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NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

Released Wednesday, 23rd August 2023
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NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

NATO 5-EYES Vs. BRICS + | Breaking History Ep 10

Wednesday, 23rd August 2023
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Episode Transcript

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0:00

to the Sean Morgan Report on AMP News . I'm here

0:02

with Matthew Erich from the Rising Tide Foundation

0:04

and Matt the big news

0:07

. I mean I think in the whole history

0:09

of humanity , this meeting in South

0:11

Africa of the BRICS nations is a turning

0:13

point . I think we're gonna look back at

0:16

these decisions that will be made

0:18

at this time period of before BRICS

0:20

really went full

0:22

cooperation and after BRICS went

0:24

full cooperation . What

0:27

are some of the highlights from the

0:29

meetings thus far ?

0:31

Absolutely no . I agree . We are living through historic

0:34

times and I think it's one of those

0:36

things that you tend to appreciate more in hindsight

0:38

and while you're living through it , it's a bit more difficult

0:40

for some to sort of appreciate what's really

0:43

happening and to keep in mind the context

0:45

in which the BRICS Summit in South Africa it's the 15th

0:47

annual summit that has occurred is

0:49

occurring at a time where we are having a

0:52

major breakdown . I mean , everybody watching

0:54

this is probably aware , to varying degrees , that

0:57

the Western , what's called the Unipolar

0:59

System , centered in London and Wall Street as a

1:01

central axis of global monetary

1:03

control , which has been dominant for

1:05

centuries , is collapsing . It's

1:08

becoming revealed that , or at least

1:10

recognized finally , that what

1:13

we thought was an economy is a giant bubble

1:15

with fictitious capital

1:17

like derivatives , impossible to

1:19

pay debts and no real

1:21

economy , or at least a highly atrophied

1:24

, sabotaged , once

1:26

powerful but now very weak and destroyed

1:28

real economy that

1:30

people were required to support their lives

1:33

, their children , their families and their nation . I'm

1:35

talking here about the factories , the agricultural

1:37

and industrial powers that

1:39

we once enjoyed as the

1:41

greatest country in the world the United States here

1:44

, and also Canada , was participating

1:46

in this in the 50s and in the 60s , that

1:48

is completely atrophied . So now the BRICS

1:50

nations have met together . That means Brazil

1:53

, russia , india , china , south Africa , but

1:55

with 60 other observer

1:57

nations who participated , 30 of them from Africa

1:59

itself . At this summit it's still underway

2:02

Putin was not able to show

2:04

up due to the weaponization

2:06

of the legal system both in various nations

2:08

it's not just in the United States although it is in the United

2:10

States , as people know from the attacks

2:12

on Trump but also in Pakistan , where

2:15

Imran Khan , who was a major fighter to

2:17

against the sanction policy against

2:19

Russia in Pakistan , but also a

2:22

major champion for Pakistan

2:24

, chinese code

2:27

development around the Belt and Road Initiative extensions

2:29

into Pakistan . He's

2:31

been taken down in made

2:34

up legal charges and is now facing

2:36

three years in prison and disqualifying

2:38

him from running in the upcoming elections in

2:40

November in Pakistan . Meanwhile

2:42

, the current Pakistani government has

2:44

just signed a military contract with the US

2:47

military industrial complex to do joint

2:49

maneuvers , joint training , joint basing

2:51

and also interoperative .

2:52

There's the evidence that it was a coup right there

2:55

. I just wanna highlight

2:57

this because this is a really important point that

3:00

the head of state of Russia can't

3:02

even go to the BRICS summit because

3:04

the International Criminal Court , which

3:07

is just a kangaroo court , has

3:09

made it so that

3:11

South Africa would be obligated to arrest

3:14

Putin if he showed up . So

3:16

that's ridiculous .

3:18

It's insane . It's absolutely insane and , honestly

3:20

, he probably could have gone . But , being South

3:23

Africa being what it is , it's not the most secure region

3:25

in the world . There's still all sorts of networks

3:27

of deep state operatives , with the Cecil Road's

3:29

network still active . So I think that Putin

3:31

did the right thing by choosing to make things easy

3:34

on his counterparts in South Africa to not

3:36

have to deal with the scandal and also to

3:38

keep his own security intact

3:40

. It was probably the right thing to do , and I listened

3:42

to his speech and it was a very powerful speech . But

3:45

you have a long waiting list . I mean , as

3:47

it stands , the

3:49

nations right now coalescing around

3:52

the BRICS , which include over 40 nations who have

3:54

expressed openly their intention to join what's

3:56

called the BRICS Plus Many of them are from Africa

3:58

, many of them are from Latin America , many

4:00

of them are from Asia more broadly have

4:04

looked towards things like the new

4:07

BRICS Development Bank , the new Development Bank that

4:10

was created in 2015 . This played a very

4:12

prominent role in this current summit

4:14

that's underway , where , up

4:16

until now , the bank itself

4:19

has been forced to settle transactions

4:21

in US dollars , even though the BRICS

4:23

nations only use the US

4:25

dollar for something like 30% of their transactions

4:27

or less . But the BRICS Development Bank , which

4:29

could be and should be an

4:32

alternative , a way to break free of the IMF

4:34

and World Bank and USAID type

4:36

of systems of control . It

4:38

has been withheld , constrained by

4:41

the use of the US dollar , which obviously by

4:43

everybody who in the world

4:45

has to settle their transactions and

4:47

with other

4:49

nations in US dollars . This

4:51

gives the imperialists who

4:54

are controlling the United States a major weapon

4:56

to sanction countries , as they've done

4:58

to over 30 countries today which are on the

5:00

US sanctions list , which can

5:02

do more murder , more death , than

5:04

launching bombs onto a country , because

5:07

you're now withholding the ability of the nation's people

5:09

, of their children , from accessing food , from

5:12

accessing very basic things that they need

5:14

to survive . So this is one of the destructive

5:16

elements of sanctioning . So the

5:18

BRICS now are setting in play measures

5:22

to get around that , and Dilma

5:24

Rousseff , who's the former head of Brazil

5:26

, now she's in charge of the BRICS Development Bank

5:28

, has also made the point that they

5:30

will increase the lending up to $10

5:33

billion this year

5:35

and this will increase . But

5:38

she made the point that this is not gonna be seen as so

5:41

much of an alternative to the US dollar

5:43

, as a new system , completely , with

5:45

no conditionalities . And that's the key

5:47

thing is that it's

5:50

the system of how we're thinking about

5:52

political economy which is brought into

5:54

the core . And when you look at the

5:56

idea of conditionalities

5:58

, that's one of the key ways that poor

6:01

nations were kept under the heel and

6:03

having no development , despite receiving untold

6:06

hundreds of billions of dollars since World War II . How

6:09

could we give Africa so much

6:11

money since World War II , or

6:13

many other poor countries , but have seen

6:15

only an increase in starvation , instability

6:18

, war ? How is that possible ? Well

6:20

, it's through these conditionalities that the IMF and World Bank

6:23

, under the control of the Rhodes Scholars

6:25

, the Fabians , these death cultists since

6:27

the moment Franklin Roosevelt died

6:29

, have said okay , if you want the loan , will

6:32

give it to you , but under the condition that you restructure

6:36

your government , that you bring in Western corporations

6:38

that have sole monopoly rights over your

6:40

minerals , over your land , over

6:43

whatever oil is under your territory

6:45

, and we will enrich a small elite within

6:48

you know , lesotho or

6:50

Nigeria or whatever , but they will then

6:52

be beholden to their puppet

6:54

masters in the West , and that's how these conditionalities

6:57

work and the people never benefit , whereas

6:59

now you have a different style

7:01

of lending and the BRICS Development

7:03

Bank . Dilma Rousseff made the point

7:05

that just some of looking at

7:07

what they're going to invest in , they have water projects

7:10

, hydroelectricity dams

7:12

, rail . These are real things in the

7:14

real world that have won

7:16

over the confidence of many of the African nations who

7:19

have suffered so much and are now looking at

7:22

this as a real alternative , including South

7:24

American countries , too , that have been suffering

7:27

no shortage of abuse over decades .

