just

2:47

because of the way things are going,

2:49

I don't know. But I

2:52

would urge everyone to go to

2:55

wisconsinchristiannews.com and through

2:57

Coach Dave Dobbenmeier's website, Coach Dave

2:59

Live, that's where you purchase the

3:01

tickets. I mean, I think

3:03

they're all of $69. And

3:06

by the way, am I

3:09

right? Yeah, yeah, okay. And

3:11

by the way, the way this conference is laid out,

3:14

this will not tire you out,

3:17

okay? It's nine to five on

3:19

Friday, or I'm sorry, I

3:21

can't read that. Six

3:23

to nine p.m. Friday, and then nine

3:25

to five on Saturday. Just

3:28

the way the glare was hitting that

3:31

part of the preview monitor. Anyway, the

3:34

theme, of course, we won't back down. Folks,

3:37

I'm telling you, this is going to be

3:39

a great, I'd love to meet you, I

3:41

really would. So please, mark your calendars, April

3:43

12th and 13th, 2024. And

3:47

the theme, of course, we won't back

3:49

down. Get your tickets right away. It's

3:51

my understanding that seating is limited, so

3:53

you want to do it soon, like

3:57

after the show. All right.?

4:00

The second thing I when I just

4:02

mentioned this folks if if you haven't

4:04

heard about this ah Metics I call

4:06

it which is nano so month new

4:09

this is a spray. There's

4:11

a topical gel and a cream

4:13

as well. I

4:16

have never used. Ah,

4:19

I'm I'm minutes in his

4:21

know. There's so many things

4:23

out there were you can

4:25

invest. Spend. And. Even sometimes

4:28

wish your money this is not

4:30

one of them. This. Is.

4:34

And. And this is a product. I.

4:37

Have to be careful what I say. But

4:40

this tells your body. What?

4:44

The fix him and your

4:46

body fixes it live in

4:48

my mind. Okay, in in

4:51

my limited capacity mentally. that's

4:53

kind of will. When

4:55

I'm thinking. Isn't the best way to

4:57

describe it? On

5:00

it can. it's free Isis,

5:02

You know whatever might be wrong

5:04

with you and then tells

5:06

your toes yourselves, Your body. Hey.

5:09

Six that. Ah

5:11

I'm I have I have spoken

5:13

the the Me tie some of

5:16

so in of people and and

5:18

myself included Did you talk about

5:20

the neuropathy. With depending on

5:22

what the cause might be, I doesn't

5:24

matter really with the causes, I don't

5:27

think ah but diabetic neuropathy? ah. I'm

5:30

telling you what, That.

5:33

When my case. I had

5:35

a so bad there were times that

5:37

tears came out of my eyes. Be.

5:40

A When? Who would? who? If he

5:42

were that he was haven't. Yet.

5:45

As restore ancestry lot of people

5:47

out there arm. Bar.

5:49

Say What? A

5:52

few weeks to this. And

5:54

I go through. but I'm a bottle a week.

5:58

The few weeks service. A

6:00

certain noticing when a second said that I

6:02

haven't either. Apathy. Mean.

6:05

I don't know. I

6:07

and it's not lessons,

6:09

it's absence. Made

6:12

my blood searle as seriously, my

6:14

blood sugar levels. I

6:17

am absolutely incredible Folks go

6:20

to I want my health

6:22

back. Last

6:25

Hagman. Or. Simply

6:27

going to hang with the odds are

6:29

com. Click on the link above. but

6:31

do me a favor. watch the videos.

6:33

first. Watched him all the way through.

6:35

Watch a video. Yeah, I know, I

6:38

know that watch the videos. Or.

6:41

Or or not. I'd I'd like,

6:44

I'd like to. So. There

6:46

it is run the top your screen

6:48

mouth know top it's in the movie

6:50

or scream or seconds gonna. Mess

6:52

with the right there you can see there is read their.

6:55

Their the products and by the

6:57

way the topical job i cut

6:59

myself when I was a town.

7:01

He are kind of stuff almost.

7:04

That. In itself, I cannot

7:07

believe how well that. See.

7:09

Old Ah, I'm. He

7:12

ugly cut I had a my hands

7:14

it's guns concealed. Gun.

7:18

Or with me as John More from

7:20

well he's he is the Liberty Men,

7:22

the Liberty Mint or com before he

7:24

gets zone I went to play this

7:27

this is going to this this well.

7:33

This. Will outline or can

7:35

give you an idea

7:38

of. In my in

7:40

my again and my mind on.

7:43

The. time zone i gonna spin

7:45

this can since stage for today's

7:47

show this is video and on

7:49

the show prep i have to

7:51

do is gonna hang together com

7:54

click on the episode sidle defined

7:56

delivery man by the way his

7:58

links his website but also to

8:00

find this and any other source

8:04

article link that we use in

8:06

today's show. But

8:08

this is Dan Bongino

8:10

specifically addressing something that

8:13

I think all of us need to

8:15

come to grips with. Oh,

8:17

don't worry, it's

8:20

clean and it's,

8:23

well, hey, you're watching for yourself. This is a

8:25

video. We've got one from the show group.

8:29

I've got a complaint. I know

8:31

the campaign wants to win over Nikki Haley's

8:33

voters, but I don't think you

8:35

do that with name calling. For example, I

8:38

take issue with Trump's new nickname

8:40

for California governor calling him New

8:43

Scum. I don't think

8:45

that's a good idea. I object to that kind of

8:47

language. How about you? Well,

8:50

I think that what Governor Gavin

8:52

Newsom has done to the great

8:54

state, once great state of California

8:56

is terrible. You see, excuse me.

8:59

Are you OK with bringing back? Excuse me.

9:01

Are you OK? Are you

9:03

saying it's OK to bring that kind

9:05

of language to a presidential campaign? New

9:07

Scum? That's OK. I

9:11

think the real problem here, Sue, is

9:13

the policies of the deranged Democrats from

9:15

Gavin Newsom to Joe Biden. I think

9:17

your campaign has a problem with language like

9:19

that. You don't agree with me, but I

9:21

think your campaign has a problem with language

9:23

like that. Well,

9:26

I don't think voters respectfully agree with you

9:28

either, Sue, if you look at the resounding

9:30

wins that President Trump has received across the

9:32

board. You think you've got to win over

9:34

Haley voters with language like that, do you?

9:36

You win over moderates and women with language

9:39

like that? Right. Folks,

9:41

there's an answer for this, and I'm not telling anyone

9:43

how to do their job. She is super talented. This

9:46

is not in any way directed at Carolyn, who I know

9:48

pretty well. She's fantastic. I had her on my radio show.

9:50

I think she ran for Congress. She did a pretty good

9:52

job, too. The answer to this question

9:54

is fairly obvious. When

9:57

someone asks you, are you OK with language like that? Yeah, especially

9:59

we're going to be. using more of it. These

10:01

are communists weaponizing our government,

10:03

destroying people, inflating away our

10:05

economy, the dramatic price of

10:07

food, you have families on the verge

10:09

of starvation. Yeah, we're gonna use every

10:11

tool in the toolbox, including mockery, to

10:13

make sure everybody understands the scum these

10:16

people are. Any other questions? QT

10:20

time is over. It

10:22

is over. You want to play cute?

10:24

This is, I'm just gonna be fairly

10:26

candid with you. This is not the

10:28

show for you, because this is never gonna

10:31

be that show. Nor

10:34

is this. And that sets the stage

10:36

to bring John Moore on. To me,

10:38

QT time is over. We're not going

10:40

to play that game. I'm not

10:42

going to be forced or

10:45

compelled to engage in

10:47

your fantasy of trans-whatever.

10:51

I'm not gonna do that. I'm not

10:53

going to, I don't care. I don't

10:55

care. You are, our enemy

10:59

is this communist Leviathan.

11:03

And we have been infiltrated, we've been,

11:05

our leaders have been

11:08

compromised, and we have to fight. And we

11:10

have to fight like our

11:12

lives depend on it, because

11:14

they do. John Moore, thelibertyman.com.

11:17

Thanks for joining me today. It's good

11:19

to see you. You're looking fabulous. Folks,

11:22

the link to John's show will

11:25

be at hagmanpi.com, as it always is,

11:28

and in the episodes. But John,

11:30

how are you today, sir? I'm

11:32

wonderful, Doug. Good to be with you. And

11:34

I noticed you do have a suntan. You

11:36

look great. I do? You look great. I

11:39

feel good. Doggone it, I

11:41

look good. What

11:43

was that character from Saturday

11:45

Night Live? Anyway,

11:47

folks, you know what I'm talking about.

11:49

Some of you anyway. But well,

11:51

thanks. You do, too. You look great as well.

11:54

So, John, do you agree? I mean,

11:57

I think it's time that we

11:59

that we fight with everything that we

12:01

have because our countries at stake, our lives

12:03

are at stake, our futures are at stake.

12:05

What are your thoughts, my friend? Well,

12:07

I'm not focused so much on

12:09

the language that President Trump uses, which it

12:12

does alienate a few people, but that's kind of

12:14

a side issue, I believe. President

12:18

Trump and others, including myself, and I believe

12:20

you Doug, are also advocating that we have

12:23

a free and parallax in which involves paper

12:25

ballots with a carbon copy counted

12:28

at the precinct level, one

12:30

day voting, no mail-in ballots, no ballot

12:32

harvesting. Of course, there

12:34

will be ballot harvesting that's coming in

12:37

lots because it's legal in certain jurisdictions,

12:39

and I'm proud to say that Republicans

12:41

are taking advantage of every legal way

12:43

to win this election, including

12:46

ballot harvesting. If it's legal,

12:48

go ahead and do it. Absolutely. It needs

12:50

to be abolished. If

12:52

it's legal in a particular jurisdiction, it

12:54

needs to be taken advantage by the

12:57

Republicans as well as Democrats. So

13:02

many elections recently have been held

13:05

out as the most important election ever. In

13:09

the case of this 2024 election, the first

13:11

Tuesday in November, I believe

13:13

it's not inaccurate at

13:15

all. We call this the

13:17

most important election we've ever had. We're

13:20

certainly at a crisis point with

13:23

we don't know how many illegal aliens the

13:25

official numbers appear to be hovering around 10

13:27

to 11 million unofficially. I'm

13:30

hearing and seeing twice, sometimes three times

13:33

that many. That's an

13:35

unacceptable number of people. I

13:38

can easily see President Trump making

13:41

use of school buses, public

13:45

buses, whatever it takes

13:48

to get these people out of the country with the largest deportation

13:51

effort ever undertaken in our country.

