Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
Hi. This is Ryan from Insideout Hyperbarics.
0:02
And today, I'm on the radio to say thank you to
0:04
all of our clients who have allowed us to be part of
0:06
their healing journeys from helping those suffering
0:08
from traumatic brain injury and chronic pain
0:10
disorders to those with symptoms of auto immune
0:12
are the lingering effects of COVID nineteen
0:14
long haulers. It's been an honor you put faith
0:16
in us to help you through some of your toughest times.
0:19
to get back, we will be running monthly specials
0:21
as a celebrated upcoming six year anniversary.
0:23
To find these specials, check us out on the web at
0:25
inside out hyperbarics dot com.
0:27
everybody. I just wanted to tell you real quick.
0:29
Look, we didn't invest in t shirts
0:32
and hats. We could have, believe me, I've come
0:34
up with slogan or two, as you could probably imagine.
0:36
we have the commemorative Kate Delhi
0:38
Show coin because we want to put
0:40
money back in your pocket. And we knew that right
0:43
now with everything going on, you would
0:45
want to invest in precious metals.
0:47
This is a real silver coin. It is
0:49
a minted after the first
0:51
coin ever produced in the United States.
0:53
It has a piece of history that I love, and
0:55
it has the Kate Dally show on it be faithful, be
0:57
fearless, comes in beautiful case. Ninety
1:00
nine dollars and most of that goes to the show.
1:02
But it is gonna put money back in your pocket, and I
1:04
do think silver is only going up. I
1:06
wanted to make sure that you got something out
1:08
of that, out of helping truth and radio.
1:10
We're up against a lot because shows
1:12
like this don't go on for
1:14
a long time because corporations usually
1:17
edge us out. and I don't want that to happen.
1:19
Please help this show stay on the air
1:21
and you can help free speech and know that
1:23
you did something to help free speech
1:25
in America survive this.
1:27
Radio is very important. It's a very important
1:29
element because you're listening.
1:32
And when people are listening, as Russ used to
1:34
point out, when people are listening, they're digesting
1:36
those words better than watching
1:39
something on TV and watching visuals.
1:41
It's a really important medium, and I wanna
1:43
stay here doing this show with all of my
1:45
favorite cohosts. So thank you. Go to
1:47
kate dallyradio dot com and please pick
1:49
up few of those coins. I would really appreciate
1:51
it. Thank you. Hello.
1:52
I'm Mike Glendale. In light of the recent
1:55
events, your continued support means
1:57
everything to myself and my employees
1:59
to think think you were having the biggest sale
2:01
ever on all my pillow betting. Get
2:04
my pillow bed sheets for as low as twenty
2:06
nine ninety eight. A set of pillowcases
2:09
for only nine ninety eight. In this
2:11
economy, instead of buying a new bed,
2:13
rejuvenate your bed with a my pillow
2:15
mattress stopper for as low as ninety nine
2:17
ninety nine. We also have blankets
2:20
in a variety of sizes, colors, and
2:22
styles like plush waffle or
2:24
gossamer for his lowest twenty
2:26
nine ninety eight. We even have pet
2:28
blankets from small size to the ones for
2:30
your car. Get huge discounts
2:32
on duvets, quilts, down comforters,
2:35
and so much more. So go to
2:37
my Pillow dot com or call that number on your
2:39
screen. Use your promo cord, and you'll
2:41
get huge discounts on all my
2:43
pillow bedding, including my pillow bedsheet
2:46
for as low as twenty nine ninety
2:48
eight. Get all your shop PM off quantities
2:50
last, please order now. Make
2:52
sure and use the promo code Kate,
2:54
KATE and get those savings and help
2:56
truth in radio. Thanks you guys.
2:59
from the bottom of my heart. Inside
3:00
out Hyperbarics bringing out the best
3:02
in you. You, but I'm thinking another flood isn't
3:04
such a bad idea. All in favor
3:06
of just a total earth cleansing, say,
3:08
ah, The Kate Delhi show starts
3:11
now.
3:11
Oh,
3:15
I'm really Wallace, and I see
3:17
the whole army of my countrymen,
3:21
the deer in the fire security. You've
3:24
come to fight a tree,
3:25
man. man and three
3:27
man you are.
3:28
What will you do without
3:30
freedom? Will you fight?
3:33
No. We're alright. You
3:36
will live. God.
3:39
Fight and you may die. Run.
3:41
And
3:42
you'll live at least a while.
3:44
and dying in your beds, money
3:47
used from now. Would
3:49
you be willing to trade
3:52
all the days from this to that.
3:54
For one chance, just one
3:56
chance to come back here
3:59
until our end.
4:00
But Welcome.
4:10
Kate Dally's show. I was on the AGG Show
4:13
earlier. I host every Wednesday and you
4:15
can catch that in a couple hours probably. It'll
4:17
be up. Maybe it's up now. Who knows? but
4:19
talked about the disrespecting marriage
4:22
act. I talked about oh,
4:24
a little bit about this climate climate
4:28
change, get a crazy climate
4:31
change summit. I don't even know what
4:33
you even would call it. It's just the crazy
4:35
And what else? Oh, yes,
4:37
the banking thing. But
4:40
but I have Melissa on.
4:43
And so we're gonna have a great conversation
4:45
in this hour. And then, of course, Susan comes on.
4:48
Melissa, so I just
4:50
wanted to say for the record, go check out the Alex
4:52
Jones episode that I just
4:54
did because I I put a lot out there. And
4:56
then also, please go get the
4:58
coin to help us out. And we
5:01
we really need you right now. And
5:03
I can't stress that enough right now.
5:05
Please please go get the coin You
5:08
it's ninety nine dollars puts money back in
5:10
your pocket because you're investing in
5:12
silver. It's a silver round. It's
5:14
awesome. I'm serious. It's beautiful.
5:17
And like we said yesterday, maybe this
5:19
will be kind of a a thing in the future where
5:21
I see a coin and I
5:23
recognize that show I recognize those
5:26
ideas behind that coin and
5:28
things
5:29
actually don't even have to be said. I just know
5:31
that III probably politically
5:34
agree with that person. And maybe
5:36
in the future, when free speech is completely
5:38
annihilated, that might come in handy.
