Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
With Luckyland Sluts, you can get
0:02
lucky just about anywhere. This
0:05
is your captain speaking. We've got clear runway and
0:07
the weather's fine, but we're just going to circle
0:09
up here a while and get lucky. No,
0:12
no, nothing like that. It's just these cash
0:14
prizes add up quick, so I suggest you
0:16
sit back, keep your tray table upright, and
0:18
start getting lucky. Play
0:20
for free at luckylandsluts.com. Are
0:22
you feeling lucky? No purchase necessary. Void
0:25
where prohibited by law. 18 plus
0:27
terms and conditions apply. See website for
0:30
details. With Lucky Land
0:32
Slots, you can get lucky just about
0:34
anywhere. Dearly beloved, we are gathered
0:36
here today to... Has anyone seen the
0:38
bride and groom? Sorry, sorry, we're here.
0:40
We were getting lucky in the limo and we
0:43
lost track of time. No,
0:45
Lucky Land Casino, with cash prizes that add
0:47
up quicker than a guest registry. In
0:49
that case, I pronounce you lucky. Play
0:52
Play for free at luckylandslots.com.
0:54
Daily bonuses are waiting. No purchase necessary.
0:56
Void where prohibited by law. 18 plus. Terms
0:59
and conditions apply. See website for details. Using
1:23
free speech to
1:25
free minds. You're listening
1:27
to The David Knight Show.
1:47
As the clock strikes 13, it's Thursday,
1:49
the 11th of April. You're of
1:51
our Lord, 2024. Well,
1:55
we're going to begin today, actually, with the
1:57
back and forth and outrage. about
2:00
this Arizona Supreme Court decision that
2:03
really has the left angry. It's amazing how
2:05
angry they get if you don't go along
2:07
with them on their
2:09
agenda of abortion, injection,
2:12
mutilation. And
2:14
so we're going to begin with that and
2:17
we're going to look at the spineless, feckless
2:19
GOP and the candidates with that. But we're
2:21
also going to talk right after
2:23
that about the fight
2:25
over FISA and the
2:28
GOP. This is a
2:30
very important issue that's been there for quite some
2:32
time. And we'll also
2:34
take a look at how the pandemic
2:36
began, an excellent summary of the nonsense
2:38
with all this stuff, as well as
2:40
a movie that is out, Climate
2:42
the Movie. I'm going to give you a little
2:44
bit of a taste of that. I'm going to
2:47
encourage you to take a look at this or
2:49
share it. It's excellent produced production
2:51
values for this film. We'll be right back.
3:07
As I was saying, the production values for
3:09
the climate, very good, very good sources. They
3:11
talked to a lot of scientists who have
3:14
been there and done that. People
3:16
who are part of the UN IPCC,
3:20
people who have been on the inside to
3:22
tell you just how politicized and
3:25
untrue and unscientific the whole thing is. But
3:27
together, my guy that's done a lot of
3:29
National Geographic documentaries and things, he's got a
3:31
lot of experience in his shows. One
3:34
thing here that does not have very
3:36
good production values or content of any
3:38
sort is the view. The
3:42
host, Whoopi Goldberg, makes
3:44
a bizarre claim about
3:46
the Ten Commandments. So when she's talking about abortion,
3:50
and she turns it into the Nine Commandments,
3:52
and you can guess which
3:55
one she gets rid of, because
3:57
they demand abortion. And
4:00
as I said, injection and mutilation of kids, they
4:02
want to kill kids before they're born. They
4:05
want to kill, mutilate kids afterwards to
4:08
satisfy their sexual depravity. And
4:11
then they want to sterilize
4:13
and kill people and injure people with
4:16
the injections. And they demand, your body, your choice.
4:18
Oh no, we forgot about all that four years
4:20
ago, didn't we? It wasn't about
4:22
your choice. It wasn't about your informed consent. It wasn't about
4:24
you and your doctor deciding what to do. No, you must
4:27
do this. Now
4:29
you are a pariah. You are a sociopath.
4:31
You are a psychopath if you don't wear
4:34
a mask. If you don't stay six feet
4:36
apart from me. I love how they call
4:38
that social distancing. I said
4:40
at the time it's anti-social distancing,
4:42
isn't it? Very anti-social.
4:46
But she said on
4:48
social media on Monday that abortion is not included under
4:51
the biblical mandate thou shalt
4:54
not kill. And of course,
4:56
she makes the rookie mistake
4:59
to think that it's killing of any
5:01
sort. Now that really
5:03
is about murder, which
5:05
is different from killing that happens
5:08
in self-defense, isn't it? You
5:11
know, if somebody breaks into your home and you defend
5:14
yourself and you kill them because they're a threat to
5:16
your life, people are not
5:18
even charged with that. Someone
5:20
died but it wasn't murder. And
5:23
if someone breaks into your country and
5:26
you defend yourself with the military, you have a
5:28
justified war to defend
5:30
yourself and to kill those invaders
5:32
if necessary. I'm not a pacifist but we're
5:36
so far away from any justification for
5:38
war anymore. She said, I want to make
5:40
sure that if you decide that this is what you want to do, I'm going
5:43
to get behind you because I don't know
5:45
your life. And if
5:47
you say this is what you need, that's
5:50
what I'm going to do. In other
5:52
words, you have a truth. God
5:55
doesn't have any absolute values. There is no
5:57
objective truth and there
5:59
is no... objective standard for anything. She said,
6:01
and that means, you know, hey, 50 weeks,
6:03
I don't care. Well, if you got a
6:05
baby for 50 weeks, you got a problem.
6:10
You got a real problem. 50
6:13
weeks, 75,000 weeks,
6:16
whatever. How many weeks? It's nobody's
6:18
business. Well, God made it his
6:21
business. And she's the one who
6:23
brings God into this. She
6:26
argued that abortion is a matter between you and
6:28
your doctor and God, she said. She
6:31
said abortion isn't mentioned in the
6:33
Big Ten, being
6:35
the Ten Commandments. Yeah, it is. Actually,
6:39
it doesn't take a great
6:41
deal of critical thinking to
6:43
understand that. But you
6:45
can rationalize anything if you wish. Goldberg began
6:47
lecturing about God's rules and regulations. She said
6:49
God was pretty clear. Just
6:51
the stuff that will make your life better on
6:54
earth. And so,
6:56
you know, that's what that's all
6:58
about, right? You know,
7:01
certainly if you follow God's
7:03
commandments, they are
7:05
things that are good for you. And I've made that
7:07
analogy in the past before I made it to my
7:09
kids. I said, you know, look, you are old enough
7:11
to know that if the stove
7:13
is glowing red, it's really pretty, right? But you don't
7:15
want to touch it. That's
7:17
our rules here. We're doing that
7:20
for your own good, but it's our rules. And
7:22
you need to just trust us when we've got
7:25
rules that those rules are for your own good
7:27
or just obey,
7:30
right? But
7:32
she doesn't like that. Sunny
7:34
Hostin said, well, some Christians are going to
7:37
say, thou shalt not kill would include abortion.
7:39
And she said, well, here's the thing. I think thou
7:41
shalt not kill cannot
7:43
be used as a block because
7:46
we allow wars all the
7:48
time. Again, it's not murder. It's
7:51
thou shalt not murder. And it's not murder
7:53
if somebody breaks into your home. Somebody breaks into
7:56
your country. Now, if we go into another
7:58
country and we break into that
8:00
country, we start a war preemptively, that is
8:02
murder. That is
8:04
unjust. She said
8:07
the crusades were all about these things.
8:09
The crusades, she jumps into the
8:11
crusades. I mean, her mind is a mess
8:13
here. It is amazing. So, there's some conversation
8:15
we had there. Thou
8:18
shalt not kill for everybody
8:20
and everything, or we have to talk about the
8:22
things that you and I need to do. Sometimes
8:25
we need to kill babies, and
8:28
so it's just a relative turn. Sometimes
8:31
it applies and sometimes it doesn't. They
8:34
are the 10 suggestions, but
8:37
whoopee will give you a pass. Not
8:40
that God will give you a pass, because God says that
8:42
these babies are human.
8:45
Not only that, but He knows them. He
8:47
says in Jeremiah, before I formed you in the womb, I
8:49
knew you. Before you were
8:51
born, I set you apart. I pointed you to
8:55
what He was going to do. In this
8:57
particular case where Jeremiah was to be a
8:59
prophet to the nations. In Psalm, for you
9:01
were created at my end most, for you
9:03
created my end most being, you knit me
9:05
together in my mother's womb, as
9:08
all my days were known to you before
9:11
a single one had occurred. Well,
9:14
they are really, really angry
9:16
about this 1864 law. Conservatives no longer
9:20
care about freedom, says
9:22
Ella Wheeling. This
9:24
is from the Telegraph in
9:26
the UK. Again,
9:29
freedom? How dare you talk
9:31
about freedom? You people who are demanding
9:33
jabs, masks, lockdowns, social distancing, all the
9:36
rest of this stuff, how dare you
9:38
talk about freedom? How dare you talk
9:40
about my body, my choice? You lost
9:43
that altogether. And it's
9:45
those same people, same
9:49
people, democrats to
9:51
a man and
9:54
to a woman. Legislation
9:56
is now in
9:59
effect in Arizona because Because they said, look, the
10:01
prohibition, the thing that changed everything was
10:03
Roe v. Wade. This
10:05
is the Arizona Supreme Court's logic, and they're right.
10:09
Roe v. Wade pretended
10:13
that the federal courts had
10:15
the authority and the power to
10:17
define life and to
10:19
set limits for abortion. They did not.
10:22
The Supreme Court has finally admitted they did
10:25
not. Ever. The
10:28
last 50 years, 50 plus. And
10:31
so that's gone. So what we do is we revert back
10:33
to the law. Now, in the interim, they
10:36
had set up a law that was
10:40
when Roe v. Wade was in effect.
10:43
The legislature said, well, if that's removed, we're going
10:45
to ban abortions in 15 weeks. And
10:49
they said, well, no, the real law that's on the
10:51
books goes back to 1864. And
10:56
so if you're going to remove the Supreme Court interference
10:58
in our state laws, then
11:01
we revert back to the 1864 law. That
11:04
1864 law bans all abortions
11:07
and all conditions except when the life
11:09
of the mother is at risk. And
11:13
if a physician does that, the physician commits
11:15
a felony and can get up to
11:17
five years. I 100% agree with
11:20
that. That's what I would have put
11:22
in. I think this was a
11:24
better country 150 years ago or 60 years ago, whenever
11:26
it was. People
11:30
understood what was going on. We
11:34
have less of an excuse today, don't
11:36
we? We can
11:38
look at ultrasound. We can look
11:41
at 4D ultrasound. We
11:43
can understand and see that this
11:46
is a child. They
11:49
didn't have that advantage. What
11:52
they saw was in the Bible. Oh, well, these
11:54
are human beings being knit together by
11:57
God in their mother's womb. They
12:00
saw more clearly than we do with all of our
12:02
scientific methods
12:05
and tools what the real issue
12:07
is. And
12:10
so, you have many people
12:12
in the GOP like Mike
12:14
Pence, Lindsey Graham. They
12:17
want to federalize this. And
12:20
you have – it's interesting to me that
12:22
there's a lot of people who are very pro-life and
12:26
they're completely oblivious to the fact
12:29
that if you federalize this and set a
12:31
limit at 15 weeks, which is what Pence
12:33
and Graham have both talked about, then
12:36
you are going to have a lot
12:39
of children murdered
12:42
in GOP states that
12:45
would not otherwise be murdered. They're
12:48
looking at this and saying, well, this problem has to
12:50
be – we have to impose this on
12:53
places like New York and California. You're not going to
12:55
be able to impose that on them anymore than you
12:57
could impose marijuana prohibition
12:59
on them because there is
13:01
no federal authority for that. The
13:04
powers not delegated to the federal
13:07
– to the central
13:09
government are retained by the states and
13:11
the people, 10th Amendment. That
13:13
includes things like prohibiting marijuana. You want to prohibit marijuana? You've
13:15
got to do the same thing you did with alcohol. You've
13:17
got to have a constitutional amendment. If
13:20
you want to prohibit abortion, a law ain't going
13:22
to do it, first of
13:24
all. It's going to take it back to the court. Now,
13:27
would these political judges change
13:29
their mind? Probably.
13:34
Can they change the judges? Definitely
13:36
they will. So they could possibly do
13:39
something like that. But under the Dobbs decision that they
13:41
just put out there, that
13:43
would not – that's not just about the
13:45
Supreme Court. That's about the federal government making
13:47
these types of decisions. And
13:50
so Pence and Graham and a lot
13:52
of these pro-life organizations are
13:55
defying the Supreme Court as
13:58
well as the Constitution of the 10th Amendment. And
14:00
from a pragmatic standpoint, it's going
14:03
to cost lives. As they pointed out
14:05
in one of these articles, the 15-week
14:07
number that they're talking about that
14:09
these people want to nationalize it, then
14:11
you understand why they want to nationalize it. You
14:14
know that Lindsey Graham doesn't care about life at any
14:16
age, right? He
14:19
does. It's warmonger. The
14:22
15 weeks that they're throwing out there, that's more
14:24
a longer term than most of the European
14:31
countries have. France
14:33
is 12 weeks. And
14:36
as they're talking about it, they said, you know, if
14:38
you look at where the levels
14:40
were set in most states,
14:42
including GOP states, it was
14:44
way beyond the European
14:47
countries in many cases, many, many
14:49
cases. And so
14:51
from a pragmatic standpoint, it's going to be a
14:53
disaster. From a constitutional standpoint,
14:55
it's a disaster. Now I understand that,
14:57
you know, Trump took this position
15:01
because he didn't want to take a position. Not
15:04
my job. I just leave it to the states.
15:07
And actually for once, that was right. And
15:09
yet the conservatives have become so
15:11
enamored of central control of everything.
15:14
And this is a path to civil war. They
15:17
become so enamored of central
15:21
control of everything that they demand
15:25
that this something be done about this at the federal
15:27
level. And of course, there are some individuals
15:30
like Lindsey Graham and even some
15:32
of the pro-life organizations that want
15:34
this as a political
15:36
football. They're very sad that
15:38
was taken away from them. And they'd love
15:40
to talk about
15:43
how they're pro-life until
15:45
it actually happens and they run as far away from it as
15:47
they can. Now
15:49
this is also correct when the Telegraph
15:51
talks about the fact that
15:55
it is not a popular position.
15:59
You know, it was not a popular position. position to say, I don't
16:01
have to wear a mask. It was not a popular position
16:03
to say, I don't want to take the jab. It
16:06
was a minority of people. And this is
16:08
what's wrong with democracy. It's
16:11
the treading on
16:14
individual rights on both
16:16
our life and our liberty. In October 2023,
16:18
the New York Times found that 59% of registered voters
16:22
in Arizona believe that abortion should
16:25
always be legal or mostly legal,
16:28
as opposed to 34% who thought it
16:30
should be mostly illegal or always illegal.
16:32
And so I said the problem for these
16:34
Republicans is that they're out of touch with the voters there. Well,
16:37
the problem with Republicans is that they won't
16:39
show it for what it is, which is
16:42
murder, which takes us back to what we
16:44
started with, whoopee. You
16:47
show whoopee that
16:49
a picture of an aborted baby. And let
16:53
her explain that to you. Talk
16:57
to me about the morality of that while
17:00
you're looking at that picture. They
17:02
need to shove those pictures down
17:04
people's throats, right
17:06
through their eyes into their throats. So
17:09
Carrie Lake doesn't know what to do. She
17:12
is, that's the headline from
17:14
Reason, and they're right. Because
17:18
she doesn't have any principles, but she's flush
17:20
with cash from her Mar-a-Lago fundraiser. But
17:22
she doesn't know what to do at this point in time. She's
17:25
at a loss. You see,
17:27
this is somebody who is a media personality. She
17:29
always had somebody write out everything she was supposed
17:31
to say or to tell a prompter. Luckyland
17:35
Casino, asking people what's the
17:37
weirdest place you've gotten lucky? Lucky?
17:39
In line at the deli, I guess? Ah,
17:41
in my dentist's office. More than once, actually.
17:43
Do I have to say? Yes, you do. Yes, you do.
17:46
In the car, before my kids' PTA
17:48
meeting. Really? Yes! Excuse me, what's the
17:50
weirdest place you've gotten lucky? I
17:53
never win Intel. Well, there you
17:55
have it. You could get lucky anywhere
17:57
playing at luckylandslots.com. Play for free right
17:59
now. Are you feeling lucky? No purchase necessary. Void of
18:01
record prohibited by law. 18 plus. Terms and conditions apply.
18:03
See website for details. With Lucky Land
18:05
Slots, you can get lucky just about
18:07
anywhere. Dearly beloved, we are gathered here
18:10
today to... Has anyone seen the bride
18:12
and groom? Sorry, sorry, we're here. We
18:14
were getting lucky in the limo and we lost
18:16
track of time. No, Lucky
18:18
Land Casino, with cash prizes that add up
18:20
quicker than a guest registry. In
18:22
that case, I pronounce you lucky. Play
18:25
for free at luckylandslots.com. Daily bonuses are
18:27
waiting. No purchase necessary. Boydware prohibited
18:30
by law. 18 plus. Terms
18:32
and conditions apply. See website for details. And.
18:35
If don't have some I write this opener for.
18:37
she just doesn't know what to say. And
18:40
what to do. And in that regard,
18:42
she's exactly like the previous celebrity candidate.
18:45
That. Trump supported. I am so
18:47
sick of his new reality show.
18:50
Celebrity Congress. Area
18:53
people running for senate. Doctor.
18:55
Oz. Blake Masters because somebody
18:57
running for our house those
18:59
us a democrat. Long. Term
19:01
Democrat birch you as beautiful actress or
19:03
one of your game to Tennessee who's
19:05
gonna run for an open seat? And
19:09
Tennessee legislature her fixed it. They said
19:11
no. You can't run for office
19:13
until you've lived in the state for three years.
19:16
And. You can't run for state office. And
19:18
will gonna apply those conditions to federal offices.
19:21
Well, so you're not gonna come in here
19:23
like a carpetbagger. A carpet
19:25
bagging democrat endorsed by another democrat,
19:27
Donald Trump. New. York Democrat.
19:30
Or you're not going to come in here. and
19:33
just because you're celebrity and you're a model, Look
19:35
like a model. Ball. Trump
19:37
support shooters like he supports, man,
19:39
supported Doctor Oz or his P
19:41
supporting these people who have no
19:43
principles. Doctor Oz was not even
19:45
an American citizen exclusively. He's.
19:48
Still retaining his a Turkish
19:51
citizenship. And he has
19:53
some. He stays here for the money. But.
19:56
Israel heart and loyalty is to Turkey. He.
19:58
was in the military their his still heavily involved in
20:01
Turkey. He said, if you like me
20:03
in a Congress, I'll get rid of
20:05
my Turkish citizenship so that I can get in
20:07
on some secrets and Senate
20:09
committees. Well, thanks a lot, Oz,
20:13
but no thanks. So
20:16
the court has
20:18
now put its ruling on hold. So
20:20
with all this stuff that everybody's getting upset about, they're
20:23
still doing abortions as always in
20:25
Arizona, and they're going
20:27
to continue to do that until the court makes a
20:29
decision they think that's going to be at least through
20:33
the month of May. Previous
20:35
abortions had been set, legally set up to 15
20:37
weeks in the state. That
20:40
is passed the first trimester, says Reason,
20:42
and Reason Magazine points out what I
20:44
was just saying earlier. That's
20:47
several weeks into the second trimester,
20:49
which makes it more permissive than
20:51
most European countries. And
20:54
before the Dobbs decision, you had
20:56
dozens of American states that were
20:58
more liberal and more permissive on
21:00
abortion than most European countries,
21:03
including a lot of states that you would never expect,
21:06
they said. So Kerry
21:08
Lake is winning like mad, just like
21:11
Blake Masters did after Dobbs came out.
21:13
Now after this Arizona Supreme Court case,
21:15
when the federal Supreme Court case came out,
21:19
Blake Masters started scrubbing his website and all of
21:21
his other ... She's
21:23
doing the same thing now with the state Supreme
21:25
Court there in Arizona. And
21:28
Reason points out two years ago, Blake called
21:30
abortion the ultimate sin. Well,
21:32
it's not, but it is a
21:34
sin nevertheless, while noting that
21:36
it should be determined at the state level. And
21:40
then she completely changed everything yesterday.
21:45
And so there is a
21:47
palpable rhetoric
21:49
shift for the
21:51
Republicans, said Reason. He's
21:53
a celebrity Congress candidate.
21:57
He's a celebrity fraud. Harris
22:00
is going to go to Arizona this week,
22:02
capitalize on this. She blamed the impending state
22:04
ban on Trump because
22:07
Roe v. Wade was removed.
22:10
She said, well,
22:13
actually, Reason says the
22:15
Supreme Court appointees that he had voted to
22:17
eliminate the federally guaranteed right to abortion.
22:23
No, no. Reason
22:25
should know better than that. Government
22:27
doesn't create rights. If government creates them, they're
22:29
privileges. If government creates them, they can go
22:31
away. You have rights, as
22:34
the Declaration of Independence explained. Maybe this writer
22:36
at Reason has not read the Declaration of
22:38
Independence, but we have rights because we're created
22:40
in the image of God. And
22:43
because God gives us those rights, the
22:45
government can't take them away. If
22:48
they're quote-unquote rights from government, they're
22:50
never secure. So there
22:52
was never a right to an abortion. God
22:56
did not give
22:58
anybody that option. And
23:01
it's not a right. It
23:03
wasn't even the law of the land. It was an
23:06
unconstitutional power grab by the Supreme Court. And
23:08
I've got to say, it really took me by surprise. Because
23:13
they always talked about it's the law of the land, I
23:16
thought that Roe v.
23:18
Wade was being used as
23:20
a real lynchpin to judicial
23:23
supremacy of the Supreme Court. And
23:26
I think that many people believed that.
23:30
And they got very concerned about the fact that Alito and
23:32
his decision, God's decision, said, well, you know, this could affect
23:34
a lot of things. For instance, I don't
23:36
think we have the authority to define what marriage is and
23:38
all the rest of these things that they have jumped into.
23:42
And he was right about that. He
23:46
opposes the Arizona Supreme Abortion ruling,
23:48
just like Kerry Lake. He's scrambling
23:50
around to try to disassociate himself
23:52
from it. He
23:54
said they did go too far, and that'll be
23:56
straightened out. Who's going to straighten it out, Donny?
24:01
Actually, they got it right. Only for the
24:03
life of the mother is it an option,
24:06
and it is a felony for the doctor.
24:09
So, who is going to straighten
24:11
this out? He said, when asked about it, yeah, they
24:14
did go too far. That'll be straightened out. I
24:16
do know that it's all about
24:18
states' rights. Again, states do not
24:20
have rights. States have powers. And
24:23
as the Tenth Amendment points out,
24:25
a lot of these powers have not been delegated to the
24:28
central government and they remain
24:31
the powers, not the rights, but
24:33
the powers of the state.
24:35
He says, that'll
24:37
be straightened out and I'm sure that the governor,
24:39
the governor, this radical
24:41
Democrat governor is going to fix
24:43
it. Well, you know, he
24:46
is a New York Democrat.
24:48
So maybe, you know, the radical
24:51
Democrat governor will do something that will
24:53
be more in line with his own
24:55
personal preferences. He
24:57
said, we're going to bring back reason. This
24:59
radical Democrat governor will bring back
25:02
reason. She will
25:04
straighten it out. He
25:06
said, Florida is probably maybe going to change also.