13:53

It needs to happen, Doug. It's

13:56

simply unacceptable to have this

13:58

many illegal aliens. alien

14:00

criminals in our country. They need to be

14:02

gone. They need to go back to where they came from. And

14:05

if their home country won't accept them, drop

14:07

them off in Mexico. Make sure they can't get back

14:09

in, Doug. No,

14:11

I totally agree with you. And especially

14:14

on the tactics, and this

14:16

is something that I thought about.

14:19

Look, I'm a believer.

14:22

One vote, ID, paper ballots,

14:25

people counting them. Okay, that's

14:27

the same as you. I believe

14:29

in that. But in

14:31

many jurisdictions, we don't have

14:34

that. So therefore, in

14:37

my view, and I think this mirrors what

14:39

you've just said, we play by

14:41

their rules. And in some cases, they're

14:44

not playing by the rules. So why should

14:46

we? We have to fight on the level.

14:49

We have to level the playing field, I

14:51

guess, and fight as they

14:53

do. If you

14:55

can vote early, vote early. If

14:57

you can, I

14:59

mean, do whatever you have to

15:01

do to win, because you're absolutely

15:03

correct. I believe, and

15:07

we're not that far apart in age, you're

15:09

probably what, 50, 60 years older than I

15:11

am? At least.

15:13

Yeah. No,

15:17

the way I look at it is, this is

15:19

the most important election in our lifetime. And

15:22

I'm seeing things heating up. Are

15:24

you seeing the rhetoric,

15:29

the neighbor against neighbor, especially

15:31

on social media? Are you seeing that heat

15:34

up at all? I'm worried that it's there.

15:36

I don't see it so much myself. But

15:38

I'll tell you, Doug, when I go to the local coffee shop,

15:41

I interact with people that are

15:43

high school dropouts, others that have

15:46

advanced degrees from various universities. And

15:48

there's an undertone of

15:51

people just thought they've

15:53

had it with the

15:56

US government, the healthcare system,

15:58

the politics. Almost

16:02

without exception, they see

16:04

Donald Trump as part of the solution, not

16:06

the entire solution, obviously, coupled

16:08

with electing patriotic conservative

16:11

Christians at every level,

16:14

the local school board, city

16:16

council, mayors, sheriffs, and so

16:18

forth. Donald Trump by himself can't

16:20

possibly do this. Of course not. We

16:23

need a surge of conservative Christian

16:25

patriots across the country to be

16:27

elected to every office we can

16:29

imagine. We need

16:31

in all 50 states, we need to do

16:33

away with mail-in ballots. Third

16:36

world countries have voter

16:38

ID. Doug,

16:40

it's inherently racist for Democrats to

16:42

say it affects black people who

16:45

don't have government-issued

16:47

voter ID. Doug,

16:49

you cannot function in this

16:51

society without a government-issued

16:54

voter ID. You simply can't, including the

16:56

entire black community. That's

16:58

a fiction, and it's inherently racist to make that

17:00

statement on the face of it, isn't it, Doug?

17:02

Oh, yeah, yeah, it sure is. And

17:05

folks, don't underestimate your ability

17:07

to change things. I

17:10

have already committed

17:13

myself signed up and am

17:15

going to be a poll watcher

17:18

slash challenger. Now, that

17:21

second part is new, but here's

17:23

the thing. When

17:26

I go there and I'm

17:29

able to supervise

17:31

what takes place, no

17:34

one's going to tell me where to stand. Of

17:36

course, I'm going to be respectful, but

17:38

no one's going to tell me I can't see.

17:46

No one's going to tell me I can't do my

17:48

job. Obviously, I'm going to respect the voter. I'm going

17:50

to respect their privacy. But

17:53

when it comes time to count the ballots

17:55

or do whatever, I'm

17:57

going to make sure that they're not in

17:59

the right place. sure I'm there. No one's going to put a

18:01

pizza box in front of me. No one

18:03

is going to make me sit in a corner. And

18:06

if they do, and

18:08

I already have a list of attorneys

18:11

that they had given out

18:13

to the whoever's

18:15

in charge of this

18:18

election. So

18:20

I intend to attempt to make a

18:23

difference here in my county. So

18:26

everyone can do that. And I think

18:28

everyone should who cares and who can

18:30

do that. Go ahead, sir. Well,

18:33

Doug, in 1994, I was doing

18:36

executive protection for the woman

18:38

who was in charge of the Missouri anti-gambling

18:40

campaign. And election day, the

18:42

first Tuesday in November, 1994, she

18:45

was a registered poll watcher in a

18:48

city of St. Louis precinct where for

18:50

decades more ballots came out than

18:53

voters came in the door. It was

18:55

no secret at all. So we're there

18:57

doing this thing, watching the polls. I was watching

18:59

her to make sure she's safe. One

19:01

of the alderman of that precinct came in, who

19:04

happened to be the

19:06

father of the mayor of St. Louis at the time. And

19:09

he's two, this is

19:11

a black, 99% black precinct.

19:15

He asked these two women who they were,

19:17

they identified themselves shoulder credentials, and he demanded

19:19

they leave. Well, they refused. And

19:22

so he said, I'll call the police. The

19:24

poll watchers said, I think you should call

19:26

the police. So the two uniform

19:28

officers show up. They listen to the alderman.

19:30

They talk to the two poll watchers and

19:33

they told the alderman took a hike. And

19:35

we spent the rest of the day at that

19:37

poll, watching what was

19:39

going on and making notes and counting

19:42

the voters as they came on

19:45

the door, which is critical. You

19:47

can't have more ballots go out the door than

19:49

you have voters come in the door. That's

19:51

absolutely critical, Doug. And if you add up

19:54

the total Biden vote count from 2020

19:57

and the total Trump.

20:00

account voter count from 2020 you have

20:02

more voters than you have voters than

20:04

you have since that's not possible Doug

20:06

it simply isn't No

20:13

But you know that's fraud on the

20:15

face of it even if you're

20:17

not choosing who was who was

20:19

defrauded That's automatically fraud on

20:21

a face of it when you have more

20:23

ballots than you have voters Doug. No, you

20:25

you you're a hundred percent, right? and To

20:29

think otherwise, I mean I have no doubt in

20:31

my mind That

20:33

2020 obviously folks that

20:36

was a stolen election. There's no way in

20:38

hell Biden got 81 million votes That

20:42

that guy couldn't get the you

20:44

know, half a dozen people in the

20:46

six-foot circles. Okay So

20:51

it was a stolen election in 2020 what

20:53

gets me though John is the

20:57

right the Republicans in

20:59

this case In

21:02

2022 they believed hey we can you

21:04

know, we can win just on the

21:06

numbers And and and

21:08

they took a beating again, but

21:10

they played the same game as they did

21:13

in 2020. You can't be polite Oh

21:15

can't be polite. Yes be tough Yes,

21:18

you have to play the same game that they're

21:20

playing. We have no choice Doug. We

21:22

really have no choice and We

21:25

keep hearing over and over again that these 10 million

21:27

plus you'll do the aliens are going to be voting

21:29

Well, they'll be right here to vote. They won't they

21:31

won't necessarily go to the polls But

21:33

the Democrats will vote on her behalf even they never show

21:35

up at the polls won't they Doug? Exactly

21:38

and I have a prize see Man,

21:42

I got a big problem with all this. Okay You

21:46

know there there are hundreds

21:48

of NGOs out there Being

21:51

paid by the United States. I I'm

21:53

gonna be involved

21:56

in a webinar with

21:59

pastor Paul Begley And

22:01

my topic is about the invasion

22:03

of the US and really the

22:05

global invasion of the West, but

22:08

how the

22:10

apocalyptic nature of all this. So,

22:15

but to your point, okay, the

22:19

damage, they're

22:21

being used as human ammunition,

22:26

many of these people, at

22:28

least the ones who are

22:30

truly attempting to seek a

22:32

better life, I don't know, maybe all 12, 14 of them. But

22:38

they're being used as human ammunition, and

22:40

of course, they're being used by

22:42

the left in ways

22:45

that I don't even

22:47

think we can imagine, but also as

22:49

assets for the votes. Go ahead. Well,

22:51

Doug, we've seen multiple

22:54

reports from the Darien Gap, which are good

22:56

and necessary, and I need to continue on

22:58

one hand. You

23:00

and I are both broadcast journalists, and I

23:03

would like to see several journalists

23:06

go to places like

23:09

Guatemala and

23:12

Venezuela, in

23:15

the Middle East and in Africa. We

23:17

have refugees coming here from Africa,

23:20

going to the African countries, and

23:23

find out and document what's

23:26

being broadcast and radio reports,

23:28

TV reports, newspaper reports, getting

23:30

these people, recruiting these people.

23:33

What propaganda is being used to recruit

23:35

people to come from eight and ten

23:37

time zones away to the United States?

23:41

I'd really like to see that, and find out

23:44

more importantly, who's paying for it. Who's

23:47

paying for the TV ads in

23:49

Guatemala, the radio ads in

23:51

Guatemala, the newspaper ads

23:53

in Guatemala to get these people

23:55

to leave their

23:57

homes, leave their families, and come back.

24:00

the United States, what promises are being made,

24:03

what supports being given to them. You

24:05

know what's sad? I have kind of an

24:07

answer for you on this. And

24:10

folks, listen to me carefully. This

24:13

invasion, at least to the United

24:15

States, to answer your question, first

24:18

of all, it's being funded

24:20

primarily by or through, again,

24:24

different tactics here, and

24:26

by the, and through the United Nations. It's

24:29

non-governmental partners and

24:31

regimes that are

24:33

hostile to the United States. Now,

24:35

under Biden, funding

24:38

from us, UNI, U.S.