7:29

Yeah , that's a really good point

7:31

. And if anyone's not read the

7:33

book Confessions of an Economic

7:35

Hitman , that

7:37

tells part of the story about selling this

7:39

pie in the sky projections

7:42

to some kind of corrupt government . And

7:44

then they take on a loan and

7:46

it's this classic predatory lending at

7:49

a grand scale of billions of dollars . And

7:52

then it's money laundering because a lot

7:54

of the money doesn't go to the projects they should and

7:58

it doesn't benefit the people . So

8:00

if there's a real alternative and it really works

8:02

the way you're saying , it'll work and

8:05

these big infrastructure projects happen and

8:08

it increases the real economy and real productivity

8:11

and it really helps the people

8:13

. I mean this is

8:15

going to be so great for humanity . And it's not just

8:17

little , tiny African nations that

8:20

are joining BRICS Plus , it's Mexico , it's Venezuela

8:22

, it's Saudi Arabia . I mean

8:25

these are just gigantic economies with

8:28

tons of resources . That

8:30

makes it truly a competitor with

8:33

the US-based world economy

8:35

, right ? I mean , if

8:37

you put the number of people , the population , the

8:40

productivity , the number of resources and you put it on a scale

8:42

, the BRICS side is looking

8:45

bigger than the other side in some ways , right ?

8:48

Oh , yeah , by far yeah and in terms of any real value standard

8:50

that you want to

8:52

use . That's not simply GDP manipulation , although

8:55

you could use that if you want . The

8:57

BRICS nations alone , just the basic five , represent

9:00

over 40% of the world population . We're dealing with

9:02

India , we're dealing with China , we're

9:05

dealing with Brazil . I mean these are big , like

9:08

the population levels are immense . But

9:10

then also you have the GDP . Just last year those

9:15

five nations alone , their GDP outpaced for

9:17

the first time the G7

9:19

, the so-called most glorious advanced

9:21

countries of the world

9:23

. They actually outpaced

9:25

that . And then when you start looking at some

9:27

of the individual variables , like the Chinese life

9:30

expectancy , which was formally , you know , back in 1965

9:32

, it was something like 46 years of age

9:35

on average and individual

9:37

access to energy , which back then was

9:40

like a fraction of a fraction of what the

9:42

average US citizen was able to enjoy . Today

9:45

the average life expectancy of a person

9:47

living in China has reached 78.3

9:50

years of age , whereas in the United States it's collapsed

9:52

down to 76.8 years Just

9:55

over the last two years alone . That collapse was drastic

9:57

and we all know why . Also

10:00

, access to energy . The West has been shutting

10:02

down it's

10:05

hydroelectric dams over 1,000

10:07

have been demolished in the

10:09

past 30 years alone in the United States , whereas

10:12

India , china , russia , other nations that

10:15

are not committed to murdering

10:17

their people have only seen a massive

10:19

increase of hydropower , nuclear

10:22

power , investments into fusion

10:25

, as well as natural gas

10:27

, coal , other things that are just vital , and they're

10:29

offering this this is the key thing too . They're offering

10:31

this to the poor countries that have suffered under neocolonialism

10:34

. So when you see the African leaders

10:36

in Niger , which has

10:38

such an abundance of uranium

10:41

under their soil , or Burkina Faso , which has so

10:43

much coal , they

10:46

haven't been allowed to develop it . Only 3% of

10:48

the people living in Niger actually have access to electricity

10:51

. That's 3% . The infant mortality is

10:53

huge , the average life expectancy

10:55

is terrible , and yet

10:57

they have so much wealth and abundance . Same thing for

10:59

Sudan . So when you see Russia or China

11:01

especially China or India coming in to

11:04

Africa and doing a business deal , it's

11:06

actually based upon helping them develop the

11:10

resources under their land for the use of the people

11:12

, as well as benefiting in an honest

11:14

business arrangement . That was the way we used to do things

11:16

, so

11:19

that's a very different way of looking at it , and I think that

11:21

when you look at the six coup d'etats that

11:23

have happened across West Africa in recent years

11:25

I mean the most recent being Niger . In

11:28

the past , since the 90s , you

11:31

had the EcoWaz

11:33

, the economic community

11:36

of West African states , which are basically

11:38

puppet regimes who have been used as an

11:40

instrument to invade those other

11:43

countries that resisted

11:45

the IMF World Bank . They've done well

11:47

over six or seven military interventions . Today

11:50

, even though the threat was there

11:52

to launch an invasion , with the support of the US and

11:54

France , against Nijal to put the puppet

11:56

regime back in power , they

11:58

failed to convey their meetings

12:00

because each of those governments have

12:03

militaries which basically told them if

12:05

you do that , we're gonna overthrow you too and

12:07

you're gonna have your own coup d'etat , which has kept

12:09

a lot of the what normally would have worked

12:11

in days of Anglo-American

12:14

hegemony of the past are no longer

12:16

working . The formula is breaking down because

12:19

there is a new game in town and the game operates

12:21

with different rules , and those rules are much

12:23

more beneficial to the people in the nations of

12:25

Africa . And I'll just say one

12:27

last word on this .

12:29

Sorry , just to summarize that dynamic the

12:31

old rules are destabilized and

12:33

don't allow them to develop , and the new rules

12:35

is maybe you have China coming in saying

12:38

, hey , we'll help you build a rail

12:40

system , or we'll help you develop and we'll

12:42

give you these loans , and so forth

12:44

. And so it's stabilizing

12:47

rather than destabilizing .

