Episode Transcript
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Как
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сейчас «Смерть»
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Суверенитет «Незнанечный дом» Санкт-Петербурга
0:32
Центральный поезд Ооооооооооооооо
1:19
Санкт-Петербург
1:42
Центральный поезд
1:46
«Смерть»
1:59
The computer knows you better than you. It
2:02
really does. Well,
2:06
yeah, yeah. I
2:09
what a way to start. Welcome to another union of the unwanted.
2:12
We're hanging. We're banging. We're in it.
2:14
We got a nice group of people
2:16
on here to talk about a wide variety
2:19
of subjects. All right. Here we go. Is
2:22
anybody
2:23
here new? Is there any
2:25
new people to the show that's never done it?
2:28
Number six down there he's known number six. I
2:31
raised my hand, but you know. Yeah. My name is
2:33
number six. I'm from TNP,
2:35
which stands for the new prisoners. You can find us
2:38
on rumble Odyssey. And
2:40
also Twitter streaming live. Now
2:43
what we do is very similar. Actually
2:46
at TMP live, where we bring a panel of folks
2:48
on and talk about some crazy things. And I'm
2:50
really excited to be included in this Madhouse
2:53
group of guests. I'm familiar with
2:55
Steve with. We've worked before. I'm
2:57
definitely familiar with Charlie. You've done some stuff with my
3:00
friend, Chris Graves. And so have you Sam Scott. We
3:04
should get familiar with one another and so
3:06
shall we Courtney, but thank you for having me. That
3:09
was like the conspiracy version of Ron.
3:13
I see Charlie and Scott and
3:15
Steve to
3:17
Courtney and Monica and Susie
3:19
Olson to. Oh, oh, Mike, you know, you're hearing that Alex
3:21
Jones reading off names. Yeah. I
3:24
can't play the flip through. Just
3:26
checking.
3:27
Welcome everybody. Thank you. Number six
3:29
for joining us. That's great. We're happy you're here.
3:33
Happy to be here, brother. All
3:36
right. So guys, world, what
3:38
are we talking about? Ricky's here. Ricky's
3:41
here. Look at that shirt. That
3:43
guy. That guy's winning something. I don't
3:45
even know what he's winning, but he won.
3:48
By the way, Monica got awarded a beer
3:51
sponsorship and a shoe contract. Yeah. Yeah.
3:55
The best background ever. I like everyone
3:57
has a thousand books. Mom's like Monica's like I'm going to.
3:59
to be the only one. No book. I'm just starting
4:02
my question. No, I just this is my first podcast
4:04
from my new house. I love
4:07
I love. I'll
4:09
shut up now. Monica's like, I only
4:12
need one book and it's the good book. Thank you
4:14
very much. A book on here. I don't
4:16
know where, why that was the only one. The
4:18
weapons of mass migration. I think
4:20
Courtney would like this.
4:21
Yeah, I just did you see your face. She's like, oh, oh,
4:24
that looks good. It's
4:27
about to get crazy in this motherfucker tonight,
4:29
isn't it? Look who's here. Everybody. I love.
4:31
Oh, my God. What's up, pasta? What's
4:34
going on? Except for Tripoli. I
4:36
don't love Tripoli. No way. You know, he
4:38
made that chubby comment about me two years
4:40
ago. Look great, bro. I did motivate
4:43
you and my work here is done.
4:45
Every show needs a name is pasta
4:48
and you're afraid of fat jokes. Yeah,
4:50
no, I was there for that. It was motivational.
4:53
Thank you, Sam. You did the work
4:55
on that. No problem.
4:57
You know, the next day I was at the
4:59
gym.
5:00
I'm like, what's going on, bro? You look like you call
5:03
me Tubby. I ain't having this. You
5:05
look great, buddy. You look great. You rather and
5:07
I love you, bro. I really do. Amazing
5:09
work, Tripoli.
5:10
Thank you, buddy. I love everybody here. Ricky,
5:12
do you have a topic you want to start off with?
5:15
Are we live? Yeah. Oh, yeah. We are live,
5:17
buddy. You showed up late, dog. Sorry.
5:22
I assumed we were. But no,
5:24
I don't really have a topic per se. I
5:27
know we've talked about this in the past, but
5:30
I don't know if anybody's opinion on Robert
5:32
Kennedy, Jr. has changed
5:35
or what they think of like, you
5:37
know, just his popularity. You
5:40
know, some of his interviews he's done and so
5:43
on and so forth. I think some of us are a little divided
5:46
by, you know, by him, because
5:49
I know the I've seen some tweets from some people
5:51
on the on the on the call that
5:54
differ from other people on the call. But
5:57
as you guys know, I think we talked about this
5:59
last time. I'm a fan of what he's doing.
6:01
He was just on the Lex Freeman show and
6:04
I like the fact that
6:06
they were asking him about,
6:08
about the left and they're asking him about
6:10
Trump and these
6:13
things and
6:14
he said that when he was on the Jordan Peterson
6:16
show that he felt like it was Jordan's
6:19
goal to just get him to bash
6:22
the left or somebody else. And he's like,
6:24
I don't wanna do that. And I kinda
6:26
like that approach. I like the idea
6:29
that he's more about trying to bring people
6:31
together and try to focus on the
6:33
similarities we have instead of falling
6:36
into this left right nonsense,
6:38
which I think most of us on this call
6:40
would agree is nonsense and really is just
6:43
used to divide us.
6:44
So the fact that
6:46
he's kind of deflecting
6:48
those questions and not
6:51
really entertaining them at all, I think is definitely a good
6:53
thing. He's got a great body, doesn't he?
6:55
Does he? That dude is on
6:57
TRT, if anything. That guy
7:00
is Jack. He's Jack Kennedy.
7:03
Coming from that. I don't give a dick. Those
7:05
nipples are on point
7:08
for sure. You're pushing 70. He's
7:10
got hard nipples. If you're pushing 70
7:12
and you don't have a Bill Gates body,
7:15
you're on something, you're taking something.
7:18
And there's nothing wrong with
7:20
taking vitamins or supplements or what. I
7:22
don't care if he's going
7:24
to the jungle himself to strangle
7:27
a tiger to extract its semen so
7:29
he can shoot it into himself. That
7:32
has little to
7:33
do with whether or not you're
7:35
going to be a champion for the state
7:37
of Israel. Today we found out that tigers are not
7:40
a rocket team.
7:41
Full range pushups though. Yeah,
7:44
respect Courtney, respect Courtney. My
7:48
biggest thing is that once
7:50
again, everybody seems to
7:52
be
7:53
looking at somebody with
7:56
the hopes that they're pure light.
8:00
I'm at this point in my life, my
8:03
50th lap of the sun around the world,
8:05
because we all know the sun goes around the
8:07
planet. I've
8:10
been let down enough that I'm
8:13
over looking for any kind of
8:15
savior. I really don't believe
8:17
anyone's come to save us, and
8:20
the best we could hope for is not complete
8:22
garbage. But do
8:24
you have any faith
8:26
in any of these people at that level
8:29
being able to get anything
8:31
done? I think that the problem
8:33
is that we're defining what winning is differently
8:36
over here. You know what I'm saying? If you're hoping
8:38
that somebody's coming in with a cape and coming
8:41
to save democracy and save the day, then
8:43
you're not being realistic.
8:45
What's going to happen with RFK,
8:47
and it's kind of interesting with this particular
8:49
group, because I've done now events with this
8:51
group. I've been on the show before. I
8:54
tell people all the time how Union
8:56
of the Unwanted and all the people on that show provide
8:59
a platform and a space for me as
9:01
an old school liberal,
9:02
leftist, anti-imperialist, leftist come
9:05
and talk. I think that's great, but
9:07
what he is going to do and what he's been
9:09
able to do right from the get-go is elevate
9:11
the political discourse in a comatose
9:14
nation that is just a sleep. That's
9:17
priceless. You can't replace that. I hate
9:19
the fact that people only play
9:21
the normies or the majority of the people all only
9:24
pay attention to politics once every four years,
9:26
but that's the field we're dealing on. I'm
9:29
going to go meet them on the field when they're doing that. Obviously,
9:31
I think a lot of this question, me being the
9:33
one here that's now fundraising
9:35
to go cover him on the campaign trail, and
9:37
when he's not around, I'll go dip into other campaigns
9:39
if I can go see Tim Scott or
9:41
Vivek Ramashwami or obviously Cornel
9:43
West, who's been nice enough to give me an interview and
9:45
face the fire. I'm going to do so,
9:47
but like I said from the get-go, what he is bringing
9:49
to the table as far as the conversation.
9:54
It's something special when you can talk to
9:56
Republicans or conservatives or people of
9:59
populist right.
9:59
who were so concerned what happened to
10:02
us over these past couple years and Thank
10:04
you very much. Everybody at the table over here because
10:06
when people talk about oh man the convo
10:08
couch Those guys were covering the
10:10
cover right out of the gate And I was like yeah because I had good friends
10:13
from you know No, you wanted who've been watching
10:15
these people for so long So thank you so
10:17
much But when you can go talk to a populist
10:19
right
10:20
who's who's gonna be a trump and say well who
10:22
is really better on On the covet
10:24
situation all in all wasn't in our guy
10:26
RFK over here I mean he's one of
10:28
the only people right now that you can
10:30
go and you can talk to somebody who's Just
10:33
head over heroes supported of Donald
10:35
Trump and go wait a second look at this option
10:37
over here So it makes for better conversation
10:40
it makes for different conversations and makes for conversations
10:42
that would never be had Unless he was running
10:44
so that's why I'm supportive of his campaign.
10:47
I
10:48
Totally agree with that. I think it's less
10:50
about what what he's gonna do if he gets in I
10:52
honestly don't even know that he will get a nod I
10:55
know Roger Stone was talking about possibly
10:57
there being a Trump Kennedy ticket I
11:00
know can that our case said that that
11:03
would be blasting me to his family But honestly
11:05
it would be very strategic for both of them both
11:07
of them would it Like benefit
11:09
greatly from it because there's people
11:12
on both sides who are very Unhappy
11:14
with each of them and each of their platforms
11:16
and for what they've stand stood for and what they've been
11:18
saying And it would kind of
11:20
fill in the gaps, so I'm not gonna
11:22
rule it out but that aside I really agree
11:25
with what pasta is saying I think it's more important
11:27
the conversations that he's raising And
11:30
I think that you know when you look back in 2016 like
11:32
when Trump was running a lot of overlap
11:35
in what? Rfk is saying now
11:37
and the types of conversations that he's raising that
11:40
made people who would have never voted for Trump
11:43
Take a look at Trump So I I
11:45
think that that those conversations
11:48
are really important. I'm not you know I kind
11:50
of Agree with Sam. You know I've
11:52
kind of lost my Starry-eyed
11:55
like the Savior is gonna come
11:57
and you know save the day and
11:59
we're gonna that this one man
12:01
is gonna somehow like reform the whole country
12:03
and bring it back. I don't really see it that way.
12:06
But I think that the conversations that
12:08
are being raised and so many people
12:11
who
12:12
would look at ROK, who are people who wouldn't
12:14
necessarily look at the types of topics
12:16
he's bringing to the forefront, I
12:18
think that's really powerful.
12:20
Because the people who are willing to
12:22
listen to him, a lot of them are really,
12:25
they may be really shocked at first to hear
12:27
some of these things, but it's
12:29
bringing it to the forefront in a way that, from
12:32
somebody who
12:33
they might listen to. And I think that
12:35
has great power. I had an interesting
12:38
interaction with somebody that's
12:40
close to me that's a hardcore Democrat.
12:43
And I asked what their opinion was on RFK
12:46
Jr.
12:47
They described him as
12:49
reprehensible. So
12:51
I thought- Did they explain that? Like what
12:53
is so reprehensible? Vaccines. Oh, okay.
12:56
Vaccines. So it's like-
12:57
They're all brainwashed. Hi guys, I haven't
13:00
been on here in a long time, but sorry about
13:02
that. But thanks, it's nice to
13:04
be with all of you. Isn't
13:06
that so sad? Because I did the same thing. I
13:08
asked a friend of
13:10
mine that was always trying to
13:12
debate with me. It's still
13:15
a hardcore Democrat. I'm like, well, if you're so hung up
13:17
on a Democrat, why won't you at least
13:21
entertain RFK Jr. And
13:23
they're like, no, you know, Biden's barely
13:26
left it enough for me. So it's certainly
13:28
not RFK Jr. And it's just like, it's so ridiculous.
13:31
But beyond that, I mean, after what we
13:33
saw the Democrat party do with cheating
13:37
and even against their own Bernie
13:40
Sanders, to piggyback
13:43
on Courtney Turner's pessimism,
13:46
I'm like, I'm sorry, but like,
13:48
I love that he is a
13:52
Democrat that's actually not talking
13:54
along party lines, but it becomes
13:57
one of those things like, oh, am I excited
13:59
about... seeing this Democrat that
14:01
is not completely like
14:05
mind effed like all these other Democrats
14:07
have gone way over to the communist
14:10
transgender. I mean, it's just insane.
14:12
It's totally insane at this point. So it's
14:14
refreshing to see that in a Democrat candidate,
14:17
but like, is it kind of like an echo chamber?
14:19
Because when you talk to an average
14:21
Democrat, they just, of course, like because
14:24
of their hypnosis are like, oh, well,
14:26
since the mainstream media is telling you, RFK
14:29
Jr. is not really a Democrat and he's
14:31
more of a right winger than, then I'm going
14:33
to find him, as you said, reprehensible
14:35
too. You know, so
14:37
that's, it is an echo chamber. I
14:39
would completely agree with that. I
14:42
just don't know if the conversation's worth it because at
14:44
the end of the day, how is he going to make it through? Like
14:46
with what they did to Bernie Sanders, even
14:48
now Biden, he has like, there's
14:50
no plan. There's no plan to go out and
14:53
he's there to control a demographic.
14:55
He's there to weaponize a populist platform
14:59
and to push military industrial complex bullshit, just
15:01
like any other candidate that's ever served to us.
15:04
I have zero faith.
15:06
The great thing about this question
15:08
though, is that everybody gets to choose
15:10
their own level of participation. You
15:12
can have a surface level conversation
15:14
where we all pretend like we live in
15:16
a free country where
15:19
one person gets one vote and there's
15:21
an open, transparent, democratic
15:24
process by which to count them, ensuring
15:27
a, you know, legally
15:29
and legitimately elected
15:32
candidate. We can do that. We could
15:34
do the, you know, opt in
15:36
at the level of participation where we've
15:38
all seen the DNC fraud
15:40
lawsuit and we all heard, or
15:42
we read the transcripts and saw
15:45
Bruce Spiva, the DNC attorney
15:47
say, technically there's no such thing as a Democrat.
15:50
The, this is a private corporation. We
15:53
don't have to operate by our own bylaws.
15:55
We can acknowledge that, that
15:58
at least up to this point,
15:59
RFK Jr. has said he won't sign
16:02
a loyalty pledge, which means that he
16:04
is ineligible for participation
16:07
within the DNC framework, which
16:09
effectively makes him a third-party
16:12
candidate
16:13
in the eyes of support media
16:15
coverage, ballot access, even at
16:17
that level. And I may be incorrect about the ballot
16:19
access thing. I'm not sure. But
16:22
reality is going to creep in at some
16:24
point. And the way that the Democrats
16:26
have rigged their own party and rigged
16:29
their own system is how
16:32
this thing is conducted. So
16:34
either RFK Jr. gets
16:36
on board and openly shows
16:39
everybody that he is willing to be, you
16:41
know, to become the machine to reform
16:43
the machine. Or
16:45
he
16:46
tries to work outside of it and
16:48
we still pretend like he has a shot because
16:50
it's a legal, fair, free election system
16:53
and continue to have the conversation about
16:55
it.
16:57
You know, or you can just look at what historically
17:00
the party has done to anyone
17:02
that they didn't want there. And then you can
17:04
look at the larger picture with the continuity of government.
17:07
If RFK Jr. fritz into that,
17:10
if there's a framework and
17:12
RFK Jr. is going to effectively move
17:15
the ball in terms of UN
17:17
agenda 2030, 2050, so on and so forth, I
17:21
don't see why he wouldn't wind up
17:23
the next president.
17:26
Becoming the machine to reform the machine sounds like a good sign.
17:29
But it's not. My point is that it's not going
17:31
to be. It's not going to be. Ultimately,
17:33
we we're we're not going to make that decision.
17:36
That decision is going to be made and then
17:38
sold to us
17:39
to your point, Steve, from beginning to
17:41
end. Rosa Quarry,
17:44
who was really so on the forefront
17:46
of the climate change, the agenda 21 stuff, she said she was really
17:48
building momentum. And
17:51
I I remember very distinctly like
17:53
congressmen and senators and stuff who never
17:56
took chances coming out against it like
17:58
their constituents were just. I'm
18:00
waking up to the problems with it, property
18:02
rights, all of that. And she
18:05
said that as soon as Trump got elected,
18:07
people stopped showing up. She was, there was
18:09
a snowball effect coming where they were, they
18:11
would, she was had the anti-delphi effect.
18:13
They were going to these city council meetings. They were
18:15
getting hurt and they were really slowing
18:18
down agenda 21. And I feel like that
18:20
the climate thing is the weapon of control,
18:23
the final ultimate, like with tech
18:25
going forward. And I don't think RFK
18:28
is strong on that on the contrary.
