Peasants Perspective

We're Not Waiting for Red Dawn—The Invasion Is Already Here

Taylor Johnatakis Season 2 Episode 90

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What if the decline of America's cities isn't due to incompetence but deliberate design? This episode takes you deep into the mechanisms of societal control and manufactured chaos that keep citizens distracted while real power consolidates behind the scenes.

President Bukele of El Salvador offers a stunning perspective on America's vulnerability, explaining that no external threat could successfully invade the United States—the nation can only be destroyed from within. "You're watching internal operations here," he observes, pointing to once-beautiful cities that have become unlivable wastelands in just three decades. The policies driving this decline—defunding police, decriminalizing theft, providing drugs to addicts—all predictably lead to societal breakdown. As Bukele notes, "You cannot plant corn and expect beans to show up."

We reveal the shocking truth behind recent Los Angeles riots that mainstream media portrayed as deportation protests. Tom Holman, former ICE director, exposes that the riots actually began when authorities served warrants in an $80 million money laundering investigation tied to cartel activity. This coordinated response suggests something far more organized than spontaneous protest. Meanwhile, cartels have evolved into sophisticated Fortune 500-level operations in 45 countries and every major American city, with potential influence over politicians and governance.

The episode explores how control systems maintain power by manufacturing criminality—creating laws designed to be broken, then selectively enforcing them against targeted individuals. A former intelligence analyst explains that surveillance technology merely mirrors our own internal self-policing, suggesting freedom begins not with resistance but non-participation. As we examine the transition from freedom to debt bondage through technology and consumerism, the fundamental question emerges: how do we reclaim our autonomy in a system designed to keep us dependent?

Join us in this eye-opening discussion that connects politics, cartels, surveillance, and personal freedom. The door to liberty exists—but walking through it requires understanding how deeply the system depends on our voluntary participation.

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Speaker 1:

And when they went to the queen To tell her Her subjects had no bread, do you know what she said? Let them eat cake here. You take the bomb.

Speaker 4:

We're getting screwed, man. Every time we turn around we're getting screwed. Oh, the revolution's gonna be through podcasting for sure. That's the only way we talk. It's the little guys. The little guys that take the brunt of everything. It's gotta stop. Peasants, man, we're just peasants, every one of us. You watch those old movies. You see the peasants in the background with the kings and queens walking around. We're those people. You watch those old movies. You see the peasants in the background with the kings and queens walking around. We're those people. We're those people. Good morning, peasants. Welcome to another episode of the Peasants Perspective. People watching the video watch me.

Speaker 5:

They didn't even see that. It's just you and me that saw that.

Speaker 4:

Oh, good morning everybody. Welcome to another episode of the Peasant's Perspective. We've got a good episode. Weedon boys, good morning. Yes, all right, I got the live chats open so I can monitor things, sort of they're over here, I see them, I see them eventually. Okay, I told you yesterday at the end of the show we weren't going to have a show today because I had to go take care of a court thing and on oregon turns out it's next wednesday. So next wednesday we will not be having a show. But I did, uh, drive an hour before I realized that I had a date wrong, so sucked up my whole day. A lot of fun, okay. So let's jump into today.

Speaker 4:

We are going to set the stage with this longer video from Bukele, the president, down in El Salvador. I believe he's being interviewed by Tucker Carlson and he's talking about just the state of the USA, the state of power and politics, and invasion and infiltration. It's just worth listening to. This is a man who brought his country, el Salvador, back from really collapse. I mean, I think it was just a narco state. I mean MS-13 was so infiltrated between judges, prosecutors, attorneys, government officials. It was bad. Just too much rot. Too much rot.

Speaker 4:

So, they had to do an exception to their constitution because clearly they had manipulated the constitution to the point to where the constitution, you know, when you depend on a judge and you depend on politicians and people to act in the interest of the people and they don't. That's, that's the problem. Federalist papers understood this. I mean, this is the thing that could end. It all is corruption of the people that have power.

Speaker 5:

I thought you're just describing washington state it's everything.

Speaker 4:

Power corrupts. I mean it all. It inevitably will create a corruption and has to be cleansed. It's kind of that simplekele. You know a lot of people call him a dictator and he's like well, if my people are eating and happy and educated, ok, you know, I don't know we say dictator is a bad word, but you know it was originated as a good word.

Speaker 7:

Right.

Speaker 4:

So let's just listen to him. This is a long clip, but it's worth listening to.

Speaker 5:

Oh, just let me, uh, change my sound so you guys can know it was me, I know it's me all right here we go to be destroyed from the outside.

Speaker 8:

The usa is too powerful to be destroyed from the outside. Actually, geographically, you nobody can invade the us, the united United States Nobody. I mean even if huge armies will collude and want to attack the US, it's impossible. I mean you have to cross all the ocean, all the Pacific Ocean and all the Atlantic Ocean, just to get to the shore. I mean it's impossible, right, and the US has military bases. It's impossible.

Speaker 8:

So the only way the US fail and this is this is not my um, this is not my uh, my analysis this, this was made by by presidents before, by us presidents before uh, the demise of the us has to come from within. The enemies have to be inside, not really outside. No external enemy can cause so much damage as an internal operation. You're watching internal operations here. You can see them in cities. Cities that were pristinely beautiful 30 years ago are wastelands right now. You would see people. I mean I'm from El Salvador, a third world country in Central America, and myself I can see cities here and say I don't want to, I want to live here. So that would be unthinkable three decades ago, totally unthinkable. But a Salvadoran wouldn't want to live in a US city In a US main city, I mean Los Angeles, new.

Speaker 10:

York, chicago, yeah.

Speaker 8:

Well, philadelphia, baltimore, when you look at how the cities are eroding so fast, this has to be by design. How the cities are eroding so fast, this has to be by design. I mean, who would make so many stupid decisions Like, okay, we're going to give you money for drugs. Really, they're doing that In some cities. They're giving people drugs. I mean, they're literally giving people drugs in some US cities. Or they say, okay, we're going to give you money if you don't work. Or we're going to.

Speaker 8:

You know, they make all of these laws that make no sense. Or if they have a high crime, okay, I have a solution. Let's defund the police. Right, they make this analysis here. And you see all these campaigns defund the police. You will see these campaigns of you know, let's allow shoplifting up to this amount.

Speaker 8:

They make this, this, these decisions, openly. I mean, it's not even a secret. They make it, they made them. They make them openly and we all know what would be the consequence of it. It's like I always use this example we, you know, I know the US grows a lot of corn. No-transcript, plant beans. It's fine, but you cannot plant corn and expect beans to show up. Or you cannot plant beans and expect corn to show up.

Speaker 8:

So if you plant a defunding of the police, allow for shoplifting, give drugs to drug addicts, you know, give money for people to stop work, what would be the consequence of it? You will destroy the society, you will destroy the city, you will destroy the economy. And it's not only a logical thing to think it's already happening. And when they see more problems they say, oh, so we need more of the same solutions that caused these problems in the first place and they enact more of them. So they have more problems and they enact more of the same solutions that caused those problems. They have more problems. So you would think, these people, they can be so dumb. Of course they're not. They're smart, they're very smart people. So why are they doing these things? Because it's by design. It has to be by design so seems very fairly well thought out.

Speaker 4:

I mean not complicated to understand. I feel like he just explained that to the peasants.

Speaker 5:

Pretty simple thought pattern. If you plant beans, you can't expect the corn.

Speaker 4:

If you say you can shoplift, you can't expect a law and order. You know what I mean. It's like, yeah, and he says. He says the thing that we all intuitively know Bouquet life for governor. He says the thing that we all intuitively know, but we have a fever dream that is. The only way it could happen is an invasion. Right, red dawn, right it's come in.

Speaker 4:

This is why they gave us the second amendment. Boys and girls, you know what I mean. Like that's what. That's how we want to see an invasion, we want to see a normandy, we want to storm the shores, we want to see people wear uniforms and know who the enemy is. But that's not how they do it. That's not how the us was going to be taken out well, it wasn't how we were going to win either.

Speaker 5:

I mean, it wasn't like a bunch of teenagers were going to grab guns and go to the woods and then take over the soviets exactly, which is why we haven't done it.