12:49

Exactly . It's a very

12:51

. It's simple . There's a simplicity

12:53

hovering above the

12:56

apparent sophistication and complexity

12:58

of the thing , and if you listen to a lot of analysts yapping

13:02

on forever about

13:04

what's going on with the geopolitics of Africa or

13:06

the Bricks or they make it sound so complicated

13:09

and sure , there's a lot of detail , but in reality

13:11

there is that simplicity that you just

13:13

eloquently just said which

13:15

is missed in the discussion , which

13:17

causes people's minds to fail to

13:19

get to the essential thrust

13:21

of what is shaping , like what

13:23

I said at the very beginning of our discussion

13:25

today about the collapse

13:27

of the Western system . The entire Anglo-American

13:31

banking structure is collapsing . That's

13:33

setting the global context for

13:35

everything else and creating a form of timeline

13:38

around which things have to happen , for

13:40

good or for bad . Because I gotta tell

13:42

you , if you're in control of the US military arsenal

13:44

and the banking system that you require to be

13:46

viable in order to launch wars against nations

13:48

you don't like , if that banking system collapses

13:50

, your ability to carry out that type

13:52

of coordinated action is

13:55

also going to collapse , and

13:57

that doesn't really work . If you have competent

13:59

nations , as we see , where there

14:01

are adults in the room using

14:04

political power far outside

14:06

of the NATO transatlantic five-eyes

14:08

sphere cage . You actually have competent

14:11

adults managing the

14:13

national economies , the militaries

14:16

of Eurasia . That

14:18

doesn't work . You need to be able to do

14:20

battle with that thing , with that operation

14:23

, with your banking system

14:25

kind of intact .

14:27

So this is one of the interesting things I find fascinating

14:30

Is that yeah , and you

14:32

can't do these , these infrastructure projects

14:35

, and have them fail or else no other country

14:37

will get on board . So there has to be

14:39

a legitimate Win-win

14:41

for everybody . But isn't it ironic

14:43

that the Americans themselves have hollowed

14:45

out their own manufacturing base and we

14:47

don't have , you know , passenger

14:50

rail like Europe and other places

14:52

? It's happening to us

14:54

too . It's , it's the oligarchs of America

14:56

, it's not Americans or who

14:59

are doing this . It's the elites

15:01

they call themselves who

15:03

are doing this , even to to our own country

15:06

.

15:07

Yeah , and people . That's the thing . You know . Like

15:09

a lot of people in the in the world

15:11

looking towards the United States tend

15:14

to Make the

15:16

mistake of not recognize , not

15:19

differentiating the American people From

15:22

the US regime that

15:24

has taken control over the dead body of JFK

15:26

Bobby Kennedy over 60 years ago , as we have

15:28

talked about and as viewers of the show would know they

15:32

. But the reality is that the

15:34

enemies of the , the Anglo-American

15:37

deep state operation , isn't just other countries

15:39

that they want to destroy although it is that too but

15:41

it's also the American people themselves that

15:44

they have to destroy , because the American people carry

15:46

a heritage , a revolutionary heritage

15:48

from 1976

15:50

and even before that , to the days of John

15:52

Winthrop announcing the city on the hill

15:54

, back 150 years

15:56

before the American Revolution , which called for

15:59

creating a new type of society founded upon

16:01

the idea that we have an Alienable rights , that all

16:03

men are created equal , made of the image of God , and

16:05

the colonists in

16:07

the Americas , since that moment of the Massachusetts

16:10

Bay founding , always had that

16:12

strong independence and hate of

16:14

the injustice of the , of the other

16:16

part of the English-speaking world , of the British Empire , which

16:19

never disappeared after 1776

16:21

but always worked to destroy

16:23

and undermine the United States from within . So

16:26

today this system has

16:28

an evil legacy behind it that

16:30

they've wanted to destroy by by Declaring

16:32

war on the American people . But also , if you look

16:35

at it , every nation has has

16:37

been abused , raped and

16:39

abused over Decades and centuries

16:42

by this British Empire . India suffered

16:44

25 famines controlled by

16:46

, under British control of the

16:49

British Empire . You know that's

16:51

an unimaginable . How many , how many

16:53

Hundreds of millions of people

16:55

died by design in India . Same

16:58

thing for Ireland , same thing for the every

17:00

country in Africa . The reason why they have the problems

17:02

or even the borders that we currently see when we look

17:04

at a map in Africa , it wasn't African nations

17:06

deciding on their borders . It

17:08

was the British , the Belgium , the French

17:11

, the Dutch , but mostly the British

17:13

and the Belgians and the French who went in artificially

17:15

at the end of the 19th century , just carved out arbitrary

17:18

lines on a map for geopolitical

17:21

purposes alone and usually divided

17:23

by different tribes that

17:25

had a Grudge with each other

17:28

, in order to create Constant

17:30

divide , to conquer civil wars within

17:32

every country . They did that with Pakistan before

17:35

out Britain left India

17:38

. They , you know Lord Monbaton

17:40

, the , the controller and handler

17:43

of the later Prince Philip , and

17:45

this guy went out of his way to carve

17:48

out a Muslim region

17:50

called that became Pakistan , and went

17:53

out of the way to illegally Force

17:56

Muslims who had lived all over India

17:58

into that controlled zone in order to

18:01

incubate and cultivate hostility

18:03

and divide between the

18:05

Indians and the Pakistanis in constant war

18:08

forever . They did that with Sudan before the

18:10

British left Sudan . They did this in Kenya

18:12

. They did this everywhere .

18:14

So so now , now

18:16

I'm seeing the American Civil War as a British

18:18

operation more clearly , because it is

18:20

kind of the same idea divide and conquer . We're

18:23

gonna take a quick break . I know you probably could

18:26

talk about that and a lot more , but

18:28

we are gonna get into what happened in Maui . Was

18:31

it a directed energy weapon ? What about these

18:33

so-called natural disasters ? We're

18:36

gonna dig into that . But first I want to talk about

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ascent nutrition . This

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is a really cool founder . I got to meet

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him at the the Garts event in

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Tried about six

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of the products . My favorite , the hemp oil

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super potent stuff

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, if you want to , for me

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, helps me with my sleep , but

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this is really , really good stuff . I'm gonna

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21:33

where do we leave off and are you ready

21:35

to dig into Maui on fire ? Do you want

21:37

to kind of talk a little bit more about this dynamic

21:40

between the bricks

21:42

and the developments and

21:44

the NATO 5

21:46

eyes groups and how they destabilize

21:49

and prevent development ?