25:09
It's just too sanctimonious. It's
25:11
too harsh. He
25:14
says, it's all the will of the people.
25:16
And that's what I've been saying. It's a
25:18
perfect system. So he's somebody that
25:20
doesn't believe in the Constitution or
25:22
individual rights. He doesn't believe
25:25
that our country is a republic. He believes
25:27
that it is a democracy with two wolves
25:30
and a sheep. In
25:32
this particular case, a baby
25:35
sheep and
25:37
the wolves are deciding what is for dinner.
25:40
Ron DeSantis has predicted
25:42
that the abortion amendment
25:45
will fail. Once
25:47
voters figure out how radical it is,
25:50
there's one there in Florida as well as
25:52
in Arizona. He
25:54
says the Arizona and also the Arizona
25:56
Freedom Caucus, which declared, quote, protecting the
25:58
lives of Arizona's most vulnerable. children is
26:01
not a political football
26:04
Donny, they didn't say Donny, to
26:07
be kicked around for partisan gain.
26:09
He's just playing 40 chess. Come on, cut him some
26:11
slack, right? It may look
26:13
like a betrayal of principles, it may look like
26:15
he's out there flip-flomping like a fish he just
26:18
pulled out of the water, but it's fine
26:21
because it's Trump. And
26:24
the Arizona Freedom Caucus lamented that
26:26
some of the GOP quote are
26:28
choosing to reject the
26:30
fundamental core principle
26:33
of protecting life. Well,
26:36
that's because people like Donald
26:38
Trump and Kerry Lake have
26:40
no fundamental core principles, none
26:42
whatsoever. They said today the Supreme Court
26:44
of Arizona made the correct ruling, upheld the intent
26:46
of the legislature, and preserved the rule of law
26:49
because that was the law that was on the
26:51
books. It was
26:53
preemptive, preempted supposedly
26:56
by the Supreme Court decision until
26:58
the Supreme Court itself said
27:00
no, that's wrong. Preserve
27:04
the rule of law today by ruling
27:06
that the pre-row law will remain effective.
27:10
And as LifeSight News says, all of this
27:12
cuts against Trump
27:14
defenders who interpreted his
27:16
remarks as a mere tactical focus, you
27:19
know, 4-D chess, on
27:21
advancing life at the state level until
27:23
public opinion is more conducive to federal
27:25
action. Why do you change public opinion?
27:29
Do you show them pictures of developing babies or do
27:31
you show them pictures of babies that have been
27:33
ripped apart? That's the question. Actually,
27:36
the Republicans won't do either, will they? They'll
27:39
take their poles, they'll wet their finger, they'll stick it
27:41
in the air. RFK
27:43
Jr. recently confirmed that like Biden,
27:45
he would also sign legislation to
27:48
codify a national right to abortion.
27:51
And so he's a radical Democrat,
27:54
just like Biden. RFK Jr. is
27:56
a radical Democrat, just like
27:58
Donald Trump. These
28:01
radical northeastern liberals will all act the
28:03
same way when it comes to killing
28:06
babies. Well, what
28:08
do we say about babies? Do they really make women
28:11
happier and marriage? Well,
28:14
there's a lot of studies that indicate yes.
28:18
As a matter of fact, this
28:20
person here wrote this long article.
28:22
As a sociologist references a lot of
28:24
studies, studies from
28:26
Gallup, polls from Gallup, studies
28:28
from Harvard, studies suggest that
28:30
around a third of all adult women suffer
28:33
some sort of mental health problem
28:36
compared to a fifth of men.
28:40
Now, in the Gen Z, the 18 to
28:43
25 year olds, right,
28:45
we've talked about this before,
28:47
they're mostly, you know, have a large
28:49
number of them, about
28:52
30% or so, identify
28:54
as LGBT and
28:56
feminist and that type of thing. So,
28:59
in that 18 to 25 age group of Gen Z, 41% are said to suffer
29:04
anxiety according to Harvard University. And
29:07
over the last six years, everything's gotten a lot worse. It's increased
29:09
10% from 26% in 2017 to 36.7% in 2023, according
29:17
to Gallup's poll of 5,000 US adults.
29:19
So, that's not just the
29:22
Gen Z people, they're slightly worse than everybody
29:24
else. This person says,
29:26
of 20 years under my belt as
29:28
a sociologist, studying the lifestyle patterns of
29:30
Americans, as well as their fulfillment over
29:32
time, I believe I've stumbled on one
29:34
possible explanation for this sea of sadness.
29:38
It might appear to be a controversial
29:40
take. He said, or
29:42
she said, it's too few women are
29:44
getting married. Hmm. Well,
29:47
you don't hear that from the culture, do
29:49
you? Marriage rates
29:51
reached an all-time low in 2021, research from
29:56
the University of Bowling Green State, with
29:58
only 28 out of of every 1,000
30:01
women getting married each year, down from
30:03
76 in the 1970s. So
30:09
it's the third, lower, roughly. There
30:11
are married reasons for this, more career focused,
30:13
less disposable income, a change in societal norms,
30:15
that's just a few of them. But
30:18
the uncomfortable truth is that women who
30:20
aren't married are worse off, health-wise, compared
30:23
to their married counterparts. The
30:26
mental health benefits of marriage and having a family of
30:28
your own have also been
30:30
well proven in scientific studies. Some
30:33
40% of married mothers under 55 reported
30:35
that they were very happy with their
30:37
lives, that's 40%, very happy. Compared
30:41
with 22% of single,
30:43
child-free women, and only
30:45
13% of divorced women said they'd
30:47
reach this level of happiness. I
30:50
said, and this is actually a
30:52
woman, Wendy Wang, she says,
30:54
however, it's worth saying that many divorced
30:56
couples remarry up to 64%. Studies
30:59
show this improves self-reported happiness.
31:02
Those who find themselves irritated by their partner's
31:04
infuriating habits might find this
31:07
to be surprising. But it
31:09
is true, she says. Studies
31:11
have consistently shown that
31:13
strong social relationships are
31:16
the key to happiness. That's why they locked us down.
31:18
That's why they told us to stay six feet apart.
31:20
That's why they said, don't talk to anybody, don't go
31:22
anywhere. They
31:24
want to harm us, psychologically,
31:26
physically, everything. Despite the
31:28
scientific data, social media is
31:30
doing its part to malign marriage. On
31:33
TikTok, videos are jokingly depict marriage
31:36
as a fast route to domestic
31:38
choice, like washing dishes and
31:40
caring for a newborn baby. And of course, this
31:42
has been the case my entire life and that's
31:44
one of the reasons why in my entire life
31:46
we've seen marriage sliding. It's been the brunt of
31:48
jokes. It's very easy to make jokes about that,
31:51
mother-in-law jokes, all the rest of this
31:53
stuff. It's a low-hanging fruit, frankly. But
31:56
she says the truth is
31:59
sharing your life. for another person does
32:01
have unique benefits for
32:03
your emotional health. Perhaps,
32:06
she said, this
32:08
is because married people are known to be
32:10
markedly less lonely than their peers. The
32:13
CDC has identified loneliness as
32:16
a contributor to a host of diseases
32:19
from dementia to stroke as well as earlier
32:21
death. That's why the CDC wanted us to
32:23
be lonely. They
32:26
want to kill us. It's
32:28
just amazing. Yeah, we knew that. Yeah.
32:32
But, you know, when I saw this, it made
32:34
me think of a
32:37
song from Guys and Dolls. Karen
32:40
used to do this. She would do this. She
32:42
was in a group that did
32:45
Broadway shows and stuff. And
32:47
she did this song. Adelaide's will met. Well, she's talking
32:49
about this very thing. And she's
32:51
actually all dolled up like
32:53
some kind of a tradwife because this was in the
32:56
1950s. It says here,
32:58
the average
33:01
unmarried female, basically
33:04
insecure due
33:07
to the main frustration,
33:10
may react with
33:14
psychosomatic symptoms.
33:18
Difficult to endure. There
33:21
we go. All
33:41
times together. Right? CDC
33:43
knows that being lonely is going to harm
33:45
your health in so many different ways. And
33:48
maybe it'll even give you a cold, right? We
33:51
can call it COVID. Yeah, that's on
33:54
Rumble Beyond Health says, reason is
33:56
a leftist think tank that poses
33:58
this libertarian. agree with that. Yeah,
34:00
I remember when we were in the Libertarian Party, it's
34:03
like, they come up with that. Yeah, that's not the
34:05
Libertarian position. Problem is,
34:07
the Libertarian Party has now, and
34:11
again, he's got a lower case L.
34:13
Libertarian Party has now become like
34:15
reason and become like Cato as
34:17
well, moving to the left and
34:21
getting rid of things like the non-aggression principle. On
34:25
Rockfend, Doug Alugg, thank you very much for the
34:27
tip. I really appreciate that. A faithful contributor. I
34:30
really do appreciate that. On Rockfend, Psalm
34:33
144, thank you for the tip. I
34:36
thought about yesterday's episode, and I think if
34:38
Batswana, that's where they're going to
34:41
go. Oh yeah, you don't like us having trophy
34:44
hunts, you know, because we're using that to
34:46
care for the animals and to keep this
34:49
under control. You don't like that? Germany? Well,
34:51
we'll send you 20,000 elephants. How about that?
34:53
And they were really getting angry and serious
34:55
about it. So, Psalm 144. So, I thought
34:57
about yesterday's episode, and I think if Batswana
35:00
can just get the elephants across our southern
35:02
border, Abbott will get them
35:04
to Germany for them. Step into the world
35:06
of power, loyalty, and
35:09
luck. I'm gonna make him an
35:11
offer he can't refuse. With family,
35:14
canoles, and spins mean everything now.
35:16
You want to get mixed up
35:19
in the family business. Introducing the
35:21
Godfather at chambacasino.com. Test
35:24
your luck in the shadowy world
35:26
of the Godfather slot. Someday, I
35:28
will call upon you to do
35:30
a service for me. Play the Godfather
35:32
now at chambacasino.com. Welcome to the
35:34
family. VDW Group, no purchase necessary. Avoid
35:36
where prohibited by law. See terms and conditions,
35:38
18 plus. With Lucky Land slots, you can
35:40
get Lucky just about anywhere. Dearly beloved,
35:43
we are gathered here today to... Has
35:45
anyone seen the bride and groom? Sorry,
35:48
sorry, we're here. We were getting Lucky in
35:50
the limo when we lost track of time. No,
35:52
Lucky Land Casino. With cash prizes that add
35:55
up quicker than a guest registry. In
35:57
that case, I pronounce you lucky. For
36:00
free at luckylandslots.com. Daily
36:02
bonuses are waiting. No purchase necessary.
36:04
Voidware prohibited by law. 18 plus. Terms
36:07
and conditions apply. See website for details. That
36:09
could very well be the case. We'll be
36:11
right back. For
36:30
free at luckylandslots.com. For
37:01
free at luckylandslots.com. For
37:08
free at luckylandslots.com. Get
37:12
your free at luckylandslots.com. For
37:17
free at luckylandslots.com. Get
37:22
your free at luckylandslots.com. Analyzing
37:27
the globalist next move. And
37:40
now, the David Knight Show.
38:00
It was not so famous that
38:02
there was at the same time another
38:04
committee in the House, run by Congressman
38:06
Pike. The church committee
38:08
hearings focused on the CIA. Pike focused
38:10
on the NSA. It didn't
38:12
really get too far. I mean, it was the – and that's
38:14
one of the reasons why they didn't talk about it, was
38:17
because you didn't talk about the NSA in those days. The
38:20
joke was it stood for no such agency. And
38:24
even when I began at Texas
38:26
Instruments, one of the guys – one of
38:28
the older programmers that was there had worked for the
38:30
NSA. And he wouldn't talk about
38:32
it at all. He'd just say, no such agency. That's
38:35
what it stands for. Okay.
38:39
But the
38:41
reason they had these hearings was because
38:43
they knew that the CIA and the NSA were spying
38:46
on Americans without a warrant. What
38:49
the mainstream media did for
38:51
the CIA that controls them was
38:54
that they completely ignored the fact that there
38:56
was any inquiry into the no such agency.
39:00
And then they shifted this over to the
39:02
CIA's campaigns of assassination and heart attack guns
39:04
and all the rest of the stuff and
39:07
coups, that type of thing. And
39:10
everybody was curious about that because it wasn't that long,
39:12
you know, a decade
39:14
or so since
39:17
the Kennedy assassination, thereby
39:19
I believe was done by the CIA as well. So
39:21
everybody's looking at their killing
39:24
devices and everything. But nobody really paid much
39:26
attention to it. But out of that hearing,
39:28
those hearings, came the
39:30
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, prohibiting
39:33
surveillance of American citizens unless
39:36
they had a search warrant.
39:42
And you could not spy on American citizens
39:45
in foreign countries unless you had a search warrant. And
39:48
you couldn't spy on foreign citizens in America unless
39:50
you had a search warrant. You
39:53
could spy on foreign citizens in foreign
39:55
countries. End of story. Now
39:58
they then watered that down. with
40:00
a section 702, which
40:04
allowed them to, which
40:08
is what we've been under since, allowing them
40:10
to have some pre-verication,
40:13
some loopholes to continue to do what they want
40:15
to do. But of course, they also have the
40:17
loopholes I've pointed out many times. So
40:19
since they partner with other
40:21
intelligence services, especially the five I's, where
40:23
you have the five English speaking countries,
40:26
the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, New
40:28
Zealand, what they do for
40:30
each other, just as a courtesy, is to
40:33
violate the restrictions on surveilling their own
40:35
citizens without a search warrant. So if
40:37
they really want to search on, do
40:39
a search on somebody, what
40:42
they say is, well, you know, I'd like
40:44
for you at MI5 or MI6 or whichever
40:47
MI it is, oh my.
40:51
I would like for you to do
40:54
some surveillance on David
40:56
Knight, for example. And, you know,
40:59
we're not allowed to do that. But
41:01
you can do it. And you can
41:03
tell us, you can exchange intelligence with us. We're
41:05
not the ones doing the surveillance. You understand? That's
41:07
the same kind of logic that they do for
41:09
censorship. We'd
41:11
like for you guys on social media or Google
41:13
or whatever, censor so and so. But, you
41:16
know, we're not the ones doing it, but
41:19
you can do it for us. They
41:22
do that with everything. As a matter
41:24
of fact, that's what they had been doing prior to
41:27
the FISA committee hearings. They
41:29
would ask AT&T
41:31
to, you know, get some information
41:33
on people and do PIN
41:35
number surveillance and stuff like that.
41:38
And it's like, oh, well, they're allowed to do that
41:40
because they're a private company. They can do whatever they
41:42
want. If they would like to do something as a
41:44
favor to us, they are allowed to do it. They
41:47
don't have to do it. And
41:49
we see that same kind of cynical lies
41:53
when it comes to Trump and the lockdown
41:55
and all the rest. Oh, Trump didn't do
41:57
it. Fauci says he didn't do it. They
41:59
just made recommendations. recommendations and then they let other
42:01
people do it. They
42:04
always do that and it amazes me
42:06
that people can't wake up to that game. It
42:09
infuriates me as a matter of fact. Really when
42:11
it comes to this lockdown, I about
42:13
lose it when people start talking about that. It's like,
42:16
are you that stupid and
42:18
uninformed that you don't understand how they're doing
42:20
this and claiming that it's not coming from
42:22
them? We've even got the emails
42:24
now that show all this stuff. So
42:26
as part of the 702 is to say well, if
42:30
this is, we
42:32
can only spy on foreign
42:34
people and other countries, but
42:36
we can expand this
42:39
to a couple of hops. So, you know,
42:41
this is like the six degrees of separation
42:43
of Kevin Bacon and they go two
42:45
or three degrees of separation to expand
42:47
it out. But they
42:49
don't even need to do that. But
42:52
even that principle that they should have
42:54
to have a search warrant is something
42:56
that is now splitting the Republican Party.
42:58
The Republican Party is splitting between two
43:00
factions. One faction, which is loyal
43:02
to the CIA, it's
43:05
the House Intelligence Committee, and then the other
43:07
faction, House Judiciary Committee, it
43:09
says hey, wait a minute, we got a constitution. We got
43:11
to have a search warrant and that type of stuff. Those
43:13
two factions are fighting each other. And
43:15
unfortunately the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson,
43:18
used to be somebody who was not in favor
43:20
of the Ukraine War. He used to
43:23
be somebody who was not in favor of the
43:25
FISA 702 either. And
43:28
interestingly enough, neither
43:31
was his Democrat counterpart,
43:34
Akeem Jeffries, the
43:36
guy who is the minority leader now. If
43:39
the Democrats have more members in Congress, he
43:41
would become the Speaker of the House. So
43:43
both of these guys had in the past,
43:45
before they got into the leadership position of
43:48
their party, or in the case of Mike Johnson, Speaker of
43:50
the House, when they were not in
43:52
the leadership position, they
43:55
opposed. This FISA
43:57
warrantless searching. But
44:00
now, this is
44:02
one of the things, is he blackmailed? Is
44:05
he bribed? With power,
44:07
perhaps. These people will
44:09
do anything. This is
44:11
the problem we're trying to fix
44:13
our country at
44:15
the top. First of
44:18
all, there should be no top. That's
44:20
not the way the government was designed. It was
44:22
designed with checks and balances. It
44:25
wasn't designed as a hierarchical pyramid. And
44:28
so, that entire perception that is shared now
44:30
by the rank and file of the parties,
44:34
Democrats and Republicans, believe
44:36
that it should be a hierarchical top-down
44:39
structure. It's not. That's not the
44:41
way it was designed. But if you think you're going to fix it,
44:44
the problems we have in this country by
44:46
fixing Washington politically, you're on a
44:48
fool's errand. You don't know anything about what's been
44:50
going on for the last century in terms of
44:53
politics and history, and you can't see what's going
44:55
on right now in front of your face if
44:57
you think that. Late
44:59
last year, Congress elected to
45:01
punt the issue of FISA
45:04
renewal and has since been horrendously
45:06
abused by the US intelligence community to
45:08
continue to target Americans. This is an
45:10
article from Zero Hedge. And this has
45:13
become, and they said, including
45:15
president, former President Trump. That's the
45:17
only person anybody cares about. They
45:21
don't care about no-knock SWAT
45:23
team raids in the middle of the night
45:25
for you and I. But
45:27
look at this, they went in tomorrow long ago and
45:29
they searched his mansion, or
45:32
whatever you call that
45:34
thing, his show mansion. They
45:36
went in and searched, how dare them do
45:38
that to Trump? Well,
45:40
they didn't throw any flash bangs. They didn't shoot
45:43
anybody on site. It
45:45
wasn't a no-knock SWAT team raid. Yeah, it
45:47
was a show raid for the press, but
45:51
they didn't want to show you how brutal their SWAT
45:53
team, and nobody cares about the SWAT stuff. Nobody cares
45:55
about civil asset forfeiture for the rest of us. Nobody
45:57
cares about due process for the rest of us. about
46:00
surveillance for the rest of us. They don't,
46:02
but it's crump. It's poor Trump. Poor
46:05
Trump. So
46:08
this is becoming a big
46:10
issue now because there was a
46:13
sunset clause on it for April
46:15
the 19th. That's eight
46:17
days from now. It'll be
46:19
next Friday. And if they haven't
46:21
got this fixed, it goes away. CIA is not
46:23
gonna be very happy. CIA
46:26
is probably the person
46:28
that Mike Johnson is reporting, the
46:30
group that he's reporting to. So
46:33
now they got to come up with a permanent replacement. They've
46:35
only got eight days now. Mike
46:38
Johnson put forth something called
46:40
RISA, R-I-S-A-A, a bill backed
46:42
by Ohio Representative Mike Turner
46:44
and the Intelligence Committee, the
46:46
Intelligence Committee, that
46:49
just passed through the House Rules Committee where
46:51
a final floor vote would likely
46:53
take place today. Privacy
46:56
Hawks, however, point out that it is
46:58
a steaming pile of Bolshevik
47:03
with no meaningful language to protect
47:05
privacy rights except
47:07
for members of Congress. That's
47:10
the interesting thing. And that's what I talked
47:12
about yesterday. Thomas Massey. He said, look at
47:14
this, they're trying to buy us off. They're
47:16
saying, you're gonna have to have, there's
47:19
a carve-out for members of Congress. Not even
47:21
for Trump. Not even for Trump.
47:24
Maybe that's what Marjorie Taylor Greene's angry about.
47:27
But it required the FBI to notify
47:29
a member of Congress and to seek
47:31
consent from a member of Congress before
47:35
they did surveillance of
47:37
that member of Congress.
47:39
Yeah, that's
47:41
not gonna last to go wrong.
47:43
The FBI won't abide by that
47:45
either. What's more, critics say that
47:47
the R-I-S-A-A essentially
47:50
codifies surveillance abuses into
47:52
law. You know, a
47:54
special section that they put in there with the Sunset
47:56
Clause of April the 19th, eight days from now. they
48:00
would make it permanent law. And so you've got a
48:02
joint statement put out by a lot of different privacy
48:04
groups. You've got the Electronic
48:06
Privacy Information Center, Epic, they're on the
48:09
left, Brennan Center on the left and
48:12
FreedomWorks on the right. They
48:15
said in a joint statement, this bill is not
48:17
a compromise and
48:20
it's 56 quote unquote
48:22
reforms codify
48:25
the unacceptable status
48:27
quo. It's like you're not
48:29
reforming anything. You're just
48:32
cementing it in. The
48:35
bill also has caused a rift within the Republican
48:37
Party over privacy rights. As I said, the GOP
48:39
has divided into two broad camps. You
48:42
have the one camp, which is the
48:44
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and
48:47
they don't want to change anything. They want
48:49
to give more carte blanc to
48:51
the CIA and these people. And then
48:54
on the other hand, you have the Judiciary Committee, which
48:57
is at least
49:00
virtue signaling as
49:04
pro-Constitution. According
49:06
to FreedomWorks, of the 56 RISAA
49:10
reforms, Speaker
49:12
Johnson highlights, Johnson
49:14
said, we have 56 reforms in there. They said,
49:16
oh yeah, well of the 56 you say, at
49:19
least 13 either codify
49:21
existing practice and procedures, meaning they
49:23
make no changes. They emphasize that
49:25
in upper case. They
49:28
make no changes to the warrantless surveillance status
49:30
quo or they
49:33
actively weaken existing
49:35
protections. It
49:37
is a sham reform, says
49:39
Representative Mike Lee. And
49:43
as I pointed out before, both
49:45
Speaker Johnson and Hakeem Jeffries,
49:48
before they were put into a leadership position
49:51
and before they were corrupted by the power
49:54
of the ring, the
49:57
Boromir seat, they
49:59
were against all of this, but
50:02
now they support it. Jim
50:05
Bovard, a good columnist, has been
50:08
on it several times. I've had him on it once
50:10
or twice, but Guard Goldsmith has had him on it
50:12
several times, knows him. Jim Bovard
50:14
had a great comment. He
50:16
told The Daily Caller, any member
50:18
of Congress who supports extending FISA
50:20
without radical reforms should
50:23
receive a deep state approved
50:25
logo to burnish for
50:27
their reelection campaign. If
50:29
Congress cannot yank in the reins
50:31
on the FBI and the NSA
50:34
after millions of confirmed violations of
50:36
Americans' rights, only a
50:38
fool would expect Congress to ever give a
50:40
damn about the Constitution. I
50:44
don't expect them to care about it
50:46
ever. Buried in Section
50:48
702 is the
50:51
new reformed
50:53
version, according to Johnson. It's
50:56
a provision that could result in the permanent,
50:59
permanent reauthorization of this
51:02
deeply flawed authority without
51:05
a single reform. That's
51:07
the comment from the
51:09
Brennan Center for Justice. FISA
51:12
currently includes a sunset date of April
51:15
19th, eight days from now, which is
51:17
why they are in a frenzy to
51:19
do this. Because we can't go, folks,
51:21
one day without the ability
51:25
of our government to do complete warrantless surveillance
51:27
on each and every one of us, can
51:29
we? Politico says
51:31
that the beleaguered speaker suffered
51:34
a fresh defeat as conservatives chaffed at
51:36
his opposition to a plan for requiring
51:38
warrants. Didn't this
51:41
SOB take a note to the
51:43
Constitution? What's the problem
51:45
with all these congressional
51:48
people, Republicans and
51:50
Democrats, who don't like
51:52
warrants now? They
51:54
took a note to the Constitution. Maybe
51:57
they've just invalidated their
51:59
position. as a congressman. Republicans
52:02
brought down their own speaker's third
52:04
attempt to reauthorize a
52:07
controversial spy power on
52:09
Wednesday. And as
52:11
a matter of fact, let me play for you. With
52:13
Lucky Land slots, you can get Lucky
52:16
Lucky Land Slots. You can get lucky just
52:18
about anywhere. Dearly beloved, we are gathered
52:20
here today to... anyone Has anyone seen
52:22
the bride and groom? Sorry,
52:24
sorry, we're here. we were getting We were getting lucky in
52:26
the limo and we lost track of time. No, Lucky Land Casino, with cash prizes
52:29
that add up quicker than a guest registry.
