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truth in radio. Thanks you guys.
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The Kate Delhi show, because
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all opinions matter, and George
3:38
Soros will pay good money
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for them. The show starts now Where
3:46
does the real power lie?
3:48
The power, the
3:51
hind the power because
3:54
it's
3:54
no longer about who he lives
3:55
in the White House. It's
3:57
about who owns the White House.
3:59
This is the presidency. How much
4:01
higher can a politician go?
4:03
The real power isn't huge.
4:05
here.
4:05
It's beyond here.
4:08
It's
4:08
above it, but still working in conjunction
4:11
with it.
4:14
Hi there.
4:15
Welcome. Kate Dallas show last
4:17
hour. On a Friday and so glad to
4:19
have you listening from wherever you're listening
4:21
to the show from. We just hit
4:23
sixteen point six million and
4:26
on SoundCloud, and I really appreciate
4:28
all of you. And I love that we're
4:30
live as well also live in in
4:32
so many cities and also share
4:34
the show, please. Please share the show with
4:36
people that you know and love. We need to wake people
4:38
up. And of course,
4:40
this guest is one of my most favorite. And when
4:42
people ask me off the air, I've had this question
4:44
a lot in interviews. what
4:46
what some of your most favorite guests? I have to
4:48
say, g, Edward Griffin, is
4:51
is on that list because on that
4:53
short List because of his
4:55
legendary career in waking
4:57
people up. The creature of Jekyll
4:59
Island woke up people about the Fed
5:01
and the documentaries he's done outing
5:04
public education, all
5:06
of these things. A very important interview with
5:08
Norman Dodd, the important interviews with
5:10
the KGB defectors you
5:12
name it. He's been there and he's
5:14
been there to expose it and he has
5:17
the Red Pill Expo now
5:19
and the newest one is in Salt Lake City.
5:21
and that is November the twelfth coming
5:24
up. And I'm so happy to have you on the
5:26
show, Ed. Again, how are you?
5:28
thank you, Kate. Thanks for inviting me, and I'm
5:30
doing well. Good. I've had a little
5:33
bout of illness that some people
5:35
would have described it
5:37
as the COVID and all that thing. Mhmm. I
5:39
think it was just a slightly weaponized
5:41
version of the flu. Me too, but
5:44
I'm recovering. It's good. It's
5:46
good. I'm so glad to hear that. A
5:48
little bit short of breath. Oh,
5:50
I am. Sorry. But you should have seen me
5:52
a couple of months ago. Really?
5:55
That was in bad shape. Oh, no.
5:57
No. We can drop that issue now.
5:59
We're doing really well Thank you.
6:01
I'm looking forward to going to the Red Pill
6:03
Expo here in a couple
6:05
of days, and so that would
6:08
be pretty strenuous. So I think I'm up to it.
6:10
I think I hope so. I hope so. We'll
6:12
put you in our prayers for sure. And
6:13
I I hope so. And I I'm glad you're doing well. You're
6:15
ninety one years old. I can't believe it.
6:18
I
6:19
can't believe it is. I
6:21
made a mistake somewhere. Don't
6:23
we all feel that way? Oh, gosh. ninety
6:26
one. You just had your ninetieth birthday
6:28
last year and I couldn't believe it because, you
6:30
know, you don't look it, you don't sound it. I
6:32
mean, it's just you've had this amazing
6:34
career you're still going strong and doing
6:36
all of these things at the helm of all of those
6:38
things. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I
6:39
hope to be able to do that for quite
6:41
a while yet because things are really getting
6:44
exciting now, and I don't wanna make sure.
6:45
Yes. Yes. I I would I I understand
6:47
how you feel I do. This whole
6:50
this whole last, I call it, Blovid,
6:52
or flu bid. This whole last three
6:54
years, has this been
6:56
one of the wake up calls? And maybe if
6:58
we could pull anything out it that's positive.
7:01
Has this been a wake up call? Have you noticed
7:03
a shift
7:04
in the pink dress? It's so obvious.
7:06
Yeah. And, of course, We know
7:09
that this is what's coming. I
7:11
mean, people have to
7:13
wake up at some point. I'm
7:15
sure even those cows in the chute
7:17
going to the slaughterhouse -- Sure. -- when they get
7:19
so close that they can smell
7:22
the melt and slaughter ahead
7:24
of them here They
7:26
mowing from the I guess they don't call it
7:28
mowing or mowing or whatever they're calling from
7:30
the cows and everything. They said, hey,
7:32
wait, something bad going on
7:34
here. Right.
7:36
Yeah. I think humans are a lot like that.
7:38
The closer they get to the calamity, the
7:40
more obvious it is.
7:42
But the good part of all that is that
7:44
even though the calamity is
7:47
probably good name for it is getting closer
7:49
and closer, we still have enough
7:51
time to to
7:53
steer the ship a little bit. I don't think we're
7:55
going to get out of this without paying a
7:57
huge price. But I think we are going
7:59
to come out of it better
8:01
than we went into it because people
8:03
will have lost their complacency. It
8:05
will know that liberty is no longer something
8:07
you can ignore. it's something you
8:09
have to defend and something you have to nourish.
8:12
And so that's an important next step.
8:14
And I don't think I don't think the
8:16
world
8:16
would be taking that step. if
8:18
they hadn't felt the the breadth
8:21
of the of the dragon,
8:23
you know. Mhmm. It
8:24
hadn't felt the loss of liberty quite
8:26
as deeply as we felt it. Yes.
8:28
Okay. Well, I can certainly understand
8:30
that. And hopefully, you know, if we
8:32
can pull anything good out, maybe that's something
8:35
that's positive. know, I'm gonna ask you
8:37
this again because I asked you this the very first time I
8:39
interviewed you, but it's been a few years. What was
8:41
your wake up call? What was that moment?