5:40
So please go and help
5:42
us out and get that coin. I really
5:44
appreciate it. It says the Kate Dally show on it. Be faith
5:47
will be fearless. Just it's it's
5:49
really pretty. really pretty, and it comes in a beautiful
5:51
case, and it's the Lady Liberty with the stars
5:53
around her, and it helps truth and
5:55
radio stay on the air. Melissa,
5:58
so we, you know, of course,
5:59
let's talk a little bit about Gates. We'll talk
6:02
little bit about the climate the
6:04
climate fiasco summit
6:07
of manipulation that they threw together.
6:10
And I talked yesterday with Alex Newman
6:12
about this in uncle Milti, but
6:14
there are some other things too.
6:16
And, you know, I just have to say
6:18
after watching some of it, it
6:20
was so weird and they had the statue.
6:23
They had the statue up, and it was
6:25
all lit up. And I Oh, of course, there's a
6:27
reason they've got the statue. right
6:30
there as everybody's coming into this,
6:32
to this weird and strange,
6:35
strange meeting. and it was
6:37
the gurudu is a bird. It's a creature.
6:39
It's it's a man sitting writing a bird.
6:42
Okay? And it's from the Hindu mythology
6:44
and has a mix of eagle and human features.
6:48
And I'm like, of course, of course, they
6:50
would put something that
6:52
really spoke to the fact because in
6:54
the documents, it says non humans and things
6:56
like that, that speaks to the fact
6:58
that they really like the hybrid human.
7:01
And they really are
7:03
wanting to toy with this
7:05
and, of course, the the
7:07
little robot adventure that we're on
7:09
for technology and AI in the future. Of
7:11
course, they would have that particular statue
7:14
all lit up huge over this
7:16
whole summit. So
7:18
I don't did you did you see did you watch
7:21
parts of it?
7:22
I watched a little bit
7:24
of Bill Gates speaking, but I'm
7:26
I'm looking for a picture of the the
7:29
one thing. My name was bizarre. If they wanted to get
7:31
a half human, half something else, they're in
7:33
Egypt for gonna say, shouldn't they have gotten
7:35
like I don't know. There's
7:37
plenty of those things all hanging
7:38
over for Egypt too. It's
7:40
pretty bizarre. Anyway, of course, they'd get
7:43
a human hybrid or
7:45
at animal hybrid. It's very very
7:47
weird. Yeah. It's a mix of eagle and
7:49
human. Of course. I mean,
7:51
should we expect anything different? So
7:54
so I know you probably had to take a
7:56
long shower after you listened to Bill
7:59
Gates to speak. to
8:01
walk the, you know, staying off of as
8:03
well as we have to hear that man. But
8:05
what happened? What what did you what did you get out
8:07
of it? Well, Let's start with
8:09
this. He comes out onto
8:11
the stage -- Mhmm. -- pulling a little
8:16
I was listening to a a feed from
8:18
it was some British people talking about
8:20
it. So they're like, look, he has a little trolley
8:22
of corn. He had a little wagon.
8:25
literally little like a little red wagon
8:28
full of corn, like giant
8:30
corn plants growing and he pulls it out like
8:32
he's seven or something. very
8:34
odd. And Bill Gates might just
8:36
my emotional response to him.
8:39
He's like, he's
8:41
like listening to a little person. His
8:43
aweshek's nerdy stuff. Yeah.
8:46
You it's very easy to
8:48
underestimate him. because
8:51
he if
8:52
you listen to what he's saying, he's saying the
8:54
most vile and wicked things. But
8:57
it just comes off as so innocuous
8:59
because he's just, like, oh, look, I brought
9:01
my little wagon full of corn here
9:03
today, and then she'll lose.
9:06
You know, such a mess. If we
9:08
all wanna have lunch, we're gonna just
9:10
have this right here because there's no food
9:12
left in the whole world to eat. Some of you're
9:14
gonna have to die. But so
9:16
cute. That's kinda how he talks.
9:18
It just bugs me. Yeah.
9:21
Well, yeah. He's a he's a little worse.
9:23
Go ahead. The New York Times wrote
9:26
a big interview. They did
9:28
an interview with Bill Gates before he left.
9:30
And he said, we're in a worse place
9:32
than I thought. How
9:34
long have they been working on all
9:36
of this climate change, all of this everything?
9:39
Mhmm. Has been going for many
9:41
years now. Right? Right. The fact that
9:43
they're not making any progress should
9:46
be a big signal that they don't
9:48
have technology
9:48
that works.
9:50
Yeah. they don't have solutions
9:52
that work. Technology or not.
9:54
I just never expect a word out of their mouth.
9:56
I mean, truthful. I mean, These
9:58
are these are some of
9:59
the growth most grotesque human beings
10:02
we have on the planet. And he's
10:05
he's a depopulationist. And
10:07
I can't imagine being that. So
10:10
when you even start there with him, it
10:12
whatever comes out of his mouth, I mean, I just
10:14
hope by now everybody realizes he didn't invent
10:17
Microsoft. he was put in as the face of Microsoft.
10:19
And he is he
10:22
is three shades of strange. And
10:25
I just I can't imagine not
10:27
Anyway, so when you were sitting through
10:30
through the speech, what else what else did the guy
10:32
have to say? Yeah. Well, he
10:34
he just down the the usual
10:37
push. Mhmm. And the commentary that
10:39
I was listening to -- Mhmm. -- and this
10:41
is a brilliant comment. Does Bill Gates
10:43
push anything that doesn't put a dollar
10:45
in his own pocket? No. Ever. Mm-mm.
10:48
Nope.
10:48
That is his game.
10:51
So the things
10:53
that put money in bill
10:55
gates' pocket are things
10:57
like high-tech, surveillance
11:02
farming -- Mhmm. -- where we're gonna spy
11:04
on farmers from the sky, from our
11:06
satellites to see what they're doing.
11:09
it is the control
11:14
of seeds -- Mhmm. so
11:16
that farmers cannot be independent. They
11:18
have to purchase from
11:21
Monsanto in order
11:23
to get any kind of
11:24
seeds. Right.
11:26
And that you
11:28
know, the whole what he's
11:30
pushing right now, what what Bill Gates is pushing,
11:33
Well, I I can't remember the exact
11:35
phrase, but it's like digital farming.