21:51

Yeah , I think let's let's carry that one out

21:53

a little bit more before Rounding

21:56

about to some of the , the forms of warfare

21:58

being conducted on the

22:00

people of America and , more broadly , the

22:02

transatlantic and the world . I

22:06

think one of the the points it's

22:08

a . It's an irony , sean , because you

22:11

know , if we were Sober

22:14

and if we had our wits about us , we

22:17

would take advantage of

22:19

and I'm talking here about the broader we , the population

22:21

, but also policymakers , frankly , but and

22:24

businessmen of the West , but

22:26

we would take advantage of the model

22:28

being set for a different type

22:30

of approach to banking , to finance from

22:33

the Eurasian economies , by Seeing

22:36

that this is the way we used to

22:38

do things like the , the ability to focus

22:40

on value , not simply from , you

22:42

know , theories of pricing , theories of

22:45

interest , the type of crap that they , the

22:47

mathematical garbage that they feed kids Studying

22:49

in Harvard or McGill or Yale when they

22:51

study economics . Then no , no , no , no , no . The

22:54

way we actually built our society Was

22:56

when we had a more clear-headed approach

22:58

that economics and banking and investments

23:01

and interest all had to be subservient

23:03

to an Understanding that

23:05

we have human beings . That needs certain

23:07

things satisfied In

23:10

order to have an economy in the first place

23:12

. The reason why we have money is because we just it's

23:15

arbitrary , it could have been seashells we all

23:17

simply agreed to give this a

23:19

legal tender , this piece of paper , a form of

23:21

value that we attributed . We all agreed

23:23

that we have trust in this and that there

23:25

is Something real that will

23:28

justify the wealth that we accumulate

23:30

when we have these papers . And circulation

23:32

or whatever it could have been Plastic forks , doesn't

23:34

matter . We just all agreed . But

23:37

we've lost the , the common sense

23:39

. Basic elementary . I got a . I

23:41

got a high school textbook on my bookshelf from 1941

23:44

in American high schools on Geographical

23:46

economics , and it does go through banking

23:49

and finance and things like that , but at the first chapter

23:51

it it . The

23:53

first chapter is on what differentiates

23:56

monkeys from humans and how

23:58

humans organize agriculture . That's the first

24:00

friggin chapter . And , and

24:02

simply looking at the days before , we had money , we

24:05

had the need to hunt , we had the need to preserve

24:07

our meat , the need to create , you

24:09

know , skins that required certain tanning

24:12

processes and other things just to stay warm , to use

24:14

fire . That

24:16

has value even if there was no money , you have reality

24:18

. So

24:21

if you're building dams , if you're doing

24:23

the things that involve just maintaining

24:25

electricity access , which we all

24:27

need in an advanced society where we expect

24:29

to live to at least 80 years old honestly

24:31

, we should expect to live even longer but

24:34

you have to be able to both maintain that

24:36

electricity availability , but

24:38

not just maintain it , but

24:40

also improve it . You have to take new

24:43

technologies that are brought online and

24:45

infuse it into the productive system

24:47

in order to make the water

24:49

availability , the water better quality

24:52

, the water more available , more

24:54

useful for farming as well as for residents

24:56

and for industry , because industry uses a lot of water

24:58

. So all of these things should

25:01

be held in consideration . And when you go to

25:03

like , just take

25:05

the time to listen to a St Petersburg Economic

25:07

Conference and listen to the economists from China

25:09

, from Russia , from India speaking

25:11

about their understanding of what the economy should be

25:13

doing . They have a

25:16

solid grasp of the thing we lost

25:18

, we lost sense of , and so

25:20

we could take this opportunity of sanity

25:23

to reevaluate what we

25:25

did , to make us good and do more of that . We could

25:27

do that . All right , donald .

25:28

Trump . This is a huge opportunity for the United

25:31

States and it is something that I think Trump would

25:33

get on boards . Isn't he the businessman

25:35

who celebrated the ability to do fair

25:38

trade real fair trade , not this fake

25:40

fair trade ?

25:41

Exactly . I'm so glad you said that yes

25:43

, and I mean that people have been

25:45

taught to almost like , religiously

25:49

worship

25:51

this concept of free trade as if it's

25:53

always good and sure enough . There are times where

25:55

free trade is good , no doubt . But

25:57

for much of human history , including

26:00

the present as we alluded to with the IMF conditionalities

26:02

, you , free trade kind of

26:04

works if everybody is honestly playing

26:06

by the game of competition , if you have , if everything

26:09

is equal , as they say in mathematics , right , all

26:11

things being equal , and there are no political

26:13

agencies above nations trying

26:15

to manipulate the game

26:17

for their benefit . Yes , free trade

26:19

is fine , which is why it worked

26:21

with the original 13 colonies

26:24

that become states after the American

26:26

War of Independence . At first , under

26:29

the Articles of Confederation , which

26:31

existed for about seven or eight years until

26:33

the Constitution was drafted , there

26:37

was no free trade really amongst the

26:39

states . Each state had their own protective tariffs

26:41

, their own issuance

26:43

of different types of currencies . There was no real solid

26:46

, harmonized nation that could , you

26:48

know , do a protective , a collective

26:50

tariff . There was no ability to do

26:53

taxation . There was no ability to build a

26:55

project that involved the whole

26:57

nation working together , none of that . So it was

26:59

a very weak , divided nation only

27:01

waiting to be reconquered by the British

27:04

Empire , with no manufacturing , no industries

27:06

, no ability to build those industries and

27:08

a complete dependence upon cheap labor

27:11

exports to the

27:13

British Empire . So they

27:15

were an economic basket case . The reason why free

27:17

trade worked is that after 1789

27:20

, it was recognized that , oh , if

27:22

we can create a unified nation with

27:25

a principled constitution , then

27:28

we can have a protective tariff around

27:30

all of the states , but within all of the states

27:32

don't have to fight each other for scraps , but you

27:34

can actually have free trade amongst each other because

27:36

you all have the same interest in the same

27:38

future . So that's good , which is why

27:40

, also in Africa right now you have what's called the African

27:42

Free Trade Agreement . It's the

27:45

first biggest continental free trade agreement , modeled

27:47

, ironically , on the best examples

27:49

of the US in those early stages that I described

27:51

, where now the

27:56

different African states can trade

27:58

amongst each other . They are able to build projects

28:01

like there's nine major continental

28:03

rail lines that are on the

28:05

Africa Agenda 2063 program

28:08

, which is centered in Ethiopia . That's

28:10

one of the most solid African

28:12

countries , despite the problems that they've suffered from

28:14

foreign manipulation . That's the center

28:17

of the African Union . So in this

28:19

project they have nine different rail

28:21

lines that will be driving

28:23

forces for the development of new industrial

28:26

zones that will be built up east

28:28

, west , north , south . That would then connect

28:30

up into the Belt and Road Initiative

28:32

, from Egypt along the Mediterranean

28:34

and Suez zone , but also

28:36

through the Bob

28:40

L Mandab Strait , which is this 225

28:42

kilometer gap between Djibouti and

28:45

Yemen . If

28:48

anybody looks at the Arabian map and you look at where the

28:50

Saudi Yemeni war has been waged

28:52

up until very recently I mean

28:54

, it was launched in 2015 and we've only now

28:56

, in the last six or so months , have had

28:58

a peace deal between the Saudis

29:01

and the Yemenis but that gap would be where

29:03

you would have rail built up

29:05

and pipelines and other things that would connect

29:07

to all read being projects

29:09

being built up with the assistance of the

29:11

Chinese Rail Corporation engineering firms in

29:14

the Arabian Peninsula connecting Oman

29:16

, yemen . The

29:19

UAE is a big player .

29:20

So this is exactly what the Anglo-Americans

29:22

, uh elites , don't

29:24

want . They don't want to connect Africa

29:27

and the Middle East and all those resources .