8:43
Because usually, there's always a cattle a
8:45
list. There's a the build up and then the
8:47
catalyst of of why you started looking
8:49
into these things, like the writing the
8:51
creature of Jackalai and about the
8:52
Federal Reserve and so forth. What was your
8:55
moment? Well,
8:56
you know what, that's
8:58
an easy and a hard question to answer at
9:00
the same time. Sure. It's
9:02
easy because I I do remember
9:04
it, but it's hard because most people
9:06
expect the answer to be dramatic,
9:09
which is not Right. It's
9:11
like so many things in life. I think
9:13
most people have gone through this
9:15
experience that we start off. We've
9:17
got our view of where we're headed.
9:19
We've got a mission. We've got a master plan
9:22
and wham. Something hits us and
9:24
or falls in our path and we can't
9:26
proceed down the path that we
9:28
had chosen. So we're forced at
9:30
great pain and anguish to try
9:32
something else and we go off at maybe
9:34
thirty degrees or ninety degrees.
9:36
to where we were headed. And we cry
9:38
all the way up for me, for me. And
9:40
then a couple of years later, we realized,
9:43
whoa. Hey, this is this is better than the
9:45
first pass. I'm doing better now than
9:47
I I'm I'm happier now than
9:49
I was then. And these
9:51
these terrible things that happened
9:53
to us. these blocks in our past,
9:55
turn out inevitably to be
9:57
the best things that ever happened to
9:59
us because they force it down us
10:01
to take a more intelligent and a
10:03
more realistic path in our
10:06
lives. So that was kind of how I got
10:08
into this. A little
10:09
thing happened. I be in a
10:11
a
10:11
client's office waiting for an appointment.
10:13
I picked up a little magazine
10:15
called the Free Man and
10:17
it was the first time I'd ever read a
10:19
little story from the pre enterprise
10:22
or less a fair perspective.
10:24
I've never read anything like that before I
10:26
-- Mhmm. -- I gone through my
10:29
childhood, gone through the university, I graduated,
10:31
got married, already had a couple of
10:33
kids, and I'd never read
10:35
anything from pre enterprise perspective.
10:37
And this sort of jumped at me. I thought, hey, this is
10:39
really interesting. So even though
10:41
a life changing thing -- Mhmm. --
10:43
it's just that I subscribe to the magazine
10:45
and and I I
10:47
liked it so much. I I ordered out as
10:49
many back issues as I could. I
10:51
got the bound versions. of
10:53
the mezzanine all the way back to year one. Wow.
10:55
I read all this stuff. I thought this is really
10:58
interesting. Then I picked up
11:00
another pamphlet a little while
11:02
later critique of the United
11:04
Nations. Mhmm. I was incensed at that
11:06
because I knew the UN was wonderful.
11:08
They told me that school. Right.
11:10
And I knew it was our last best hope
11:12
for peace. And so when I read
11:14
this stuff and this can't be true. So and
11:16
I went to the library. I started
11:18
checking out. I found out, oops, it was
11:20
true. Now, by this time, the hook is a
11:22
little bit deeper. And it's just
11:24
the steps like that. Like, one
11:26
thing leads to another, to another, to
11:28
another. And finally, I decided
11:30
to abandon my so called
11:32
career. I was climbing the corporate
11:34
I was all wrapped up in
11:37
material things. How much money am I going to make?
11:39
What kind of a car am I driving? Are
11:41
we looking? Can we buy a better
11:43
house? You know what? we're gonna go on
11:45
vacation and all this stuff, and
11:47
new furniture, new drapes, and all this
11:49
stuff. And I was very materialistic, but all of
11:51
a sudden, I realized that, oh
11:53
my gosh. It's it's all my illusions
11:56
about life. Warren illusions.
11:58
I thought they were the real thing. I thought
12:00
I was born into a country. of
12:02
our forefathers. Right? You know what? I
12:04
still believe in, you know, the land of the
12:06
free, the home of the brave, and all
12:08
of that. and I came to
12:10
realize that those were illusions.
12:12
And that's when my crusader
12:14
gene hit in. And
12:16
I quit my job poor
12:18
wife thought, I was crazy how we just feed
12:20
the kids, put food on the table. But
12:22
it it was not one thing,
12:25
Kate. It was a whole series of little
12:27
things like that. And so here I
12:29
am the victim of hate, I
12:31
guess. I love this story. I really
12:32
do because that's how it happens for most people,
12:35
for me. It was the seat belt the seat belt law. I mean, I
12:37
have all things. Right? But that was what launched
12:39
me. So in in your career,
12:41
what was the first deep dive the
12:43
real big deep dive that
12:44
you did. What topic? Well,
12:48
it hap the deep dive just
12:50
like a moment ago. It was not all
12:52
at once. Okay. But nevertheless, the
12:54
deepest dive for me was
12:56
the monetary system. Mhmm.
12:59
Yeah. I have to stop and evaluate
13:01
that. the health system is also I think
13:03
another very, very deep
13:05
dive. Anyway, I
13:07
thought our money was created by
13:09
the government. I thought the Federal
13:11
Reserve whatever that was must be a
13:13
government agency. I thought all the
13:15
people connected with it. We're probably
13:17
interested in my my
13:19
best interest in -- Mhmm. -- the fate of the
13:21
nation. They were our servants and they
13:23
were good people doing the best they
13:25
could. Right. And I
13:27
said the same thing about, in my mind,
13:29
about all those researchers in the health
13:31
field, all the doctors and all
13:33
the experts, the health
13:35
version. The people were telling me what
13:37
I should and should not eat and
13:39
all that stuff. I thought they all had my
13:42
best interest at heart.
13:44
Mhmm. And
13:46
but I took two deep dives on both
13:48
of those and which led to
13:50
my two books -- Right. -- that have been the
13:52
best sellers over the years and I didn't
13:54
expect them to be. But anyway, so one was
13:56
the world without cancer -- Yes.