11:38
It's
11:38
farming without farmers.
11:41
Yeah. And -- Right. --
11:43
think about think about where Bill Gates
11:45
is investing his money in fake
11:47
meat which is ranching
11:49
without cows or farmers. Right?
11:52
He's got agricultural
11:55
land that's going to be farmed without farmers.
11:58
Mhmm. And there's going to be a population
12:00
without food at the end of it. I
12:03
mean That's really what he wants. Yeah.
12:05
And in the meantime, we are going
12:08
to enrich him as he
12:10
takes us down that pathway. because
12:13
Bill Gates in his heart is
12:15
a pirate. When when my
12:17
kids needed their new computers
12:19
to go to college, I stood in a
12:22
in a computer store and
12:24
apparently too loudly said, Bill Gates
12:27
is nothing but a pirate. Does he wear an eyepatch
12:29
and have a peg leg? and my
12:31
kids were just like,
12:33
quiet.
12:33
I'd be quiet. You're making a scene
12:35
here. Yeah. But Bill Gates doesn't
12:37
do anything that like I said, doesn't
12:40
put a dollar in his pocket, and it doesn't matter
12:42
what he's involved in. Mhmm. At the end of
12:44
the day, whether it's vaccines,
12:47
We've
12:47
all heard the clip where he said, oh, this is
12:50
my most profitable investment ever was in
12:52
the COVID vaccine. Sure. Yeah.
12:54
MAKING A MINT FOR SURE.
12:56
AND WHAT DOES HE DONE? WHAT DOES THE VACCINE
12:58
DONE FOR US? Reporter: THE VACCINE DONE FOR US? Reporter: THE VACCINE DONE
13:00
FOR US: IN DEATHS
13:03
little children die people sudden adult
13:05
death syndrome. He's a man
13:07
who's pirating. He's
13:09
he's earning
13:10
money off of the
13:12
exploitation of
13:15
all of us. Right. Right.
13:17
And we're well, there's a word
13:19
for that. used to have a word for that, back in
13:21
the in the nineteenth century. Oh, I had a really
13:23
fun word for that. What's that called
13:25
colonialism. Oh, yeah. And that's
13:28
That's
13:28
an ugly word in the world today. Nobody
13:30
wants to be a colonialist, but you tell me how
13:32
Bill Gates and his minions
13:35
are not colonialists. Right. they
13:37
are
13:39
white men who are determined
13:41
to tell the world everybody
13:43
in the whole world
13:46
how to live and and to exploit
13:48
the resources wherever they may be for their own
13:50
gain and profit. That's the definition of colonialism.
13:54
Oh, man. He's a colonialist.
13:56
You know, it's funny that we don't really look at
13:58
gates and realize that he's he
14:00
was over is over our education.
14:03
and our health. He's the only private entity
14:05
that is partnered with the CDC.
14:07
i'm
14:09
That right there should tell us volumes about
14:11
Gates because who else is allowed
14:13
to do that. He was calling the shots
14:15
on common core. And then when
14:17
he completely screwed up our educational
14:20
system even beyond what it was already screwed
14:22
up, then, of course,
14:24
I remember when he became a partner with the
14:26
CDC. And
14:28
from then on, they warned and they
14:30
kept telling us not really warning. It was just a
14:32
precursor to what was going to happen that
14:35
we would have all these viruses come out and
14:37
everyone wanted to give us a risks. How
14:39
they how they know that? Right?
14:41
And so they kept telling us this, and that's
14:43
when he did all of the this is gonna
14:46
happen, and we're gonna get hit by a
14:48
pandemic and everything else.
14:50
The second he partnered with the
14:52
CDC. And why
14:54
we let an entity like this, an unelected
14:57
entity Who knows nothing about
14:59
health? Who knows nothing about education? It
15:01
wouldn't even matter if he did. He's unelected.
15:04
He's not a voice for everybody, but he was calling
15:06
the shots. Pretty amazing. Well,
15:09
why did they let CECL Rhodes go into Southern
15:11
Africa and do whatever he wanted? Yeah.
15:13
It's the same reason. Right? It's because we're
15:15
weak and he's strong. And
15:17
we're not We don't have the tools
15:20
to fight back. Right? We better get
15:22
smarter in a hurry. Yeah. We better get smarter
15:24
in a hurry. Also, I just
15:26
wanted to say before we go to break, look,
15:28
that disrespecting marriage act
15:30
too is I Mike
15:33
Lee is right in calling it out and saying this
15:35
is not what you think it is. We already
15:37
have protections in our constitution
15:39
that are written correctly You don't
15:41
need bills for this. And when they start
15:43
writing bills, you know with the people
15:45
associated with it, it's an extremely nefarious
15:48
bill. It absolutely guts
15:50
marriage is what it does. That's why I called the disrespecting
15:52
marriage act. Be
15:55
right back Kate Dally show.
15:56
with Melissa. Don't go anywhere.
16:02
But now, call 888673
16:04
fourteen
16:06
fifty. This is the Kate
16:08
Dally show.
16:15
I'm on the someone
16:18
to help me.
16:20
I'm on I'm
16:29
already going to
16:31
turn. I'm alright
16:34
and shaking my butt. Alright.
16:37
A little
16:37
Nathaniel rat lift. I
16:39
know. The song's called SOB. So I can't
16:41
really play the chorus, but hey,
16:43
I have Melissa on with me, Susan's up next,
16:46
and And of course, welcome
16:48
back. You know,
16:51
please
16:51
get over to Balance of Nature. If
16:53
you saw the emails I'm getting right now, for
16:55
the protocols and and and
16:57
people getting, you know, colds and things like that.
16:59
It's because your immune system's down. Please.
17:03
Please. I mean, I'm not above
17:05
begging. Get some balance of
17:07
nature. Please just try
17:09
it out. Just try it out.
17:12
It's guaranteed. Look,
17:15
friends. We need
17:17
you. and I we can't have you
17:19
not feeling okay. We've got to have your
17:21
immune system up thirty one fruits and
17:23
vegetables a day packed into six cuplets.
17:26
they're easy to take. Takes two seconds.
17:28
I'm not kidding. This is the way to
17:31
go. My
17:31
family won't be without it. I won't be without
17:33
it. Uncle Milti won't be without it. Everyone
17:36
I know is on it because I'm telling
17:38
you it's that good.