29:30

No , they don't know exactly , because it would make

29:32

the , the it would , it would make , it would be more prosperous

29:35

if you did that . So it's good business , and any businessman

29:37

who wants to , or any company that wants to participate

29:39

in either investing in making that happen , are going to get very

29:42

good returns . But it

29:45

will also empower those nations to stand on their

29:47

own two feet , which is really what . At the end of the

29:49

day , it's not about money making the world go around . If you

29:51

control trillions of dollars of capital flows

29:53

as a Rothschild banker , you don't

29:55

wake up in the morning thinking how can I make more money ? No

29:58

, you , you wake up thinking how

30:00

can I maintain the system of controls that keeps

30:02

my cast of masters ? Um

30:05

, and don't get me wrong , the Rothschild

30:07

family is upper level management , but they are not

30:09

masters . But that upper cast

30:11

that I am in my upper brahmins

30:13

, um , in a position of power over

30:16

the , the , the multitude who have to

30:18

be , or we expect , are born into

30:20

slave families because there's something lower

30:22

about the quality of their genetic stock

30:24

. And so you , the ways to do that is

30:26

to keep them dumb , to keep them divided amongst

30:28

each other , fighting each other for whatever reason

30:30

, whether for oil , minerals or religious

30:32

things , or skin color or or or language

30:35

, whatever , inflamed the differences

30:37

, make it more difficult for them to see

30:39

what they have in common and keep them

30:41

in a state of scarcity , because when you're in a state

30:43

of despair , starving , you're watching your kids

30:45

starve guaranteed you're going to be more likely

30:48

to look for an enemy image that

30:50

you will want to go and fight to receive

30:52

your hate and fear and anxiety . Um

30:55

, so this , these are just basic things

30:57

. And also you'll be more superstitious too . You'll be

30:59

more inclined to believe whatever artificial gods

31:01

the imperialists want to create for you to

31:04

worship , which is why even Prince Philip

31:06

has this sick joke

31:08

of an African um tribe

31:10

that sees him as a God and he would visit

31:13

this African tribe every every few decades

31:15

before he died , and they would

31:17

worship , sacrifice , lambs and stuff to a

31:19

big picture of Prince Philip from the 1950s

31:22

that he gave them as as their

31:24

God . And they this is like social

31:26

engineering 101 and a bit of a sick joke

31:28

for the elites , um , and I don't

31:30

like calling them that , but they hate fair

31:32

trade and they hate it when nations all

31:34

start working together , overcoming their religious

31:37

or ethnic or whatever differences , and start building

31:39

abundance . They hate that

31:41

. They try to destroy it when it happened in the United States

31:43

. That's why they've had their eyes set

31:45

on destroying the United States for over 250

31:48

years . They haven't stopped at any given

31:50

moment . Um cause the U ? S

31:52

has this thing within it where , like a phoenix

31:54

, it tends to rise from the ashes at times where it

31:56

seems like all odds are against them , which

31:59

gives me a lot of hope . Looking at American history this way

32:01

has given me a lot of hope that , even despite

32:03

the fact that the crisis is so dire that

32:06

there is something in sort of the

32:08

genetics the moral genetics , if you

32:10

want to call it , that of the U ? S , which

32:12

has , every time it's come close to the abyss

32:14

, you've had the ability to revive

32:16

the constitution .

32:17

There's something that has been passed down to

32:19

me as an American it is most

32:22

likely culturally is this this

32:24

valuing freedom above

32:26

all other things , and so

32:28

I do think we have it in us to

32:31

throw off the yokes of this bondage . I

32:33

was wondering if you have any insights about Dubai

32:35

, because we've had these different , you

32:37

know , global power

32:41

centers like Hong Kong that are controlled by the

32:43

Anglo Americans , and seems

32:46

like Dubai is doing something different , and

32:48

and if you could comment

32:50

on why they've been especially successful

32:53

.

32:54

Well , Dubai in the UAE

32:56

has a

32:59

lot of the , the , the Arabian sheikdoms

33:01

have a British

33:04

imperial heritage . They're

33:06

, Saudi Arabia being one of them , the

33:08

UAE being another . I mean , there's Oman

33:10

, there's a few . Many of these

33:12

, these families

33:15

that have been made kings within

33:18

that region , were installed there by British

33:20

imperialists who wanted their

33:22

loyal tribe that worked with them . Whether

33:24

you know , during during the 19th century

33:27

or or even before that , there was , you know

33:29

, British Afghan wars that that

33:31

involved the use of various Saudis that would

33:33

that would be sent in and fund various

33:35

agencies within Afghanistan or whatever

33:38

else . Point being is , they didn't really play such

33:40

a very good role In modern

33:42

geopolitics of the last 80 years

33:44

. Most of the time not

33:46

so good , in my analysis , although there

33:49

is , you know , like I wrote a book

33:51

series called the Clash of the Two Americas , you can also have

33:53

the Clash of the Two Arabias . There

33:56

is something culturally very powerful

33:58

that looks back to things

34:00

like Andalusia

34:02

, the Islamic Renaissance movements

34:05

of the 11th , 12th and 13th centuries

34:07

, and even before that , Much

34:10

of the Western Renaissance was made possible by Western

34:12

scholars going into the Middle East

34:14

and studying the

34:17

manuscripts that were transcribed

34:19

by the Arabs who had studied the classics

34:21

, the Greeks , Homer

34:24

, Plato , Eres , like all of these things , were studied

34:26

by Western scholars . The sciences

34:28

that had blossomed to create these beautiful architectural

34:32

designs that you see in southern

34:34

Spain and in Iraq , before

34:37

Afghat , Before NATO , destroyed

34:39

a lot of this when we blew up , you know , the

34:41

Middle East in the 90s

34:43

and then after 911 , or that we sent ISIS

34:46

to destroy in Syria or Libya . You

34:48

know like every time we destroy a country

34:50

, we destroy their heritage sites first

34:52

to destroy the memory of

34:55

the people , so that they don't have a dignified

34:57

memory around which to rebuild and reconstruct

34:59

and restore their heritage sites .

35:01

I was wondering why ISIS did that

35:03

destroyed the heritage sites

35:05

.