24:40

taxpayers, to the

24:42

UN jumped to more than $1 billion

24:46

in 2023. Mass

24:49

migration has been weaponized

24:51

to overwhelm and destabilize

24:54

the U.S. and ultimately break

24:56

it apart. Now, last year, a record

24:59

half million illegals

25:03

traveled through the Darian Gap Document Show.

25:06

The United Nations and related

25:08

NGOs, which received

25:10

millions of taxpayer dollars, have

25:13

made mass migration easier by

25:15

facilitating and augmenting this

25:18

migrant movement with food, shelter, and

25:20

water, all of which is being

25:22

paid for, most

25:25

of which is being paid for by NGOs

25:28

funded in part by the United

25:30

States via the UN, and in

25:33

some cases, so-called charity

25:35

groups like the Soros Open

25:37

Society Foundation, and its

25:39

different tentacles. But

25:43

the other part of what you said, it's

25:47

in Spanish, I could tell you this, when

25:50

Biden took over and

25:52

his first 100 days in office, he

25:55

got rid of 94 restrictions

25:57

that President Trump imposed.

26:00

And also, sent out

26:02

the clarion call titled, La

26:04

In... It's

26:07

the invitation in Spanish, I can't

26:09

pronounce Spanish. And

26:12

the, all of the ads in

26:15

Spanish, Latin and some

26:17

in South America, are,

26:20

hey, seek a better life, come to America.

26:23

The doors are open, kind

26:25

of like Biden, Motel 6, we'll leave the light on for

26:27

you. We're not going to harass you, you're

26:29

not going to get stopped. But

26:31

that, because I've, and

26:34

I'm going to show up after

26:36

this, I spoke to Michael Yahn

26:38

throughout, well, I've been speaking with

26:40

him quite, communicating with

26:42

him quite frequently in the

26:44

Invandros Seal. And they're

26:47

saying, they were down in Panama,

26:49

they were down in Latin America, South,

26:51

parts of South America, Michael's

26:53

been everywhere. And

26:56

they're saying that

26:59

the promises

27:02

made by Mayorkas and by Biden and

27:04

Mayorkas, saying we're not going to stop

27:06

you, just come on in and you'll

27:08

have a chance at a better life.

27:12

That's kind of what's being said that

27:14

I can verify. There may be

27:16

other things, I don't know. I don't know about Europe or

27:19

Western Europe, I don't know what's going on there.

27:22

But this is a global thing. Go ahead, sir. Well,

27:25

it is. Talk

27:27

about Venezuela for a bit. The

27:30

prisoners and the insane asylums. If

27:34

you think about providing food,

27:36

shelter, clothing, medical supplies for

27:39

criminals and the

27:41

mentally insane is

27:43

expensive, of course it is. So

27:46

what I'm reading is that Venezuela is

27:48

clearing out the prison, which includes

27:50

rapists, murderers, armed robbers, the insane

27:52

asylums, where people obviously

27:55

have severe mental health issues

27:58

and they're loading them up. shipping

28:00

them to the United States, which

28:03

accomplishes two things. It provides

28:07

them with a financial advantage that they

28:09

didn't have before in saving all the

28:11

tens of millions of dollars. And

28:15

they're helping to wreck the United

28:17

States, which is another goal of Venezuela as a communist

28:19

country. And one of their goals,

28:21

of course, is to destroy the United States.

28:23

So it's a win-win situation for Venezuela to

28:26

clear out the prisons and the incentive times to

28:28

ship these men and women to the United States.

28:34

It's dynamite with a fuse already lit,

28:37

though, is what it is. We have men

28:40

who are obviously part of the People's Liberation Army

28:42

coming here. We have the insane

28:44

asylum people from Venezuela, the criminals

28:46

from Venezuela coming here, sometimes

28:50

walking across the border in Texas. Other

28:53

times we're now finding, being flown to

28:56

probably regional airports. These

28:58

regional airports, Doug, once it's

29:01

dark, there's almost nobody there, a few

29:03

maintenance people. There's no customs people,

29:05

hardly anything at all. Somebody in the tower

29:07

to make sure planes can land and take

29:09

off safely. But these regional

29:11

airports are virtually empty at night. And

29:14

I'm pretty sure it's where they bring them into, Doug. I've

29:16

had documentation and firsthand witness accounts

29:19

of that going back eight and

29:21

ten years. 43

29:23

airports, 320,000 illegals in this silence, these silent flights in

29:26

the middle of the night.

29:34

And I believe you are correct. I think

29:36

they are the regional airports that

29:39

you speak of that

29:41

are the recipients of these illegals

29:43

who are then bused to wherever. So

29:46

I think you're 100% on the ground. Every

29:48

force I got going back, like I say, six

29:51

or eight years ago, one,

29:53

I had a reporter down in Springfield,

29:55

Missouri, which has a regional airport. Springfield

29:59

is about a quarter million. people. Branson, Missouri is

30:01

just south of there, about a half

30:03

hour drive. And these

30:05

planes would come in late at night. They

30:08

would land. There's no customs people, no officials,

30:10

no police. They offload the

30:12

aircraft. And at the time, we

30:14

found out they were using UPS cargo

30:17

airplanes that have been reconfigured

30:19

by putting seats on. Apparently,

30:21

they're set up so they can install

30:23

or remove seats in a matter of a few

30:26

hours. They're de-planning

30:28

and getting on the vans

30:30

and getting on interstate 44 right there

30:33

and leaving for places

30:35

unknown. There's nothing new about this.

30:37

What's new about it is it's being reported to

30:39

the public. But I've been reporting it for six

30:41

or eight years, Doug. You've

30:44

been on top of things. And

30:46

folks, John Moore, thelibertyman.com, if

30:48

you haven't done so already,

30:51

bookmark his website. But

30:53

also listen to his show because

30:55

he has some tremendous guests on,

30:59

deep dives into subjects that you're

31:01

interested in if you're listening to

31:03

the show. I

31:05

can't say enough good about

31:08

what I hear. I mean, I have a show

31:10

on in the background. I use

31:13

some of it for show prep.

31:16

But that's John Moore. And plus,

31:18

you class this operation up quite

31:21

a bit. But

31:24

yeah, boy,

31:26

I don't think you can be

31:28

more correct than you

31:31

are right now. Well,

31:33

thank you, Doug. It's my passion. When

31:36

I was 18 years old, I

31:38

had to pull out when I was my

31:40

freshman year in college, what my goal

31:43

was, my career goal, and that was to be a journalist. At

31:46

the time, there was no such thing as talk radio

31:48

in the modern sense of the word. But

31:51

here I am now, half a century later, a

31:54

broadcast journalist. And I love it. I'd

31:56

much rather be doing this and investigating

31:58

homicides, which as you and I

32:00

have done many times. I've,

32:03

but he has a old saying, you

32:05

know, right? Well, I

32:07

could sit down and count them, but

32:09

unlike books, movies and

32:12

TV shows, a defense

32:14

investigator takes about a year from start to finish,

32:17

on the average. And if you're doing

32:19

it right, and of course, that's what I always did, it

32:21

takes over your life. It

32:23

really does. A homicide investigation takes

32:26

over your life. When it's trial time,

32:28

the world stops. Oh, yeah. And

32:32

that three days or four days, unlike

32:35

radio and TV, they don't go out for weeks

32:37

and weeks. Typical murder trial is three days, sometimes

32:40

four, very rarely. But

32:42

the world stops when the trial takes place.

32:45

Nothing else exists, nothing else matters. And

32:48

I'd much rather be a broadcast journalist,

32:50

quite frankly. Anyway,

32:53

John, my job, go ahead.

32:56

Let me stop you right there, because you mentioned

32:59

homicides. And that's my passion. Okay,

33:03

now, I've taken numerous forensic

33:05

courses, and

33:09

there's such a thing as being certified in

33:11

cold case homicide investigations, homicide investigations

33:14

and such. But

33:16

I want to ask you a question, because this

33:19

is not getting enough play. We

33:22

know that Mitch McConnell, and I don't know how

33:24

much you know about this. You're talking about his

33:26

sister-in-law? Yeah. Now,

33:28

he resigned his position, his

33:31

leadership position. But

33:36

his sister-in-law, Angela

33:39

Chow, was

33:43

she died in Johnson City, Texas,

33:46

after her car became submerged in a pond.

33:48

Right. And this was, I

33:50

think, late last month. Okay, so the whole

33:53

thing stunk to high. When

33:56

I heard it, the whole thing stunk to high. to

34:00

I heaven. All right, supposedly she,

34:04

it was kind of an accidental

34:06

death. Anyway, it became an equivocal

34:08

death investigation. Now they're saying,

34:11

wait a second, it could very

34:13

well be a homicide we're dealing with.

34:15

These are the authorities. Now,

34:18

Chao is the sister of

34:21

Elaine Chao, who was the transportation

34:23

secretary, a former cabinet

34:26

member, Elaine Chao,

34:29

and of course, sister-in-law of Mitch McConnell.

34:32

So, what are your thoughts

34:34

on this if you have any... Well,

34:37

I obviously, I don't have access to the

34:39

police report, but my first two questions are

34:41

the following two. First of all, how

34:43

drunk was she? And second of

34:46

all, was he test a self-driving automobile?

34:49

The second part is, I'm not

34:51

sure if it was a self-driving, but it

34:54

was a Tesla. So does that count? Well,

34:57

another aspect of it being

34:59

a Tesla, once it's

35:01

underwater, can you open the windows? All

35:05

electric vehicles, I want

35:07

nothing to do with all electric vehicles

35:09

myself, but... It

35:13

was a Tesla Model X

35:15

SUV. Right, well, I

35:17

don't know what that means, but the

35:20

first responders were rightfully scared to death

35:22

by getting in the water with a

35:24

damn thing from fear of being electrocuted.

35:28

That's a well-founded, very real fear.

