Peasants Perspective

Who Controls the Narrative Controls the World

Taylor Johnatakis Season 2 Episode 93

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The elites would prefer we remain distracted while they consolidate power, but as this episode of The Peasant's Perspective reveals, the revolution may indeed come through podcasting. When everyday Americans share what they're actually experiencing, the carefully constructed narratives begin to crumble.

Consider the bombshell revelation about the FBI's Most Wanted list - during Biden's entire administration, zero of the Top 10 were captured, yet Kash Patel apprehended all ten within weeks after taking over. Why isn't this headline news? Because control of information is the ultimate power. As Elon Musk discovered after purchasing Twitter, videos showing the border crisis were systematically censored. So astonished was he by what he saw once the filters were removed that he traveled to Eagle Pass personally to verify the situation.

We explore the fascinating "Rule of 500" theory from Yellowstone - how smaller communities can self-govern, but once populations exceed 500 people, the strongest inevitably exploit the weakest without government intervention. Yet paradoxically, these same exploitative individuals eventually infiltrate government itself, using it to legally oppress others. This cycle explains why disconnection from family, community, and traditional values leads to societal breakdown.

From the "injection conspiracy theory" suggesting medical interventions create lifelong pharmaceutical customers to patents potentially tracking vaccinated individuals through technology, we examine how deeply surveillance and control have penetrated modern life. Recent events like political assassinations in Minnesota and the Israel-Iran conflict receive thoughtful analysis focused on the peasant's perspective - how these events affect ordinary citizens rather than power brokers.

The episode concludes with Roger Federer's wisdom that champions only win 54% of individual points - a powerful reminder that success doesn't require perfection. Even when facing seemingly insurmountable societal challenges, by stringing together enough positive decisions, we can collectively create meaningful change.

Join us in reclaiming the narrative that matters most - yours. Visit peasantsperspective.com to connect with fellow citizens who refuse to be silenced.

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Speaker 1:

And when they went to the queen to tell her Ruth Buncheck had no bread, do you know what she said? Let them eat cake.

Speaker 3:

We're getting screwed, man. Every time we turn around, we're getting screwed. Oh, the revolution's going to be through podcasting, for sure. That's the only way we talk. It's the little guys. 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. We're those people. We're those people. What's happening? It was one of these pages, so I can check. Good morning, peasants. Welcome to another episode of the peasant's perspective. Still not, ai? Yeah, dude, I love it. It's like become an omen. Everything was going so smooth and then, all of a sudden, jeez welcome everybody to another episode of the peasant's perspective.

Speaker 3:

We have a super busy show today, so we're gonna jump in. Happy father's day to all. Episode of the Peasant's Perspective. We have a super busy show today, so we're going to jump in. Happy Father's Day to all the fathers out there yesterday.

Speaker 6:

Oh yeah, Everybody's her dive Toxic masculinity day.

Speaker 3:

Toxic masculinity day's over. Okay, let's jump into this. You guys want to hear something totally crazy? Yeah, let me let you hear something totally crazy. This is a little clip from Scott Adams' show. He's doing a little interview with someone or he's being commenting with someone or something. But listen to this. Okay, this is something we knew. I just don't know that we ever really conceptualized the impact of this it's the top 10.

Speaker 7:

How come no one's talking about this? He called all top. This is crazy. Kash patel and I don't understand this story at all, but apparently the top 10 FBI's most wanted during the entire Biden era, I think zero were arrested, zero of the top 10. How many of them do you think that Kash Patel has already caught? Of the top 10 most wanted? All 10. Hell is already caught. Of the top 10 most wanted um, all 10. What were they doing? It's the top 10. How come no one's talking about this? He called all top 10. What? Just weeks? How come? No one's talking about it.

Speaker 7:

Are you telling me that wasn't possible before? Well, I don't even understand.

Speaker 6:

How is it?

Speaker 7:

remotely possible that Biden's administration got zero and then cash in a few weeks got all 10?

Speaker 8:

What. We could clean up a lot of messes if we wanted to. That's crazy. Think about that, look it up. It's true, and have you even heard about it? Where is the story?

Speaker 6:

holy smokes. Joe biden, zero cash. Patel 10 wow yeah, in four years he got like zero about a thousand in a month.

Speaker 3:

Hey, listen, I've talked. I mean, this is the whole thing. So this right here is gonna have to be edited out of it YouTube when it eventually gets uploaded, because we're going to get a copyright restriction on it. But that's okay, because this show doesn't make any money yet. Go to buymeacoffeecom and you be the funding source, not big ads, okay. So rule of 500,. This comes from the Yellowstone series, or I don't know what you call it. Amazing cinematography.

Speaker 3:

I actually really enjoy these shows um I think it's called 1923 or 24 or something like that. Yes, we played a clip from this shape before. No, this is 1924, I think okay, doesn't matter. Played a clip from this show where they're talking about electricity and the washing machine. He's like I'll buy that from you and I don't work for me anymore I work for you to pay the bill, that's right it's like yeah, there you go, so this is that same era and, uh, he's sitting around.