13:58
-- story of vitamin b seventeen.
14:01
Yes. The other one was the creature from
14:03
Jackal Island. A second look at
14:05
the Federal Reserve. Massive Those
14:07
were deep dives from me.
14:08
Yes. They were and they were for
14:11
everybody else. So a lot
14:13
of people were awakened
14:15
with that. And when you
14:17
look back, what is the interview that you
14:19
look back? The interview that you did
14:21
that, I mean, you've had a lot of
14:23
interviews that or published and
14:25
documented. What was the one that you found?
14:27
Like, I'm that you're just so happy now
14:29
that you were able to do that you felt was
14:31
so important
14:32
for people to hear and understand? Well,
14:35
there were several of them like that,
14:37
Kate. But the one that comes to mind first
14:39
is the one with Norman Dodd.
14:41
Yes. Yes. Seriously? chief
14:44
investigator for the REIT's committee.
14:46
Mhmm. And they were investing tax
14:48
exempt foundations. And
14:50
that's when Norman Dad had come
14:52
from the banking world. And when
14:54
I interviewed that fellow, that
14:56
old gentleman, he he just
14:58
taught me what life was real. all
15:00
about in terms of money and
15:02
banking. And,
15:05
yeah, and I I recorded that
15:07
on video at a time that nobody was particularly
15:10
interested. Mhmm. And and
15:13
now, of course, everybody interested in it
15:15
because he was talking about
15:18
this at such a profound fundamental
15:20
level. Oh, my
15:20
gosh. Yes. And the education system,
15:22
how it was hijacked, and I've actually taken
15:25
that recording and I've played it on the
15:27
air.
15:27
Oh, good. Yes.
15:29
Well, you know nobody understood it or cared
15:31
about it. when I did it.
15:33
But twenty years later, all of a sudden people
15:35
were saying, I hear you have a recording with
15:37
Norman Dodd. Yeah. Could
15:40
we hear it? Could we hear it? I
15:42
say. Yeah. So much
15:44
after the fact, that's interesting because
15:47
it took a a little bit and people
15:49
started realizing how it had been hijacked
15:51
and he described perfectly how the Carnegie
15:53
foundation and those foundations
15:55
associated with it took over from
15:57
nineteen o seven on. So it was --
15:59
Yes. -- so
15:59
you did study that very
16:00
shortly. Yes. Yes.
16:03
Because it's it's that important
16:05
gonna go off to a break. We'll be right back. I'll be right back with
16:07
g Edward Griffin. I know. I have to say the
16:09
legend, and I hate to say it like that. But you're
16:11
the legend. I mean, you have brought
16:13
a lot more word. I know. Right? I
16:15
knew you'd get a kick out of that. He's so humble.
16:17
Be right back, Kate Delhi, show, more with
16:19
Jaboukie Griffin, when we come back. And the
16:21
Red Pill Expo November the twelfth
16:23
saw
16:23
Legacy be right back.
16:34
Now, call 888673
16:36
fourteen fifty.
16:38
This is the Kate Dally show.
16:41
I looked over to Jordan, and
16:43
I had what did I say?
16:46
Coming forward a carried e
16:48
home. A band
16:50
out and Joel's comment
16:53
after me. Come in
16:55
for the carry me home. Hi
16:57
there. Welcome back. Hey, Deli. Show.
16:59
so glad you're joining me a
17:01
great and fun interview
17:03
with g Edward Griffin. Also, Dinesh
17:06
T'Souza on Monday, on our
17:08
Monday show after the weekend.
17:10
And, of course, Red
17:12
Pill coming. Red Pill will be in
17:14
Salt Lake City on the twelfth, and there's so
17:16
many wonderful speakers. So many of those
17:18
speakers we've had on the show numerous
17:20
times and you'll want to hear them in
17:22
person. There's always a lot more in person,
17:24
especially at the red pill. So it's a great
17:26
event. Make sure you go up to Salt Lake City
17:28
and be part of that, please, and
17:30
go get tickets because
17:32
it's important. These things are important and right
17:34
now is a great time to wake up a
17:36
friend. So bring a friend that sorta
17:38
doesn't really know anything or just
17:40
barely beginning to understand, and I I think
17:42
they're gonna have a great experience
17:44
up there. Go to Red Pill University dot
17:47
org. Red Pill University dot
17:49
org. Welcome back. I really
17:51
appreciate this time with you. We were just talking
17:53
about that interview with Norman Dodd. And
17:55
then what was your interview with
17:59
the KGB? the KGB guy.
17:59
Did you wanna talk about that? That was his
18:02
name
18:02
was Yuri. Yuri. Yes.
18:04
He was a high ranking
18:07
Soviet KGB agent. specializing
18:09
in propaganda and that
18:12
kind of thing. And,
18:14
yeah, he escaped from
18:16
all of that had great risk to his life,
18:18
especially back in those days. I
18:20
think I was reading one of
18:22
the reports that the previous
18:24
guy that had that tried to defect
18:26
from the KGB. They brought him
18:29
back and they
18:31
burned him alive in a
18:33
cremation oven. and
18:35
forced all the other agents around
18:37
us. Watch it. Oh my
18:39
gosh. Just burn him to death.
18:41
So when you're
18:43
abezing off, defected. He
18:45
came out of India. He was assigned in India.
18:47
India. He dressed up like a
18:49
hippie and got out with a bunch of
18:51
other American hippies and came to the
18:54
US to tell his story and
18:56
to to wake up America in
18:58
a way to to warn us
19:00
that he knew what they AGB
19:02
was and the Soviet Union were trying to do
19:04
to America because he was part of it.