35:06

Yeah , isis is an asset of the United States military

35:09

industrial complex . They carry

35:11

out what their money bags

35:13

tell them to do

35:15

, which is why , like ISIS in Mali

35:18

, are being deployed to destroy

35:20

and attack the military barracks in Niger

35:23

right now . It's ISIS that's

35:25

carrying that out those attacks . Like , why would

35:27

ISIS , these Arab you know

35:29

, african , in this case African freedom fighters , as

35:32

they call themselves want to destroy

35:35

a new government that just liberated itself from

35:37

Western colonialism ? It's because they're assets

35:39

of the CIA . That's how we destroyed Libya

35:41

, qaddafi and everything else , and then we killed again

35:43

. We destroyed their museums , all

35:45

these things . So , in the case of UAE , I've

35:47

been very impressed . In the last four

35:50

years or so , they've gone from being

35:52

just sort of a financial hub where there's been money

35:54

laundering , tourism for billionaires

35:57

, things like that , to becoming a driving

35:59

force of scientific progress in a

36:01

move towards embracing

36:03

a that , that Belton

36:06

Road Initiative orientation . So they've got . They're

36:08

the first country of Arabia with a nuclear

36:10

sector . They recognize that oil geopolitics

36:12

is a thing of the past , even though their whole economy

36:14

has been built upon oil geopolitics . They

36:16

had no industry . They had no factories . Same thing for Saudi

36:19

Arabia . They were told by their , their

36:21

masters , in London . You

36:23

don't need . You'll make money off of oil . You

36:26

don't need to have manufacturing industries and

36:28

processing facilities to turn the oil into something useful

36:30

. You don't need to have science and technology , because you have oil

36:32

that makes your people rich , or at least your

36:35

elites rich , because there's a lot of poverty . So

36:37

you know there was it seems

36:39

to be a revolution in like a battle

36:41

against some of the deep state operatives within both

36:43

countries , and what came out of

36:46

that fight starting in , as far as I can

36:48

see it , around 2017 in both countries

36:50

UAE and Saudi Arabia was

36:52

a totally different policy . Saudi Arabia adopted

36:54

the Saudi 2030 vision program

36:56

that is very much more tied to high speed

36:58

rail development , manufacturing

37:02

hubs , building up upstream , downstream facilities

37:05

for the raw materials and

37:07

also a foreign policy that would be based around like

37:10

healing , going towards Yemen and

37:12

saying let's build a peace process . Going towards Iran

37:15

, which had no diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia

37:17

since 2016 , and the murder

37:19

of Imam

37:21

al-Nimer , which

37:24

is an Iranian Imam in Saudi Arabia

37:26

, brutally murdered and that killed all diplomatic relations . Well

37:29

, now you have a rebuilding because

37:31

China and Russia have have facilitated

37:33

these back channel discussions for entente and

37:35

cooperation . So also

37:38

, uae is one of the most robust space programs

37:40

of the Middle East , I

37:43

mean with a program to land

37:45

a rover on Mars . They already

37:47

have an orbiter around Mars , very

37:50

, very good stuff . And the head of their space program

37:52

is this young girl who's like 23 years old

37:55

. I've listened to her speakers . My wife's written

37:57

about her . She's brilliant , brilliant

37:59

and there's . And so we're told oh , these are

38:01

like nations who are just anti-woman

38:04

and yeah , they do have misogynist problems

38:06

, don't get me wrong . I mean Saudi Arabia . The women were

38:08

just allowed to drive cars , like last year or something . So

38:10

there's problems . I'm not . I'm not trying to say it's all good

38:12

, but Hello

38:33

.

38:34

Yeah , you're back , you're back .

38:36

Okay , I don't know if that was my side of your side

38:38

, yeah . So

38:40

yeah , I'll have to say , yeah , uae , dubai

38:42

seems like they're they're they're getting their

38:44

heads out of their asses and looking towards the real

38:47

economy in the future in a fair

38:49

trade orientation and , as you pointed out , free

38:51

trade , fair trade , not the same

38:54

thing . Trading fairly is

38:56

like we will . Every nation should

38:59

be able to produce for itself , and

39:01

the idea is we should all have , you know , access

39:03

to use the resources , the land

39:06

, the resources , whatever we're we're

39:08

endowed with , because not all nations are equal , but

39:10

we should be able to have the manufacturing , the transformative

39:13

power of factories to to

39:15

make the lumber and whatever into useful

39:17

goods . Well , and in order

39:19

to satisfy the needs of our people

39:22

as best as possible , that's called full

39:24

spectrum economics . Right , you have food

39:26

production , you have industrial production

39:28

, and then whatever bounty

39:30

and excess we produce that we don't need for

39:32

ourselves , we will trade internationally

39:35

on a fair trade basis and you will . You will

39:37

pay for the goods that you import and buy from other

39:39

countries fairly , the way

39:41

you would pay local workers and your own people . You

39:43

won't be , you won't be trying to exploit them because they're poor and

39:46

obviously , if people in another

39:48

country can be made to stay poor

39:50

and use obsolete technology

39:52

for for you know whether , whether for cash

39:54

cropping or fulfilling our dollar stores , yeah , you

39:56

won't have to pay them . You might have to pay them a

39:58

dollar a day , like we do for many Africans who

40:00

make you know who

40:03

mine cobalt for our cell phones

40:05

, but if they were developed and living

40:07

on parity , in a similar living standard

40:10

as we are , no , you'd have to pay them

40:12

an adjustable wage , as

40:14

you would pay a Canadian or an American minor

40:16

and I don't

40:18

mean underage workers here , which is another

40:20

problem for Africa . I say minor , so

40:24

that's fair trade . Fair trade is just common sense . It's

40:26

good stuff and it is compatible with different types

40:28

of selective protectionism as well as selective

40:30

free trade , but it's

40:32

based on a moral principle and that's

40:34

what we used to have and we've forgotten .

40:37

Yeah , that's what I'm always surprised that

40:39

I learned from you . It's not just learning about history

40:42

, because you have such a great knowledge of all the facts

40:44

and figures and dates and people , but you're

40:47

you're teaching me about the

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43:20

have 14 minutes left . Matt . I want to make

43:22

sure we talk about what happened in Maui

43:24

and how you perceived that , as

43:26

the facts were coming in , the photos were coming

43:28

in . How did you interpret this

43:30

type of second worst possibly

43:33

the worst fire in American history ?

