Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
Some people just know the best rate for you
0:03
is a rate based on you with Allstate. Not
0:05
one based on the driver who treats the highway
0:07
like a racetrack and the shoulder like
0:09
a passing lane. Why pay
0:12
a rate based on anyone else? Get one
0:14
based on you with DriveWise from Allstate. Not
0:17
available in Alaska or California subject to terms and conditions, rates
0:19
are determined by several factors which vary by state. In some states,
0:21
participation in DriveWise allows Allstate to use their driving data for purposes
0:23
of rating. While in some states, your rate
0:25
could increase with high-risk driving, generally safer drivers will save with
0:27
DriveWise. Allstate Bar and Casually Insurance Company and affiliates are with
0:29
Peculanoi. We
0:59
are also going to talk about immigrants in New
1:02
York City. That's right, so illegal immigrants in New
1:04
York City. We are also going to talk
1:06
about... No, sorry, that's wrong.
1:09
Yeah, I was thinking that's not
1:11
quite right. Well, we are going to talk about war funding
1:13
because right tonight we have
1:15
the vote going on in the Senate right now.
1:17
So the Senators right now are on the floor
1:20
giving impassioned speeches over the past few hours. Chuck
1:22
Grassley barely, you know, basically falling asleep. You
1:25
have Mitch McConnell falling asleep on the floor
1:27
of the Senate, telling all of us why
1:29
we need to send another $100 billion to
1:31
both Ukraine and also to Israel and Taiwan.
1:34
Bernie Sanders making a really bizarre speech
1:37
this afternoon, basically saying he doesn't want
1:39
to give money to Israel or the
1:41
pieces of it, but he's totally fine like sending
1:43
$61 billion to Ukraine. I
1:46
mean, the craziness that is unfolding right now. The
1:49
acrobatics that you have to do
1:51
when you were originally anti-war and
1:54
then somehow are co-opted to support
1:56
war. The mental
1:58
acrobatics for that, it loathes. the mind.
2:00
Either you realize people are dying or
2:02
you don't. There's no nuance to
2:04
this, but I guess that's what politicians
2:07
are doing right now. We're also going
2:09
to talk about ISIS and super soldiers,
2:12
which you know there's all of these
2:14
mainstream media stories floating around in the
2:16
past few weeks about Syria and how
2:18
there's all of these drug-induced super soldiers
2:21
and that Syria has become a narco
2:23
state and we basically need to you
2:25
know infiltrate Syria, take over Syria, send
2:28
American forces to Syria, sanction Syria because
2:30
it's just filled with drugs and super
2:32
soldiers like super ISIS soldiers that are
2:34
literally running at tanks because
2:37
they're so hopped up on some sort of
2:39
an ecstasy, it's captagene, and they're running
2:41
at tanks even after being shot they're
2:43
still going. It's like a chicken with their heads cut off
2:46
and so we need to invade them right now. We're gonna
2:48
have Vanessa Beale is gonna be
2:50
joining us here, great journalist from Damascus, Syria
2:52
to talk about all of that. Plus
2:55
we're gonna talk about Princess Kate. Oh yes you're
2:58
doing it. Don't switch off, we are going
3:00
to talk about whether or not Princess
3:02
Kate is A-OK because we have a little
3:04
bit more proof that we're not sure is
3:07
proof from the royal family. Weird move, we're
3:09
going to take a look again because they
3:11
are a tax-funded institution. They stand for a
3:14
globalist agenda. We got to watch them also
3:16
because they have pretty clothes, all
3:18
of those things. Yeah we talked about all
3:20
of that tonight and Brooks here in our chat
3:22
on Rumble, our Rumble chat says, I don't think
3:25
that Clayton and Natalie ever read these comments. Brooks,
3:27
you just got nuked because we
3:30
read your comments. Brookers I see you and
3:32
I also see you talking about cannabis as well
3:34
so I see you talking in there and we
3:36
do it. We watch our comments here live on
3:38
Rumble and on YouTube every night and X so
3:40
we're streaming live on all of these
3:42
platforms. Good to see the tens of thousands of you
3:44
joining us for whatever platform you happen to be on
3:46
tonight. Right and sometimes though Clayton's like
3:48
pay attention because I get a little excited
3:50
about what you say in the chat so
3:52
you know we got work to do here
3:55
but we definitely want to interact with you.
3:57
Also to the commenter who said that she's
3:59
looking at herself in the camera. I'm
4:01
looking at a comment. She's a woman.
4:03
Of course she's going to look at herself in the camera.
4:06
Can we check? Are we, hold on a second, are
4:08
we good on YouTube because so much people saying we're
4:10
not on YouTube. Is that correct? Just
4:12
making sure. I see us. We're good.
4:14
We're good on YouTube. I can't click
4:16
over because my mouse is occupied, otherwise
4:18
occupied tonight. All right. We've got,
4:20
we're getting to get all of those stories. We're
4:23
going to get to this massive story out of
4:25
Russia, which is Vladimir Putin threatening the United States.
4:28
Hey, all of those weapons you're about to
4:30
send us with your big Senate war funding
4:32
that you're discussing right now, we will blow
4:34
up all of them. We will strike them
4:36
with a severity that you have not seen
4:39
before. So good. Let's send them more money.
4:41
Let's send them more weapons that can all be
4:43
destroyed like the last tranche of weapons that was sent.
4:45
So we'll get to that in a second. But
4:47
first we want to remind you
4:49
that Redacted is brought to you
4:51
by Indeed. They are the sponsor
4:54
of our show today. And right
4:56
now our listeners will get a
4:58
$75 sponsored job credit to get
5:00
your jobs more visibility. But you
5:02
need to go to our link.
5:04
It's indeed.com/redacted because Indeed is your
5:06
matching and hiring program with over
5:08
350 million global monthly
5:10
visitors, according to Indeed data
5:12
and a matching engine that
5:14
helps you find your fast
5:16
qualities and your best
5:18
candidates fast. So head on
5:20
over to indeed.com/redacted again, indeed.com/redacted
5:23
right now and support our
5:25
show by letting them know
5:27
that you heard about them
5:29
on this show because
5:31
they are supporting independent media and
5:34
you can support them because of
5:37
it. Again, that's indeed.com/redacted. Well,
5:40
Poland might've just lost its fricking mind, which they
5:42
have seemed to have been doing over the past
5:44
few weeks, offering to bring
5:46
nuclear weapons into Poland
5:48
as a staging ground to
5:50
strike Russia and China. Just when you thought
5:53
the world couldn't get any crazier, Poland
5:55
steps in and does the unthinkable. Of course, we'll
5:57
get back to Poland though in a second. First,
6:00
today, Russian President Vladimir Putin,
6:03
speaking through his top military leaders,
6:05
sent a clear message to Washington,
6:07
D.C. We will bomb and
6:09
destroy all of the weapons that
6:12
you're planning to send in this new Ukrainian
6:14
aid package that you're currently debating on the
6:16
floor of the United States Senate, $61
6:19
billion plan. We
6:21
will blow up all of them. General
6:23
Shoigu reading a message from the government
6:25
saying basically the moment these weapons cross
6:27
the border, we will increase
6:29
the attacks with an intensity and severity,
6:32
the likes of which you haven't seen
6:34
before. We know
6:36
their location. We know
6:38
the buildings where they will be stored. We
6:41
know the routes they will enter
6:43
into Ukraine. And we will
6:45
destroy them like
6:47
we've destroyed all of the other weapons. So
6:49
just think about this, right? Think about the madness
6:51
of all of this because as Lever News points
6:54
out, the great unknown
6:56
about the U.S. weapons deluge in
6:58
Ukraine, Pentagon has no idea where
7:01
these weapons are going. We
7:03
have no idea. So just think
7:05
about the madness of this, right? Just keep
7:07
sending all of these weapons into Ukraine to
7:10
be destroyed and make members
7:12
of Congress wealthy, you
7:14
know, thanks from their big donors. That's
7:18
how all of this works. It's
7:20
an unbelievable thought, though, to know we're
7:22
going to send 60—I just can't
7:24
wrap my head around it. I
7:26
mean, we—$61 billion of weapons,
7:29
you're going to send Patriot systems, you're going
7:31
to send attackums, which is
7:33
their new savior that they're going
7:35
to send now, which will be destroyed. So
7:38
Russia knows exactly where all of these are. In
7:41
fact, earlier today I saw a video
7:43
from Al Jazeera of Russian
7:45
soldiers towing a German leopard tank to a
7:47
museum. So remember about this time last year,
7:49
the Germans were debating, should we send a
7:51
leopard tank, should we not? I don't know
7:54
what's the right thing to do. Those are
7:56
kind of intense. Maybe we shouldn't. Well, they
7:58
did, in fact, send them. Russia
8:00
said thank you we're gonna disable those and
8:02
put them in a museum and
8:05
you will not be using them so all of this for
8:08
what? Museum pieces I
8:10
guess they could use them for museum pieces,
8:12
you know, I'm just reminded of like the
8:14
USS Liberty story You
8:16
know you think oh, they don't know where all these
8:18
weapons are going Russia doesn't know where all of these
8:20
things are going if you go back to 1967
8:22
and the
8:24
Israeli attack on the USS Liberty The
8:28
USS ship and the collaboration of
8:30
course with the CIA to make that happen turns
8:33
out the Soviets knew Everything
8:35
they knew exactly what was about to
8:37
unfold the plan to invade Syria They
8:40
were able to monitor the
8:42
underground wireless communications on underground
8:44
cables They knew
8:46
everything they then even
8:49
positioned their nuclear missiles aimed
8:51
directly basically at Syria Because
8:53
excuse me at Israel because they knew exactly
8:56
what was coming. This is 1967
8:59
they knew all of this go back 50 years.
9:01
They had the intelligence. They knew a well ahead
9:03
of time They know exactly where all
9:05
of these things are going They
9:08
had the most advanced satellite technology to be
9:10
able to zoom in They know exactly where
9:12
all of these things are gonna go and
9:14
they will blow up all of them And
9:18
given how crappy Ukraine's military is
9:20
Do we really think they've got
9:22
secret hiding spit spots that the
9:24
Russians don't know about that? They're
9:26
so good and furtive No,
9:29
no, they don't know any of that. They I mean
9:31
they They know all
9:33
of the details about all of these warehouses
9:35
and they're gonna strike them with severity like
9:38
we've never seen before I mean
9:40
they're hiding in plain sight We saw
9:42
yesterday what Colonel McGregor had said about
9:44
how now their next big mission is
9:46
just to dig trenches around the lines
9:48
of the war Barriers
9:51
so that Russia can't go any further and
9:53
they're just gonna hang out there for a
9:55
while to keep this war going Well, they're
9:57
Russia can see them doing that They
10:00
will know where they are. They will know where their
10:02
equipment is. The plan is
10:04
we have no plan, clearly. And
10:06
today we're learning more about the insane new weapons package
10:08
that we're about to send to Ukraine. And
10:10
every one of us watching right now should feel
10:13
like you've been sold out by your politicians in
10:15
Washington because that's exactly what they did. They sold
10:17
all of us out. Remember this
10:20
nearly $100 billion package would send
10:22
$61 billion to Ukraine and
10:24
a few key senators are trying everything right now
10:26
they can to try to stop it from happening.