18:30
And so I think, you know, our eyes are all
18:32
in the backs thing, but that's just
18:34
could be his way of building
18:37
trust.
18:38
I would say, I mean,
18:41
wouldn't allow something like ESG to take hold?
18:43
Sorry. Oh, I was going to say, not
18:45
only would I say that he's not strong enough, like
18:47
he's all for the climate stuff,
18:50
the whole climate narrative, he's been spewing
18:52
that. So yeah. I mean, he's
18:55
definitely not. It's interesting. I
18:57
don't know who's saying that he's a, you know,
18:59
not conservative. I think a bunch
19:01
of you are saying that he's being
19:04
portrayed by mainstream media as
19:06
like the, you know, I think you said it, Christie,
19:08
right? That he's being portrayed as like this conservative
19:10
alt, right? But I'm in a hotel right
19:12
now. So we've actually been watching some mainstream
19:15
television, which I never do. But I've watched
19:18
both sides. I've watched like Fox. I've watched
19:20
MSNBC and it's pretty
19:22
nauseating on all sides.
19:24
That's how you lose a security deposit. I'm
19:26
just saying. Yeah, right. Exactly.
19:30
But it was really interesting because on
19:33
MSNBC, that was their whole,
19:35
whole talking point was that he's this
19:37
crazy conspiracy theory. This
19:39
is so dangerous. We can't
19:41
have this. And they're going back and forth and
19:44
they're talking very like,
19:45
you know, calmly is that there are authorities
19:48
on the science. And
19:50
he's just nobody in this country
19:53
would ever, ever believe
19:55
these narratives. He, I can't believe we
19:57
have a presidential candidate saying these
19:59
things.
19:59
And that's basically the,
20:02
you know, I find the whole thing absolutely
20:05
insane about how they've captured
20:08
this internet, this intellectual
20:11
class of the left. It's
20:13
unbelievable. You know, I've been
20:15
doing my podcast in full half for about
20:18
seven years. And you know, I just
20:21
discovered this. I mean, like a long time ago,
20:23
I realized there's a difference between intelligence
20:25
and smart intelligence. And
20:27
intelligent people have no clue how
20:29
the world works. And they're, they're afraid
20:32
of their own shadow.
20:32
And they just like, it really
20:35
is insane. The amount
20:37
of all you have to do is label something
20:39
and they just run in fear. Like
20:42
he's a conspiracy theorist. How aren't
20:45
you a conspiracy theorist? Like what's
20:47
it going to take for you to go, Oh,
20:50
the lying liars have been lying. Maybe
20:52
I should buy into everything. The labeling
20:54
theory works on all of them, Sam. It works
20:56
on all of them.
20:57
Isn't it crazy though? That like they
20:59
don't even have like a new
21:02
playbook. It's always literally
21:04
the same labels. You're either racist,
21:07
a conspiracy theorist, or it was
21:09
Russia's fault. I mean, like, or you're
21:11
a Ross Perot or you're Ross
21:13
Perot like, we're all just waiting for like
21:15
the cocaine thing in the white house, which
21:18
obviously the, you know, how
21:20
comes your major thing? Like the most obvious
21:22
answer is tearing you out in the face and you've
21:24
already played a game of clues saying it
21:26
was in library. It was over here. It was like, it literally changed
21:28
like five times where the cocaine was from.
21:31
And so it's like, it was actually cocaine there
21:33
at the white house. Yeah.
21:37
That about like, that's going to be the next
21:39
thing. Cause it's always one of those things. It's just
21:41
like, Oh my God, how can they fall for the same trick every
21:43
fricking time? Like you said, Sam.
21:45
And it just gets to the point where it's like they
21:48
have, I like, dude, I, I'm an old man. I'm an
21:50
old school liberal. I know some people think I'm
21:52
conservative. I consider myself an old school
21:54
liberal and like live in let live. But
21:57
you know, it's like these progressive's now who
21:59
like.
21:59
cannot come to grips with like
22:02
the notion that the Koch brothers
22:04
and the Bushes and all these people
22:06
from the quote unquote right,
22:08
which is I think is like the super right,
22:11
the secret right captured and
22:13
brought in the Clintons
22:15
to destroy the left. And they just can't
22:17
come to grips with it. They all have this old
22:20
notion of like the
22:23
Democrats being for the little people
22:25
and the Republicans being for the
22:27
elites and the corporations. And they
22:29
just can't
22:29
come to grips with like the sledgehammer
22:32
that was Hillary Clinton in the 2015
22:35
election, which really just blew
22:37
open the notion that it's two
22:40
wings of the same decayed
22:42
bird and they just can't come
22:44
to grips with it. And I know
22:47
big day comedians out here that are just, I'm
22:49
getting out of here. These cities are collapsed.
22:52
I'm like, yeah, because of policies that you've
22:54
been pushing, that you've been gaslighting
22:56
people on your Instagram
22:58
into buying. And now you're running.
23:00
Like my old thing is like, let's just build
23:02
a wall around San Francisco and make all
23:04
those motherfuckers have to sit
23:07
there and clean up the mess that they fucking
23:09
created in that world class
23:11
city. Clean it up, figure
23:13
it out. Don't move somewhere else to bring your
23:16
policies with you so you can destroy that area. Sit
23:18
in your shit and figure it out.
23:20
But no,
23:21
they're all going to move everywhere else.
23:23
That's just what they're going to do. And they have no
23:25
ability to go, wow, I got it all
23:29
wrong. Like a friend of mine's really like on
23:31
our side now.
23:32
And he's done a lot of amazing things in Hollywood.
23:37
And he's like, oh, really open to everything
23:39
that we talk about in terms of vaccine. And he's
23:41
talking to the same kind of big name comic. And
23:44
this big name Congress, like you're listening
23:46
to the loons. You're listening to the loons.
23:48
It's like, how are you not listening to
23:50
the loons after all this stuff?
23:53
How are you not listening to the loons
23:55
if the loons have gotten their batting average
23:58
is insanely high right now? How
24:00
are you not listening? How is you being the intelligent
24:03
person and it's weird thing I'll
24:05
stop yelling right here But this weird thing
24:08
about all these punk rockers from the
24:10
70s and the 80s and the 90s
24:13
Who are just who think like
24:16
like being open-minded is listening
24:18
to corporations? Listening to the mainstream
24:21
media and listening to the military
24:23
industrial complex like we've had friends
24:25
of ours who are anti-government anti
24:30
Military industrial complex that just fully
24:32
bought into the vaccinations thing and
24:34
we're like gas lighting all of us going We're
24:37
trying to save lives here. It's like I don't
24:39
I just don't get it. It's insanity to me
24:42
Look what they're doing Roger waters out though Roger
24:45
waters
24:46
the biggest lefty that there
24:48
was probably since the 70s created
24:50
a whole motion picture a whole album
24:53
about Anti-fascism the wall
24:55
and he dares to perform that for the past 30
24:58
years without any incident and then
25:00
all of a sudden
25:02
He starts doing it in Germany
25:04
doing the same show
25:06
Same music and now he's considered
25:08
a fascist But
25:09
it probably has more to do with him being outspoken
25:12
about the Ukraine conflict than anything else
25:14
But
25:15
now I have people my personal life
25:17
that are suggesting Roger Waters
25:20
is in fact the fascist And
25:23
that they want to censor his fascist speech
25:25
even though he's doing an anti-fascist play It's
25:28
like blaming Robert England
25:30
for all the kids he killed in Nightmare
25:32
on Elm Street, you know, he's playing it He's playing a
25:34
character and people just is they're so brainwashed
25:37
at this point I don't even want you want to use the word brainwashed
25:39
because that's an overused term It just
25:41
feels like they ever been tricked
25:43
in some way to pick a side that
25:45
they don't fully agree with But if they don't choose
25:48
that side, then they're gonna lose all their absolute
25:50
absolutely terrified
25:53
of being seen as The
25:56
same kind of fascist Roger Waters
25:58
is we're supposed to believe
25:59
that there are people that are our
26:02
age or older that grew up with the wall
26:04
that have no idea what the Concept
26:07
of the wall is that it somehow brand
26:09
new that Roger Waters woke up one
26:11
morning. It was like fuck it I'm a Nazi.
26:14
I am the all that shit
26:16
for the last 40 years. It was a
26:18
larp. I was fooling you I'm a sleeper
26:21
Nazi for real Z's and
26:23
And here's what I really think none
26:26
of this would have happened by the way if he hadn't
26:28
have been outspoken about Palestine
26:31
Yeah
26:36
Yeah, it's chaos dude Hey, I
26:38
know we're getting into okay, but I kind
26:41
of want to uh
26:42
bring Mel K in because
26:44
It's kind of crazy cuz Mel K just came out
26:46
of my podcast and she was talking about
26:48
something that
26:49
It's insane as soon as I dropped the episode I
26:51
started seeing it happen in real time She
26:55
came on told me that you that the you
26:57
know They're that the powers that be are gonna
26:59
be starting to drop the queer
27:01
theory stuff the pushing of pride
27:03
and all that stuff and the new thing will
27:06
be immigration riots
27:08
and stuff like that and As soon
27:11
as she dropped was soon as we dropped the episode bang
27:13
Starbucks. We don't want the pride stuff bang
27:15
bang I mean one corporation we have to another
27:18
but then I was thinking
27:19
about what she was talking about with this immigration
27:22
stuff and I've been wanting to talk to Mel
27:24
about this but So so now
27:27
I kind of started looking at her. I'm like, oh France
27:29
is going nuts with immigration Is that gonna
27:31
come here? But man Mel I wanted
27:33
to bring this up like what are your thoughts on what
27:35
the Santas and Abbott has been doing? By
27:38
moving these everyone's like they're moving
27:40
these immigrants all over the place. So they're like, oh,
27:42
the Santa's getting back at those Democrats
27:45
I'm like is he or is he moving
27:47
assets right now?
27:49
Yeah, I saw you say that and that's what I think
27:51
I think that what they're doing is terrible Honestly,
27:53
this is not a solution and and
27:55
what I am what I've seen I know
27:58
pasta and I talk a lot about National Day
27:59
for democracy and their color revolution
28:02
playbook that they've used over and over. And
28:04
what happened with me is I had on a
28:06
couple guys that were down at the border. I
28:08
was still in New York City. I just recently moved out.
28:12
And we have 50,000 illegals
28:14
right in the middle of mid. Basically, they're all hanging
28:16
out in Midtown all day long. They
28:18
have nothing to do. The sad part is there's a
28:21
lot of young children, a lot
28:23
of pregnant women, and a lot
28:24
of 24 to 17 to
28:28
24-year-old men wandering around everywhere.
28:31
And somebody that I know that I dealt
28:34
with a long time ago when I was trying to expose de Blasio's
28:36
fake thing for the homeless, Thrive New York
28:38
City, sent me a text saying, this
28:40
is the text, and these are the messages
28:43
that the people that are in Midtown are getting.
28:45
And they're getting
28:46
questions and surveys saying,
28:49
how has it been for you since you got to America?
28:52
Do you feel like you're getting what you were promised
28:55
with the hashtag demand citizenship?
28:58
And after I got that first one, then somebody
29:00
else told me that it was happening. Then
29:02
somebody else told me, and from different places,
29:05
these are...
29:07
So there's a concerted
29:10
effort to use, I believe, the illegal
29:12
immigrants that they're shipping around the country as
29:14
a weapon.
29:15
That a lot of the, I'm not saying that these
29:17
are bad people, though I do know that they sent
29:19
a lot of people. There's 173 nations of people that have come through.
29:24
But there is some kind
29:26
of very manufactured, I'm sure
29:28
if we figured out,
29:30
I did look into it, obviously open society,
29:32
UN, our common agenda type people, but
29:34
also Democrat Socialists
29:37
of America. Some of these, if you look at who
29:39
they're coming from and whatever the NGO
29:41
says, and then you look at who
29:42
funds that NGO. Are you talking about the
29:44
tax? Yeah, yeah. So
29:46
if you look at the groups that are involved there,
29:48
it goes back to all the same people that funded BLM
29:51
and the same people that funded
29:53
the Women's March. So it's
29:55
a globalist playbook
29:58
that is playing out and unfortunately,
29:59
I do believe that like
30:01
pasta is talking about a million times, I talk
30:04
about that it is the same people and it
30:06
is a color revolution here and
30:08
that the LGBTQ thing is failing
30:11
and they need this. But we have to
30:13
be smart because like you're saying, Abbott
30:16
and DeSantis are sending them all over the nation.
30:19
Michael Yahn was on my show. He showed me a map.
30:21
They're going everywhere.
30:22
And they also get
30:25
cell phones at the border. So,
30:27
you know, it's not this is not some
30:29
kind of organic uprising is all I'm
30:31
saying. And we but the people have to
30:33
know about it and maybe reach
30:35
out to I mean, like,
30:37
I don't know what's going to happen, but I do know that
30:39
we all of the people in
30:40
America should be on high
30:43
alert and not necessarily blame these
30:45
people, but
30:46
blame whoever's funding it. Somebody's
30:48
funding it.
30:50
Hey, Mel, if you were going to
30:52
put this plan into place
30:55
over the next I don't know,
30:58
seven years up to agenda 2030,
31:00
right?
31:02
You could pick anybody you wanted to be the president
31:04
of the United States. Why wouldn't
31:06
you be picking Gavin Newsom? Yeah,
31:10
to run this up. He's
31:12
already shown the ability to destroy
31:15
San Francisco as
31:17
the mayor, then as the governor,
31:20
as a part of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors
31:22
destroyed that country. He's
31:25
the best. What did they want to do? Build
31:27
back better. Yep. Who better
31:29
for the job than Gavin Newsom? He
31:31
is an Android ready to rule.
31:34
I agree. Ready to destroy.
31:36
But also did all of you guys happen to see
31:38
that Joe Biden went to meet with King
31:40
Charles and they had a buzzer,
31:43
a timer that they pushed for agenda
31:45
to put seven years to agenda 2030.
31:47
Oh, really? That's the big enemy
31:49
is that they think they're sustainable
31:52
development goals. I call them the controllable development
31:54
goals.
31:55
California leads the way,
31:57
always has catalytic converters and everything.
32:00
They've always been lefty greenies
32:03
for a long, long time. It'd be easy to
32:05
implement. He's got Getty money behind him. And
32:07
God knows what, where that's coming
32:09
from or what it's being used for. He's
32:11
the perfect destroyer. He's a soulless
32:14
psychopath sent to
32:16
gut this country with his ideas
32:18
and sell it in a way that makes it sound good
32:21
to people that aren't really paying attention. He's the perfect
32:23
guy for this, unfortunately. The dark money,
32:25
Charlie. Definitely the money when you bring up
32:27
the money, the dark money behind all this shit
32:30
and the ESG and the way it ties into the
32:32
WEF and the way it's scraping
32:34
Twitter for all of our metadata right
32:36
now and all of our political discourse, discussions,
32:39
personal thoughts and feelings, and DMs,
32:42
by the way,
32:44
all in the pocket of somebody like Elon Musk.
32:47
That's how I feel. Before we move away from the
32:49
immigration thing, I just was thinking there's like
32:51
three different agendas at work at the same
32:54
time, I feel like here. One is that those
32:56
guys take
32:57
very immigration-dense
33:00
cities and create a sort of diaspora,
33:02
means that they go to all these little cities that
33:05
some people, I know, Sam, you and
33:07
I know, a lot of people who move to Tennessee, move
33:09
to Austin, Texas, it's very clear what they're
33:11
doing. And when you have Somalians
33:13
in Minneapolis and stuff, that's
33:16
an engineered culture clash and they
33:18
do it on purpose. They're not going there of their
33:20
own volition. And then if you
33:22
get-
33:22
It's even called clower and piven.
33:25
They've even got a name for it. It's so
33:27
used so often that the guys branded
33:30
it because they probably get royalties.
33:32
They accelerate the class. But another thing I think
33:34
is that they do like this conflict and what they'll
33:36
do is proceed to like the
33:38
third agenda. So the conflicts
33:41
would be the second one. And the third one would be that
33:43
the solution will be a lot
33:46
of compromise domestically for
33:48
this to resolve the culture
33:50
clash national problems. But I've been
33:53
expecting them to move into
33:55
the era of closing down borders,
33:57
shutting down information flow, shutting down.
33:59
transportation flow. Like that's why stuff
34:02
is happening with like the FAA. Airline
34:04
travel is basically flawless for
34:07
US run commercial jets like this, whatever
34:09
it is, 50,000 a day or some crazy number.
34:11
It's just flawless and now they're starting
34:13
to talk about, oh, it needs attention. It's getting
34:15
old, blah, blah, blah. There are problems. They're going
34:18
to institute like electric batteries
34:20
and engines and stuff with those things. You're going to start having
34:22
problems on what's going to end that goes along with them
34:24
wanting like zoom working 15 minute
34:27
cities, digital, 100%. They don't, they don't
34:29
want you flying. They've been
34:33
saying that forever. They don't
34:35
want you flying. So they want you
34:37
in a 15 minute city. Why would they want
34:40
you to get on a plane?
34:41
And CBDC is going to be the ultimate
34:43
solution. That's what they all want us
34:46
on because that's how you control who travels and
34:48
who does it. That's how you control who gets
34:50
food and who doesn't, who gets the lights turned
34:52
on. All of it's going to be tied into that.