43:37

Yeah , it is a real sick tragedy

43:39

, and I had written

43:41

an essay

43:43

not that long ago on eco-terrorism

43:46

and the emergence of

43:48

the up above grounders and below grounders

43:51

, as was put forth on the Deep

43:53

Green Resistance website . It's an

43:55

eco-terrorist program that has been

43:57

recruiting young

43:59

radicalized students from

44:01

the Wokist University structures and

44:04

coordinating assaults

44:06

on infrastructure , rail lines

44:08

, power stations , on

44:10

the list of their trophy list that

44:12

they host on their website of hundreds

44:15

of different points of infrastructure

44:17

that have been targeted for destruction . I didn't

44:20

see any fires burning down , but looking

44:22

at the anomalous way that

44:24

fires were springing up this year , especially

44:26

where I began to pay closer attention

44:28

, as did many people in Canada especially

44:30

, there were

44:33

all sorts of anomalies , so I was already

44:35

thinking in terms of arson . Same

44:38

thing for Greece . In some cases there's even drone

44:40

footage of human beings

44:42

going around with their motorcycles , throwing

44:44

Molotov cocktails into the forest

44:46

and just driving . None

44:49

of this is discussed . All of this is being sold to

44:51

us as manmade climate change and a reason

44:53

why we need to shut down carbon production in industry

44:55

. But it all

44:57

smelled of coordinated arson . So

45:00

that's where my mind originally went and

45:02

again , I don't have any smoking

45:04

guns per se , but increasingly evidence

45:08

and information has popped up that has

45:10

captured my eye in the past couple of weeks

45:13

over directed energy weapons , which I wasn't even

45:15

thinking about , but I got to say there's

45:17

a lot of information out there demonstrating that

45:19

Northrop Grunman , lockheed

45:21

Martin , other private

45:23

contractors like the

45:26

UK's Ministry of Defense has

45:28

hired out different contractors over

45:31

decades to build up directed

45:33

energy beams that can either

45:35

be mounted on planes or on satellites

45:38

, and you

45:40

see some of the footage that

45:42

people have taken from various

45:44

parts of the world that's been going viral

45:46

online , and I'm quite persuaded that this has to be really

45:48

looked into much more seriously . The US Air

45:51

Force has a directed

45:53

energy beam operation that has

45:55

been in place , at least openly , since 2016

45:58

, which is

46:00

a very influential thing . When

46:03

you look at the destruction of selected

46:05

houses in neighborhoods in

46:08

Lahaina in Maui

46:10

and you look at the

46:12

way that the fires behaved by destroying

46:15

the houses completely

46:17

, you can't even recognize that there was a house there . It's just these

46:20

big black squares on the ground , flattened

46:22

, separated by trees that

46:24

are somehow still standing , and

46:26

whole neighborhoods have gone down like this , with neighborhoods

46:29

separated by whole tree systems

46:32

, with other neighborhoods close by that

46:34

also got hammered by

46:36

fire , and yet in many cases

46:39

you have these anomalies where the trees between

46:41

the two neighborhoods were not hit . So

46:44

there's weird stuff like that , right

46:46

, that does cause the mind to

46:48

ponder what the hell is going on . And

46:52

then you have things like the governor green

46:55

of Hawaii coming out

46:57

making strange announcements

46:59

that

47:01

the land is now open for being reclaimed

47:04

. He has an intention to take the land

47:06

into state control . This is some of

47:08

the most valuable real estate . People like Oprah

47:10

Winfrey somehow bought

47:12

800 acres of this high

47:14

quality land early on and

47:17

made creepy statements like we are going to rebuild in

47:19

ways you haven't even imagined , knowing , of course

47:21

, that the idea of creating

47:26

the precedence of 15 minute cities that could then

47:28

be rebuilt in a very organized way from scratch

47:30

around the Agenda 2030

47:33

program , which itself calls for and

47:36

this has been normalized in the international

47:38

legal structures around the United Nations in the

47:40

recent years the idea that properties

47:42

, land can be reclaimed by the state

47:44

if there is a crisis , whether chemical spillage

47:47

of a train , unless a farm-penced

47:50

region of Ohio

47:52

, or

47:55

the cases in the Yukon or Northwest Territories

47:57

today , or British Columbia , where there have

47:59

been strange , anomalous fires

48:01

going off in ways that we haven't seen in

48:03

previous years as precedent which

48:05

, under the new legal structures some can say could

48:08

be reclaimed by the state , and people who had former property

48:10

rights there no longer have those rights

48:12

. They have to be moved to more safe locations

48:15

. So that's something which , in

48:17

my mind , mixed with the other

48:19

form of warfare on the people of America and the

48:21

form of pathogens , reminded

48:25

me again of the Project for New American

48:27

Century . I really think that this can't be re-emphasized

48:29

enough . People should read before

48:31

9-11 . You had Richard Perl

48:34

, paul Wolfewitz , victoria

48:37

Newland's husband , robert Kagan . They

48:41

drafted something called the Project for New

48:43

American Century , which was a think tank where

48:45

the incoming Neocon administration said

48:47

about the creation of a unipolar

48:50

system of controls under a

48:52

one-world government where

48:54

sovereign nation-states won't exist . Russia

48:56

, china , iran were seen as the only

48:58

real threats to this new world order architecture

49:01

. These were all creatures who were part

49:03

of the Zabignu-Brezinsky

49:05

trilateral commission operation of the 1970s

49:07

that took control of the US foreign policy and

49:10

in it they literally said in September

49:13

2000 . The rebuilding

49:15

American defenses . A

49:18

white paper can be read online

49:20

where they said combat in the 21st century

49:23

will likely take place in new dimensions

49:25

, in space , cyberspace

49:27

and perhaps the world of microbes

49:30

, advanced forms of biological

49:32

warfare that can target specific genotypes

49:34

may transform biological warfare

49:36

from the realm of terror to a politically useful

49:39

tool . So we're

49:41

talking about space warfare , cyberspace

49:43

warfare , communications

49:45

, internet warfare , I think the entire social media

49:47

platform which came out of the military industrial

49:49

complex in DARPA , that's

49:52

Facebook for you , that's Twitter , all

49:54

of this Life

49:57

log , life log , all of

49:59

this . All of this it came out of

50:01

anthropologists and social psychiatrists working

50:04

for the US military industrial complex in the CIA

50:06

in the 1970s , looking at mapping

50:08

out human networks in Africa

50:10

and other places and seeing how can you use a

50:13

networking system where we profile ourself

50:15

and then you can nudge and figure out how

50:17

to psychologically profile and then manipulate

50:19

whole networks of people who have like minds

50:22

within the social media universe in that space

50:24

. So you have that . It's also useful for

50:27

overthrowing governments you don't like . That's how the Iran

50:29

Green Revolution was organized . Or the

50:31

riots in 2009 in

50:33

China that killed 2000 people

50:36

.

50:37

Or to stop . To

50:39

stop revolutions from occurring , you just shut

50:41

down the social media platforms

50:44

and then they can't do it . So it goes both ways

50:46

. But yeah , life log I learned this

50:48

from the Q-Post that life log was a DARPA project

50:50

very similar to Facebook . They shut it down

50:52

the day before Facebook was founded

50:54

or launched , that's interesting

50:57

.

50:57

Eh , that's so interesting , yeah

50:59

, the whole thing . And then they create some synthetic cardboard

51:02

cut out like a Mark Zuckerberg to be

51:04

the genius that we

51:06

see on the surface and it's like no

51:08

, in no case . Whether

51:11

it's Zuckerberg or Bezos

51:14

or Musk , in

51:17

my view none of the Bill Gates

51:19

, none of these are authentically emerging

51:21

geniuses from garages or something

51:23

. None of them . They're all cardboard cutouts with

51:25

family connections tied to the upper echelons

51:27

of the military industrial complex that

51:31

serve a use to hide

51:33

the fact that it's the same agencies that brought

51:35

us Hitler IBM , which

51:37

was organizing all of the death camps right

51:39

, that's what was overseeing

51:41

the creation of this desktop computing system

51:44

to bring their technology into our houses

51:46

. And they had to do a little cardboard cut

51:48

out of the son that used

51:50

the sons of one of the directors at

51:52

IBM , bill Gates , as a cover

51:54

story to rebrand themselves

51:57

because people won't trust IBM , you

51:59

know like they still had a very nasty

52:01

, smelly reputation of working with Nazis even

52:03

in the 60s and 70s . So they had to rebrand and

52:05

do something a little bit different . Same thing for Musk

52:08

with his technocracy

52:10

party grandfather . You know who managed

52:13

the technocracy party of Canada , all

52:16

of this stuff . So the

52:19

thing is , we have to look

52:21

at the fact that these

52:23

agencies , like I said , richard

52:25

Perle Kagan , all of these characters who have

52:27

merged with , like we

52:29

once had , authentic Republicans and authentic Democrats

52:32

, like Lincoln and

52:34

John F Kennedy , you know , who were very much cut

52:36

from the same cloth this is what Donald

52:38

Trump was and is bringing

52:42

back into play is the authentic

52:44

American patriots from both aisles

52:46

who recognize that their parties are captured . Bobby

52:49

Kennedy , I think to a certain degree , is playing a positive

52:51

role in that too , and they could have a better convergence

52:53

. But you have a convergence of the

52:55

evil guys too , right ? The Clintonite

52:57

, obama , soros , democrats

53:00

and the right-wing

53:02

neocon conservatives are also all converged

53:04

now in the same view that we have to go to war with Russia , go

53:06

to war with China , declare war on the Europe and

53:08

weaponize it .