Speaker 3:

This is uh, harrison ford and his character sitting around the table explaining government and buffering still not ai. See, I wouldn't have done that. They would have been right on it. It's a huge concern, by the way, the fact that, like, a lot of the videos we're seeing on the internet have ai in them.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and you see these like little news summary things yeah and it's got an ai voiceover and you're like I don't, I know, I don't know if I can trust the news at all, because some of it is nonsense yeah, I keep seeing news clips of people on the scene and then all of a sudden, like people in the background, just disappear.

Speaker 12:

Yeah, there's a lot of rumors, All right here's this clip Theory that these scientists came up with after studying tribes in India and Africa and South America. The smaller tribes didn't have any government, didn't need any. They could sit down and talk out their problems, decide where to plant crops, to hunt. It was just a big family, really. But when the number of people got up around 500, if there wasn't any government, the strongest people would take advantage of the weakest. Every time, without fail. They would enslave, rape, steal, enrich their lives at the expense of other people's lives. Government's, man's way to control our behavior. But it can't be controlled. That's what we are. Sooner or later, the kind of people that would enrich themselves at your expense will use the government to do it. And mark my words one day they'll create laws to control what we say, how we think. They'll outlaw our right to disagree If we let him.

Speaker 3:

Pretty good little analysis there.

Speaker 6:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

In the Bible, the story of Gideon talks about this too. He says listen, if you allow a king to be set up or a ruler or government, right then they'll take your kids, they'll take your. You know all your resources. They'll take crops, they'll take you. You know all your resources, they'll take crops. They'll take you know taxes. And it goes on and on and he goes. I object to the, even the thought that that we could appoint someone to be in charge like that.

Speaker 6:

Right, and there's stories in the book of Mormon like that, where they talk about you don't want a King.

Speaker 3:

You don't want a King judges and it's like, well, okay, but we've got to have something. Right, you get over, get 501 people. It's like, hey, gotta do something. So government is this is thomas pain, right, it's produced by our evils, it's to control our vices. But then what happens is you have that one or two percent of psychopaths in the world that then will recognize they don't want to be on the end of the stick, they want to hold the stick and they'll eventually get into government and you'll have utter corruption.

Speaker 6:

This is like and it's, and it's weird how those types? Of people will gravitate to those positions of authority and power.

Speaker 3:

Exactly, and you know I don't want to be out here a sycophant for any particular leader in power. Thank you, donald Trump, for the pardon, but we have to recognize human nature and this. You know this, this, this is why it's the peasant's perspective on the family. It works. The peasant's life revolves around his family. Right? We're all peasants. I don't care if you're an accountant, I don't care if you are a politician, right? It's when you lose connection to the family, which is connected to the country and the ground and the society you live in, and then you start being something else. You're just this floating thought. You know what I'm saying. You're not connected to the source of your food. You're not connected to the source of your, your family or anything like that. You start thinking family doesn't matter, and you know what I mean. Should I not have a kid? Like? You're not adding to society by producing children. Your thoughts leave what's natural, and you know. You get a government as big as this and what do you get?

Speaker 11:

It's going to be crazy.

Speaker 3:

This is something that I found really interesting. This was an interview that Elon Musk did with Laura Trump, and I know a lot of you guys are like but there was so much stuff going on this weekend. There was like a political assassination and a war in iran. Yep, we're gonna get to it, but all of that has to be seen in context. This was a really wild weekend. It's been a wild six months. It's been a wild five years heck, 15. How long do you want to go back? There's some old people listening to this show being like I've been angry for 60 years.

Speaker 6:

Well, I know a lot of people want to turn the time machine back to about the mid-90s and just stay there.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and I could show you some old YouTube clips of people in the 90s being like, if people knew what the government was doing. There be more. Yeah, that's jones. Yes, as, as a political scientist guy, I remember I did a study, right. I went to a religious school and a big. There's always the hope and fear, right. What motivates people? Hope or fear, hope or fear, hope or fear.

Speaker 6:

It's one of those two things, or you know, pleasure and running hope and beer kind hope and beer are kind of tied together.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, okay. So I was looking at religions and how many religions have an apocalyptic element? All of them do at some point, right? And what is that pointing to? And how is that used? And most cults that religions produce center around this apocalyptic principle. Right, that the end is nigh. Prepare now, get your life in order, sacrifice everything, get your purple shoes, get you, yeah, exactly, yeah, okay. So the end they're, they're apocalyptic. So then I started looking at like, okay, how many times has the end been predicted?

Speaker 3:

and we've just kind of blown past right, and it's like over and over and over again 2000 2012 yeah, and, and what I found real common in christianity, especially in america? Yep, but it goes back way farther. You can go back into some german like this is zion, and the end is near, and then the local town or the local duke comes in and surrounds the city with his troops, and you know this is a apocalypse, you know. And then they end up just all starving to death and the city gets rebuilt with new people who don't think that the end is nigh.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, at least we're not another hundred years. So anyways, in America though it's like one after another.

Speaker 3:

And, of course, because we have freedom of religion and people can start their own religions, you kind of just have this.

Speaker 6:

Recycling.