34:55
Absolutely. Have all of you heard about Colonel
34:57
McGregor? I know General Flynn, some other
34:59
people up there are very, they've
35:02
been very vocal that they don't even think we're going to make
35:04
it to a 2024 election. And I worry
35:05
about, and
35:09
pasta, I don't know if you can talk about this a little,
35:11
I worry about the chaos that they're going
35:13
to cause. I think probably late July,
35:16
early August, there'll be like this
35:18
uprising that I feel like they're setting up
35:20
and that they could at that point, I'm worried
35:22
because right when Biden came in and I honestly,
35:25
I think both sides are absolutely disgusting. They're
35:27
just billion dollar conglomerates that the status
35:29
quo throwing the ball back and forth. So
35:31
we pretend that somebody's winning when it's us
35:34
always losing. But the bottom line is
35:36
that when they trigger
35:37
this, I think that they're going to pull, I
35:40
don't know if anyone here knows
35:42
about it. I bet a lot of you do something
35:44
that the United Nations under the worst person,
35:47
Samantha Power used called the responsibility
35:49
to protect because early on,
35:52
people might not know Obama and Blinken
35:54
and all them went to the UN to
35:56
evaluate the United States from
35:59
our gun book.
35:59
gun violence, inner city violence, systematic
36:02
racism, all of that. I handed it to the UN. We've
36:04
never heard back from that. So for me,
36:06
I honestly do believe Americans would
36:08
come together and resist this, but
36:11
they've called responsibility to protect in
36:13
many nations that have led to every
36:16
color revolution to have become militarized.
36:18
So my thinking is if they make it crazy
36:21
enough,
36:21
that they can then say, well, now we need either
36:24
martial law or responsibility to protect
36:27
UN troops. I just, I feel
36:30
like they don't want a 2024 election no
36:32
matter what. I just have that feeling
36:34
that
36:34
that's, well, they organized all
36:36
of that Mel during COVID. They brought
36:38
together all of the
36:40
different coalitions, all the different little
36:42
groups, whether it be racism
36:45
and all that stuff, brought it all together under
36:47
the biosecurity state nonetheless, which
36:49
is what they can institute at our borders. So
36:53
if we want to solve a crisis at the borders,
36:55
now you have to have this new ID.
36:58
Right? Yeah. The UN has announced
37:01
that they've created digital IDs and
37:03
they're tied to bank accounts. Well,
37:06
think about it from their perspective. Like if you're
37:09
a true believer, why have
37:11
an election and allowing an opportunity
37:14
for Trump or another fascist to get
37:16
into power, just cancel the election. It's
37:18
the safest solution.
37:20
And that's how we'll pitch it. It's
37:23
like packing the Supreme Court. Yeah. I
37:25
actually don't think it's so much about canceling the
37:27
election because they can rig it and
37:30
they can take control regardless. What
37:32
I think it's about is setting up false flags
37:34
so that they create the riots, because they'd rather
37:36
have everybody fighting
37:39
each other and create so much chaos that
37:41
then they say, okay, we have to take control
37:44
here. And they'll come in with
37:46
their magical solutions that
37:48
are basically going to be like martial law
37:50
or some variant of it, where we're all just
37:52
in a prison, essentially. And they've already set
37:55
all that
37:55
up through all the FEMA camps, through all the digital
37:57
tracking. So they're all red. all
38:00
of that locked and loaded, ready to go. But I don't
38:02
think it's about canceling. The
38:05
global passport, like, is a real
38:07
thing. Like, it's global. Oh, yeah. No, it's real. They
38:10
talked about it. Yeah. They all signed on to it. Everybody,
38:12
Russia, Brazil, all nine yards, China,
38:14
America. So does it make a difference? Bricks nations,
38:17
not mixed nations. They're all in when it comes to
38:19
the digital passport. And I
38:21
just kind of just following up on the
38:24
foreign policy aspect of the whole situation, we talk
38:26
about what's going on in France. I
38:28
think Gaddafi said this, that like when he was
38:30
under distress at one point, he's like, you remove me from
38:32
power and things go crazy
38:35
here. Forget about the the immigration
38:37
that's going to go across
38:38
the waters and just pour into into,
38:42
you know, Europe. And that's what the case has been because
38:44
all these wars. There you are, Monica. She got it right
38:46
there. The
38:46
book is about weapons of mass migration. It talks
38:48
about Gaddafi's story. Yeah, they're they're
38:51
still doing the same thing in the global south
38:53
that they did back back in the days for almost 100
38:55
years right now. I'm going to be on a plane going to
38:57
Nicaragua in less than a week and speaking about
38:59
speaking with the Sandinistas who won a revolution against
39:02
the Contras. Well, the Contras were a CIA
39:04
backed uprising. And
39:07
that's what they do. And I've talked about this all the time. And
39:09
that's been what's so frustrating for me. You know, when
39:11
you hear people like Donald Trump talk, we're not
39:13
going to let any communists and socialists
39:15
and
39:16
God hating people into this country. And they
39:18
say all this crap right now. Nobody's ever
39:21
recognizing more than anything the biggest problem.
39:23
And that's our foreign policy that they are. They
39:25
are here because we are there. And
39:28
it was one of the greatest things that this guy said. Well,
39:30
look into the number one movie in the box office
39:33
right now. And what kind of ideas
39:36
that that pushes, especially for people
39:38
on the right, what buttons that can push, because
39:41
with that, they can definitely convince
39:43
a lot of people for radical actions at
39:45
the borders if it's tied into child
39:48
trafficking now.
39:48
Yeah. Yeah. And they don't that's
39:51
not only that, but shipping children.
39:54
Yeah. That's what I was just going to say. Primary
39:57
solution to the.
39:59
very much like 2000 mules in that regard.
40:01
We're adding
40:04
surveillance, multiplying, force
40:06
multiplying the track trace database
40:08
system and making sure that you
40:10
get the digital information
40:13
inside a freaking human being. Those
40:15
are always the solutions. And if you
40:17
can throw more freedom, more
40:20
constitution, or more children
40:22
under the bus in the process, you're gonna get
40:24
a ton of fucking right wingers to go, okay,
40:27
let's put that in the children. Just like
40:29
you're getting all of these idiot left wingers
40:31
to go,
40:31
okay, I guess I gotta cut Bryson's pee
40:33
pee off. It's the same thing. Yeah.
40:37
There's just, you're attacking people from different angles.
40:40
It also keeps the population divided
40:42
too as well. Sorry, Courtney, go ahead. I
40:44
know, I just, cause that's what I was gonna bring up
40:46
too is the chipping children, but I just wanna make a very
40:49
clear distinction because I think some
40:51
people are kind of falling into the trap of, I
40:53
hear this a lot that people are like, oh, that movie
40:55
is a scythe. It's just designed
40:57
to create all of this, the
41:00
move basically for people to want
41:02
to chip their children. And I think we
41:05
need to be very careful about not falling
41:07
for that because you can celebrate
41:11
the fact that this is coming to the forefront
41:13
and that there is awareness for something that
41:15
happens to be a very real problem. So
41:18
I think when you say, oh, this whole
41:20
thing was just designed as a scythe so
41:22
that people will rush to chip their children, you
41:26
minimize the fact that there is
41:28
a real problem with trafficking. There is
41:30
a real problem with child trafficking.
41:33
And it is great that that is being brought
41:35
to the forefront that people are paying attention
41:37
to that. The solution is not
41:39
to then chip your children. And I think we
41:42
can agree that both are true. But I
41:44
just wanna be very
41:44
careful with that. I've never heard of
41:46
that being, I've heard a lot. I'm friends with
41:49
Jim Caviezel and I've heard a lot. And I
41:51
saw this movie three and a half years ago. This movie was made
41:54
and they're saying it's QAnon thing. The movie was made before
41:56
the first Q drop. So,
41:58
I mean, I,
41:59
I see the, I never heard about the chipping
42:02
thing. I've never heard that. I mean, you know,
42:04
there's a lot of questions
42:06
about the national
42:09
missing and exploited children and Polaris
42:12
project and a lot of that, which
42:14
is valid and should be answered. But, you
42:16
know, for me, if you didn't see the movie, I
42:19
mean, for me, the biggest part of the movie that was,
42:21
you know, in my estimation and from
42:24
what I know about
42:25
Epstein Island from real people who
42:27
had visited there is there's a scene
42:30
in that movie that's about trafficking young
42:32
children to a rich island of rich
42:34
people. And all I hoped was that
42:36
when people went and saw this movie, they
42:38
would see that and it would click in their head.
42:41
Is that what happened at Epstein Island? And maybe
42:43
make them ask some questions about, you
42:45
know, where did the children from Haiti go? Where,
42:48
what is this, you know, Clinton
42:51
Island initiative that goes past Branson's
42:54
Island and all of that,
42:55
to me, it was more a matter of, I hope that
42:58
when the movie came out, you know, I saw it
43:00
a long time ago, but when the movie came out, that people
43:02
would look at this and be like, well, what really did happen on
43:04
Epstein Island and what is happening on all these
43:06
islands? And there's a big problem in the world that I've
43:08
dealt with a lot on my show, which is sex
43:11
tourism,
43:13
where it's, there's a
43:15
pedophile sex tourism industry,
43:18
which is exposed in that. So my
43:20
own thoughts on it, having known the
43:22
people involved, not all of them, I only
43:25
know the actor and a couple of the other people,
43:27
but
43:28
I can tell you that, that
43:30
just from my point of view, all I thought
43:33
in my head was I hope people look at this
43:35
and question what really happened on Epstein Island
43:37
and to the kids of Haiti, and
43:39
to what are the Clintons doing all over
43:42
the world and these orphanages
43:44
that Madonna and Oprah and all
43:46
them are setting up and then you hear horror stories
43:48
later, like what are they doing? And,
43:51
you know, so I just hope it's, at least no
43:53
matter what it is, I hope that anyone
43:55
that sees it starts to demand some
43:57
answers. And for me, I was hoping that it would
43:59
trigger people. to put Epstein Island together
44:01
with what happens in that movie.
44:04
I think people are always looking for the trap doors, though,
44:06
too, as well. Right. How are they going to take this and spin
44:08
this off and make this? I still wonder what's
44:10
happening to the Haitian children every day. I thought that
44:13
was nothing more than a distraction to get people
44:16
turning their heads away from what's really happening to
44:18
these kids in Haiti that are disappearing, you know, the
44:20
same characters to use that. And, you
44:22
know, even with the situation,
44:24
you know, with the movie and when we talk when
44:26
Steve was talking about 2000 mules,
44:28
maybe that wasn't the initial attentions, but it seems
44:30
like they're always trying to
44:32
move you or push you somewhere else no
44:35
matter what, whether they're trying to get ahead
44:37
of something or they're using it. But,
44:39
you know, I'm always watching for
44:41
the trap doors myself, too, as well.
44:44
Yeah. Yeah. You know, I mean, I
44:46
just really hope that people, you
44:48
know, whatever the case may be, it's a terrible
44:50
topic. A lot of people
44:51
here, I know Charlie and other people have talked to
44:54
Kathy O'Brien, too, you know, I would I
44:56
would very and we're talking about working on
44:59
Mark and Kathy story because
45:01
a big, bigger picture here. And I do hope
45:03
people look at Polaris Project and
45:05
these other things connected to CPS
45:08
because this wasn't about what's going
45:10
on in America.
45:11
Maximus Inc. Right. I mean,
45:13
a whole bunch of, you know, as Charlie
45:16
would call it, tentacles to it. But there's a real problem
45:18
in America.
45:19
And a lot of it is tied to law enforcement
45:22
and CPS and foster care. I mean, I can't tell
45:24
you how many people have reached out to me. It's tell their
45:26
stories. It's horrific. And Kathy and
45:28
I have so I mean, Kathy has gotten thousands
45:30
of emails since this movie came out from people
45:32
that are traumatized because
45:35
they never healed from being trafficked. And
45:37
this movie and because it's being used as
45:39
a political football, a lot of
45:41
the people on the right are using it like, see,
45:44
we're the good guys. You know, we're supporting
45:46
this. And that's that's not
45:48
good at all. And
45:49
then it ties into the family courts, too. It
45:52
ties into family courts, especially even on conspiracy.
45:55
And then it's not. But then there are a lot of people
45:57
out there who were trafficked. They're not just there's not just trying.
45:59
A lot of people that are strippers
46:02
and hookers, they're not there willingly, or they
46:04
didn't start there willingly. And then when
46:06
they get out, it's years and years of this. So there's been
46:08
a, because it's being used as
46:11
a political football, and I think it's very damaging to people
46:14
that actually live through this and are trying
46:16
to heal, and seeing it being used as like, like,
46:19
we're the good guys, we're supporting this film,
46:22
and you're the bad guys, and it's just so stupid. Sad. Is
46:25
the story of Nancy Schaeffer, does that come up in any of
46:27
this? No, but it should. It should.
46:30
Somebody should make a movie about her. Yeah, she was
46:32
a Georgia lawmaker, and she
46:34
totally clued into this, and the
46:36
CPS thing, and she said they were literally
46:39
picking children to have them taken away from their
46:41
parents, because they liked them
46:43
particularly. Like I think
46:45
Dick Cheney does with teenage hearts. He's
46:48
like, oh, I like that guy. I want that heart.
46:50
But I don't know that for sure. But she said
46:52
this really happened in the Clinton era,
46:55
and she was murder-suicided
46:58
with her husband, which was like completely
47:00
preposterous for this chick with like
47:02
loving grandchildren and whatever. And
47:05
I mean, it definitely still goes down. Yeah, Nancy Schaeffer
47:07
was a hero. Oh my God. Because
47:09
I'm really, really good friends with Kathy O'Brien,
47:12
and people can
47:12
think with, I 100% believe everything. I've
47:15
been through her stuff. I've been through her.
47:17
I've been through her. He's been through her health too. But I am
47:20
telling you right now that there
47:22
is a real problem, and it's
47:24
deep in America, and it is not a conspiracy
47:27
theory. And the Clintons turned
47:29
CPS and foster care into a business.
47:32
So I just want it to be diluted.
47:36
I hope I have notes being on. Catherine
47:39
O'Brien is. I'm sorry.
47:41
She's an MKUltra survivor.
47:44
She's written at least three
47:47
or four excellent books. There was a
47:49
film that was done about her trying to disclose
47:51
what it
47:52
was done to her. I'm going to write that down. I'm
47:54
like a three
47:56
year young conspiracy pill red pill
47:59
person.
47:59
She's trouble
48:02
for a cause. Absolutely
48:04
incredible. Absolutely
48:06
amazing woman. But wait, I
48:08
mean, what's the best way to learn about
48:10
her? Because obviously... You can send me, if you
48:13
want to get in touch with her, but
48:15
she has a website, trance-formation.
48:18
Her
48:18
books are... The
48:21
book that really dives into is not... Transformation
48:24
is her first book, but the book that really goes into... Access
48:26
denied. Yes, and stuff is
48:28
access denied. Access denied is the name of
48:30
the book. Yeah, and she
48:33
was interviewed on the Higher Side Chats, which
48:35
is always usually good
48:36
overview, an hour or two, where he like
48:39
highly edits, so you get the whole story, doesn't waste any time. So
48:42
she was interviewed on that, I think,
48:43
last year. Listen, while we're talking
48:45
about another young lady here and being the progressive
48:47
voice and for equity and for everybody
48:50
to have an opportunity, Miss Suzy Olsen-Corgen
48:52
has not spoken on this whole thing. I wouldn't
48:54
be doing... Can I say
48:55
something really, really quick before you guys move
48:57
on? I'm just on that
48:59
just because, Mel, you were bringing up the
49:02
Child Protective Services and they...
49:05
A lot of these things get modeled
49:07
before they get moved to the United
49:09
States and I'm blanking. I'm drawing a
49:11
total blank, but I actually interviewed somebody who
49:13
was trafficked from the United States
49:15
to the UK and they
49:18
have a very similar organization there and
49:20
I'm completely blanking on the name, but it is like
49:22
the equivalent of the Child Protective
49:24
Services, however, there,
49:25
it's a federal kind of immigration-tied
49:27
entity
49:33
and she was
49:36
re-trafficked through that organization. So
49:38
I think that they've replicated
49:40
this throughout the world, but I think they
49:42
work together,
49:45
which is kind of not really all that surprising, but
49:47
I just wanted to bring that up before we move on to
49:49
other topics because I think that that's relevant,
49:52
that this really is a globally coordinated
49:54
problem. I think the
49:56
United States happens to be the largest business.
50:00
of the trafficking, but
50:02
it's a globally coordinated problem. It's
50:05
a franchise. It's brought to us by the family court system. Brought
50:07
to us by the family court system. Shout
50:09
out to my friend, Lisa Blanger, for teaching me that.
50:12
Yeah, I was just going to say along the same lines,
50:14
I don't know how involved you guys are legislatively throughout
50:16
the country, but that's my thing that I've been doing for the last
50:18
about 15 years. And we've had legislation
50:21
during COVID. They created the Western States
50:23
Pact. So it's Newsom, Kate Brown in
50:26
Oregon, and Jay Inslee in Washington State, and Inslee's
50:28
top donor is Bill Gates. They passed
50:31
legislation that allowed for there to be monitoring
50:33
with street cameras, saying that it was only for violent
50:35
criminals. They do all the same
50:37
stuff. But back in May of this year,
50:40
our governor signed into law a piece of legislation,
50:42
Senate Bill 5599, that allows
50:45
kids that have any kind of gender confusion
50:48
or aren't having gender affirmation care
50:50
at home to go to any shelter. And
50:52
those shelters do not have to report it to the parents.