53:09

That's so important , matt , that you mentioned

53:11

that . It's something that you can't gloss over that

53:14

the worst of both parties both

53:16

agree to go to war with Russia and China

53:19

. That's what they want next . That's

53:21

what they're . This is , all these

53:23

psychological operations that

53:25

we think are our daily news or

53:28

we think are hot takes from our favorite

53:30

commentators , are all

53:32

to get us geared up for the next world war

53:34

. And we've seen this how many times

53:36

before , with world wars controlled

53:38

by families that profit off of it

53:40

and then divide up the spoils . So

53:42

I really think that's the big picture thing

53:45

that we all have to keep in mind , because

53:47

the beginning of this show was about Russian

53:49

China forming a

53:52

competitor to the Anglo-American

53:54

control center

53:56

of everything , and

53:58

so , of course , they're gonna be demonized and

54:00

made out to be the enemy , and that we need to go to war

54:02

with them . Right ? I mean , we've got three minutes left

54:04

. Can you give me your thoughts on that ?

54:07

Yeah , no , absolutely no , that's really

54:09

it . And Jake Sullivan

54:11

gave an interview in 2019

54:13

, this Rhodes Scholar freak

54:16

Brookings Institute operative who's

54:18

been handling Obama and Biden , and

54:20

he's there again as special advisor . Anyway

54:22

, this guy in this interview basically

54:25

said it's a win-win . We have to

54:27

figure out a way to make China

54:30

an

54:32

enemy image that would rally the people of America

54:34

the way Pearl Harbor did rally them back in 1941

54:37

. And he goes on at length talking about

54:39

how the Cold War had a proper enemy

54:42

image around which we could unify

54:44

the masses of Americans . And today

54:46

it's not tightened enough that the enemy image

54:48

because , honestly , you can organize people

54:51

around hope or fear Olegarks

54:53

will always organize us and

54:55

get us to work together in fear of

54:58

some other constructed

55:00

enemy image . A real leader like

55:02

a Martin Luther King or a John F Kennedy will challenge

55:04

us to hope with reason , not

55:06

the Obama hope . I'm talking about reasonable

55:08

, viable hope , because it's hope that we all

55:10

have to participate in making happen . We

55:12

have to take responsibility . As JFK

55:15

said , you know , ask not what your country can do for you , but

55:17

what you can do for your country . So

55:20

that is a real type of expectation

55:23

of citizens acting like citizens , taking

55:25

responsibility onto themselves

55:27

for their future and thus earning their rights .

55:30

Rights are not just whatever I want to do at

55:32

this , given Are we in a

55:34

generational crisis here where millennials

55:37

don't feel hope , they don't think

55:39

they're going to earn more than their parents earned

55:41

. They can't afford the things that their

55:43

parents could afford as far as getting

55:45

their own home , owning property . Millennials

55:50

, younger than millennials , the generations

55:52

under them , less and less hope , more

55:55

and more . Live for the moment . Yolo

55:57

, you only live once . Gamble

56:01

all the little

56:03

that you have for short-term

56:05

gratification . Can

56:08

you comment on that demographic

56:10

crisis that we're in right now where

56:13

there's just not enough economic hope

56:15

for people to construct

56:18

an image of the future that they

56:20

like and want ?

56:23

Yes , I think we have one last chance to

56:26

basically turn things around , because the next generation

56:28

of millennials and younger don't

56:32

have a lot of access and reference points , especially young

56:34

people born after 9-11 that don't even have

56:36

a memory of a pre-9-11 world as a reference

56:38

point it's . They live in a very

56:40

detached world that has reality and

56:43

fiction completely blurry , with a lot

56:45

of very bad influences and not a lot of there's

56:47

very few parental structures

56:50

that have been able to give them the type

56:52

of training that they need to have to become the

56:54

citizens . So that worries me a lot , which

56:57

is why , again , this window

56:59

of opportunity to bring

57:01

back the constitutional banking structures , work

57:03

with Russia , china , india , other countries around

57:05

the bricks that are going to have it will

57:08

happen . There will be an emergency

57:10

conference for a new economic architecture

57:12

probably two , actually , because you have

57:14

the death cult Davos clan that is gonna

57:16

they're already planning their own and it's gonna be based

57:18

upon everything we know

57:20

about a depopulation agenda

57:23

digital currencies , 15 minutes , slave cities

57:25

, all that stuff eating bugs . And then you

57:27

have the abundance creation

57:29

dynamic , which is winning more and more people

57:32

of the world to their movement , which is gonna have

57:34

their own conference . They're already setting the groundwork

57:36

for it . We are invited to join and participate

57:38

as active participants and members .

57:40

Beautiful thing . It's not . They don't

57:42

have to paint someone as the enemy who gets excluded

57:45

. They're inviting

57:47

people to cooperate . So it's really control

57:51

versus cooperation as an archetype

57:53

, but that's the concept of my new

57:55

show on Badlands , so it's a nice segue . On

57:58

Thursdays no longer doing economic

58:00

update with Dr Kirk Elliott I'm hosting

58:02

a show with rotating financial guests to

58:04

talk about those two very different visions

58:06

for our financial future . So check

58:08

that out on Thursdays at

58:11

1130 , 1130

58:14

am Eastern time . So , matt

58:16

, thank you for joining today . We're

58:18

gonna do another episode next week . Thank

58:21

you for bringing your insights into what's happening now , because

58:23

what's happening in Maui right now , we

58:25

can learn about it from the past and we can look forward

58:28

and plan for it . So , thank you

58:30

, matt , and we'll see you next time . Everybody , take

58:32

care .

Rate

From The Podcast

The Sean Morgan Report

My small Youtube channel started on March 17th 2020 quickly grew to 60 thousand subscribers with millions of views from people who were searching for truth, especially about the much maligned "Q intel drops". I mirrored my content via podcast and started an email newsletter called "The Sean Morgan Report". I was able to interview Google Whistleblower Zach Vorhies, Vaccine Truther Dr. Christiane Northrup, Political analyst Praying Medic and other notable intellectuals who were questioning the official narrative. I was also interviewed by people in the Alternative News world such as Dustin Nemos, Charlie Ward, and others. The information and analysis I was providing was too dangerous to the "Big Tech" monopolies that coordinate with the deep state. At least it must have been...because at the height of the 2020 election I was deplatformed from Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Spotify, Patreon, Teespring, and Discord.Despite the setback from the deplatformings that have taken away my fundraising, clothing store, private chat group, and social channels, my audience of loyal truthseekers have stepped up and supported my work through 2020 and 2021. I have a weekly show on AmericanMediaPeriscope.net and my new channels on Telegram and Gab.com continue to grow. If you're looking for objective research, alternative perspectives, and rigorous analysis of breaking news, check out my videos, podcasts, and newsletters. No matter what the megalithic institutions try to do to stop the flow of information, I will continue to expose corruption and stand up for human rights. This is the great awakening and nothing can stop humanity from uniting against tyranny.  Get connected on Gab, Telegram, Email, and Video at https://SeanMorganReport.com

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