10:29
Senator Mike Lee, one of the most vocal adversaries
10:33
of this, he does not want this to pass.
10:35
He was up this morning before the sun was
10:37
up at the Capitol calling on senators to kill
10:40
this bill. Watch. The
10:43
$95 billion aid package with
10:45
$61 billion for Ukraine and up to
10:47
$9 billion for Hamas. It's
10:50
not a done deal yet. 41
10:52
senators can stop it. Tell your
10:54
senators, let's stop this
10:56
thing. Let's kill the bill. So
10:59
he lays out the $95 billion doesn't have
11:01
to pass. It takes only 41 senators
11:04
to stop it. There
11:06
are 49 Republicans in the Senate, he
11:08
tweets, more than enough. Where
11:11
do your senators stand? Please
11:13
like and share if you agree that 41
11:15
Senate Republicans should unite to stop the $95
11:18
billion aid package. It doesn't seem likely
11:20
because Mitch McConnell basically has tied
11:23
his legacy to this. He's
11:25
been an ardent supporter of funneling billions of
11:27
dollars to Ukraine from the very beginning and
11:29
he seems really hell bent on making
11:31
sure that that happens here. So
11:33
the Senate starts with two procedural votes today
11:35
is what we saw unfolding that could last
11:38
two days before the full vote. The
11:41
legislation then ties together four different
11:43
bills. The House voted separately on
11:45
Saturday, of course, and passed that piece of it. That
11:48
would provide nearly $61 billion in aid
11:50
for Ukraine, $26 billion for Israel,
11:52
more than $8 billion for Taiwan.
11:55
It's hilarious, though, as the first three bills
11:57
are very similar to the package that Senate
12:00
passed earlier this year and
12:02
the House speaker, Mike Johnson, had originally refused
12:04
to bring any of it to the House
12:07
floor. That
12:09
was before they got to him. Before
12:12
they got to him. And injected him
12:14
with whatever science fiction serum makes
12:16
them do. I mean, he's
12:19
basically under the imperious curse. I
12:21
guess. I mean, that's all it took. I guess
12:23
he flew into Israel and they
12:25
just did whatever they do and then suddenly now he's
12:27
like fully on board with this because the other piece
12:30
of this bill that now he's fully supportive of is
12:32
the TikTok piece of this. The TikTok
12:34
ban. Included in this aid
12:36
package. How the hell does the
12:38
ban on TikTok make its way into an
12:40
aid package for Ukraine? Well, that's
12:43
how Washington works. So
12:45
the TikTok bill, because Israel
12:47
doesn't want you to have TikTok, the Israel
12:50
lobby is pushing very hard to have that
12:52
banned in the United States. Any idiot knows
12:54
that it has nothing to do with China.
12:57
You're a moron if you think that that's the
12:59
case. That's the cover they're using. It's China spying
13:01
on Americans. You're an idiot. APEC
13:05
and the Anti-Defamation
13:07
League are
13:10
pushing Congress very, very hard on this. I
13:16
apologize. I'm still working on trying
13:18
to get. That's okay. Sure. I'm
13:21
trying to get this. Sure. Do
13:23
we have that down or not? We can. Yeah,
13:29
I'm working on trying to get the
13:32
next video up. No worries. Okay.
13:36
Maybe you just set up who this is. We're going to
13:39
hear. So this is Jonathan Greenblatt,
13:41
the CEO of the Anti-Defamation League.
13:44
He's been pushing and pushing and pushing to
13:46
make sure that we do not have TikTok
13:48
anymore. That is, of course, any
13:51
sort of voice that's
13:53
anti-ethnic cleansing, that's
13:57
wanting to shine a light on what's been happening in
13:59
Gaza. You cannot have any awareness
14:01
about the genocide there. You
14:05
cannot talk about it. You cannot talk about the
14:07
mass graves. You cannot talk about it. And
14:10
Jonathan Greenblatt, of course, big proponent of getting
14:12
rid of TikTok and they have been pushing
14:15
this big time. We
14:18
need to talk about TikTok. TikTok,
14:21
if you will, is the
14:23
24-7 news channel of so
14:25
many of our young people
14:27
and it's like Al Jazeera
14:29
on steroids amplifying and
14:32
intensifying the anti-Semitism and
14:34
the anti-Zionist with no
14:36
repercussions. Yeah, no
14:38
repercussions except here's the repercussions.
14:42
We're going to kill it. We're going to ban it. But
14:44
it's my first amendment right to be anti-Zionist. That's
14:49
not against the law. It is. Well,
14:51
in the United States it is. It is
14:53
now in the United States to be that way. It's
14:55
really interesting because the only members of Congress who voted
14:57
against this bill in the House didn't receive large amounts
14:59
of money from Israel, which
15:03
is kind of crazy. Don't you think? Don't
15:05
you find it fascinating and very curious that all of
15:07
those who voted for this are happy to support Israel
15:09
in any way that they can? Or
15:12
painfully obvious, yes. Yeah, they
15:14
receive a boatload of money from the Israel lobby
15:17
and then they vote for the TikTok ban and
15:19
then this was added to the shameful bill. It's
15:22
crazy how this happens, isn't it? They think you're stupid.
15:26
I mean, they think Americans are stupid. This
15:29
is the strongest argument for separation of religion
15:31
and state. You
15:33
know, like, read the quote underneath the
15:35
bottom. Blessed are those who, what does it say
15:37
on the bottom of that image? Blessed are those
15:40
who bless Israel. Welcome to Israel
15:42
when they arrive. Like, take a picture with the sign.
15:44
So we've got you, you know? We've
15:47
got you here. And so, yeah,
15:49
they added, they showed this TikTok ban into this
15:51
bill because they know that Congress is going to...
15:54
The brilliance of this, the brilliance of this is
15:56
that they know that Congress is going to pass
15:58
all of this additional money for Israel. Israel. So
16:01
how do we get the TikTok bill
16:03
passed? We shove it in this. We
16:06
don't do it as a standalone because if it's
16:08
a standalone it would likely fail. But
16:10
when you shove it in here, no way. So
16:13
meanwhile the Wall Street Journal did a deep dive into
16:15
this giant pile of garbage, this
16:17
bill that came to pass,
16:20
and they confirmed our worst suspicions about Donald Trump.
16:23
It turns out deeply connected to this
16:25
bill and it's the only
16:27
way that it passed. So
16:30
again I don't care where you come down on
16:32
Donald Trump. I mean again I remind you that
16:34
both of these parties, it's a uni party and
16:36
they're both corrupt. So
16:39
the idea is simple here that we're going to
16:41
loan, so the idea that Donald Trump put forward
16:43
apparently according to the Wall Street Journal here is
16:45
that it was a simply a loan to Ukraine.
16:48
That's how they're able to get this through. They're going to
16:51
push this as a loan to Ukraine and the Wall Street
16:53
Journal points out that Donald Trump was instrumental in this. They'll
16:56
pay it back though. Don't worry, they're going
16:58
to pay back the loan with
17:00
one small caveat. Ukraine
17:03
has to win the war in
17:06
order to repay the loan. You
17:09
can't make this up. This is literally in
17:11
the legislation. Here it is the Wall Street
17:13
Journal. A group of senators including Senator Lindsey
17:15
Graham, Kevin Cramer,
17:17
and Mark Wayne Mullen of
17:19
Oklahoma held joint phone calls first among
17:21
themselves to strategize and then with President
17:23
Trump after he floated first
17:26
the idea of making Ukraine aid
17:28
into a loan. Ukraine,
17:31
Trump, and the senators discussed
17:33
Ukraine, Trump, and the senators discussed is
17:36
rich with minerals and has the potential
17:38
of being a rich country able to
17:40
pay back its deaths. People
17:42
familiar with the discussion said payback
17:45
is contingent on defeating Russia
17:48
since most of those resources are in
17:50
occupied territory. So we get this right.
17:52
Right. Wait, wait, wait. It's not
17:54
Ukraine that's rich in these minerals.
17:57
It's the Donbass region, which is
17:59
why anyone who's been studying Ukraine
18:01
for the last 30 years realizes that
18:03
the leaders have been terrified of losing
18:06
those regions, not because they hate the
18:08
ethnic Russians so much that live there,
18:10
which they do, but because
18:12
of all the mining that happens
18:15
in those regions. So it is
18:17
no longer Ukraine that's rich in
18:19
those regions, rich in those minerals.
18:22
That's Russia now. So
18:24
they have to recapture that land,
18:27
get all that natural resources, and
18:29
then so that's how the United
18:31
States will capture those
18:34
things. That's a
18:36
racket. Can
18:38
I do this with like a home loan? Like
18:41
can I take out a home loan to borrow
18:43
like $500,000 on the contingency that I get promoted
18:45
at work before I start paying you back? Or
18:48
that like I'm going to rob it
18:50
from my neighbor. That's, it's even worse.
18:52
It's like, I don't have it, but
18:54
my neighbor has it. I'm
18:56
going to go attack him. I'm pretty sure because
18:58
I'm good at Krav Maga that I'm going to
19:01
win. And so can I have
19:03
the loan on the assumption
19:05
that I will wrestle it out of his
19:07
control? That's basically what this
19:09
is. Yeah. I mean, I don't know any
19:11
Krav Maga. I'm just saying. In other words, the only way
19:13
this loan is repaid is by Ukraine defeating Russia. Polish
19:16
president Duda was also in town, met
19:19
with president Trump, who was there apparently doing
19:21
the bidding of NATO, trying to make sure
19:23
and convince Trump to support this bill. Here's
19:27
the wall street journal. And again, journalist
19:29
Michael Tracy pointing out some of these key
19:31
points here. Duda in an interview ahead of
19:33
his meeting expressed confidence that the Ukraine bill
19:35
would pass in a social
19:37
media post the next day. Trump backed the
19:40
idea that Ukraine's security as a U S
19:42
national security interest. So
19:44
wrong. I mean, he'd
19:46
be one of those wrong. I
19:50
mean, I just don't, I
19:53
don't understand how that, so Duda is telling him that
19:55
this is a national security interest. Trump is backing
19:57
this idea that Ukraine's security is a U S national
19:59
security. U.S. national security interest.
20:02
Okay. So if you
20:04
thought that Trump was like Jesus sitting there on
20:06
high ready to come in and sort of save
20:08
everyone, you need to get your head examined right
20:10
now because this uni party is
20:12
controlling things. So is president Trump going to
20:14
be the head of the uni party? It
20:19
sounds like you may not be voting
20:21
for peace if you. Well
20:24
and also like everybody's
20:26
like, well, but Trump started no wars.