17:40
Please go to balance of nature dot com,
17:42
please. I implore you
17:44
to get your health on track and
17:46
make sure that immune system is
17:50
is
17:50
working well for you.
17:52
because we need all hands on deck, please.
17:56
And try it out. Just try it. Just give
17:58
it a week and a half and just try it out. And then tell
18:00
me what you think. Okay? This
18:03
is so worth it. Go to balance of nature
18:05
dot com. Put in the code Kate. It's gonna help the
18:07
show when you do that, and you're gonna get the most
18:09
in savings. So thirty five percent off in free
18:11
shipping. gonna ship it out in twenty four hours.
18:13
You
18:13
need to be taking this.
18:16
Our poor immune systems right now.
18:18
I there's so many assaults. I'd have to do
18:20
like an hour on the show to even go through them
18:22
all. Please please get healthy.
18:25
Melissa, so we
18:27
were just I just, for a second, wanna talk about
18:29
I know this is on people's minds right now, and
18:31
we'll go back because I want to talk about what
18:34
happened. This whole summit thing is
18:36
the strangest thing when you read their
18:38
gobbling good writings
18:41
and stuff. I you think these people are insane.
18:44
But the the marriage thing that I just mentioned
18:46
on the way out, I just want people to know,
18:48
yes, I am beyond disappointed
18:51
in the churches embracing gay
18:54
marriage and
18:55
and supporting it in this way
18:57
and doing it so that they think there's a
18:59
protection. They think there's a protection there
19:02
that's not there, and we're gutting
19:04
it. And if you were, like, let's say, California
19:06
made made marriage
19:09
legal to a twelve year old, then if
19:11
they come to say the state of Illinois
19:13
and they say, well, this is my marriage in California,
19:16
then Illinois has to do that. Illinois
19:19
has to because of a federal law.
19:22
There's no authority for them to shove
19:24
through a federal law on this. And
19:26
the constitution already has the protections. There was
19:28
no need for this. And and
19:30
the fact is is you know these
19:33
people behind it, the scumbags
19:35
behind this bill, are only pushing
19:37
it because it guts it and because it's gonna let
19:39
the floodgates open on really,
19:41
I think making 501C threes
19:43
the churches, the exempt status, do
19:45
things that they never thought they'd be made to
19:47
do, and this is a total missteps. So I'm just
19:50
saying that for the record. Any
19:52
thoughts on that Melissa? before
19:53
we go to back
19:55
to Who who was the Greek philosopher
19:57
that said if I had a lever I could
19:59
move the world?
20:00
This is this is the lever.
20:02
Yeah. Mhmm. And they
20:05
to think that this stuff has not been
20:07
plotted and schemed -- Yeah.
20:10
-- war game a long time ago. Look,
20:12
he's behind. He's ridiculous. He's
20:14
ridiculous. I know. So sad
20:17
sad day, a really sad day for
20:19
churches supporting those because they this
20:22
is this is total misstep. So
20:24
let's go back to the summit thing for just a
20:26
moment. There are people standing up
20:28
to gates. There
20:30
are. I have been reading
20:33
a book by woman from India
20:35
named Vandana Shiva -- Mhmm. -- very
20:37
interesting. And
20:40
I don't know. There's a lot of books
20:42
that I come at and I think, oh, this is going
20:44
to be full of Wolk nonsense. Right? Mhmm.
20:46
And she's really she's
20:48
really not full of woke nonsense. She's really
20:51
talking a lot of common sense, although she's
20:54
beyond either side of argument.
20:56
This is what she has to say about Bill Gates.
20:58
And I think this is something that we
21:00
should pay close attention to.
21:03
She says Bill Gates is the modern day Columbus.
21:06
His empire is the continuation of
21:08
colonization five hundred years after
21:10
the first colonization. Today,
21:13
the civilizing mission of imposing
21:15
the Christian religion on non Christian cultures
21:18
has given way to the civilizing
21:20
mission of forcing GMO's and digital
21:22
dictatorship on small farmers and
21:25
tiny businesses across the world.
21:28
Gates is the pope of his religion of
21:30
the worship and the imposition of genetic
21:32
engineering and digital tools. Those
21:35
who live in pluralistic worlds of biodiversity
21:37
and diverse agriculture, diverse economies,
21:40
diverse technologies, diverse languages,
21:42
and diverse intelligences, are
21:44
the new digital barbarians who must
21:47
be civilized and brought into
21:49
the empire of the one percent. I
21:53
think that's a pretty hard III
21:55
agree with everything that she just said, but
21:57
understand who
21:59
you are and who Bill Gates is.
22:02
we are the barbarians now. We are
22:04
there to be exploited and used.
22:06
And I think it's really interesting after
22:08
Bill Gates after this big New York
22:11
Times interview with him.
22:13
And yet again, I kind of expected
22:16
these people to be very woke, but
22:19
Bill Gates is the woke one. The rest of
22:21
the world is kind of like, wait, what?
22:23
Anyway, this they wrote an open letter
22:25
to Bill Gates on food farming in Africa.
22:28
Mhmm. And the people that wrote this came
22:30
from the community alliance for
22:32
global justice, hence the reason why
22:34
I thought, oh, here it comes. Right. Right. And
22:37
the alliance for food sovereignty in Africa.
22:40
And here's they really talk
22:42
back very hard to bill gates. Here's
22:46
the first quote from them they said. It is your
22:48
preferred high-tech solutions, including
22:50
genetic engineering -- Mhmm. -- new breeding
22:52
technologies and now digital agriculture.
22:55
that have in fact consistently failed
22:57
to reduce hunger or increase food
22:59
access as promised. Well, good. At least they're
23:01
calling out the truth because, you know,
23:03
people are under this assumption that they're over
23:05
there on these on these altruistic causes
23:08
and they're not. They make Africa their the
23:10
guinea pigs And all kinds
23:12
of different countries are guinea pigs too.
23:15
Yeah. They'll take them. Kate, if
23:17
you and I had hundred billion dollars Mhmm.
23:20
we could make up what we want the world to
23:22
be like. And we could call ourselves humanitarians
23:25
and philanthropists while we do it. Yep.