Speaker 3:

Yes, and they can kind of be born and go and die. And then of course some of them stick like seventh day adventist and mormons and you know, they kind of start out a little bit as apocalyptic cults, right, and I'm using that term very broadly. I'm just saying there's an element of now's, the time to join, do this thing now, because here we go, the end is night, and seeing that every generation had had absolute preachers of that message, right, that just were super convinced. So I, I I'm saying like, with all the craziness this weekend, just remember, sun's going to rise tomorrow, so I'm going to set. The rain's going to fall, it's not going to fall. You got to plant your crops or you're going to go hungry, regardless of what's happening on the other side of the planet.

Speaker 6:

Cause there's always some crazy talk.

Speaker 3:

There's always some crazy talk. Now this can all this attitude of just whatever happens happens and I can't control it, can also lead to a bad end game. So we kind of have to, as peasants, we have to know when do we pitch the pitchforks and repel the invaders, versus when do we say not, my business, can't see it.

Speaker 6:

For my yeah, and let's not give her. Let's not ever get a hundred percent apathetic.

Speaker 3:

You can't so there's, that's the peasant right I defend my farm and I send some kids to go stand on the ridge to make sure people don't come in, but I'm not going to send my kids to take from another farm. Right, there's a line there. Defense is one thing, offense is another. And how do we balance all this? Well, let's sit down and talk it out. How do we do that? Well, I don't know. Let's send a whole bunch of people that are paid off by the people to make the offensive weapons. Oh, that's a good idea what do you?

Speaker 3:

think the result will be. That's why you can't be disconnected from your family and society and where things really actually happen and come from right. That's why the fear of having the people who just want to control and mooch, the second handers, as ayn rand calls them you don't want them in charge.

Speaker 3:

Okay, so this is Elon Musk talking about when he purchased X. This is potentially revelatory. I know that our audience already knows governments corrupt, right, right. But I always imagine my dad, who's a loyal listener, right, who grew up instilling in me this idea of you need to hear both sides, right, like truly, truly, he, he.

Speaker 3:

If I was reading a uh sean hannity book or a brush limbaugh book, simultaneously I was reading an al franken book, okay, senator al franken, who was originally a comedian but he wrote a series of books to kind of counter sean hannity. He kind of huge sean h Hannity is a huge lying liar who got us into Iraq, maybe I don't know. So, constantly trying to see both sides, my dad was borderline obsessive with this word paradigm, right, which I've now expanded to be the perspective. So, listening to Elon Musk here, I also want to say we're only as good as the information you have. If you live in an echo chamber and you cut yourself off from other ideas, you can't distill them and take what's good and leave what's bad. You're just left with whatever you've got you know you can't ever change.

Speaker 3:

So it's super critical as Americans, and we just kind of take it for granted that the information we have is complete, that in a world of free speech we hear all the ideas, not the truth. So listen to what Elon Musk says about Twitter and keep in mind Twitter is where the important people are right. This was the first platform that got politicians and celebrities and everything to use that to broadcast out to the public. Every major government entity has a Twitter page. Not all of them necessarily have like a Facebook page or an Instagram page.

Speaker 6:

Right, and it was like the first one where they got official with like blue checks and that kind of stuff.

Speaker 3:

Yes, and so Facebook. What you find was Facebook was the news. Almost every news story came from this Twitter. Excuse me, I said Twitter Right. And if you remember back in your annals of history, all the major news broadcasting networks back just just before their just mid-iraq war, uh, got rid of their journalist desks. They had no investigative reporting arms. Why? Because twitter does all the investigating right. And so when you hear elon musk open up with what he found when he unlocked twitter, it should send shivers through your spine. When you think about what we've been engaged with for the last 20, 30 years and where that information has been curated and handled, when you hear this, it should absolutely terrify you.

Speaker 4:

Once we unlocked Twitter from being censored, then we started to see what was really going on and I became increasingly concerned. I'm like wait a second. I'm seeing videos of people streaming across the border on Twitter now X. And I was like is this real? So I said, well, you know, I'll go to the border myself. So I went to Eagle Pass, texas, and, sure enough, people screaming across the border and I was like so is there any vetting of these people? Like no, the Biden administration is letting them all in. And I said, well, but some of these people clearly have criminal affiliations, like they literally have the criminal affiliation tattooed on their face. But the left is kind to the criminals and cruel to the victims, which is no fault, which is not empathy. At the end of the day, if you're a high trust society and you bring in low trust or untrustworthy individuals, that that's. That's.

Speaker 3:

now you've got a fundamental breakdown in the system recipe for disaster a recipe for disaster remember what harrison ford says yeah, bring in low trust individuals into a high trust society where we just trust that our representatives are doing the right thing, but do you know that they don't have a gun to their head? From a low trust individual who's like, oh, I get the game and and they'll get the the politician to take the fall right because they got to cash their check, because they're attached to their job, just like you were attached to yours, right, pretty stunning, there, it was censored. You couldn't see the videos of what was going on at the border. They take over and they're like the richest man in the world's like. Is this real?

Speaker 6:

yeah, he went there to check. Is this real?