50:55
This law is going into effect in 13 days
50:58
in this state. So these children
51:00
then will get taken by CPS or put
51:02
in other foster homes, and their parents
51:04
can, the information will be withheld
51:06
from those parents if they believe that there are irreconcilable
51:09
differences between 10-year-old boys
51:12
that believe that they're supposed to be girls or vice
51:14
versa, and the parents have no
51:16
right to know where their children are going. So you're
51:18
talking about the sex trafficking being global,
51:21
but it is right in our backyard, and it is
51:23
just going to get that much worse. We are one of 15 states
51:26
working to pass legislation like this. Unfortunately,
51:28
Washington gets to
51:29
be the flagship state once again
51:32
with the Western state here. But Newsy is behind us. I
51:34
didn't just mean it's global. It's globally coordinated. They
51:36
work together. I want to ask you something.
51:39
Do you know who's funding this? Have
51:42
you found who is, this
51:45
is so twisted and sick, and it's
51:47
all over the country. Have you found where
51:49
it's really coming from? Because somebody is funding
51:52
this on a massive scale.
51:53
And what's defined as a shelter in
51:55
the law? Is it a panel ban? Can that be
51:58
a shelter? I can only.
51:59
say so much right now but I'll say with this
52:02
bill in particular it was a western
52:04
states coordination and that goes into Colorado
52:07
and Nevada as well as they joined the pack during
52:09
COVID. So there is an underlying
52:12
current going between these states with our governor
52:14
Inslee specifically and with Bill Gates
52:16
and that foundation they're tied into Act Blue. You
52:19
guys also have to remember that we're the
52:21
place that had the Capitol Hill autonomous zone Chaz
52:24
that was shut down. I went
52:26
there in a heel in a dress
52:28
and reported live from the street. It was nothing
52:30
like we were being told it was. The
52:33
warlord quote unquote of that was talking
52:35
to our fire chief. The city council
52:38
people were allowing them into our buildings like
52:40
nothing was as it seemed. So it
52:42
was another place like San Francisco that was completely
52:45
destroyed but it was all part of a greater agenda
52:47
creating the chaos to divide in Congress and they did
52:49
a fantastic job.
52:50
Well I mean you can look at everybody that
52:53
hangs out and is part of the Aspen
52:55
Institute and make a direct
52:57
line for all of those people
53:00
in the western states pack where their money
53:02
comes from, who they're influenced by, who they
53:04
all read, all of the conferences they
53:06
go to. It doesn't surprise me in the least
53:08
the colorado's included in that.
53:12
Speaking of that I was glad that none of you were at
53:14
the Idaho festival
53:16
this weekend in Sun Valley. I don't know if you guys
53:19
know about that one. It's similar to the Aspen
53:21
Institute but this one is when the media gets
53:23
together every year and decides what the narrative
53:26
is that they will all follow. People
53:28
should look into who's at that meeting this
53:30
week. It's all the good club members and
53:33
more and I guess Jeffrey Katzenberg will be running
53:35
Biden's campaign so get
53:37
ready for a total woke
53:40
blitz of Hollywood great.
53:42
What's that called? What
53:45
was that meeting called? It's called the
53:47
Sun, I think it's called the Sun Valley
53:49
Institute meeting and
53:52
it's hosted I believe by Reed
53:54
Hastings and a bunch of other usual
53:57
suspects but it's like the Aspen
53:59
Institute on Aspen Ideas Festival and
54:01
steroids, but here the real power
54:03
play people go. So Warren Buffett's
54:06
there, Zuckerberg,
54:08
Reed Hastings, obviously, Peter Thiel.
54:10
And again, we have to all realize that they're
54:12
globalists. They're not left or right. They're
54:15
done with America as far as I can see. And
54:18
the truth is they run in packs and they don't
54:20
hide.
54:21
You know, it's just us. They sit there
54:23
and say, oh, look, they just were at the Aspen
54:25
Ideas Festival, where I did a thing with Mickey
54:27
Willis to try to disrupt it. And
54:30
then now they're in Idaho, the same people,
54:32
but now it's the bosses are there. All
54:34
the guys from Netflix, all the guys from
54:37
Apple, all the guys from, it's
54:39
basically everyone that runs Hollywood
54:41
is there coming up with, okay, what's the narrative for
54:43
the next 15 months? They do it every
54:46
year. It's not new. And it's the same. It's, you
54:48
know, it's, it's, they mock us like Charlie,
54:51
your book
54:51
is not new, but it's the same.
54:54
They just go. I mean, that's why I was saying
54:56
even on Sam's show, I was like, we have to start really making
54:59
fun of these people and, and, and mocking
55:01
them and how, how arrogant and disgusting
55:04
and elitist they are. And they're, they're such
55:06
a small group of them and they're always together
55:08
and it's always the same people. And yet we
55:10
sit here and we point at them and say,
55:12
look at them. And
55:14
it's like, and they don't, they don't miss a beat. They
55:17
keep going. The funnier way was
55:19
you were just mentioning too, as well, like the way they're done
55:21
with us over here in the United States. Really? You know what
55:23
I'm saying? Doesn't anybody find it funny the
55:25
way the CFR, the people from the CFR
55:28
were actually talking to Laz, Rob and April, like
55:30
they were having a conversation like people, your
55:32
government doesn't make any decisions for you. Nancy
55:34
Pelosi and Chuck Schumer don't make decisions.
55:37
The real bosses were going to talk to lab, Rob
55:39
and April. Yeah. Try to end this fucking war to find
55:41
an off ramp for them so they can move over
55:43
to Taiwan. And what
55:45
I also believe is make Kiev
55:47
start the blueprint for that 15 minute
55:49
cities, you know, the real now they're going
55:51
to try it for real
55:53
with the QR codes and everything else. They want
55:55
to go on doing this. They're BlackRock
55:58
is knocking on the door. Let's go.
55:59
baby. Let's get it started. They
56:03
did promise to build it back better, pasta.
56:06
Susie, I'm thinking when you say like Gates
56:08
obviously is funding the governor
56:11
there, that
56:12
was trying to figure out
56:14
why the trans stuff they're so
56:16
focused on or like transgender
56:18
surgery specifically, they're so focused
56:21
on adolescents and disconnecting parents. And
56:23
I had an occasion
56:25
to be in a children's hospital. And I happened
56:28
to meet some people who were the doctors
56:30
for what they call gender affirmation surgery. And
56:32
I'd like didn't even really know what that meant. And I kind
56:34
of thought it was the opposite. I was like, Oh, that's so nice
56:36
that they're like, affirming people's
56:39
gender. But of course, it's like an inversion.
56:41
But
56:42
they were super, super, super nice.
56:44
And I was thinking, that's
56:46
when it kind of clicked to me that I
56:48
was like, you know, they they really, I don't
56:50
think they could talk enough
56:52
adults into doing this. Or maybe it's
56:54
because it's developmentally, that it's really
56:57
like primarily, maybe everybody
56:59
already thinks this, but like 95%, just
57:02
pure eugenics experimentation,
57:04
like Nazi style, just to see what
57:06
happens when you do this to a body.
57:09
Like, do you have any insight, Courtney?
57:11
Susan, how do you
57:12
get that? I, well, I think there's a lot of
57:14
things going on. I think one is they're creating
57:16
like a lifelong client
57:19
for big pharma, right? These people are going to be on
57:21
drugs for the rest
57:22
of their life. They're creating a
57:24
new demographic to sell drugs to 100%. And
57:27
you have to stay on the grid. There's no
57:29
getting off the grid. Yeah, exactly. You'll
57:32
do anything to stay on it. Exactly.
57:35
And I think, of course, it's, you know, part of the depopulation
57:38
agenda, because these people can't procreate,
57:40
right? So there's a huge part of that. But
57:42
I also think, you see, it's a
57:46
wage a transition, pun intended
57:48
to the transhumanism. Because
57:51
you're now you're blurring the lines
57:53
of what it means to be human. And if you
57:55
even just think of it about it, like mimetically,
57:57
they rarely say like,
57:59
transgender, transsexual,
58:02
right? They say trans. And the same
58:04
thing, so trans, trans-human,
58:07
trans. And I do think
58:09
there is this fluidity, and it's also
58:11
now like, so you can,
58:13
you can merge with whatever,
58:16
right? Because you don't have a defined
58:19
sense of what it is to be human. So
58:22
why not have chimeric beings, whether it
58:24
be merging with machine, you can procreate
58:26
with animals, you
58:28
can be a minor attractive person, it doesn't
58:30
matter. There's no, because there's
58:32
no boundaries.
58:34
It eliminates the importance of the family. It
58:36
eliminates the importance of the family. Breaks down
58:38
the entire structure of society.
58:40
Yeah, I was just thinking that like,
58:43
they are in the phase of experimentation
58:45
where they have to actually see what happens
58:47
when you take human subjects and change
58:50
their hormone, or just see how it actually happens over
58:52
time. And even whether it's just
58:54
for, because adolescents are the prime age
58:57
for it, or they just can't get anyone to
58:59
consent. So they have to get minors
59:01
and separate them from their guardians
59:03
in order to get the subjects that they need
59:05
and act like they're doing them a favor, just like super.
59:08
Yes, they become statists. That's what
59:10
happens to the test subjects. Yeah, we do stabilize
59:14
an entire generation. When you disconnect
59:16
from your family, you wind up often making
59:18
different associations and the logical
59:21
one is to attach to the state.
59:23
And they know that. Because
59:26
what also is important besides your job
59:28
or your whatever else that you can be for the system
59:31
if you don't have a family that matters.
59:33
Right, and will be your family now.
59:36
We start to hear this getting normalized by
59:38
these lunatics on MSNBC that are saying,
59:41
we need to get away from the idea of children belonging
59:43
to individual parents. They belong to the community.
59:45
You go,
59:46
whoa, that's some real commie bullshit
59:48
right there. So they already destroyed
59:51
self-ownership in the past few years.
59:54
I think that that's all definitely
59:56
true. But I kind of think that that's actually
59:58
part of their old paradigm.
59:59
They're moving into where the state is
1:00:02
going to be the high boric mind. That's
1:00:04
really where they want to go with this. So now I
1:00:06
think all this beta testing, yes, they've now pulled
1:00:08
these children away from their family, but
1:00:10
they've also really dehumanized them. Most
1:00:13
of the, I mean, the statistics
1:00:15
showed something like 99% of them regret it and
1:00:18
to the extent where they're suicidal.
1:00:20
The numbers are staggering for
1:00:22
suicide rates for people. Yeah, they say it's because
1:00:25
of haters. It's like,
1:00:27
why? What's the evidence of that? They
1:00:30
use the bullshit tactic of saying,
1:00:33
if you don't allow them to transition,
1:00:35
they're going to kill themselves. And so they use that
1:00:37
emotional blackmail on the parents
1:00:39
and the parents are like, well,
1:00:42
I obviously don't want that to happen.
1:00:44
So what are our options here? I think
1:00:47
they target
1:00:47
suicidal people telling them that this
1:00:49
is the answer. And then
1:00:52
I watch a pharmaceutical company, a
1:00:54
pharmaceutical commercial that's
1:00:56
for like headaches. And one of the side
1:00:58
effects is suicidal thoughts.
1:01:01
But yet they like, you're changing your
1:01:03
hormone balance and you don't think something's
1:01:05
going on. It's the most ridiculous
1:01:08
thing ever. There's so many
1:01:10
different factors that go into
1:01:13
this high suicide rate, the
1:01:15
lifestyle, drug abuse,
1:01:18
past abuse, all this stuff.
1:01:20
But, and we've actually the
1:01:22
craziest part of this whole cultural
1:01:24
Marxism movement is they have
1:01:26
been blessed enough to get about 10
1:01:28
years of their,
1:01:31
like their policies put into
1:01:33
action. And we've seen they've had
1:01:36
horrible effects. They've, they've
1:01:38
failed miserably. So like they're
1:01:40
blaming on every, Hey man, you've had every chance
1:01:42
to implement what you want to do. And it does
1:01:45
not work. Everything you've
1:01:47
told us is a bullshit lie.
1:01:50
And this whole notion that people are killing
1:01:52
themselves because, because
1:01:54
of society is the most ridiculous
1:01:56
thing. And the last thing I got to say before I go is
1:01:59
what?
1:01:59
What what this movement
1:02:01
has done is try to make outlaw shit
1:02:05
Mainstream meaning that these things
1:02:07
that outlaws used to do because it's the only
1:02:10
thing they could do to make money They
1:02:12
really couldn't do anything else I mean you
1:02:15
just see it in the past whether it's drug
1:02:17
dealing or pornography
1:02:19
or punk rock stuff
1:02:21
or what I mean even trans he listened
1:02:24
to old drag queens are like you guys
1:02:26
don't understand like why we did They're
1:02:29
trying to make it so that everybody tries
1:02:31
to and you can't live
1:02:33
that life They live that life because it's the only
1:02:35
thing they could do It's the only way they could
1:02:37
they were built for it and now you see like
1:02:39
with this only fan stuff these Women
1:02:42
who would like normally have normal jobs
1:02:45
are doing only fans are realizing that Pornography
1:02:48
brings a certain kind of energy and they
1:02:50
aim people react to you in a certain kind of
1:02:52
way but that was all part of it as well
1:02:55
like this giant movement between feminism
1:02:57
and only fans to get high
1:03:00
value women out of the dating pool
1:03:02
of High value
1:03:03
men and having children were high value
1:03:05
men now It's all about you're doing this
1:03:07
low frequency bullshit Or you're not
1:03:09
trying to have kids at all and all those
1:03:11
genes get taken out of the gene pool
1:03:14
And it's having a long effect on all of us
1:03:16
great show today. I love you all very corporatism
1:03:19
corporatism saying
1:03:20
that's what I'll call it I
1:03:24
Saw somebody say the only fans was just
1:03:26
begging with your tits out and I had a real
1:03:29
hard time Arguing that
1:03:31
one. I really did
1:03:33
you know, I think tick-tock is is
1:03:36
like porn for girls, but it's
1:03:38
the inverse porn cuz
1:03:41
Girls wanna like well, it's like it's like
1:03:43
hooters It's like Asian being the object
1:03:45
not the subject, but that's how they get them to engage
1:03:48
like that It's triggers the same thing
1:03:50
but it's just
1:03:51
hooters girls get to keep their clothes
1:03:53
on their Strippers who lack the commitment
1:03:55
and the follow-through of actually whipping their
1:03:57
tits out. So they go to work for
1:03:59
it
1:03:59
Hooters, it's the same thing with TikTok. They just
1:04:02
haven't graduated. So they
1:04:04
haven't met, you know, the they have
1:04:06
a particular like mess or the best thing to
1:04:08
a set of, you know, terrible,
1:04:12
terrible.
1:04:12
You know, my story that we had no reservations
1:04:15
on Mother's Day one year. We moved to Atlanta
1:04:17
that year. And I was like, where is there not
1:04:19
going to be a line?
1:04:21
Hooters. It's how we went to
1:04:23
Hooters. And I'll tell you, my kids
1:04:26
were like, the ladies are so nice
1:04:28
here. That's actually genius. I would have never.
1:04:30
It was genius. It was a lovely
1:04:32
sheet of orange. They were
1:04:34
so nice to me. And I got so many balloons.
1:04:38
Conversely, I my friend sugar was
1:04:40
telling me that she's never seen a strip
1:04:42
club more packed as it was on Father's
1:04:44
Day. Father's Day is
1:04:47
the day
1:04:48
I've never understood spectator sports
1:04:50
at all. Like I don't get them. I
1:04:53
don't I don't there's no real value
1:04:55
in me for test driving a car. There
1:04:57
really isn't. I'm I'm definitely
1:05:00
not going to buy the car passenger in
1:05:02
the car or someone else test drive like it's
1:05:04
done. Yeah, right. It's an automated.
1:05:07
It's like the pole is driving
1:05:09
a
1:05:09
motley crew made strip clubs
1:05:12
cool. But strip clubs are very
1:05:14
cool. I'll say that. Well,
1:05:16
neither is Motley Crue. If you get right down
1:05:18
to it. Sorry. Sorry
1:05:21
about not. No. You know,
1:05:23
on another note, Courtney, I got to say that bouncing
1:05:26
off my leftist friend saying, you know, the truth, the
1:05:28
community believes that transgenderism
1:05:31
is a step to transhumanism. And they're like, no,
1:05:34
it's just it makes for great conversation.
1:05:36
I wish you were around there as we're bringing
1:05:38
these things up, you know, in Latin. I never understood
1:05:40
that. I love that. Yeah, that would
1:05:42
be great. I thought that it was
1:05:45
when Courtney or other people would say that, that it was
1:05:47
just a psychological thing, a linguistic
1:05:49
thing. But then when I kind of
1:05:52
just the the light bulb went off
1:05:54
about how they are literally looking
1:05:57
at how hormones and by the way,
1:05:59
like.
1:05:59
have PMDD or really hardcore
1:06:02
PMS will tell you hormones
1:06:04
can make you
1:06:05
suicidal basically. It's
1:06:08
just a crazy thing to do. So they're so, so
1:06:10
powerful that obviously that is going to be the,
1:06:13
it's going to make that rate go up. But I feel
1:06:15
like they are at that stage where like
1:06:17
when you read those eugenics Nazi
1:06:19
stuff, they just like take a bunch
1:06:22
of people in different groups and do fucked up shit
1:06:24
to them. Like they just don't even, you
1:06:26
know, it's not even necessarily rhyme or is it's like,
1:06:28
what would you, what would happen if you put like
1:06:30
an agonist sperm of a monkey and a human? Like, let's
1:06:33
just see. I mean, that's what they
1:06:35
do. I think, yeah, it is. When
1:06:38
this solution is being, oh, sorry.