Speaker 4:

It's the same thing with iran. We could turn iran into a sea of yeah, but that would defeat. The purpose May as well be a sea of glass right now. Yeah, huge mountains and one side by ocean and they got it all on lockdown you know, I mean, it's a.

Speaker 4:

It's an ancient civilization, it's one of the world's ancient civilizations, the persians right, and that's the like. Persia has many times extended itself beyond the range of its own mountains and conquered many lands, but when it gets pushed back, you ain't pushing it back beyond those lands like okay you know what I mean like.

Speaker 4:

So any thought of war with them, it's like it's not a good plan, like anybody who actually has to execute the battle. It's not going to work. And that's the thing I think a lot of us we don't, I know. For me, we don't conceptualize how big the world is and how action actually has to be taken on the ground.

Speaker 12:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

If you want to fix this country, action has to be taken. It's not just going to like curve itself to being a better place, right, the laws of physics say, based on inertia, right, you're going to end up wearing down, decaying, and unless you are constantly maintained and repairing, it doesn't work. You know, I heard a I think did I play it on this podcast.

Speaker 5:

That's a principle called entropy, entropy, inertia. Yeah, entropy that's correct.

Speaker 4:

So, uh, I don't know if I paid played this clip on this podcast, but there was this african guy and he was talking to some afric, african college kids that were exchange students into the US and to some really nice colleges and he was kind of educating them on don't buy into this idea that all cultures are equal and that all cultures produce the same results and they just have to be. You know, he was just like pushing back on that idea and he goes why is it in Nigeria, which is where they came from, on that idea? And he goes why is it in nigeria, which is where they came from? Why is it that, you know, everything breaks and everything is in disrepair and everything, like, everything is breaking? And he's like and they're like I don't know, you know, not enough money, not enough this. He says no, he says it's our culture. What do you mean? He says what's the word for maintenance in nigerian? And they're like uh, he's like there's no word for maintenance in Nigerian. And they're like uh, he's like there's no word for maintenance. You know it in English and you know what it means.

Speaker 4:

In America, there's a culture around the word maintenance. You build something and then you maintain it. He's like in Nigeria, we do not have a word for maintenance. He's like think about it, you know we've got great weather. Everything grows Like there. Everything grows like there's not even a real agricultural farming culture because you kind of have, you know, year-round growing seasons for things like. He's like we don't have a word for maintenance. He's like we don't. We didn't build things as a culture out of concrete. They were built out of wood and you know it rotted and you just rebuilt it. You didn't maintain it. And he's like we don't have a word for maintenance, he's. So how do you get an entire nation who doesn't conceptualize or have any cultural baggage around maintaining things, to maintain their roads or their bridges or their buildings or their institutions or their education system, to upgrade it with the times? They don't. They have a build it, let it wear down and then revolution rebuild it. Mentality that's a cultural problem based on language so, wow.

Speaker 5:

So cultures are not just different flavors of ice cream cultures shape everything.

Speaker 4:

Cultures shape everything. At the end of the show we're going to play a little video about a woman who used to work in the intelligence agency and she says everything's. Metaph of the show. We're going to play a little video about a woman who used to work in the intelligence agency and she says everything's metaphysical. She's like we're projecting and creating the world through our expectations of how things will be, can be, should be, and think about the world we live in. With all the technology we're getting fed most of that world, as those of us who've raised children we understand. When you have a little child, who's one, two, three, everything's new. You're giving it names and labels and and describing the utility and, through example, how to use things right. If you just have a kid grow up feral in a house, they don't know how to use things. They're not going to know how to use the dishwasher or use the garbage disposal, or you know what I mean. You have to use them.

Speaker 4:

They just won't use them correctly, yeah look at this nice wood, cheaper chipper, funny little you know what I'm saying like so the the world is like that.

Speaker 4:

It's being shaped constantly. We're projecting it outwards, and so that's why it's so good. The show peasants perspective. Right, it's the simple thing. Sun rises in the east. Plant your crops in the spring, harvest in the fall. It's always a good time to care for your family and share a meal with friends. It's never a good time, historically, to go fight and die for Rome. You know what I mean. It's always a good time to defend your home. Well, right now, think about what's going on around the country. These riots that started out in LA, they've spread right Now. We've got them in seattle, we've got them in dallas, got them in denver. There's I guess there's a big thing planned this weekend oh, yeah, so organic so organic, yes, but here it is.

Speaker 4:

It's like we're not waiting for red dawn. It's here. The paratroopers walked.

Speaker 5:

Nope, we let them in you know some of our cousins and brothers.

Speaker 4:

We know for a fact, there's a thousand uh people on the designated terrorist watch list that have been let in, and these aren't designated terrorists. Like I was on the no fly quiet skies list. Right, right, these are the guys that, like no, you've lost your right to fly a plane anywhere ever you know what I mean, like tats on your face with a proof a little bit different.

Speaker 4:

Well, I don't even think these people are tats. These people are like caught in A little bit different. Well, I don't even think these people are tats. These people are like caught in bomb making plots and not arrested, but their co-conspirators were. These are people that are known part of declared terror cells To be on the terror watch list. I'm sure there's mistakes. I'm sure there's some dude on there that's like. All I did was deliver a pizza, I'm sure of it, but generally that list is top priority right, I think at 9, 11.

Speaker 4:

It was something like. You know, a very small number of these known people were in the country. So the fact that we know a thousand came in, let alone the ones that didn't commence. What tom holman says, the ones who paid extra not to get caught, you know, think about it. You get a plane ticket, a hotel benefits, probably a job, you know, if you get caught he's like. But the ones who paid extra not to get caught, there was a 2 million of them at least. So okay. So wrap up a couple of story themes, a couple of things. Elon Musk Well, actually, no, no, no, no, no. We're going to wrap that up at the end.

Speaker 4:

So Elon Musk retweeted this for himself. This is from February 5th 2025. This is what we're finding out in real time. This is from aesthetics.

Speaker 4:

What we're finding out in real time is the entire modern left is just smoke and mirrors. There is no left-wing voter base. All the elections are rigged and fake. All the liberal media outlets have no audience and are kept alive by USAID funding. All their politicians and political pundits are paid by USAID to say what the government wants. The whole thing was a house of cards. Elon retweeted that. He said that in February, he retweeted it in February and he retweeted it again yesterday, Okay, Okay. So I have felt that for a long time. I feel like what we're fighting is the zeitgeist. We're not fighting bad actors, right? I shared the experience yesterday about having my daughter come home and you know, just ask general questions. But the thing was and I played this video on the podcast, which made it so relevant because it happened in real time without my prompting but the use of the n-word itself is racist and I was like and then it went to black people can't be racist and it's like well, hold on right.

Speaker 4:

So I explain. Like you know, judge it by its fruits. It's not the words, it's the overall act. You know the action and it's like telling me I can't say the n-word because it's racist. Um, but black people can be, can do racist actions. I'm like that in and of itself is racist, because you're prejudicing me based on my skin color, on what I can or can't do, and giving another group a carte blanche. I'm like that is racism.

Speaker 5:

Like some people like to call that reverse racism. That's nonsense. It's just plain racist racism, yeah it's anyways.

Speaker 4:

So I plain racism, racism of yeah it's anyways. So I explained my daughter got it, you know they. Okay, I hope she got it. See if it comes up again later, right, but uh, anyways, that's the zeitgeist. You're fighting with education. You're fighting with teachers unions, you're fighting with mass media, and just the narrative, right, that's what you're fighting with. Mass media and just the narrative, right, that's what you're fighting with. You're not fighting with bad actors my daughter's not a bad actor in this and so it's crumbles.

Speaker 4:

There's no voter base, there's not people who are convicted of it. You're not going to come to me and start, you know, pitching me some communist thing that's full of benefits and you get ice cream every day and Ozempic is, is, is. You know all it's free. And like you're not going to convince me because I'm going to go. Well, no matter how great it sounds, I can see that that would equal slavery, right, that I would be a captive, like I don't you know what I'm saying. Like I'd rather have dangerous freedom than secure, secure a license and which is ultimately just no freedom whatsoever right like I get it.