Speaker 3:

so meanwhile, the peasants along the border and in border states like illinois, right, we don't have the ability to go double check with our eyes you know, like states like illinois, were one of my cellmates back when I was in prison, from centralia, illinois. Wait, it's his name, waith williams. If anybody wants to look him up, I'm sure he's a dirtbag. But waith william from Centralia, illinois, right talks to me about his town. It's devastated. It's devastated. No factories All been moved out before he was born, right Gone.

Speaker 6:

Dead town.

Speaker 3:

Agricultural town, immigrants in the fields, mechanization, not a lot of work. In his assessment, the whole town's in his assessment. The whole town's on math. The whole town's on math. It's normal the teachers use math. It's normal, everybody's on that. If it's not methods, adderall, it's the same thing. You know, if you can't afford adderall, you get math. If you can, if your parents are rich, you go get adderall. It's the same, everybody's on it.

Speaker 3:

Like that was his attitude so when I see something like that, I'm like, yeah, that's, that's all border related. So you know, when you're in a border state like illinois and you, you know there's a problem and you're speaking up but can't, can't censor. You know, locally, everybody knows their town's problem locally.

Speaker 3:

We can go on and on about our local town right, yeah, yeah but when you want to get it up and get some attention, suppression and we were almost unaware of it, only the people that were screaming they're turning the freaking frogs, gay, and they were taking them off the internet we're like hey no they really are turning the frogs games with the microprospects. So yeah, I want to pay attention to that. Here's another thing, too, about media and the manipulation of the narrative, and this is also from Elon Musk. I believe this was a different interview. It's irrelevant what the interview is. He said what he said.

Speaker 4:

We need to allow the people to develop the narratives that are of interest to them. So it's possible for news to be technically truthful, but they're still deciding what the narrative is Like. Let's say you took a photo of someone and they had a little zit. Now you could zoom in on the zit and make it look gigantic, like Mount Vesuvius. And it is still true that they have a zit. It's just not the size of mount vesuvius and they, you know it doesn't properly reflect their face. Their face is not one giant set. But you could. You could say like well, it's true, but have they lied? They haven't. You know, they just happen to zoom in on the zit, um, and not look at the rest of the face, uh, type of thing.

Speaker 3:

So, um, he's a Maryland dad. He's a Maryland dad.

Speaker 1:

It's a.

Speaker 3:

Maryland man being deported, isn't he? And that's 13. Doesn't he like traffic? Thousands of individuals over a decade? He's a Maryland dad, okay, but it's not quite like that, you know what I mean?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, zoom out. What I'm saying is that choice of narrative is extremely important and at the point at which, if there's only, like, say, half a dozen editors-in-chief or maybe even fewer than that, maybe it's only three or four that are deciding what the narrative is, what's going to be on the front page, then that's a form of manipulation of public opinion that I think the public often doesn't appreciate and is perhaps the most pernicious of all yeah we didn't.

Speaker 3:

Boy says shout out to eagle pass. That's my hometown, don't live there anymore, but uh, but not far from. It was crazy. Everyone was excited to see him there. Well, he changed the world. That trip to eagle pass changed the world. I mean, the borders closed because he went, because he got control of the narrative, the. The narrative changed by the time trump was in his debate with kamala harris and we'd had this thing in springfield ohio.

Speaker 3:

Now, what's so funny about the springfield ohio thing is there's a springfield in all 50 states, so it's the most generic, it's the springfield and the simpsons, that's why they picked it, I know because, of your local hometown, right, it's always just oh yeah, that's, it's the john doe of cities, okay, so that happens to be where I went to prison. Springfield, ohio or Springfield, missouri, doesn't even matter, it was inside of brick walls. It doesn't matter where I was at, I was in Springfield, okay.

Speaker 6:

They all look the same too, right.

Speaker 3:

Back when I was in prison in Springfield, there was a crisis happening in Springfield where there were 20,000 Haitian immigrants who had been paroled into the United States and settled in this town of Springfield.

Speaker 6:

Damn. That's like a whole town with the people.

Speaker 3:

Like most, springfields, isn't a major metropolitan area, it's just a city, and this city happened to be pretty small 40,000 people and they deposited 20,000 Haitian migrants there Wow, what do you think happened to home vacancies? What do you think happened to rent rates? What do you think happened to the local school district? What do you think happened to the local parks where the migrants were hunting down geese and they were taking out cats and dogs, and there were police reports of this, of things going on, as well as some really weird occult-type behavior. You know, remember I talked about in brazil seeing the macumba traces with the crows and the sacrificed animals, like on the streets, like that happens down there.

Speaker 3:

Okay, well haitians just happen to practice, oh, this thing called voodoo so guess what they were doing with some of those cats and dogs.

Speaker 3:

All this is documented on the internet. You can go find x videos but of course you'll question if they're ai or fake or out of context. And trump got up there and goes listen, we got to deal with this migrant issue because they're eating our dogs and our cats and our pets and the narrative of the mainstream news. Those 20 or 30 editors were like there's no evidence of eating dogs or cats or pets. And videos started to flood in from all over the country of dogs and cats and pets, but it wasn't always in the all over the country of dogs and cats and pets, but it wasn't always in the springfield. Sometimes it was in the adjoining town, a town around the corner, so it's not springfield so donald trump is a liar meanwhile, people on the street, as you explain this to someone, you're like, yeah, so donald trump's a liar.