52:29
No, Lucky Land Casino. With cash prizes that add
52:31
up quicker than a guest registry. In
52:33
that case, I pronounce you lucky. Play
52:36
for free at luckylandslots.com. Daily bonuses are
52:38
waiting. No No purchase necessary. Void where
52:41
prohibited by law. 18 plus. Terms and
52:43
conditions apply. Lucky Land Casino
52:45
asking people what's the weirdest place
52:47
you've gotten lucky? Lucky? In
52:50
line at the deli, I guess. Ah, in
52:52
my dentist's office. More than once, actually. Do
52:54
I have to say? Yes, you do. In
52:56
the car before my kids' PTA meeting. Really?
52:59
Yes! Excuse me, what's the
53:01
weirdest place you've gotten lucky? I
53:03
never win Intel. Well, there you
53:05
have it. You could get lucky anywhere
53:07
playing at luckylandslots.com. Play for free right now.
53:09
Are you feeling lucky? No purchase necessary. Fully reprohibited by
53:11
law. 18 plus. Terms and conditions apply. See website for
53:13
details. What Thomas Massey had to
53:16
say about this, I gave you
53:18
the general comments yesterday. Here's Thomas
53:20
Massey with his three minute speech.
53:22
Today we're voting on a resolution
53:24
that will bring forward reauthorization of
53:26
a program that's been abused for
53:28
decades. The FISA 702 surveillance program.
53:31
Before we vote on that program
53:33
though, this resolution that we're voting
53:35
on now prescribes that we will
53:37
bring forward an amendment to require
53:40
warrants. If you want to
53:42
spy on Americans, if you want to use this database
53:45
as a back door to look
53:47
at the privacy, the private information
53:49
of Americans, you would need
53:51
a warrant if this amendment passes. Now
53:54
there's some people who say, oh, getting a warrant
53:56
is too hard. It'll slow us down. You'll put
53:58
American. Listen, I've
54:01
been in the SCIF, the
54:03
classified area, where they're supposed to tell
54:05
us the problems with requiring a warrant,
54:07
and they never have told us an
54:10
example, a single example of where getting
54:12
a warrant would be a problem to
54:14
national security. In fact, we've got a
54:17
provision in the warrant amendment that says
54:19
in exigent circumstances, you can skip that
54:21
step. You'll hear today
54:23
that, oh, everything's fine. We don't need
54:26
the warrant amendment. We've
54:28
got 53 reforms in this
54:30
package. Here's the problem with those reforms.
54:33
We rely on the same people that
54:35
abused the system to enforce those reforms,
54:38
and they still don't go to the
54:41
constitutional level that is required in
54:43
this country. Who doesn't
54:45
trust those 53 reforms? Congress
54:49
doesn't trust those 53 reforms. The
54:51
authors of this bill, you know how I know?
54:54
Because they put an exemption, two exemptions
54:56
for themselves in this bill. That's
54:59
right. If the FBI is going to use 702
55:02
FISA to spy on
55:04
congressmen, they have to tell
55:06
congress. They even have to
55:08
get permission from the congressmen they're spying
55:10
on if they say it's for the
55:12
congressmen's own good. Why
55:15
do we have a provision in there
55:17
that exempts congressmen but not all of
55:19
America? Intelligence deserve
55:21
the protections that are enshrined in
55:24
the constitution. Nothing less
55:26
should pass this house. This
55:29
is an enormous database. They're going to
55:31
tell you, oh, we're just looking at
55:33
intelligence that was gathered on foreigners. The
55:35
problem is they're collecting this intelligence in
55:38
the United States using service
55:40
providers in the United States, using internet connections
55:42
in the United States. They collect a lot
55:44
of stuff here. Do
55:46
you think the NSA employee who
55:48
did a FISA search on a
55:51
Tinder date was looking
55:53
for information about Hamas? No.
55:55
There's all kinds of information in there.
55:58
That's why it's being abused. That's why we
56:00
need the warrant provision. I urge
56:03
folks to vote for this rule so
56:05
that you can vote for the warrant
56:07
provision amendment and if that amendment doesn't
56:09
pass, you shouldn't vote to reauthorize FISA.
56:11
With that, I yield back. Reserve.
56:14
Yeah. He's good. He's
56:17
good. They don't believe this works
56:19
because they went to
56:21
the absurd position of bribing themselves, which
56:23
is where we started, giving
56:25
themselves an exception. Oh yeah, we got
56:27
it all protected. No problem. Let's put
56:30
something in there to protect ourselves. Specifically,
56:32
just Congress. Truly
56:34
is amazing. On Rockva and Denver,
56:36
Attaway says it probably grants retroactive
56:39
legal legitimacy to illegal
56:41
actions taken for years. That's the key thing.
56:44
They do this stuff surreptitiously. They
56:46
do it through surrogates, surreptitiously,
56:49
secretly. They
56:52
pretend that they don't have it there and then
56:54
they legalize it. So what's the big deal? What's
56:56
the big deal? It's legal. Are
56:59
you going to come after me now for something that
57:01
is now legal? I
57:03
agree. On Rockva and
57:05
Guard Goldsmith, thank you, Guard, for the tip. Thank you.
57:08
He says, David, I was just thinking of your great speech at Gerald's event
57:10
a couple of years ago. Your
57:12
presentation here reminds me that the
57:14
14th Amendment requires all states protect
57:16
human beings equally. So
57:18
already is a form of national
57:20
abortion ban for states that have
57:22
laws forbidding murder. Yeah.
57:25
The thing is, if we put the 14th Amendment in
57:28
there, and it
57:30
should be, the
57:32
problem is that Washington is just so broken. That
57:35
is what a lot of people who are saying
57:38
at the federal level, this is a 14th Amendment
57:40
issue. And the statement has been made
57:42
a long time because the 14th Amendment was in there
57:44
why. It wasn't to create anchor
57:46
babies. They were taking that
57:48
down this rabbit hole, which
57:51
it was never intended to do. But it
57:53
was intended, after the Civil War, it
57:56
was there to say that the freed
57:58
slaves are fully citizens of the United States. States.
58:01
And so, a lot of people have said, you know, that
58:04
was the key argument, personhood. Personhood
58:08
was denied to the slaves before
58:10
they were freed. And
58:13
what you're denying is the personhood of
58:16
babies when you abort them. You're saying
58:18
that's not a person. And I've
58:20
covered over the years many people, there
58:22
was a black abortionist, a
58:24
man in Washington, D.C.,
58:27
who said, oh
58:30
yeah, they're not persons. They're not persons. And
58:32
it's like, and people would make the argument,
58:34
well, what do you think that baby is
58:36
going to become? It's not
58:38
going to become a human? Oh
58:41
yeah, but it's not a person now. It's like, well,
58:43
what makes that happen? You know, at what point? That's
58:46
why when Christians talk about you
58:48
knit me together in my mother's womb,
58:51
as, and that's actually in the
58:53
Jewish scriptures, in the Old Testament, you
58:57
know, God recognized them as persons,
58:59
as He was knitting them
59:01
together. He saw them as persons from
59:04
eternity past. He knew what He was going
59:06
to do with them and for them. And
59:09
so, all of that is true. It's just that when
59:11
we look at this from a practical standpoint, the,
59:16
you know, you could say 14th
59:18
Amendment protecting people would
59:21
apply to all murder cases. So, we ought to make all
59:23
murder cases a federal case. And
59:26
that's what the FBI is, you know, trying
59:29
to constantly expand their agency and take over
59:31
every different aspect. But I think basic crime
59:33
has not been delegated as a category of
59:35
things to the federal government and it needs
59:37
to remain at the state level. And,
59:41
you know, the murder
59:43
trials and how the different states
59:45
would define first degree, second degree
59:48
murder, things like that, or manslaughter, those
59:51
are state definitions or slight differences in state
59:53
laws and place to place. And
59:56
that type of crime, murder,
59:59
Belongs at. The state level and
1:00:01
from a functional standpoint we know that
1:00:03
the Feds are gonna mess it up.
1:00:06
They are going to do anything they
1:00:08
can to ignore the constitution. Even though
1:00:10
they will talk about the Fourteenth Amendment,
1:00:12
I think about die Getting back to
1:00:15
this. You know. It. Was
1:00:17
I was just a couple weeks ago. Ah,
1:00:19
those movie that we'd never seen. That.
1:00:22
Ah, I liked the soundtrack for.
1:00:25
Was not a good movie own outweigh the name of
1:00:27
it because it would not recommend it for anybody but
1:00:29
now it would bitten have. We looked it up and
1:00:31
didn't have one of her. And didn't
1:00:33
have any. Of the
1:00:35
usual Hollywood gratuitous sex and things like that
1:00:37
or even know the violence was not not
1:00:39
vomit bad but had a good soundtracks. Didn't
1:00:41
care much for the movie but a lot
1:00:43
of it took place in Venice. And.
1:00:47
Damn. Ah so.
1:00:49
As are watching it. I'm. I.
1:00:51
Met a couple com as incurred and realize that
1:00:54
I'd been to Venice. Oh with a high school
1:00:56
group and I went with and I said you
1:00:58
know I don't really have good memories of Venice.
1:01:01
As. Got some beautiful places that are
1:01:03
there but I have what I remembered from
1:01:06
Venice. Was. The discussions
1:01:08
about done the Money Cheese and to
1:01:10
tower Turn Society that they had the
1:01:12
Bridge of Sighs. Ah, I
1:01:14
believe. I'm not sure I believe that was where
1:01:17
the star chamber was of, but I'm not sure
1:01:19
about that. But yeah, was Crevices nine or said
1:01:21
yes. But the Bridge of
1:01:23
Sighs people a could be heard going
1:01:25
through this covered bridge sighing because they
1:01:27
knew that there are being taken to
1:01:29
a place where we're not going to
1:01:31
have any due process. And.
1:01:33
So that really left a bad taste
1:01:36
in my mouth about minutes. And
1:01:38
yep, that's where we're headed. Know already there's
1:01:40
matter fact, they're just normalizing it and legalizing.
1:01:43
And in their minds, And
1:01:45
we can allow them to do that. So
1:01:48
the Grp is raging with itself, says the
1:01:50
hell as the fires a deadline inches closer.
1:01:53
We must. Preserve.
1:01:56
Their. billie as a notice what's happened with
1:01:58
us As I pointed out
1:02:01
before, FISA was there to restrict actions by
1:02:04
the CIA and the NSA specifically restrict
1:02:06
their actions about surveilling us. Now it
1:02:08
has become a tool of surveillance. And
1:02:10
this is, again, the way
1:02:12
the government always perverts and subverts and
1:02:15
inverts everything in the Constitution.
1:02:17
Same way they'll do it with abortion. You
1:02:20
know, the very thing that was set
1:02:22
up to restrain them from surveilling Americans
1:02:24
without a search warrant has now become
1:02:26
their tool. They
1:02:28
can go in, as Rand Paul said, he was right about
1:02:30
it, he said they
1:02:33
can get a search warrant on Mr. and Mrs. Verizon. Just
1:02:36
everybody. It is so easy for them to
1:02:38
get a search warrant, but they don't want to be bothered. They
1:02:41
go before a single judge. There's
1:02:44
nobody arguing on the other side. It's
1:02:47
a secret procedure, a Star Chamber-like
1:02:49
procedure. I'd like to spy
1:02:51
on so-and-so specifically or a whole group of people,
1:02:53
and they're allowed to do it. So
1:02:57
FISA has now become a very
1:02:59
important thing for the real government
1:03:02
to have seen
1:03:05
as legitimate. It
1:03:07
has now become a tool of surveillance. When
1:03:10
its design was exactly the opposite,
1:03:12
FISA was to restrain surveillance.
1:03:17
And now instead it has become a
1:03:19
tool of surveillance. The
1:03:21
tanked procedural vote that
1:03:24
happened yesterday sent
1:03:26
House Republicans to a hasty conference meeting behind
1:03:29
closed doors in the Capitol basement, their
1:03:31
second of the day, for
1:03:33
a huddle that lawmakers described as, quote,
1:03:36
an airing of grievances. Oh,
1:03:38
wow, this is... What
1:03:42
is the Seinfeld thing that
1:03:47
Rand Paul always does, an airing of grievances? The...
1:03:52
Anyway, I guess that's what they had yesterday,
1:03:55
celebrated at a festival. They
1:03:57
celebrated festivals a little bit late in the House. They
1:03:59
aired their green... Did they have a
1:04:01
poll in there that they mail their grievances to or something? One
1:04:04
that seemed to heighten the internal tensions. Max
1:04:08
Miller from Ohio, Republican said, it was pure
1:04:10
chaos. It wasn't productive at
1:04:12
all. Kelly Armstrong, Republican from
1:04:14
North Dakota said, it was a conference that
1:04:16
could have been done as an email, minus
1:04:19
the yelling. I
1:04:22
mean, they just do it in an uppercase like Trump. I
1:04:25
think it's cathartic to some degree or another, but
1:04:28
we've got to figure out something. I
1:04:30
don't know what this looks like. Well,
1:04:32
we know what it looks like. It's very clear. You get
1:04:34
a warrant. No exceptions. No
1:04:36
exceptions. You get a warrant. None
1:04:39
of this, you know, two
1:04:42
degrees or three degrees of separation from Kevin
1:04:44
Bacon's stuff either. That's the
1:04:47
key. That's their little wedge in there. And
1:04:49
when I talked to William Benne years ago,
1:04:51
he said, that lets them get
1:04:53
anybody they want. You know, they play that
1:04:55
game. The Speaker did not lay
1:04:57
out a path forward on the contentious question of
1:04:59
how to reauthorize Section 702. And
1:05:04
see, you notice even in the Hill. So
1:05:06
how do we reauthorize this? It's
1:05:09
not even a question to the Hill as to
1:05:11
whether we should reauthorize it.
1:05:13
It's how do we reauthorize it? Well,
1:05:18
Section 702 does not permit the government
1:05:20
to spy on American citizens who communicate
1:05:22
with foreigners who are being surveilled, have
1:05:24
their interactions swept up in the process,
1:05:28
information that can be later viewed by
1:05:30
law enforcement. Again, there's essentially no restriction.
1:05:33
And they've already got the
1:05:35
nonsense of the Five Eyes thing. They
1:05:38
would just like to be able to do it without as, you know,
1:05:40
they've got the FISA court where
1:05:42
they can do anything they want. They got
1:05:44
their agreements with foreign intelligence services who will
1:05:47
spy on us for them and tell them
1:05:49
anything they want to know. They just want
1:05:51
to make it more expeditious. This
1:05:55
is Not about even whether they're going
1:05:57
to do this kind of warrantless surveillance.
1:06:00
How can we make it more easy for them to
1:06:02
do it He said. Ah,
1:06:04
So said we have a it is
1:06:07
now in the position in our society.
1:06:09
Where. These things that. We.
1:06:12
Had their protections put him because there
1:06:14
things like the star chamber and stuff
1:06:16
like that. We had the same put
1:06:18
an and now we are questioning all
1:06:20
the foundations of western societies. You see
1:06:22
is not just. Etti far
1:06:25
and be a lamb that
1:06:27
are tearing down statues. And
1:06:30
tearing down the foundation of our society.
1:06:32
It's Republicans even. Were.
1:06:34
Doing certainly democrats unanimously on this,
1:06:37
but it's them vast majority of
1:06:39
republicans. there's only nineteen that really
1:06:41
pushing against this song. A small
1:06:43
number of republicans as only because
1:06:46
they've got a very narrow majority.
1:06:48
That. They're paying attention to it. But
1:06:51
the vast number of republicans are just supposed
1:06:53
get this over with was do the how
1:06:55
can we make this easier. For.
1:06:57
The Cia to spy on Us. As
1:07:01
so. Ill warrants for searches
1:07:03
we don't care about anymore. Free speech
1:07:05
without care about that A more due
1:07:07
process We don't care about that anymore.
1:07:09
Everything is up for deaths. Because.
1:07:12
They want to tear down the foundations
1:07:14
of our society. Well,
1:07:17
Merger Telegram. Met.
1:07:19
Privately with my johnson and she said there
1:07:21
was no deal. Well
1:07:23
on on this. I'm with her. Ah,
1:07:26
thank ya to get rid of this
1:07:28
guy. He's obviously sold us out, is
1:07:30
obviously been bought, blackmailed, or corrupted by
1:07:32
power. He looks at power over principal
1:07:34
now. Which. Is what seems to happen
1:07:36
whenever any by guess I'll have a disposition. He.
1:07:39
Had a voting record that was com that
1:07:41
was very good. He had a very good
1:07:43
resume that a very good voting record. Any
1:07:45
just Dell complete one eighty. right?
1:07:48
Away our money for Ukraine. It always been against
1:07:50
money for you print. A
1:07:52
roughly hour long meeting between Mike Johnson
1:07:55
emerge retailer Gray Him. a
1:07:57
to get her to drop or threat of forcing a vote
1:07:59
the can did speakership. She said, I got a
1:08:01
lot of excuses, but we didn't walk out with
1:08:03
a deal. She said
1:08:05
the meeting was direct and passionate. She
1:08:08
threatened to force a vote to strip Johnson
1:08:10
from the gavel after he relied on Democrats
1:08:12
to push through a $1.2 trillion spending bill.
1:08:16
Yeah, there's that as well, right? That
1:08:19
he plays the Nancy Pelosi card.
1:08:21
Oh, here you go. You got, what was
1:08:23
it? 48, 72 hours to read this thousand plus
1:08:25
page bill, and we're going to add another $1.2
1:08:28
trillion and we're going to give all the money
1:08:30
that Biden wants for this army of IRS agents
1:08:32
and on and on and on. Since
1:08:35
then, she's openly criticized his leadership in
1:08:37
media interviews and on social media, warning
1:08:39
him that passing Ukraine aid or reauthorizing
1:08:41
FISA would put his position in peril.
1:08:44
And then a blistering letter to Republican colleagues
1:08:46
on Tuesday, she argued that Johnson has failed
1:08:49
to live up to his promises by
1:08:51
negotiating with Democrats and by breaking
1:08:54
procedural rules to pass major action.
1:08:57
But she has not laid out a timeline for forcing a
1:08:59
vote because as they go through this
1:09:01
and they'll talk to other people, they're not on board with
1:09:03
this. Most Republicans are just want
1:09:05
to go along with it. They
1:09:07
don't want to fight for principle because they don't have
1:09:09
any principles. She
1:09:12
said, I didn't give him a red line. I'm
1:09:14
watching what happens on Ukraine funding and the
1:09:16
reauthorization of FISA, a powerful
1:09:19
and controversial spy authority. So
1:09:21
again, that's where we are with this. On
1:09:25
Rumble, I'm Marty. Hey Marty, good
1:09:28
to see you there. Thank you for that tip. It
1:09:30
says no rant, just something for
1:09:33
your necktie budget. Thank you, maybe I
1:09:35
get a better necktie. Oh,
1:09:37
as a matter of fact, we talk
1:09:39
about wardrobe budgets coming up here. You
1:09:41
won't believe what happened on Easter with
1:09:43
this church that I was talking about
1:09:45
that said, well, you know, we want to
1:09:47
get people to come on Easter. We got two shots to get them, you
1:09:49
know, Christmas and Easter. So we don't
1:09:51
want to talk about resurrection or the
1:09:54
cross or cavalry or blood or anything like that.
1:09:56
Hello, it is Ryan and I was on a
1:09:58
flight the other day. one of my
1:10:00
favorite social spin slot games on chumbacacino.com. I
1:10:03
looked over the person sitting next to me
1:10:05
and you know what they were doing? They
1:10:07
were also playing Chumbacacino. Coincidence? I think not.
1:10:09
Everybody's loving having fun with it. Chumbacacino's home
1:10:11
to hundreds of casino style games that you
1:10:14
can play for free anytime, anywhere, even at
1:10:16
30,000 With
1:10:28
Lucky Land Slots, you can get Lucky
1:10:30
just about anywhere. Daily beloved, we are
1:10:32
gathered here today to... Has anyone seen
1:10:34
the bride and groom? Sorry, sorry,
1:10:37
we're here. We were getting Lucky in the limo
1:10:39
when we lost track of time. No,
1:10:41
Lucky Land Casino with cash prizes that add
1:10:43
up quicker than a guest registry. In
1:10:46
that case, I pronounce you Lucky. Play
1:10:48
for free at luckylandslots.com. Daily
1:10:51
bonuses are waiting. No purchase necessary.
1:10:53
Boyd were prohibited by law. 18 plus terms
1:10:55
and conditions apply. See website for details. You
1:10:58
won't believe what they talked about and you won't believe what this
1:11:00
guy wore. We'll be right back. If
1:11:03
you like the Eagles, the
1:11:06
cars, and Huey Lewis in
1:11:09
the news, you'll
1:11:13
love the Classic Hits channel at
1:11:15
APS Radio. Download our app or
1:11:17
listen now at apsradio.com. And
1:11:57
we're back. I hit the wrong button there. Okay,
1:12:00
so let's
1:12:02
talk a little bit about a Democrat
1:12:06
Senator who, and
1:12:08
I said this yesterday, this was, this
1:12:10
is old news here. I'm pushing everything
1:12:12
as the
1:12:15
wrong button here. This is yesterday's
1:12:17
news that I forgot to get rid of. I
1:12:19
want to talk about the NCAA women's coach who just
1:12:21
won the title. And
1:12:24
I thought it was interesting. I don't follow
1:12:26
sports, but I see these
1:12:28
articles that are put up in Main Street just like I
1:12:30
don't follow Taylor Swift, but I see all this stuff about
1:12:32
her. I know a great deal about Taylor Swift that I
1:12:34
don't really want to know, just from seeing the headlines go
1:12:37
past. And so I
1:12:39
saw all this stuff about the women's NCAA championship
1:12:42
and didn't see anything at all about the
1:12:44
Final Four. It got me curious because
1:12:46
you used to hear all that stuff about the men's Final
1:12:48
Four and everything. Zip. Nothing
1:12:50
about that. And
1:12:53
one of the people who's at
1:12:55
the controversy center of this is
1:12:57
the coach, Dawn Staley.