Speaker 5:

Principally, I understand it a lot of people out there wouldn't do that.

Speaker 4:

They'd say keep that ice cream coming and only because they don't know the context from which to see it. Right, does that make sense? Only because they don't know the context from which to see it? That's why we have this show. That's why we do it. So, uh, elon musk said that and then I guess I did already pull it up. He also said this. So last week, right, he had his little spat with Donald Trump. He did post I regret some of my posts about President at real Donald Trump last week. They went too far and he did take down the tweets that were critical of Trump. I don't know what this means.

Speaker 5:

I don't either.

Speaker 4:

A lot of people I'm listening to that are like insiders. We're talking people who are genuine insiders, like meeting with rudy giuliani and the different people that are in trump's personal like orbit. Like these are not people that always have jobs, these are people that are in like you know, can call the family and get a message and that kind of thing. So they're saying that this was like, a setup like this was just just to expose people, bring more attention to the epstein list.

Speaker 5:

You know, I was really hoping that's what it was.

Speaker 4:

It felt like a juke, you know and then you've got other people like steve bannon, who are like to port elon musk also in trump's orbit. So I don't know. I mean, trump did call steve bannon sloppy steve at one point, so they've got their own history too well, even friends can have some fun banter now and then yeah, I think bannon. Bannon is one of those guys he sees in trump the thing that he can't do and no one else he knows can do so he's hitched his start of that wagon, but he's you know he disagrees with trump on things clearly.

Speaker 4:

I mean he did get fired by Trump. He had huge disagreements with Jared Kushner. So, anyways, all right. So this is Karen Bass yesterday confirming what we ended the show with. We subjectively determined, in a subjective, diagnostic manner, that the Democrats are in fact retarded, confirmed, and Karen Bass held a press conference yesterday.

Speaker 11:

Hi guys, I called on this press conference to let everyone know that I am, in fact retarded. I know most of you already knew that, but just in case any of you still has any doubt whatsoever on whether I'm a retard or not, I want you to know that I am retarded oh and gavin news is of course, of course.

Speaker 4:

so I mean retard, not not to emphasize the dangerous world we're living in, but does it look like ai? No, this is freaking scary. Four years ago I would have played this and been like they said it. They did it, yeah right. Makes you wonder how long they've been using AI. Yeah, hillary Clinton was talking about deep fakes and you know when there was rumors of videos of her circulating around and who knows Like, honestly, you just don't know.

Speaker 5:

Well, like hand through the lectern stuff, you know.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, okay, what are these riots going on? Because they're popping off, they're going, they're getting quelched, but you know?

Speaker 5:

What are they Besides paid for? What are they? What were they over?

Speaker 4:

I don't know Deportation right.

Speaker 5:

Oh, okay, sure.

Speaker 4:

This I don't know deportation right, oh, okay, sure this time. This time, well, that's what they think it's over. It's over deportation and we talked about, you know, the main group that's funding. This is churla, which is, you know, basically immigrant rights, but it's also kind of driven by this movement that california, basically the southwest, goes back to mexico. You know you're on stolen land which you stole.

Speaker 5:

I mean, it's just this whatever, we're trying to steal it back, yeah okay, so it's over deportation.

Speaker 4:

So everybody thinks okay I mean literally everybody thinks that this was over blocking deportations. You know, there's a van full of immigrants, somebody's dad's on the and that's what this started over. That's the zeitgeist running through the left, that's what the media wants you to believe. But Tom Holman, he spilled the beans. This was over something a little bit different. So I think this again, just look at it for what it is. This whole riot, everything started not over deportation. The fashion is something completely different. Listen to this. This whole riot, everything started. Public safety threats in the fashion district Something completely different. Listen to this. Were there public safety threats in the fashion district and at that Home Depot? In these raids we've seen.

Speaker 4:

Yeah and that's what no one's talking about.

Speaker 2:

The fashion district wasn't an immigration raid. It was a service of three criminal warrants at locations based on a large criminal conspiracy that ICE have been investigating locations based on a large criminal conspiracy that I used to be investigating. It has to do with money laundering, tax evasion and customer fraud, where a company under declared over $80 million in goods, generally pays $17 million in fees and it's part of an overall conspiracy on numerous businesses that they believe that some of this money is being laundered in Mexico, colombia, the fun cartel activity. So this was a criminal investigation that they all responded to in the beginning. That's how it all started, but the facts never got out, even though we put the facts out and we didn't cover it. They just said immigration rates and we're separating. Okay.

Speaker 4:

So this all started in Los Angeles. Not over deportations, not over a roundup at the Home Default parking lot or at the fashion district. They were serving warrants on a money laundering investigation. That's what the riots started for. So you know when your friends and family are like, hey, I'm going to go support the immigrants, and you know we really like Juanita, our housekeeper. Okay, that's not what you're protesting. You're protesting the service of warrants in search of money laundering and cartel activity, and you know what I mean. But they're going to drag Juanita home. Who's going to wipe our asses? Yeah, but that's not how this started. So think about this. I shows up, serves the warrants. Yeah, you're told that they were raiding people to deport them. They weren't. Who decided to start rioting? You think it was people in the parking lot. That's not what this is. I mean, that's not how that story plays out. That's not how warrants get served. You know what I mean. That's not how they like this was targeted. Like, oh, hey, they're serving a warrant, let's spice things up.

Speaker 2:

Uh, wow, so let's finish this and all the negative information we hear all the time. We took a lot of bad people off the street last couple of days. A Vietnamese national that attended a graduation party was kicked out and came back and killed two young people, two young Americans. We arrested a child predator. We arrested someone for sexual misconduct. Someone arrested or committed armed robbery. We arrested numerous gang members. What ICE did the last couple of days is make angeles safer by taking public safety threats off the street.

Speaker 4:

Great and keep it going. Yeah, so connecting this money laundering situation, this is a big deal. So tom holman talked about this. Uh, this was a couple months ago on the tucker carlson podcast.

Speaker 2:

I guess he calls it Tacos Mexico. They were born out of the narcotics smuggling industry in Mexico and they're powerful. Look, they're like a Fortune 500 company. This is not a gang anymore, right, jalisco cartels. They're in over 45 countries of the world, right, and not only are they responsible for moving narcotics in this country, they're currently in every major city in the United States, because not only are they smuggling the drugs in the United States, they're currently in every major city in the United States, because not only are they smuggling the drugs in the United States, they're taking over the distribution within the United States.

Speaker 2:

So, again and I said this at the RNC and President Trump agrees with me these criminal cartels have killed more Americans than every terrorist organization in the world combined, and every war more than the Second World War. So that's why they need to be designated terrorist organizations and wiped off the face of the earth. And it's going to take the United States to do it. Mexico has failed to do it. Even if they tried to do it, the bottom line is much of the Mexican military, much of the Mexican law enforcement, much of the Mexican government is corrupt. That's just a fact. Don't tell some. Actually, they are born out of the that's just a fact.

Speaker 4:

So the cartels in this is the thing that in our american politics we don't want to talk about it. We don't even want to acknowledge the potential that the cartel has infiltrated or has influence over our politicians and our government. Would you agree with that? Yeah, like that is scary. We talk about. You can't be invaded right Like red Dawn's not happening.

Speaker 4:

But the idea that cartel members have come over and over decades and decades and decades, built up influence and supply lines and bought people off and, you know, addicted a judge's son and got blackmail on the son. Now the judge is a great, honorable judge, except for when it comes to certain cases with certain cartel members. You know what I mean. Sure, they get prison sentences, but it's like a year and they're out. You know what I'm saying. Like that's the kind of what happens when you have politicians that run for state positions that have, we know have ties to the cartel.

Speaker 4:

This is a problem in Arizona, huge problem in Arizona. I mean they have a I can't remember, I can't remember his position, but he used to be a lawyer for the cartel, a defense attorney for the cartel, and now he's in government. I don't know. Know, I mean he was a bar card member, but it starts to make you kind of. I mean, you actually did take money from the cartel as an attorney but maybe that was just way in the past and it's behind him okay, so why this decision?