23:27
And that's exactly what Bill Gates is doing. He
23:29
has no reason to know
23:32
the things he claims he knows. Right?
23:34
He knows, by the way, Bill
23:36
Gates believes that
23:39
the best solution for Africa, what
23:41
they really need in Africa is they need to grow
23:43
corn and soybeans and
23:45
rice. Mhmm. and
23:46
they need in order to do that in Africa,
23:49
they need piles and piles and
23:51
piles of GMO seeds that they
23:53
have to buy from
23:55
unwirmed with malsano,
23:58
and they have to dump piles
24:00
and piles and piles of synthetic fertilizers
24:02
on it. Right. So here's what here's
24:04
what the open letter says about that. First,
24:07
well, first I'd say you make a number
24:09
of claims that are inaccurate and need to be
24:11
challenged. I'm in love with
24:13
them already. And they say first synthetic
24:16
fertilizers contribute to two percent
24:18
of the overall greenhouse gas emissions
24:21
are the primary source of nitrous oxide
24:23
emissions.
24:25
So
24:27
why is Bill Gates pushing
24:29
so hard if we're trying to reduce
24:31
greenhouse gas emissions, why is
24:34
the solution to agriculture in far agriculture
24:37
in Africa Why is it
24:39
more and more and more piles and piles and piles
24:41
of toxic synthetic fertilizer?
24:44
Yep.
24:44
Why
24:45
is that? It's inconsistent. Yeah.
24:48
They're always inconvenienced. They
24:50
go on to say, toxic
24:53
and damaging synthetic fertilizers are
24:55
not a feasible way forward. Already
24:58
companies, organizations, and farmers in
25:00
Africa and elsewhere have been developing bio
25:03
fertilizers -- Mhmm. -- made from compost
25:05
manure in ash and bio pesta sides
25:07
made from botanical compounds such as
25:09
name, tree, oil, or garlic. Why
25:11
isn't Bill Gates hearing that? He
25:14
doesn't want to. That's not part of his mission.
25:16
Yeah. Well, you know, it's
25:19
even worse than that because a
25:21
bio pesticide -- Mhmm. -- made from
25:23
pine tree oil isn't gonna put a dollar in his
25:25
pocket. Of course not, and it's healthy. See,
25:27
we've been they've been at this game over
25:29
a hundred and twenty years trying to
25:32
sell us on the idea that we needed synthetic
25:34
fertilizers. and and
25:36
all these shots. It's kind of amazing actually.
25:39
It's the absolute arrogance --
25:41
Right. -- colonizers to know,
25:43
to believe that they have the solutions
25:45
and that the people who actually have their hands
25:47
in the dirt are too stupid
25:49
to know. yeah, and he
25:51
won't listen to anybody. I mean, he doesn't care.
25:54
And and, know,
25:57
as we as as people start to
25:59
speak up,
25:59
It might be a little too late because,
26:03
you know, I remember the people in Africa
26:05
on tape saying, gosh, if we'd stop
26:07
with these NGOs coming over here in competing
26:09
with us, we would actually like a little capitalism
26:11
over here, and we could actually become
26:14
a really strong nation on our own and
26:17
we don't need your help. We don't want your help because
26:19
all your students competing with us. And that
26:21
message will never reach everybody.
26:23
because everybody puts up
26:25
Bill Gates as the savior of of Africa
26:28
when he uses them like a little pin cushion.
26:31
for his guinea pig vaccine stuff,
26:33
but it is crazy how much
26:35
he's able to control and how much he won't listen.
26:37
He he doesn't care. One Iota
26:39
The population is don't take a
26:42
care of us. No. Oh, well, in fact,
26:44
it's actually to actually feed people, it would be
26:46
contrary to what his moldament agenda
26:48
is. Yeah. here here's another
26:50
thing that they said that I think is very profound.
26:53
The green revolution, which is what changed
26:55
agriculture worldwide to, like, monocroping,
26:58
and -- Mhmm. -- fertilizer, all this stuff,
27:01
was not a success. And
27:03
they they go on to say your
27:06
unquestioning support for a new green
27:08
revolution demo demonstrates your
27:10
willful ignorance about history about
27:12
the root causes of hunger, which are by
27:14
and large about political and economic arrangements
27:17
-- Mhmm.
27:18
-- and not about a lack of
27:20
global food.
27:22
Yeah.
27:23
There is
27:23
food, and they say that very early on
27:25
in this open letter. There is enough food
27:28
to feed everyone if we could clear the
27:30
political obstacles out of the way.
27:32
We have We are not hearing anyone
27:35
saying that in Egypt right now.
27:37
Yeah. Very
27:38
very true.
27:39
you know, I read through their manual. And
27:41
as I was reading it to my husband, he
27:44
was like, at the end of every sentence, he goes,
27:46
what? I know. know.
27:49
It's like a string of words. It's
27:51
like word salad after word salad
27:53
after word salad. They never
27:55
they never say what they really wanna do. They
27:57
just talk around it in circles, and then
27:59
they make it seem as though they're they're most intellectual
28:02
people on the planet, yet it backfires.
28:04
It's like it's like Hormala trying to
28:06
put together her word salad and then
28:08
sound intelligent, it makes them
28:10
sound like they're insane because
28:12
they they they never say anything.
28:14
They just say a lot of words together. that
28:17
don't mean anything real. So
28:19
when they were talking about how if
28:22
Japan has something happen like an earthquake,
28:24
We're so interconnected. It affects
28:26
us immediately, and it affects our earth
28:29
immediately. And and and
28:31
this is why you're gonna see
28:33
this interconnectedness of all of this.
28:35
They just kept going and going with this thought
28:38
that never got to the conclusion, but
28:40
that you're just supposed to you're just supposed
28:42
to think that it's climate change. Whatever
28:44
they say is climate change. I'm like, I you
28:47
can't get to the end of a sentence without going
28:49
what? What did they what did they actually say?
28:52
No. Who knows? Nobody knows?
28:54
Well, and I I think that's done on purpose.
28:57
Oh, yeah. I mean, a hundred percent.
28:59
It's confused seeing, it's page after page
29:01
a gobbling book. You don't even know what you're hearing
29:04
because climate change isn't real.