1:13:01
And she has gotten into
1:13:03
controversies with the Freedom
1:13:05
From Religion Foundation. They say, well, we
1:13:07
don't like you praying as a
1:13:09
coach and things like that. So
1:13:11
she got involved in that. She says, well, I'm a Christian.
1:13:13
That's what I'm going to do anyway. But
1:13:16
she's also talking about how she wants to
1:13:18
have men
1:13:21
who identify as women, they call them
1:13:24
trans athletes, and
1:13:26
women's basketball, which
1:13:28
I thought was really a strange
1:13:30
combination of things. So
1:13:32
she's going to stand firmly on her
1:13:35
faith in terms of praying. But
1:13:37
what is her faith in? I
1:13:40
don't really know. She's
1:13:43
as game day devotional that she leads with the team
1:13:46
and also in pre and post game interviews. The
1:13:49
Freedom From Religion Foundation, which is
1:13:52
trying to, you know, they kind
1:13:54
of misread the Constitution. That's freedom
1:13:56
of religion. You know,
1:13:58
freedom to... Express your
1:14:00
religion, to exercise your religion. It's
1:14:03
not to suppress it. But
1:14:05
they got that completely wrong. That has been
1:14:07
the way that the Constitution has
1:14:09
been interpreted since the middle of the twentieth
1:14:11
century, freedom from religion. But that's not what
1:14:14
it says. They sent multiple
1:14:16
letters to her to complain
1:14:18
about this. And
1:14:22
in a post-game interview, she said,
1:14:24
if you don't believe in God, there's something wrong with you. Seriously.
1:14:27
She said, I'm a believer. He makes
1:14:29
things. He makes things come true. When
1:14:32
you're at your worst, he's at his best.
1:14:36
But then she doesn't seem to care what he has to say
1:14:38
about she doesn't want to hurt anybody's
1:14:40
feelings. So, you know, let the men play
1:14:44
women's sports. That
1:14:46
not only hurts the feelings of the
1:14:49
women who get skunked, but it also,
1:14:51
in many cases, hurts them physically. I
1:14:54
just don't understand that. There's a lot of this
1:14:56
stuff out there, who are, I think, what
1:14:59
Jesus was talking about. He said, why do you call me Lord,
1:15:01
Lord, and you don't do what I say? Which
1:15:04
is what's happening with the PC USA,
1:15:06
the Presbyterian Church USA. This
1:15:09
is the original Presbyterian Church. It's been
1:15:11
three splits. But
1:15:13
they've been working on their apostasy now for over 100
1:15:15
years. They're getting pretty good at it. They
1:15:17
just, they went down
1:15:19
the hill and the slippery slope,
1:15:22
and there's picking up speed. And
1:15:25
so, you have
1:15:28
the PC USA. You know, first
1:15:30
there was a split off. There's Orthodox PC, Presbyterian
1:15:33
Church, and then I
1:15:36
think it's sometime in the mid, that was in
1:15:38
the early 20th century, like 1920s or something like that. And
1:15:41
then there was in the 1950s, there
1:15:43
was a second split off from
1:15:46
them, and it was
1:15:48
the Presbyterian Church of America. But
1:15:50
the PC USA, as
1:15:52
one person described, is a testament to
1:15:55
their final capitulation to the zeitgeist
1:15:58
Forsaking the foundation of God's will. The word
1:16:00
for the ever evolving whims
1:16:02
of contemporary moral relativism. Ah,
1:16:04
the legislative proposal For them.
1:16:06
They are. They have a
1:16:08
very i recall a structured
1:16:10
her. Ah, things can
1:16:13
like add some church government thing that
1:16:15
they're gonna know how it works and
1:16:17
can't find it in the bible. That's
1:16:19
what if is why this happens. You're
1:16:22
not just the marxists who have a
1:16:24
long Marcy institution as also Satan, his
1:16:26
minions and Avalon marched through the institutions
1:16:28
masquerading as an exercise and inclusivity and
1:16:31
compassion. They ostracize
1:16:33
clergy and members who adhere
1:16:35
to the biblical convictions on
1:16:37
human sexuality. And the
1:16:40
Sanctity of marriage. They frame
1:16:42
traditional biblical teachings as discriminatory,
1:16:44
and they outright reject the
1:16:47
gospels call to repentance. And
1:16:50
A New Life and Christ. And
1:16:52
so what they said in the some. This
1:16:55
new document to change
1:16:57
their governing rules. The
1:17:00
said God unites persons who baptism
1:17:02
regardless of race, ethnicity, age, sex.
1:17:04
So far so good. Spin.
1:17:06
They add gender identity or
1:17:08
sexual orientation. Or
1:17:10
theological conviction. Whoa. Wait a minute.
1:17:13
All three of those are South.
1:17:15
God unites us, except for those
1:17:17
whose theological convictions include repentance from
1:17:19
what God calls. So. Much.
1:17:22
How I would rephrase. As for them. At.
1:17:25
Their therefore no place in the life of the church.
1:17:28
For. Discrimination against any person so they
1:17:31
have no place for you. If
1:17:34
you adhere to the biblical definition
1:17:36
of these relationships, Among
1:17:38
the Mayo Clinic by the way as looked
1:17:41
at the damage. From. Puberty
1:17:43
blockers. As part of their
1:17:45
study, one of their subjects was a two
1:17:47
year old transgender. You.
1:17:50
Understand the problem with that notion and
1:17:52
this child even talk. By.
1:17:55
The child who can't even talk.
1:17:58
Knows that they are in the. The body.
1:18:02
Though the Mayo Clinic. For. A
1:18:04
two year old are they claim
1:18:06
had gender dysphoria. Was
1:18:08
a story from my sight News?
1:18:11
Ah and the average age of
1:18:13
puberty blockers initiation said the Mayo
1:18:15
Clinic. Was twelve years old.
1:18:18
Issue that is. Equally. Unable
1:18:20
to consent, A twelve year old cannot
1:18:22
consent to doing something like this. They
1:18:24
don't have the judgment, and we don't
1:18:26
allow them to do anything that is
1:18:28
permanently disabling. They would allow them to
1:18:30
drive cars, would allow them to own
1:18:32
guns, drink alcohol. Vote. All these are
1:18:34
things. a twelve years old. They don't
1:18:36
have that kind of maturity. We all
1:18:38
understand that and everything. except they sweep
1:18:40
that aside. Because.
1:18:42
They want to elevate this degeneracy because I
1:18:45
want to elevate. This.
1:18:48
This targeting of children as pedophilia.
1:18:52
The Mayo Clinic team found quote
1:18:54
mild to severe sex gland atrophy.
1:18:58
And the cells of boys who had taken
1:19:00
puberty blockers. A twelve year
1:19:02
old boy in the study have fifty
1:19:04
nine percent of sex glands fully atrophied.
1:19:07
With the appearance of micro. Lengthy.
1:19:10
Asses. Which
1:19:12
is a condition. And.
1:19:14
Which small clusters of calcium
1:19:16
form and the testicles. My
1:19:20
son of a ninety percent of cells responsible for
1:19:22
sperm production. This patients. Were. And
1:19:24
unable to progress further. This
1:19:28
is not only sexual abuse. Psychological.
1:19:31
Abuse Mental Abuse.
1:19:34
Sterilization, Well. So.
1:19:38
How do we had to this? pointless because we got.
1:19:41
Nothing. But a silly church and
1:19:43
most cases we've got Anthony Hopkins
1:19:45
is gonna be portraying King Herod
1:19:48
and an upcoming biblical thriller. Called.
1:19:51
Marry. A biblical for
1:19:53
our could be a biblical thriller. We
1:19:56
already know the ending. Oh but wait
1:19:58
the gonna change the endings and there. There
1:20:00
is Joe Osteen joining in the
1:20:02
marketing campaign. Isn't that nice? Maybe though,
1:20:04
even give him a cameo role. he
1:20:07
could play judas. Or maybe
1:20:09
just a judas goat or. Last
1:20:11
day. At this time my life said
1:20:13
Anthony Hopkins. I'm drawn to the challenge
1:20:15
of a complex script. Or. This
1:20:18
time your life gonna be thinking about judgments. At.
1:20:20
Seriously. As well
1:20:22
as a level of detail given a this production
1:20:25
with extraordinary sets, props and costumes and it makes
1:20:27
me proud to be a part of this. The
1:20:30
screenplay here's with a thriller part comes on.
1:20:32
We really don't know. How.
1:20:34
The store's been with thought. Doesn't.
1:20:37
I don't follow the bible. With
1:20:41
this script writer has consulted
1:20:43
he said with priest, bishops,
1:20:45
baptists, pastors, Rabbis, Mormons and
1:20:47
Muslims. And sounds like The Chosen
1:20:49
doesn't. Matter where. You're just gonna make this stuff
1:20:51
up. Actually
1:20:53
make this more entertaining. I don't care what's true or
1:20:56
not, A fight. all the rest of the stuff. And
1:20:59
then we have, as I point out, Ah,
1:21:01
even for like the guy who is. Pastor.
1:21:04
Of this mega church in North
1:21:06
Carolina Elevation Turks. Ah, take a
1:21:09
look at this. He
1:21:11
was them. For.
1:21:14
External a massage or bad
1:21:16
as fashion Taste of buddies
1:21:18
had this large Pete sweater.
1:21:21
I were the design on it ends
1:21:23
and it is really striking. An outstanding
1:21:25
I guess it the stands out open
1:21:27
in that way. And
1:21:29
so I guess somebody was curious about that. They
1:21:31
lose that. Such an odd. Fashion.
1:21:34
Choice here. Somebody looked it up and
1:21:36
they found that it is sold by
1:21:38
Neiman Marcus we always used to call
1:21:41
needless markup. It is
1:21:43
a two thousand dollar sweater. This.
1:21:46
Is a church that didn't want to mention for
1:21:48
Easter men there but invitations to the community that
1:21:51
it won't say anything about The Resurrection. About.
1:21:53
Blood About Calvary? any that stuff? No, no,
1:21:56
let's not do that. They get a passer
1:21:58
who. For. Easter that a pink. Sweater.
1:22:01
And and it's got to. And.
1:22:04
Acosta. Two thousand dollars. But here's a close
1:22:07
up of it and and the name of
1:22:09
it so you can see it better. Or
1:22:12
this is a men's oversize because
1:22:14
is really big oversized. Holy sweater.
1:22:16
There you go. That's what it
1:22:18
was. It was wholly sweater for
1:22:20
Holy week except they smell it
1:22:22
H O L a y because
1:22:24
they're talking about the holes that
1:22:26
they punched through on this night.
1:22:29
When he was able to get from needless mark up for
1:22:31
only two thousand dollars. And when
1:22:33
he did his Easter sermon, he kept
1:22:36
to that promise. it won't send anybody
1:22:38
with anything about Jesus. As
1:22:40
as be completely non offensive. Let's not talk
1:22:42
about the resurrection or if we do. We.
1:22:45
Can make it about the prosperity
1:22:47
gospel wasn't when he did his
1:22:50
resurrection narrative was a quote where
1:22:52
his grave represents your depression and
1:22:54
failure. And Galloway
1:22:57
represents a better life you want
1:22:59
to live. On.
1:23:03
says. Not about the fact that they're we've
1:23:06
all send fallen for the glory of dawn.
1:23:09
And how we going to get that removed
1:23:11
because God cannot accept even are good works
1:23:13
if we are. Ah,
1:23:15
and a state of war against him
1:23:17
Out had we. Had a we'd.
1:23:20
Take. That away. Well.
1:23:23
God love the world. So much gone three sixteen
1:23:25
that he sent his son to do that. And.
1:23:29
Also because he had to have just as he
1:23:31
can't just say well forget about it like these
1:23:33
people would. Forget. About you like
1:23:35
that. Here's the sweater for you know he covered
1:23:38
us. With. The acts of
1:23:40
his son. Who. Came to
1:23:42
take that away. If you gotta find.
1:23:45
Somebody can pay your fine and you can walk free.
1:23:47
but that's just as citizens that the drugs and substances
1:23:49
lot of care about the find. forget about it that
1:23:51
but. Now maxed, Know.
1:23:54
The fine has to be paid. And
1:23:56
Lesser Christ did. And. That's
1:23:58
what Easter was about. And.
1:24:01
The resurrection was to show. The.
1:24:03
That was acceptable. So
1:24:06
the i'm all about his last on
1:24:08
these people and they've got their holy
1:24:10
sweaters! And
1:24:13
their theology that is full of holes. Ah,
1:24:15
and. Where. They're not having
1:24:18
any. Impact whatsoever. Honor
1:24:20
Society because or that is as
1:24:22
secondary tertiary effect. Down from having
1:24:25
a relationship with God, you're not
1:24:27
going to have any effect on
1:24:29
society. If you're gonna start out.
1:24:32
By. Focusing on some of the
1:24:34
blessings that may or may not. When.
1:24:38
You're following. Again, God is
1:24:40
not about. making
1:24:42
our life the most prosperous life. Thought
1:24:44
about having your best life now. As
1:24:47
about having your best relationship with Christ.
1:24:50
And. That means that for many of us we have
1:24:52
to go through difficult times and life. We all do
1:24:55
as America. Lucky land
1:24:57
to see. No asking people what's the
1:24:59
weirdest place you got? Lucky Lucky. In
1:25:01
line at the deli I guess. Ah,
1:25:03
my dentist's office. More than once actually
1:25:05
do I have to say Yes you do.
1:25:08
In the car before my kids C t
1:25:10
a meeting? Really? Has excuse me. What's
1:25:12
the weirdest place you've gotten lucky? I
1:25:14
never win Intel. Well there you have
1:25:16
you to get lucky anywhere. Playing at
1:25:19
Lucky landslides.com Play for free right now.
1:25:21
Are you feeling lucky? Numbers: Spaces are
1:25:23
women off. The simplest of disciplines was
1:25:25
Indian. Springtime savings are in full
1:25:28
bloom. All in the Kroger app, get
1:25:30
six packs of delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi
1:25:32
or seven up for to ninety nine
1:25:34
each. Then get flavorful large avocados for
1:25:36
ninety nine cents each or with your
1:25:38
card and a digital Cuban shop these
1:25:40
deals that your local Kroger today or
1:25:42
click the screen now to download the
1:25:44
Kroger app to save big Today Kroger
1:25:46
Fresh for every one price in product
1:25:48
availability Subject to change restrictions apply the
1:25:50
site for details. Are
1:25:57
difficult things. So. We can
1:25:59
learn. We can first long will
1:26:01
be I bought. If
1:26:03
you like the eagles, The
1:26:06
Cars and Huey Lewis. I'm a
1:26:09
nurse. She'll
1:26:12
love that classic his channel. As
1:26:14
Easy as Radio! Download our app
1:26:17
for listen Now as Easy as
1:26:19
radio.com. New. World Order to
1:26:21
sick. Of.
1:26:42
The I booster number. five years of the
1:26:45
Cdc a new, all longer the stuff was
1:26:47
on really been. Ah,
1:26:49
They knew all along about seven hundred
1:26:51
and eighty thousand side effects or were
1:26:53
logged into their system, but they didn't
1:26:55
bother coming to bed. And.
1:26:57
A can remind me I I saw this on
1:26:59
Twitter valuable. It's a pretty good analogy. Of
1:27:02
what was going on with all these vaccines. This
1:27:04
is a guy from nineteen fifties. And
1:27:07
Mr. Science type of guy. Who. Shows
1:27:09
us leader this I've got radioactive uranium
1:27:11
and I'm just gonna swallow it's report
1:27:13
out my hand. And.
1:27:16
That radioactive contamination. Wasn't
1:27:19
radioactive. Yeah this.
1:27:21
Ah,
1:27:24
Very reluctant. To.
1:27:26
I qualify as a control drain. You
1:27:36
know, the geiger counter up his mouth? That
1:27:40
material that I just eight. Years
1:27:45
are. Not
1:27:48
soluble and body fluids. That
1:27:50
as great. Six. Nuclear
1:27:52
energy is your friend. Of.
1:27:57
Immigrants will give you barium animals and by by bad
1:27:59
so they. For a further your body
1:28:01
I'm curious a law, but maybe it's
1:28:03
less than what he had. but damn
1:28:06
yeah. The miracles of modern technology, energy
1:28:08
production, science. At the
1:28:10
Us and Or for The Disease Control,
1:28:13
the Cdc is released previously hidden reports.
1:28:16
Of facial paralysis of other
1:28:18
adverse events. Following me
1:28:20
Trump shots. Seven
1:28:23
hundred and eighty thousand reports.
1:28:26
Received shortly after these
1:28:28
Trump shots were rolled
1:28:30
out. And they show the
1:28:32
people experience a wide range of post
1:28:34
vaccination problems including heart information, miscarriages, seizure,
1:28:36
loss of consciousness, seizure immediately following injection,
1:28:39
many went to the Er by ambulance,
1:28:41
another was dated a diagnosis Bell's palsy,
1:28:43
so forth an assist. We knew all
1:28:45
of this stuff. We knew it from
1:28:47
the very beginning. We knew it when
1:28:49
you how they had everybody running around
1:28:52
one source keeper Trump in the White
1:28:54
House and other a system as a
1:28:56
let him go, let him rot And
1:28:58
course he's been pushing the fact this
1:29:00
is. All okay, Biden. Men
1:29:02
push the vaccine as well, but we
1:29:05
knew all this stuff. From. The
1:29:07
very beginning we started seeing the
1:29:09
stuff in December, late December. Of
1:29:12
twenty Twenty. And a
1:29:14
really escalated in January. And.
1:29:17
Net it was all about January the
1:29:20
sex wasn't people lodge the reports as
1:29:22
the safe. I created
1:29:24
by the Cdc to monitor these
1:29:26
possible effects. Cc for years declined
1:29:28
to make the V Save data
1:29:30
public. instead publishing studies are described
1:29:32
the airports as providing reassurance to
1:29:34
matter of fact. Ah
1:29:37
when they am. And
1:29:39
what They were telling people what you need to know. The
1:29:42
Kobe nineteen vaccines are safe and their
1:29:44
fastest. Or during the coven.
1:29:46
Eighteen pandemic hundreds of millions of people in the
1:29:49
U S received covered my team vaccines on the
1:29:51
most intense. Safety. Monitoring.
1:29:54
In the history. The
1:29:56
Cdc recommends everyone ages six months and older
1:29:58
than an updated covered bags. In to
1:30:00
protect against serious illness. And
1:30:03
aggressor. It was also recommended by Alex
1:30:05
Jones of for him I do this
1:30:08
for Trump's Forty two last week. Attenuated
1:30:10
classic viruses. With. A
1:30:12
very low amount of adamant and it. Looks
1:30:16
a little bit of us
1:30:18
attenuated meal microwaves or radiated
1:30:20
about urban. Of
1:30:23
a deal out of argument. let's watch. Choking
1:30:25
on as wise as is doing it right
1:30:27
there. Yeah, it's a sugar water your mouth
1:30:29
is like go back to aid that baggins
1:30:31
into. Yeah, Jim's is. My
1:30:34
relative. versa. Is where trump.
1:30:37
Come on, you can take that stuff. It's
1:30:39
just sugar water. That
1:30:41
any better. Than. What a
1:30:43
half day was. Same Cdc Oh yeah,
1:30:46
safe and effective. We've. Done
1:30:48
our testing. death the that's what it
1:30:50
is. Yeah we've done all the testing
1:30:52
that that basically and sugar water over
1:30:55
there Pfizer with find. Only
1:30:57
thirty five thousand pounds for promoting
1:30:59
a vaccine before it was authorized.
1:31:03
And so. I
1:31:05
suppose a news. says. Otherwise
1:31:07
is not surprising how do
1:31:09
they get away with this
1:31:12
visor's penalty of only thirty
1:31:14
five thousand pounds (UK pounds)
1:31:16
equates. Zero. Point Zero
1:31:18
Zero Zero Zero. Five percent of
1:31:20
their revenues of they made off
1:31:23
of the since. Mother.
1:31:25
Words Five. One.
1:31:27
Hundred thousands. Of
1:31:29
one percent. Of. Their revenue. As
1:31:32
a fine. Mess.
1:31:34
Even better than the big banks as even Berryman
1:31:36
the deals of they cut with a just be
1:31:38
see him or Jp Morgan and these other places
1:31:41
when they got caught. Red. Handed. Committing.
1:31:43
Felonies, Are.
1:31:46
Just the is not even a slap on the rest.
1:31:49
Since two thousand and I'm fighters
1:31:51
been found guilty of numerous instances
1:31:53
of fraudulent practices including corruption, blackmail,
1:31:56
spinning negative data to place it and
1:31:58
a more positive light Negligence,
1:32:01
failing to warn about drug risks,
1:32:04
acting fraudulently with a blatant disregard of
1:32:06
human lives and the law. Stalking,
1:32:10
terrorizing whistleblowers and their families.
1:32:13
Yeah. And of course, big media did
1:32:15
the same thing. Big conservative
1:32:17
media did the same thing as well. Alex Tucker Carlson,
1:32:19
they all did that kind of stuff as well. Telling
1:32:23
people, yeah, it's just sugar whites flying. Fine.
1:32:26
No problem. It's amazing to
1:32:28
me that there is no penalty
1:32:32
or punishment for this day. The
1:32:35
Japanese know what's going on. The Japanese, they had
1:32:37
a couple of different batches. One of them
1:32:39
was like a million. The other one was like 1.2 million. They
1:32:42
threw them away. They'd already paid
1:32:44
Pfizer for their stuff, of course, and couldn't
1:32:46
back it up. They probably had to have the
1:32:48
same kind of agreement that Pfizer had blackmailed many
1:32:51
sovereign nations with and
1:32:54
Latin America. It was reported by
1:32:56
Stat News, a pharmaceutical publication, that
1:32:59
they were blackmailing Brazil
1:33:01
and Argentina and a third Latin American country
1:33:03
that they did not name because that Latin
1:33:05
American country said, don't say anything because we
1:33:07
reached a deal with them and we don't
1:33:09
want to not be
1:33:11
able to get our vaccines. Because see, it's
1:33:14
just we were talking yesterday with James
1:33:16
Roguski about this World Health Organization and
1:33:19
their pandemic treaty and things like that. There is
1:33:21
the people, as
1:33:24
we saw it in 2020, people were
1:33:27
scrambling for the shots. Netanyahu
1:33:29
offered up Israelis as lab
1:33:31
rats. They were pressuring
1:33:34
these Latin American countries and saying, well, we're
1:33:36
not going to give you the vaccine unless
1:33:38
you extend our
1:33:41
legal immunity to things
1:33:43
like negligence,
1:33:47
contracting errors, shipping
1:33:49
errors, and things like that. We
1:33:52
also want you to put financial resources
1:33:54
outside of your country as
1:33:58
collateral guarantee for us. And
1:34:01
so I'm sure this happened with Japan as
1:34:03
well. They didn't talk a whole deal, you
1:34:05
know, well, you know, make good on these
1:34:07
two million, two and a quarter million
1:34:10
jabs we had to throw away. But
1:34:12
they did research also on bio-distribution that
1:34:14
came out of Japan, and when that
1:34:16
was reported by a Canadian doctor, he
1:34:19
was severely punished
1:34:22
for telling the truth about that. And
1:34:24
so by the way, these two and a quarter million
1:34:26
jabs that they had to throw away, why did they
1:34:29
throw them away? Well, because they had some
1:34:31
kind of a black substance precipitated
1:34:34
out, and it interacted
1:34:37
with magnets. Oh, but
1:34:39
that's okay. Nothing to worry about. It's just sugar water. Let's
1:34:41
just move on. So
1:34:43
now the Japanese have a preprint study
1:34:46
that's calling for the mRNA vaccines to
1:34:48
be suspended because they said it is
1:34:50
contaminating their blood bank. And
1:34:53
they're worried about all kinds of blood
1:34:55
diseases from transfusions with
1:34:58
a blood bank that is contaminated
1:35:00
with mRNA. Receiving blood
1:35:02
transfusion from vaccinated individuals could pose a
1:35:04
medical risk to the unvaccinated recipients since
1:35:07
numerous adverse events are being reported amongst
1:35:10
vaccinated people worldwide, according to a recent
1:35:12
study from Japan. The
1:35:14
preprint published on March 15th examined
1:35:16
whether receiving blood from
1:35:19
a COVID vaccinated individual is
1:35:21
safe or poses a health
1:35:23
risk. Many nations
1:35:25
have reported that the mRNA
1:35:27
usage has resulted in, quote,
1:35:30
post-vaccination thrombosis, blood clots, yeah,
1:35:33
and subsequent cardiovascular damage as well
1:35:35
as a wide variety of diseases
1:35:37
involving all organs, all systems, including
1:35:41
the nervous system. Well,
1:35:44
we've known this for the longest time. Of
1:35:46
course, it can also make you more vulnerable to
1:35:49
COVID-19 as well. So
1:35:52
a daily skeptic out of the UK says,
1:35:55
how do we estimate the scale
1:35:57
of harm from The Pfizer
1:35:59
vaccine? Because you
1:36:01
are still developing. And yet
1:36:04
as it still developing we have our two
1:36:06
candidates for President Biden and Trump who keep
1:36:08
Thomas How they have saved the world. With.