Speaker 4:

you know what I'm saying. Like it's what bukele says. Like this is it's got to be on purpose. Like you can't honestly think that you know, if you give free, free spray cans to kids, that you're not going to end up having more graffiti around town, around the high school. You know what I mean. Like you plant the seed, you're gonna, you're gonna harvest that crop or you're gonna have. You know what I'm saying. Like it's just that's what's wild to me. Like, clearly, we know what's happening here. We see it, the cartel, the Fortune 500 company, like you said, they're huge. That's just the one cartel that he mentions, the Jalisco cartel. There's plenty of other ones we talked about.

Speaker 4:

Go back and listen to the episode on narco terrorists running our election systems. They've become way bigger than anything. So the fact that they're going after serving this warrant and this money laundering steal and he says it's tied to a much bigger, you know investigation, that that's what starts the riots and they're waving foreign countries flags. You know now, we, the people, we're being sold. This is about deportations. That's what we're being sold. Okay, it's the smoke and mirrors. Oh, this is about deportations. That's we're being sold. Okay, it's the smoke and mirrors. Oh, this is about deportations, that's the big. Oh, no, they're gonna after pablo the pool cleaner. No, no, okay, that's the smoke. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, you have an investigation and you have a simultaneous cover-up. You know, and try to create enough smoke that they can't penetrate through the other thing, too, that these little riots happen.

Speaker 4:

So I've talked to people down in Southern California and they're like, well, the riots are happening, like downtown, and you know it's huge. It's like 45 minutes away hour with traffic. So for most people, yes, life's going on as normal, but what happens is you start to see this. So this is I believe this video is not AI. I checked it like multiple times okay, this is someone who's out in california, out in the pal, I think. He says the palisades and, uh, he called in. And this is, this is the real on the ground effect of riots like this. And this is what starts to become that uh, pressure cooker. Right, I used to describe prison as a pressure cooker Like, oh, it's easy, you just you're in there, you can read, you can call home a couple of times, watch TV all day, like, doesn't that sound great?

Speaker 5:

No Right.

Speaker 4:

But then when you get in there and it's like, well, everybody's deprived of freedom, like it's the stress. If you can just be in the moment, it's an all paid, inclusive summer camp, right, you know, I mean goodness gracious, but it's not everything, but that it's a pressure cooker. It causes all the stress to where, next thing, you know, people are getting stabbed over top ramen. That really happens in prison, like I remember David Dempsey gave told me this one story when he was in state prison Cause you know, you've been there before and he talked about watching this one mexican guy get stabbed like all the way down the body and a little gang stabbing died, bled out right there, and it was literally over stealing 50 cents worth of ramen. You know, pressure, that's called a pressure cooker. So this, this situation that he describes here, this creates a community pressure cooker all right.

Speaker 3:

so lapd just came out to one of my job sites where we had some people breaking in and stealing things. But they were getting called in on the radio right now to head downtown to help out with the protests and they were telling me yesterday they had six officers injured. They've got some protesters coming over here and starting brush fires near Pacific Palisades just to mess with law enforcement. What people need to understand is that these riots have a citywide effect. One of the officers here just told me that he worked a full shift in Pacific Palisades yesterday, got called in on emergency orders to go help with riot control at three in the afternoon yesterday, orders to go help with riot control at three in the afternoon yesterday, worked until 430 this morning and then was back on shift in Pacific Palisades at 730. This is interfering with wildfire recovery and Karen Bass and Gavin Newsom are absolutely responsible and they need to be held accountable. All right, so LAPD just came out to one of my jobs.

Speaker 4:

And they're retarded, and they're retarded, and they're retarded. We're taking that word back, okay, so there you go. That's the thing, the little small event around these little federal buildings, right? And then it becomes. Well, now you can't respond to a wildfire, recall, or you can't respond to this, and oh, my goodness, there's a rape. Well, that investigation is going to have to wait. We've got to protect this resources getting spread thin.

Speaker 4:

And then, next thing you know, civil society breaks down. And now what are we getting for our tax dollars? We should be saying that anyways you know what I mean this is how you break it from within. We let the raw in, and now, here it is. Now the solutions are hard. Now it's mass deportations. Now juanita's got to go along with sanchez, who has a double, has a rap sheet. You know what I mean.

Speaker 5:

It's it starts to be really complicated and we're also not talking about, like individual local levies and taxes in general, because we're preoccupied with all this la bs.

Speaker 4:

You know this is taking up all of our bad guard folks yeah, in um southern california here's a little video that I got off the off of uh raw news.

Speaker 7:

This is fox there is national guard folks uh in southern california, westwood, tonight as well, so this is just like a camera angle.

Speaker 7:

This was some video from earlier that was pretty startling to me, and you see this these are boxes of masks being handed out and a lot of folks seeming to just grab them like candy. These look like they are bionic face shields, which, we looked at their website, is basically recommended for machinists and auto body shops as a way to protect one's face. I don't think we expect to have a lot of cars coming in for repair work tonight, so that sort of seemed like the thing that you would have as a precaution if you were planning to or getting ready to, potentially have some sort of conflict with law enforcement. Hopefully that doesn't happen tonight and something like that isn't needed, as we see this particular crowd on the move, some of them holding Mexican flags, many of them covering their faces as they're on the move, some of them holding Mexican flags, many of them covering their faces as they're on the move. We want to get an update now about this page is becoming unresponsive.

Speaker 4:

We used to call that a militia. When you gathered up all your friends and marched under a flag without uniform, that was militia. I don't know, I mean by your fruits.

Speaker 5:

You shall know them. I call them cultures. Call it something you gotta, you got a foreign militia marching through the streets.

Speaker 4:

I mean these are the kind of things where it's like, well, well, yeah, freedom of speech, you can fly whatever flag you want. Yeah folks like at a certain point we just have to go. That's not, that's a militia, that's a foreign army, that's a foreign force, that's assembling. That's yes, exactly. You know it's like ah, oh man, um, this was so. That was their local broadcast. This was a press conference with the um. I believe this is the sheriff of LA County. If it's not, it's the police department.

Speaker 12:

But when I when I look at the people who are out there doing the violence, that's not the people that we see during the day, who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue. These are people who are all hooded up, they've got a hoodie on, they've got face masks on. They're people who do this all the time, get away with whatever they can, go out there from one civil unrest situation to another, using the same or similar tactics frequently, and they are connected. Some would call them anarch anarchists, uh, or by any other variety of names, but they're people that, uh, we run across routinely, city to city, and this is what they do. So, even more disgusting that many of the people who were doing this come in from other places just to hurt people and to cause havoc, uh. But when I so, he says that it's like we're out there doing the violence okay.

Speaker 4:

Well, if you're coming in from other cities to just hurt people and you're carrying a foreign flag, I mean, they said donald trump was right about everything, he did sign an executive order declaring that an invasion was taking place, and now you're seeing what would look like an invasion like I feel like we're all in kind of this do do, do, do. It's just normal. You know, metal is good on rumble in the chat says the master sold it by your favorite walmart. All the money, yes, those bio shield masks. They're not crazy expensive, but they're, you know, 30, 40 bucks, whatever they are, and based on the picture they had there and somebody paid for all those, like somebody dropped just coming out of the back of that truck, they're what thousand dollars worth of masks at least.

Speaker 5:

So I think what he's getting at is. I saw another clip about this. Um, these masks are apparently. They're, of course, mass produced in China, but they're only available in quantity through Walmart and it's. I saw a post this morning that said something about the Waltons that were promoting and providing this as a service.

Speaker 4:

So okay, we're in this really weird moment right because you've had let's just blanket call usaid money right. Usaid money and other types of funding like that has been matched with private donor money. So the walmart foundation, soros foundations, like they put a million dollars in and then 10 million dollars in grants come in to do the thing, or whatever.

Speaker 4:

So that's what they've been doing. Walmart's been one of these. Of the many foundations They've all got one that you know it's a tax write off. There's a lot of reasons why you would pitch it to a corporation, or even to an individual, financially Right, a lot of reasons you would do that. But then it gets going and you start seeing this kind of stuff. Right, there's some foreign executive at walmart that's like all in, anti deportation, super globalist, I guess the family just came out and the other board members had to come out and condemn her, and so there's a little bit of like. You know, you can't exactly score in america, just outright, you know.