19:06
And so when I heard about this,
19:08
I ran the guy down. It's in the
19:10
hotdog, and we Can we interview you? sure. Be glad
19:13
to. Wow. So that's how that came
19:15
about. I can't
19:16
even imagine what that was like for
19:18
you. to interview him and hear it straight
19:20
you know, straight from someone
19:22
involved like that. Yeah. Well, I knew
19:24
the story because I had read about it,
19:27
but to sit there with him in
19:29
a living room, in two
19:31
comfortable chairs -- Mhmm. -- and just ask
19:33
him questions. Was it really quite an
19:35
experience -- Okay. -- than an eye
19:37
opener because And when you read things, you don't
19:39
know who wrote this. Is this the truth or
19:41
not? But when you see the man himself
19:43
telling his own story,
19:45
You know, it's the real thing, you know. Yeah.
19:47
Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Are
19:50
there still rabbit holes you want to
19:52
go down? still some questions that you
19:54
wish you had weeks on end to just do
19:56
some research on? Oh,
19:58
they're all over the place. Hi,
20:01
Christine. I'd probably be your yes. sir.
20:03
There's so many. I wanna I wanna know
20:05
more about the the Antarctic
20:07
phenomenon. I wanna know more about -- Yeah. --
20:09
they really put a man on the moon else.
20:11
I wanna know. I don't want to hear somebody's
20:13
opinions.
20:13
Right. Right. I'm with you.
20:15
There's yeah. I wanna know. Are there aliens
20:17
out there or
20:18
aren't there? So what's going on? You
20:21
know? There are all kinds of questions. It's not all
20:23
politics and health. There are a lot
20:25
of phenomena. I want to know
20:27
more about quantum physics
20:29
is the real thing. Yes.
20:31
Oh, you know you
20:33
know the idea of the red pill
20:35
is everywhere. seems like the more
20:37
important an issue is in our
20:39
lives. The more likely it is that we've been
20:41
taught an illusion
20:43
about it. It's not the way it really
20:45
is. Do
20:46
you still feel like you have cognitive dissonance?
20:48
That I have
20:49
well, sometimes I do. Yes.
20:52
Yeah. Of course. I think that's such an
20:54
honest
20:54
answer. I think we all do.
20:56
I You know, if we're not questioning
20:58
that, maybe there's a problem.
20:59
Right? Yeah. It happens all the
21:02
time. Right. You know, the way
21:04
I I am sure that
21:06
I've just peaked under the tent. And I've
21:09
spent, what, fifty years in
21:11
heavy duty questioning
21:13
and research on these things know
21:15
I just lifted a little corner of the tent.
21:17
There's so much more in there that I don't
21:19
know about. Oh,
21:20
yeah. Absolutely. And I'm sure the last
21:22
well, go ahead. Go
21:24
ahead. what I was going to say, much of it
21:26
spills over from the real world of
21:29
politics and physics and all that stuff
21:31
into the esoteric world
21:33
of What is the universe? What is
21:35
matter? What is gravity? You know,
21:37
what is time? Things like that.
21:39
They're they're mind vendors. What
21:41
is infinity? How do you measure infinity? Is
21:43
that a beginning or an end?
21:46
Well, no. But then how does what does
21:48
it look like? Well, it doesn't look like
21:50
anything. And, you know, questions like
21:52
that. If if a person has an
21:54
open mind, you never have
21:56
to worry. about being
21:58
bored. That's so true. Are there anything that
21:59
you're sure of a hundred
22:01
percent?
22:03
Yes. Yeah. What
22:04
is that that? I don't know very
22:07
much. That you don't know very
22:09
much. Oh, that's
22:12
great. I love that. I think
22:14
that's great. you know, maybe
22:14
maybe we should all say that. I I I'm I'm
22:16
pretty sure God's there. I feel like
22:18
there's a God. Yeah. And
22:21
that I know But beyond that, I
22:23
think it's all up for questions
22:26
because people say to what extent were we
22:28
lied to, what's your answer to
22:30
that? Well, I
22:31
don't know. The answer, I don't know.
22:33
Yeah. But the but I know it's extensive.
22:35
There you go. Right? I
22:38
mean, there's so many to us.
22:40
Yes.
22:40
There's so there's just so much out there. I
22:42
think that we're just just like you
22:44
like you said we're just starting to peek under
22:46
the tent. What was the after this last
22:48
three years and what we've just gone through
22:50
with understanding finally with the medical community
22:53
after after the takeover of Johns Hopkins
22:55
and public health the introduction of public
22:58
health, they wanted to make sure that they
23:00
ran those medical schools a certain
23:02
way. So now we're all finally
23:04
realizing this and we're also realizing we
23:06
have socialized medicine that is afoot
23:08
now. So with that
23:10
and your book and your series on a world
23:12
without cancer, what are some of the most
23:14
important things that you think that you saying early on that
23:16
people need to pay attention to when it
23:18
comes to cancer?
23:19
Well,
23:22
I
23:22
suppose the most fundamental
23:25
thing. The really rock bottom
23:27
thing about not just
23:29
cancer, but all chronic diseases
23:32
is that health
23:35
does not come from
23:37
a test Mhmm. It comes from
23:41
nature. And I believe it conversely
23:45
most illnesses come
23:47
from the lack of being
23:49
at one with with nature.
23:51
Mhmm. There are certain things, of course, you can
23:53
You can live too close to a power line.
23:56
You can be inhaling toxic things.
23:58
You can poison yourself with the foods that
24:00
you eat and all those things. But
24:02
even in spite of all of those damaging things
24:05
to your body, I've
24:07
come to appreciate the fact that the body
24:09
is extremely responsive
24:11
and can overcome amazing
24:14
trauma if you just give it the
24:16
right ingredients that it's
24:18
looking for -- Mhmm. -- things that grow
24:20
out of the around. Mhmm. Generally,
24:22
I never thought I'd hear myself
24:24
saying that because I used to think these these
24:26
people are always talking about herbs
24:28
or crazy, you know. Right. But no, I think well,
24:31
no, I'm crazy. Right.