35:31

This thing's got enough battery power to

35:34

electrocute a man

35:36

in a heartbeat, no pun intended. So,

35:39

yeah, but

35:42

going into a pond, if you're an adult,

35:46

and if you can't... Probably

35:48

you could stand on the roof of

35:50

the damn thing and not drown. I

35:53

don't know how deep the pond was.

35:55

And that's exactly what the

35:57

first two on the scene did. one

36:00

was on top of the car, they could not

36:03

get in to the

36:05

vehicle for whatever reason, you

36:07

know, breaking the glass. If you have the

36:09

right tool, it's not that big of a

36:11

deal. You know, a side glass is easy.

36:14

A windshield is tough. Yeah. So the side

36:16

glass turns into cubes.

36:18

If you hit it with a

36:20

hammer, any object like that, a

36:22

hammer, a big rock, we turn all

36:25

that glass into cubes in a heartbeat.

36:28

Well, the story, and by

36:30

the way, this did happen on February 10th,

36:33

shortly, right around midnight. I do

36:35

have the report. The report is,

36:39

all it is, what

36:41

we used to call triptychs, it's just

36:43

a trip

36:47

record. It's just

36:49

time to dispatch, time to

36:51

call, time to dispatch, time

36:53

to arrival. Very little information,

36:55

but nonetheless. So I've got

36:57

a copy of that, but the fact is,

37:01

the terrain was very difficult

37:03

and it took 24 minutes

37:06

to get to the submerged

37:09

vehicle after the call. 24 minutes,

37:12

that's a long time. Well, the

37:14

record reflects this woman being in

37:16

the car, in the water, on

37:18

the telephone. Now,

37:21

why in the hell didn't she open a window? Well, we

37:24

don't know. She attempted to

37:26

open a window and couldn't or she was

37:28

so distraught that she didn't think

37:31

to do that. She didn't know how to do it. There's

37:33

a lot of unknowns here, aren't there, Doug? Oh,

37:35

man. Yeah, and that's the thing.

37:37

I don't know about you, but I always, and

37:39

folks, I'd recommend this. I

37:42

carry a flashlight with a, in

37:44

my vehicle, and on the

37:47

side is, it's got one of those, you

37:50

can knock out the window if you have to,

37:52

and it also has something

37:54

you can cut the seat belt. So

37:56

folks, I'd recommend regardless.

38:01

But there's something that smells high

38:04

heaven about this, in

38:06

addition obviously to the electric

38:09

vehicle aspect of things. But yeah,

38:11

I just kind of wanted to get

38:13

your take on it. Well, another aspect

38:15

of this, the

38:18

Tesla automobile did not gently roll over

38:20

the embankment. Apparently it's going fast enough

38:22

to put out some

38:24

distance from the bank of the

38:27

pond. That was mentioned also.

38:29

So if

38:31

it was, if she was

38:33

gently turning around, typically when people

38:36

turn around her going two or

38:38

three miles an hour, which

38:40

if you go over an embankment of the pond

38:42

going two miles an hour, you're going

38:44

to roll down the embankment and stop pretty much.

38:47

But this vehicle was way out now,

38:49

how far is way out? 20 feet,

38:51

30 feet, but it sounds like it

38:53

was much farther out than

38:55

a woman gently turning

38:57

a vehicle around in the dark. Well,

38:59

she was in the dark, right? Correct.

39:01

Well, it was dark outside,

39:04

given the time of night. Right.

39:07

Right. So, you know,

39:10

it's interesting what you said too,

39:13

because CNN reported the tow

39:16

truck driver who couldn't get the

39:19

winch to the vehicle, the end of

39:22

the winch to the vehicle, expressed

39:26

that electrocution hazard.

39:28

That's a real concern. That's

39:31

not so far the fancy to be

39:33

concerned that electric vehicle in the water

39:35

is going to kill you. That's

39:38

a very real concern based on real science

39:40

and real evidence, Doug. Well,

39:43

this is something that I'm going to follow. I

39:45

just, when you mentioned homicides,

39:48

I thought of that, and I'm going to be following

39:50

this and seeing what I can come up with, but

39:53

anytime the communist Chinese, no,

39:55

not, let me rephrase that.

39:59

Anytime you You've got someone

40:02

who is a native-born from

40:06

China, and you have

40:09

the communist Chinese presence in this

40:11

country, and you have politics involved.

40:14

Ah, man, I just think

40:17

that it warrants really close

40:19

investigation. That's just my view

40:21

on it. But okay. I

40:25

hope the local sheriff does

40:27

a thorough investigation. Given

40:29

the high profile of the woman,

40:33

the Texas Rangers

40:37

or some similar state authority should

40:40

do a thorough investigation of this and

40:43

hopefully come to the right conclusion of what really

40:45

happened there. I

40:48

mean, look, all murder victims

40:50

deserve justice

40:53

and deserve their

40:55

stories to be told. And I

40:57

truly believe that in

41:00

my experience, I'm sure you too,

41:04

bodies tell their own stories as

41:06

to what happened. And

41:08

anyway, hopefully that'll be the

41:11

case and we can get

41:13

some information. I

41:16

feel very bad for her

41:18

family and obviously for her. Very,

41:21

very... It's

41:23

a tragedy, no doubt. She

41:27

didn't deserve that, not at all. So

41:29

okay. I want

41:31

to ask you about this too. This

41:33

is page one in the show notes.

41:39

Obviously President Trump had

41:41

a victory with respect to

41:43

the 9-0 Supreme Court

41:45

ruling last week. Right.

41:48

Right. Okay. Now,

41:50

folks, we don't jump on headlines rather way. I don't do

41:52

that because to me, I

41:54

think a lot of... We

41:59

need the time to... to take her time to take

42:01

a look at what... I don't

42:03

want to be first, I want to be correct.

42:05

Okay, so that said, there's

42:08

a lot of back-slapping and high-fiving over

42:10

that, but I do believe that there

42:12

are other things in the offing that

42:16

present some

42:18

not-so-good scenarios for

42:20

President Trump because

42:22

they're bound and determined, the left, the

42:25

communist left in this country to keep

42:27

him off the ballot. Did

42:30

you see this? Jonathan Turley

42:32

came out with a piece talking

42:34

about the nightmare scenario, how a

42:37

Trump trial could now

42:39

run up to or

42:41

through the 2024 election. Have

42:44

you seen this at all? Have

42:47

you read it? Well, I haven't seen it

42:49

at column, but I'm aware of that. Certainly

42:51

a possibility. Absolutely it is. So okay, and

42:54

folks, you can read this at your leisure.

42:57

Essentially what is being

42:59

said here, at least

43:01

in my... or at least

43:03

how the column reads. This

43:07

trial will not yield to the election cycle.

43:10

And those are the words of

43:12

Tonya Chutkin last year.

43:16

That's the judge who made it clear that she's not

43:18

going to consider that Donald Trump will likely be the

43:21

candidate or the nominee in

43:23

setting the schedule for his trial. So

43:28

and Jack Smith, the same thing, declared

43:32

that he will not consider himself bound

43:34

by the Justice Department's longstanding policy of

43:36

not bringing charges or holding

43:39

trials of candidates close to an election. So

43:42

there's that immunity question lingering

43:46

out there as well. Now

43:48

I sent all of that to

43:50

ask you if you have

43:52

any thoughts on the immunity question and

43:56

also if you have any thoughts

43:58

about what a trial... would do during

44:02

this. Well, let's address. First

44:05

of all, President Trump, as

44:08

far as the trial issue, he

44:11

can do workarounds. All

44:15

these, as you and most of our audience

44:17

may know, most of these

44:20

court managers set 30 days in advance.

44:22

So that gives them time to do workarounds

44:24

for rallies and appearances. I don't think that's

44:26

too much concern. As to

44:28

immunity, that's massive because

44:32

if they take

44:34

away president Trump's right

44:36

to immunity, they also taken

44:38

away that right from

44:40

every previous and future president, which

44:44

is very dangerous for a number of reasons. Men

44:48

and women at that level are

44:51

not going to expose themselves, their family,

44:54

their, their, everything about

44:56

them is that kind of exposure

45:00

by losing the right of immunity, they

45:03

simply won't, they won't run for president. We

45:06

have several previous presidents

45:10

who, if they lost their rights to immunity, could

45:12

easily be brought up on charges. Like

45:15

for example, president Clinton and what happened

45:17

in Benghazi is a great example.

45:21

And that

45:23

becomes very real very quickly

45:26

because any number of men and

45:28

women who would love to see, once

45:31

again, going back to president, Clinton,

45:34

president Clinton brought up on

45:36

charges for what appears to be

45:38

the intentional death

45:41

of the ambassador in, in,

45:45

in Gaza. Uh, if I didn't get, I

45:49

hope I didn't get that wrong. I may have, but who was

45:51

it? President little Obama, it was Obama

45:53

with Clinton and Hillary Clinton was secretary

45:56

of state and let's

45:59

get us straight. Obama

46:04

could easily be brought up on charges for what

46:06

happened to Ben Gausey, Hillary

46:08

Clinton, the same thing. These

46:11

cabinet-level people also enjoy

46:13

a pretty similar immunity for

46:15

acts they do when they're in those positions.

46:19

They're always doing things that put them at risk. That's

46:22

just an actual kind of jobstag. It's

46:27

dangerous territory, and the Supreme Court

46:29

should not take away presidential

46:31

immunity at all. It

46:34

would put at risk all

46:37

these previous presidents, all future presidents, as

46:40

well as President Trump. And

46:42

hopefully they won't do that, Doug. Yeah,

46:46

I mean, you would essentially,

46:49

by removing

46:52

immunity, you

46:54

would decapitate the executive branch

46:56

and essentially just sort of

46:59

republic. And

47:02

it almost seems to me that that's

47:04

what the left wants to do. I

47:07

mean, that's kind of my thinking about

47:09

this in

47:11

any way they can. And certainly Smith,

47:14

who I don't believe should

47:16

even be in that

47:19

position, and Shutkin, who openly

47:21

stated that she believes

47:24

President Trump is guilty and should

47:26

be prosecuted and imprisoned,

47:31

this is who is trying the case of

47:34

the cases now. And

47:38

by the way, folks, we have, according

47:41

to the article, there are roughly 770,000 pending

47:45

cases in about

47:48

100 district courts around the

47:50

country. So the

47:53

backlog, okay, when

47:56

you look at the backlog, and also

48:00

even defendants who plead guilty in

48:02

the case, their case usually

48:04

takes about 10 months. So this would be

48:06

on a not just a

48:08

rocket docket, but a super

48:11

duper rocket docket in

48:13

order to get this even to trial. So

48:16

at any rate, by

48:20

the way that Jack Smith, I'll tell

48:22

you what a guy he is, he

48:24

offered no reason other

48:26

than he wants voters to consider the

48:28

outcome of the trial. It's a rare

48:30

acknowledgement of a desire for a trial

48:32

to become a factor in an election

48:35

yet he's doing it. So here

48:37

we are. I just,

48:39

again, you know, your take on it is

48:42

important given your history

48:44

in the courtroom and

48:47

beyond. So there it is. Okay.