20:28
Well, he just supported a major one
20:30
potentially. Yeah. And by the way,
20:32
the idea that yes, Trump did not start
20:34
any wars or I
20:36
guess expand them, but
20:38
continued them. I mean, continued drone strikes. It's not
20:41
like he came in. He's like, you know
20:43
what? We're ending all foreign wars. We're, we're, we're
20:45
shutting it all down. No,
20:47
that's not a, that's not at all what happened. So
20:49
remember these guys, something happens
20:52
to them with the Pentagon and
20:54
the military industrial complex and the relationship
20:56
that they have with the Israel lobby
20:59
that somehow, I don't know what they're,
21:01
what dirt they'd get on these guys,
21:03
what they have them behind closed doors,
21:05
what they're doing. How in the world
21:08
does Mike Johnson go from not supporting
21:10
it saying that the border
21:12
is the most important thing in the United
21:14
States to now sending a hundred billion dollars
21:16
to Ukraine and Israel. Where
21:19
does this, how does this happen? And
21:21
the idea that this is in our US
21:24
national security interest and that this is supporting
21:26
democracy. NBC news with their interview with Zelensky,
21:28
he would label the
21:30
interview Americans are not funding war
21:32
in Ukraine. They're protecting freedom. That's
21:36
right. We're protecting freedom. Somehow
21:38
Ukraine suddenly became a freedom, a freedom
21:41
loving country and democracy. When did that
21:43
happen? So it's
21:45
not the freedom of Ukrainians. Okay.
21:49
That's long gone has been. So
21:51
after the house, after
21:55
the house vote, Zelensky was filmed being handed
21:57
a copy of the members of Congress who.
21:59
voted for the 61 billion. So
22:02
they're still competing for Massachusetts. And
22:05
I have something that you're really going to like.
22:07
No. This is
22:10
the official town of the world. Yes, I
22:12
see. For the supplemental aid. Yes.
22:16
And look at that vote. Yeah.
22:19
Thank you so much. That's a good phone. Good.
22:21
Thank you. I'm going to watch. I
22:24
mean. Cool. What the hell
22:27
did I just watch? No, was that.
22:29
I mean. What the hell. You have
22:31
a member of Congress. Literally
22:33
handing a list of members of Congress who voted
22:35
in favor of the bill. Like here's a list
22:37
of everyone who just voted for you. 73%
22:40
passed overwhelmingly to send you
22:43
61 billion dollars. And
22:45
he's like. And he like plays to the camera. Do
22:47
you see that part? This is a souvenir for you.
22:49
I'm sorry. Philip. I know it's a pain in the
22:51
ass tonight with the crash that we had here on the. Can you replay that
22:54
sound bite? I don't know if he can or not. It's
22:56
a pain in the ass if he can't. I
22:59
don't know if they're still keeping the message. I
23:01
think I have something. You really got a like.
23:04
No. This is the
23:06
camera. You're going to see the official count
23:08
of the vote. Yes, I see. For the
23:10
supplemental aid. Yes. And
23:12
look at that. Yeah.
23:15
Thank you so much. That's a good phone. Good.
23:18
Very good. Thank you. I've
23:20
seen fire. I've seen fire and I've seen
23:22
rain James Taylor. Yeah. That's
23:24
saying 73% of the Congress are okay with
23:27
stealing Americans money and giving it to you.
23:30
We're okay with stealing everybody's money. People
23:32
that don't support this, majority of people do not support sending
23:34
them money, but 73% of the people of the Congress are
23:36
like, we don't care. We'll
23:40
steal their money anyway. Here you go. I
23:42
mean, it's unbelievable. I just like how spontaneous that was
23:44
with the multiple cameras shots. And
23:47
the laminated document. Yeah. Exactly.
23:50
Yeah. Who carries a laminator
23:52
besides me? Dinesh D'Souza,
23:54
a friend of the show says, why does Zelensky
23:57
need the list of members of Congress who voted
23:59
for 60? $61 billion
24:01
payment to Ukraine. What could
24:03
he possibly do with this information? Where's
24:06
the list? Well,
24:09
it's public on congress.gov, but why does
24:11
he need a laminated version to put
24:13
up in his office? And,
24:15
and you know, this is not it. Last
24:18
year, Joe Biden told us that the package
24:20
that they passed in the winter of
24:22
2023 was probably the last. This
24:25
is it. We're not going to do any more. Well,
24:27
that was clearly a lie. This
24:29
is not the last. They're going to try again
24:31
because we're going to, we're going to go through.
24:33
Russia's going to destroy all these weapons and
24:35
then they're going to be out of money
24:38
again, and we're going to hear this again.
24:40
So, you know, he's not even going to
24:43
remember if he lives to an old age.
24:45
What the hell that document is. Which
24:47
time was this that we took aid
24:49
from the United States? What, what, when
24:52
was this? It's, it's disgusting. And
24:54
I, you know what? I hope reporters ask Donald
24:56
Trump some tough questions about this. I mean, I
24:59
hope they don't just give him a pass on this. Conservative.
25:01
I hope conservative people who've been
25:04
big supporters of Donald Trump. I
25:06
mean, look, nobody's perfect, right? If you think that Donald
25:09
Trump is perfect, you know, well,
25:11
I'm sorry that that's not the case. This is
25:13
a major mistake. I don't know how in the
25:15
world President Trump could be supporting a bill like
25:17
this and when
25:19
America is crumbling right now, I just don't, I cannot
25:21
wrap my head around it and I
25:23
don't know what, I don't know what's going on. I don't
25:25
know what's going on. I'm trying to read the tea leaves
25:27
on this. I can't figure it out. Meanwhile,
25:29
though you have Poland. So you
25:33
had, you had the Polish president fly into
25:35
meet with Trump and
25:37
also Biden. But he flies in
25:40
and you now have, well, first of all, you have, you
25:42
have the Polish president, Duda
25:44
expressing his willingness to host
25:46
nuclear weapons inside of Poland.
25:49
And he says, I quote, I must admit
25:51
that when asked about hosting nuclear weapons, I
25:53
declared our readiness and recently
25:55
Russia has been relocating its nuclear weapons
25:57
to Belarus. And if. Our
26:00
allies decide to deploy nuclear weapons as part
26:02
of a nuclear sharing also on on to
26:04
our territory to strengthen the security of nato's
26:06
Eastern flank. We are ready for it. So
26:08
people are freaking out about this and Polish
26:11
individuals i'm talking about uh speaking with
26:13
are flipping out about this as well
26:16
Wait a minute. You're gonna bring american nuclear
26:18
weapons into poland Duda
26:21
went on to say that he expects some but not
26:23
universal access to these weapons So like we will have
26:25
them here in poland and we assume that we will
26:27
get access to them So like you're going to give
26:29
them to us to use if we need to I
26:34
mean And polish prime
26:36
minister donald tusk also called the
26:39
proposal. Absolutely massive for poland.
26:41
So this is what's happening We're going to move nuclear
26:43
weapons to poland We're going
26:45
to send another 61 billion dollars to ukraine
26:48
And we're doubling down now on
26:51
a major move against russia and
26:53
it's now Totally in
26:55
our national security interest to make
26:57
sure that ukraine is shored
26:59
up. Does that sound like vietnam to anybody?
27:03
Does it sound like any other incursion that
27:05
we does it sound like iraq to anybody
27:08
Does it sound like afghanistan to anybody? What
27:11
sort of a boondoggle we're going to be
27:13
involved when involved is involved with for the
27:15
next? I don't know five years ten years.
27:18
Yes, it sounds like all of those
27:20
things reminiscent of all the hits Uh,
27:22
thank you clinton your segment has succeeded
27:25
in pissing me off That
27:28
wasn't my goal. We started but you have a senate
27:30
right now. I mean call your senators They're literally debating
27:32
this right now on the floor of the senate Listen
27:36
to senator mike lee We
27:38
can stop this we can stop this
27:40
insanity right now I mean
27:42
send them. I mean go on truth social and like,
27:44
you know, let president trump Know let let I don't
27:46
know let the whole group of them know That
27:49
we don't support this Here's um, here's
27:51
a super chat from roman says ukrainian soldiers
27:53
are abandoning their positions in the field of
27:56
battle Who is going to use these new
27:58
weapons? I don't know. They're going to be destroyed The
28:00
point is they're going to be destroyed Russia's
28:02
already told us they're going to destroy them See
28:05
the weird thing about Russia is and I've
28:07
never been to Russia and I don't really care But
28:09
they've told us what they're going to do and they do it They
28:12
told us I'm gonna go back to the
28:14
beginning here Russia Putin today says we are
28:16
going to attack with severity the
28:19
likes of which you in an intensity the likes
28:21
of which you haven't seen before if These
28:24
weapons arrive as soon as they're here. We're going
28:26
to destroy them You know why we
28:28
know that's true because it's already happened All
28:32
the ones that we already sent so why
28:34
are why would we think that that's
28:36
not? Absolutely going to happen to the ones we're gonna
28:38
send now Unless we're
28:40
going to hide them in Poland. We've
28:43
just been sold out. I mean we've been sold
28:45
out by these politicians I think you know, it's
28:47
a we need a third party We need strong
28:49
third fourth fifth parties right now in the United
28:51
States because they're all criminal. They're
28:54
all criminal This uni
28:56
party that we have running Washington right now is all
28:58
criminal and Well, then
29:00
it's sad to know that less than 30% are on our
29:02
side I mean
29:05
that just shows like less than 30% care
29:07
about what we want, right? Yeah,
29:10
yeah, those those that haven't been bought
29:12
and paid for you have like brave
29:14
individuals like congressman Massey and Marjorie Taylor
29:16
Green and Matt Gates and You
29:19
know senator Mike Lee senator Rand Paul those individuals
29:21
and I mean I can go on with a
29:23
few more But that's about it, you
29:25
know, Chip Roy You could fit
29:27
him in a dinner party at a Thanksgiving table.
29:30
Yeah Yeah, you can What's
29:33
the name of that to large Italian place that has the
29:36
big big long table de beppo? Yeah, you could take them
29:38
to a bucca de Beppo They
29:42
would fit it up table at bucca de beppo
29:44
and get meatballs you can share the lazy
29:46
Susan All of
29:48
them All right, well we've
29:50
got more news to get here Yeah, most of
29:52
it's about war but we do have one
29:54
about Princess Kate and that might be we'll
29:56
call it a palate cleanser Even though it's
29:58
still kind of a nefarious globalist story, it
30:00
will at least give us a break from all of
30:02
this because we're going to talk about whether
30:05
or not ISIS has super soldiers.
30:07
Is it Syria that's making these
30:09
drugged up zombie soldiers,
30:12
Hulk-like, scary
30:14
post-apocalyptic, or is it something else?