24:34
That says, I think I think
24:37
this this universe or this
24:39
planet at least was put together
24:41
not only with with living
24:43
things, but I mean,
24:45
animals and things with feet that you can
24:47
move around and with fins that you can
24:49
swim around and wings that you can fly around.
24:51
But none of that it has to be
24:53
created with the essential nutrients
24:55
and the food, the engine needs to
24:57
be driven with the fuel, all
24:59
the fuels and all the maintenance tools
25:01
are also created at the same time.
25:03
Otherwise, it wouldn't work. Right. So once
25:05
you get that kind of a
25:07
thinking process going It makes it simplifies
25:10
things a lot. It makes it easier to
25:12
understand what illness really is
25:14
and a lot easier to figure out what to do
25:16
about it. So true. Wow.
25:17
Words of wisdom. I love that.
25:20
Yeah. Absolutely. When
25:22
you when you're looking back at ninety
25:24
one years, what are you most proud
25:26
of? in your life?
25:28
Proud. Proud. Let me think.
25:30
One
25:32
has to be very careful
25:34
of pride. Mhmm. my aunt,
25:38
Alice, who raised me, all he used
25:40
to say, and I remember Edward, pride
25:43
cometh before a fall.
25:45
so true. It was
25:48
so true. That is so
25:50
true. But you asked me a
25:52
question. I feel very
25:54
content. about having
25:57
produce some educational
25:59
materials books and videos that
26:01
have caused people to
26:03
I think take a more correct path in life
26:05
at least as I see it. Mhmm. When when
26:08
people like you tell me
26:10
that something I've written or something -- Yes. --
26:12
said, somewhere on the line. has had a
26:14
profound effect on your life, for
26:16
example. Mhmm. When somebody tells me that, I
26:18
think, hot dog, I'm I'm
26:20
worth it. I'm worth something. Yeah. I
26:22
did it. I love
26:24
that. Isn't that
26:25
great? Because it's it's all about truth. And
26:27
so the things Well, I'll give you an example. Sure.
26:29
When
26:29
I started down this path, I
26:32
realized that The most fundamental problem
26:34
I think we're facing
26:37
politically is the fact that people believe in
26:39
something called collectivism. Mhmm.
26:41
And they didn't they don't know about
26:43
collectivism versus individualism. Mhmm.
26:45
And I realized that, you know, long not
26:47
too long ago, everybody knew what those bridge
26:49
met. Mhmm. But by the time I got to World War two,
26:52
they'd been pretty well scrubbed out of the
26:54
vocabulary. And I found that,
26:56
you know, communism, fascism, socialism,
26:59
some rights left, Republican, Democrats, and
27:01
all these things mean nothing really
27:04
-- Mhmm. -- hard definitions. They're all
27:06
based on this conflict between
27:09
individualism versus collectivism.
27:11
And I've been trying to preach that
27:14
for quite a while now. And what
27:16
really makes me feel good is when
27:18
I hear these words beginning
27:20
to creep back into the common
27:23
vocabulary, I hear it on the radio or on television, I think,
27:25
hot dog. Here's another one. There's a
27:27
Bingo. She probably love the people are
27:29
beginning to think in terms of reality
27:31
now. not illusion. So
27:33
true. Where
27:34
we have always talked about communism,
27:36
is it globalism now? Is that
27:38
our threat? Well, that's another that's another
27:40
word. What is global and
27:42
-- Mhmm. -- I mean, I'm a globalist. I
27:44
I want global peace and freedom
27:47
and humanity. Mhmm. What is
27:49
globalism? Well, we know globalism is
27:51
the equivalent of global
27:55
collectivism -- Yes. -- if the collectivism
27:57
part that makes globalism
27:59
that there's nothing wrong with the world government.
28:01
If the government is based on the
28:03
principles of liberty and protection
28:05
of human rights, and restriction
28:07
against the growth, the government itself. What's wrong
28:10
with
28:10
that? It could be global. I hope
28:11
if we ever get a good formula for
28:13
it, it should be global.
28:16
So the size of it is not the
28:18
issue. That's why these words get in the
28:20
way. People start arguing over things
28:22
that they don't even understand what the words mean. So
28:25
true. The issue is individualism
28:27
versus collectivism. What is the
28:29
center of society? Is it the individual? Mhmm.
28:31
Or is it the group? Right.
28:34
And most people today
28:36
without realizing it, believe it
28:38
is the group. and
28:40
that's how we lose because all
28:43
the the demagogues have to
28:45
do is say, well, this is for the
28:47
greater good of the greater number.
28:49
Mhmm. And we say, oh, okay. Well,
28:51
I guess, so that Then yeah.
28:52
That's turned into, like, niceness and
28:55
kindness, and it seems as there those
28:57
things have turned into a pad
29:00
on the back. So when they're when they're in
29:02
collectivism, they think, well, this and
29:04
and rooting for it they think
29:06
that this is good. It makes them
29:08
good in some strange
29:09
way. Yeah. Like the perfect
29:11
example is Pearl Harbor. people denied
29:14
it for a long time. The idea
29:16
that the United States government
29:18
of FDR and and
29:21
others in the State Department and the
29:23
military all plotted to get us
29:25
into the war and made
29:27
it very tempting for
29:29
Japan to attack Pearl Harbor made sure that
29:31
her fleet and her planes and everything
29:33
were not interfered with so they could have a,
29:35
quote, surprise attack. all
29:38
that was denied at first. Now
29:40
they found the records in the
29:42
archives and it's all proven now
29:44
that that's exactly what happened.