Speaker 3:

He said that those 20 000 haitian migrants in springfield were eating the pets and they're like wait, hold on, what was going on? 20 000 haitian migrants are eating the pets. Well, there's migrants. What town? Springfield? I know springfield. Yeah, 20 000 haitian migrants. Well, how big was the springfield? I was a 40 000 people. What 20 000 people? Migrants in a town of 40 000 people? Yeah, and they're not eating the pets, dude. But how many migrants did they bring? 20 000? Why are you focusing on that? That's a lot of people, like what happened to the jobs and the rental market and and stuff like that. Dude, you don't get the point. Trump's a liar. But hold on, go back. How many migrants? That's what americans heard that's what peasants heard.

Speaker 3:

Because in springfield you're wondering why your kids aren't reading. But yet they learn a lot more Spanish than you think and it's all slang from the playground and you're like, huh, that's interesting. So you go volunteer at school and you find out that a third of the class is English second language. So it takes a long time to teach different things because you know there's like a translation thing going on. And then you know half the class has to leave to go do their specific English education. So the rest of the class just kind of sits and does nothing. So that's what's going on. Why? Oh, but because because of the migrant situation. But don't trust me, trump's a liar. They're not eating your pets. Well, I saw this video. You can't trust that video. It's a mess. We need to set the narrative right. Buy your fruits, you shall know them. The path to hell is paved with good intentions. I understand that there was good intention in bringing migrants there.

Speaker 6:

At least the way it was pitched. When you double the population of a little town like that, that sounds like hell to me it sounds like hell yeah.

Speaker 3:

And the thing is is there's? There's this idea?

Speaker 6:

how can you even provide services? You know?

Speaker 3:

they can't. That's the thing. And then when you went to that town, you had like city councilmen and mayors who, under political pressure, like we don't want this attention. And guys, you don't drop 20 000 migrants into a town of 40 000 without buying off the city council, the county commissioners, the state Duh, this is the gravy train. Look, oh hey, you're going to have great Section 8 housing. There was some chamber of commerce thing that was like this is great and it's completely antithetical to what you as a peasant need. But it's really great on their bottom line because they've got all these federal dollars but they don't really care about your pets.

Speaker 3:

Well, I mean mean, if you drop that many people in a town like that, they're gonna run out of food. What are they supposed to eat? So we are the news now, right, elon says this about a very major publication. I found this hilarious, but this has kind of become my attitude. I look at the news, I'm just trying to gather the facts out of it, recognizing they're doing so much narrative it's almost not even worth reading most of the time. Oh yeah, right, listen to this. He's being asked about the Wall Street Journal.

Speaker 4:

Is there a worse publication on the face of the earth than the Wall Street Journal? I wouldn't use that to line up my cage for paratrophies. That newspaper is the worst newspaper in the world, and if there's one newspaper that should be pro-capitalist, it's the one with wall street in the name. But it isn't so. I have the very lowest opinion of the wall street journal absolutely nonsense. And you clearly believe the tripe that you've written that you've read in those papers yeah, that's why we do this show.

Speaker 3:

It's one of the reasons, yeah it's like because who's the solution? I'm the solution, if I see it a certain way and I can't see my, my view represented when I go talk to people, they all agree with me. Okay, well then, that's what we have to do, like okay, I mean, it's just simple. He did it Once he saw it.

Speaker 6:

He's like Sometimes the only person I can believe is me, and I know I'm wrong.

Speaker 3:

Okay. So now we've got, we're going to go on a series of random things until we get to the real thing, but they all kind of tie in a little bit, Okay, Okay. So this one. First one. Have you ever heard of the injection theory?

Speaker 6:

Well, I'm coming up with my own theory right now, but no, so this is.

Speaker 3:

This is a medical theory. Listen to this. This gets explained really good. It's the injection conspiracy theory and it's just a conspiracy theory. There's no relevance, just for covid vaccine no, it's just just.

Speaker 6:

It's just an injection conspiracy theory.

Speaker 3:

We'll take a listen. I have no idea. I mean, this is just completely wild. There's no evidence.

Speaker 6:

Okay, I really have no idea what I'm going to see now.

Speaker 8:

Injection conspiracy theory. It starts with a healthy baby being born and the doctor insisting that the baby get injections. The parents follow the doctor's orders. Then the baby gets a fever from those injections. So the doctor goes ahead and prescribes some medications to help bring down the fever. The parents thank the doctor and they go home. The baby develops a rash and ear infections from the toxic injections and medications. The parents take the baby back to the doctor. The doctor prescribes toxic antibiotics.