Speaker 4:

So it's like I wasn't going to mention the post about the wallace, but I think that's what he's getting at there is a deep walmart may have like as this usaid money pulled back, these foundations are now having to kind of step forward and be the face and fund them, and then you like when one of these Walmart foundations that's funding this, you know. Now the emphasis is who's facilitating? Walmart's facilitating it? Yeah, you know what I mean. And there's a couple others that have been named too. That's like okay, so Tom Holman's doing a money laundering investigation on American companies, of which he served a warrant at a home Depot Right, which is an all American company money laundering investigation on American companies of which he served a warrant at a home Depot right, which is an all American company that loves Trump.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right, right, right. Does everybody know who's scratching whose hands and who's got the money's in the cookie jar? You know what I mean. Like, so okay, are they a Patsy in it? Are they cooperating, or are they a target of it? Like are they a patsy in it, are they cooperating or are they a target of it?

Speaker 4:

like, and that's what kicked off these raids, or an active participant and that's what kicked off these riots, with potentially paid agitators and protesters. Now in 2020, right, I know people who went to the different rallies and protests and things for the george floyd, various hoopla but we also know there was a lot of paid agitation and all kinds of nonsense.

Speaker 4:

But trump kind of had his hands held and the fbi wasn't really doing a whole much because they were getting ready for me. You know like they were. They were monitoring me to be like how riled up can we get tailored again? See if we can get them up to the end of the year, see if we can get them to go to dc, you know what I mean. Like that's what 2020 looked like. Well, now we've got a new sheriff in town. Now trump's a little bit more politically wise and I think the four years in the wilderness, they they've you don't think they can on the record numbers of unrest.

Speaker 4:

You're crazy. I mean everybody. We, we talked about this. The summer's gonna be lit right 2020 all over again. We're still talking about 2024 years later. Why? Why was it so quiet during the Biden regime? Now they're out of power.

Speaker 4:

I didn't see a lot of right-wing violence the last four years. I mean, I tried to drum it up, but I didn't see massive rallies and protests when they took away parental rights in Washington. You know, I see politicians fundraising. I don't see any protests or rallies. Massive rallies and protests when they took away parental rights in Washington. I see politicians fundraising. I don't see any protests or rallies.

Speaker 4:

So here's John Solomon. This is good Signal. Noise. This is some good signal. Last time there was media talk about it on the right-wing ecosystem, but now it's different. Now these riots are going off. They're in direct confrontation to an investigation. Right, this isn't just George Floyd cultural thing. This is more than that. They're trying to make it cultural. But the leaders that are running the federal government right now the heads of the cabinets, the cabinet members seem to understand. This is the enemy within. These are the weeds poking up the dandelions, so to speak. It's not the root system, but it's the dandelions. We can mow the lawn, but if you mow the lawn, all you do is knock off the dandelions. Yeah, that's all you do by quelling the violence and taking some of these low-level guys off the street. Is you've just mowed the lawn?

Speaker 10:

you haven't actually taken care of your broadleaf weed problem this morning, kash patel told us we have it on the record, up on just the news that they're following the money trail. The second way you stamp out these sort of movements is to choke the money supply that pays for the radios and the bricks and the uh organization and all of the things that we see on the street in la that are clearly not organic, and that is something that never happened in 2020 under Bill Barr. It is happening under Pam Bondi and Kash Patel as we speak, and under Kristi Noem and the Homeland Security Investigations Intelligence Unit. They're fast at work because if you can choke off the money, you'll choke off these protests pretty quickly, and I think that that is a big change from 2020. You can see, this administration was ready for this moment. They imposed law and order. They didn't let the media, the Democrats or the elitists dictate the terms. They dictated the terms and I think LA has been safer as a result of it.

Speaker 6:

Great investigative report of Adjusted News Group at center of initial anti-ICE protest funded by California and federal government Walker. Because we've got to cut the head of the snake off and you've got money. You've got tax pay, you've got these high net worth billionaires and the billionaire kids, but you also got taxpayer money going to fund this, which is unbelievable. What do you got for us?

Speaker 10:

So this group, charlotte, has been around since the 1980s. It has been at the center point of the illegal immigrant movement. They have tried to portray those who cross the border and commit crimes here sympathetically for many years, but it became a big business in the last few years. Where does that money come from? The taxpayers of california? More than $30 million of the money that goes into Churla is now coming from the state of California. A couple million comes from the federal government, to the credit of the Trump administration. They cut off that funding as soon as they got into power. But Churla is now the official spokesperson for all the anarchists you see on the ground. They're the sympathists. They're the people making the case that ICE is the bad guys and that the illegal aliens should be allowed to run wild. In fact, one of the things they were doing, going into this weekend of mayhem, was asking every neighborhood in LA to immediately report when ICE was running an operation in their neighborhood so they could swarm and try to thwart ICE.

Speaker 10:

But what does this show us? It's what we've been learning for the last 20 years about the left. They take government money, whether it's the climate change movement, the pro-illegal alien movement, and they get funding from the Justice Department, from different taxpayer-funded programs, and they actually make these nonprofits into armies programs and they actually make these nonprofits into armies, into substantial forces that then, we have to reckon with, the California taxpayer is essentially underwriting or funding the mayhem they're going through right now. That system has to be broken. We've seen it for 20 years.

Speaker 10:

The Justice Department would get a major environmental war. They'd give it to the climate change people. They'd get a major war. They'd give it to the climate change people. They'd get a major war. They'd give it to the illegal immigrant people. Uh, that money has built up an extraordinary war chest that now has turned around and weaponized against the american people in places like la. Uh, the justice department on top of that that's what kash patel was talking about this morning choking off this money short term. Long term will choke off a lot of these radical movements. Can you believe?

Speaker 5:

that can you believe he called this not organic. What I can't believe that anybody believes that this is organic our own justice department was dispersing these grants I know that's so crazy like you don't hate your government enough.

Speaker 4:

Right now, you, you need the benefits. You're addicted to the benefits.

Speaker 4:

This outfit you're addicted to the safety. But kelly said it no one is invading america. It's not happening. You have two major oceans. Oh, we have some battleships. Great, you land 5 000 people in bermerton, washington, and we know it's a china boat unloading they'll, bremerton will repel the invaders. You know what I mean. That's not a problem. We have the second amendment. We are armed to the teeth. We don't know when to use our guns because we're never going to be invaded. You know, abraham lincoln, all the armies in the world couldn't drink a drop of the mississippi.

Speaker 4:

You know there isn't a napoleon and all his might couldn't have gotten into the ohio valley, okay. So where's the enemy? There? It is. You shop within in la, your shop getting beat up today. Oh, the justice department paid for that. Sure they did that. The people you're going to call to protect you? What's the difference between extortion money and protection money? Ron well hold on.

Speaker 5:

How do we even let an organization like Charlotte exist for 20 plus years? And now we're being? It's being funded by the government.

Speaker 4:

They can't be that dumb. They can't be that dumb. That's, this is the situation. You, you can't be that dumb.

Speaker 5:

Exactly right.

Speaker 4:

Peasants are peaceful, ok. When we have disruptions of peace, we call it domestic violence. You got the drunk uncle at the Christmas party. Gets a little handsy right. You have a dad can't handle some childhood stress. Takes it out on his kids right.

Speaker 4:

And the community, the family, the tribe has to step in. That is disruption to our peace of the highest order. But beyond that, I got, I got. I do not care what they're doing around the corner right now. You know what I mean. Can't see it from my house, not a problem. Peasants are peaceful. As long as I'm fed, as long as I can care for my family, I have no need to stray beyond my bounds. You know what I mean and cause trouble. Tourism, my bounds, you know what I mean and cause trouble. Tourism, sure, cultural exchange all day. But go pick a fight. We seek peace yeah right.

Speaker 4:

so when you have a situation like this and the people we hired hey, we hired you. When the drunk uncle or the abusive father is out of our capacity to handle it, he needs a timeout from society. Yeah, we need to be protected from him.

Speaker 4:

for a minute, Right, don't release 500 of those, so we created an institution called the government and the department of justice and the BOP and everything there to take care of those instances when our piece is disturbed, when it's obvious to us resolving this issue is beyond our capacity and we need an adult time out. Okay, now that doj isn't taking care of the uncle, they're sending a guatemalan uncle to replace him. Yeah, and he's just as drunk.