30:16
Most likely, I mean, you know,
30:19
you watch this show, most likely
30:21
you're being sold something to support
30:23
war. Yeah, I mean, why? Kind of the whole
30:25
point of redacted is unpacking
30:28
the lies we're told to
30:30
sell violence. You're seeing all of these
30:32
stories over the past few weeks saying that Syria
30:34
is a narco-state. You know, the
30:36
only way to stop it, we should put
30:39
more U.S. sanctions and more U.S. troops into
30:41
Syria. Really? Like, it's weird how all of
30:43
the media is sort of collaborating around this
30:45
one, this like narco-state
30:47
narrative right now out of
30:49
Syria. Yes, and then
30:51
we'll talk about Princess Kate, and then
30:53
we're going to end up talking about
30:55
a new report showing that the Pentagon
30:57
has lost, conveniently lost over
30:59
a year's worth of records on crimes
31:02
on civilians in the Middle East, perpetrated
31:05
by the United States militaries. Oops,
31:08
and we don't track that, so we're
31:10
not really all that interested in stopping
31:12
it. Well, what happens then when we
31:14
continue to attack civilians? We
31:16
get terrorist attacks, retaliation on our shores. Also,
31:19
it makes our soldiers unsafe. So we're going
31:21
to talk about this new report. What can
31:23
be done about it? All of that and
31:25
more, but first? First, you
31:27
need a good night's sleep. I need a good
31:29
night's sleep. I had a massive headache all day
31:31
today. I need a good night's sleep tonight, and
31:33
that's where our friends over at Ghostbed come in.
31:36
If you're thinking about getting a new mattress right now,
31:38
you can use our code and get 50%
31:42
off. 50% off, one
31:44
of the best beds you
31:46
will ever buy. ghostbed.com/redacted. They
31:48
have high-quality, super comfortable award-winning
31:50
mattresses built in the United
31:52
States and Canada. Did you know that 60% of
31:55
U.S. adults report being too hot when they're trying to
31:57
sleep? That's me. That's
32:00
why they design all of their products
32:02
with cooling features. So you sleep so
32:04
nicely. It's great You stay comfortable and
32:06
asleep all night and you can pair
32:08
any of the mattresses with ghost beds
32:10
award-winning adjustable base And you
32:13
get the ultimate sleep experience the
32:15
family-owned business United States and and
32:18
sleep experts with 20 plus years experience
32:22
60,000 five-star reviews 60,000
32:25
five-star reviews. They have this patented coolant
32:27
technology, which is amazing And
32:30
I'm telling you what the ghost bed pillow is my
32:32
favorite pillow I've ever used and it's cool It's nice.
32:34
You don't have to like to flip the pillow over
32:37
to get the cooler side of the pillow I love
32:40
my ghost bed pillow You can try
32:42
it also for 101 nights at home sleep
32:44
trial and all your mattresses and pillows Right
32:47
now free shipping and returns on mattresses
32:49
most products ship within 24 hours and
32:51
they have in-house Customer
32:54
support that's in Florida. So it's not
32:56
some not some company off in
32:58
India somewhere. They're right there in Florida So right
33:00
now I want you to check them out and
33:03
I want you to try their comfort guarantee 101
33:06
nights sleep trial you can try at risk free
33:08
and experience the difference for yourself Plus they're offering
33:10
free shipping on most items within
33:12
24 hours visit ghost bed comm
33:14
slash redacted to save 50%
33:17
off once again ghost bed
33:19
comm slash redacted Well
33:25
is Syria a narco state that needs
33:27
to be invaded and occupied and sanctioned
33:29
by western countries like the United States
33:31
And Great Britain. Well, if you read
33:33
mainstream corporate media, of course, you'd think
33:36
that that's the case Here's the BBC
33:38
Syria's economy built on drugs Here's
33:41
the Sun Isis terrorists
33:43
taking superhuman drugs that make
33:45
them charge at tanks So
33:48
then now their Isis are super soldiers or
33:50
my favorite It's great Great
33:53
liberal magazine of the Economist
33:55
which might actually be worse than the
33:58
BBC if that's possible. Here's the economist
34:00
headline And Syria has become a narco
34:02
state. So
34:04
we wanted to ask Vanessa Beale, who knows
34:06
all about this. She joins us from Damascus,
34:08
Syria right now. And her reporting has been
34:11
second to none on this. And ask a
34:13
question in a recent sub-stack article, Vanessa, that
34:15
you wrote, the BBC appears to work in
34:17
lockstep with the United States and the UK
34:19
deep state to facilitate new raft of sanctions
34:22
against Syria. So we thought we'd ask
34:24
you what actually is going on
34:26
here. Has Syria descended
34:29
into a narco state that needs the United
34:31
States to invade it to save you? Yeah,
34:35
I mean, this is quite extraordinary.
34:37
It's multi-layered, of course, as all
34:39
of this is, trial by
34:41
the BBC. The BBC documentary is
34:45
basically the report that much
34:47
of this information is based
34:49
on. And
34:51
the BBC documentary, which
34:53
was put out, I think, about a year
34:56
ago, was effectively in collaboration
34:59
with a media outlet OCCRP, which
35:01
of course is funded by the
35:03
UK Foreign Office by
35:05
NED, the National Endowment for
35:08
Democracy, by USAID.
35:10
They worked in collaboration with
35:13
two media outlets in southern
35:15
Syria, where of course we
35:17
have this Israeli-US-UK-backed separatist movement
35:21
happening right now for some time. And
35:24
those media outlets are backed respectively
35:26
by Qatar and Saudi Arabia. So
35:28
you had a real conglomeration of
35:32
entities that have, in effect, tried
35:35
to secure a regime change in
35:37
Syria since 2011, failed. So
35:42
what is happening is we're having raft
35:44
after raft of sanctions to collectively punish
35:46
the Syrian people, because of course we
35:48
know that sanctions are
35:51
always designed to do that,
35:53
to effectively increase the unrest
35:55
and the displeasure with whichever
35:58
government is being targeted. it
36:00
for removal by the West.
36:03
But I think we also have to
36:05
look closely at who was behind these
36:08
bills. First of all,
36:11
the anti-normalization with
36:13
President Assad. And now the
36:16
Capsagon Act, which again is
36:18
claiming, as you said, Syria is a
36:20
failed state, an Arco state. Assad's
36:23
family is basically running
36:26
this drug cartel inside Syria.
36:29
And the incredible claim by
36:31
the BBC that is then
36:34
being disseminated throughout legacy media
36:37
that Syria is making
36:39
around $57 billion from
36:41
the Capsagon market. Well, if you bear
36:43
in mind that
36:46
Jordan's entire GDP is
36:48
less than $50 billion. And
36:52
in 2021, the claim was that the Capsagon
36:55
market in Syria was worth around $5.7 billion
36:59
so did they just move to decimal point
37:02
basically, right? But
37:04
let's have a look, if we can, really quickly
37:06
at who's behind this bill. Because
37:08
I think that's really important for people
37:10
to understand why this is happening. Of
37:12
course, as I said, it's a long
37:16
line of unprecedented sanctions that
37:18
have been designed to collectively
37:20
punish the Syrian people and
37:22
it's working. With
37:25
this, one of the sponsors of this
37:27
bill was a congressman called French Hill.
37:30
French Hill has created a kind
37:32
of a law
37:34
conglomeration called Peace Through
37:36
Strength in the 21st Century.
37:40
I'll leave you to comment on that title of it.
37:43
Now this includes rebuilding economic
37:45
prosperity for Ukrainians that I
37:47
would argue is a de
37:49
facto narco state, thanks
37:51
to Western money laundering
37:54
and enablement and facilitation
37:56
of the drug trade inside Ukraine.
37:59
Holding Iran's money. leaders
38:01
accountable, number two and number
38:03
three suppressing the illegal catagone
38:06
trade. And
38:08
these laws are designed,
38:11
pushed through and accelerated
38:13
by Zionist-backed American-based Syrian
38:15
lobbyists, like in this
38:17
case the American Coalition
38:20
for Syria. So they
38:22
were voted through the
38:24
House of Representatives, 364-58
38:26
against, in order
38:28
to put sanctions against offenders. But
38:31
who are the offenders? This is
38:33
the important question. According to the
38:36
BBC, its president
38:38
Assad and his cohorts inside Syria,
38:40
according to Syrians, these drugs were
38:43
coming into Syria as far
38:45
back as 2011, 2012. So
38:50
catagone, which is a
38:53
phenetoline, which is basically
38:55
a form of amphetamine, it inhibits
38:57
the adrenaline inhibitor in the body.
38:59
So basically, you're adrenaline keeps pumping.
39:05
There's no cutoff point. So
39:08
you do literally create these
39:10
superhuman soldiers. And I
39:12
mean, I have multiple kind
39:14
of testimonies about
39:16
the ISIS and
39:19
Al-Qaeda fighters being
39:21
literally pumped full of bullets and
39:23
still standing, still fighting, still coming
39:25
forward, etc. Quite
39:27
incredible from both Lebanon and
39:30
inside Syria, in Syria from
39:32
around 2013. The adrenaline just
39:34
keeps pumping, so their bodies just keep moving, whether
39:36
or not their brain is even really functioning. They're
39:38
shot full of ISIS, Al-Qaeda,
39:40
using this to just run
39:43
right towards tanks. And
39:45
of course, it was used
39:48
to give to suicide bombers, so
39:50
particularly the Saudi-backed
39:53
Wahhabi elements like
39:56
ISIS, but also various offshoots
39:58
of ISIS and Al-Qaeda
40:01
were given this drug. And
40:04
they're claiming that this is Assad,
40:06
that this is the Assad regime
40:08
that's providing ISIS and Al-Qaeda fighters
40:10
with this captagun, this ecstasy like
40:13
adrenaline pumping to create these ISIS
40:15
superheroes basically. But that couldn't be
40:17
further from the truth, right? Well,
40:20
I mean, this is ridiculous. This is like the
40:23
chemical weapons claim. And actually
40:25
in the article that you sent me, it's
40:27
put into context with
40:29
the claims of foreign attacks by
40:31
the Syrian government, which of course
40:33
have been absolutely
40:35
debunked by various experts,
40:38
including the OPCW inspectors
40:40
themselves, the dissidents
40:43
inspectors. And so for me,
40:45
you know, this is the
40:47
same dilemma. Is Assad going to be producing
40:49
the drugs that are then sold to the
40:51
terrorists that are killing his people? In
40:54
the same way, is Assad going to
40:56
be using foreign gas, his
40:58
stocks of which were destroyed in 2013-14 in agreement
41:00
with the UN and Russia?