Speaker 8:

Once the baby grows into a child and is old enough to go to school, the doctor insists that the child get injections. Old enough to go to school, the doctor insists that the child get injections. The parents follow the doctor's orders and the child goes to school but starts having all kinds of problems focusing in school. So they go back to the doctor and the doctor prescribes that child ADHD medications that are very similar to meth. The medication gives the child anxiety and depression, so the doctor prescribes even more medications. The parents thank the doctor and the child grows up and remains a big pharma customer for life. Another healthy baby is born and the cycle repeats. If you didn't catch on, the conspiracy here is the injections make people big pharma customers for life.

Speaker 6:

Huh, no, I've never heard this one, it just sounds like normal life.

Speaker 3:

Injection conspiracy theory. Bro, are you a conspiracy theorist, don't you know, without those injections you'd die early. You know, like the Amish who live longer than us. Wait, what? What? You know what I mean. Hold on, are you telling me, if I use indoor plumbing, aka, take the out right it, dispose of it properly, and I wash my food with relatively sanitized water that I regularly use, which means I've got all the stuff to fight Whatever's in that water source Right Then, then I, if I don't get these injections, I I'll live shorter.

Speaker 6:

So if we practice cleanliness, we'll live as long and we won't be affected by polio, just like polio was eradicated with cleanness, cleanliness okay, exactly, smallpox is the ruse.

Speaker 3:

Smallpox is like the one and only vaccine that actually worked and eradicated a disease. Right, and it came from the disease, like it was like take the cow pus and smear it on you, oh my gosh, I'm vaccinated. It's the. It's literally like hey, you're allergic to something, eat more of it until your body figures out how to not be allergic to it yeah, it's also the grossest one. Yes every other virus. Every other virus after that is like whoa tower of babel playing god kind of stuff yeah but it's a business model that works.

Speaker 3:

I'm just saying it's no, no proof to it at all. There's no empirical evidence. Nobody would ever fund a study that could prove that, so it's just going to be left to a guy standing in front of a palm tree. But this is real. Catherine Austin Fitz has talked about that. This is the patent for a Pfizer application. So this is a summary from Sudden, unexpected. The Pfizer patent application was approved August 31st 2021. Is a summary from sudden and expected. Uh, the pfizer patent application was approved august 31st 2021 and is the very first patent that shows up on a list of over 1,000, 18,500, for the purpose of remote contract taste tracing of all vaccinated humans worldwide and who will or are now connected to the internet of things, that's, the 5g network, by a quantum link of pulsating microwave frequencies of 2.4 gigahertz higher from cell towers by satellites, directly to the graphene oxide held in the fatty tissues of all persons who've had the COVID shot. They call it oh my gosh.

Speaker 6:

Here we go again, nanobots.

Speaker 3:

Okay. So I want to explain the concept of this because for some people, conceptually they don't get it. But essentially everything now is the internet, from your toaster to your sprinkler timer. I read a review one time on a sprinkler timer I was buying for my yard. That was like why does this thing need to connect to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth? Like I just need a 15-minute water on-sink. It was like this whole. It was literally just you put it on the. You have to have a battery to connect it to the Bluetooth. It was like you just a dial. Like the guy was like why, well, it's the Internet of Things.

Speaker 3:

Your toaster, your refrigerator, your TV, your smartphone, everything's talking and registering. Have you ever turned on your phone and says please, permission to identify other devices? You know, look for printers, that kind of thing. It's looking for everything. And you see your. You know you see your refrigerator pop up on there, all these other things. They're talking, they know each other. The device IDs are like so then somebody in some master computer there can go what, what, what are you near? What's? Taylor up to.

Speaker 3:

Taylor's in his house, we'll turn on his nest thermostat and start listening. Yeah, do you see what I'm saying? It's that pernicious the capability there. Well, now they want to add people to it. The internet of bodies, catherine Austin Fitz about this, this, and she's like you have to think of mr global, thinking of you as livestock.

Speaker 6:

That's the only way to conceptualize this appropriately, because, as peasants, I can't even imagine why I would want to be a part of this well, sometimes, when you know, when you do an app or whatever, and it says, hey, do you want the the internet to know where you are? Allow you know for location. Well, now, they just want to do that with people, not with phones they doing it anyways.

Speaker 3:

whether you say don't track me or not, the difference is whether they can openly sell it. I mean, there's a kind of how they target you, like, ok, don't give them location specific ads so he doesn't know we're tracking him. You can't turn off the tracking. Ok, united States patent methods and systems of prioritizing treatments, vaccination, prioritizing treatments, vaccinations, testing and or activities while protecting the privacy of the individuals. Now, this is a capability. So once you have this capability, the way the patent is written in order to get it approved is trying to protect private rights. But remember, the reason they're having to do this is because, inherently, the technology strips you of private rights. So they're trying to get the patent approved to have you having no private rights by overlaying a couple. You know.

Speaker 3:

oh, we'll obscure it with a device id instead of your name and a really good title so the system, the abstract, the system and methods for anonymously selecting subjects for treatment against an infectious disease caused by a path pathogen. The system compromises a plurality of electronic devices, compromising instructions to generate an id and when in proximity of another such electronic device, one or both electronic devices transmit the id to or from the electronic device. So you can protect your privacy and your refrigerator in the same room. They ping and let their systems know I'm near this fridge, I'm near this toast. This is all about protecting privacy but do you see what happened?