1:36:11
His first Us. And the
1:36:13
same time to this is all us
1:36:15
going and the very same organizations. they'll
1:36:18
come out and talk about these. A
1:36:21
dangerous metastasize in poisons.
1:36:25
Will. Get in line and cheer! Trump.
1:36:28
The. Last, doesn't want to talk about
1:36:31
how other stuff is posed. By
1:36:34
the right or talk about and they know that
1:36:36
it's poison. But. They will
1:36:38
still support. The. Guy who
1:36:40
brags and pushes his poison. And
1:36:43
just next spring. Springtime savings are in full bloom.
1:36:45
All in the Kroger app, get six
1:36:47
packs of delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi or
1:36:49
seven up for to ninety nine each.
1:36:51
Then get flavorful large avocados for ninety
1:36:53
nine cents each or with your card
1:36:55
and a digital Cuban shop these deals
1:36:57
that your local Kroger today or click
1:36:59
the screen now to download the Kroger
1:37:01
app to save big Today Kroger Fresh
1:37:04
for every one price in product availability
1:37:06
Subject to change restrictions apply the site
1:37:08
for details. British.
1:37:13
And products on the other person with an
1:37:16
edited healthcare providers is a lot of women.
1:37:19
and required that at all with open very that isn't elicits
1:37:21
into my middle. one is of were using Glp one said
1:37:24
about mingle with it I would see cel tumors. Not
1:37:26
easy of he wanted that. If
1:37:29
you've struggled for years to lose weight
1:37:31
and have given up hope, did you
1:37:33
know you can now access Glp? One
1:37:35
prescription medications had trying life him d.com
1:37:37
We're now offering eligible patients online access
1:37:39
to Glp once. the breakthrough prescription medication
1:37:41
that can help you lose body fat
1:37:44
and wait, listen to what people are
1:37:46
saying. It's fun to put on
1:37:48
genes at you couldn't get into six
1:37:50
months ago every morning I look forward
1:37:52
to getting on a scale. For anybody
1:37:54
who's struggling with their weight, it's a
1:37:56
godsend. And here's the best part. Your
1:37:58
insurance may cover one. Hundred percent of
1:38:01
the coast of your medication. So
1:38:03
go to Try Life empty.com to
1:38:06
have your eligibility jacked right now.
1:38:08
Get started Today I'd try Life
1:38:10
M D.com that's Trylispmd dot com.
1:38:13
For ceases to amaze me,
1:38:16
it is absolutely insane. Will
1:38:19
be ibis all those of other
1:38:21
a bit of. Sounds
1:38:24
the most our find them on the
1:38:26
all these channel as easy as whole
1:38:28
know. Com
1:38:41
and man. Recreated
1:38:45
Common Core A dumb down
1:38:47
art Center A Creative Commons
1:38:49
have to track and control
1:38:51
us The comments project the
1:38:53
make sure the commoners own
1:38:55
nothing and the communist future.
1:38:58
They see the common man
1:39:01
sophisticated for. Each
1:39:04
of us as worth and dignity created
1:39:06
in the image of. That.
1:39:10
If what we haven't that with what
1:39:12
they want to hold the way them
1:39:14
a half of up on for observation.
1:39:18
Intimidation. No desire to know everything
1:39:20
about us. Fall They hide everything
1:39:23
from us. It's time to turn
1:39:25
that around and expose what they
1:39:27
want. The On. We
1:39:30
share the information links you'll find
1:39:32
at the David Night show.com or
1:39:34
you for listening. Thank you for
1:39:36
sure. If
1:39:43
you can't support us for next, please keep
1:39:45
us in your first The David Night Show
1:39:47
Doctor. Joining.
1:40:07
Us now is Tony Arbain of Wise Wolf
1:40:09
Gold and Tony has set up day when
1:40:11
I bought gold. Would you take you there
1:40:13
and let him know that you're coming through
1:40:15
Us Always good have Tony and he has
1:40:18
been incredibly busy ah the last couple weeks
1:40:20
because of what is happening and the Gold
1:40:22
market article. but about this how ah how
1:40:24
it is really shot up either so I
1:40:26
got up by nineteen percent them from member
1:40:28
over the last two months or something like
1:40:31
that are but a tremendous a jump and
1:40:33
the price of gold. Ah thanks for joining
1:40:35
us Tony. On. Thanks for
1:40:37
having me David that's good to see You could
1:40:39
say you have this is a price of gold
1:40:41
A keeps hitting it's all time high and sitting
1:40:43
in the so often and I even keep up
1:40:45
with that anymore and any type of all time
1:40:47
high like four times in the last thirty days
1:40:49
of right a look at it like as as
1:40:51
a a new article or what is this an
1:40:53
hour so much so that the the misses us
1:40:55
as he does asking so. Is gold
1:40:58
overpriced? or can it's price go even
1:41:00
higher? And I thought that was interesting
1:41:02
because you know the missus and state
1:41:04
as a of an intro I'm Think
1:41:06
Tank Our economic think tank. Looking
1:41:08
at the writings and course now
1:41:10
just a general free market Libertarian
1:41:13
perspective of of luggage of on
1:41:15
mazes and them And they're not
1:41:17
selling gold but they're looking at
1:41:19
this stuff and they they thought
1:41:21
well you know, a damn expensive
1:41:23
compared to what was your question.
1:41:26
If. Well.
1:41:28
That's right, I mean what you're actually watching
1:41:30
is not goal reaching. it's all time highs.
1:41:32
The dollar reaching it's all time low. It's
1:41:35
an inversion via act as as you know
1:41:37
to go back to original system here in
1:41:39
the United States. the by metallic system other
1:41:41
was no insulation and lighting sensory. So a
1:41:44
pair of a pair of shoes and and
1:41:46
eighteen hundred because he the same and nineteen
1:41:48
hundred down. There was no inflation because we
1:41:51
had. a gold standard and we
1:41:53
had a silver dollar and course that
1:41:55
chains it pretty much a night and
1:41:57
thirty three when franklin roosevelt his his
1:41:59
executive order you to turn the gold in, he
1:42:01
raised the price of gold at $35 an
1:42:04
ounce once all the Americans that, uh, that
1:42:06
complied. I, there's a lot of Americans that
1:42:08
didn't comply, David, because I buy those coins
1:42:10
all the time, those pre 1933 American coins,
1:42:13
but they raised the price of gold
1:42:15
to $35 an ounce. That was a
1:42:17
banker's ploy, uh, to shift the
1:42:19
gold away from the United States to the bank of
1:42:21
international settlements. You can go back and read the history.
1:42:24
But again, after 1944, Bretton woods, $35 an ounce and it
1:42:27
stayed that way until 1971.
1:42:31
And then Richard Nixon, because of
1:42:33
all the, the, the basement
1:42:35
of our currency that the countries, other countries
1:42:37
noticed, we took the silver out of our
1:42:40
coinage. Uh, we were writing checks beyond
1:42:42
our capacity for guns and butter
1:42:44
in Vietnam and the great society
1:42:46
on the Mekong like LBJ said.
1:42:48
And so Richard Nixon knew
1:42:51
that we couldn't, uh, continue to keep the
1:42:53
gold window open and, uh, they
1:42:55
went off the gold standard and August 15th, 1971,
1:42:58
the gold went up 2000%. Um,
1:43:01
but that doesn't mean that gold went up.
1:43:03
It just means that we have a revaluation
1:43:06
of Fiat currency. And now every country on
1:43:08
earth has a Fiat currency. They all followed
1:43:10
the United States after 1971. Uh, the United
1:43:12
States now has the
1:43:15
oldest surviving Fiat
1:43:17
currency in the world. The average life spans about
1:43:19
26 years. So we doubled that.
1:43:22
And so I think you're just going
1:43:24
to continue to see these price shifts
1:43:26
because of the BRICS nations primarily. And
1:43:28
I don't, I honestly, David, I don't think
1:43:30
we would see these prices and gold this
1:43:32
fast, the way it's doing without the
1:43:35
war in Ukraine, with
1:43:37
sanctions that were placed on Russia
1:43:39
after NATO provoked, in
1:43:42
my opinion, NATO wanted that in that
1:43:44
incursion. Uh, but they put the sanction,
1:43:46
we put the sanctions on Russia. Uh,
1:43:48
and, uh, the Russian finance minister months later
1:43:50
said, well, the dollars are candy wrappers to
1:43:52
us and got off of the system. Other
1:43:54
countries took notice. We have 40
1:43:56
different sanctions on 36 different countries.
1:44:00
the dollar. But I think what you're
1:44:02
watching really is not so much
1:44:04
that gold is having its
1:44:06
moment, it's that the dollar
1:44:08
is losing ground rapidly. The world
1:44:11
is taking notice. They want a
1:44:13
revaluation of commodities. That's what
1:44:15
Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa,
1:44:18
now Saudi Arabia are all about.
1:44:20
It's the reevaluation, in my
1:44:22
opinion, of all commodities. And
1:44:24
I was looking just before we
1:44:26
went live. Other countries
1:44:29
like India, record numbers of
1:44:31
silver being ordered, record numbers
1:44:33
of gold in China. China
1:44:35
had a major ETF
1:44:37
had to stop creating because
1:44:40
people were buying so much paper stock gold, there
1:44:42
wasn't enough gold to back it up. At least
1:44:44
that's what I'm looking at. And
1:44:46
this is going to be a problem, I think, in
1:44:48
the West too. We're just at the beginning of this.
1:44:50
If you think you missed the boat on
1:44:53
gold and precious metals, especially with silver
1:44:55
still being under $30 an ounce, you
1:44:58
are mistaken because there's a lot of room
1:45:00
left here, but it's not looking
1:45:02
good for King dollar. And of
1:45:04
course, I talked about this earlier in the week, and
1:45:07
they were saying, they talked about the inverse
1:45:09
relationship between the Federal Reserve,
1:45:11
fiat currency, and gold, and how one
1:45:14
would go up and
1:45:16
down in an inverse relationship with
1:45:18
each other. They said, so always
1:45:20
these Western institutions, under
1:45:22
certain circumstances, they would start selling their gold
1:45:24
and the East would buy it up and
1:45:26
that type of thing. But that all got
1:45:28
broken, they said, is with these sanctions and
1:45:31
other things that are happening. It also got
1:45:33
broken with this ETF stuff that is out
1:45:35
there because they have used
1:45:38
that to essentially create a
1:45:40
fiat gold system that
1:45:43
has gotten so out of whack that they
1:45:45
can't even make a credible case for it,
1:45:47
as you pointed out. They had to suspend
1:45:50
trading on it. But as Forbes
1:45:52
looked at it, it was tremendously,
1:45:54
I forget what the ratio was, I'll look
1:45:56
it up here as we're talking, but the
1:45:58
ratio that we're seeing, was there was absurd
1:46:01
and they said, well, that's even a conservative one.
1:46:03
A lot of people estimate that the ratio of
1:46:05
ETFs that are out there trading about gold are
1:46:07
much, much higher than the actual
1:46:09
physical gold that's there. But we're
1:46:12
saying a lot of the same things that you've said in the past
1:46:14
where what was interesting earlier in
1:46:16
this year was the fact that the Federal
1:46:18
Reserve was making these different moves like hiking
1:46:20
the interest rate up and things like that
1:46:22
that normally would cause gold
1:46:24
to go down and it was holding its own. And
1:46:27
they said that's because everybody has
1:46:29
lost so much faith in the dollar that
1:46:32
they are still accumulating the gold and
1:46:34
as the institutions want to sell off
1:46:36
their gold, there's still
1:46:39
more demand keeping the price
1:46:41
high. And so I think
1:46:43
that's really what the Mises Institute was talking
1:46:45
about. They said, are
1:46:47
we late on all of this in terms
1:46:50
of getting into gold? Well, not unless you
1:46:52
think that they've somehow figured out what they're
1:46:54
going to do with the fiat currency. And
1:46:56
if they can somehow fix
1:46:58
this stagflation or this dragflation that
1:47:01
Salinti calls it, you know, like
1:47:03
a recession, not just stagnant, but
1:47:05
a real recession along with
1:47:07
inflation, if you think they've got that
1:47:09
solved, then yeah, you'd be late. But
1:47:11
they've got so many
1:47:13
built in problems and things have
1:47:16
shifted underneath them that
1:47:18
a lot of people are saying this is just the
1:47:20
beginning. And so that's where you've been, I guess, just
1:47:22
kind of running around trying to keep track of demand
1:47:25
and orders. Well, absolutely. And the rules
1:47:27
of the game are changing. I mean,
1:47:29
Jerome Powell first said that inflation was
1:47:31
transitory along with Janet Yellen. This was
1:47:33
all transitory and nothing to
1:47:35
worry about, nothing to see here. And then they
1:47:38
became very hawkish and they're going to whip inflation.
1:47:40
No problem. We got this. And they raised rates
1:47:43
faster than any time in history to
1:47:45
curtail that inflation. Then they felt like
1:47:47
they're really confident this last six months
1:47:50
or so. We're going to talk about
1:47:52
lowering rates because the economy could sure
1:47:54
use a goose before the election. Not
1:47:56
that they're political or anything, David, the
1:47:59
federal. reserves way above that. They're not playing politics.
1:48:02
They're not going to intervene. But
1:48:04
they got a problem because the latest data
1:48:06
that's out, inflation continues.
1:48:08
The economy is roaring along.
1:48:10
Inflation continues. And what are they
1:48:12
going to do? They've promised these
1:48:15
rate lowerings. The European Central
1:48:17
Bank has just backed off of a
1:48:19
rate lowering, so they're going to hold
1:48:21
rates. So we're not going
1:48:23
to see, I don't think we're going to see
1:48:25
any rate lowering for a minute or two. It
1:48:28
might be going to right before the election, but
1:48:30
they're going to do it this year. I think
1:48:32
they've promised too much. There's too much built into
1:48:34
the system. It's all rigged. As
1:48:36
you know, this isn't your father's stock market.
1:48:39
Wall Street's not based on profit
1:48:41
anymore. It's based on environmental social
1:48:44
governance and your relationship to the
1:48:46
Central Bank. It's not really
1:48:48
entrepreneurship anymore. So I think you're going to
1:48:50
see some intervention. There'll be some rate
1:48:52
lowerings. But it's hard to do that in the face
1:48:54
of the data that's coming out. And a lot of
1:48:57
this has to do with the energy sector. As a
1:49:00
matter of fact, the White House is not
1:49:02
going to be buying back food
1:49:05
off the open market to replace
1:49:08
the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. That's
1:49:10
insane. I mean, we're not
1:49:12
replacing our Strategic Petroleum Reserve
1:49:15
in the face of all
1:49:17
this geopolitical upheaval. Honestly, I
1:49:19
think this is them not wanting to
1:49:21
drive the market up or do something to
1:49:23
increase the price because that's
1:49:26
where you're seeing inflation. It's in
1:49:28
the items that people need. Well,
1:49:31
he sold off the Strategic Petroleum
1:49:33
Reserve to lower
1:49:35
the price before the election. Not even Obama
1:49:37
did that. Always in the past, they
1:49:39
would hold that until there was a
1:49:41
storm that came through and took refineries
1:49:44
offline in Louisiana or something like that.
1:49:46
Some kind of real disaster, that's what
1:49:48
they would use it for. Biden used
1:49:50
it To make himself look good,
1:49:53
To temporarily lower the price of gas. And
1:49:55
Of course, if he goes out there and
1:49:57
replaces it at this point in time, That
1:50:00
is going to mitigate against her reducing the
1:50:02
price of gas because he's gonna be
1:50:04
bill out there buying stuff little bit the
1:50:06
price up as so I don't know I
1:50:09
think he can do now is just
1:50:11
a set it up. And. Not
1:50:13
refill that as as it really
1:50:15
is as shows how he has
1:50:17
absolutely. No. Interest in them.
1:50:19
What is good for this country is
1:50:22
all about his own personal political gain
1:50:24
in that regard as just like Trump.
1:50:26
As as. It's it's. almost like
1:50:28
it's a plan. David like that controlled
1:50:30
demolition just like missed. The calls are coming
1:50:32
from inside the house and the all these
1:50:35
these decisions that are made are not
1:50:37
strengthening our economy, the not strengthening our. Our
1:50:39
our readiness as far as a national security.
1:50:42
Obviously, this is all part of a
1:50:44
plan. It's an inside job and you
1:50:46
see this. This is the consequences You wanna?
1:50:48
You want to intervene unnaturally in the
1:50:50
market? You want to release. A
1:50:53
prude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to lower
1:50:55
the price temporarily will guess what if the
1:50:57
price goes back up and you have to
1:50:59
replace that when you buy it against it
1:51:01
drives the prices of so you're intervention backfired
1:51:03
on you again as the same thing with
1:51:05
these. Yeah. I can you
1:51:07
imagine this is going back in a one
1:51:09
hundred years and say well why don't know
1:51:11
what's gonna happen The economy. The Federal Reserve
1:51:13
hasn't told me what to do yet. I'm
1:51:15
a nobody, has a set of money. Was
1:51:17
looking to the said. To figure
1:51:20
out what? What's the next move? What should I do?
1:51:22
What should I invest in? This has become. So.
1:51:24
Ubiquitous that says it is permeated all
1:51:26
of our culture or what the Federal
1:51:28
Reserve is doing and frankly what they're
1:51:30
doing is they're ruining. Our seats are
1:51:32
faster than than really I think is
1:51:35
natural I me why I think we
1:51:37
had a little bit more time left
1:51:39
on the dollar honestly but just the
1:51:41
amount of hubris and the sanctions that
1:51:43
replace I think everything's accelerating in the
1:51:45
yeah. The. Teleprompter reader, hairdo people on
1:51:47
the spec financial networks. I just don't get
1:51:49
it David They keep saying oh don't his
1:51:52
opponents crazy kids to those wound up and
1:51:54
they keep looking at the price. I wonder
1:51:56
why that is it? I. Know new sensation
1:51:58
that is not that. That I mean
1:52:00
they to keep going but again it's it's
1:52:02
the it's the central banks. Around
1:52:05
the world. Buying. Gold. And
1:52:07
as you mentioned earlier, these each yaps in
1:52:09
this paper Gold. It's out there all around
1:52:11
the world. And. You can't
1:52:13
really back that up. I am asked
1:52:15
Iowa I don't have any faith and
1:52:17
that I'm can like the supermarkets. I
1:52:20
know because of the data and I've
1:52:22
interviewed the experts. If you if
1:52:24
you had a whale comments as I got
1:52:26
a lot Musk are some big buyer. You
1:52:28
could corner the silver market right now just
1:52:30
like the huns did in the nineteen seventies
1:52:32
and him. But see the dips. They got
1:52:34
rid of the hunts, they made sure that
1:52:36
nobody expose. That's because what you're exposing if
1:52:38
you can corner of pressure monetary metal. And.
1:52:41
And get the physical supply is you
1:52:43
show that the currency that is shown
1:52:45
in value of is actually fake. And
1:52:48
that's what the huns did in the nineteen seventies. Nineteen.
1:52:51
Eighty fifty two dollars and fifty cents an ounce
1:52:53
for silver. That's crazy. If
1:52:55
you think about what thirty two dollars
1:52:57
and fifty cents and I have a
1:52:59
would do now, have more. You're purchasing
1:53:01
power. And Nineteen Eighty terms of Six
1:53:03
Three Hundred dollars Today. So. I
1:53:06
don't have any space in these
1:53:08
these markets. I think that supplies
1:53:10
a lot thinner. Than. People realize,
1:53:12
and that's what's really driving the
1:53:14
price when people are demanding physical
1:53:16
gold. especially places like India. And.
1:53:19
China it's driving the price David
1:53:21
end of the it will come
1:53:23
here. Cosco. Is. Is is selling
1:53:25
gold bars and and we talked about this
1:53:27
before. we've seen this phenomenon where a best
1:53:29
seller list price and I think they're like.
1:53:32
Fifty. Bucks over spot or something like that
1:53:34
and in know sell out and he can
1:53:36
get up in ah we have supply but
1:53:38
I would say that it is center than
1:53:40
you think that it is and it's I'm
1:53:42
not going to over promise as I can
1:53:44
get any variety of anything because I really
1:53:46
would watch. That is is people start to
1:53:48
wake up and demand precious metals. This price
1:53:50
that we're looking at now is gonna be
1:53:52
can be quite different Saying you know you
1:53:54
guys were talking about the paper goal thing
1:53:56
or a lot of people who look at
1:53:58
this as they want. That like the dollar.
1:54:01
Ah we need to go go go
1:54:03
go the paper gold and they don't
1:54:05
realize as wondered but this this Rt
1:54:07
article or something about the other day
1:54:09
gave the figures the Forbes came up
1:54:11
with. And Forbes said, while
1:54:13
recording our calculations, there's about two hundred
1:54:15
to three hundred trillion dollars worth of
1:54:18
paper gold out there. But there's only
1:54:20
eleven trillion dollars worth of gold. So
1:54:22
in other words, they're They're someone. Twenty
1:54:24
to thirty times the amount of paper
1:54:27
A T S. We're going to give
1:54:29
your share of the golf shirt selling
1:54:31
Twenty to thirty times. Are. They
1:54:34
actually have. An Damn. And
1:54:36
they said we think that that's very
1:54:38
conservative. Ah, That it's actually much worse
1:54:40
than that. And as you pointed out, Earlier
1:54:42
a china had to suspend trading because
1:54:45
the was so much demand that it
1:54:47
was getting out to a level. but
1:54:49
nobody would believe that army be if
1:54:51
people believe that there's twenty to thirty
1:54:53
tests at the end of paper gold
1:54:55
out there that there is physical gold
1:54:58
known physical gold reserves, the other not
1:55:00
going to believe it if it at
1:55:02
some point of the gets up to
1:55:04
fifty or sixty or hundred times as
1:55:06
on my at that point it becomes
1:55:09
unbelievable. And. The bubble burst but
1:55:11
at that reckon that term realization is
1:55:13
going to come around. At some point
1:55:15
in there will be a reckoning and
1:55:17
as all the people who are interested
1:55:19
in collecting gold are saying why I
1:55:21
want the real thing is that a
1:55:23
paper that swim or another type of
1:55:25
gold rush will happen because as a
1:55:27
mother competition to physical gold but paper
1:55:29
go. I
1:55:31
like winter larry think that had a
1:55:33
black rock said a couple weeks ago
1:55:35
about or people and countries like India
1:55:38
and China. And emerging markets.