41:06
But is he going to be using foreign gas
41:08
against his own people as his army is
41:10
advancing to liberate those people? You
41:13
know, it's the same ridiculous
41:15
argument. And if we
41:17
come back to French Hill, let's see his
41:19
involvement in Syria itself. So he's responsible for
41:21
the Captagun Act. He's
41:23
responsible for the anti-normalization with
41:26
President Assad Act, which is
41:28
designed to basically
41:30
further politically and economically
41:32
isolate Syria, right, from
41:34
potential allies in the region that might come
41:37
to the help of Syria to help it
41:39
rebuild after 12 years war. But
41:41
this is a congressman who also
41:43
came to Syria in August 2023, entered illegally,
41:46
just like
41:49
John McCain did in 2013
41:51
with the Syrian Emergency Task
41:53
Force, and met
41:56
with and fraternized with Al-Qaeda
41:58
in the northwest. and
42:00
their affiliates in the white helmets.
42:03
He also supported the separatist movement
42:05
in the south and allegedly
42:08
had phone conversations with the leaders
42:10
of the separatist movement, which
42:12
as I've mentioned is backed by the
42:15
US and Israel in order
42:17
to secure southern Syria
42:19
under a separatist regime,
42:24
similar to what they've done in the
42:26
Northeast using the Kurdish Contras to basically
42:29
create what they call an
42:31
autonomous region. So this
42:33
is not someone who's,
42:37
let's say credibility is not compromised
42:40
because he has a clear, he has clear
42:42
skin in the game, right? Well,
42:44
you've got to give him credit. I mean,
42:46
he just wanted to go and see where
42:48
his money was going, right? The funding of
42:50
Al Qaeda. So US money going
42:52
to fund Al Qaeda and ISIS for years. So he
42:54
wants to go see is his money doing its job
42:57
to foment a revolution inside
42:59
of Syria and to use that money to of
43:01
course try to overthrow Assad. It's all
43:03
part of the plan. So I
43:07
mean, what is happening to the Syrian people? I
43:09
mean, this is at the heart of all of
43:11
it, right? These sanctions have just been absolutely crushing
43:13
to the Syrian people. It was, as we've talked
43:15
about here on the show extensively, one of the
43:17
safest countries in the world, one of the most
43:19
beautiful countries in the world. And
43:22
when I say that, I see comments from
43:24
our viewers, like, yep, you're absolutely right about
43:26
that. Safe, safe, safe, beautiful. And
43:28
then we come in and destroy it and place
43:30
sanctions and try to upend this apple cart.
43:33
So how are the Syrian people dealing with these
43:35
sanctions and now the potential for this new raft
43:37
of sanctions? Well,
43:39
I think it's also important to note that
43:41
pre 2011, Syria was pretty much drug
43:43
free. It was something
43:46
that was very much frowned
43:48
upon by the Syrian government. And
43:51
there was crackdown on any drug supply
43:53
inside Syria. And it was pretty much
43:55
drug free since the
43:57
start of the regime change.
44:00
War in 2011. I mean, I've
44:02
spoken with the head of
44:04
the psychiatric hospital in East Aleppo
44:06
that was occupied by the Western-backed
44:09
terrorists, including Al-Qaeda. And he told
44:11
me after liberation in
44:13
December 2016, the
44:15
biggest issue that they were dealing with was
44:18
drug addiction, which was something that
44:20
they never had before the Western
44:22
armed groups came
44:24
in and occupied districts
44:28
of Aleppo, both in the Western and
44:30
the East. And
44:32
if you remember, after
44:35
the US invaded Afghanistan was when
44:37
we saw the opium trade increase
44:40
exponentially under the Taliban,
44:43
there was no opium
44:46
trade. And who
44:48
is the biggest user of opioids in
44:50
the world today? It's the
44:52
United States. The United
44:54
States economy benefits from what is it
44:57
around 500 billion from
44:59
the drug trade globally. And if we
45:01
go back to Nixon, because I was
45:03
reading up on that this morning, in
45:06
1971, he started the war
45:10
on drugs. Well, very much
45:12
like the war on terror, what's happened since
45:14
the war on drugs, drug
45:16
abuse globally has increased
45:18
exponentially following the war on
45:20
terror. Terrorism globally
45:23
has increased back by the
45:25
US and the UK and
45:27
the EU cartel and the
45:29
Gulf States and Israel and
45:32
so on. Sorry, he
45:34
mentioned about the Syrian people. Yeah,
45:36
but we love our wars on things, right? Whenever
45:38
the United States launches war on climate
45:43
change, whatever it is, right, you know that
45:45
there's going to be billions of dollars funneled
45:47
into that effort and it's only going to
45:49
get worse, of course. And some
45:52
people are going to get very, very rich off
45:54
of it, which is exactly what's happened with this
45:56
trying to go after. I love looking
45:58
at all the headlines. You can see all of the... states
46:00
that we've created around the world, right?
46:03
We use this as sort of like a
46:05
Trojan horse. Now Syria is a narco state.
46:07
How'd that happen? Oh, well,
46:09
because we flooded the country with illegal drugs and
46:11
allowed that to happen with ISIS and al-Qaeda fighters
46:13
coming. So we do that in all these other
46:16
countries and then we use that as justification to
46:18
go in with our military
46:20
or paramilitary and try to stop it. We're
46:22
trying to stop the illegal flow of drugs
46:24
from your country. Oh, really? So this
46:27
is how this happens. So now the Syrian people have
46:29
to live with this as
46:31
a reality every day, not only the drugs
46:33
on the streets, but then American forces in
46:35
their country and the inability to get cheap
46:37
medicines and electricity,
46:39
I mean, oil
46:41
and everything else that we steal from you. Yeah,
46:44
absolutely. And it's an interesting history of
46:47
this drug. It was developed in the
46:49
60s in Germany. It was
46:51
then basically banned in most countries because
46:53
of its psychotic effects
46:56
in 1986. But
47:00
then production began on a kind
47:02
of counterfeit captain in Bulgaria. And
47:04
from 2000 onwards, it
47:07
was Turkish and Balkan cartels
47:09
that were smuggling it into
47:11
the Arab peninsula. So
47:13
this is a European problem also. As far
47:15
as I know, also, there is still a
47:18
legitimate production in the Netherlands,
47:21
for example. And what
47:23
is also interesting is the claim
47:25
quite recently by Jordan is that
47:27
there's over 160 manufacturing
47:30
sites in southern Syria.
47:32
Now, when I'm talking about manufacturing sites, they
47:34
can literally be someone's shed
47:38
attached to their house. And
47:40
Jordan has, I think, bombed
47:42
the southern Syrian territory three
47:44
times, claiming that it's destroying
47:47
these drug manufacturing sites. But
47:50
if you look at the positioning of
47:53
these so-called manufacturing sites in southern
47:55
Syria, It's in areas
47:57
which are effectively still. Largely.
48:00
Under the control of
48:03
Western Back, a armed
48:05
group. And. And
48:07
agent. right? So
48:09
who is fostering this production if
48:12
it is actually going on inside
48:14
Southern Syria where right now Israel
48:16
and the West is from anything.
48:20
Separatism and violence against the
48:22
state. Are. So.
48:24
You know I, it's it's. I
48:27
just find this whole thing.
48:29
So. Absolutely he knows
48:32
what they're doing. because it's week
48:34
we did countries the Clinton Narco
48:36
state under the War on Drugs.
48:39
Isolate them politically and
48:41
economically. Right to bring them
48:43
to their knees. And this is exactly this.
48:45
Have been the prices since Two thousand and
48:47
twelve. To. Isolate Syria to
48:49
steal it's resources, to make claims
48:52
against the Syrian government and effectively
48:54
against the Syrian people, and to
48:56
punish them for claims that are
48:58
not proven. And I'll just
49:00
free been in the case of the chemical weapons
49:03
home. And the Catholic
49:05
on claims are coming A generated by
49:07
the Bbc and by the Uk Foreign
49:09
Office and by any D and Usaid.
49:13
Me: This is why it's so important
49:15
to have. Three. Independent journalists like
49:17
yourself on the show to be able to
49:19
shine a light on this because the Bbc
49:21
as a very loud bullhorns and then all
49:23
of these other. Media. Organisations run
49:26
with those claims Well according to Bbc,
49:28
you know this is what's happening inside
49:30
of serious illnesses. Justification for an invasion
49:32
for sanctions against as the Syrian people
49:34
in most Americans is gonna go along
49:36
with your dated. Understand what's going on
49:38
the hear these reports Why? I heard
49:41
some are here to narco state. In
49:44
this is why we have to have justification for this
49:46
to go into these countries. Ah
49:49
so I you know. Thank you so
49:51
much Vanessa Fear Amazing reporting on this
49:53
and other wage Want to say. You.
49:56
Know independent journalists are few
49:58
and far between. And Vanessa
50:00
is one of the greatest journalists in the
50:02
world. And if you have, if you want
50:05
to support independent journalism, Vanessa has a great
50:07
sub stack. It. Says Billie.subs deck.com
50:09
just her last name does some
50:11
stack.com and for five dollars a
50:13
month. You. Can go over and
50:15
or just use a subscription plan if you
50:17
want to support independent journalism. Armstead
50:20
have given that money to the New York
50:22
Times or other places. On. This is
50:24
a great place to do it all. Have a link
50:26
in the description below. I think we need to stand
50:28
together and support great journalist like Vanessa. Exposing
50:30
these liars so I know you didn't
50:33
ask me to do that. Have an
50:35
hour I want our audience. Vanessa didn't
50:37
ask me to do that. I enjoy
50:39
your embarrassed that I'm doing it but
50:41
I am. I
50:44
going to support support great journalist like
50:46
Vanessa and will have linked up in
50:48
a description of and as a thank
50:50
you so much Few great reporting and
50:52
all and all of this from Syria
50:54
right now from Damascus Syria arm and
50:56
are your great writing is says is
50:58
fantastic they he Vanessa. Not
51:00
that bright and I'm thankful for always
51:02
getting on a platform to be able
51:04
to talk about things that are not
51:06
talked about. Legacy me the as I
51:08
thank you. Offer. A
51:12
So much from a successor shit. Harrowing,
51:15
Story and awesome to have someone
51:17
who has expected by to. Have
51:19
appointed. Yeah, she's amazing. So
51:21
again go to support Vanessa. I mean
51:24
she's She's an image she literally have
51:26
to deal with like the power being
51:28
off on a regular basis there in
51:30
Damascus, Syria like on the front lines
51:33
are covering these stories for the world
51:35
and an amazing person. amazing journalist so
51:37
he knows you again she didn't most
51:39
too noisy to do that. I just
51:42
really of the i feel strongly about
51:44
we see these corporate media tycoons that
51:46
control everything and we have. I can
51:48
count the great nine count the great
51:51
journalists that I trust on like maybe
51:53
like two hands. As again, adults at
51:55
a better tail. off they can all sit at
51:57
a book it of evo tables if that's about it
51:59
there's a There's so few of them. They're all
52:01
working for corporate media. They're all in, you
52:03
know, so anyway, Blee.substack.com if you
52:05
want to support Vanessa's great work over there.