1:06:40
When you talk to people who have like
1:06:42
been through a MK ultra or
1:06:44
who, you know, are the, the children
1:06:47
of MK ultra survivors, they will tell you,
1:06:49
so the narrative that they sold people in
1:06:51
order to, you know,
1:06:53
garner the acquiescence for, you know,
1:06:55
like
1:06:56
justifying this is essentially
1:06:58
that, you know, these people are so far gone, either
1:07:01
psychologically or physically that, you
1:07:03
know, doing a little experimenting on them is really
1:07:05
justified. But the truth of the matter when
1:07:07
you talk to these people is someone will go
1:07:09
in with like the really benign things,
1:07:12
like a headache, like trigeminal nerve,
1:07:15
like a
1:07:16
moment of, you know, really like a,
1:07:19
like depression, but something that was
1:07:21
like consequential depression, you
1:07:23
know, really like a circumstantial, not,
1:07:26
not necessarily clinical.
1:07:28
Right, right. Exactly. And so these
1:07:30
people would go in for something very, you
1:07:33
know, relatively benign and
1:07:35
they would put them through these. I mean, when you
1:07:37
look at what they did in these studies, it's inhumane.
1:07:40
I
1:07:40
mean, it is just, it's
1:07:43
so unfathomable that you would do
1:07:45
these experiments even on somebody who you
1:07:47
thought was like hopeless and far gone, but most
1:07:49
of these people weren't. They had very like
1:07:52
temporary recoverable,
1:07:54
treatable short term conditions
1:07:57
and they were permanently damaged.
1:07:59
for life. I have another idea.
1:08:02
And I mean, with my work in journalism,
1:08:04
the, the, you know,
1:08:06
the whole point of journal, well, not the whole point, but one
1:08:08
of the tenants of journalism is to examine conflicts
1:08:11
of interest and motivations. And I think so
1:08:13
often, when we see what's going
1:08:15
on with Big Pharma and everything, we're like, Oh,
1:08:18
it's, you know, follow the money, follow the money. But that
1:08:20
anymore seems too simplistic, because
1:08:22
Big Pharma, I mean, my gosh, how much money would
1:08:25
they possibly need more than they already
1:08:27
have at this point, that the only people that,
1:08:29
you know, made money during the pandemic
1:08:32
over and above, like, well, other businesses
1:08:34
were feeling so it's like, I like that we're touching
1:08:37
upon these other motivations, because there's
1:08:39
got to be more to it. But then there's other things that are
1:08:42
like counterintuitive. If, if,
1:08:44
you know, part of the motivation is to
1:08:46
reduce population, and that's why we push abortion,
1:08:49
you know, then why at the same time
1:08:52
are we pushing, you know, they just
1:08:54
I just saw an article today that now they
1:08:56
want to make it so a
1:08:59
couple equity or whatever, so
1:09:02
that met, you know,
1:09:04
with regular couples will say, they
1:09:07
can get through their insurance, sometimes
1:09:10
IVF treatments, well, now they want to make it so same
1:09:12
sec, same sex couples can have
1:09:15
facilitated to have their
1:09:16
employers basically
1:09:19
have the IVF treatments paid for. So that's like
1:09:21
something that would bring life. And so sometimes it gets
1:09:23
all confusing about like the true motivation
1:09:26
other than what you were saying, Courtney and Monica,
1:09:28
is just they just went experiment. I'm long
1:09:30
term to like, where
1:09:32
are we going to be in 20 years whenever
1:09:36
like all of the hormones that people p
1:09:38
out into our water are going into everyone's
1:09:41
body?
1:09:42
Yeah, can I say
1:09:44
something that's a little different than Courtney and
1:09:46
everyone else? I just I'm just throwing this out there.
1:09:49
And I've talked to I tried
1:09:51
to talk to a lot of people that came out of communist
1:09:53
countries. And I've had a couple people on and their
1:09:56
70s and 80s who were in communist China
1:09:58
when Mao took over.
1:10:00
And what they talk about seems to
1:10:02
be that it's
1:10:05
a bigger picture than what any of this
1:10:07
is saying. And I've gone down all these
1:10:09
holes too myself. But I
1:10:11
say a lot of times, especially in my speeches,
1:10:13
that we talk a lot about the evil
1:10:16
in the concentration camps and the experiments
1:10:18
and what they did. And all of this transgender stuff
1:10:20
and all of this went on in the Weimar Republic.
1:10:23
It went on in Nazi Germany. It went
1:10:25
on in Mao's China. This, you
1:10:27
know, this disgusting
1:10:30
underbelly of this transgender movement. But
1:10:33
I always say we talk a lot about the victims
1:10:35
of the Holocaust. We rarely talk about the millions
1:10:37
of people who worked in those camps and
1:10:40
who did those experiments and the Eichmans,
1:10:42
the people that were so damaged
1:10:45
that they had no conscience to do
1:10:47
these crimes. And that they there
1:10:49
were millions of people that worked in these camps. You
1:10:52
know, so what I've
1:10:55
been coming and thinking maybe, and
1:10:57
I've talked about quite a bit, is are
1:10:59
they getting these children, if you know a lot about
1:11:01
MKUltra, are they getting these children as
1:11:03
young as possible, convincing them
1:11:05
that God made a mistake with their body
1:11:08
or their gender or their color?
1:11:09
And they are therefore,
1:11:12
you know, and then their parents went
1:11:14
along with it. But you know who loves them?
1:11:17
The state,
1:11:17
like Chairman Mao, like somebody else.
1:11:20
And that I don't know if you guys know, when Eichmann
1:11:22
finally was put to death, he said
1:11:24
that he was proud of what he did and that he
1:11:26
was a good soldier and that he honored his
1:11:29
furor and his flag. So I don't
1:11:31
know if they are raising generations of
1:11:33
children to be so dependent
1:11:35
on the state
1:11:36
that they also have no conscience when
1:11:39
it comes to getting rid of any enemies
1:11:41
of the state. So that's something I've thought
1:11:43
about quite a bit. I would agree with you.
1:11:45
I think both are at play. I mean, I think
1:11:47
they absolutely have an agenda. So, Christy,
1:11:50
like when you're talking about the other
1:11:52
end where they create life, right, there's like the ectopods,
1:11:55
right? And the part of it,
1:11:57
like they can't make up their minds. It's not they can't make up
1:11:59
their mind.
1:11:59
their mind. They're not hypocrites. They spew
1:12:02
whatever narrative serves their end
1:12:04
goal, right? So they're saying that these
1:12:06
ectopods are to solve
1:12:09
the underpopulation problem.
1:12:11
Because you know, we were overpopulated
1:12:14
before, but now we're underpopulated. And so we
1:12:16
now we can have these artificial and
1:12:18
by the way, when they're in the ectopods, they're
1:12:20
considered a baby. It's considered
1:12:23
a life. When it's in the mother's womb, that's
1:12:25
just a clump of cells. But when it's in ectopod,
1:12:28
then it's a life.
1:12:29
I think so far away.
1:12:32
I mean, that's so far away.
1:12:34
I'm talking about the actual kids right now that
1:12:36
are being taught. But you're saying
1:12:38
Courtney, for one second, I'm talking about kids that are being taught
1:12:40
that they were a mistake,
1:12:42
that they were a mistake and their parents betrayed
1:12:45
them and God betrayed them. But the state
1:12:47
and the and the national the teachers
1:12:50
union and the schools and Planned Parenthood love
1:12:52
them. Those are the kids I'm worried about.
1:12:55
No, I get it. I understand what you're saying.
1:12:57
I think they're connected. I'm not I'm
1:12:59
not saying I don't actually think they're so far away.
1:13:01
I think one is a trajectory they've already
1:13:04
it's a
1:13:05
hate to say tried and true,
1:13:07
but I think that that they've already created
1:13:09
those. They know how to take those
1:13:11
they're dependent, they can mold them,
1:13:13
shape them and use them as assets literally
1:13:16
as assets. We have like countless
1:13:18
documentation of how they've done so in you
1:13:21
know, just as you pointed out in Mao in
1:13:23
Nazi Germany, this goes way even earlier
1:13:26
than that. They've done this throughout history. But I
1:13:28
absolutely think that that is very true. But
1:13:30
I think now what they're creating is
1:13:33
that this new generation they're trying
1:13:35
they're merging it. This way I keep bringing up the transhuman
1:13:37
element, because they have done this where
1:13:40
they and they don't need to do it through transhumanism,
1:13:42
they can absolutely do it through just
1:13:45
these methods of trauma induced
1:13:47
mind control, they can do it by, you know, traumatizing
1:13:50
them, separating them from their parents and creating
1:13:52
this dependency that where
1:13:55
they're and like you said, where they're
1:13:57
they're completely demoralized to
1:13:59
the point where they
1:13:59
have no conscience, no
1:14:02
sense of morality. And of course
1:14:04
they're completely destabilized and become dependent
1:14:06
upon the state and will follow
1:14:08
whoever guides them. And
1:14:11
in this case, in those cases, it will be
1:14:13
the state. But I think now they're moving in a
1:14:15
direction where they're actually creating these artificial
1:14:17
life. And I think that's part of why they're willing to do
1:14:20
things like support these same
1:14:22
couples or these
1:14:25
infertility cases, these untraditional,
1:14:28
not traditional type
1:14:29
families, because
1:14:32
they're experimenting with how they can
1:14:34
create this artificial life, which I think does
1:14:36
move into the direction of
1:14:38
the transhuman type of life that they
1:14:40
think they will control through a high
1:14:43
borg mind. I think they literally think that. You've
1:14:45
all know Hari says it all the time, and
1:14:48
he's not the only one, but he's the
1:14:50
loudest about it. So Mel,
1:14:52
I absolutely agree with you. I think what you're saying is
1:14:54
absolutely valid. I just think that
1:14:57
now they're starting to experiment with
1:14:59
the technological
1:14:59
implications
1:15:02
and how they can use the technology to enhance
1:15:04
what they've already done. So the
1:15:07
connection
1:15:07
and the overlap is the
1:15:10
replacement of the population.
1:15:13
Yes, there's absolutely a depopulation
1:15:16
agenda in effect. And yes, absolutely.
1:15:19
They are encouraging people
1:15:21
that they've already altered or
1:15:23
captured and controlled to
1:15:26
artificially regenerate that
1:15:28
portion of the population. What you're doing
1:15:31
is you're eliminating all of the people
1:15:34
with critical thinking skills. You're eliminating
1:15:36
all of the people who wanted to push
1:15:38
back against any of this. And you
1:15:41
are, it's voluntary
1:15:43
eugenics by trauma, brainwashing
1:15:46
by propaganda.
1:15:48
And it's the act of
1:15:51
getting rid of whatever
1:15:55
dominant minded or I don't
1:15:57
know, the
1:15:59
opposites. missionally minded
1:16:02
amongst your chosen population
1:16:04
that you want to control it in a given moment
1:16:07
if all you have are build
1:16:09
a babies from a bunch
1:16:11
of broken the
1:16:13
incapable of actual
1:16:15
human reproduction on their own
1:16:17
we fell
1:16:20
into the marketing of
1:16:22
our worst possible narcissistic
1:16:24
neurosic, you know
1:16:27
Neuroses the the
1:16:29
then you're going to have a generation and
1:16:32
generations of nothing but Build-a-babies
1:16:35
that are born to worship the
1:16:37
state that don't have
1:16:39
any connection with their Biological
1:16:42
parents in the first place because
1:16:44
they were born a damn ectopod
1:16:47
So what relationship do they have with them
1:16:49
at all and you've got a completely
1:16:51
compliant controllable population in
1:16:54
perpetuity? Yep,
1:16:55
well I'm being ruled by stakeholders and
1:16:58
human beings are just a market that they manipulate
1:17:01
That's how they look at it. And I do
1:17:03
I think the IVF is pretty experimental
1:17:06
in a way also because Maybe
1:17:08
it's better now, but I have a 20 year old
1:17:10
who has down syndrome So when
1:17:13
he was a baby I would and even now
1:17:15
like I know a lot of people who have special needs kids
1:17:17
but especially when he was a baby a disproportionate
1:17:20
amount of
1:17:21
people Had
1:17:23
done IVF and I and I remember
1:17:26
saying like you don't notice this like this is
1:17:28
really like kids who are really messed up Born
1:17:31
like very premature because they have double
1:17:33
births and stuff which are not you know
1:17:35
from people who were naturally had twins in their
1:17:37
families and stuff and They
1:17:39
said oh, it's just because older people get IVF
1:17:41
and they and I looked up the stats and it's way
1:17:44
higher in So like that your argument
1:17:47
Christie about the cat about On
1:17:49
the one hand, you know wanting abortion
1:17:51
population control and on the other hand doing that I always
1:17:54
thought this was interesting the Catholic Church does
1:17:56
not allow abortion obviously, but they also don't
1:17:58
allow IVF because because it
1:18:00
is kind of experimental and dangerous and
1:18:02
unnatural. So I would say that
1:18:05
they are again doing this
1:18:07
mass experimentation, but they are
1:18:09
getting people's consent for it because
1:18:12
it is people who are desperate. And yes,
1:18:14
AHS has something to do with it. Women continuing
1:18:16
to work later definitely contributes to lower
1:18:18
fertility. I think men too, maybe starting
1:18:20
later, but I think there's like a whole
1:18:23
another layer of follow the money or what are
1:18:25
people into that?
1:18:27
It's all from the same companies that are putting
1:18:29
their forever chemicals and everything that
1:18:31
we're consuming right now. It's
1:18:33
the same damn companies. It's the same Ouroboros
1:18:36
eating itself, right? Yep, absolutely.
1:18:39
They're
1:18:39
in everything and I mean
1:18:42
wasn't it even the CDC who was
1:18:44
talking about how they were going to put like endocrine
1:18:47
disrupting like chemicals
1:18:49
into the water? I mean there's
1:18:52
documentation that they've admitted
1:18:54
this
1:18:55
and so then they come out with their solution,
1:18:58
which is the IVF which then further advances
1:19:01
their goals because now they can experiment and
1:19:04
you know, then the cycle
1:19:06
just continues. We'll do
1:19:09
it for equity. Any
1:19:12
ideas of what we're going to do to save ourselves
1:19:15
from the demons?
1:19:17
Yeah,
1:19:19
we're going to have the union and
1:19:21
wanted bunker that we're all going
1:19:23
to go to so we can all survive this group
1:19:26
right here.
1:19:27
Break away from the state as
1:19:30
much as you can mentally, physically,
1:19:33
monetarily. The money is definitely
1:19:36
the head of the snake. Shout out to my friend angry tiger.
1:19:38
But yeah, that's that's the number one.
1:19:40
What can you do to get outside of our current
1:19:42
monetary system?
1:19:43
Because that's going to be the ultimate controller that's used
1:19:46
against us in the future. I don't care what kind
1:19:48
of dystopian future we're talking about.
1:19:50
How long do you think we have
1:19:52
until they they've flipped the switch? You
1:19:55
know, they hit the timer on
1:19:57
the agenda 2030. Didn't they? You
1:20:00
didn't tell you told us. You
1:20:03
know, I mean, I was glad you already told everybody
1:20:05
when they were going to. Oh, yeah, they have it. They have a that's
1:20:08
right. They have a clock. I forgot. I
1:20:10
still think it's going to be difficult to implement
1:20:12
the digital currency
1:20:15
across the board, the way they envision it with
1:20:18
like real time manipulation.
1:20:21
We still have we still have the physical dollar
1:20:23
that is all across the world. It's the
1:20:25
only thing that really keeps America
1:20:27
where it's at. They have to get
1:20:29
people to buy in voluntarily initially
1:20:32
to the digital currency. So
1:20:34
they're going to have to create incentives for
1:20:37
people. So you'll probably see like a chase or
1:20:39
other big banks transfer
1:20:42
over some of your funds to the new digital
1:20:45
dollar and will give you like a 10 percent
1:20:47
increase of the value.
1:20:49
So they're going to have a pilot program already.
1:20:51
Well, it's it's also why you're
1:20:54
it's also why your branches disappearing.
1:20:56
Your brick and mortar branches are disappearing
1:20:59
across the country in waves.
1:21:01
There's so people aren't going to be dealing in cash. They
1:21:03
just make it out of service. I
1:21:06
still think there's an opportunity
1:21:09
for
1:21:09
a lawsuit
1:21:10
to challenge this because
1:21:13
then what function is the
1:21:15
the Treasury at that point?
1:21:17
So there could be some constitutional
1:21:19
violations and a chance for a lawsuit to
1:21:21
stop it, at least here in America,
1:21:24
because I know we have
1:21:26
through the Federal Reserve Charter basically
1:21:29
given over that power of power to private
1:21:31
banking, but the the
1:21:33
Treasury still has a lot
1:21:35
of power to
1:21:36
then exchange bonds
1:21:39
for the receipt of
1:21:41
some physical tangible dollars. So that's I think
1:21:44
there's a huge opportunity for a lawsuit.