29:46
And so lot of
29:48
these people have denied it
29:50
originally are now changing their tune and
29:52
say, well, isn't it isn't it
29:54
great that President Roosevelt had
29:56
such great foresight is to
29:58
use these
29:59
these these tricks to get
30:02
the American
30:02
people to wake up to the
30:05
necessity to get into the war. And
30:07
and so because it was for the greater good of
30:09
the planet -- Oh. -- because you
30:12
hate nazism. and go ahead on, you know,
30:14
marketing plot. I'll be --
30:16
Yeah. -- we'll be right back a little bit a little bit more
30:18
a couple more minutes with GEDRA Gripen when we
30:20
come back. right
30:22
back.
30:25
An
30:26
era
30:29
goes to restaurant. Top
30:31
lines are open now. Call 888673
30:34
fourteen fifty.
30:36
This is the Kate
30:37
Dally Joe. Come out for the carry and eat
30:40
home. Tell
30:42
all my friends I'm gonna
30:44
come after.
30:47
really
30:49
So glad
30:51
you're listening in because you're getting a treat today.
30:53
G Edward Griffin, the author
30:56
of the creature of Jekyll Island, the world of
30:58
cancer, and exposing
31:01
public education and I mean,
31:03
you name it. You name it. Exposing communism. You
31:05
name it. He's done it. And a a
31:08
lifelong worth of work
31:10
in this department. I can't even tell you.
31:13
And and and in just a
31:15
moment, we'll have him back on. But let me tell
31:17
you, inside out Hyperbarics, great
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sponsor of the show. A Hyperbaric machine is
31:21
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31:29
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machine. It'll do you so much good
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for so many reasons. G
32:10
Edward Griffin is my guest,
32:12
and I'm so honored to have him because
32:14
he is truly one
32:16
of the legends. I mean, this is this
32:18
is the person who has woken up so many people. I was
32:20
just telling him on the break, that I'm asking him
32:23
what his wake up moment was.
32:25
And honestly, I've had guests on the
32:27
show who refer to him as their
32:29
wake up moments. So talk
32:31
about, you know, talk about how this how
32:33
this all works out. It's very, very interesting,
32:35
and I hope he realizes this because
32:37
he is the catalyst for many,
32:39
many people waking up. And love that.
32:41
Don't you, Ed? I think that's so wonderful.
32:44
Well, it
32:44
is wonderful. But it's to me, it's
32:46
more of a phenomenon than it
32:48
is a personal thing. because we've all
32:50
heard the expression that we stand on
32:53
the shoulders of giants. And
32:56
there's very little that I
32:58
have contributed to
33:00
the knowledge base. Maybe
33:02
a few minor things.
33:04
And I'm very happy about those, but
33:07
ninety-nine point 999
33:09
percent of everything, I know or
33:11
think I know of any
33:13
value. I've learned from some of
33:15
the other authors from other
33:17
speakers -- Mhmm. -- some even some
33:19
friends in house listening. But
33:21
the the literature is great. and
33:23
it's you read a good book -- Mhmm.
33:25
-- sometimes it's written a hundred and fifty
33:27
years, two hundred years ago.
33:29
Read some of the debates
33:32
and the and the constitutional convention -- Mhmm. --
33:34
read the federalist papers. You know, the
33:36
old documents where people talked about
33:38
the same things we're talking about.
33:41
and you come away with
33:43
impressions and conclusions.
33:46
And then you're in a conversation
33:48
someday and you you wind up saying
33:50
something, I was like, geez, that's brilliant.
33:52
And you don't even realize that you stole
33:54
it from Jefferson or something, you know?
33:56
That's how it works. you learn
33:58
from others, and it is a great feeling
34:00
to be part of that chain. Mhmm.
34:02
And you look at yourself, what are
34:04
you doing? How many people are
34:07
you influencing? and you may not even realize it, but
34:09
those people will go on and
34:11
they'll influence a hundred thousand people or
34:13
maybe just a hundred people.
34:16
but that's how it goes. It goes forever that way. Knowledge
34:18
grows person to person. Oh,
34:20
I love that. You're so
34:22
humble. III really
34:24
like that about you. It's just a fantastic
34:26
quality about
34:26
you. When you're
34:27
when you when you think about all the hits
34:29
that you've taken for bringing
34:31
all this information forward and for speaking out and and
34:33
all the cottage meetings you've done and all
34:36
the times that you presented and you
34:38
look back at
34:40
your life as we are more moving forward in our lives
34:42
and we're trying to tell people you must
34:44
stand. It's Liberty is more than just
34:46
a vote every year. You have to stand. You
34:48
have to speak out you have to
34:50
learn. Have has it all
34:52
been worth it? I'm sure you took your hits.
34:54
I'm sure people looked at you sideways. I'm
34:56
sure people said things
34:58
about you. has it all been worth it? Because I sure hope that the
35:00
takeaway is that people need to move
35:02
forward speaking
35:04
out. Right?
35:04
our right Well, yes.
35:06
In
35:06
that sense, it was definitely worth it.
35:08
But, you know, even if we were
35:10
still in that underdog, well, I guess,
35:13
we are in the underdog but
35:16
not as much as as we were back in the sixties when
35:18
I started to speak out on these things. But
35:20
even if we were or even worse off
35:24
than that, it's it's not that it's it's worth it or not. It's do
35:26
we have to do it? Yeah. And
35:28
if you're the kind of a person
35:30
like I am and you're and
35:32
you've got this burden of having a a
35:35
crusader jean. It doesn't make any
35:37
difference whether it's worth it. You just have
35:39
to do it. That's to do it settle
35:42
all. Well,
35:42
you just have to speak the truth. Yeah. You have to do
35:44
it.
35:44
Yeah. Yeah. For your own
35:46
conscience, I'm sure. And Right.
35:49
you're still standing today. So if
35:51
if you made it, you
35:53
know, what are people so afraid of?