Speaker 4:

You know what I mean. Hundreds of them, hundreds of them, thousands like thousands of them, like that same entity that you need to protect you, to protect us is the problem is causing 90 of our real problems.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I was in prison. It's not full of drunk uncles, okay, it's 50 full of illegal immigrants who are there on much lesser charges than what they have actually done. That's a huge problem. You don't hate your government enough. You don't even know what problems they're causing. We talk about the housing and the health and the building department. I mean, how many houses do you know that have just collapsed in on themselves, that they keep updating these engineering standards? I mean, how many houses do you know that have gone up in flames? That residential houses need commercial fire sprinkler systems?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, basically zero.

Speaker 4:

Basically zero. But it's for your good. I don't know that it's for your good. I don't know that. I think you're putting on some kind of worldwide zoning agenda based on UN 2030, and I can see it roll down through federal, state and then now my local laws. You're doing a one-world government agenda with no reason. Why is housing expensive? Is it because builders charge too much? Is it because there's not enough ready, willing and able people to swing a hammer? No, the reason building so expensive as it takes a year and a half. It takes as much to get permitting as it does to build the freaking house. Time and money yeah, sometimes it's crazy.

Speaker 4:

anti-socialist league on rum. The only people that believe rights are organic are the 500 people that still watch CNN and MSNBC. The lunatics that still believe in Russian collusion. Yes, yes, we have a. We've diagnosed those people. They're called retarded. Are there 500 of them? I don't know. I don't know, but I think my judge watched, watched MSNBC.

Speaker 5:

I'm pretty sure on loop. Yeah, on loop.

Speaker 4:

Maybe he's watching the christmas special yeah okay, um, I need one second because I just closed the tab I wanted to watch. No, just a second, all right. So there's also been quite a bit of talk about this plantare, uh ai you know, palatier, palatier.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, so I have some really interesting thoughts on this. Okay, I remember when I was meeting with the fbi and they they're you know, we chatted and I'm good, you know, talk, talk, talk, talk. Tell them everything they need to know, cause nothing to hide. And then they served me the warrant and they were going to raid my house. But because I was volunteering, you know like if you give us her phone, pretty much satisfy this warrants, like okay, give him my phone. You know, in that moment as you're handing your phone to someone and you're like huh like there goes my whole life.

Speaker 4:

There goes my whole life. And I just watched one of those crime shows where the guy's like I'd rather get someone's cell phone than their dna, so their cell phone. I know everything he's like with a dna.

Speaker 5:

I just know who they are right I wonder what happens in that moment if you just go. I don't have one, you know oh, they're smarter than that.

Speaker 4:

I started out the meeting. You got a cell phone on. You're not recording or anything, are you know? Do you mind putting it on the table?

Speaker 4:

oh sure, we're on the table it was literally, it was zero chance of me being like, no, the good thing was I had two cell phones. I left one in the truck so I had my one. I gave him that one and then, as I'm driving back, I actually called him and I was like, hey, he he's like what number is this? And I gave it to him. I mean they were going to get that anyways. Yeah, my cell phone account that's funny.

Speaker 5:

What number is this? Oh, this is my phone. This is a burner phone I got to figure it out.

Speaker 4:

I don't know, hold on, I just picked this one up, yeah, gotta figure it out. Well, I don't know, hold on, I just picked this one up, yeah, okay. So anyways, realizing like they have everything. And then the other big shock was when you get a rain, they take your dna, they swab your mouth and you're like oh, okay, okay, you know, clone, incoming taylor goes in, clone comes out.

Speaker 4:

You know what I'm saying? Like I don't know. Eventually look at us all you know let's be a whole world full of npcs in the new, brave new world. They create a virus that just goes and gets convicted felons right, and they just know, and they just take it out and, oh my gosh, look, we save so much on our budget. We don't even need these prisons. It sounds horrible, but somebody's thought it. I just thought it just now.

Speaker 4:

You know, there's some mad scientist sitting with a usa id grant be like okay, new bangla yeah, so, uh, the the using ai to track things and coordinate things on one hand, yes, if we want law and order, well, this is one way to achieve it. If there's any doubt that the government will ever turn things against you, that's where it becomes a problem. And Atlas shrugged oh man, I'm going to give it one flip through and let's see if we can find the part. There's a part in here where, yeah, the character, hank Reardon, gets approached They've created a whole bunch of rules. Oh, here it is. How great is that? Okay, so I'm going to read this. This is basically what goes on here. Basically what goes on here.

Speaker 4:

Okay, so hank in the story, hank created a metal. It's a super alloy, it's the best and, uh, it's going to take over all the steel manufacturing. But the old guys, the other guys who make steel, they're all connected politically and they're fat cats and they just want to sit back and be lazy and they bought into this. Like, do things for the social good. And you know, we don't have to run our businesses, we'll just regulate. No competition.

Speaker 5:

I'm already thinking of this in context of free energy versus old oil there's definitely some real comparison there.

Speaker 4:

All right, okay, so he, so the, the director of the academy of science or whatever shows up and and wants to extort Hank Reardon for his metal to nationalize it. Issues of principle are such a nuisance at Dr Ferris smiling and such a waste of time for all concern. Now, would you care to be a martyr for an issue of principle only in circumstance where nobody will know that that's what you are, nobody but you and me. Where you won't get a chance to breathe a word about the issue or the principle. So he's like we're going to nail you for this crime and you're not going to get to explain to the world that it was over principle that you did the thing right. You won't get a chance to breathe a word about the issue or the principle. Where you won't be a hero the creator of a spectacular new metal making a stand against enemies whose actions might appear somewhat shabby in the eyes of the public. Where you won't be a hero but a common criminal, a greedy industrialist who's cheated the law for a plain motive of profit. A racketeer of the black market who's broken the national regulations designed to protect public welfare. A hero without glory and without public accomplish, who accomplished more than a moment? No more than about a half column of newspaper print somewhere on page five. Now would you still care to be that kind of martyr? Because that's just what the issue amounts to Now. Either let us have the metal or you go to jail for 10 years and take your friend Danager along too.

Speaker 4:

As a biologist, dr Ferris has always been fascinated by the theory. Dr Ferris has always been fascinated by the theory that animals had the capacity to smell fear. He had tried to develop a similar capacity in himself. Watching Reardon, he concluded the man had long since decided to give in because he caught no trace of any fear. Who was your informer, asked Reardon, one of your friends, mr Reardon, the owner of a copper mine in Arizona, who reported to us that you had purchased an extra amount of copper last month above the regular tonnage required for the monthly quota of reared-in metal which the law permits you to produce. Copper is one of the ingredients of reared-in metal, isn't it? That's all the information we needed. The rest was easy to trace. You mustn't blame the mine owner too much.

Speaker 4:

The copper producers, as you know, are being squeezed so badly right now that the man had to offer something of value in order to obtain a favor and emergency need ruling which suspended a few of the directives in his case and gave him a little breathing spell. The person whom he traded his information knew where it would have been of the highest value, so he traded it to me in return for certain favors he needed. Do you see how he's going through this? Yeah, so all the necessary evidence, as well as the next 10 years of your life, are now in my possession and I am offering you a trade. I'm sure you won't object, since it is your specialty. The form may be a little different from what it was in your youth, but you're a smart trader. You've always known how to take advantage of changing conditions. These are the conditions of our day, so it should not be difficult for you to see where your interests lie and to act accordingly.

Speaker 4:

Reardon said calmly in my youth this was called blackmail. Dr Ferris grinned. That's what it is, mr Reardon. We've entered a much more realistic age.

Speaker 4:

But there was a spectacular, peculiar difference, thought Reardon, between the manner of a plain blackmailer and that of Dr Ferris. A blackmailer would show signs of gloating over his victim's sin and an acknowledgement of its evil. He would suggest a threat to the victim and a sense of danger to them both. Dr ferris conveyed none of it. His manner was that of dealing with the normal and the natural. It suggested a sense of safety. It held no tone of condemnation but a hint of comradeship, a comradeship based, for both of them, on self-contempt.