48:50

I get it, I guess. Absolutely.

48:52

I mean, this whole thing is politics,

48:54

but the immunity thing I think is

48:56

a huge deal. And

48:59

for the Supreme Court not to

49:03

grant presidents immunity,

49:06

we're not talking about a president

49:08

who would sacrifice a killed

49:14

person on the steps of the White House.

49:16

We're talking about executive level

49:18

decisions that could go sideways. Right?

49:21

I mean, we're talking common sense

49:24

out there. I

49:27

can't imagine. Can you imagine, okay, so

49:30

what's the bottom line in your mind? Can

49:33

you imagine the Supreme Court not

49:35

giving the president immunity?

49:38

That is it. I can't, Doug.

49:41

And I believe the same thought process will go

49:43

into this as I did. This

49:45

telling that President Trump has to be on all the ballots.

49:48

He can't be taking off the ballots. Usually

49:53

when conservatives are looking at the Supreme Court,

49:55

we look at the flaming liberals

49:58

that are on there. the

50:01

way that Justice Roberts

50:03

votes on one hand on the other. There's

50:07

another level of thought among these nine

50:09

men and women. Thoughts

50:11

about their place in history. Thoughts

50:14

about the future of the republic. And

50:18

obviously, most of our legal

50:20

system is based on precedence. And

50:23

there's some things they simply can't go

50:26

against. And we saw that

50:28

with that nine to zero vote. The

50:30

other day. This

50:33

matter of immunity. Were you surprised by

50:35

that nine zero? Yes

50:38

and no. I've

50:41

worked with people at that level. We,

50:43

not US Supreme Court, but we

50:46

had a Missouri Supreme Court Justice, I knew since he

50:48

was in law school, Rick

50:51

Teitelman. And they

50:54

all have their own thoughts

50:57

and beliefs and so forth.

51:00

Some lines can't be crossed. And

51:03

when it comes, at that

51:06

level, all men and women

51:08

are very aware of their place in history.

51:11

And the older they get, the more mature

51:13

they get. The closer they get to their

51:15

retirement, the more aware that

51:17

they become. Their place in history

51:20

and how it will affect the republic and their

51:22

oath of office and so forth. And I think

51:24

all those things were factors in that nine zero

51:26

vote. Doug. Okay. And

51:29

I believe what will happen again, once this

51:32

immunity matter comes up, we

51:34

have well more than

51:36

200 years of presidential immunity being

51:38

a fact of life. That

51:41

allows these presidents to do what they

51:43

need to do in whatever matter it might be.

51:46

And it would cripple, no

51:49

matter if the president is extreme right wing

51:51

or extreme left wing, it would

51:53

cripple these presidents from doing what they feel needs

51:55

to be done at the moment in time. And

51:58

I think that... resistant

52:01

and refusing to do the right thing

52:04

at the right time because

52:06

of their fear of being prosecuted if they

52:08

lose immunity. So I think

52:10

the Supreme Court will continue that

52:13

tradition which needs tradition needs to continue

52:15

to keep these presidents able

52:18

to do their duty. Well

52:21

no I totally agree with you on that

52:23

and I think boy that man

52:26

is that wow would

52:28

that be a wrong-headed move

52:30

yeah for sure.

52:33

One more thing I wanted to get your take

52:35

on and then wherever you want to go but

52:39

this I saw this this

52:42

poll now I'm not a big believer in

52:44

polls but this was a

52:46

Rasmussen report and

52:50

the National Pulse Rahim

52:52

Qassam published

52:54

this and here's

52:56

the headline 57% of

53:00

Democrats the Democrats want

53:03

Congress to refuse certification

53:06

if President Trump wins. Okay

53:08

so this scenario would

53:10

be he would win let's

53:13

say the Electoral College maybe

53:16

maybe not the popular vote but

53:20

57% of likely Democratic voters have

53:23

told Rasmussen that

53:25

Congress should refuse to certify

53:27

the result of the 2024

53:29

election in the event of

53:32

a Donald Trump victory. Now

53:35

isn't that what

53:38

are your thoughts on that I mean.

53:40

Well my belief is the vice president

53:42

has had authority to certify the Electoral

53:45

College. So I don't

53:48

believe it is Congress I believe it's the vice president

53:50

of the states. Well on

53:52

January 6th the members

53:54

of Congress were going to issue motions to

53:57

halt the the

54:00

certification pending a review

54:03

of the evidence of... Well,

54:05

that needed to happen and that's what

54:08

they could have and should have done.

54:11

The evidence we had at the time was incomplete

54:13

on one hand. On the other, it was

54:16

complete enough to say,

54:19

hey guys, let's

54:22

review all the evidence before we move forward with

54:24

this. There was enough

54:26

evidence to do that. And

54:29

that's what should have happened. And Mike

54:31

Pence turned out to be a traitor

54:33

to his boss, the President of the United States,

54:35

and moved forward with that certification. I

54:38

don't know what promises or threats were made to that man,

54:41

but that's what he did, which

54:43

was absolutely wrong. And

54:48

we probably had the total vote challenge

54:51

by then, the

54:53

total votes for the President and

54:55

for Joe Biden, which

54:58

exceeded the number of voters. That

55:00

by itself was enough to say, hey, let's

55:02

wait. Let's do

55:04

a thorough investigation of these elections

55:07

in these 50 states, especially

55:10

in these swing states. Most

55:14

of us have seen the stacks

55:16

of mail-in ballots that were

55:19

never folded and put in an envelope, but

55:21

were counted as mail-in ballots anyway. That's

55:24

clear and convincing evidence, which

55:27

is a term you and I have heard on its terms. Clear

55:30

and convincing evidence of

55:32

fraud on the face of it. That's

55:34

a legal definition,

55:36

or legal phrase. You're

55:39

correct. Yeah,

55:41

but see,

55:43

now you mentioned Pence. I 100% agree

55:45

with you on that. But what happened

55:48

also was when

55:50

the proceedings

55:52

were interrupted, when they came

55:54

back, they came back under

55:58

Nancy Pelosi's emergency. emergency

56:00

rules which I

56:05

guess, not I guess, part

56:08

of that was you didn't have to

56:11

be in chambers. You could do it

56:13

remotely. Full remotely. Yeah.

56:16

That was one. And the other thing

56:18

is the same rules that applied prior

56:21

to them stopping that

56:24

and then declaring an emergency session

56:27

didn't apply during the emergency session. So

56:31

it was, the

56:33

fix was in I guess is what I'm

56:35

trying to say based

56:38

on the rules when

56:40

they reconvened which

56:43

was the rules were different than the

56:46

first attempt.

56:48

But all that aside, what

56:52

do you think? Do

56:54

you think that's even possible where I guess

56:58

it would be possible if people were thinking

57:00

about it? Yeah. Maybe it's possible. Where

57:03

the left could say, nope, you know what?

57:07

He's an insurrectionist. He's guilty

57:10

even though maybe by then, hey,

57:13

maybe he wasn't tried. Do

57:18

you think that they would do that? Well,

57:22

we're no saying, well, of course,

57:25

desperate people do desperate things. And

57:29

four more years of President Trump would severely

57:33

hamper him possibly just delay

57:35

for a generation the new

57:37

world order coming in and fully into place. And

57:40

they can't tolerate that. They can't handle that. This

57:44

is what we're having right now is the

57:46

third Barack Obama administration. But

57:49

sometimes Joe Biden is called, oh, Biden for

57:51

very good reason. Of course. Yeah.

57:54

Yeah. Every president for more

57:56

than a century when their term office

57:59

was always open. I always,

58:01

I left DC and went home, where her home was. That's

58:04

not Barack Obama. He bought a very nice,

58:06

very large mansion right down the street from

58:08

the White House where he's running

58:10

things. And most likely

58:12

it's Valerie Jarrett who's running things day

58:14

to day just like she did when

58:17

Barack Obama was president. You

58:20

know, Barack Obama

58:22

played more golf than I believe

58:25

any president ever, ever. And

58:29

if you were the CEO of D So

58:38

Valerie Jarrett has been up the street from the

58:41

White House and that beautiful mansion of Obama bought,

58:43

running things now for over three

58:46

years, running to the fourth year. And

58:50

to get back to your question,

58:52

just for people who are desperate for things, I put

58:54

nothing past them. It's now

58:56

been publicly noticed

58:58

that President Trump requested

59:01

10,000 plus National Guardsmen to

59:03

keep the peace on

59:05

the 6th of January. That's not the

59:07

act of a man who wanted an insurrection. That's the

59:09

act of a man who wanted to keep the peace.