35:55
So you're saying,
35:56
well, I don't know what they're afraid
35:58
of getting bumped off, I guess. I guess. Yeah.
36:00
You
36:00
know, I Well, nothing wrong
36:03
to
36:03
be afraid of that. Right. But it's what you
36:05
do with your fear, that
36:07
simple That is so true. That is so
36:09
true. You were talking about before we left to
36:11
the break how they knew about
36:14
Pearl Harbor. coming on. And I didn't know if you wanted to comment on
36:16
that more. You're certainly welcome to
36:18
do that. Well,
36:18
I just I'm
36:22
I'm quoting now some facts that I remember -- Mhmm. -- from years
36:24
ago when I was researching the topic. So
36:26
I don't have a lot of finite details
36:28
with names and dates and so forth.
36:31
but it it was amazing to me at the time
36:34
how much detail there
36:36
was. It was thoroughly
36:38
documented. Right. and found in official documents
36:40
that the leading officials in
36:42
the United States government were the
36:44
primary indicators
36:46
of the attack on Pearl Harbor. And they wanted
36:49
they wanted Japan to attack Pearl Harbor so that
36:51
we could get into
36:54
the war as a victim
36:56
rather than in as an aggressor.
36:58
Yes. And because they thought if we went
37:00
in as an aggressor, why it would it
37:02
would be bad publicity. So they made
37:04
it everything made everything possible and easy for
37:06
Japan to strike Pearl
37:08
Harbor. Mhmm. And that's
37:10
in the details after that become
37:12
very interesting. even
37:14
to the point where they I I don't know why I picked this flooded across my mind.
37:17
Mhmm. So there was one one
37:20
Japanese spy -- Mhmm. --
37:22
that came
37:24
in to Pearl Harbor under the cloak
37:26
of being a diplomatic
37:29
employee for the
37:31
office there from from
37:34
Japan. Mhmm. And the record the
37:36
FBI record showed that they knew exactly who he
37:38
was. He was a graduate of Japan's
37:42
espionage school. They knew his
37:44
name, his address, his girlfriend's name,
37:46
they knew everything about him. They knew when
37:48
he got on board and was coming to
37:51
Pro Harbor. They knew when he landed. They knew where
37:53
he lived. They knew what his phone number was. I
37:55
think they tapped his phone, and they knew that
37:58
every day, he went up to
38:00
a hilltop. overlooking the bay -- Mhmm. -- and was
38:02
and was taking note of shift
38:04
movements and and
38:06
then telegraphing or sending in some
38:10
way. the information back to Tokyo as to
38:12
what ships were there, where they were,
38:14
you know, when they came in and what they're likely to
38:16
go out with. They were setting up
38:18
Pearl Harbor
38:20
that the Japanese would know exactly what ships to strike and
38:22
where they were. And they did nothing
38:24
to interfere with it. Nothing at
38:27
all. In fact, they actually blocked some people who
38:29
were trying to get the information
38:31
out and that they stepped in in a way and
38:33
said, no, no, this is
38:35
This is protected information. Things like that. You
38:38
you know, one or two things you could probably
38:40
explain away. Well, maybe there was a reason.
38:42
Maybe somebody made a mistake. Mhmm. But when
38:44
you find fifty or sixty things
38:46
like that all in a row becomes
38:48
very clear that this was part
38:51
of a strategy to get the United States into
38:53
World War two -- Mhmm. -- as a
38:56
victim, so that the people in America would
38:58
support it. Otherwise, they wouldn't have
39:00
supported the
39:02
war. So true. Oh, amen to that
39:03
and almost every war we've had.
39:05
So Well, it it goes on and
39:07
on and on. I mean, let's take a
39:09
look at that. nine eleven.
39:12
Yeah. Nine eleven. I mean, an
39:14
example. Same principle, not a war. Mhmm.
39:16
The war on terrorism
39:18
supposedly. Right. you gotta have
39:20
a terrorist attack. It's gonna conduct a war against terrorists. So
39:22
who creates the attack? You
39:26
know? Yeah. You're exactly right. So why do you think they tell us,
39:28
you know, because all of this, there's
39:30
so much proof. They're always saying these
39:33
and I always say on the air, they're saying it. I'm just telling you
39:35
what they're saying. I mean, I'm just a
39:38
messenger. Why did they tell us? What
39:40
do
39:40
you think? In
39:41
many cases, I don't
39:43
think they'll they don't think they
39:45
will read it. In many cases,
39:47
they say these things in private
39:50
settings -- Mhmm. -- where somebody took
39:52
notes and then wrote a book on it
39:54
later or maybe somebody was making a
39:56
recording. Mhmm. They didn't realize it. Mhmm.
39:58
They thought they were just friends. And
40:00
sometimes they do write about
40:02
it and openly broadcast it.
40:04
But in those cases, they generally
40:06
soften it a little bit. by explaining
40:08
that it was a good thing as I mentioned a
40:10
moment ago. It was a good thing that we did all of
40:12
that. We killed a couple of thousand
40:14
American sailors because it was
40:16
for the greater good of the greater
40:18
number, and we were able to put an end of
40:20
fascism. Oh, it's
40:22
so horrible. Yeah. So we they one way or the
40:24
other, they explain it. Mhmm. And
40:26
besides, we know how they think
40:28
because we've
40:30
read their their ideology
40:32
books. We know that they believe
40:34
that this is warfare and
40:36
their goal is to conquer
40:39
the world. and people like you and me, we're
40:41
we're the enemy because we're blocking them.
40:43
Right. And so they're at war
40:45
with us. And you know,
40:47
the morality of warfare is very simple. Yeah. And it's that
40:49
there's only one only
40:52
one immoral thing
40:54
in warfare. and
40:56
that's too loose. Oh,
40:59
yes. Everything else
41:02
is moral. So once you
41:04
understand how they think that it's no longer
41:06
surprising that they do things like
41:08
that, especially when they can
41:10
justify it, or appear to justify for
41:12
good. Great comments. It's
41:14
covered on all on all corners.