1:21:46
They're
1:21:46
just implementing. They were able to assert something
1:21:49
that was unconstitutional for what? 100 years
1:21:51
now. So I think they have a pretty good track record
1:21:53
of asserting themselves whenever it comes to
1:21:56
just injecting a new form of currency
1:21:58
into a. And also.
1:22:01
Yeah. And also who we find the lawsuit
1:22:03
with. Clearly the Department of Justice does not
1:22:05
care. Yeah, that's true. Nobody's
1:22:07
working for us at this point. There's
1:22:11
an interesting story that just broke
1:22:13
today, which is that the Brix nations
1:22:15
have decided that they're going to go with a goldback
1:22:18
currency. They've been saying that,
1:22:21
yeah. There's
1:22:23
a waiting list to join the Brix
1:22:25
as well. So now you're starting to talk about
1:22:28
a real competitor to the dollar, or
1:22:31
is this what
1:22:34
they use as the justification to get you out
1:22:36
of a dollar and into a digital
1:22:38
dollar as a sort of like,
1:22:41
oh no, we've done fucked up the dollar
1:22:43
and it's losing all its value. I wonder
1:22:45
what you're jumping to this digital option.
1:22:48
So I think that's probably why the gold and silver
1:22:50
markets have been
1:22:51
acting crazy lately
1:22:53
and not making much sense is because
1:22:55
they're probably being manipulated to set up that
1:22:57
very change that you spoke of. They've been
1:23:00
manipulated and found guilty
1:23:02
in courts of law for rigging all
1:23:04
of these marketplaces over the years. So
1:23:07
it's not even a question of
1:23:09
whether or not they're rigging the silver and gold markets.
1:23:12
They've been found guilty of it and paid massive
1:23:14
fines the banks have. So it's definitely
1:23:16
being rigged. It's just how
1:23:19
much longer can you do it? Octopi.
1:23:23
Well, I remember I read a story a couple of years ago that
1:23:25
the Federal Reserve in New York couldn't
1:23:27
account for all the gold that on the books
1:23:30
should technically be there. I think
1:23:32
Germany was asking for some of their gold back
1:23:34
and they couldn't find it all. So,
1:23:36
well, it's I guess it's good that BRICS has a
1:23:38
gold back currency. I like to see their
1:23:41
gold. Yeah, for sure.
1:23:43
But you saw recently that Russia
1:23:46
had success with backing the ruble with gold,
1:23:49
5,000 rubles to a gram of gold. And that
1:23:52
buoyed their
1:23:54
ruble and allowed them to have stability
1:23:58
and belief in it. So
1:24:01
listen, I'm against fiat currencies. I
1:24:03
mean, clearly I wrote a book with
1:24:05
Burwick. So like, I'm not
1:24:08
into the US dollar, but
1:24:12
if you're gonna back it with gold, we're at least going
1:24:14
in the correct direction. Now I'm
1:24:16
as paranoid as anybody, so I'm gonna need to
1:24:18
see that gold as well. But
1:24:21
in theory, Russia
1:24:23
and these groups, they mine a lot of gold, and
1:24:26
they don't necessarily always account for
1:24:28
it on the open market as to how much
1:24:30
of it they're keeping for themselves. So who
1:24:33
knows how much has been collected
1:24:35
over the years in
1:24:37
these places. And don't forget, China's got relationships
1:24:40
in Africa and all the gold there. So
1:24:42
like, they're a quiet, they've
1:24:44
been, as far as I'm concerned, they were planning this
1:24:47
for years, the BRICS nations,
1:24:49
looking at that going, we need to load up like on the
1:24:51
down low and get as much of this gold as we can,
1:24:53
then we do a currency backed by it, and
1:24:56
we
1:24:56
say, fuck the dollar. How is
1:24:58
everything just off you for that shit? Is
1:25:01
off he was killed for that. Is China. The
1:25:03
rare earth minerals, all the rare earth minerals
1:25:06
in Africa too, that China has their hands on
1:25:08
now, which will be used to create all of the
1:25:10
5G, 10G, and 20G tech
1:25:12
that will control our little 15 minute
1:25:14
cities.
1:25:15
Does anybody know on here that's
1:25:18
smarter than me, what happens
1:25:20
if say this, cause it looks like the Shanghai
1:25:24
exchange is also, now wants
1:25:26
to get involved with BRICS, and
1:25:28
they're all saying like
1:25:29
F America and the UK
1:25:32
right now, and the NATO, the 5G group. The
1:25:34
dollar could get downgraded. Yeah. And
1:25:37
what would it look like? Rampant
1:25:43
inflation, the dollars
1:25:46
being more worthless than
1:25:49
they already are. I mean, this
1:25:51
is effectively, this is what
1:25:54
has happened to countries all over the
1:25:56
world. Normally, by our Republic
1:25:58
of the United States, but yes.
1:25:59
the Weimar Republic as well. The South
1:26:02
post-reconstruction. Go ahead, Monica. Yeah,
1:26:04
you can't trade then. So
1:26:07
what happens is all the dollars come back
1:26:09
and you can live within, but you can't
1:26:12
trade. So that actually dovetails
1:26:14
with a question I wanted to pose to the group also,
1:26:16
which is I've always thought of like
1:26:19
the one world government, new world order, whatever
1:26:22
is kind of really at the highest level
1:26:25
colluding totally. And that may even
1:26:27
still be true whether or not my question
1:26:29
is yes or no, if your answer is yes or no.
1:26:32
But is
1:26:34
it becoming like, again,
1:26:36
a polarized world so that I've
1:26:38
always thought this with oil and fossil fuels. I'm thinking
1:26:40
what if the climate thing is all about the fact that the
1:26:42
West tried so hard
1:26:44
to monopolize oil and was not able
1:26:46
to do it. So I really think they took
1:26:49
the czar out for that reason, because he was
1:26:51
going to be
1:26:52
like a husband, that resource
1:26:55
and the communists were not. And
1:26:57
now that the communists are gone and they have like a new
1:26:59
czar, basically, let's say, in my
1:27:01
theory, my thought experiment. So
1:27:04
but if you fold gold into that, they
1:27:06
then the West, okay, they are absolutely
1:27:08
never going to be able to dominate the oil
1:27:11
and gold people. So maybe
1:27:13
they want to polarize the world
1:27:16
so that at least they get their
1:27:18
half.
1:27:19
Well, Monica, competition is driven
1:27:22
by people that are manipulating others.
1:27:24
Like the competition
1:27:27
between nations and these currencies.
1:27:30
I mean, if you if you look into the IMF
1:27:32
and the loans that it's given out to
1:27:34
all the countries that we've what bombed to pieces
1:27:36
over the past 20, 30 years, and
1:27:38
all the ones that have been driven into shit through just
1:27:41
economic manipulation between giant
1:27:43
trade deals between us and other people, which
1:27:45
we reinforce with our military industrial
1:27:48
complex, if not for itself,
1:27:51
it all feeds it, every industry
1:27:53
feeds one another from the biosecurity
1:27:55
state to the nanny state
1:27:58
to everything down to
1:27:59
going back to just the introduction
1:28:03
of our current currency when
1:28:05
it was done and how it was done.
1:28:07
We've never really recaptured
1:28:10
our ability to control our destiny because
1:28:12
if somebody owns your property, if
1:28:14
somebody owns your time, the
1:28:17
reason why people don't have time
1:28:19
nowadays to even keep up with what we're talking
1:28:21
about on this show, I hope they get a chance
1:28:23
to, but it's because somebody controls
1:28:26
their time through the currency and what its value
1:28:28
is and how long you have to work, how long
1:28:30
you have to slave away to do something
1:28:33
that gives you some sort of life
1:28:35
and that what do you have left after that time. You
1:28:39
have to appreciate the audacity
1:28:41
of the scam. Quite frankly,
1:28:44
I mean, Jesus, they
1:28:46
really swing for the fences. Everything
1:28:50
that comes out of my check goes to somebody that
1:28:52
fucking hates me and wants to manipulate me and
1:28:54
there's nothing that I can really do about it. If I become
1:28:56
a tax protester, I could be the next Gordon Call,
1:28:59
according to my friend Ken Silva.
1:29:01
There's tons of different
1:29:03
ways, but are we all going to
1:29:05
stop paying taxes? Are we all going to have a giant
1:29:07
protest for a day? Well, we take off at
1:29:09
work. What happens the day after?
1:29:11
What's the long-term solution to that
1:29:14
type of disruption in the system?
1:29:17
Do we have any ability right now to collect
1:29:20
and take over this current state and
1:29:22
move it over to a parallel society?
1:29:25
Hell no. We have to restart the whole
1:29:27
thing. We
1:29:28
have to restart it and restart it locally. I
1:29:30
would suggest that if
1:29:32
you want to find out where your
1:29:35
community is at, look
1:29:37
up how many farmers markets you
1:29:39
have within a 10-mile
1:29:41
radius.
1:29:44
If it's not
1:29:46
four, something like that,
1:29:49
you might be kind of hosed. You might
1:29:51
be. You should. You should
1:29:54
absolutely try
1:29:55
to do it. Those are
1:29:57
the real food deserts, Steve. I'm
1:30:00
not, you know, I mean, yes, you're absolutely
1:30:03
correct. And people have the ability
1:30:05
to grow some of their own food, no matter
1:30:07
where you're at,
1:30:09
you can at least do microgreens all
1:30:11
freaking day long, if
1:30:14
nothing else, you know, but
1:30:16
I without, without
1:30:19
solid information, knowledge
1:30:22
and willingness to engage in counter economics
1:30:25
without the willingness
1:30:27
to put in the sweat equity
1:30:30
to grow your own food without willingness
1:30:33
to even learn a handful
1:30:36
of marketable skills that you could
1:30:38
barter
1:30:39
with people who did put in that sweat equity
1:30:41
or did, you know, all that kind of stuff.
1:30:43
Then, you know, that's those are the kind of
1:30:45
people that are always going to be led by the nose
1:30:47
by whatever authoritarian stay
1:30:50
exists in any incarnation. And
1:30:52
imagine if we could barter with energy from
1:30:54
each other's local communities. Like, if
1:30:56
you can harness whatever type of energy,
1:30:58
yes, absolutely. And barter with that
1:31:01
storable energy somehow between people,
1:31:04
that would be the ultimate solution to break away from
1:31:06
the grid and the system. We can.
1:31:07
And that's something that's doable.
1:31:10
It's a willingness to do that, but it's also
1:31:13
a willingness to realize that you can't save
1:31:15
everybody, that there are always going to be
1:31:17
a lot of people that want to be led
1:31:19
by the nose. And if you want them to
1:31:21
even consider what you're doing, you
1:31:23
have to successfully establish and present
1:31:26
an alternative to whatever passes
1:31:28
as the current status quo.
1:31:32
By the way, I think that, Steve,
1:31:35
correct me if I'm wrong, there's still an excess
1:31:37
of wild boar out there. So it's okay
1:31:39
to eat boar right now since we're talking
1:31:41
about the food line. Boar is delicious. You're
1:31:44
in about a year and a half, dude. There's
1:31:46
an excess amount of boar. We'll be taking
1:31:49
reservations. We'll be taking
1:31:51
reservations to hunt up at the property.
1:31:53
You got to get in line behind Joe Rogan and
1:31:55
his money, but maybe, maybe
1:31:58
I'll do some boar.
1:31:59
We'll do a favor. I want to ask you guys
1:32:01
something. How many people do you guys think,
1:32:03
percentage-wise, in America, understand
1:32:06
that we, the people of
1:32:08
the United States, are being left behind?
1:32:10
There
1:32:13
is a left and right, blossom,
1:32:15
uniparty that are fully committed
1:32:17
to the globalist situation,
1:32:20
but that we, the people of the United States, are
1:32:22
being totally on. And it doesn't matter where
1:32:25
you fall. We
1:32:26
are not being, I feel
1:32:29
like the people of this country are being left behind,
1:32:32
and that the people, that the
1:32:34
government, the uniparty, whatever, that they're
1:32:36
already gone. Do you
1:32:38
guys feel like people in America understand
1:32:40
the stakes at which we find
1:32:42
ourselves at the moment?
1:32:44
Yes and no, because the largest block
1:32:46
of voting eligible people in America
1:32:48
are non-voters, people who don't participate. The
1:32:51
second largest voting block is people who identify
1:32:53
as independent. And then the
1:32:56
smallest two blocks of voting
1:32:58
age eligible Americans are people
1:33:00
who are Republicans and Democrats. So
1:33:03
on a level yes. On another
1:33:05
level no, because everybody is assaulted
1:33:07
24-7 by division
1:33:09
porn and terror porn and
1:33:12
war porn and porn porn
1:33:14
and food porn and whatever
1:33:16
else. Yeah, I think
1:33:18
Republicans know that we're,
1:33:22
America's being left behind, but I think
1:33:24
only a small percentage really know
1:33:26
that
1:33:27
it's a uniparty. I guess I would
1:33:29
say there are mutually exclusive groups. Steve's huge
1:33:32
percentage of people who don't vote know it's a uniparty.
1:33:35
And then I think Republicans who do vote,
1:33:37
I think, think that realize
1:33:39
that we've got a problem. I
1:33:41
believe our Overton window has
1:33:44
moved in a corporate event. Sorry.
1:33:47
I just want to say like I don't I don't even know.
1:33:49
I find that the RNC
1:33:51
and win red is so disgusting
1:33:54
as I do find that DNC and ActBlue
1:33:56
are so disgusting. They're both disgusting.
1:33:59
They're just totally
1:33:59
frauds and I feel
1:34:02
like there's way more people that get it but
1:34:04
because of how it's set up,
1:34:06
you can't participate
1:34:08
if
1:34:08
you're an independent basically when
1:34:11
it matters the most which is the primaries. You
1:34:13
can't participate if you're outside the system
1:34:15
obviously and people just pick sides
1:34:18
to be able to participate when they know it's not
1:34:20
real. I just feel like so many more people
1:34:22
know it's like
1:34:23
this lesser two evils BS that's been
1:34:25
going on for 50 years. I
1:34:28
feel like
1:34:29
at least the people here that are from all different
1:34:31
walks of life and usually and
1:34:33
all the offshoots of the people that come in
1:34:36
and out of Union on the unwanted are a good
1:34:38
cross section of how America is.
1:34:40
All of us that started on the show years ago
1:34:42
back and forth agreeing
1:34:45
now like pasta when you had the
1:34:47
show with the Marxist and me
1:34:50
and you and Don DeBar
1:34:52
and somebody else and it was like
1:34:54
how do we all end up agreeing? I
1:34:57
just feel like there's so many more of us and there's
1:34:59
no definition or no group to
1:35:02
be like this but if this
1:35:04
group was a party
1:35:07
we'd be a lot better off.
1:35:10
Well I would say I wish
1:35:12
that that number were bigger. I mean
1:35:14
that was one of the really amazing things
1:35:16
about Cosfest. I mean it really was that everybody
1:35:19
got it. It was not about
1:35:21
politics. It was like we need to come together.
1:35:24
We don't agree on everything. We need to come together
1:35:26
because it is we the people and really
1:35:28
we're the enemies of them but
1:35:31
unfortunately I think because
1:35:33
I'm constantly surrounded by people like you
1:35:35
and so I feel
1:35:37
like
1:35:38
everybody gets it. It seems so obvious but
1:35:41
the reality is then I go out into the
1:35:43
like normie world and quote
1:35:45
unquote normie world and
1:35:47
even the you know Republicans,
1:35:50
the conservatives, the you know classical
1:35:52
liberals, whatever label you want to put it but the people who
1:35:54
you would think are somewhat awake
1:35:57
really don't get it. They're like yeah we
1:35:59
just
1:35:59
We just need to vote harder. We just need to get the right
1:36:02
person in office. You know, the 2024 election
1:36:04
is coming up. We can just get
1:36:06
Trump or DeSantis or whoever their guy is
1:36:09
or RK, you know, and it's all gonna turn
1:36:11
around. And they really think that that's
1:36:13
the solution. It's mind boggling
1:36:15
and baffling to me. I do think
1:36:18
more and more people are waking up to
1:36:20
the reality that it is a uni-party.
1:36:23
And unfortunately, it's not just a uni-party in
1:36:25
DC. It's a uni-party in DC
1:36:27
that is working. It's a
1:36:30
worldwide coordinated effort. I mean,
1:36:32
there is a globalist entity,
1:36:34
you know, whether you wanna call them like the
1:36:37
trillionaire oligarchs or whatever it
1:36:39
is, I actually think it's, you know,
1:36:41
that is it to some extent, but it is more
1:36:43
complicated than that. It is this
1:36:46
very intricate web that they
1:36:48
have created and they're
1:36:50
really, they're running the show and they're
1:36:52
working with, they've just infiltrated
1:36:55
through DC and a lot of the politicians,
1:36:57
I mean, I'm preaching to the choir. I know you all
1:36:59
know this, but a lot of people don't get it. They
1:37:02
really don't.
1:37:03
Well, a lot of people are asking for collectivist
1:37:05
solutions when the solution I believe lies
1:37:07
in individualism. Like we need a new
1:37:10
enlightenment. We need to return back to individualism
1:37:13
and we need it also codified in
1:37:15
law,
1:37:16
even if that means a new constitution.