59:11

And that was denied. Now,

59:14

once again, in clear and convincing evidence that

59:16

President Trump did not want an insurrection,

59:18

he wanted peace. He wanted

59:20

the rule of law. That's

59:23

why he requested 10,000 plus

59:25

National Guardsmen to be on duty that day

59:27

to keep the peace. Nothing

59:30

could be more clear to me, Doug. How about here? Doug

59:33

Smith I'm glad you mentioned that because that came out

59:36

obviously that he

59:38

requested 10,000 troops two days before. It

59:43

was on January 4th, I believe. And

59:46

it was declined by

59:48

Muriel Bowser, the mayor of

59:51

DC. Nancy

59:53

Pelosi also declined that

59:56

as well. as

1:00:00

I believe, son, the

1:00:03

chief of the capital police, but don't

1:00:05

quote me on that. So I mean,

1:00:07

yeah, but

1:00:09

this story is just making its

1:00:12

way through. And

1:00:14

that was also pushed

1:00:17

down the memory hole by the unselect

1:00:21

January 6th committee, which

1:00:24

I find was very interesting. By design. The

1:00:30

commander of the capital police was kept in the

1:00:32

dark. He was not given

1:00:34

the intelligence, advising

1:00:38

what would be happening on January 6th. He

1:00:40

was kept out of the loop. That was by

1:00:42

design also. Man,

1:00:45

I'll tell you what. Again,

1:00:50

you know, cutesy time is over

1:00:53

to coin

1:00:56

Dan Bongino's phrase. I

1:00:58

believe that we have to really

1:01:00

become as vocal

1:01:03

as we can, as insistent

1:01:05

as we can for justice

1:01:08

and really fight against the weaponized justice

1:01:11

system. Because by the way, John, they're

1:01:13

still looking for another couple thousand people

1:01:15

to put in jail over January 6th

1:01:17

by 2025. And

1:01:25

that includes this platform.

1:01:27

Well, here's one of

1:01:30

the dangers of that. It's

1:01:38

well known, especially in a pay-for-profit community, that

1:01:42

if you're arrested for peacefully

1:01:45

walking through a capital

1:01:47

door that was held open by a capital

1:01:49

police officer, by the way, that

1:01:53

you will be arrested. You'll be charged.

1:01:55

You will not be given the opportunity

1:01:57

to post bond as every murder is.

1:02:00

This. Will. Be held,

1:02:02

enter enter jail. Was. No

1:02:04

Up No without being brought before a

1:02:06

judge. And having the charges read

1:02:08

you any given him but avoid post fun.

1:02:11

You. May sit there for a year. Or

1:02:14

more. Waiting. For the normal things

1:02:16

have happened to your main one charged with murder. Now

1:02:19

here's dangerous that. Is

1:02:21

you know this? What? Will happen

1:02:24

because says to track record. And

1:02:27

you feel it. As

1:02:29

the I made some you home in

1:02:31

a horse at four am. To.

1:02:33

Break down your door. Was.

1:02:35

Force of arms. You

1:02:38

may decide is fair to. Die.

1:02:41

Fighting. These. Criminals.

1:02:44

Which. Are if you're going us are normal

1:02:46

legal system. Far as I'm concerned, you're a

1:02:48

criminal. It may be better to die. Rather

1:02:50

than. Face. A car racing

1:02:53

for a year plus. Was.

1:02:55

No opportunity. V P. Brought thieves

1:02:57

brought before a judge. And

1:02:59

given fc to post but. I

1:03:02

think that's an icon. say it's

1:03:05

inevitable by says it's highly likely

1:03:07

Dog. That. Man or woman could

1:03:09

both make that decision. And

1:03:11

they're gonna be arrested. And.

1:03:13

Spent a year in solitary confinement before

1:03:16

he even thought brought before a judge.

1:03:18

Was no chance. Post bond, I'll die

1:03:20

first. And I

1:03:22

think is I like was

1:03:24

addicted happened ducts was his

1:03:27

several thousand men women are

1:03:29

under arrest well as his

1:03:31

into the result to seize

1:03:33

Xinyu. I heard numbers and

1:03:35

is I'm not mistaken I'm

1:03:37

very close If I'm not

1:03:39

an exact roughly one hundred

1:03:42

thousand people resins of. Voted

1:03:45

for by or

1:03:47

on were. Dirt.

1:03:50

or democrats ah i

1:03:52

see nine hundred and

1:03:54

some on nine hundred

1:03:56

and sixty seven votes

1:03:58

in dc were for President

1:04:01

Trump in the 2020 election. That's

1:04:04

the jury pool. You know,

1:04:07

so what are the

1:04:09

chances you're going to get

1:04:11

a fair trial in that venue? Well,

1:04:14

almost non-existent. There's

1:04:17

a term called inside the beltway. Pretty

1:04:21

much 100% of

1:04:23

people's jobs inside the

1:04:25

beltway are connected somehow, some

1:04:28

way to the federal government. There's

1:04:31

no factories inside the beltway.

1:04:33

There's no, you know,

1:04:36

wealth comes from mines, factories, and farms.

1:04:38

There's no mines, factories, and farms inside

1:04:41

the beltway. It's all government related. You

1:04:44

know, even more

1:04:47

pedestrian things like automobile

1:04:49

mechanics, plumbers, electricians, they

1:04:52

all work for people that work for

1:04:54

the federal government in some ways or

1:04:56

manner. It's all connected and

1:04:59

everybody knows it. It's no secret that

1:05:01

the federal government in the United States inside the

1:05:04

beltway is the source of almost

1:05:06

all jobs, almost all

1:05:08

income is somehow related to the

1:05:11

federal government somehow, some way. So

1:05:14

of course you're going to vote that way. Doug,

1:05:16

that's a given. Yeah,

1:05:18

it's just to me, none

1:05:21

of this is proper. And

1:05:24

how do you fight against that?

1:05:27

How do you, in

1:05:29

the legal sense, to be, you

1:05:31

know, legal, how do you fight against that? Well, it

1:05:33

has to be changed. In this case, it has to be

1:05:35

changed. Exactly. Exactly. But if

1:05:37

they, no. The jury pool is biased.

1:05:41

There's no getting around that. No,

1:05:43

you can't. Yeah. And

1:05:46

even if it's not, even if they

1:05:48

moved it to somewhere else,

1:05:50

I mean, it's definitely one can

1:05:53

argue. If I was going to

1:05:55

sue the, if I was going to sue the Green Bay

1:05:57

Packers, I would not have that in their home city of

1:05:59

Green Bay. Bay, Wisconsin. There's no way.

1:06:03

Every seat in the stadium is

1:06:05

sold out before the season ever

1:06:07

starts. You know, you're not going

1:06:09

to sue the Green Bay Packers

1:06:11

and have a neutral

1:06:14

jury pool. That's not going to happen.

1:06:17

And I think that's a good analogy, Doug. Yeah,

1:06:20

exactly. Folks, you're

1:06:23

being treated to

1:06:25

johnmoorethelibertyman.com. His link

1:06:28

to his website will be at

1:06:30

haggmanpi.com or isathaggmanpi.com in the program

1:06:32

description box. You

1:06:35

know, I'm

1:06:37

telling you, his news page, make

1:06:40

sure you visit his news page and

1:06:42

also support the people who

1:06:45

support his program. But

1:06:47

I would, folks, I would definitely listen to

1:06:49

him five days a week.

1:06:51

That's Monday through Friday. And

1:06:54

he's got a great show and

1:06:56

great guests. So

1:06:58

john, what else is on your mind, sir?

1:07:01

Well, how about the worst crime in human history?

1:07:04

Yes, we can't we can't forget about that. Go ahead.

1:07:08

Well, that would be the consequences of the

1:07:10

COVID-19 vaccination clock. The government of

1:07:14

the state of Florida, the Surgeon

1:07:16

General of Florida is attempting to make

1:07:19

these vaccines illegal to

1:07:22

be distributed in the state of Florida. It's

1:07:25

about three years late as far

1:07:27

as I'm concerned. But at least we're

1:07:29

doing it. There's still time to save some lives. So

1:07:33

I believe it's on my website. I believe the

1:07:35

seventh day of March if I'm if I may

1:07:38

have been a different

1:07:40

month, but I can go to my website and get that

1:07:42

date real quick for us. But it

1:07:44

was March and here we go. I

1:07:48

scroll down here a little bit. May 7 of 2020. I was

1:07:53

interviewing Dr. Lynn Horowitz on my show live

1:07:55

on air. And I made two statements.

1:07:58

First of all, out develop

1:08:02

a safe and effective vaccine in nine months or less.

1:08:04

It can't be done. A

1:08:07

true state and Dr. Horowitz supported that.

1:08:10

My second statement, I had no evidence at the time,

1:08:12

I've since acquired evidence that the

1:08:14

vaccines were already in refrigerators waiting

1:08:17

to be distributed and

1:08:19

that was on May the 7th, 2020. It

1:08:23

turns out I've had

1:08:25

information from private sources inside the

1:08:27

vaccine industry. They

1:08:29

worked on these vaccines for six years before

1:08:32

they were released, not nine months. We

1:08:35

hear about these vaccines being experimental. They

1:08:38

weren't experimental, Doug. I

1:08:41

have several articles and videos by Dr.

1:08:43

Michael Yaden, former Vice President

1:08:45

at Pfizer, former Director

1:08:47

of Medical Research at

1:08:49

Pfizer. What is there? Maybe 10 people

1:08:52

on the plant. It's got those kind of credentials. He

1:08:54

says these

1:08:57

vaccines are intended to kill

1:08:59

and hurt people. They're not side

1:09:01

effects. They're the direct intended effects

1:09:03

to kill and hurt people. We're

1:09:05

now looking at a 40%

1:09:07

increase in United States, 40% increase

1:09:10

in all cause mortality. Mostly

1:09:13

tests traded in men and women

1:09:15

between 20 and 50 years old

1:09:18

when they should be in a prior life. Doug,

1:09:23

you mentioned my guess. Every Friday, I have

1:09:26

a scientist on with me, the

1:09:29

third hour, Marie Lester, the elected

1:09:31

coroner of Texas County, Missouri.

1:09:35

She's publishing a book coming out in the

1:09:37

next few weeks concerning this matter. She's

1:09:41

saying in her own county, Texas County, Missouri, by

1:09:43

the way, is the largest county

1:09:45

in the state of Missouri as far

1:09:48

as square miles. I'm almost doubling

1:09:51

people dying this

1:09:53

year as opposed to previous years, which

1:09:57

was a dramatic rise. There's

1:10:00

and cancer deaths. Were.

1:10:02

Saying something called turbo

1:10:04

cancer. For. People go

1:10:06

from normal healthy people to

1:10:09

a stage four cancer diagnosis.