1:55:40
He said that you're not helping. When.
1:55:42
You're buying gold yacht helping Anything about helping
1:55:44
the market It doesn't do anything and I
1:55:46
thought ah there's there's the rub there's the
1:55:49
tell said he was he a he's been
1:55:51
pushing or the bitcoin a T S and
1:55:53
he bought a scratching their heads like what's
1:55:55
policy director in my opinion. I think the
1:55:58
Bitcoin a T S or entities. BlackRock
1:56:00
is a lifeline to a dying system.
1:56:02
It at least gives them
1:56:04
some finite. They can put their
1:56:06
clients into that. But if they
1:56:08
start putting their clients into physical
1:56:10
gold, it does bankrupt the entire
1:56:12
system a lot faster because people
1:56:14
start to realize as physical gold
1:56:16
demand goes up, the price
1:56:18
goes up. It doesn't really go up when you
1:56:21
when you put them into paper. It doesn't. I've
1:56:23
not seen that. I only see the price rise
1:56:25
really when I see central
1:56:28
bank demand and I see these reports coming
1:56:30
out of people, the average person
1:56:32
like China, they're buying gold beans, just like
1:56:34
a bean, but size of a coffee bean
1:56:36
and gold just as much as they can.
1:56:38
It's not even coined. It's not even it's
1:56:40
not even put into bars. People are
1:56:43
hoarding it. And I think I've talked about this
1:56:45
before, but China has like 60,000 gold
1:56:48
mines, and they don't they're not a
1:56:50
net exporter. And
1:56:52
China, Russia, they're
1:56:54
talking right now about a new
1:56:56
financial system. The BRICS wants to
1:56:58
back a new system with gold,
1:57:00
a digital system. As in Bob
1:57:03
Lee, David, I remember that in
1:57:05
Bob Lee, that had the trillion
1:57:07
dollar notes. Yeah, they've got a
1:57:09
new gold back currency that's emerging.
1:57:11
So this, this the monetary
1:57:14
system around the world is going through
1:57:16
a transformation. And as you notice, the
1:57:18
central banks buying gold, and what you
1:57:21
have to watch is while they're buying
1:57:23
gold, they're also putting together
1:57:25
the plans for the rollouts of their
1:57:27
own central bank digital currencies. That's
1:57:30
the danger. They're going to build they're going
1:57:32
to build this control. They are building this
1:57:34
control grid. For all of us,
1:57:36
it's going to lead back to the Bank of International
1:57:39
Settlements and the IMF and other things. They're going to
1:57:41
consolidate these clearing houses. We have to watch that here.
1:57:44
We have to continue pushing decentralization, supporting
1:57:46
states that want to have their
1:57:48
own bullion banks, supporting
1:57:50
free markets. And, You
1:57:52
know, there's a lot of argument about what's happening
1:57:55
with the Bitcoin ETFs. And I Think you and
1:57:57
I will continue to talk about that every week
1:57:59
because it's really. Interesting. A bitcoin sober
1:58:01
seventy thousand today. Mom but
1:58:03
it it Brooklyn really drives the argument. It's
1:58:05
like life fire people buying it when they
1:58:07
find out all the you can't make any
1:58:09
more of them and that becomes and it's
1:58:11
a becomes a conversation this conversation starter especially
1:58:13
when were given l what How many dollars
1:58:15
are there are more? there's just more say
1:58:17
oh it's just a little bit more as
1:58:19
such as a little bit more Why methods
1:58:21
are you know about? Because if you want
1:58:23
to buy bitcoin, get Bitcoin. But why would
1:58:25
you get a T F? You know whenever
1:58:27
I look at the Ctf things based on
1:58:29
the experiences A we've had with derivatives with
1:58:31
these are the real estate derivatives. That they did.
1:58:34
You know? I mean there's nothing if they're not making
1:58:36
any more land. You know, as a always pointed out
1:58:38
in, these are real physical assets. Another us to stop
1:58:40
at. They crashed it. With. A
1:58:42
neat yes You know that the essentially with
1:58:44
derivatives that there were a pudding through that
1:58:46
to me I look at this he understands
1:58:48
couple different things going on. I think when
1:58:51
they create these these derivatives the Cts course
1:58:53
they're going to make a lot of money
1:58:55
off of it. They gonna way that they
1:58:57
can make money off of that by think
1:58:59
they they typically do that and they usually
1:59:01
wind up. Crashing. The Market
1:59:03
no matter how solid a real it is just
1:59:05
like they did with real estate. So you you
1:59:07
believe in bitcoin you want to get in bitcoin
1:59:10
are still be careful these eat he asked things
1:59:12
ah I wouldn't want to own them but I
1:59:14
would make me. I was scared that and as
1:59:16
made me afraid. You know even for a bitcoin
1:59:18
thing because our the going to manipulate that they're
1:59:21
going to get people into the bitcoin thing and
1:59:23
then crash it and then try to push them
1:59:25
into Cbd seats. We know they want to crash
1:59:27
the financial system so they can establish this new
1:59:29
system and so that's another thing that makes me
1:59:32
suspicious. About why they would do the Ctf.
1:59:34
So I'm very suspicious of a both of.
1:59:36
You. Know Bts for paper and silver
1:59:38
and and also for bitcoin I think
1:59:41
want to get something Get the real
1:59:43
thing as it's known by the the
1:59:45
funny stuff from my Jamie Dimon. Or
1:59:48
Jp Morgan or a these people. I'm.
1:59:51
With you on that. and and I've been
1:59:53
in decline since Twenty sixteen. Add some of
1:59:55
the first bitcoin a T M we discuss
1:59:58
many times, but I'm I'm skeptical. the
2:00:00
ETFs and I like Bitcoin. I'm
2:00:04
not saying it's going to zero. I'm not Peter Schiff.
2:00:06
I don't think it's
2:00:08
a bad thing to own it. You
2:00:10
shouldn't own the ETF because
2:00:12
Bitcoin is just easy to get by itself and
2:00:14
you should have your own wallet, your own keys
2:00:17
and understand what that means. I mean, really knowledge
2:00:19
in the coming years, the most important
2:00:21
thing, somebody asked me the other day, what's
2:00:23
the most important thing? What kind of equity
2:00:25
is it? Knowledge, knowing how to use something
2:00:28
and go back to the third
2:00:30
counterparty risk. If
2:00:32
I have a gold coin in my hand right now,
2:00:35
that's mine. I don't
2:00:37
have to worry about a bank. I don't have
2:00:39
to worry about an institution or a CEO or
2:00:42
embezzlement or anything like that or
2:00:44
fraud. I've got it in my hand. If I
2:00:46
bought it from a reputable dealer, then I've got
2:00:48
value and that's gold has been money and silver
2:00:50
has been money for thousands of
2:00:52
years and it will continue to have value as
2:00:54
long as I think it's their civilization. I've
2:00:57
bought some coins from the Roman era
2:01:00
and kept them here at
2:01:02
the shop. They're valuable because there's gold
2:01:04
in them. Some of the ones that are debased, the
2:01:06
old Roman coins have a little bit of value, but
2:01:08
not much. It's the metal that
2:01:11
made them valuable throughout the years. You can
2:01:13
still use them as money. So in
2:01:16
the coming years, I think it's going to be more important
2:01:18
for cut out the
2:01:20
middleman. You don't need ETFs. You don't
2:01:22
need an institution. Learn how to own
2:01:24
things yourself. That's one of the
2:01:27
reasons I'm in the physical precious metals business. We
2:01:30
have things like the membership program like
2:01:32
Wolfpack or even if you don't have a lot of
2:01:34
money and you just got a
2:01:36
little bit, you want to put some savings in,
2:01:38
let us do it. Let my team go find
2:01:40
value for you, even if it's as little as
2:01:42
$50. Yeah, that's
2:01:45
why early this week I talked
2:01:47
about what's happened in
2:01:50
recent history with the Bretton
2:01:52
Woods II and on and what is happening with
2:01:54
that. But when you look at these
2:01:57
today, the articles that I kind of
2:01:59
focused on, for things from
2:02:02
Mises Institute and other people were talking about
2:02:04
the economics of inflation because that's not going
2:02:06
to go away. We talk about how you
2:02:09
got paper gold, paper silver, paper, bitcoin
2:02:12
and all the rest of stuff. Well,
2:02:15
there's still the paper dollar which is the
2:02:17
worst of these derivatives, the most easily manipulated
2:02:19
because they're printing more of it all the
2:02:21
time as you pointed out. People look at
2:02:23
bitcoin and say, well, I'm not making any
2:02:25
more of this or getting more scarce so
2:02:29
that's where you want to be because that's
2:02:32
the printing, what they called quantitative easing,
2:02:34
it's the manipulation of the interest rates.
2:02:36
They have so many different ways that
2:02:38
they can manipulate the value of the
2:02:40
paper dollar that it's
2:02:42
just not a store of value at all.
2:02:45
And then of course, besides
2:02:47
their direct manipulation, we've
2:02:50
seen it many times in our lifetime
2:02:52
get out of hand and we're at
2:02:54
one of those moments right now where
2:02:56
these guys who are pulling the levers,
2:02:58
the guy behind the man
2:03:01
behind the curtain like the Wizard of Oz, once
2:03:03
he gets into that balloon, it's like come back,
2:03:05
I don't know, I don't know how it works.
2:03:07
Once he inflates that balloon, he's just heading off
2:03:09
and we've seen that happen with the Federal Reserve
2:03:11
Wizards many times, haven't we? They don't know how
2:03:14
it works. They can't come back to where they
2:03:16
were. No,
2:03:18
and that's all fiat currencies go to
2:03:20
zero so they're just playing a game
2:03:22
in the interim. I think
2:03:24
that the dollar is going to digital, that's their
2:03:27
plan. I think all these plans have been
2:03:29
accelerated. I don't think that we're supposed to be
2:03:31
seeing right now the swift decline that there
2:03:33
is. But you don't even go back to
2:03:35
the allegory of the Wizard
2:03:37
of Oz. This is,
2:03:39
Frank Baum wrote that in the late 19th century.
2:03:43
The cowardly line was William Jennings
2:03:45
Bryan, the cross of gold speech.
2:03:47
What was William Jennings Bryan talking about? He's
2:03:49
talking about free silver because we had such
2:03:52
a strong currency. The farmers wanted some relief
2:03:54
and they hit the Comstock load. We had
2:03:56
in the 1870s out in Nevada
2:03:59
and they wanted to... The said silver of the market
2:04:01
to help ease the deaths to increase the money
2:04:03
supply. Now I wasn't fake, they don't want to
2:04:05
dump fake money into they wanted to dump silver
2:04:07
in there to give the and that was a
2:04:10
popular zone to give the farmer some relief. I
2:04:12
think there's gonna be an argument for that. But
2:04:15
the ear the banksters ran with that in. and
2:04:17
of course you end up getting the Federal Reserve
2:04:19
as they kept pushing. That is is a way
2:04:21
to help. Stave off crashes
2:04:24
and things like the evidence was all
2:04:26
of that that the yellow brick road,
2:04:28
the emerald palaces, the Greenback, he all
2:04:30
that stuff on the Wizard of Oz.
2:04:32
And it is. It's it's it's Wizards
2:04:34
cases, It's a it's a out economic
2:04:36
alchemy and and I know that sir,
2:04:38
it's really. It's. Really insane to
2:04:40
I say what I got in his
2:04:42
business years ago and every year. Every
2:04:44
now, every month. And we're seeing
2:04:46
some change in this in the monetary system
2:04:49
in the markets. And. Know what
2:04:51
we're talking about the couple weeks ago and I
2:04:53
still can't get over your took us from the
2:04:55
founding of our country. To. The
2:04:57
time I was born to go a trillion dollars
2:05:00
into debt. And. Now we do it
2:05:02
every ninety days there. Are
2:05:04
just let that sink in. Once you let that sink
2:05:06
and. You. Realize we pass some
2:05:08
sort of boundary. Where. We're never
2:05:11
going to be a minute where I've
2:05:13
been about fiscal responsibility or anymore nobody's
2:05:15
running on that politically. So. I
2:05:17
think we've We've crossed some sort of boundaries, so
2:05:19
it's time to start thinking about. Are
2:05:22
you are. You thrive and survive. How do
2:05:24
you weather the storm of what's coming? A
2:05:26
dozen met you and I can't stop it.
2:05:29
He. Or whatever whatever down the road all
2:05:31
we can do. Is. prepare and
2:05:33
try to use history is or guy you
2:05:35
know what was the one at what happens
2:05:37
in times of hyperinflation what happens in times
2:05:40
of economic uncertainty or or currency shifts you
2:05:42
know you don't want to get lists the
2:05:44
left holding the bag i saw that and
2:05:46
or rak that was a microcosm of those
2:05:49
things but i was to currency go to
2:05:51
zero in real time nobody wanted a baby
2:05:53
both running out the banks with with boxes
2:05:55
of curved were iraqi dinar that no one
2:05:58
wanted him to think about that that
2:06:00
no one wants. Wow. Well
2:06:02
yeah we're definitely not in Kansas anymore. We're
2:06:05
in Davos or something or Baghdad
2:06:07
or something like that. I mean we're in
2:06:09
some alien territory. That's why you know grab
2:06:11
something that's real that's held as value for
2:06:13
a very long time and of course as
2:06:16
I you know we talk about it you
2:06:19
can handle transactions there at Wise
2:06:21
Wolf and you've got the Buyers
2:06:23
Club there, Wolfpack. Anything new with Wolfpack that you
2:06:26
want to talk about? Well
2:06:28
we're got a new special 1776. If
2:06:30
you type in promo code 1776 you
2:06:32
to David Knight dot gold.
2:06:36
I've got some free silver so talk about William
2:06:38
Jennings Bryan. I've got free silver. Go to Wolfpack.
2:06:40
We'll give you free silver. We'll
2:06:42
put some silver in the package for you if
2:06:44
you upgrade or if you join. We'd love to
2:06:46
have you. There's more people to join. I think
2:06:48
it's we're all right out of almost a thousand
2:06:50
and I want to celebrate when we hit a
2:06:53
thousand. It's been a lot of
2:06:55
work. I got a great team here.
2:06:57
We're always packing new packages and tracking
2:06:59
things. I know why the big guys
2:07:01
didn't do this now. I'm
2:07:04
happy to have done it. It's really what
2:07:07
sets us apart because we care
2:07:09
about we flipped everything on its
2:07:11
head. We're not just chasing people that have you
2:07:14
know a large savings account or a retirement account.
2:07:16
We're talking to everybody and everybody deserves
2:07:18
to be able to to have
2:07:20
real precious metals. They can trade
2:07:22
their fake currency and for real
2:07:24
money and we do that here
2:07:26
at Wolfpack. So yeah promo code
2:07:29
1776. I'd also like to say to David
2:07:31
with the markets the way they are we're pretty
2:07:34
much seamless now on
2:07:36
being able to any kind of
2:07:38
IRA 401k. If you've got it in the
2:07:40
paper markets and you're interested you should reach
2:07:42
out. Go to David Knight dot go. Let
2:07:44
us know if we can walk you through
2:07:46
what that process would look like turning into
2:07:48
physical precious metals. We can do that
2:07:50
without penalties and all that we just use our
2:07:53
partner company New Direction Trust and even
2:07:55
if you can't do Wolfpack or you don't want
2:07:57
to do a monthly we have one time orders
2:07:59
and And nothing's too small. That's
2:08:02
what Wise Wolf's here for. And we've got a
2:08:04
great supply line. We've got a good team. And
2:08:07
we're just so happy to and
2:08:09
proud to sponsor your program. Well,
2:08:11
thank you. And of course, you
2:08:13
know, taxes are coming up April 15th.
2:08:15
If you haven't put money into your IRA, you've
2:08:18
got just a couple of days to do it. And
2:08:20
you might want to do something with some kind
2:08:23
of a precious metals IRA through New Dimension
2:08:26
that works with you
2:08:28
there at wisewolfgold.gold. And
2:08:30
people can get there by davidnight.gold. Always great talking
2:08:32
to you, Tony. We're
2:08:35
in really interesting times. And
2:08:37
I know it gets really difficult for
2:08:39
you as everybody sees the price going
2:08:41
up. That gets their attention. And
2:08:45
everybody starts investing in it, fear of missing
2:08:47
out. But I don't think that
2:08:50
people have missed out at this point. Other
2:08:52
to the people who are writing about the
2:08:55
financial and economic standpoint, they
2:08:57
think there's a lot left
2:09:00
in this because they're going to continue
2:09:02
to try to feed the inflation beast
2:09:05
for this election at the very least.
2:09:07
And that's assuming that they know how this balloon
2:09:10
they inflated actually works and they can control it.
2:09:12
I don't think they can. I've
2:09:15
seen this get away from far too many times. That's
2:09:17
one of the best analogies, I think, out of the
2:09:19
Wizard of Oz. Thank you so much
2:09:21
for joining us again, David and I. I go to take
2:09:23
it. Springtime savings are in full bloom. All
2:09:25
in the Kroger app, get six packs
2:09:27
of delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi or seven
2:09:29
up for to ninety nine each. Then
2:09:32
get flavorful large avocados for ninety nine
2:09:34
cents each or with your card and
2:09:36
a digital Cuban shop these deals that
2:09:38
your local Kroger today or click the
2:09:40
screen now to download the Kroger app
2:09:42
to save big Today Kroger Fresh for
2:09:44
every one price in product availability Subject
2:09:46
to change restrictions apply the site for
2:09:48
details. If
2:09:54
you own a vehicle with less than 200,000 miles
2:09:56
and have an auto warranty about to expire
2:09:58
or no warranty coverage. at all, listen
2:10:00
up. Car Shield has a low-cost month-to-month
2:10:03
vehicle protection plan that covers more parts
2:10:05
than ever. Visit carshield.com/audio
2:10:07
to find out how you could pay
2:10:09
almost nothing for covered auto repairs. Drivers
2:10:12
who activate this vehicle protection today
2:10:14
will also receive free roadside assistance,
2:10:16
free towing and car rental options
2:10:19
at no additional cost. Get your
2:10:21
free quote today at carshield.com/audio. That's
2:10:23
carshield.com/audio. Thank you, Tony. At Wise Wolf
2:10:25
Gold. Thank you, Tony. Appreciate it.
2:10:28
Thank you, David. We're going to be right back.
2:10:31
Stay with us. Tell
2:10:34
Alexa to add the APS Radio
2:10:36
skill and have access to the
2:10:38
best channels anywhere, from country to
2:10:41
blues, classic hits to news. APS
2:10:43
Radio curates incredibly diverse playlists for
2:10:45
you to enjoy. Get details at
2:10:48
apsradio.com. You're
2:11:36
listening to The David Knight Show.
2:11:39
All right. I'll just remind everybody that
2:11:41
right after this show, Tony will be
2:11:43
live with his radio show also. So
2:11:45
check that out. Let's talk
2:11:47
a little bit about the pandemic. I
2:11:49
saw a very good video that really
2:11:51
laid out how this fraud began. And
2:11:54
I thought it's time for us to go back
2:11:56
and look at how deliberate this was because it's
2:11:58
concerning me. I'm seeing... One
2:12:01
article after the other in big
2:12:03
conservative media interviews
2:12:05
with Rand Paul, who
2:12:07
is still trying to focus exclusively
2:12:09
on Wuhan, Wuhan, Wuhan, Fauci, Fauci,
2:12:12
Fauci. Folks, that
2:12:14
is a red herring. As
2:12:17
a matter of fact, we look at it at this
2:12:19
point, I think we need to start calling Rand Paul
2:12:21
out on this, call him Red Herring Rand, because
2:12:24
he has focused on
2:12:26
this relentlessly, and
2:12:29
he should have as a medical doctor who
2:12:31
knows better, he should have
2:12:33
pushed back against all these restrictions and instead
2:12:35
what he did was he focused on Fauci and
2:12:38
Wuhan to take people's minds away
2:12:40
from the jab,
2:12:43
take it away from these phony
2:12:47
prescriptions for everybody, masks, social distancing
2:12:49
and everything, while don't touch the
2:12:51
ivermectin, don't touch the HCQ. Rand
2:12:54
Paul was focused just like the people
2:12:56
I worked with at InfoWars, he was
2:12:58
focused on Wuhan, selling
2:13:01
the bat flu stuff. And
2:13:04
that is not the issue. The
2:13:07
origin really was not in Wuhan. The
2:13:10
origin really goes back to 9-11. It's
2:13:13
not about gain of function, it's about the
2:13:16
Patriot Act, it's about the germ
2:13:18
games that they practiced even two
2:13:20
months before 9-11. That's
2:13:23
what it's really about. And
2:13:25
when somebody starts redirecting you relentlessly,
2:13:27
and he's been doing this now
2:13:29
for four years, he's been misdirecting
2:13:31
people away from
2:13:33
the real bioweapon,
2:13:36
the vaccine, he's been redirecting
2:13:38
people away from our real
2:13:40
enemy, which is the CIA
2:13:43
and this medical biological warfare
2:13:45
state that's been practicing to
2:13:47
do all this stuff for
2:13:50
20 years before they actually pulled it off,
2:13:52
and they're still practicing their germ games. It's
2:13:54
the germ games, it's not the gain of
2:13:56
function. And he's still
2:13:58
misdirecting people. You remember when he had Fauci understand.
2:14:01
He said, Dr. Fauci, you're going to, with
2:14:03
this vaccine, you're going to create vaccine
2:14:07
hesitancy. Well, good,
2:14:09
good. And you know better
2:14:11
than that, Rand. It's just amazing
2:14:13
to me to see that this is happening.
2:14:15
So, I
2:14:17
say that as a preface to
2:14:19
this guy's remarks. We
2:14:22
need to understand from the very beginning
2:14:24
how fraudulent this was. And this guy
2:14:26
I'm going to play here for talks
2:14:28
about the origins of it. And of course, he
2:14:31
doesn't even include the hokey stuff where
2:14:33
people were falling down on the streets in China.
2:14:36
Yeah, it was a big sham. And
2:14:38
it wasn't just China. It was every
2:14:40
government on Earth. And
2:14:42
people like Rand Paul and most
2:14:44
of the conservative media are
2:14:47
redirecting your attention back
2:14:50
to Wuhan. Why? Because that takes the
2:14:52
heat off of them. They
2:14:55
played along with this. They
2:14:57
were as guilty of this as Trump
2:14:59
or Biden. So, how did
2:15:01
this pandemic begin? The first thing that
2:15:03
happens is we have a very strange
2:15:05
phenomenon in China. And I, Dr. Spots,
2:15:07
a case of supposedly atypical pneumonia. That
2:15:12
event is a very strange event to
2:15:14
start with. There's lots of pneumonia all
2:15:16
the time in China. Okay. But this
2:15:18
one's very strange. So that's
2:15:20
30th of December. And then supposedly we
2:15:22
have the emergence of, according to the
2:15:24
World Health Organization already, on January the
2:15:27
5th, they're telling us that they have
2:15:29
identified 44 cases
2:15:31
out of a population of 8 million
2:15:33
people of atypical pneumonia of an
2:15:35
unknown cause. So that's the second of five days
2:15:38
from the time that the first doctor said he'd
2:15:40
seen something strange. Then two days later, they
2:15:42
had declared that a new SARS-like virus
2:15:44
was the cause of these pneumonia cases.