29:06
Like, you don't affect climate change. It's real,
29:08
but we don't affect it. And so how do how do
29:10
they put how to affect it in four hundred
29:12
pages? Well, you have to start really just making
29:14
crap That's really what it comes to. You do.
29:17
You really do. You do. I remember that
29:19
skill from Gretchen. Exactly.
29:22
See, And and as I was I it
29:24
it gave me an actual headache to read it because
29:27
it
29:27
was so loopy and it made
29:29
the people writing it sound really
29:32
insane. And you'll never
29:34
hear that because they also wanna
29:36
sound really altruistic. So they they
29:38
put in there few things that make them sound
29:40
like They're very idealistic and
29:43
really nurturing. I'm like,
29:45
wow. I don't know how they do it,
29:47
but man, they do it. Be right back
29:49
with Melissa. in just a moment. Stay
29:52
with us.
29:58
balance of nature's fruits and vegetables
29:59
in a capsule changing the world one
30:02
life at a time.
30:02
I'm a physician. I've been
30:04
in practice for forty years.
30:06
When I started taking this, you know, I
30:08
I don't
30:09
like medicines and I probably have taken
30:11
more people off medicine than I put on it.
30:13
And so when I look at it and it's
30:15
pretty much a natural element and there's
30:17
no question in my mind knowing lot
30:19
of patients that people in my age,
30:22
you know, sixty and over
30:23
do not eat right and they certainly
30:26
don't get the appropriate nutrients
30:29
through the vegetables, fruits and things like
30:31
that. So think that it supplies
30:33
the
30:34
building blocks that your body normally
30:36
would use to heal itself and
30:39
if you don't get them, you don't heal. Right? So
30:42
it's amazing. And I'm doing what I did
30:44
two years ago.
30:45
Start your journey to or health. Call one eight
30:47
hundred 2468751
30:49
or go to balance of nature dot com to get
30:51
free shipping and don't forget to get thirty
30:53
five percent off your first preferred order by
30:55
using discount code, Kate.
30:57
l. Call 88673
31:01
fourteen fifty. This is
31:03
the Cape Town play show.
31:34
Mother Earth song has gone
31:36
a beat. Oh, Barbara
31:38
Rooney. You know, these these kinds
31:40
of Barbie songs that make you
31:42
wanna throw up in your mouth and you listen to them
31:44
because there's never anything about God.
31:46
We're stewards of a land, you know, No.
31:49
It's not when we call it mother
31:51
earth, we're the ones that did that. We're the ones
31:53
that exalted it to mother status.
31:57
It's the earth. But
32:00
as they're as one we heal
32:02
her I mean, give me a break. Right?
32:04
Give me Enough.
32:07
So, yeah, the Gobile Good
32:10
Climate Summit with all of its weirdness
32:12
and the course, weird hybrid statue
32:15
looming in the in the distance half human.
32:18
Anyway, look,
32:21
My Pillow has some fantastic products
32:23
for Christmas. Please go to mypillow dot
32:25
com, get the sheets. You're gonna love them, and
32:27
you can get the greatest price on them right now.
32:30
and the pillows, green label, blue label if
32:32
you snore. Also, gosh
32:34
there's so much. The dog beds, the
32:36
mattresses, the mattress toppers,
32:38
if you need you know, like a new bed,
32:41
but can't quite afford that, get
32:43
the topper, and you can get up to
32:45
ninety percent off. Please use the code
32:47
word Kate. It helps to show. And then, of
32:49
course, they're gonna ship them out immediately, and
32:51
they're just fantastic to work with. Everything
32:53
has like a ten year warranty on it. It's a pretty
32:55
amazing that they even do that. I
32:57
love that they do that. We do have
32:59
a collar, so okay. Oops. We don't
33:01
have a collar. And and
33:05
balance of nature. Please go get balance of
33:07
nature and get yourself healthy,
33:09
please. Balance of nature
33:11
dot com code word
33:12
kate. Just try it for fifth try
33:14
it for ten days. And
33:17
you'll feel the difference I promise. You're gonna feel
33:19
a lot of energy and no
33:21
more blood days for you. Okay,
33:24
Melissa. So back to the language
33:26
they're using because they used the word
33:28
interconnectedness a lot.
33:30
Because they don't have anything. They don't really
33:32
have anything to prove or to
33:34
say that climate change is affecting us.
33:37
Our human cause climate change is affecting
33:39
us. So they come up with the gobbling good. and
33:41
they use words that that
33:44
they that they'd like to and
33:46
they they overuse them and they dramatically
33:48
use them kinda like this song. But
33:51
let's talk about those words.
33:52
Well, we
33:54
can start with interconnectedness. Isn't
33:56
that a warm and fuzzy word? It is. I
33:58
feel interconnectedness. just saying
33:59
it. Yeah. It's lovely.
34:02
So if you feel if if it's stuff
34:04
that makes you feel good, that's why people
34:07
who are not really aware
34:10
fall for this stuff. Yep.
34:13
Because who doesn't get disconnected?
34:16
Who doesn't wanna love the earth? Who doesn't
34:18
wanna at Stuart? ship is another word
34:20
that they use all the time. We gotta
34:22
be good stewards. Well, I believe in stewardship.
34:25
Mhmm. I do. I genuinely Everybody
34:27
does. Everybody feels like, well, yeah. I mean,
34:29
that it's kind of a no brainer. It's just they're
34:31
taking it to these theatrical and
34:35
also lying just
34:38
beyond the pale. Right?
34:40
It's so crazy to the lengths they take
34:42
it. like
34:43
the worshiping of mother earth?
34:46
Yeah. Well, and that's part
34:48
of the problem. Yeah. Because they go they
34:50
go way beyond. And my stewards
34:52
In my definition of stewardship, I have a
34:54
responsibility to god to
34:57
take care of the gifts that he's given me. In
34:59
their definition of stewardship, it's bowed down
35:01
and worshiped the earth. Yeah. The mother
35:03
nurse. Oh, yeah.
35:06
Mother. Well, and and you I'm
35:08
supposed to put my needs
35:11
and wants
35:12
those are supposed to exist beneath
35:15
the greater good. Mhmm. And I
35:17
don't believe in that either. I believe that
35:19
we can balance those Right. Anyway,
35:21
here's another quote from Shiva,
35:25
Vandana Shiva. And
35:27
you can hear her kind of speaking
35:29
out about some of this gobbledygook language.