1:10:11

And. Ninety Days. I

1:10:14

have it is it's it's crazy.

1:10:16

It's Heflin Saints are people who

1:10:18

were in remission for four and

1:10:20

five years or so having stage

1:10:22

four cancer. Within a very short

1:10:24

for to tie. Up

1:10:26

Very bizarre, Unusual. Answers

1:10:29

happening at that we rarely rarely see

1:10:32

happening as well. You're all

1:10:34

accounts once course of the covert anti vax

1:10:36

as clutch shots. She.

1:10:40

Now I'm real answer but others

1:10:43

have a. Bit. Of Mrs. Kings

1:10:45

and for example. Are

1:10:47

saying that this year twenty twenty four

1:10:49

of the the beginning of a big

1:10:51

die off a people got the coroner

1:10:53

vaccination, five shots, On Twenty four,

1:10:55

Twenty Twenty Five his own, You'll see

1:10:57

the mass die off of people who

1:10:59

got these. Vaccines.

1:11:02

So. Of course, crime and

1:11:04

humanist er doc know he's

1:11:06

absolutely com. Okay,

1:11:09

so. This. Is

1:11:14

just at the numbers

1:11:17

of came I'm not

1:11:19

including necessarily the boosters.

1:11:22

That the numbers. Seem.

1:11:24

To match what Ziegel

1:11:27

Report had reported for

1:11:29

the population. Of the

1:11:31

Us and will they do and we

1:11:33

wanted for years what would cause I

1:11:35

can die off and. That.

1:11:39

These. Vaccines are certainly said

1:11:41

that. Paradigm.

1:11:44

Very. Nicely. Those

1:11:46

don't know. do a deal. Corporation

1:11:49

has a company that does studies

1:11:51

for governments. And. A fortune.

1:11:53

Five hundred companies. To. Find out

1:11:55

what are these governments and forty five hundred

1:11:57

companies want? that? It's a sentence. And from.

1:12:00

for lack of another term. And the

1:12:03

legal report was published publicly in what, 10

1:12:06

years ago? Quite a while ago. It was a while

1:12:08

ago, yeah. And we

1:12:10

wondered for years, how could this happen? Georgia

1:12:13

Geistones were erected more than 20 years

1:12:15

ago, and everybody wondered how could this

1:12:17

happen? A worldwide

1:12:20

population of 500 million. Now

1:12:24

we're getting some answers as to how that can happen, aren't

1:12:26

we, Doug? Yes, and

1:12:28

now do you believe, speaking

1:12:32

about this very same topic, or

1:12:35

related to it, do you believe

1:12:37

we're going to see something else come

1:12:40

out? Are they going to, prior

1:12:42

to this next

1:12:45

election, are we going to see something

1:12:47

else being rolled out beyond

1:12:49

the injections? Is

1:12:51

that necessary? Well, it's,

1:12:54

they had quite a bit of success the first time.

1:12:56

They probably, they

1:13:01

have a bag of tricks. This is one of the tricks

1:13:04

in that bag. And I think

1:13:06

it's highly likely that they'll do it again

1:13:08

with another pandemic that they'll, you know,

1:13:11

this thing that happened in 2020 killed

1:13:13

0.3% of the people that got it.

1:13:17

And they made it look like the Bonnie

1:13:20

Clegg and the Spanish flu

1:13:22

mixed together to have

1:13:24

this massive die-off, which it wasn't that at all. So

1:13:27

the mainstream media can make it look like

1:13:29

whatever they choose to make it. There's

1:13:31

talk about Disease X, we talked about

1:13:34

Ebola, we talked about

1:13:36

Marburg. It's

1:13:38

all on the table, Doug. And, you know,

1:13:40

Ebola is real. And

1:13:42

it's scary, and movies make

1:13:45

it look scarier than what it is.

1:13:47

Marburg is a biological weapon, and Ebola

1:13:49

probably is also. But Marburg is

1:13:52

a biological weapon made to the laboratory.

1:13:56

So with the success they had, they needed any excuse

1:13:58

of pretext for the male and ballots. And

1:14:02

I can't think of it other than

1:14:05

extreme violence, I can't think of a better excuse

1:14:07

than another pandemic, some sort Doug.

1:14:11

Yeah, yeah indeed. Are

1:14:15

we going to see any justice from this? Because

1:14:18

more and more is coming out now where

1:14:23

people like yourself, people

1:14:25

like your guests, especially

1:14:28

the scientists, the

1:14:30

coroners, the doctors who

1:14:33

are saying, wait a second, there's something wrong

1:14:35

here. Are

1:14:37

we going to see any justice about

1:14:40

them first of

1:14:42

all breaking the gain of function

1:14:45

moratorium? Okay, justice will be at

1:14:47

the state level. I'm not

1:14:49

sure President Trump can clean out the

1:14:51

Justice Department sufficiently to move forward at

1:14:54

the federal level. He'll

1:14:56

make diligent attempts, but at the

1:14:58

state level, especially the blue

1:15:00

states like my state, Missouri,

1:15:03

like Florida, Texas, I

1:15:05

see hope for justice at the state

1:15:07

level. I see none at the moment

1:15:09

at the federal level and none whatsoever

1:15:11

at the international level, the court

1:15:15

and Hague. I

1:15:17

don't expect to see them do anything, but

1:15:19

I do see hope at the state level, Doug. Okay,

1:15:22

well that's fair and I can

1:15:25

relate to that. What

1:15:27

are your thoughts? I just saw

1:15:29

a truth social post

1:15:32

by President Trump

1:15:34

about, he was again bragging

1:15:36

about the rolling

1:15:38

out of the jabs. I know. We

1:15:41

talked about, well I didn't mention this, but I

1:15:44

was invited by Clay Clark to

1:15:46

meet Digital Flynn, which I did

1:15:48

this past Saturday two days ago.

1:15:50

There was at this conference, it was

1:15:53

all talk show hosts and podcasters. Yeah,

1:15:55

I couldn't make that by the way.

1:15:58

I had the conversation, but go ahead. Yeah,

1:16:00

well, it was a great event and I

1:16:02

wish you could have been there. Was that Dutosa? The

1:16:04

Dutosa, yeah. Yeah, that's right. Okay. Which

1:16:08

is right down the highway. I get on 44 near

1:16:10

my home and drive right there. But anyway, there

1:16:13

was discussion, but there's several people there who

1:16:15

are on a first name basis with

1:16:18

President Trump. And

1:16:21

what I heard, the conclusion of what I heard is President

1:16:24

Trump was just being President Trump. And I've

1:16:26

worked with men like this. You probably have

1:16:28

also, or their style of leadership

1:16:30

is they can ever admit that they were

1:16:32

wrong. I simply can't. And

1:16:35

that's an unfortunate personality trait.

1:16:38

That's not just President Trump,

1:16:40

but other men and women and maybe

1:16:43

running a shoe store or running a

1:16:45

country. That's simply who they are, unfortunately.

1:16:48

And in fact, in today's headline on

1:16:50

the, on the Liberty Daily news site, Alex

1:16:53

Jones is saying to President Trump,

1:16:55

back off. I saw that. You

1:16:58

know, that really, you know, there's

1:17:01

probably numerous people who have access to

1:17:04

President Trump telling him the same

1:17:06

thing now, when he announced

1:17:08

he was running for president, uh, what was

1:17:10

that 15 months ago, I was

1:17:12

hoping he'd come clean. What

1:17:14

he didn't, he didn't say,

1:17:18

whatever happened, I was misled. I

1:17:20

was threatened. I was fooled. I

1:17:22

really believed the lives, whatever it

1:17:25

was. But he hasn't, he's

1:17:27

sick. He's sticking to it. And that's very unfortunate.

1:17:31

Okay. So when you met with, so

1:17:33

you met with, uh, General

1:17:35

Flynn this weekend. Okay. Um,

1:17:38

takeaways from that beyond the, uh,

1:17:42

my immediate impression is very

1:17:44

intelligent, very intense. And,

1:17:47

uh, here's how, here's how I

1:17:49

introduced myself to General Flynn. I said,

1:17:51

General Flynn, my name is John Moore. I

1:17:53

was an intelligence analyst in Vietnam before, during,

1:17:55

and after the child's offensive, I spent most

1:17:57

of my life as a homicide detective. And

1:18:01

it went from there. Oh man, I

1:18:04

would have loved to listen to that. They've

1:18:06

been there Wow,

1:18:09

okay. He's gonna be on my show by the

1:18:11

way. I made the connection. I was hoping to

1:18:13

make the connection He's probably

1:18:15

we're shooting to have him on with myself

1:18:17

and Sam Andrews to debrief

1:18:19

him and interview him on a Monday morning

1:18:22

Hopefully in a near dip in their future General

1:18:25

Flynn is on a nationwide tour to promote

1:18:27

his moving. I'll be talking about that Soon

1:18:31

I get more details. Okay, and

1:18:33

his book on how to defend yourself from 5g so

1:18:37

that the movie is going to be a very

1:18:39

important matter for general Flynn and for the public and

1:18:42

the entire public of the United States and It's

1:18:46

I'm looking forward to seeing it and promoting

1:18:48

it both Wow, that

1:18:50

sounds great and folks that's why you

1:18:53

need to tune in to the Liberty

1:18:56

Man his radio show go to the

1:18:58

Liberty man calm and of

1:19:00

course you You can get get

1:19:02

a show right there and dig down for

1:19:04

the archives. But hey

1:19:06

John Moore. He's He's

1:19:09

got a finger in the pulse of many

1:19:12

people who are movers and shakers

1:19:16

Yeah So, okay

1:19:20

By the way, who do

1:19:22

you think? Vice

1:19:24

president slot for President

1:19:27

Trump any what are your thoughts on

1:19:29

that? Who

1:19:31

might it be? Well the governor Kristi noem,

1:19:34

I think it would be a good choice

1:19:38

There's some people I don't want to see leave office of Senator

1:19:43

Iran Paul, for example, I think he's better

1:19:45

off saying where he is He'd make great

1:19:47

vice president, but he can get a lot

1:19:49

more done where he is The

1:19:53

bad luck between the

1:19:56

governor of Florida and dissenters

1:20:00

said uh... once again i just

1:20:02

asked him and do more good thing in florida

1:20:04

where he is uh... the

1:20:08

uh... woman represent and and uh...