52:08
So thanks to Vanessa. All right, we've got
52:10
more news to get to here on your
52:12
Tuesday. We do indeed. We're going
52:14
to talk about Princess Kate, whether or
52:16
not the newest photo from the palace
52:19
assuages, is that the way you say
52:21
that word? Assuages. Assuages, any anxiety about
52:23
the safety and truth about
52:26
the princess. We're also going to talk about
52:28
the United States government. Oops, losing the records
52:30
of its own war crimes in the Middle
52:32
East and how a new report
52:34
shows that over a year's worth of records
52:36
are just missing. Why is that? What can
52:38
we do about it? We have a guest
52:40
coming up to report on that
52:43
and I'm excited about it. But first, I
52:45
want to tell you about fast growing trees
52:47
because you know that it is the planting
52:49
season. And did you know that fast growing
52:51
trees is the biggest online nursery in the
52:53
US with more than 10,000 different kinds of
52:55
plants and
52:57
over 2 million happy customers in
52:59
the US. They have everything you
53:02
could possibly want like fruit trees,
53:04
palm trees, evergreens, house plants,
53:06
and so much more. Whether you're
53:09
interested in something new that
53:11
you haven't grown before, they can help
53:14
you learn if that will do well
53:16
in your neighborhood and how to care
53:18
for those trees or something just to
53:20
add to your existing nursery, something to
53:22
change up your backyard. You can never
53:24
go wrong with fast growing trees because
53:26
they'll give you advice based on where you
53:28
live and you get a healthy tree. You
53:31
don't always get that when you go to
53:33
these box retailers in your neighborhood a lot
53:35
of times because those trees are pumped up
53:37
on drugs, basically like
53:39
hormones and pesticides and all of
53:41
that. And then they go into
53:43
shock when they get into your
53:45
yard because they're mass produced. So
53:48
you can get a quality tree
53:50
that fits in your yard. So
53:52
right now, head on over to
53:54
fastgrowingtrees.com slash redacted. If you use
53:56
our code redacted, you get 15% off. shows
54:00
up. You don't have to put it in your
54:02
car and dirty your trunk and you'll get help
54:04
choosing one. So again, our code redacted gets
54:07
you 15% off. Head
54:09
on over to fastgrowingtrees.com
54:12
slash redacted. Okay.
54:15
So where is Princess
54:17
Kate? What the hell are they hiding
54:20
just when you think it couldn't get
54:22
any weirder? It feels
54:24
like the palace is trolling us
54:26
because we have a new picture
54:29
from the royal family. But again, it feels
54:31
like, like, wait, are they punking us or
54:33
do they really expect us to believe that
54:36
this is all on the up and up?
54:38
So you decide for yourself. Today is the
54:40
sixth birthday of the youngest child of Kate
54:42
and William, Prince Louis. Every year
54:44
on the eve of
54:47
one of their children's birthdays, they
54:49
post a happy birthday to this young
54:51
child with a photo of that child.
54:53
They do it on the eve of
54:56
the birthday. So yesterday was the eve
54:58
of this birthday and people were worried
55:00
like we haven't seen the happy birthday
55:02
Prince Louis, his birthday is on Tuesday.
55:04
Where is it? Well, they did in
55:06
fact post an image and here it
55:08
is. Well, only after, after a lot of
55:10
people were like, what, where, where is it? Why
55:12
is it missing? Like they're like eagle eyed observers
55:14
or this. I mean, even me,
55:17
who I don't pay attention or give a rat's ass
55:19
about the royal family. But when I saw this, I
55:21
was like, what, this is a continuation of this, this
55:23
conspiracy. What the hell is going on here? And so
55:25
they didn't post the photo and then until everyone was
55:28
outraged about it, then they're like, Oh yeah,
55:30
we better get that photo out there. Right. It
55:32
was not until noon today, London
55:34
time that we finally got this.
55:37
So was that just, Oh, oops,
55:39
they forgot. Or did they notice
55:41
that people had noticed that it
55:43
was missing? Uh, and does this
55:45
in fact calm your suspicions about
55:48
foul play about the royal family?
55:50
Well, for me, it does
55:52
not because it seems to me that
55:54
this image was taken on the same
55:56
day as the mother's day image that
55:59
started this whole chaos. Here is
56:01
the photo that was posted to
56:03
the Royal Family's Instagram on
56:06
Mother's Day in the UK and everybody
56:08
noticed that there were many,
56:11
many things wrong with this photo. It
56:13
was clearly edited and photoshopped. So take
56:15
a look at Louis. He's the youngest
56:17
on the right and then
56:19
let's put them together. So this was supposed
56:21
to be March 10th, the Mother's Day photo
56:23
on your right. And then the one on
56:25
the left is supposed to have been taken
56:28
in the last few days. Clearly
56:30
he's wearing the same shirt. Now I
56:32
get it. When my son was five,
56:34
he really was obsessed with those, uh,
56:36
cape shirts that you put like Velcro
56:39
from old Navy and they all had a cape on
56:41
them. Yeah. Superman. He would not take it
56:43
off. He was obsessed with any of those
56:45
cape shirts. Like anywhere was going need a
56:47
cape shirt today. Is
56:50
that his version of a cape shirt?
56:52
He just really wants to wear this
56:54
collared shirt. Let me tell you something.
56:56
Let me tell you something about children.
56:58
No child ever wants to wear a
57:00
collared shirt. Ever, ever, ever, ever. If
57:02
I've never met a kid that wants
57:04
to wear a collared shirt and it's
57:07
like, where's my favorite collared shirt, mommy?
57:09
Like Sheldon. Right. From that. Okay.
57:12
Maybe he, but why,
57:14
why wouldn't they just give us a
57:17
different shirt knowing that we, we really
57:19
need proof that this family's okay. Now
57:21
here's something that kind of bothers me, but
57:23
I'm not a dentist. I'm not an expert.
57:26
I did find myself trying to figure out
57:28
how fast teeth grow because my kids seem
57:30
to grow their teeth in pretty
57:32
fast. He's missing a tooth, uh,
57:35
in the mother's day photo, one of
57:37
the bottom left teeth, and he's still
57:40
missing it in the
57:42
one that was supposedly in the last
57:44
few days. So has it not grown back at
57:46
all in the last six weeks? There's not, doesn't
57:49
even seem to be like a little nubbin. I
57:52
don't know. That's not really something. It
57:54
might be the shirt though is the
57:57
thing that I'm just kind of like,
57:59
are they? Rolling honestly couldn't give us a
58:01
fresh shirt so that at least we know
58:04
that there, All right. Also, it does seem
58:06
to me if you zoom in that he's
58:08
got a little bit of shopping on one
58:10
side of his lip and it still there.
58:12
So in both images, it seems like he's
58:15
kept a little at Santa like my kids.
58:17
When the weather's cold, the like to lick
58:19
their lips and then you get that shopping
58:21
on a child's are you going to have
58:23
to really zoom in to probably not showing
58:26
on your screen. But do they not have
58:28
any vaseline at the Palace like those. Things
58:30
give me pause now. Palace sources
58:32
say that is not an edited
58:34
photo and it was taken by
58:37
the Princess at her cottage in
58:39
Windsor in the last couple of
58:41
days. but again it was late
58:43
and it only came after people
58:45
noticed it It had not come.
58:47
So maybe it's something or maybe
58:50
it's nothing but. Then at the
58:52
same time just to hours later
58:54
the King announced that he is
58:56
giving Kate Middleton the Princess a
58:58
special honor called the. Order of
59:00
the Companions of Honor. The. Daily
59:02
Mail says this is the first time that
59:05
a member of the royal family has been
59:07
appointed for this. Ah hey buddy,
59:09
whole whatever highfalutin award that you
59:11
and I are probably not eligible
59:13
for. And. I didn't bother
59:15
to look up what it is william
59:18
at the same time about something called
59:20
Great Master of the Most Honorable Bull
59:22
Order of the Bass. It's the Grand
59:24
Poobah of the Royal. You.
59:27
Know. Who. Cares. Ah,
59:29
so the timing feels weird. That's all
59:31
I'm saying. They say that the King
59:33
has done this because he is believed
59:35
have grown closer to the Prince and
59:37
Princess of Wales in recent months because
59:39
they're both support supposedly suffering from illness.
59:42
Well. Maybe. Ah, the near post is
59:44
also reporting that the youngest prince will
59:46
in fact get a small private birthday
59:48
party over the weekend. Maybe.
59:50
we just a few friends again because
59:53
reportedly his mother is ill so what
59:55
do you think does it help you
59:57
feel that the palace has been so
1:00:00
with us and that Kate Middleton is in
1:00:02
fact undergoing chemotherapy
1:00:04
and treatment for cancer
1:00:07
or is she otherwise okay and
1:00:09
she's just receiving these awards in
1:00:11
absentia but we don't get pictures
1:00:14
that are very convincing it just
1:00:16
feels like they continue to tell
1:00:18
us stories with so many holes
1:00:20
in it and again just
1:00:23
a reminder of all the things
1:00:25
that are strange about this and why we
1:00:27
should care. It's not just palace intrigue although
1:00:29
I very much enjoy watching Kate Middleton wear
1:00:31
the prettiest clothes that money can buy I
1:00:34
readily admit that but again
1:00:36
they are a taxpayer funded institution
1:00:38
they are aligned with globalist entities
1:00:40
specifically World Economic Forum and that
1:00:43
agenda and they have not explained
1:00:45
any of the following for instance
1:00:47
why did they throw Kate Middleton
1:00:50
under the bus pretending that she
1:00:52
was just badly photoshopping that photo.