2:15:46
Two days after they decided that they'd
2:15:49
identified 565 unusual cases. Just three days
2:15:51
later, we have a situation where the
2:15:53
firm manufacturing the first PCR kits to
2:15:56
test for this thing is already shipping
2:15:58
them. So let's just recap. We've
2:16:00
gone from the identification of the first
2:16:02
patient to the shipping of the first
2:16:04
kits in 11 days. On the same
2:16:06
day when they shipped the kits, the
2:16:08
first gene sequence is published. Two days
2:16:10
after that, the World Health Organization has
2:16:12
already accepted Christian Drosden's PCR protocol as
2:16:14
what they call the gold standard for
2:16:16
testing for this new disease. And a
2:16:18
few more gene sequences are published in
2:16:20
that time. In nine days after that,
2:16:22
the famous Cormann Drosden protocol is published,
2:16:24
is submitted for review, and 27 hours
2:16:26
later, it's peer reviewed and published. In
2:16:29
a journal that Drosden is an editor of.
2:16:32
Two days after that, there's a Chinese
2:16:34
study about the specific clinical symptoms that
2:16:36
supposedly relate to COVID, and that's published
2:16:38
in the New England Journal of Medicine.
2:16:40
We still only 25 days from the
2:16:42
beginning of the school thing. And then
2:16:44
five days after that, the first study
2:16:46
is published also in the NEJM about
2:16:49
asymptomatic transmission. We've established in a compressed
2:16:51
time frame of just 26 days, there's
2:16:53
a new clinical manifestation. It's caused by
2:16:55
this virus. This virus has the following
2:16:57
sequence. Here's the test, which is the
2:16:59
gold standard in identifying that sequence and
2:17:01
the research identifying the primers that we're
2:17:04
going to use all over the world
2:17:06
has been submitted for peer review and
2:17:08
published. And we've described the clinical features
2:17:10
of this so-called new disease. I would
2:17:12
submit to you that every single one
2:17:14
of those steps was A, complete and
2:17:16
utter bullshit and B, premeditated. Yeah,
2:17:20
it was all complete and utter Bolshevik and
2:17:22
it was all premeditated and it was
2:17:24
practiced for 20 years. It
2:17:28
truly is amazing. And people that I worked
2:17:30
with knew about this and
2:17:32
decided to lie to you. Politicians that
2:17:35
you vote for and think that your future
2:17:37
depends on lied to you,
2:17:40
complete and utter Bolshevik.
2:17:43
Look, it is the
2:17:47
Patriot Act, the Model State Health
2:17:49
Emergency Powers Act. That's what
2:17:51
you need to be focused on. This is a misdirection to continue
2:17:54
to talk about gain of function. Yes,
2:17:56
it's a tremendous waste of money and
2:17:58
yes, they could actually release something
2:18:00
and get people sick. They've had so
2:18:02
many accidents and here's the interesting thing.
2:18:05
They shut this stuff down in 2014 because Alison
2:18:07
Young who was
2:18:10
a writer at USA Today was talking about all the
2:18:12
different accidents that they'd had. One
2:18:15
of them in particular, the Burkhold
2:18:17
area Pseudomalei at the National Primate
2:18:20
Center down in Tulane University. Oh
2:18:22
well we got this thing we brought in and
2:18:24
it's pretty dangerous but it's only a couple of
2:18:26
different areas in the world so we brought it
2:18:28
in we thought we would try to make it
2:18:31
more dangerous and more easily spread
2:18:33
and somehow it gets out of that biosafety
2:18:35
level 3 lab and you start seeing monkeys
2:18:37
who are getting sick with it out in
2:18:39
the 500 or so
2:18:41
acres that they've got outside of that lab. They
2:18:46
bring in some people from the CDC and one of
2:18:48
them comes down with it but they say oh she
2:18:50
must have gotten it somewhere else. This
2:18:53
is something that's only in a couple of areas
2:18:55
on earth and
2:18:57
so it's been one line after the other. Yes you can
2:18:59
have some accidents with it but when
2:19:01
you look at all of the
2:19:04
documented accidents that Alison
2:19:06
Young had and it was presented to Congress
2:19:08
and Congress at the time in 2014 said
2:19:10
stop it we don't want any more of
2:19:12
this and that's when Fauci took this stuff
2:19:14
to Wuhan. He continued, he and
2:19:16
Francis Collins continued what they were doing at
2:19:18
the University of North Carolina and they were
2:19:21
called out on it when they released their
2:19:23
stuff but in 2017 under Trump
2:19:26
they said okay you can go back and do a gain of function again but
2:19:29
with hundreds hundreds
2:19:31
of these accidents and
2:19:34
workers exposed and all the rest of stuff we didn't
2:19:36
have any outbreaks with any of this stuff.
2:19:39
You don't need to worry that much about
2:19:41
the gain of function so tremendously there is
2:19:43
some risk there it's a tremendous waste
2:19:46
of money but folks
2:19:48
this is a misdirection to
2:19:50
get people to focus on this and so
2:19:52
what you're seeing everywhere the article's 15 US
2:19:54
agencies new the Wuhan
2:19:56
lab is trying to create a corona virus like
2:19:59
COVID-19 says Rand Paul. Well,
2:20:01
guess what? These are the same
2:20:03
15 agencies that were practicing on an annual
2:20:05
basis for 20 years what we went through.
2:20:07
Oh, we got something here. Lock
2:20:10
everybody down until we got a novel untested virus
2:20:12
that we're going to require them to vaccine
2:20:14
that we're going to require them to take before we
2:20:16
let them out again. Yeah, those
2:20:18
15 agencies all knew about
2:20:21
that. There's even more than 15 agencies
2:20:23
that were involved in these annual germ games. Then
2:20:25
we're going to talk about the timeline of it.
2:20:28
Complete and utter Bolshevik, just
2:20:32
like how they held
2:20:34
this so-called panacea, the
2:20:36
shot until right after the election. As a
2:20:40
matter of fact, they held it up to
2:20:42
the point that they declared Biden the winner on
2:20:44
a Saturday after the election on Tuesday. The
2:20:46
very next day on 60 Minutes, they roll out
2:20:48
their thing. Look, here's Operation Warp, so we'd be
2:20:50
ready to roll this out as soon as the
2:20:53
companies tell us they're ready to go. The very
2:20:55
next day, Pfizer says, yeah, we're 90 percent
2:20:57
effective. And then within one week, Russia
2:20:59
comes out, oh, we're 93. Then a
2:21:02
week later, you have Moderna, we're 94.
2:21:04
The next day, Pfizer says we're 94.5
2:21:06
percent effective. And they continue to
2:21:08
bid that up to 100 percent effective until it
2:21:10
continues to go down to essentially zero.
2:21:14
The whole thing was a lie. The whole thing
2:21:16
was a scam. And yet, to narrowly focus everybody
2:21:20
on Wuhan, as
2:21:22
Rand Paul is doing, is a
2:21:24
misdirection of the worst kind. And
2:21:28
it really bothers me to see him continue
2:21:31
to focus on this. You know,
2:21:33
you look at people, it's not just Mike Johnson
2:21:35
who's gone native with a power. I
2:21:37
think it is Rand Paul as well. And it's everywhere. I'm
2:21:40
seeing this on one conservative
2:21:42
media side after the other, from
2:21:45
Fox News to Zero Hedge to
2:21:47
all the smaller ones, the great
2:21:50
COVID cover-up shocking truth about Wuhan
2:21:52
and the 15 federal agencies. He's
2:21:54
putting this out just like Hillary
2:21:56
Clinton said, well, you know, we
2:21:58
got this Russian concern. conspiracy to
2:22:00
get Trump in. And we got these 15
2:22:02
or 17, whatever it was, intelligence
2:22:05
agencies that all assessed that the
2:22:08
Russians are running Donald Trump. It was
2:22:10
complete and utter Bolshevik. And so is
2:22:12
this stuff from Rand Paul. It
2:22:15
was real concern. Oh, let's not make
2:22:18
people vaccine hesitancy because, you know, these
2:22:20
are our masters, our financial masters of
2:22:22
pharmaceutical companies. Chicago
2:22:24
has been slammed with 57 cases
2:22:27
of measles in
2:22:29
migrant shelters. Now this is
2:22:31
Breitbart and Breitbart has continued
2:22:33
to push the panic button on
2:22:35
measles as well. Again,
2:22:38
trying to do this for the pharmaceutical
2:22:40
companies and also tying this in with
2:22:42
the open borders. That's a
2:22:44
common strategy of Breitbart. Yes, if
2:22:47
they're going to go to extreme
2:22:49
measures about
2:22:52
pandemics and all the rest of this
2:22:54
stuff, it is utter
2:22:56
and complete hypocrisy for
2:22:59
the Biden administration, for the CDC and all the rest of
2:23:01
them to look the other way. We
2:23:03
don't know what is coming across the borders and they
2:23:06
frankly don't care. They don't care about any of these
2:23:08
people. They didn't even in the midst of all this
2:23:10
stuff. They didn't really care about
2:23:12
people who were coming in. They'd ship them
2:23:14
around. They wouldn't make them wear masks. They
2:23:17
wouldn't inject them as they brought them in,
2:23:19
giving them all their goodies,
2:23:22
the credit cards, cell phones and all the rest of the
2:23:24
stuff. They wouldn't give them a shot. They didn't care about
2:23:26
that. For
2:23:29
Breitbart to hang out on this, and
2:23:32
Breitbart was a real vaccine cheerleader if
2:23:34
you remember, especially John Nolte. He
2:23:36
used to be the general editor, but he
2:23:38
started specializing on entertainment. I remember
2:23:40
that he just got ratioed in
2:23:43
the comments on Breitbart. People say, go
2:23:45
back to movies and something you know
2:23:47
about. You're lying to people about this
2:23:49
stuff and yet those same people are
2:23:51
the ones who are Trump, Trump,
2:23:54
Trump, Trump, Trump all the way. Don't
2:23:56
want to hear anything negative about Trump. He's
2:23:58
going to save this country even though he's So he was the one
2:24:00
who was pushing this stuff out and
2:24:03
gave him the green light to do all this stuff
2:24:05
and he said he pushed them harder than they wanted
2:24:07
to go even. And so Breitbart
2:24:09
is continuing to push this panic about measles
2:24:13
and they're doing it to tie it in with
2:24:15
their open border stuff. And
2:24:17
again, the border is a problem. Measles
2:24:20
are not a problem. And
2:24:22
we all know that. That's why I've played that stuff from
2:24:24
Donald Trump so many times. I've got to get the shots.
2:24:26
It's really going around. They didn't have a
2:24:28
measles vaccine when he was a kid. He
2:24:30
probably had measles. We all did. And
2:24:33
he's older than I am. He
2:24:35
knows better than that. He knows you don't have to have
2:24:38
that. And
2:24:40
I think he also knows that autism
2:24:42
is an issue, but he doesn't care
2:24:44
about that either. Chicago says Breitbart has
2:24:47
been slammed with nearly
2:24:49
as many cases of measles in
2:24:51
its migrant shelters this year than
2:24:53
the whole country had in 2023. So
2:24:58
what? Nobody died
2:25:00
Breitbart. Nobody died. It's
2:25:03
a childhood disease. I've covered
2:25:05
this before. They say, well, you know, they may call
2:25:07
it a childhood disease, but that doesn't mean it's not
2:25:09
serious. It's not serious. Anybody
2:25:13
can die from anything. And
2:25:15
people have died from complications from measles. That
2:25:18
was something that, to borrow a phrase
2:25:20
from Fauci, was rare. It really was
2:25:23
rare, right? It really was rare.
2:25:25
So rare that we had never heard of it happening.
2:25:30
And the question is,
2:25:34
measles may be rarer now, but
2:25:37
autism isn't. Do you
2:25:39
care about that? No, they
2:25:41
don't. I would rather have measles
2:25:44
especially as a childhood disease. Why they called it a childhood
2:25:46
disease? I pointed out the time, because you get it as
2:25:48
a child, you're immune for life. Not
2:25:51
so with these vaccines. We've had outbreaks
2:25:54
that said, well, you got 57 cases. So
2:25:56
usually we have about 57 cases throughout
2:25:58
the whole country. And
2:26:01
yet, these are usually people who have been
2:26:04
vaccinated. As a matter of fact,
2:26:06
the outbreak that we had in California that got Trump
2:26:08
saying that everybody had to get the shot, they've been
2:26:10
all vaccinated. We've had outbreaks before that that I'd covered
2:26:12
in New York where they were all vaccinated, many of
2:26:14
them multiple times. The
2:26:16
vaccines do not convey immunity. And
2:26:21
they come with very, very debilitating side effects
2:26:23
for us, as we can see what has
2:26:26
happened in our society with autism.
2:26:29
According to city officials, 33 cases of
2:26:31
measles are migrant children up
2:26:33
to the age of 4. 7 are from 5 to 17 years
2:26:35
of age. 16 are adults
2:26:38
between the ages of 18 and 24. And
2:26:41
1 is over 50 years of age. These
2:26:45
are people coming in from other countries where
2:26:47
they don't get the MMR shot. And
2:26:51
they're getting measles. And
2:26:54
they're not dying either. These
2:26:58
57 cases are mostly
2:27:00
among illegal border crossers.
2:27:02
Mostly? Does
2:27:04
that mean that some Americans who got the MMR
2:27:06
shot still got measles? Because
2:27:08
we have seen this, as I pointed out, California, New York,
2:27:10
other places all the time. This
2:27:12
year, the outbreak has exploded. Hey,
2:27:17
get on the phone, Breitbart, and call
2:27:19
the WHO. Yeah,
2:27:21
the who. Don't get
2:27:23
fooled again, folks. Because
2:27:26
of February 29th, a total of 41 measles
2:27:29
cases were reported in 16 U.S.
2:27:31
states. Be afraid. Be very
2:27:33
afraid. These numbers
2:27:35
do not include the new cases in Chicago.
2:27:37
The CDC has issued a warning about the
2:27:40
disease and issued an alert titled,
2:27:42
quote, increase in global and
2:27:44
domestic measles cases and outbreaks.
2:27:48
But again, it's not anything
2:27:51
that you need to be concerned about. And
2:27:54
the question is, why are they pushing this that hard? a
2:28:00
global revolt in motion. Well,
2:28:03
I certainly hope so. He's
2:28:06
got misgivings about it. I do as well. Some
2:28:08
people think that it has. He said, my first
2:28:10
article on the coming backlash,
2:28:13
admittedly, was wildly optimistic. It
2:28:15
went to print on April
2:28:17
24, 2020. Springtime
2:28:20
savings are in full bloom. All in
2:28:22
the Kroger app, get six packs of
2:28:24
delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi or seven up
2:28:26
for to ninety nine each. Then get
2:28:28
flavorful large avocados for ninety nine cents
2:28:30
each or with your card and a
2:28:32
digital Cuban shop these deals that your
2:28:34
local Kroger today or click the screen
2:28:36
now to download the Kroger app to
2:28:38
save big Today Kroger Fresh for every
2:28:40
one price in product availability Subject to
2:28:42
change restrictions apply the site for details.
2:28:50
If you've been hurt by a truck, you
2:28:52
can call Colombo Law 24-7 and we'll be there
2:28:54
to make sure you're taken care of. When
2:28:57
someone is hurt by a truck, Colombo Law
2:28:59
is the law firm people call to get
2:29:01
answers. Hurt by a truck? Call
2:29:03
Colombo Law. I
2:29:06
was very pessimistic about it. I thought people are
2:29:08
never going to wake up because
2:29:10
two weeks, you know, we're already at
2:29:13
that point, April 24th, we were six weeks into
2:29:15
it and we had
2:29:17
churches that were afraid to open up for Easter
2:29:19
service and things like that. This is insane. This
2:29:22
is insane. After six weeks of lockdown, Jeffrey
2:29:25
Tucker says, I confidently predicted
2:29:27
a political revolt, a
2:29:30
movement against masks, a population
2:29:32
wide revulsion against the elites,
2:29:34
a demand to reject social
2:29:36
distancing, quote unquote, and
2:29:39
streaming only life. Plus
2:29:41
a widespread disgust at everything and everyone
2:29:43
involved. Well that
2:29:46
was certainly what he was feeling and it was
2:29:48
what I was feeling but I continued to go
2:29:50
on. I'll never forget by June, we're never going
2:29:52
to stop this stuff. People
2:29:54
are never going to wake up and
2:29:56
they were able to do that because you could
2:29:59
cover up people's voices. So well. You
2:30:01
know, later on I found out, yeah, there's other people who felt that
2:30:04
way as well. He said, I was
2:30:06
off for four years. Well, I'm still pessimistic
2:30:08
about this, frankly. He said, I
2:30:10
assume that people are smarter than they proved to
2:30:12
be. I also did not anticipate just how devastating
2:30:14
the effects of lockdown would be. Things
2:30:17
like economic chaos and cultural shock
2:30:20
and the population-wide demoralization and the
2:30:22
loss of trust. He
2:30:25
doesn't even mention the
2:30:27
training for universal basic income. Stay at home, we'll
2:30:29
cut you a check. How about that? That's
2:30:32
what the stimulus checks and the
2:30:34
CARES Act and PPP and the
2:30:36
trillions of dollars that Trump
2:30:39
spent that he didn't have. The
2:30:41
forces that were set in motion on those grim days were
2:30:43
far more deep than I knew at the time. They
2:30:46
involved a willing complicity from
2:30:49
tech, media, pharma, and the administrative
2:30:51
state at all levels of society.
2:30:54
Well, he calls it complicity. I call it
2:30:57
conspiracy. Don't run, dare
2:30:59
call it conspiracy, right? That dirty word. That's why
2:31:01
I was happy to see Joel
2:31:05
Skousen, who said he's going to run
2:31:07
as the Constitution Party candidate. I
2:31:09
was glad to see him identify himself as a
2:31:12
conspiracy theorist. He said, then that's my advantage
2:31:14
in running the race. I
2:31:17
will tell people, he says, I'm not going to
2:31:19
win. Trump's not going to steal it from Trump,
2:31:21
so your vote for Trump is a wasted vote. But if you
2:31:23
vote for me, you tell them that
2:31:26
you buy into these conspiracy theories because
2:31:28
they're not theories. And
2:31:31
so I hope he does get some approach with
2:31:33
it because people need to hear that. People
2:31:36
need to hear it. So he says, is the backlash finally
2:31:38
here? If so, it's about time. New
2:31:40
literature is starting to emerge to document
2:31:42
it all. The new book,
2:31:44
which I talked about before, White Rural Rage, The
2:31:48
Threat to American Democracy, White
2:31:50
Rural Rage. He said, it's
2:31:53
a viciously partisan,
2:31:55
histrionic, and gravely
2:31:58
inaccurate account. That's
2:32:00
a good way to characterize it. It
2:32:03
gets nearly everything wrong except for
2:32:05
one thing, and that is vast swaths
2:32:07
of the public are fed up, not with
2:32:09
democracy, but with its opposite, ruling
2:32:12
class hegemony. The
2:32:15
revolt, however, is not racial. It is
2:32:17
not geographically determined. It's not even about
2:32:19
left and right. It
2:32:21
is class-based in part because
2:32:24
it's more precisely about the rulers versus
2:32:27
the ruled. With
2:32:29
more precision, new voices are emerging among people
2:32:31
who detect a change
2:32:34
in vibes, he says, with
2:32:36
a population. One of those is Elizabeth Nixon's
2:32:39
article, Strongholes Falling.
2:32:43
Populists Seize the Culture. She
2:32:46
argues that the lessons of
2:32:48
COVID are profound. The
2:32:50
most important lesson of COVID is that without
2:32:52
knowing the game, we outfoxed them, and
2:32:55
their narrative collapsed. The
2:32:57
revolution is happening all over the socials,
2:32:59
especially in videos, and
2:33:02
the disgust is palpable. Well,
2:33:05
I would like to see ... This is why I am
2:33:07
pessimistic, simply because of Trump
2:33:09
and MAGA. The people who
2:33:12
know better continue to cheer him
2:33:14
on and see him as their only hope,
2:33:16
and that is the problem with
2:33:18
it. They have this disgust, but
2:33:22
they believe that everything needs to be fixed
2:33:25
by taking over the
2:33:28
all-powerful central government. There should not be
2:33:30
an all-powerful central government. If
2:33:32
you want to have an all-powerful central government, as I said,
2:33:34
it's going to result in a civil war where everybody is
2:33:37
trying to get that lever. Everybody
2:33:39
wants the ultimate ring of power. Rather
2:33:43
than decentralizing things and
2:33:45
letting different states handle the problems however
2:33:47
they see fit or different areas, no,
2:33:49
we have to have one approach,
2:33:53
and everybody's got to fight over that, just
2:33:56
like they did. You're going to have that jab. You're
2:33:58
not going to have ivermectin. have a CQ,
2:34:00
you're not gonna have anything else, and if you even
2:34:02
talk about that, you're going to jail, or we're gonna
2:34:05
kill your profession or whatever. That's the thing that causes
2:34:07
me to be pessimistic about this, and
2:34:10
hopefully we can change that. Yeah, that's why
2:34:12
I do this program because I want people to understand
2:34:14
that you
2:34:16
don't want to fight over one
2:34:18
individual and be ready to fight
2:34:20
a civil war if he doesn't
2:34:22
win a rigged election. Second
2:34:25
article he says is Vibe Shift by
2:34:28
Santiago Pellego, who
2:34:31
writes, the vibe shift I'm talking about is a speaking
2:34:33
of previously unspeakable
2:34:35
truths, the noticing
2:34:37
of previously suppressed facts. I'm
2:34:40
talking about the give you feel
2:34:42
when the walls of propaganda and
2:34:44
bureaucracy start to move as you
2:34:46
push, the very visible dust
2:34:48
that's kicked up in the air as
2:34:50
experts and fact-checkers scramble to hold
2:34:53
on to decaying institutions. The
2:34:55
cautious but electric rush
2:34:57
of energy when dictatorial edifices designed
2:35:00
to stifle innovation enterprise and thought
2:35:03
are exposed or toppled. Fundamentally,
2:35:06
the vibe shift is a return to
2:35:08
a championing of
2:35:11
reality, a
2:35:13
rejection of the bureaucratic, the
2:35:15
cowardly, the guilt-driven, that's one
2:35:17
of their big things, the guilt. A
2:35:21
return to greatness, courage, and joyous
2:35:23
ambition. So
2:35:25
Jeffrey Tucker says we truly want to believe that this is true
2:35:29
and this much is certainly correct. The
2:35:32
battle lines are incredibly clear these
2:35:34
days. The media that uncritically echoes
2:35:36
the deep state line are known.
2:35:39
Places like Slate, Wired, Rolling Stone, Mother Jones,
2:35:41
New Republic, New Yorker, and things like that.