1:37:18
And not just in individualism, but
1:37:21
it's really its communities because I
1:37:23
think it's both. This is, I think this is
1:37:25
part of the default stylactic is
1:37:28
they want to create this, that either it's,
1:37:30
you know, the rugged individualism
1:37:32
or it's this collective state
1:37:35
type thing. That's the solution. And
1:37:37
really, it's
1:37:38
somewhere. And the collective is an abstract. That's
1:37:40
the problem with it. It's an abstract that you can be,
1:37:42
it could be whatever you want it or wish it to
1:37:45
be. And you don't have to live in the reality of what it
1:37:47
is.
1:37:48
They've eroded communities. They've eroded
1:37:50
families. That's not just individual.
1:37:52
That's an extension of the individual. And
1:37:55
so of course they've done that so that they can replace
1:37:57
it with the state, but it is really,
1:37:59
it's not.
1:37:59
just one man as an island
1:38:02
unto himself, it really is the
1:38:04
individuals with these extended networks,
1:38:06
whether it be the family, the communities, and
1:38:08
the communities can be, I mean, in older days, they
1:38:11
might have been your tribal communities. In some
1:38:13
cases, they could be religious communities. It could just
1:38:15
be your neighborhood. It could be what
1:38:17
we're seeing a lot of now, these homestead
1:38:20
communities that are almost reminiscent
1:38:22
of communes. And it can be a myriad
1:38:25
of different things. But that's really what
1:38:28
would be, I think, the
1:38:29
antidote to what they're talking about. And that's not
1:38:32
just individualism or the collective.
1:38:35
It is some hybrid of
1:38:37
the two, but it is not
1:38:39
outsourcing the solution. That's
1:38:41
the biggest problem. And I agree with
1:38:43
you on that is that it's because we've outsourced
1:38:45
people want to outsource the solution, whether it be
1:38:48
to some savior, that's going to be
1:38:50
the president, the quote unquote president, that's going to turn
1:38:52
it all around, or whether it be the
1:38:54
state or whatever it
1:38:56
is, instead of looking inward, but also
1:38:59
looking inward within
1:39:00
their local communities and
1:39:02
their, you know, tribes, for lack of a better word,
1:39:05
I would probably suggest a
1:39:07
different constitution. We are not doing
1:39:09
better. It is the thin parchment line. And
1:39:12
I'm basically an anarchist, right? Butting
1:39:15
a gorist, but nothing
1:39:18
is going to get any closer
1:39:21
to the plain letter of actual
1:39:23
protections. I think we should return
1:39:25
to the Constitution. Restoration.
1:39:28
Yes. Restore. Not revolution, because
1:39:30
they want revolution, right? I mean, whether
1:39:32
you're talking about the monopoly capitalists, the Marxists,
1:39:35
the socialists. If they have revolution, where the
1:39:37
reactionary. Can't we just keep
1:39:39
born
1:39:39
again, born again constitutionalists
1:39:42
and identify as born again
1:39:45
constitutionalists and not have to go through.
1:39:47
I'm just trying
1:39:48
to be practical because
1:39:51
once I realize that an
1:39:54
Arco capitalism or whatever, that
1:39:56
my objection to the state on philosophical
1:39:59
grounds.
1:39:59
was perhaps
1:40:02
planted, I would say, Courtney would say, but in any
1:40:04
case weaponized to foster
1:40:06
a world government. Cause if you take out the nation
1:40:08
state, it's not going to go my way. So
1:40:11
I'm going to hold the line until it's
1:40:13
going to go my way. Just read the last
1:40:16
chapter of Road to Surfing by Von Hayek.
1:40:20
I don't think I forgot to the last chapter, but
1:40:22
I'll read it before the next time I talk to you. There
1:40:25
we go. Yeah. Well,
1:40:28
it doesn't leave us in the same position though.
1:40:30
Like if we're just reaffirming
1:40:32
the existence of the state to protect
1:40:35
us. Like the Lockian type of paradox.
1:40:37
For me, I would just say the
1:40:39
Bill of Rights
1:40:41
is a piece of paper
1:40:43
that you can get a lot of people to hold
1:40:46
the line against an
1:40:48
overreaching government. If you have a new constitution,
1:40:50
it's not going to have, it's going to have a bunch of mumbo
1:40:53
jumbo, but it's not going to be adjudicated
1:40:56
protections. And when those protections
1:40:58
are violated, it's very clear
1:41:00
because there are a lot of words on pages already
1:41:03
that
1:41:03
identify that.
1:41:05
So I'm just saying like libertarians,
1:41:08
myself included,
1:41:09
die by the sword, but we don't live by it.
1:41:12
What was the penalty for them violating
1:41:14
our First Amendment over the past several years?
1:41:16
What was the penalty for the Biden administration?
1:41:19
I mean, if you have an extended conversation, I'm happy
1:41:21
to. There's no penalties built into it. That's the way I
1:41:24
see the problem. The constitution could be amended,
1:41:26
right?
1:41:27
So if you add some sort
1:41:29
of penalties, like being able to remove terrible
1:41:32
politicians, to
1:41:34
be able to stand up and say something
1:41:36
about who's involved in your
1:41:38
government, just that particular thing alone.
1:41:40
Making it better, I think, would be fine. I just
1:41:42
wouldn't scrap it because you'll lose more than
1:41:44
you'll get back, in my opinion. Ricky,
1:41:47
you've been quiet. What's happening? No,
1:41:51
this is the correct. Are you pontificating? We
1:41:53
all host shows. We probably all feel like
1:41:55
we do plenty of talking
1:41:58
anyway. I don't feel that need to be done.
1:41:59
I'm on vacation so I'm talking too much. Ricky,
1:42:03
it looks like you shred, brother. I love that stuff
1:42:05
in the background there. Look at all those beautiful
1:42:08
guitars.
1:42:09
Yes, I grew up
1:42:11
a metalhead. Yes.
1:42:14
Same, very much the same. There's a lot
1:42:16
of metalheads in the alternative
1:42:18
media I've found.
1:42:21
Yeah, I just want a sound drop of
1:42:23
Ricky going, yes, I shred.
1:42:27
Absolutely. Chaos AD, Old
1:42:30
School Fear Factory, and a lot of Meshuga turned
1:42:33
me on to alternative media because of the concepts
1:42:35
being discussed in those types of
1:42:38
songs and albums. Yeah, Burton's
1:42:41
been on my show, Burton C. Bell, from
1:42:43
the Singer Fear Factory. Well, the old singer
1:42:45
because they just got a new singer. But
1:42:47
that's a lot of their domestic
1:42:50
dispute that they're constantly fighting.
1:42:52
But yeah, Burton C. Bell, if you
1:42:54
guys haven't heard of Fear Factory,
1:42:58
back in the day, they were one of the
1:43:00
first artists, or at least one of the first ones that
1:43:02
I was introduced to that was
1:43:04
messing around with the Man vs. Machine thing. And
1:43:07
a very fascinating guy. I mean, they have
1:43:09
whole albums that are just dedicated to
1:43:11
this whole Man vs. Machine idea. And
1:43:15
their music sounds like what
1:43:18
you would think. Man vs. Machine
1:43:20
themed music would sound like they're just awesome,
1:43:22
awesome. And very fascinating, a
1:43:25
lead singer and writer, and
1:43:28
just a very deep thinker. And yeah,
1:43:31
I mean, it's nice to have music
1:43:33
out there that is good and thought provoking.
1:43:37
And there's not a whole lot of that
1:43:39
out there anymore. And there's
1:43:42
still some. I don't want to be the old person who
1:43:44
says, oh, there's no good new music.
1:43:47
I don't think that's ever true. I just think that
1:43:49
a lot of times we grow up with something,
1:43:52
and it has a
1:43:55
special place in our heart. And then it's hard
1:43:57
to, you know, to kind of, you know, continue
1:44:01
keeping up with the new genres
1:44:03
and whatnot. But I'm actually the opposite. I
1:44:05
constantly am looking for like, what are
1:44:07
people listening to today?
1:44:10
And I get
1:44:12
bored, you know, that's why my podcast, I constantly
1:44:15
have different types of people on because I get
1:44:17
bored with stuff and I get bored with listening to same music
1:44:20
over and over again. I wanna know who's
1:44:22
pushing the boundaries and who's doing
1:44:24
something new. And I'll
1:44:27
go down to different rabbit holes of different
1:44:29
types of hip hop, different types of metal, industrial.
1:44:34
And I think there is probably some correlation between
1:44:36
people who go against
1:44:38
the grain in regards to maybe
1:44:42
interest in music, you know, like they like
1:44:45
stuff that's maybe not mainstream
1:44:47
and maybe it's similar interests
1:44:49
in regards to history or philosophy
1:44:52
or media, maybe
1:44:55
that type of, there's some type of pattern
1:44:58
with your thinking or interest that, you
1:45:00
know, all those things are related, but
1:45:03
yeah. So
1:45:04
I had a chance last Monday to
1:45:06
go down that sort of weird
1:45:09
path as well by going to
1:45:11
a dead in company with
1:45:13
John Mayer.
1:45:15
Early once he goes to John Mayer's
1:45:17
Grateful Dead cover band. The Grateful
1:45:19
Dead cover band. That's
1:45:21
not a Grateful Dead, Bob Weir is in it. No,
1:45:24
I know. Oh, I know. Mickey
1:45:27
Hart's in it too. Dave Matthews
1:45:29
came out and played too. It was fantastic. That's
1:45:31
so fun. Dave Matthews.
1:45:33
My husband's going to all the shows. It's their last
1:45:35
show. Yeah, I
1:45:37
got a fucking random hippie. There's
1:45:41
a dive bar. I just moved here.
1:45:43
I don't know anybody in Sonoma
1:45:46
County, but at the dive bar where my kid
1:45:48
got a job, there's a random dude who shows
1:45:50
up on the weekend to freaking sell oysters.
1:45:52
And he's like, oh, I've known you for 20 years. And
1:45:54
I'm like, yeah, I suppose. Yeah, fuck. And he
1:45:57
won't stop trying to drag me down
1:45:59
the shoreline to that.
1:45:59
last Dead in Company show and I am
1:46:02
just dug in like a
1:46:04
chick no no no
1:46:06
no no you've got to go because
1:46:09
you're a reporter
1:46:10
you have to it's when
1:46:12
you're twirling but you have a bad hip it's
1:46:15
it's not good you
1:46:20
know what I mean but but I'll
1:46:24
tell you this I will say this much and I don't
1:46:26
know if they're gonna do it at the Shoreline
1:46:28
shows but they did have a crazy
1:46:31
scary drone performance that
1:46:33
I posted on Twitter if people want to go find
1:46:36
that that's freaking why it was
1:46:38
super
1:46:39
killer and
1:46:42
and I was there with Jeff Warnock who was on
1:46:44
Union of the unwanted a couple episodes
1:46:46
ago and he and I were like
1:46:48
just think of the implications of this
1:46:51
you know what I mean like project bluebeam shit
1:46:53
times like it can look like whatever you
1:46:55
want it to look like they did that back
1:46:58
at when they play the Olympics San
1:47:00
Francisco 49ers with
1:47:02
Dead in Company though it was
1:47:04
the manufactured rainbow and
1:47:07
it was like the first time that they did
1:47:09
a projected holographic
1:47:12
rainbow and I thought might have been
1:47:14
oh god 2019
1:47:16
maybe maybe Charlie
1:47:21
we all need a dead show yeah
1:47:23
but I also I gotta be honest I
1:47:26
also don't
1:47:27
view them the same way I did as
1:47:30
I in in the early 90s when I was
1:47:32
going to the the dead you know and not knowing
1:47:34
like the full backstory but just
1:47:36
enjoying the parking lot see
1:47:39
them six months
1:47:41
before Jerry Garcia died if they're
1:47:44
not good it's like this John Potech
1:47:48
changed my perspective on a lot of those bands to
1:47:50
John Potech definitely changed my perspective
1:47:52
yeah for sure yeah mine too yeah yeah
1:47:54
and Mark Devlin as well if you want to if you find
1:47:57
musical truths volumes one two
1:47:59
and three you can
1:47:59
find his books and they'll blow your
1:48:02
mind. All right, it's that time. We're going to wrap up.
1:48:05
But I want to make sure everybody gets a chance to talk about
1:48:07
where they are. Let's start with you. Number six, you've
1:48:10
remained incognito from TNP
1:48:13
Live. Where can people find your stuff? Because
1:48:16
it was fucking fantastic tonight. Thanks
1:48:18
for coming.
1:48:20
Hey, man. I really appreciate that. And you know what? I
1:48:22
enjoyed everybody's company this evening.
1:48:24
And I just want to give a huge shout out
1:48:27
to the TMP crew. You
1:48:29
can find us on Rumble, Odyssey, Bitchute,
1:48:32
Brideon, and Spotify, Apple Music,
1:48:34
Google Podcasts, and Amazon Music.
1:48:36
I think that's all the major platforms. But
1:48:39
you'll find me on Twitter as well, number six
1:48:42
TMP, also on Substack. And
1:48:44
when you go to TMP, it's a network of
1:48:47
shows now. It's not just TMP Live every
1:48:49
Friday, from 10am to 1pm
1:48:52
Eastern time. But also we have now
1:48:54
conspiring with Mr. Cooper every Saturday
1:48:56
night with my friend Tom Cooper, and
1:48:59
somebody that you've worked with, Charlie Chris Graves. Fantastic.
1:49:02
And also we have Digging Chris Graves on
1:49:05
that network as well. Chris does
1:49:07
intermittently. And then we also
1:49:10
just had a new sign on somebody
1:49:12
that we're distributing his content
1:49:14
as well. My friend Angry Tiger,
1:49:17
he does a Tiger and the Snake Financial
1:49:19
Report every Friday
1:49:20
at 4. And he also does the Tiger's
1:49:22
Dead, which Monica was on, which is
1:49:24
a great show. He does that every
1:49:27
Wednesday night at 8. There we go. And
1:49:29
occasionally, we'll have a, don't
1:49:31
take our word for it with Peter Seacosh and Chris Graves
1:49:34
too. They talk about stuff like the Lennon assassination
1:49:36
since we were just talking about music. Definitely check
1:49:39
out those episodes and everything. And
1:49:41
huge, huge shout out to my friend Greg
1:49:44
Zeister.
1:49:45
Love you, buddy. Thank you for making
1:49:47
the contact to get me on this show. This was
1:49:49
awesome. Well, thanks for
1:49:51
coming out. We're listening.
1:49:53
We don't know how to, we're just trying to figure it out, right?
1:49:56
We'll take all the brains we can get.
1:49:58
Mel K, you've reloaded.
1:49:59
located. I
1:50:01
have. I have. Where are you? I left New
1:50:03
York City for West Palm Beach,
1:50:05
Florida. And I'm just
1:50:08
starting out here, hanging out my grandma's
1:50:10
for a while. She passed away, left a cute place
1:50:13
in a retirement community. So I get
1:50:15
to talk to lots of people in their 70s
1:50:17
and 80s that are telling me that they don't know
1:50:19
what's happening in the world. And we have very interesting
1:50:21
conversations. I bet that's right.
1:50:24
That's my favorite. I'd love to hear that. Can you take
1:50:26
some of those and send them to me? You
1:50:27
would love it. I just did an event at the
1:50:30
villages. It was a packed house of 80
1:50:32
year olds. It was excellent. Oh my God.
1:50:34
That's so fantastic. Where
1:50:37
can people find your stuff? Oh, okay.
1:50:40
They all came up to me and said they knew about the UN
1:50:42
in the 40s. So it was fun. Oh, nice.
1:50:44
I will say- Nice group of old people. Love it. It
1:50:46
was great. It was awesome.
1:50:48
So I am at themilkshow.com
1:50:50
is my hub. I am on all free
1:50:53
speech platforms, which means not YouTube.
1:50:56
And I am on, my main hub
1:50:58
is Rumble, but I'm all over the place.
1:51:00
And also audio to everywhere,
1:51:03
themilkshow.com. And I restart,
1:51:06
I never got back to themilkshow on Twitter.
1:51:08
So I think I'm extra special somehow.
1:51:11
So I had to start over there. So we dropped
1:51:13
the D, it's at themilkshow. And
1:51:16
I travel around. I also Instagram
1:51:18
and
1:51:19
Truth Social, which a lot of you
1:51:21
might not be on, but it is a very interesting
1:51:23
place to be. I bet it is. Well,
1:51:26
we're glad to see you again. Courtney,
1:51:28
what's cooking? How
1:51:29
you been? Not too much. You can
1:51:31
find me at CourtneyTurner.com. It's spelled like
1:51:34
when we have it, Courtney, C-O-U-R-T-E-N-A-Y,
1:51:37
Turner.com. And
1:51:40
we're actually right now, I'm down in Florida.
1:51:42
I'm looking for a location for the next CauseFest.
1:51:45
So we're planning on that. We're
1:51:48
looking at October 13th
1:51:50
through 15th. And we're not
1:51:52
a hundred percent sure. We need to lock down the locations,
1:51:55
the venues that we're, but that's what we're planning
1:51:58
on. And yeah, my.
1:51:59
cordonturner.com is where you can find all
1:52:02
the links to all the platforms that I'm on.