1:00:55
Clearly that's not the case she didn't do that if
1:00:57
they are telling the truth she was suffering cancer
1:01:00
and then they threw her under
1:01:02
the bus for badly editing a photo that
1:01:04
caused chaos. We never got an
1:01:06
explanation about that where were the
1:01:08
children why didn't they and her
1:01:10
parents visit Kate Middleton in
1:01:13
the hospital there was no records of
1:01:15
that ever happening they have not been
1:01:17
seen in public since we've only had
1:01:19
images. Why did we
1:01:21
get confirmation that her medical records were
1:01:23
in fact compromised recall there was a
1:01:25
rumor from a Spanish blogger who said
1:01:28
that someone in the hospital told
1:01:30
her that Kate
1:01:32
Middleton had been put in an induced
1:01:34
coma and then we it was confirmed
1:01:37
that those medical records were compromised so
1:01:39
was that actually the case we never
1:01:41
got an answer on that and
1:01:44
why did the palace right after
1:01:46
her surgery say nope wasn't cancer
1:01:48
they confirmed in fact while she
1:01:50
was still in the hospital she
1:01:52
does not have cancer and
1:01:55
then then again why do we
1:01:57
have no explanation for all the
1:01:59
terrible doctors. gangers that we were
1:02:01
shown. Recall these ladies, the one on the
1:02:03
bottom left was seen in a car
1:02:06
with her mom, the one
1:02:08
on the bottom right was seen walking
1:02:10
in a farm shop with William. It
1:02:12
was never, the one on the top
1:02:14
is the one that did the video
1:02:16
saying that she had cancer. These are
1:02:18
not the same three women. So
1:02:21
I remain convinced that the palace is
1:02:23
hiding something. It just seems like it's
1:02:25
tragic and that the children
1:02:27
may not be okay. I hope I'm wrong,
1:02:30
but I don't think we'll see this royal
1:02:32
family in public ever again altogether. That's, that's
1:02:35
my gut feeling on it. It does feel
1:02:37
like they did something nefarious. I hope they
1:02:39
are held to account. I don't
1:02:41
believe them. I don't trust them. Let us know
1:02:43
if you agree. Are they trolling
1:02:45
us? Are they lying to us? What
1:02:48
do you think? Let us know. I
1:02:50
will say that a couple of viewers sent me, I know
1:02:53
this might seem really out there, but hey, we
1:02:55
have out there conversations on this show quite a
1:02:58
bit, but a couple of viewers sent me
1:03:00
a video. You
1:03:02
guys know who you are and
1:03:04
it's of a, it's of a person who was
1:03:06
psychic medium. Oh yeah. And
1:03:08
not, not even, she's a
1:03:10
remote viewer. Yeah. Which by the way,
1:03:13
the CIA still uses remote view. You can read
1:03:15
a whole bunch of books on remote viewing. The
1:03:17
CIA actively uses it to target
1:03:19
and surveil targets. They use it
1:03:21
all the time actually. And
1:03:25
she is a very proficient
1:03:27
remote viewer. And
1:03:29
so she did a remote viewing of what's
1:03:32
going on. And it
1:03:35
was crazy. Like I, I mean, you can seek
1:03:37
it out yourself. I
1:03:39
don't, I don't have her name off the top of my head.
1:03:41
I watched about two months ago. I apologize. Maybe tomorrow if I
1:03:43
could find it, I'll, I'll share it here on the show. But
1:03:46
it was really stunning. And
1:03:49
she like tapped into it. She went through
1:03:51
this whole process and she's like, I saw
1:03:53
some really dark things. Um, and, uh,
1:03:55
I was like, I was sitting there. I couldn't believe
1:03:57
what I was seeing, but are you guys sent it?
1:04:00
to me. You guys watching right now sent it to
1:04:02
me. So really
1:04:04
fascinating. Well, I mean,
1:04:07
I know a lot of people I can see
1:04:09
you in the chat saying, we don't care about
1:04:11
the Royal family. I don't either. You should care
1:04:13
about the Royal family because they push an agenda
1:04:15
on the government, even though they are not supposed
1:04:18
to. And they take a taxpayer. Yes, they are
1:04:20
global. They are global. They're unelected globalists. And
1:04:22
they scoop up taxpayer money for a
1:04:25
reason. It's the same way you should care
1:04:27
about the World Economic Forum. Right. And by the
1:04:29
way, when you realize the relationship between the W.E.F.
1:04:31
and the Royal family, that's the only reason I
1:04:33
give a rat's ass about them. Right. And
1:04:35
also, I'm very curious why the
1:04:37
media just takes what
1:04:39
the Royal family says as gospel
1:04:41
and lacks curiosity for these facts,
1:04:43
such as why did we get
1:04:46
three different doppelgangers? Why did they
1:04:48
lie about their cancer when they
1:04:50
knew that it was cancer? Why
1:04:53
so many questions and the media just going
1:04:55
along with it? I've seen the
1:04:57
coverage of this story like, there's little
1:04:59
Louise. Fine. That's definitely him. Does
1:05:01
no one else realize that the same shirt like
1:05:04
does that not seem like a
1:05:06
deliberate ploy? I just
1:05:09
don't understand it. And if it's the
1:05:12
most obvious answer that
1:05:14
they don't have pictures of this
1:05:17
family since maybe
1:05:19
last year together, where
1:05:21
the heck are they?
1:05:24
That seems like that's possibly bad news. So
1:05:27
don't pretend you don't care. You care. And
1:05:30
you're here for it. And we're going to figure this
1:05:32
out together. People saying it's the lizard family.
1:05:34
The lizard's going to lizard. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly.
1:05:37
Yeah. I wish I could find this YouTuber.
1:05:39
And I love the way that, you know, so many
1:05:41
of like the guys here are like, we don't really
1:05:43
care. But yeah, that's interesting. It reminds me of that
1:05:46
scene in Tommy Boy where
1:05:48
they don't want to change the station and it's the
1:05:50
carpenters. I can handle it
1:05:52
if you can start singing. They're all
1:05:54
singing along. You care
1:05:56
about Kate Middleton. Well, I know. I mean, to me,
1:05:58
it's fascinating, right? I mean, I mean, in the same
1:06:00
way that I care about, like, what the hell happened on
1:06:03
9-11, you know, on
1:06:05
the cover-up there, and, you know, the controlled demolition
1:06:07
of the towers. Like, I want to know about
1:06:09
how that was coordinated and brought down and why
1:06:11
those things were covered up and what's been kept
1:06:13
from us. I want to know about the dancing
1:06:16
Israelis who were there filming the collapse of the
1:06:18
towers and were Mossad agents, and they were there...
1:06:20
they told on... to
1:06:22
the FBI that they were there to document it. Oh,
1:06:24
that's interesting. So you guys were there ahead of time
1:06:26
to film it ahead of time. That's...
1:06:29
I think I'd like to know that. I'd also like
1:06:31
to know, like, where the hell is Kate Middleton? I'd
1:06:33
like to know these things when these powerful elites tell
1:06:35
us what to think and what to do, and
1:06:38
they're just like, move along, little people. The
1:06:40
Francis Scott Key Bridge? Yeah,
1:06:42
nothing to see here, but in 20 days later,
1:06:45
the FBI then starts to investigate it as a
1:06:47
cyberattack. So, you know, just go along with what
1:06:49
they say. Just listen to what they say, these
1:06:51
elites. All right, we've got more news to get to
1:06:53
here in a moment. We're gonna
1:06:56
talk, though, about... Well,
1:06:58
we are gonna talk about... Sorry, I'm still
1:07:00
trying to scroll through here. Well,
1:07:02
we're gonna talk about what the Pentagon is
1:07:04
hiding in just a minute, why the
1:07:06
Pentagon cannot find years and years of
1:07:08
records of all the war crimes perpetrated
1:07:10
in the United... in the Middle East
1:07:12
by the United States, and why they
1:07:14
just say, well, we don't really have
1:07:16
a system for capturing that. Is
1:07:19
there something we can do about it? What can we
1:07:21
learn about these reports? We're gonna get to that in
1:07:23
just a minute, but first... But first,
1:07:25
it is common knowledge that Google is
1:07:28
listening through your microphones. Even the most
1:07:30
anti-conspiracy theory, people know that this is
1:07:32
true. But did you know that
1:07:34
Google put hidden microphones in their Google Nest
1:07:36
device? That's right. And people didn't
1:07:39
find out until two years after the device was
1:07:41
released. So you have a Google Nest in your
1:07:43
home, and it's been listening the whole time. Or
1:07:45
that Google keeps your voice recordings and stores them
1:07:48
for posterity. If hidden
1:07:50
microphones, voice recordings are not enough, what
1:07:52
about the fact that they track Android
1:07:54
phone locations? Even your location services are
1:07:56
turned off, and you don't have a
1:07:58
SIM card in your phone. They still track it. I
1:08:01
really recently listened to a privacy class
1:08:03
again that Glenn Metter held and he
1:08:06
said that Google even has a tracking
1:08:08
code placed into the fonts that websites
1:08:10
use. So they want to gather as much
1:08:13
information as they possibly can. It's their business,
1:08:15
right? And they don't just use that information
1:08:17
to sell dog toys or cruises to Italy.
1:08:19
They do it because they are working together
1:08:21
with Big Brother. They always have. They always
1:08:23
will. Google's origins, of course, come from the
1:08:25
CIA and the NSA research grants that they
1:08:27
got. They wanted to fund Google in order
1:08:29
to create a surveillance state. They call the
1:08:31
operation Birds of a Feather. Like
1:08:33
the saying goes, birds of a feather flock together. They
1:08:36
were talking about how geese and other birds fly
1:08:39
in large predictable shapes. The
1:08:41
CIA, the NSA predicted that people who
1:08:43
shared interests and beliefs online were also
1:08:45
moving predictable patterns. They just needed a
1:08:48
tool that could gather all of that
1:08:50
information to form these predictions. It's scary and it's overwhelming
1:08:52
actually to think about, but that's why, that's not why
1:08:54
I'm talking about this. I'm tired
1:08:56
of reading articles about how the world is
1:08:58
going to end and there's nothing we can
1:09:00
do about it. That's why I asked Glenn
1:09:02
about what steps we can take to get
1:09:04
Google out of our lives. And he actually
1:09:06
had some great suggestions. He said that it
1:09:08
is possible to de-Google your life. He even
1:09:11
wrote an e-book on the topic. And
1:09:14
so he decided he would love to give us this
1:09:16
book for free, totally for free. And you
1:09:18
guys can grab your de-Google copy,
1:09:21
your de-Google your life document
1:09:23
right now by just going
1:09:25
to privacyacademy.com. privacyacademy.com/redacted. You can
1:09:28
de-Google your life.
1:09:30
privacyacademy.com/redacted. I highly
1:09:32
recommend you check it out because
1:09:35
everyone should get away from Google.
1:09:37
Take their online privacy more seriously.
1:09:39
privacyacademy.com/redacted to go get that free
1:09:41
e-book right now. And you're
1:09:43
going to be stunned at the
1:09:46
location tracking information that they have and
1:09:48
what voice recordings they have of you on
1:09:51
file. Go and check
1:09:53
it out right now.
1:09:55
privacyacademy.com/redacted. of
1:10:00
its own war crimes. This was
1:10:02
reported by the lever reporter, Freddie
1:10:04
Brewster, who joins us today. Thank
1:10:07
you so much for joining us. Hey,
1:10:09
thanks. Thanks for having me on, I appreciate it. First
1:10:11
time redacted guest, hopefully not the last.
1:10:14
So here's what your story shows,
1:10:16
is that you found declassified versions
1:10:18
of government reports showing that an
1:10:21
entire year's worth of records regarding
1:10:23
operations in the Middle East and
1:10:25
Africa were missing mostly during
1:10:27
the Obama years, which I think most people
1:10:29
don't know were some of the bloodiest years
1:10:32
that the US enacted on the Middle East
1:10:34
due to Obama's, this is me
1:10:36
saying this, murderous foreign policy. So what
1:10:38
can you tell us about what you
1:10:40
saw in these documents? Yeah,
1:10:43
so this comes from a declassified
1:10:45
version of a government accountability office
1:10:47
report that dug
1:10:49
into these war
1:10:52
crime allegations from 2012 to 2022. And
1:10:56
one of the more laundering things that found
1:10:59
was that there were no war
1:11:01
crime allegation reports for all of
1:11:03
2015 for a sub command center
1:11:07
overseeing Iraq and Syria.