Speaker 4:

The sudden feeling that made Reardon lean forward in a posture and eager attentiveness was the feeling that he was about to discover another step along his half-glimpse trail. Seeing Reardon's look of interest, dr Fair smiled and congratulated him on having caught the right key. The game was clear to him now. The markings ofulated him. On having caught the right key. The game was clear to him now. The markings of the pattern were falling in the right order. Some men thought dr ferris would do anything so long it was, as it was, left unnamed. But this man wanted frankness. This was the tough realist he had expected to find.

Speaker 4:

You're a practical man, mr reardon said dr ferris amiably. I can't understand. Why would you want to stay behind the times? Why don't you adjust yourself and play it right? You're smarter than most of them. You're a valuable person. We've waited for you a long time, and when I heard that you were trying to string along with Jim Taggart, another industrialist, who caved in. I knew you could be had. Don't bother with Jim Taggart, he's nothing, he's just a flea bait.

Speaker 4:

Get into the big game. We can use you and you can use us. Want us to step on Oren Boyle, the other steel industrialist, for you. He's given you an awful beating. Want us to trim him down a little. It can be done. Or want us to keep Ken Danager in line. Look how impractical you've been about that. I know why you sold him that metal. It's because you need him to get the to get coal from. So you took a chance on going to jail and paying huge fines just so you could get. Just so you could get on the good side of Ken Danager. Do you call the good that good business? Now make a deal with us and just let Ken Danager understand that if he doesn't toe the line he'll go to jail. But you won't, because you've got friends he hasn't got. You'll never have to worry about your coal company from then on. Coal supply from then on. Now that's the modern way of doing business. Ask yourself which way is more practical.

Speaker 4:

And whatever anyone said about you, no one's ever denied that you're a great businessman and a hard-headed realist. That's what I am, said Reardon, that's what I thought, said Dr Ferris. You rose to riches at an age when most men were going bankrupt. You've always managed to blast obstacles to keep your mills going, to make money. That's your reputation. So you wouldn't want to be impractical now. Would you Wait for what? For what are you doing? So long as you make money? Leave the theories to people like Bertram Scrooge and the ideals to people like Balfe Eubank. You know two philosophers of their day that were bloviating in the newspapers and be yourself. Come down to earth. You're not the man who'd let sentiment interfere with business. No, reardon said solely I wouldn't. Not any kind of sentiment.

Speaker 4:

Dr Ferris smiled, don't you suppose we knew it? He said his tone suggesting that he was letting his patent leather hair down to impress a fellow criminal by display of superior cunning. We've waited a long time to get something on you. You honest men are such a problem and such a headache, but we knew you'd slip sooner or later, and this is just what we wanted. You seem to be pleased about it, don't? I have good reason to be, but after all, I did break one of your laws, well, what do you think they're for? Dr Ferris did not notice the sudden look on Reardon's face, the look of a man hit by the first vision of what he had sought to see. Dr Ferris was past the stage of seeing and he was intent upon delivering the last blows to an animal caught in a trap.

Speaker 4:

Did you really think that we want those laws observed, said Dr Ferris. We want them broken. You'd better get it straight. That's not a bunch of Boy Scouts you're up against. Then you better get it straight that it's not a bunch of Boy Scouts you're up against. Then you'll know that it is not the age for beautiful gestures.

Speaker 4:

We're after power and we mean it. You fellows were pikers, but we know the real trick. You'd better get wise to it. There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well then, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law, abiding citizens, what's there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed, nor enforced nor objectively interpreted, and you create a nation of lawbreakers and then you cash in on guilt. Now that's the system, mr reardon. That's the game, and once you understand it you'll be much easier to deal with.

Speaker 4:

Watching dr ferris, watch him reardon saw a sudden twitch of anxiety. The look of that precedes panic, as if clean a clean card had fallen on the table from the deck Dr Ferris had never seen before. What Dr Ferris was seeing in Reardon's face was the look of luminous serenity. This is us guys, this is us Luminous serenity that comes from the sudden answer of an old, dark problem, a look of relaxation and eagerness that there was a youthful clarity in Reardon's eyes and the faintest touch of contempt in the lines of his mouth. Whatever this meant and Dr Ferris could not decipher it he was certain One thing the face held no sign of guilt.

Speaker 4:

We will not apologize for doing the right thing, even if you label it a crime. We will not apologize for doing the right thing, even if you label it a crime. We will not apologize for doing the right thing, even if you label it a crime. They will make laws and use them against you. So this is what I worry about the control grid. It'd be great if all they ever did was go after drug dealers and child predators that whole excerpt that you just read.

Speaker 5:

From the very outset of that, the uh character was trying to get the reardon guy to just not take a stand. Don't take a stand, it's just so easy just to get along, you know just tell us what we need to know we'll put some pressure on your friends, you know, so that you can get a better deal. But you know, in when he says that, you know that he's going to put pressure on you too. So you just have to get in line.

Speaker 4:

And when you read the story, people, he says we'll put pressure on daniger. Well, you right, he, he's the guy you just got the tip from right. We'll put pressure on oil and boil. He's the guy running this whole thing. You'll turn on him. Right, you're using, we're after power, exactly our friend, are in the way and hurry up and give us your power and we're taking a stand.

Speaker 5:

Give us your power in the book.

Speaker 4:

They want to take these industrials and say, look, reardon did this, he endorsed this, he, he volunteered. He said that the uh climate reduction act is good. He said that the uh nationalization of the railroads is good. Look, he endorsed it by signing on.

Speaker 4:

Right. They compel the consent by a threat. This book is biblical. I mean, it explains it. And you see it like that, in such a way where it's like who wants a nation of law, abiding citizens? The only power a government has is through enforcement. It doesn't exist if it doesn't enforce something. And when, all of a sudden, the needs of the day are met, when everybody's fed, there's food abundance, when everybody can work right, when artists can do art, when they're rewarded for that creativity, when everything's running smooth, what power does the government have? Let's crack down on some artists, let's crack down on the hippies, let's crack down on something, but not the narco guys, because we got them, we know exactly where they're at, we can get them to do anything we want, as long as we don't throw them in jail.

Speaker 5:

They're already in the system. Do you see what I'm saying?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, in fact we'll use them. In fact, in fact we need some new humvees for that local police department. Why don't we have some? You know some cartel activity over in that town and you know, then we can get a grant for more money. Quick deliver a pallet of bricks, you know quick deliver a pallet of bricks best investment you'll ever make.

Speaker 4:

You get humvees out of the thing and new body armor right police department yeah yeah, I mean insanity gotta trash all these old cars we make these laws because we want them to be broken. We will not apologize for doing what's right. So this is a former intelligence officer who's talking about this palantir stuff. And this is the reason I was led to read that, because I had zero plan on reading that and amazingly, I opened up to the page. So that's cool, uh, but she's. She's talking about this and everything is a projection of us. Right? We create this world like men like you and I.

Speaker 4:

Ron sat down and wrote the constitution and then men counter offered with the bill of rights and then people went to washington and voted on things and then people like you and I sat in back rooms and cut deals. Like this is just people making stuff up as we go the actual natural law things. You know.

Speaker 4:

sunrise in the East you know, that stuff is inner, it's just there, it is. We're in a natural state of balance. I wouldn't even say peace and harmony. Harmony, perhaps we're in a state of balance right cycles of life and death. So all of the matrix, all of the things we have, is a projection of ourselves. So when she talks about the palantir stuff, one of the things she's saying is they've already had this information. This is the great reveal. This is when you get to see the mirror back on yourself. This is what you created. Your self-suspicion, your suspicion of yourself caused you to suspect others, which then led to this. And this is the reveal.

Speaker 9:

I was an intelligence analyst and I have things to say about Palantir because I used it 10 years ago. It's probably not what you think, because my time in the IC really solidified that this whole human experience is metaphysical. I've learned that reality is a mirror. Quantum physics and neuroscience confirm it, and that job revealed to me that they've been watching this. Tech isn't new. What's new is our awareness of it. And why do you think that is the conspiracy is to reveal the conspiracy, because the truth is that powerful. If we all figure out that we're co-creating this experience, the soulless, dehumanizing system crumbles. That's why another one is being quietly ushered in.