2:35:45
So he says so now we know who these people are. But
2:35:49
again, this is what causes me to be a
2:35:51
pessimist because I know that there's a lot of
2:35:54
so-called countermedia, conservative
2:35:57
media, and David Eich
2:35:59
has talked about this. Big
2:36:03
con media, big conservative media, the
2:36:06
alt media that is selling
2:36:09
useful narratives for the establishment, you
2:36:11
know, like the Wuhan lab and
2:36:14
people like Red Herring Rand when it comes to
2:36:16
that. The liberalism that
2:36:18
once questioned authority and demanded free speech
2:36:20
seems to be extinguished. And
2:36:23
I think that certainly is the case. When you
2:36:26
look at Rand Paul, for example, it
2:36:28
is the case when you look at the
2:36:30
Trump cult, although you have to remember that
2:36:33
most of the people in the Trump cult have never
2:36:35
really paid attention to politics in the
2:36:37
past. The
2:36:39
transmogrified and captured liberalism
2:36:41
now demands compliance with
2:36:44
authority and it calls
2:36:46
for further restrictions on free speech. Now anyone
2:36:48
who makes a basic demand for normal freedom
2:36:51
to speak or to choose one's own medical
2:36:53
treatment or to decline to wear a
2:36:55
mask can reliably
2:36:57
anticipate being denounced as right-wing
2:37:00
even when it makes absolutely no sense
2:37:03
to put it into some kind of a political
2:37:07
breakdown with that. And
2:37:10
so he's not the only
2:37:12
one talking about this. Daily Skeptic
2:37:14
says we must not forget lockdown.
2:37:18
And that's my other concern, that
2:37:20
we are forgetting it. The people
2:37:22
are just ready to move on. As I've talked about it in
2:37:24
the past, you know, when we went
2:37:26
to the UK in 2001,
2:37:32
spring, took the kids there and
2:37:35
it hadn't been there when Karen and I had been there 40
2:37:38
years earlier. But they
2:37:40
had their Whitehall, they had
2:37:43
didn't even know about it really when we went in
2:37:45
the 80s, but they had found the
2:37:48
place where Churchill and
2:37:50
all the other War Center command, as it
2:37:52
was under Whitehall, and they had a special
2:37:55
place where they were running the war. And
2:37:58
as soon as the war ended, They
2:38:01
just walked out and
2:38:03
never came back. They were sick
2:38:05
of the place. And
2:38:08
it wasn't for decades until
2:38:10
many decades later. Again, we were there
2:38:13
in the 80s, so that
2:38:15
was 40 years after the war ended. They didn't know about it.
2:38:18
And so at some time between the 1980s and the late 1990s, that
2:38:25
they found this, maybe 50
2:38:28
years after the war ended, they
2:38:31
find this. Nobody talked about it. Nobody wanted
2:38:33
to go back. They just forget
2:38:35
about it. It's just done. And
2:38:37
we've walked away from the lockdowns in the same way.
2:38:40
All these people, the upper brass and the British government
2:38:42
that were fighting the war and Churchill and all the
2:38:44
rest of it, they just walked away. And somebody
2:38:48
walked in 50 years later and they look
2:38:50
at this stuff and it's like all the
2:38:52
papers are there. It's just an amazing find.
2:38:55
The maps are up there with the pens stuck in
2:38:57
them. Everything, just the way it was left. And
2:39:00
so then they turned it into a museum and
2:39:02
they give you the little things to listen to
2:39:05
as you're walking through, explaining the stuff that's there.
2:39:08
But we've got to not forget the lockdown. And
2:39:11
unfortunately, most of us have just walked away. We're
2:39:13
sick of this thing that was
2:39:15
happening to us for years. We just walk away. Don't want
2:39:18
to talk about it. Don't want to revisit it. Don't
2:39:20
want to learn any lessons from it. And
2:39:22
so the daily skeptic, they're
2:39:25
showing some pictures of some things up
2:39:27
there. One of them, coronavirus, stay home,
2:39:29
save lives. If you go
2:39:31
out, you can spread it. People will die. That's
2:39:33
it. That's what it says on the, that's the sign. A
2:39:37
couple of weeks into that first balmy lockdown,
2:39:39
a bed sheet appeared on the hedge of
2:39:41
a house along our lane. There was
2:39:43
a message painted in red or was it black?
2:39:45
My husband remembers it stating, F
2:39:47
off cyclists. She
2:39:50
said, I remember it as go home joggers, but
2:39:53
it only remained on the hedge for a day or
2:39:56
so and disappeared. I often think of this bed sheet
2:39:58
when contemplating our collective response to lockdown. Did
2:40:01
another neighbor take it down or did a
2:40:03
cyclist or jogger or did the people who
2:40:05
put it up consider the words to be
2:40:08
a bit much and remove it in embarrassment?
2:40:12
So where is that sheet now? Has
2:40:15
it been washed, returned to the cupboard?
2:40:18
Was it burned? Was it
2:40:20
used as a dust sheet? We don't know. But
2:40:23
before we all forget the lockdown episodes,
2:40:26
is it now time to officially record ordinary life in 2020
2:40:28
and 2021? Let
2:40:31
me just say this. You know, I've talked
2:40:33
about, and I tried to explain to people
2:40:37
many times as people were
2:40:39
facing losing their job and
2:40:41
that uncertainty because they wouldn't get a vaccine and many
2:40:43
other things, I said, you know, go back and take
2:40:45
a look at the prayers and
2:40:47
the autobiography and the diary of
2:40:50
George Mueller. That
2:40:53
will help you to see that God is still active in
2:40:55
our life. And we all need to keep a diary. I'm
2:40:58
guilty of not doing it as
2:41:01
nearly as much as I should. If
2:41:03
you keep a diary, it
2:41:05
gives you a whole different perspective on,
2:41:07
especially if you talk about what was
2:41:10
happening in your life, what you
2:41:12
prayed about, and what God did
2:41:14
in your life in response to that. It
2:41:17
truly is amazing. And
2:41:20
I know this, and yet I still don't do it
2:41:22
enough. And so
2:41:24
I would say, don't just write down
2:41:26
the crazy bad stuff, but
2:41:28
take a moment and go back and talk about how God
2:41:30
brought you through this. Because
2:41:33
if you think about it, I'm sure you've
2:41:35
got something to be really grateful for. You've probably
2:41:37
got a lot of things that you could be really grateful for. And
2:41:40
you could look at the dark moments of despair and see
2:41:42
how God brought you out of it.
2:41:45
But going back to this article, it said, I'm thinking of
2:41:48
a dinner party that we attended at a greenhouse, whitewashed
2:41:51
so that no one saw, and
2:41:54
muggy beyond belief, and our
2:41:56
terrified friend who decided not to visit his
2:41:58
father in the hospital. so he could be on
2:42:00
the safe side, only to
2:42:02
desperately regret the decision when the old
2:42:05
man died alone. Or
2:42:07
the bunch of flowers that we ordered that
2:42:09
was misdelivered to neighbors, left in their garage
2:42:12
for three days to decontaminate, and
2:42:14
then died. Loctails
2:42:17
and quarantinis in the woods.
2:42:20
Sourdough, an alarming post
2:42:22
on WhatsApp where someone requested a
2:42:24
new mother, as his had ended
2:42:27
up in the dishwasher. Green
2:42:29
tape pasted onto Victorian tiles in
2:42:31
church to ensure social
2:42:34
distancing, as if the church
2:42:36
had ever been crowded. Yeah,
2:42:38
under these churches that are now empty,
2:42:41
putting green tape on the floor, which
2:42:44
they had never done in the
2:42:46
history of those churches before, no matter what the
2:42:49
sickness was that was going around at the time. But
2:42:51
the chap who videoed children climbing
2:42:54
into the taped off empty playground
2:42:57
and threatening to call the police. Well,
2:43:00
it's not so funny now, he says.
2:43:03
According to the UK's National Police Chief's
2:43:05
Council, 525,738 of us made calls to
2:43:07
the police about
2:43:13
lockdown and fractions. Is it
2:43:15
any wonder then, after they passed this new hate
2:43:18
speech law in Scotland, that you've got
2:43:20
8,000 complaints of people
2:43:22
getting their stazzie on, complaining
2:43:25
and informing about their neighbor, 8,000 of
2:43:28
those, that's nothing. This is a half
2:43:31
a million of these
2:43:33
about lockdown and fractions.
2:43:37
Half a million. If there was
2:43:39
a historical endeavor to
2:43:41
record people's activities in lockdown, would
2:43:44
anybody actually admit to how they
2:43:46
had behaved? Pretty
2:43:49
much like East Germany after
2:43:52
it collapsed and some
2:43:54
people got the files. They
2:43:56
started to see how their neighbors were informing on them.
2:44:00
Truly amazing. Future generations are
2:44:03
going to look at the stuff that we did,
2:44:06
this ridiculous stuff that our society did. They
2:44:09
are going to ridicule us, laugh at us,
2:44:11
and despise us for
2:44:14
being such craven, ignorant
2:44:16
cowards. And
2:44:18
so we should make a point of all this. And
2:44:21
we should stop letting people like grandpa misdirect us
2:44:23
and scare us. The issue was
2:44:26
and is the bioweapon is the vaccine. Always
2:44:30
was. And
2:44:32
these people want us to still be
2:44:34
misdirected. And they're still working very
2:44:36
hard on it. The
2:44:39
CDC is now quietly admitted to
2:44:41
its COVID policy failures. In
2:44:44
so many words and data, the
2:44:46
CDC has quietly admitted that all
2:44:48
the indignities of the pandemic management
2:44:50
have failed. The masks fail, the
2:44:52
distancing fail, the lockdowns, the closures,
2:44:54
especially the vaccines all fail. It's
2:44:58
not like we didn't know that they were going to fail.
2:45:01
We really did. You
2:45:03
know, they tried to make us feel like we were the only
2:45:05
ones who knew, but we knew. That's
2:45:09
what I like about Richmond, north of Richmond.
2:45:14
You think we don't know, but we do. COVID-19
2:45:17
starts as an annoying, intense, uncomfortable
2:45:20
flu-like illness. And for most people,
2:45:22
it ends uneventfully two to three weeks
2:45:24
later. That is
2:45:26
unless you
2:45:28
get the fiat orders backed
2:45:31
up by fiat cash from
2:45:33
Trump, from Fauci, from Biden and all the rest of
2:45:35
these people. Bribing,
2:45:39
blackmailing, cajoling, the
2:45:41
greedy hospitals and
2:45:43
others who are doing this. It
2:45:46
was a COVID cabal. And
2:45:49
again, as we look at this, I think I'm going to
2:45:52
take a quick break and we're going to come back and
2:45:54
we're going to talk about climate because I think that
2:45:57
that is actually an even more pressing
2:45:59
thing. is important. They set a
2:46:01
precedent. They practice their
2:46:03
psychological stuff and they were able to achieve
2:46:05
more in a shorter period of time than
2:46:08
they've been able to do with the
2:46:10
climate MacGuffin. But the climate MacGuffin has
2:46:12
been this relentless push and it
2:46:15
has been a slow moving
2:46:18
as opposed to a quick panic. The
2:46:21
climate MacGuffin has been a slow
2:46:23
moving propaganda campaign
2:46:26
that has affected multiple generations. They were pushing
2:46:28
this stuff out when I was in high
2:46:30
school. And it is Springtime
2:46:33
savings are in full bloom. All in
2:46:35
the Kroger app, get six packs of
2:46:37
delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi or seven up
2:46:39
for to ninety nine each. Then get
2:46:41
flavorful large avocados for ninety nine cents
2:46:43
each or with your card and a
2:46:45
digital Cuban shop these deals that your
2:46:47
local Kroger today or click the screen
2:46:49
now to download the Kroger app to
2:46:51
save big Today Kroger Fresh for every
2:46:53
one price in product availability Subject to
2:46:55
change restrictions apply the site for details.
2:47:02
Springtime savings are in full bloom. All
2:47:04
in the Kroger app, get six packs
2:47:07
of delicious Coca Cola, Pepsi or seven
2:47:09
up for to ninety nine each. Then
2:47:11
get flavorful large avocados for ninety nine
2:47:13
cents each or with your card and
2:47:15
a digital Cuban shop these deals that
2:47:17
your local Kroger today or click the
2:47:19
screen now to download the Kroger app
2:47:21
to save big Today Kroger Fresh for
2:47:23
every one price in product availability Subject
2:47:25
to change restrictions apply the site for
2:47:27
details. We've
2:47:32
been inculcated in a large
2:47:35
part of the population and they're going to push
2:47:37
this thing on us very hard.
2:47:39
So we're going to take a look at that when we come
2:47:41
back. We'll be right back. Hear
2:47:43
news now at apsradionews.com or
2:47:45
get the APS radio app
2:47:47
and never miss another story.
2:48:00
You You
2:49:00
You Making
2:49:25
sense common again, you're
2:49:27
listening to the David Knight show You
2:49:38
Then a couple of comments here on rumble
2:49:41
and tip. Thank you from Sprumford Thank you very much for
2:49:43
the tip that I always found
2:49:45
it interesting that the PCR test quote-unquote had
2:49:48
never before been used to
2:49:50
mass Diagnose viral illness before
2:49:52
yet. It was suddenly called the gold
2:49:55
standard Well, yeah,
2:49:57
you know history does not repeat itself, but it
2:49:59
does run and it did rhyme with what
2:50:01
Fauci had pulled off with AIDS. What
2:50:06
caused AIDS? Well, Fauci said it was HIV and he
2:50:08
said the proof of it was the PCR test and
2:50:10
he had the guy who won a Nobel Prize for
2:50:12
it, Kerry Mullis, said, no you can't prove that with
2:50:15
my test. You're magnifying this. He said you can find
2:50:17
anything if you magnify it enough and of
2:50:19
course these PCR tests are being enough
2:50:21
cycles that they magnified at 1.1
2:50:23
trillion times. And
2:50:26
what is also interesting is that Kerry
2:50:29
Mullis and many other scientists
2:50:31
fought Fauci really hard on that
2:50:33
connection between AIDS and
2:50:35
a virus, HIV. And
2:50:38
of course Fauci never came up with any kind of
2:50:40
a vaccine or anything like that but they challenged him.
2:50:43
He challenged him to a debate. He went out of
2:50:45
their places and he said, he's a bureaucrat. He's not
2:50:47
a scientist. He won't debate me. I've called him out
2:50:49
time and again. And
2:50:52
Kerry Mullis died just before
2:50:54
this stuff rolled out. Interesting
2:50:56
coincidence, isn't it? I
2:50:59
don't think this coincidence is. Roxanne, Michelle, Obama,
2:51:01
and thank you very much for the tip.
2:51:04
Tony sent me a Nevada goldback.
2:51:06
It's awesome. Yeah, I like those
2:51:08
as well. Yeah. I want
2:51:10
more but do not understand what it is actually.
2:51:12
Get Tony to talk about what
2:51:15
a goldback actually is. So this is probably sent earlier
2:51:17
and I missed it. But we'll talk about it next
2:51:19
time. I'll tell you a little bit about it. It
2:51:21
does have a small amount of
2:51:24
physical gold in it. You know, they have the
2:51:26
capability now. They put all kinds of stuff and
2:51:28
money to try to
2:51:31
thwart the the
2:51:33
counterfeiters. And so when you
2:51:35
look at currency coming from the US and from other
2:51:38
places as well, it's
2:51:40
really amazing what they can do in terms
2:51:42
of putting things in it. And of course
2:51:45
they can put in some kind
2:51:47
of electronic tracking type of stuff on some
2:51:50
of the newer currency. But what they do
2:51:52
with these goldbacks is they put in an
2:51:54
intrinsic amount of gold. So it actually is
2:51:56
a particular amount of
2:51:58
actual gold. but
2:52:01
in a paper format that people can kind
2:52:03
of relate to. It looks like a Federal
2:52:06
Reserve note or something like that. So
2:52:08
it is very interesting and it's a very pretty thing
2:52:10
as well. Let me just say
2:52:12
thank you to a couple of people. I've got some cards that
2:52:15
were sent to me, very nice cards. I'm
2:52:17
getting behind and thanking people for this. I
2:52:19
just wanted to say this real quick. I
2:52:21
like this. This is a nice card. I
2:52:23
spent days on end trying to find you
2:52:25
the most perfect gift and realized it
2:52:27
was in my heart the whole time. I thought that
2:52:29
was really nice. Thank you, Mary. I appreciate that. Sue
2:52:33
sent this card and a very
2:52:35
nice quote. Sue and
2:52:38
Mary have both been very faithful and
2:52:40
regular supporters. I found
2:52:42
this quote that I think
2:52:44
is so appropriate for today. Here's
2:52:47
a quote. We're occupying a front
2:52:50
row seat to the fall of a nation
2:52:52
to see exactly how the
2:52:54
abandonment of principles rots a
2:52:57
society so badly that the
2:52:59
vast majority just wilt. That
2:53:02
is absolutely true. I
2:53:05
don't know who did that quote. I'll look it up
2:53:07
and see. That is a great quote. I really do
2:53:09
appreciate all of you who
2:53:11
have, and these are from the end of
2:53:13
March. I'm a couple of weeks late
2:53:15
on that. We
2:53:17
have moved the gas gauge
2:53:20
up to a quarter, but
2:53:22
it's slightly below a quarter, but it's closer to that
2:53:24
than it is to an eighth. Things have been going
2:53:27
a little bit slow. Our core supporters
2:53:32
have been amazingly generous and faithful to us, and
2:53:34
I think all of you who do that,
2:53:37
if you haven't supported us, I'd like
2:53:39
to get you to consider that. Just
2:53:41
a small amount would help a great
2:53:43
deal, and you can sign up at
2:53:45
SubscribeStar from $5 on up. I want
2:53:49
to respond, too, to something that somebody left
2:53:52
in terms of what they were – it's
2:53:54
taking a long time for the videos to get up, and
2:53:56
I think we're going to change that today. for
2:54:00
the love of the road, kind of
2:54:02
stepped in and tried to assuage them that,
2:54:04
yeah, this is really happening. But what's
2:54:07
taking me a while to do it is I have
2:54:09
to wait for the transcript. I don't have to go
2:54:11
through the transcript and find places that are there. I
2:54:14
think I can go through and give a
2:54:16
rough description, or maybe even no description, and
2:54:18
try to get this stuff up right away
2:54:20
after the show, and then say
2:54:22
that a description is coming. And then
2:54:24
when we have that description ready, three
2:54:27
or four hours later, we'll put that up. And
2:54:29
so I think that is what we're going to start doing,
2:54:31
at least for our Subscribestar supporters. We'll try
2:54:34
to get that up right away and just say,
2:54:36
hey, if you want to have the
2:54:39
outline, the index of topics, it's coming, but it's not
2:54:41
here yet, but here's the file. Because people will listen
2:54:43
to the full show. They don't know what's coming up.
2:54:47
And so a lot of
2:54:49
people may be interested in doing it that way as
2:54:51
well. So I think we're going to try to roll
2:54:53
it out that way beginning today. As
2:54:56
I said earlier, I think that
2:54:58
the climate thing has been rolling very
2:55:00
slowly, surely, as slowly but
2:55:03
surely, affecting people's minds and the way
2:55:05
that they think of things. And
2:55:07
we really do have to push back and debunk this.
2:55:10
And I came across this at the
2:55:13
website, What's Up With
2:55:15
That? And that's not what, it's
2:55:17
Watt, as in electrical Watt, W-A-T-T.
2:55:20
And you can also find this movie,
2:55:22
Climate, the movie, you can find it
2:55:25
on Rumble. They have it there for
2:55:27
free. And I want to play for you just
2:55:29
the beginning of it. It's got some nice little set
2:55:31
pieces in it, as well as
2:55:33
some statements from scientists,
2:55:36
real scientists, who
2:55:39
are many of them Nobel Prize winners,
2:55:42
and or people who have been working
2:55:45
in the climate science
2:55:47
industry. They're now retired. And
2:55:50
they say, well, you know, the reason people aren't saying this is because they
2:55:52
get kicked out and they lose their career. If they say, but we're out
2:55:54
now. So we're going to tell you what
2:55:57
is going on with this. And
2:55:59
it's time that we do. This is, like
2:56:01
I said, a very well-made film done
2:56:03
by Martin Durkin, who has produced, directed,
2:56:05
and executive produced hundreds of hours of
2:56:08
documentaries, things
2:56:10
like Discovery Channel, National
2:56:12
Geographic, many others. And
2:56:14
so I want to give you just a little taste
2:56:16
of this beginning. It's like an hour
2:56:18
and a half, two-hour long thing.
2:56:21
So here's about five minutes at the
2:56:23
very beginning of the climate movie. People
2:56:29
are dying, denying ecosystems,
2:56:32
or collapsing. We are
2:56:34
in the beginning of a mass
2:56:37
extinction, and all you can talk about is
2:56:39
the money and fairy tales
2:56:42
of eternal economic growth. How
2:56:44
dare you? This
2:56:51
is the story of how an eccentric
2:56:53
environmental scare grew into a
2:56:56
powerful global industry. It's
2:56:58
a wonderful business of opportunity,
2:57:01
okay? You want climate? We'll give
2:57:03
you climate. There's a huge amount of
2:57:05
money involved in
2:57:07
this. There
2:57:09
are not just now millions, but
2:57:11
there are trillions of hours. It's
2:57:15
a story of self-interest and
2:57:17
being gone forever. People
2:57:20
like me, our careers depend
2:57:22
on funding of climate research.
2:57:24
This is what I've been doing just about
2:57:26
my whole career. This is what the other
2:57:28
climate researchers are doing with their whole career.
2:57:30
They don't want this to end. CO2
2:57:34
isn't having the huge negative impact that
2:57:36
we claimed it was having originally. How
2:57:39
are we going to stay in business? A
2:57:41
lot of people's livelihoods depend on it. They're
2:57:43
not going to give that up. This
2:57:46
is a story of the corruption of science.
2:57:48
There's no such thing as a climate emergency
2:57:50
happening on this planet now. There's
2:57:53
no evidence of one. The
2:57:55
climate alarm is nonsense. It's a
2:57:57
hoax. I've never liked hoax. I
2:58:00
think scam is a better word, but I'm willing to
2:58:02
live with folks. It's
2:58:04
a story about the bullying and intimidation
2:58:07
of anyone who dares to challenge the
2:58:09
climate alarm. To speak
2:58:11
up against or about climate change in any
2:58:13
sort of sceptical way was essentially career suicide.
2:58:17
Activists are even calling
2:58:19
for any scepticism to
2:58:21
be criminalised. It's
2:58:25
the story of an assault on individual
2:58:27
freedom. It's a wonderful way
2:58:29
to increase government power. If
2:58:32
there's an existential threat out there
2:58:34
that's worldwide, well, you need
2:58:36
a powerful worldwide government, you
2:58:39
know, to cope with it. We see
2:58:41
all these kind of authoritarian
2:58:43
measures being adopted in the
2:58:45
name of saving the planet.
2:58:49
You've suddenly got the population under control all
2:58:51
over the world. We
2:58:59
called it industrial progress. Since
2:59:02
the Industrial Revolution, the development of
2:59:04
free market capital and mass production has
2:59:07
made ever more goods, ever more affordable to
2:59:09
ever larger numbers of people. Mass
2:59:12
production marched hand in hand with mass
2:59:14
consumption. In
2:59:17
the modern age, ordinary people enjoy a
2:59:19
level of prosperity never before achieved in
2:59:21
human history. But
2:59:23
all the while we're told we were
2:59:26
destroying the planet. Computers
2:59:30
are calculated. One
2:59:33
is in store for us. We reproduce and consume
2:59:35
ever more. The weather will get worse. The
2:59:38
planet will follow. We need
2:59:40
human to accept the limits of our
2:59:42
lives. Insubeless,
2:59:45
frivolous. Those who
2:59:47
deny the climate crisis will not just run. They're
2:59:50
dangerous. Breading the poison
2:59:52
of doubt among a gullible population.
2:59:55
These deniers should be shunned and
2:59:57
shamed.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More