Speaker 3:

yeah, the two internet of things. Your toaster and your fridge talk. Your fridge and your tv talk. When you're running low on milk, your fridge tells your tv to give you milk ads. That's what's going on there. It's all talking. Well, now you're in there, you walk in there and it's ping ping oh, it's the adult Run a beer commercial. Ping ping, oh, it's the wife. Run a new car commercial New car commercial.

Speaker 3:

Whatever, it's something expensive. Oh, it's kids. Run a toy commercial right, so you mean you ping mcdonald's? Yes, exactly. Okay, so everything you have an id in you and when uh to or from another electronic device, then a score is generated based on the plurality of such received ids. Additionally, based on information received from a server, relevant treatment instructions are displayed to the subjects based on the received information and the score the server comprises instructions for sending to the plurality of electronic devices the information to be displayed with the relevant treatment for instructions.

Speaker 3:

Additionally, the server and or electronic devices comprise instructions to generate the prediction of likelihood of a subject transmitting the pathogen based on the score of the subject matter. So you're walking around the mall, ping, ping, ping ping. Another guy goes in, gets confirmed sick. They backtrace them to the mall. You're in the mall. Oh, you can't. You can't get entry to the, the theater that you bought a ticket for, because they have a scam thing at the door.

Speaker 11:

You might have been in proximity.

Speaker 3:

You're in proximity, so you're in quarantine. Yeah, okay, they're doing this now with social pricing. Have you seen this? This is wild. So if you go into a store and there's like a QR code, there's no listed price on your stuff. Well, when you go to pay, oh stuff. Well, when you go to pay, oh, they just go. Oh for you, the price is exactly what it is. Oh, that's exactly what it is. Oh for you, this pack of gum is 199 because you have more resources available to you based on your scoring I see for this other guy that pack of gun might be 99 cents, because he's.

Speaker 3:

This is the equity in motion they want to make everybody equal and so you know, for elon musk, for him to go out and have a hamburger, it's three thousand dollars, for me to go out and have a hamburger, it's three dollars because we're paying, comparative to our wealth, to everybody according to their needs, resources.

Speaker 3:

It's a totally communist thing wow, this is wild yes, and that you will see that in your local convenience stores. When you get the q QR code and they can't tell you the price, they're like oh, scan it, it's scanning you, it's telling you what the price is. There are videos of people going out there with you know, getting different prices on the same scan. That's this kind of stuff here. So the idea is you go to the doctor, right, and all the devices can backtrack where you've been and they can figure out whatever. Oh, hey, how about this one? A building has a fungus outbreak, a mold outbreak, and the next thing you know, you're being knocked on the door by nurses saying, hey, you have a spore outbreak and we need to check your blood. But you know what I'm saying? You're connected into the Internet of Things. It's talking to you, and not only that, but know, deny you. It's talking about the capability to deny you service. You walk up somewhere like, oh, you can't come in because you've been somewhere. Oh, my gosh, they patented it.

Speaker 6:

This was the first of 1,000, 18,500 of so we know who the author of this patent was. Visor oh my gosh, oh geez.

Speaker 3:

You know reading this patent I almost went down a pathway to become a patent attorney. I am so glad that I did not so in Minnesota this weekend, this is Minnesota Representative Melissa Hortman, and I guess she was the former speaker of the House there. She was the lone Democrat that voted against a bill to cut health care access for adult illegal immigrants, and this is what she had to say literally hours before she ended up being assassinated.

Speaker 13:

I know that people will be hurt by that vote and I'm uh. We worked very hard to try to get a budget deal that wouldn't include that provision.

Speaker 17:

DFL Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman, emotional following the House's adjournment from a special session Monday. Hortman was the lone DFL lawmaker to cast a vote to cut Minnesota care access for undocumented immigrants. It's a move she made with a heavy heart.

Speaker 13:

I did what leaders do. I stepped up and I got the job done for the people of Minnesota.

Speaker 17:

The bill was deeply unpopular with members of the DFL caucus.

Speaker 9:

Members have repeatedly expressed frustration that the bill was part of a compromise one that would ensure the necessary GOP votes to pass the rest of the state budget. We are tremendously disappointed in and gut wrench at this decision, at this compromise that compromises our communities that are most vulnerable portman knows she let down her own caucus members with the vote they're right to be mad at me.

Speaker 13:

I think some of them are pretty, pretty angry I think that their job was to make folks who voted for that bill feel like crap, and I think that they succeeded.

Speaker 17:

Over in the Senate, a similar situation unfolded. Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy forced a vote for a bill she too disagreed with, to uphold the integrity of their compromise.

Speaker 10:

This one hurt.

Speaker 11:

This one is a wound because of its reason, my colleagues across the aisle set this as their number one hurt. This one is a wound. Because of its reason, my colleagues across the aisle set this as their number one priority.

Speaker 17:

Asked whether the move would drive a wedge between her and the rest of her caucus, her DFL colleague, Senator John Marty, quickly stepped to her defense.

Speaker 16:

As a member of the caucus, she clearly was fighting against it every step of the way In negotiations.