1:52:04
Well, when you get it squared away and figured
1:52:07
out where the date and then
1:52:09
please come back and we'll
1:52:11
talk all about it. Make sure that
1:52:13
everybody knows. So
1:52:16
Monica, what's the plan for the bookshelf? Oh
1:52:18
my gosh, I literally have like
1:52:21
well over a thousand books
1:52:23
out in that hallway. And I just, I'm
1:52:25
trying to think like, how do you organize a
1:52:28
bookshelf? And like, you look it up and it's like,
1:52:30
I mean, I've done it before, but like, it's like history
1:52:32
fiction. And I'm like, no, no, no. I mean
1:52:34
like JFK assassination,
1:52:36
9-11, like how do you? Monica,
1:52:39
my fiance needs to come over and organize
1:52:41
your bookshelf because he's constantly like putting
1:52:43
categories. Oh, I'm going to do it. I'm going to have like
1:52:45
Normie history, actually have that in the front of
1:52:47
the house. So like when people come in, they'll
1:52:49
see, you know, the history
1:52:51
of Winston Churchill, you know, the biography of Winston
1:52:53
Churchill.
1:52:53
And then you hit them with like a hammer
1:52:56
in the back in the library. They're like the satanic
1:52:59
verses by Solomon Rushdie. What the fuck is
1:53:02
going on? Why is there a grimmery
1:53:04
here? So you'll see it. I allowed
1:53:07
this instead of putting a screen back there, I allowed it
1:53:09
to start like this. And over the next couple
1:53:11
of weeks or months, you'll see it populate.
1:53:14
I can't wait. And see what I come up with. That's
1:53:16
so cool.
1:53:17
What's going on with the shows? Yeah, I've been
1:53:19
a little slow. Not, not the worst. I was
1:53:21
kind of working on a grand opus of like,
1:53:23
who are they? You
1:53:24
know, the capital T, the TN,
1:53:27
like I just feel it needs to be updated. And I
1:53:29
think I might even make a series of
1:53:31
it and have people put their little pieces
1:53:33
in. I tried to do like a, you know, a
1:53:35
show in one day. I was like, this is not going to work. So that's
1:53:37
what I'm working on. And if you want to
1:53:39
hear all the things I've done before, I've got
1:53:42
them all categorized at Monica's deep
1:53:44
dives.com. And you can listen on your podcasting
1:53:47
platform with D I two deep
1:53:49
dives with Monica Perez and rockman.com
1:53:52
slash deep dives. My next show is going to be
1:53:54
with Courtney and we're going to dig into, is
1:53:57
it the libertarian?
1:53:59
Was it, I guess. last chapter of Hayek.
1:54:01
I want to know what the next chapter
1:54:04
is and a little Tavistock. Funny.
1:54:09
I'm working on some Tavistock stuff myself.
1:54:13
Yeah, I can't get enough of that culture.
1:54:15
I know.
1:54:15
It's the gift that does
1:54:17
not stop giving. It's nonstop.
1:54:20
Yeah. Well, Pasta,
1:54:22
where are you?
1:54:24
Oh, and Pasta, real quick. Can
1:54:26
we talk about Cuba? Can you just
1:54:28
in like a minute or two talk about...
1:54:31
Because that was so rad to get those pictures
1:54:34
from you and the kids down
1:54:36
there looked like they were super excited. Yeah,
1:54:38
yeah. And thank you, Charlie Robinson, as one of the
1:54:40
manufacturers to help me go over there and bring some stuff to
1:54:43
the kids. Obviously, trying to
1:54:45
humanize the whole situation. My target
1:54:48
audience was just thinking about a Trump-supporting
1:54:51
mother that's an anti-communist that
1:54:53
will manufacture
1:54:54
consent for these sanctions.
1:54:56
And that's what these sanctions do. The sanctions are not meant
1:54:58
to stop a country's leadership from
1:55:01
doing anything. Sanctions are meant to be
1:55:03
thrust upon a country to where they starve
1:55:05
the people out, that they get so frustrated that they
1:55:08
want to remove their government. So, you know,
1:55:10
with Donald Trump as last week in his campaign, labeling
1:55:12
Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism,
1:55:15
upping the
1:55:17
sanctions,
1:55:18
they're in a bad way. They have their
1:55:21
own
1:55:21
issues. The Cuban government didn't do what
1:55:24
the Nicaraguan government, where I'll be going to Nicaragua
1:55:26
next week to actually cover
1:55:29
the Sandinistas revolution, them beating back the
1:55:31
Contras years and years ago. But
1:55:34
the leader of Nicaragua said, you know, Nicaraguan's
1:55:36
got to eat,
1:55:37
therefore no lockdowns. We're staying open. Cuba
1:55:39
did not. And Cuba is very much dependent
1:55:42
on tourism and
1:55:44
whatnot. So they were really in a bad way. They have
1:55:46
a fuel crisis there. The cars go around
1:55:48
the block. There's garbage on the streets of Havana
1:55:51
because they can't have, they don't have the fuel for the garbage trucks to
1:55:53
go pick it up enough. And they've also had the shortage of
1:55:55
baseball equipment coming in there. They can't get
1:55:57
the aluminum to make the bats. They can't get the.
1:55:59
leather in to make the gloves. So
1:56:02
I just wanted to have a situation where I can
1:56:04
humanize these kids and show you know that mother
1:56:07
over here that it's really not about communism Cuban
1:56:10
it's about just human beings and
1:56:12
I was able to take over you know about $300 worth
1:56:15
of used equipment some new equipment too as well and
1:56:17
I struck gold I met somebody in my Airbnb
1:56:20
who happened to have a stepfather be the coach
1:56:22
of three oversaw three teams the kids of Havana
1:56:25
and I was able to go down there and my
1:56:27
activism and hand out some balls some bats and
1:56:29
gloves some mitts and to some kids
1:56:32
that normally you know
1:56:33
that are in a bad way and able to do that so
1:56:36
just trying to build a bridge with Cuba you know
1:56:38
I like to do that work all the time and I always love coming
1:56:41
back and talking about what I experience over there I'm
1:56:43
going to Nicaragua next week and when I do
1:56:45
get back from Nicaragua gonna hit the ground running I
1:56:48
have a Gibson go up Gibson go comm
1:56:50
slash RFK media I tend
1:56:53
to get out there and ask them the hard questions guys I'm
1:56:55
gonna ask RFK about how he feels about chemtrails
1:56:58
and geo engineering so you know I'm gonna
1:57:00
ask all the tough questions as you know you know people
1:57:02
say I have a bias to him but I'm the one who went
1:57:04
up there to New Hampshire and asked him his stance on Israel and Palestine
1:57:07
so you know I started that shit store myself
1:57:10
so you know to give the to give the
1:57:12
people out there some honest citizen journalism
1:57:14
and ask the questions that need to be asked rather than the bullshit
1:57:16
pity Pat that's what I intend to do and if
1:57:19
I'm not covering RFK he has a couple days off
1:57:21
I can go dip into Cornell West maybe
1:57:23
if the Libertarians ever pick somebody we can go
1:57:25
bother them somewhat Vivek Rameshwami
1:57:28
Marianne Williamson anybody and get in front of their face
1:57:30
for the microphone to camera I intend
1:57:32
to do so Derek bro style so
1:57:35
that's what I'm sure you can go check it out at yo
1:57:37
pasta it's pinned up there thank you guys make
1:57:40
sure you print out their tweets like
1:57:42
Derek bros did too when he confronted
1:57:44
Tulsi in that parking garage and said
1:57:47
said well Hawaii said you're not a member of the World
1:57:49
Economic Forum young global leaders then what about
1:57:51
this tweet and he just held it up
1:57:54
showing that she said so grateful
1:57:56
to be included in this new World Economic Forum
1:57:58
young global leader bubble
1:58:00
So, yeah, no, no, listen, we're
1:58:02
all victims of our own government.
1:58:04
Just a matter of degree, right? And you saw
1:58:07
it in Cuba to an insane
1:58:09
degree. And that's so
1:58:12
easily prevented because a ton
1:58:14
of that is because of the fucking
1:58:17
embargo that we have with them. It's ridiculous.
1:58:19
It's so stupid. It's so stupid. It's
1:58:21
a low hanging fruit. Why
1:58:24
isn't one of these people running for
1:58:27
president that wants to make a big splash? Why don't they
1:58:29
just come around and say, we're not doing this anymore.
1:58:32
This is just inhumane and bullshit
1:58:35
and political. And it's obvious. Oh,
1:58:37
and we're bringing Julian Assange home or
1:58:40
we're dropping all charges against him and all that
1:58:42
stuff. You want to win the presidency, you want to get
1:58:44
people excited, then you're
1:58:46
going to have to step up and go
1:58:48
against the system in some respects. And
1:58:51
if you do, I'll tell you what, you
1:58:53
will wind up on AM wake up with
1:58:55
pasta's partner Steve over there.
1:58:58
For sure. I don't interview
1:59:00
politicians, but
1:59:03
maybe one day. It's not going to be a politician
1:59:05
that gets people excited about this. I
1:59:08
think about it. I was actually I was
1:59:10
thinking about interviewing
1:59:13
Dr. Shiva just because I like to hear
1:59:15
cutesy little nicknames with cuss words
1:59:17
attached to celebrities that he doesn't
1:59:19
like. I think I
1:59:21
just booked Shiva today for that. For
1:59:26
that reason, because I mean, that's a
1:59:28
legitimate reason to book the dude. He knows
1:59:30
a lot of stuff. I just I
1:59:32
just want to I just want to hear how
1:59:35
he sees the world. Yeah, yeah, he's definitely.
1:59:39
Definitely an interesting fellow. I
1:59:42
if you're not familiar with the show, it is a
1:59:44
and wake up. I'm on summer hours
1:59:46
because my kids are here and it was just killing
1:59:48
me to do seven shows a
1:59:51
week, six days a week while I only
1:59:53
get to hang out with them for a little bit of time. Plus, I'm
1:59:55
like working off grid
1:59:57
at two different properties for 10 to 14.
1:59:59
hours a day basically every day,
2:00:03
which is also fun. It
2:00:05
is. It's fucking awesome. But yeah, Monday
2:00:07
through Thursday, 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Pacific
2:00:10
rock fan rumble. And then afterwards, basically
2:00:12
anywhere else you can find a podcast. Let's
2:00:16
see tomorrow. Frank Cavanaugh
2:00:18
and Matt Baker are on for
2:00:20
T lab Tuesday. Comedian Danny Polish
2:00:23
Chuck. And then I think Texas Slim's coming through
2:00:25
for a now weekly beef intelligence
2:00:27
and food intelligence segment on
2:00:29
the program. Johnny Vedmore
2:00:31
back in the building on
2:00:34
Thursday. My
2:00:36
buddy Chris has a show called The Rained Out Rancor.
2:00:38
Shout out to him. This fuck YouTube shirt is his.
2:00:41
And in
2:00:43
Shepherd, he got
2:00:46
himself invited to become successful
2:00:48
and employed elsewhere.
2:00:50
So for
2:00:52
the next couple of weeks, while he's looking for a new
2:00:54
job, when he's around, he's going to pop
2:00:57
in, hang out, shoot the shit. And
2:01:00
that's always fun. As always, I am humbled
2:01:03
and honored to be a part of the best ensemble podcast
2:01:05
in the motherfucking multiverse. Thank you, guys. You rock.
2:01:08
We appreciate it. Let's make sure
2:01:10
Scott Armstrong from Rebunked and Unjected
2:01:13
was here. We had
2:01:15
Susie Olsen Corgan as well.
2:01:18
She's a badass. She's in there.
2:01:20
She's in Washington fighting for your rights in
2:01:22
case you didn't know. We had Christy Lee as
2:01:24
well. Sam
2:01:25
Tripoli. Sam Tripoli, let's
2:01:27
not forget. One
2:01:30
of the core four. I
2:01:35
had the treat of being on Midnight Mike's
2:01:37
OBDM podcast as a co-host,
2:01:40
Steve was also on as a co-host.
2:01:43
It was like Christmas.
2:01:44
Yeah, it was really a lot of fun. It's
2:01:47
really a lot of fun. It's the best fucking
2:01:49
podcast in the world. It just is. You
2:01:52
can go to OBDMPod.com or RBGdumbout.com.
2:01:55
A lot of UFO news.
2:01:57
I'm going to figure it out. I think this year I'm going to figure
2:01:59
out the whole UFO.
2:01:59
phenomenon and I'll let her know what
2:02:02
I should come in close
2:02:04
I'm coming very close but yeah OBD
2:02:07
and pod calm thanks Ricky
2:02:10
Ricky's always like
2:02:14
six months ahead with the doctors on
2:02:16
his show yeah he's always got him booked and then you're
2:02:18
like oh my god this guy's fucking great
2:02:20
where's this guy bit and Ricky's like I talked to that guy
2:02:22
like last year so
2:02:24
who are you talking to now that we
2:02:26
should be paying attention to six months from now
2:02:29
I just uploaded a Dr. peer
2:02:32
Brunkner he's an interesting doctor
2:02:34
he worked for Liverpool and he worked for
2:02:37
a bunch of national cricket teams and
2:02:40
he's a Australian doctor and
2:02:43
but and then I have a doctor
2:02:45
not doctor but a John Stockton
2:02:48
episode that happened up in the next 24
2:02:51
hours which I'm really excited about because you
2:02:53
guys know a big basketball fan so it's
2:02:55
always cool to you know we always say
2:02:57
don't meet your heroes but it's it's
2:02:59
always cool when you get to chat
2:03:02
with a hero and they're cooler than you
2:03:04
expected so he's a lot
2:03:06
of credit to people like him and I remember
2:03:09
talking to Glenn mayor Glenn Jacobs
2:03:12
also known in the WWE universe
2:03:14
as Kane Undertaker's brother
2:03:17
he was another guy who just you
2:03:19
know I grew up watching these guys and to be able
2:03:21
to sit down and talk to him and then just find
2:03:23
out that not just as performers
2:03:25
but as people they're amazing you
2:03:28
know guys and and people who stand
2:03:30
up for something and aren't afraid to push
2:03:32
back is just it's awesome it
2:03:34
really is so it's been absolute
2:03:36
pleasure to you know meet
2:03:39
all everybody in the community and
2:03:41
including people on the show so the ripple effect
2:03:43
podcast comm much
2:03:45
like Mel I'm on all the platforms
2:03:48
except YouTube and and check
2:03:50
that out and yeah keep a lookout for the John
2:03:53
Stockton show and I think
2:03:55
that's I don't look too far ahead with
2:03:58
my guess but I'm sure
2:04:00
I have somebody else booked that's interesting
2:04:02
in the future. And if I forgot about them. Yeah. I'm sorry.
2:04:05
Yeah. John Stockton is a good one, man. That's,
2:04:07
that's a dude that was, I mean, you know,
2:04:09
he had the shortest of shorts.
2:04:11
Yeah. And the cool, he, you
2:04:14
know, he's so outspoken about like, just what's
2:04:16
going on in the world and he's one of those guys
2:04:18
too, who were, you know, politically homeless, doesn't
2:04:21
really, you know, he'd rather discuss
2:04:24
ideas than, uh, discuss,
2:04:27
you know, parties and that type of thing. You know,
2:04:29
I've heard Tucker, I think when Tucker was talking
2:04:31
to, uh, Russell Brandy, he had
2:04:33
a very similar line where he was saying, he's like,
2:04:35
you know, I don't, you know, people think that he
2:04:38
likes to discuss left first right and Republican
2:04:40
first, but he, he's, he's like, no, I want to
2:04:42
talk to people and discuss
2:04:45
their journeys and their stories and their personal
2:04:47
philosophies. And I want to, you know,
2:04:50
discuss ideas. And I think that's what
2:04:52
brings a lot of us together on this show is
2:04:54
that we don't really care about those labels.
2:04:57
We care about like, okay, what's your opinion
2:04:59
on whatever specific thing? Let's discuss
2:05:02
it. Let's dissect it. Let's challenge
2:05:04
it. Let's, uh, let other people challenge
2:05:06
our ideas. And that's the beautiful thing about
2:05:08
the show. And, um, it really
2:05:11
has worked out better than anybody
2:05:13
could really imagine. When you really think about like,
2:05:15
you know, I sometimes people will email me and
2:05:18
be like, Oh, uh, you know, how does this
2:05:20
work or that? I'm like, listen, it just all works
2:05:22
out. Like people are respectful. People get it,
2:05:24
get along. And, and I think
2:05:27
from the outside looking in, you would assume
2:05:29
so many people with different backgrounds and, and
2:05:31
from different parts of the world and different philosophies
2:05:34
would be butting heads on a, you know, on a normal
2:05:36
basis and it's not the case at all. You know, it's,
2:05:39
it's, we're all like, you know, I
2:05:41
forget who said it earlier, but we're all kind of fighting
2:05:43
the same people and we might have different perspectives
2:05:46
on what the exact solutions might
2:05:49
be or how to go about it. But
2:05:51
if we all can come together and like, you know, focus
2:05:53
on our similarities, uh, then,
2:05:55
you know, and not let those things, the other
2:05:58
difference, the other labels and stuff. divide
2:06:00
us, then at least it's a step in the right direction
2:06:02
because obviously that's what they want, divide and conquer.
2:06:05
Yeah,
2:06:05
we offer a place
2:06:08
for competing
2:06:11
ideas and let them sort of duke it out. That's
2:06:13
okay. That's good. That's how you're supposed
2:06:15
to do it. You can catch Macro Aggressions wherever
2:06:18
podcasts are served. I had James Corbett on
2:06:20
this week. Next week, Chris Matthew from
2:06:23
Forbidden Knowledge News. Check it out. You can
2:06:25
follow me on Twitter at Macro Aggressions, on
2:06:27
Instagram now at Macro
2:06:29
Aggressions podcast. Thanks, everybody.
2:06:31
Thank you.
2:06:36
See you.
2:06:57
Bye.
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