41:18
comment. I know
41:18
that as we were talking on the break,
41:20
you would tell people to gather and gather often. This
41:22
is probably why you do the Red Pill
41:26
Expo. and because and you
41:28
were talking about that and the difference of emailing,
41:30
you know. And now getting together,
41:32
did you wanna talk about that for a moment? Oh,
41:34
yeah. we eventually
41:35
come with these conversations, we come to the question
41:37
of what are we going to do about this? Sure.
41:39
It's not enough just to
41:42
know about it and read books and say, uh-huh. We figure out what
41:44
they're doing. I did not now what are they gonna
41:46
do next. That's not enough. Mhmm.
41:49
We have to take that knowledge and convert it into some
41:51
kind of a plan of our own, the old saying
41:54
that the purely defensive is
41:56
doomed to feet. Mhmm.
41:58
So we've got to stop just being
42:00
defensive and and to
42:02
do something more than just try to stop
42:04
the enemy. We've got to reverse
42:07
the battle. and take it to to their home ground and get rid
42:09
of them. I don't mean to kill them. That's not
42:11
the point. This is a battle that's taking
42:14
place in the power centers of
42:16
our nation. where they're
42:18
capturing control of political
42:20
parties and government agencies and --
42:22
Yes. -- and labor
42:24
unions and
42:26
media outlets. It's not that they're killing us, all of that's going
42:28
to come. But they're catching
42:30
control of our country piece
42:32
by piece. that's the war
42:34
that we have to get into. And until
42:36
we realize that we are at war, we're
42:38
never gonna win. Thinking
42:39
of this stages of communism take over
42:41
of America. Where are we? And what sources of
42:44
hope do you for America,
42:46
do you
42:48
see?
42:48
Well, we're far.
42:50
I don't know how to put a
42:52
percentage on it or any other way to measure
42:54
it. Mhmm. But we're way
42:57
way too far down the path for
42:59
comfort. Right? I just don't
43:02
know what number to put on it. I'm usually
43:04
more pessimistic
43:06
than real IT. WE MUST
43:08
FACE OUR OFFFUL SITUATION FOR SURE. WE MUST
43:10
FACE OUR OFFFUL SITUATION FOR SURE. WHAT DO YOU
43:13
SEE AS SOURCES OF HOPE what
43:15
gives you hope right now? Well,
43:16
the source of hope, of course, is the only one
43:18
thing. And that is that enough enough
43:20
people. And now we're just talking about America.
43:22
Right. So I just say, the only source
43:24
of hope for America is for enough Americans
43:27
to understand not
43:30
only what
43:32
our enemy is doing. But what's that there
43:35
is an enemy. They don't realize we're at war.
43:37
They think this is just happening because there's
43:39
a bunch of noodle heads in
43:42
that don't know what's going on. Right. Oh,
43:44
right to your congressman. Tell him
43:46
that you disapprove, you know, they don't
43:48
realize that these
43:50
congressmen are already compromised
43:52
doing what they're told.
43:55
So anyway, we
43:58
have to depend on
44:00
enough people to realize that we are at war, to realize
44:02
that we have an enemy, to learn
44:04
how the enemy thinks, to
44:06
understand what strategies the
44:08
enemy uses, and then to get
44:10
ourselves to organize in a countermeasure
44:12
and take the offensive against
44:14
them. Now that sounds like it's a big measure
44:16
and it is -- Mhmm. -- but the good news
44:18
is it doesn't take many people to
44:20
do that. The fact is that
44:22
history is always written by a
44:24
very small minority, usually
44:26
one percent or less of the population.
44:29
If they're motivated and organized like
44:31
I'm describing, one percent will
44:34
easily dominate the other
44:36
ninety nine percent who are out there, you know, playing their games and
44:38
watching, dancing with the stars or
44:40
whatever they're doing -- Sure. -- and
44:42
enjoying life. is that
44:44
one percent who will be
44:46
the thought leaders who will
44:48
mobilize and influence a fifteen
44:50
percent of people who agree
44:52
with it They're not scholars or
44:54
anything, but they'll agree with this. Yeah. We want to
44:56
support this. Fifteen percent
44:58
will overcome the other
45:00
eighty five percent every time.
45:02
So our goal is really to find that one
45:04
percent of the population who have then influenced the
45:06
fifteen percent and then offer
45:09
a plan of action but
45:11
the fifteen percent can follow. And
45:14
just like the American Revolution,
45:16
which was fought in won,
45:18
by fifteen
45:20
percent of the population. Right. We also can win. You're
45:22
right. There's always been
45:22
the heavy lifting has always been done by the
45:25
smallest group, but that small that smallest
45:27
group is extremely strong in
45:30
your exactly right. Strengthen them. Go to Red Pill Expo and
45:32
meet Ed over there. G.
45:34
Edward Griffin over there at in
45:36
Salt Lake City November the twelfth.
45:39
Ed, it's been wonderful speaking with
45:41
you. Thank you, Kate. You're
45:43
such a wonderful person, and I don't
45:45
mean just because you you let
45:47
me talk. No. Are you kidding? I love learning from
45:49
you. I think you're spectacular. So thank
45:51
you so much. Your show
45:53
is fantastic. And and the
45:55
insights that you that
45:58
you impart -- Thank you. -- with your
45:59
listeners are just very, very impressive to
46:02
me. Thank you for
46:02
what you're doing. Thank
46:03
you, and Thank you. That really makes me happy.
46:05
Thank you. Be faithful. Be fearless, see you back
46:08
here on
46:10
Monday. We
46:10
thought
46:14
about hiring one of
46:15
those company spokesman
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