1:11:10
And this is when the Obama administration
1:11:12
oversaw thousands of airstrikes in the country and
1:11:15
during the height of some of the fighting
1:11:17
in Syria as well. There
1:11:19
were also records missing for 2017 for
1:11:23
all of CENTCOM, whichever sees operations in the
1:11:25
Middle East. And this
1:11:27
coincides with a time that
1:11:29
Amnesty International accused pro-Iraqi
1:11:32
government forces and
1:11:34
US backed forces of potentially committing war
1:11:36
crimes in that area.
1:11:38
So pretty alarming stuff right from
1:11:41
the government's own little
1:11:43
investigative research arm that is there
1:11:46
to hold some of the agencies
1:11:48
and Congress accountable. Is
1:11:50
the agency you're talking about the Government
1:11:53
Accountability Office, the GAO? Yes,
1:11:56
that's correct. Okay, so one of the
1:11:58
things that they say is, well, there's just... There's no
1:12:00
comprehensive way to retain such reports,
1:12:02
as in we don't have a
1:12:05
protocol. So what do you
1:12:07
think that means is just, oh, when we
1:12:09
do bad things, we can't track it. There's
1:12:11
no way to track it, because we have
1:12:13
reports on other crimes, such as you mentioned
1:12:16
the 2019 bombing in Syria that killed more
1:12:18
than 60 civilians. How do they
1:12:20
square that? Yeah.
1:12:23
So what the Government Accountability Office found
1:12:25
is in the Government Accountability Office is
1:12:27
really just, it's its own
1:12:29
separate entity. And all it does is
1:12:31
just do investigations and reports,
1:12:33
looking into a wide variety of issues,
1:12:36
everything from Department of Defense war crime
1:12:38
allegations to how's the economy doing and
1:12:40
what's credit card debt like. So they
1:12:43
cover a wide range of things. And
1:12:46
the key thing they found in this is that
1:12:48
there's just no comprehensive way
1:12:50
that the Department of Defense tracks these. They
1:12:53
found that it's kind of like a hodgepodge
1:12:55
mix that's left to the six
1:12:57
different command centers across, that are stationed
1:12:59
across the world. And
1:13:02
at times, even those command centers,
1:13:04
they leave these allegation reportings to
1:13:06
be left to its own subcommand
1:13:08
centers that we saw, that we
1:13:10
just mentioned in 2015, the subcommand
1:13:13
center overseeing Iraq and Syria. So
1:13:16
it's really just like a hodgepodge way
1:13:18
of tracking these in no sort of
1:13:20
centralized way to bring
1:13:23
these things together. But
1:13:25
wouldn't an after action report suffice
1:13:27
for something like this? Do they
1:13:29
think that it's just, oops, these
1:13:32
slip through the cracks or were
1:13:34
records destroyed? They
1:13:37
didn't say records were destroyed. They just said
1:13:39
there was a lack of a comprehensive system.
1:13:43
But this stuff is alarming regardless.
1:13:46
It's a lack of a comprehensive system
1:13:48
throughout all the foreign interventions that the
1:13:50
United States gets involved in is
1:13:53
alarming stuff in and of itself. Yes,
1:13:56
absolutely. And so is
1:13:58
it more of an anomaly that we know? know about the 2019
1:14:01
bombing that killed those civilians in Syria?
1:14:03
Because most of the time, it's a
1:14:05
oops, stepped on that bug, and then
1:14:07
we just move on. Yeah,
1:14:10
yeah, you're exactly right. And
1:14:12
it's also the GAO,
1:14:14
those guys also, they didn't really
1:14:16
dig into the validity of some
1:14:18
of these reports. And they also
1:14:20
said that they found at least
1:14:23
47 documented allegations of potential
1:14:25
war crimes that took place during this 10
1:14:27
year time period. But they also
1:14:30
said that they're not quite sure if that's the
1:14:32
depth of it. They weren't
1:14:34
able to dig into the entire universe,
1:14:36
as they called it, of
1:14:38
potential war crime allegations. Right,
1:14:40
it's reminiscent of a story in Chelsea
1:14:43
Manning's own biography, where
1:14:45
he talks about finding a target,
1:14:48
giving his supervisors an address and
1:14:51
saying, I'm not quite sure I think this
1:14:53
guy might have moved to check this. And
1:14:56
then they bombed the old address anyway. And
1:14:59
there's no way for us to ever know
1:15:01
that civilians were killed. And
1:15:03
there's no tracking of this. And
1:15:05
so not only does this do
1:15:07
people wrong, clearly, who live there in a
1:15:10
horrific kind of way, but it makes our
1:15:12
own soldiers unsafe. Because then
1:15:14
they are seen as these careless
1:15:16
murderers overseas, right? Yeah,
1:15:19
it's very alarming, to say
1:15:21
the least. And I interviewed
1:15:23
somebody from, they're
1:15:27
a human rights expert. And they
1:15:30
had mentioned that the Defense
1:15:32
Department gives out extremely limited
1:15:35
information on these war crime
1:15:37
allegations. So just the fact
1:15:39
that the GAO found 47
1:15:42
potential allegations is
1:15:44
in itself a big deal. Right,
1:15:47
now in I think 2021 or
1:15:50
22, Lloyd Austin promised more accountability
1:15:53
for these types of things.
1:15:55
Do you think since then, because your
1:15:57
report that you saw covered between
1:15:59
two. 2012 and 2022. So since then, do you have any idea or
1:16:01
any indication that reporting of
1:16:07
this magnitude will get better? I'm
1:16:11
not holding my breath, to be
1:16:13
totally honest with you. You know,
1:16:15
another story I published that looked
1:16:17
into how the US
1:16:19
is tracking them out of arms, it's
1:16:21
sending to Ukraine. You know,
1:16:23
the GAO office also found that, you know,
1:16:26
we're doing a horrible job of tracking the
1:16:28
end use of all those weapons. So,
1:16:31
yeah, I'm not holding my breath
1:16:33
on them improving their systems. Right.
1:16:36
So what can we do then to
1:16:38
demand more accountability, given that our government
1:16:41
is running off a cliff
1:16:43
of debt in order to support these
1:16:45
foreign wars and not improving on any
1:16:47
systems? Yeah,
1:16:49
you can pressure your lawmakers. But
1:16:52
even that is, you know, you
1:16:55
know, not quite sure how that works.
1:16:57
Right. You know, the majority of the majority
1:17:00
of the American public, you know, is against
1:17:02
funding to both Israel and Ukraine. And yet
1:17:05
those bills just passed the other day. Right.
1:17:08
Well, that's really discouraging. But I really
1:17:10
appreciate your reporting. I'm going to suggest
1:17:13
that everyone go and read this article
1:17:15
on the lever called Is the Pentagon
1:17:17
Hiding War Crimes? And maybe
1:17:19
you can come back another time and tell
1:17:21
us about the report on Ukraine, because it's
1:17:23
not a shocker. But at least the more
1:17:25
we know about it, the less they're hiding
1:17:27
from us, whether they're going to do anything about
1:17:29
it. Again, your guess is as good as mine. So
1:17:31
it's a pleasure to talk to you about this. Please
1:17:33
come back on redacted another time. Absolutely.
1:17:36
Thank you so much. That's
1:17:39
going to do it for us today
1:17:41
at redacted. Thanks so much for your
1:17:43
attention today. Thank you for joining us.
1:17:45
We really appreciate your participation. And hey,
1:17:47
if you'd like to let other people
1:17:49
know that you love redacted, you love
1:17:51
non mainstream media, non corporate sponsored media
1:17:54
and you love redacted. You
1:17:56
are cantankerous and you are informed
1:17:58
and you are a non-passivist people. extremist
1:18:00
please check out the redacted
1:18:02
store at redactedstore.com you can
1:18:04
find our oil-loving
1:18:06
merchandise so that you can
1:18:08
be an antagonist to your neighbors you
1:18:10
can find your I will not
1:18:12
comply your non-passivist peace extremist
1:18:15
merch that's my favorite slogan
1:18:17
because I made it up and I'm taking it to
1:18:19
the grave it's gonna be on my gravestone we
1:18:22
don't sell gravestones yet so
1:18:25
hopefully we don't need them for a
1:18:27
long time and we succeed at a
1:18:29
peaceful world so again check it out
1:18:31
redactedstore.com thanks so much everybody we'll see
1:18:33
you here tomorrow same time
1:18:35
same place good night California
1:18:55
subject to terms and conditions rates are determined by several factors
1:18:57
which vary by state and some states participation in drive-wise allows
1:19:00
all states to use your driving data for purposes of rating
1:19:02
while in some states your rate could increase with high-risk driving
1:19:04
generally safer drivers will save with drive-wise all state-bearing casualty
1:19:06
insurance coming in affiliate from North
1:19:08
Park Illinois. Grab up your thrills
1:19:10
this summer at Cedar Point on
1:19:12
the all-new top thrill tune drive
1:19:14
the sky on the world's tallest
1:19:16
and fastest triple launch vertical speedway
1:19:19
and now for a limited time get more Cedar
1:19:21
Point fun for less with our limited time bundle
1:19:23
for just $49.99 get admission parking
1:19:27
and all-day drinks for one low
1:19:29
price but you better hurry because
1:19:32
this bundle won't last long save
1:19:34
now at cedarpoint.com Hey
1:19:39
batter batter are you ready to hit a
1:19:41
home run with flavor step up to
1:19:43
the plate and swing by Penn Station
1:19:45
East Coast Subs where every bite is
1:19:47
a grand slam craving a classic Philly
1:19:49
cheesesteak or maybe a savory chicken teriyaki
1:19:51
or how about loading up on their
1:19:53
delicious fresh cut fries call it a triple
1:19:55
play by ordering Penn Station signature fresh
1:19:57
squeezed lemonade when it comes to subs
1:20:00
Penn Station is the big
1:20:02
league. Order online at penn-station.com
1:20:04
or stop at a store near you. Penn
1:20:07
Station East Coast Subs. Hey
1:20:09
batter batter, are you ready to hit
1:20:11
a home run with flavor? Step up
1:20:13
to the plate and swing by Penn
1:20:15
Station East Coast Subs, where every bite
1:20:17
is a grand slam. Craving a classic
1:20:19
Philly cheesesteak or maybe a savory chicken
1:20:21
teriyaki? Or how about loading up on
1:20:23
their delicious fresh cut fries? Call it
1:20:25
a triple play by ordering Penn Station's
1:20:28
signature fresh squeezed lemonade. When it comes
1:20:30
to subs, Penn Station is the big
1:20:32
league. Order online at penn-station.com or
1:20:34
stop at a store near you.
1:20:36
Penn Station East Coast Subs. Subs.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More