Speaker 9:

So are we being watched, or is the system mirroring the surveillance that we put on our own souls? It's the existential compromise that we make to avoid the void, forgetting that there's a whole other way to live. That includes being alive Metaphysically. We install tracking software on our own souls through shame, self-policing, gaslighting our inner knowing, and these systems mirror what we do to ourselves until we stop. Even outrage is loyalty to the system in disguise, because it keeps you in that loop. Asking how do I avoid this or stop being tracked is part of the trap. Real question is where am I still tracking myself? We don't defeat these systems by fighting it. War plus war does not equal peace. We win when we remove ourselves, and I don't mean off-grid homesteading, unless that's what your soul really, truly wants. Figure out what's being mirrored to you in your reality and become unmeasurable, untrackable, fully embodied, fully conscious, plugged into their divinity, real, authentic, human. How do you want to evolve? It's raining from real clouds. How do you want to evolve?

Speaker 5:

It's raining from real clouds. You know, I was talking to my wife about this last night. She's like you know, we got to stop this violence. I'm like how you mean like with some more violence, and that's exactly what she just said.

Speaker 4:

Gandhi said we have to stop participating.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that was the message Stop buying their stuff. Yes, what if I'm almost emotional about it because I don't even know if the listeners are catching what we're doing here? There's the door 1776, liveus. It's just a part, it's just a step in the stone, but there's the door. Go to it. There it is. Here's all the things that are horrible. Look, this sucks. The government sucks. They're spying on you. They're making laws to persecute you. You're in a truman show. You should get out. And then people tell me private. Why are you so optimistic about things?

Speaker 4:

because there's the door yeah my whole job in life I've learned is to stand here and be like that way, go, come on.

Speaker 5:

Okay, please out the door, just try it.

Speaker 4:

There is a way out. We don't talk about any of that on this show. This show is about what you see in reality, what's happening out, and about how it affects your dinner table, why it matters and why you should do something about it. But the best thing you could do with it is to unplug Right. The system is mirroring to us our own suspicions, our own, like she said, internal tracking system of guilt and shame. We feel guilt. This is one thing I learned in prison.

Speaker 5:

Maybe this is why our listenership is so low.

Speaker 4:

Your programming for what you feel guilt and shame for is very different than some of the programming I met with people in prison. Oh yeah, I mean you'll feel guilt and shame and horrible about something that they've done four times by 7 am Like it's a program. It's a program we create the program. It's metaphysical, it mirrors back at ourselves Like it can't be something without us letting it be that thing right. So all of this is a mirror to ourselves. And remember we have choices. Some of these choices stack on top of each other. But you don't realize that this is a clip out of the paramount series. I think it's 1923. My favorite one it's the one with harrison ford. This is the yellowstone series I haven't seen it that's a washroom, 1924 and then the yellowstone one.

Speaker 4:

So it's covering this family in wyoming, from how they got there, coming out west from the civil war and how they homesteaded all the way to modern times. So this is great depression, or pre-great depressions, in the 1920s. And this is in montana and, uh, you know, electricity is just coming to the town for the first time. So here's the pitch. What is that?

Speaker 3:

that's a washing machine what is it wash? Flows, an electric motor spins and cylinder as water is pumped through the machine. Soap is added here and the agitation removes any soiling. What is that wash? It's a refrigerator. Top compartment keeps food frozen, Bottom compartment maintains a temperature of 38 degrees. Can you sell these? We rent them. So you sell electricity and then you rent all the things that need electricity More or less. We don't need any of these things. Well, they're conveniences. Their use gives you time to do other things. What other things?

Speaker 6:

You know, like other chores you invent machines to do those. Then what do we?

Speaker 3:

do Go on a picnic, go for a swim, go to the cinema. You can enjoy a more leisurely life.

Speaker 6:

A more leisurely. We got to work more to pay for all this stuff.

Speaker 7:

He's got you there.

Speaker 3:

This is the future. Every home in New York City has electricity. They have refrigerators, some even have electric stoves. That is a thing we buy all this stuff.

Speaker 7:

We're not working for ourselves anymore, we're working for you.

Speaker 3:

I don't see machines. It seems like a good idea. Here's the deal, that's how they got you.

Speaker 4:

If we buy all this stuff, then we're not working for ourselves anymore, we're working for you. How many men have you met that? This is the thing. When we get by ourselves and we're in a comfortable spot, how are you doing? I'm struggling. Man Bill's reading me alive. Mortgage is huge because why Cause you're? You have to feed it.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, cause your you have to feed it. Yeah, because your woman went hey, that seems like a good idea.

Speaker 4:

Put it on the credit card payments you know they pay in electricity.

Speaker 4:

That's the thing. This, this, I look at this. The reason I like this particular series was because it's the transition from freedom to debt, bondage, debt, slavery, right and subjugation. Cowboys are like ain't worth it. I can read a book at night with a candle and then I don't have to wake up in the morning, go to work to pay for electricity. You know what I mean. Like in their mind. They're like we're free. Yeah, you know, we work for us ourselves. If I buy that, then I work for you and that's the system we're in. We work for them.

Speaker 4:

It's become so big and such a behemoth Remember, it's that joke with the aliens right Like a 13, 250 trillion in debt to who Like who do we owe the money to? We have everything we need here. It's not a socialist dream or a utopian communist dream, but it's like we have everything we need. Our system should work. Our system should work the things that we require. We require a programming that involves the golden rule. We require all these different things to have a cohesive society.

Speaker 4:

But once we get there, beware of the second handers, the looters, the ones who don't create or don't make, the ones who come in and go oh, my value is to solve a problem, and when that problem doesn't exist, then I need to create it. Beware of those people. All right, guys, that's it for the show today. We'll talk to you again tomorrow. Don't forget to visit left behind. Withoutorg peasants perspectivecom. 1776 live, take a check, take a checkout. 1776 live the doors right there to freedom. But you got to walk it. Everybody has to do it themselves. No one can do it for you. All right, I'll talk to you guys again tomorrow.

Speaker 1:

Bye, old woman, man, man, sorry, what knight lives in that castle over there. I'm 37. What? I'm 37. I'm not old. Well, I can't just call you man. You could say Dennis. I didn't know you were called Dennis. Well, you didn't bother to find out, did you? I did say sorry about the old woman, but from behind you looked. Well, I object to it. You automatically treat me like an inferior.

Speaker 1:

Well, I am king, oh, king. Eh, very nice. And how do you get that? Eh, by exploiting the workers, by hanging on to outdated imperialist dogma which perpetuates the economic and social differences in our society, If there's ever going to be any progress there is. There's some lovely filth down here. Oh, how do you do? How do you do? Good, lady, I am Arthur, king of the Britons.

Speaker 1:

Whose castle is that? King of the? Who, the Britons? Who are the Britons? Well, we all are. We are all Britons and I am your king. No, we had a king.

Speaker 1:

I thought we were an autonomous collective. You're fooling yourself. We're living in a dictatorship, a self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working class is oh, there you go, bringing class into the gang. That's what it's all about. If only people would Please, please good people. I am in haste.

Speaker 1:

Who lives in that castle? No one lives there. Then who is your lord? We don't have a lord. What I told you? We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune.

Speaker 1:

We take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week. Yes, but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting. Yes, I see, by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs, be quiet. But by a two-thirds majority in the case of more major, be quiet. I order you to be quiet. Order. Who does he think he is? I'm your king. Well, I didn't vote for you. You don't vote for kings. Well, I can become king.

Speaker 1:

Then the Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in the purest, shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying, by divine providence, that I, arthur, was to carry Excalibur. That is why I'm your king. Listen, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony. Be quiet. But you can't expect to wield supreme executive power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you. Shut up. I mean, if I went round saying I was an emperor. Just because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me, they'd put me away. Shut up, will you Shut up? Ah, now we see the violence inherent in the system. Shut up, come and see the violence inherent in the system. Help, help. I'm being repressed, bloody peasant. Oh, what a giveaway. Did you hear that? Did you hear that? Eh, that's what I'm on about. Did you see him repressing me? No-transcript.

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