35:32
Mhmm. She says ecological and social
35:34
ignorance combined with greed
35:37
and the urge to dominate and can
35:39
role has given us the dominant
35:41
economic, political, scientific, technological
35:43
systems that the one percent used
35:46
to rule the world today. It's
35:49
so they're cloaking all of this stuff,
35:51
but what's really their driving force
35:53
is greed
35:55
and control. look at it
35:57
everywhere in the world. Now
36:00
everywhere. Everything from let's
36:02
put so peep what
36:04
farmers in Africa really, really
36:06
need is they need satellites to monitor
36:08
what they're growing in their fields because that will
36:10
help. How
36:13
do we ever live without this?
36:15
It doesn't beat anybody else. But,
36:17
boy, it sure does put them under
36:20
the thumb of control. It is
36:22
If you're not buying your seeds from the right
36:24
place, it makes it impossible for farmers
36:26
to be self reliant, to see
36:28
save, you know, seed saving has
36:30
been a huge issue in the past. Mhmm.
36:33
Here's another one. Oh, climate
36:35
resilience, that's another word,
36:37
salad word. We have to all become climate
36:39
resilient. Yeah. What is that exactly?
36:41
I would like to know. can
36:45
you can grow the things in your refrigerator
36:48
maybe? I
36:48
don't know. Okay. It's amazing.
36:51
Really? Anyway, why
36:53
Bill Gates keeps talking about we have
36:55
to have climate resilient seeds
36:57
to meet the global climate crisis.
37:00
Everything's a crisis. Right? Mhmm.
37:03
You mean the manufacturing of weather they're planning?
37:05
I I understand. I think there
37:07
you go. And in fact, That
37:10
is also a piece of this. Bill
37:12
Gates or I think excuse me.
37:14
think it's Montana. Just bought a climate
37:17
reporting group that
37:19
monitors super monitors of
37:22
local climate conditions, and they're gonna
37:24
sell this to farmers so that farmers can
37:26
pivot more easily to adjust
37:28
and adapt. I mean,
37:30
so if I know that it's gonna rain this
37:32
afternoon or rain tomorrow, does
37:35
How
37:35
does that really affect or anything?
37:37
Well, I just wonder how we made it all those centuries
37:40
without these guys. there's
37:42
big they're they're selling
37:44
stuff. This is the ultimate expression
37:46
of we're we're just all gonna be marketed to.
37:48
We can't survive without buying something.
37:51
every day from Bill Gates or being controlled
37:54
by them. Mhmm. Well, true.
37:56
The deal with the all this climate
37:58
resilient seeds. We're gonna breed
38:01
those in a laboratory because farmers
38:04
in Africa don't really know what works
38:06
in their climate zone or what they
38:08
can grow. And this
38:10
open letter to Bill Gates says, hey, by the way,
38:13
mister Gates, we already have
38:15
climate resilient.
38:16
plants. They're just not corn
38:19
and beans and rice. Right.
38:21
They're things like sorghum. Mhmm.
38:23
That's already adapted to our
38:25
soils, our climate. We can
38:28
grow this here. Mhmm. And
38:30
now maybe it's a little bit it's
38:32
a different eating pattern, but Here we're
38:34
let's talk about another word that they love
38:36
diversity. Right. For
38:38
people that love diversity so much,
38:41
corn and beans and rice
38:43
is not very diverse, I would
38:45
say. But, you know, us little peasants.
38:47
That's all we need. Right? So they tell
38:49
us, Yeah. And
38:52
you know what? The only resistance is
38:54
the people resisting all of this nonsense.
38:56
And the people having little places
38:58
to grow things And I say little because
39:01
most people don't. So you find a little
39:03
place to grow some food because
39:05
that's how you resist this
39:07
this entire movement to roll our
39:09
food, with unhealthy food, with
39:12
NGO, with fake meat, with with
39:14
pesticides that we never needed. Do
39:16
you know there was never a reason as
39:18
to why they came up with the synthetic pesticides
39:21
when they did? There was never a reason for it. Do you know
39:23
what the reason was they gave? was,
39:25
well, we we didn't have it.
39:28
Oh,
39:28
because we did everything pretty naturally,
39:31
right, to resist pests. Okay?
39:34
they the only reason they could give
39:36
was, well, we didn't have it,
39:38
so we need it. That
39:39
was the that was the whole answer.
39:42
Amazing. Well,
39:43
you know how we've heard and heard and
39:45
heard that fake
39:48
meat.
39:48
All this fake meat, this is gonna be the solution
39:50
to climate change.
39:51
Right? Mhmm.
39:54
THERE'S THE PROBLEM WITH FAKE MEAT.
39:57
DID YOU KNOW THAT THERE HAVE BEEN ABSOLUTELY
39:59
NO TESTS to determine whether
40:02
that fake meat, lab grown meat
40:04
is safe for
40:04
human consumption. It's dog
40:07
food rated. Well,
40:09
when they
40:09
when they did tests on lab
40:11
rats. Mhmm. They found that
40:13
lab rats who were eating fake
40:16
meat that it was actually altering their blood
40:18
chemists Street, but no one knows in what
40:20
ways it was or how that would
40:22
transfer over. If
40:25
we have a whole group of people
40:27
who don't want I wanna eat
40:29
natural whole foods. I wanna
40:32
I wanna save the planet too, so I'm gonna
40:34
go get this fake meat stuff.
40:36
Right. What you're eating is a chemical
40:39
burger? Yep. And they do it in
40:41
the name of health. Oh, that nasty
40:43
beef. But let me have a chemical burger place.
40:46
Well, isn't it amazing how God created
40:48
an all natural burger -- Mhmm.
40:50
-- that just puts yeah. There's
40:53
not even back in the soil and does all
40:55
that kind of There's not a big enough bun to
40:57
soak up all the chemicals in that monstrosity.
40:59
Please don't eat it. And it's garbage.
41:01
It's garbage food. It's petri dish food.
41:04
on steroids and they did rate it
41:06
as dog food. Worse
41:07
than dog food actually.