1:20:10

arizona the uh... reporter yeah carry

1:20:12

like she made

1:20:14

a great vice president of the love series vice

1:20:16

president well what what

1:20:18

what about the vatican ramaswamy

1:20:21

always that equality that quote

1:20:23

yet to be qualified to be for a president for

1:20:25

the vice president uh... his parents

1:20:28

were not uh... users when

1:20:30

he was born he's not natural born so

1:20:32

that they don't have to work so that's

1:20:34

a right by definition that's correct

1:20:37

uh... there's a lot of questions about uh...

1:20:40

political and business connections works

1:20:42

but it's

1:20:46

not a problem or a moment is not an

1:20:48

extra born citizen this

1:20:50

is just like rock obama that's not being

1:20:53

addressed and he's been addressed uh...

1:20:55

hundred percent behind you on that uh...

1:20:58

percent all right

1:21:00

uh... john more the liberty man.com okay so

1:21:02

we've got about ten minutes left of the

1:21:05

program whatever your whatever's

1:21:08

on your heart my friend well uh...

1:21:10

what we we talk about or

1:21:13

two things i'm not sure what one is

1:21:15

personal family protection the others what can we

1:21:17

do locally and here's what

1:21:19

you can do a lot more first of all

1:21:23

and unacceptable in my opinion

1:21:25

unacceptable percentage of

1:21:28

conservative christian patriots are

1:21:30

either not registered to vote or if they are

1:21:32

don't bother to go to the polls and vote which

1:21:34

is twenty or twenty five percent of these men and women

1:21:38

we need to create enough enthusiasm that

1:21:41

these conservative christian patriots are both registered

1:21:43

to vote and actually show up at

1:21:45

the polls the first tuesday

1:21:48

november if we can do

1:21:50

that if we can motivate these men and women

1:21:52

to show up and vote they may say oh

1:21:54

my vote doesn't count oh it doesn't matter only

1:21:57

local elections it matters a lot We

1:22:00

had a conservative Christian patriot woman here

1:22:02

in my county run

1:22:05

for judge. And

1:22:08

she lost by 12 votes. It

1:22:11

turns out her own extended

1:22:14

family, the siblings, brother-in-laws, sister-in-laws,

1:22:17

nieces, nephews who were older to vote, and

1:22:20

that was more than 12 votes, didn't

1:22:22

show up to vote for her. And

1:22:24

she lost by a number

1:22:26

of votes that her own family could have

1:22:28

made up for. It's

1:22:31

just one of them. And I've seen many local

1:22:33

elections decided by 2 or 3 or 8 or

1:22:35

10 votes. At

1:22:38

the local level, these votes mean

1:22:40

an awful lot, Doug. They

1:22:43

do. And one thing I'd also recommend,

1:22:45

if you don't mind me just interjecting

1:22:48

this, if

1:22:50

you are in a location where

1:22:53

they have these drop boxes, I

1:22:57

know that we are putting

1:22:59

together a team or have almost,

1:23:02

it's almost complete, a team to

1:23:05

conduct 24-7 video

1:23:08

and in-person surveillance of

1:23:10

these drop boxes in

1:23:12

a county in Pennsylvania. That's all I'm going to say

1:23:16

because I don't want to tip my hand on what's going

1:23:18

on. But

1:23:20

I think we need to really be

1:23:24

proactive in whatever

1:23:26

we can do. Well, I've done thousands

1:23:28

of hours of covert surveillance. I know,

1:23:31

yeah. Like you have. But

1:23:34

I think it's better to make it

1:23:36

a tailgate party with great

1:23:38

food and coffee and music and

1:23:40

so forth and

1:23:43

make it a tailgate party and videotape what's

1:23:45

going on at the drop boxes. If

1:23:48

it has to be covert, then I

1:23:50

ain't making covert. With

1:23:53

the modern technology that's video, that's not hard to

1:23:55

do at all. No.

1:23:57

You and I go back to the days of... They

1:24:01

didn't have the technology that

1:24:04

they do today, I'll tell you, and

1:24:06

it was difficult to be there. Well,

1:24:09

I span both here. We started

1:24:11

out with 8mm cameras, movie cameras.

1:24:14

And in the mid-80s, when

1:24:16

video started coming into, and

1:24:18

it was moving so fast

1:24:20

in the mid-80s, it was breathtaking. How

1:24:25

small the cameras became, how powerful

1:24:27

they became, it

1:24:29

was an amazing time for video surveillance,

1:24:31

to say the least. An exciting time,

1:24:34

actually. Yeah,

1:24:36

yeah. I mean, from 8mm

1:24:39

to VHS, to VHS-C,

1:24:41

to smaller cameras. Yep,

1:24:47

absolutely. 16mm to 8mm. Yeah,

1:24:49

I got all that. It was

1:24:52

just, wow, yeah, it was crazy.

1:24:54

But, alright, alright. Yeah, well, continue,

1:24:56

my friend. Well,

1:24:58

we, okay. If

1:25:02

you want to, and you feel like

1:25:04

you should run for county

1:25:07

commission, city council,

1:25:09

library boards, school boards, if you don't

1:25:12

have the time and energy to do

1:25:14

that, then support conservative Christian candidates that

1:25:16

are running for those offices. Candidates,

1:25:19

no matter if they're president or

1:25:21

school board, they need two cents. They

1:25:23

need money and volunteer help. If

1:25:26

you contribute one or the other, or both,

1:25:28

that will help that candidate secure the

1:25:31

post on the library board, the school

1:25:34

board, the city council. Well,

1:25:36

we conservative Christians, or patriots, have been

1:25:39

asleep at the wheel for decades,

1:25:41

Doug, while the, I

1:25:43

call our opposition, the socialist comments, the

1:25:46

Democrats, Muslims, have been taking over these

1:25:48

positions. And that

1:25:50

needs to change. We need to

1:25:52

focus on these local elections. These

1:25:55

senators and congressmen, they start out

1:25:57

as state reps and state senators.

1:26:00

And frequently as a city councilman or

1:26:03

some other position before they

1:26:05

become a state rep or state senator. So

1:26:08

these local elections do matter. That's

1:26:10

the future of our country. And

1:26:13

whatever it takes to win these

1:26:15

local elections, be

1:26:17

active at the county level. I'm the elected commitment

1:26:20

from my township, Republican,

1:26:24

and town, commitment from

1:26:26

Osage Township and

1:26:28

we help conservative Christians patriots

1:26:31

get elected in my county.

1:26:34

It's 3,300 plus county, United

1:26:36

States, many of these committee

1:26:39

women and committee men posts go empty

1:26:41

because nobody bothers to register before

1:26:44

those positions. And

1:26:47

all the power at the national level comes from

1:26:49

the county level. That's where it all

1:26:51

begins. And

1:26:53

don't ignore these county level positions.

1:26:56

Many people don't even know that these county

1:26:58

positions even exist, Doug. They

1:27:00

don't. And I'll

1:27:03

give you how much time we got, two

1:27:05

or three minutes? Yeah. Yeah.

1:27:08

Bring to mind, Air Force veteran,

1:27:11

a 400 degree from our brick and mortar

1:27:13

college running a business with

1:27:16

six to eight employees, wrote a book

1:27:18

on his chosen career. Great

1:27:21

guy, family man. Doug,

1:27:23

he did not know that there's a

1:27:26

difference between a US Senator

1:27:28

and a state Senator. This

1:27:33

is not some high school dropout. This

1:27:35

is a social businessman with a college

1:27:37

degree. He did not know. There's a

1:27:39

difference between a state Senator and a

1:27:41

state Senator. That's what we're

1:27:44

up against, Doug. As far as the level of

1:27:46

ignorance among the electorate. Man, yeah. A

1:27:49

little bit light there under government classes, my

1:27:51

friend. Not you, him. But yeah. And

1:27:55

the final point, I mean, don't

1:27:58

think that other people know. what

1:28:00

you know because oftentimes

1:28:03

they don't so share

1:28:05

your knowledge and really

1:28:09

do you think in the

1:28:11

closing moments here do

1:28:13

you see if things

1:28:16

get if

1:28:18

things don't go the way of the

1:28:20

left do you see violence like we

1:28:23

saw in the summer of love the summer of 2020 breaking

1:28:26

out to the extent that perhaps

1:28:29

just perhaps we might

1:28:31

be fighting one another you know

1:28:35

and kind of getting

1:28:37

softened softened up for maybe

1:28:39

something external to happen I

1:28:43

certainly see another George Floyd

1:28:45

scenario this coming summer George

1:28:47

Floyd killed himself with a drug overdose approach

1:28:50

I think the more higher

1:28:54

percentage chance of violence will be between

1:28:56

the first Tuesday on November and

1:28:58

the inauguration I think that's the highest level

1:29:02

percentage level of violence nationwide

1:29:05

to prevent the new president from being inaugurated

1:29:07

and I think that would go either way

1:29:09

to it to me

1:29:12

that although I would

1:29:14

put more my money more on

1:29:17

if President Trump did take the

1:29:20

elect did win the election then

1:29:22

I feel appear to be spontaneous it'll

1:29:24

be George Soros funded yep he will

1:29:26

he will recruit train and equip and

1:29:28

pay for the riders it won't be

1:29:30

spontaneous at all there no

1:29:32

and hey the bricks are already being

1:29:34

shipped out I can I cannot see

1:29:37

that absolutely John Moore

1:29:39

the Liberty Man John I'm gonna thank

1:29:41

you so much for your welcome it's

1:29:43

good to see you as well and

1:29:45

folks make sure you tune in to

1:29:47

his radio program delivery men calm

1:29:49

that's his web address it'll be on the

1:29:52

program description page John thank you so very much

1:29:54

my friend thank you good talk you

1:29:56

Doug god bless have a good day

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