41:08
Miles will just eat some alpo. Just
41:11
order an alpo burger. Just come to
41:13
the chase. Crickets for you,
41:15
baby. Crickets on top of my elbow
41:17
burger, please. Please. Sounds
41:19
yummy. Yes. With some fake shanskins.
41:23
you know, that we need to remember
41:25
that all of that fake meat that is
41:27
super processed when we talk about eat
41:29
naturally. know. ultra
41:31
processed. That the natural amount of chemical
41:34
you can think of. If you really wanna do
41:36
a favor for the herb -- Mhmm. --
41:38
go to a local farmer and
41:41
by yourself, some beef. Exactly.
41:43
Well, it's like what they're doing with fossil
41:45
fuels. Same exact thing, and they give you a
41:47
version that they say is better and
41:50
safer for the environment. It costs
41:52
more. It works less. It's
41:54
terrible. And by the way,
41:56
it uses all the same stuff. There's
41:59
a lot of stuff that goes into that, and
42:01
they don't wanna ever say that. It's just lie
42:03
after lie after lie after Well,
42:06
if if you look at the history
42:07
of American agriculture -- Mhmm.
42:10
-- their American
42:10
farmers were growing much more
42:13
diverse things when
42:13
they were on small -- Yeah.
42:15
independently owned farms. Sure.
42:17
And as monocultures
42:20
have taken on, like, we're only gonna grow corn
42:22
on our we're only gonna grow wheat. We're only
42:24
gonna grow this one thing. Right.
42:26
That's why they are so dependent
42:29
on all this
42:30
chemical fertilizer. Yeah. But
42:33
it's not good.
42:35
Wouldn't it be better if we had,
42:37
you know, crop rotations that were
42:39
feeding our soils, paying
42:41
attention, Roundup.
42:43
Oh my gosh. We've talked about Roundup on here
42:45
before, and Roundup is so bad.
42:47
Yeah. Roundup has been internationally
42:50
labeled a carcinogen Not
42:52
yet. Not yet. Oh, you're
42:54
in the US. No. Just Yeah. neighbors
42:56
that sprayed on everything. Yeah. And
42:59
it
43:00
that's upsetting. So
43:02
look beyond the words they
43:04
use, that word salad is not good to
43:07
eat. for sure. Yeah. It's worse than
43:09
salad in the word salad. And
43:12
and also, I I probably have to have our
43:14
our farmer call back in that calls
43:16
him periodically this week
43:18
and just talk to him about what he's seeing and
43:20
what's happening down on the ground. Because like you
43:23
said, what that main message was, right, night
43:25
was, look, listen to the people
43:27
on the ground, the farmers, they're gonna tell you what's
43:29
up. And those are the people I trust. I
43:31
don't trust the Bill Gateses. I don't trust
43:34
the food administration. I don't
43:36
I don't trust anyone else with my food
43:38
supply other than
43:40
farmers because I know that you know,
43:42
they they have a stake in it and they are invested
43:45
in in the right
43:47
things. I mean, this is getting ridiculous.
43:50
somebody go read what the climate summit put
43:52
out that report and your head
43:54
will spend the whole entire time. It you
43:56
don't even know what they're trying to say. But
43:59
all of it at the end of the day is control. So
44:02
if there's one thing that we all know
44:04
-- Mhmm. -- it's that farmers
44:06
have a history, a long established history
44:09
of telling the truth. Mhmm. They
44:11
know the soil. They know the things
44:13
that they grow and work with. Why
44:16
would we pay attention to Bill Gates at
44:18
all about any of this? We don't. And we shouldn't.
44:21
And don't even I would be surprised that Bill
44:23
even has a garden in his backyard. You
44:26
know, obviously, what does he know about soils?
44:28
What does he know about climate? What
44:30
does he know about the animal COSPERATURE. WHAT DOES
44:32
HE KNOW ABOUT ANY OF IT? WELL, ACCEPT
44:35
HE THINKS HE'S SMARTER THAN THE REST OF IT. IT'S
44:37
-- THEY NEVER GET CANTS. THEY DON'T GET
44:39
CANTS sorrows, kissinger,
44:42
gates. Yeah.
44:45
Even the queen of England had her own
44:47
little herbalist. They don't
44:49
they don't partake in socialized medicine
44:51
that our hospitals are doing. They don't do
44:53
anything the way we we
44:55
do in our society. They
44:59
they're the ones that have actually been hiding a lot
45:01
of this stuff. So they don't want people to
45:03
to
45:03
know. But having as anybody noticed that they
45:05
don't get cancer, they don't when was the last time
45:07
you saw child with serious cancer.
45:10
They don't they don't get it. They know
45:12
better. They they're behind the
45:14
the fighting of it. Let
45:16
me take your What herd?
45:18
Bill Gates does know how to manage. What's
45:20
up? He
45:21
does know how to manage a herd. And
45:23
that's us. We are the herd that he's
45:25
managing it. They have increased us. That whole
45:27
bunch have decided that there's too many of
45:29
us, and we need to call the herd a little. Yeah.
45:32
We can definitely resist.
45:34
And there are places that do
45:36
change their zoning to make
45:38
sure they have places to grow food.
45:40
and I should do a show. We should do a show on that
45:42
because there's some good news in this. And that is
45:45
cities and counties that can take them back
45:47
and say, oh, yeah, this isn't gonna happen in my
45:49
city or county. have enough of that. There's only three
45:51
thousand of them in the United States. You can change
45:53
the entire country. And away from
45:55
Bill Gates's little little
45:58
plans. So we need to invest
45:59
so we'll invest some time into that because
46:02
it's really it's really quite compelling
46:04
and it actually will give people a lot of hope. So
46:06
thank you, Marlissa. And
46:09
thank you so much. And I'm
46:12
a Susan and of course, we'll
46:14
be right back. We'll
46:16
be right back. k dally radio dot
46:18
com, please go buy a coin. Please
46:20
go buy a coin. They're ninety nine dollars.
46:22
It's a fundraiser for the show, and
46:24
it's a beautiful silver round that
46:26
will put money back in your pocket.
46:28
And that's what we want. Right? Invest
46:30
in some silver.
46:32
I love it. Go pick that up while
46:34
you still can. Go to kdeli Radio
46:36
dot com. Thanks you guys right back with Susan.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More