Speaker 18:

if we wanted a budget, we had to agree to that he agreed to put up one vote for us because of that reporting in saint paul. I'm quinn gorham so what?

Speaker 3:

there's two things there. The second vote there where he said we had to give the vote. That means the party compromised, like the apparatus of the party, so everybody voted against, but they gave one vote up to get the deal done yeah, I'm so lost. I don't understand what's going on there at all okay, so melissa hartman's the key there in the house that got the bill moved on and then in the senate yeah, I don't know the party nominated.

Speaker 6:

I don't know anything about this story at all.

Speaker 3:

It's so it's all confusing it doesn't matter, it's their budget bill and it can it obtain. It had a provision in minnesota to not give illegal immigrants health care. Okay, okay, obviously not popular with democrats. So she's the lone democrat who voted to strip illegals of health care in minnesota. Okay, no, bueno for her party, okay. And then in the senate they did a compromise and said we are here, he is only voting for that because we as a party compromised. Everybody's saying no, but here's your token vote. She kind of did it on her own in the house, like you know, because she was the party leader to do that okay, okay now here's what happened the next morning.

Speaker 3:

Okay, this is directly from the mouth of the police actually. Yeah, we're gonna do this first. We're gonna we're gonna spend a little bit of time on this because it's it could be a watershed moment in America.

Speaker 18:

Again. Good morning, police Chief Mark Roof, brooklyn Park Police Department. The question is how did we get to represent Hortman's house and it was proactively or not. The circumstances unfolded in Brooklyn Park this morning is that we assisted the Champlin Police Department on a shooting. That shooting was made aware by one of our sergeants that it was at Senator Hoffman's home. In hearing that, that very intuitive sergeant asked our officers to go check on Melissa Hortman's home, a representative that lives in our community. Just proactively, as due diligence to swing by that police officer and his partner pulled down the street.

Speaker 3:

So one politician was shot in his home and so they police officer said hey, let's call up all the other local areas and tell them to check on the politicians.

Speaker 18:

So they went proactively to check and that's where they encountered the shooter, who was at his second stop when they arrived at Melissa's house, they noticed that there was a police vehicle in the driveway with the lights emergency lights on and what appeared to be a police officer at the door coming out of the house. When our officers confronted them, the individual immediately fired upon the officers, who exchanged gunfire, and the suspect retreated back into the home Was it a real person or a police officer?

Speaker 18:

Yes, the question is was it a real person or a person impersonating? Impersonating a police officer? It was not a real police officer. This is somebody that clearly had been impersonating a police officer, again using the trust of this badge and this uniform to manipulate their way into the home not only was very bad, but they approached their victims.

Speaker 8:

They had cars. They were like what?

Speaker 18:

Yes, the question is, what kind of vehicle? How were they dressed? They did drive a vehicle that looked exactly like an SUV squad car. It was equipped with lights emergency lights that looked exactly like a police vehicle and, yes, they were wearing a vest with taser, other equipment, a badge very similar to mine. That, no question. If they were in this room, you would assume that they are a police officer. Can you describe the moments?

Speaker 5:

after the playoff the moments after the playoff, you said in person did you go to the hall and then can you go and 15 minutes of you know.

Speaker 18:

Yeah, briefly, although I'm just going to remind us that this is an absolute inactive investigation, we have thousands of people sheltered in place in the city of Brooklyn Park. Right now we are in an extensive manhunt involving hundreds and hundreds of police officers and SWAT teams searching, ridding off areas, as we believe, competently. The suspect had fled out the back of the house. After being confronted by the police Very briefly after, the officers had exchanged gunfire and the suspect retreated into Melissa's home. They immediately went up to the threshold and looked in and seen a male that was down, clearly had been struck by gunfire. They made limited penetration, grabbed a hold of the male and drug him out to safety to attempt first aid. However, he was pronounced dead shortly after that. At that point, the officers surrounded the house, got additional resources and SWAT resources and then ultimately went in with a drone, identifying a female in the home.

Speaker 3:

Okay. So basically, he went into these people's houses and at the second house the cops showed up to do a wellness check and hey, there's a cop already here. Oh, hey, he's not a cop, cop, you know one cops. So it turns out this guy owns a security company called praetorian guard okay that has minnesota contracts and deals with immigrants and so that's where he got the car and he was appointed by tim waltz a couple years ago to a work advisory board to bring over immigrants and stuff like that okay so he's kind of in the democrat sphere.

Speaker 13:

So this is cnn's reporting on it where police say a gunman shot and killed minnesota state representative melissa hortman and her husband mark early this morning at their home. Police say the same gunman also shot minnesota state senator john hoffman and his wife multiple times at their home. Tim waltz is calling the attacks a politically motivated assassination.

Speaker 12:

Here's more of what he said earlier today I assure you that those held, those responsible for this, will be held accountable, and each and every one of us are committed to making sure that a tragedy like this never repeats itself in Minnesota or across this country.

Speaker 13:

We have team coverage. Let's start with CNNnn chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst, john miller. Uh, what have you learned about this hit list that police say was found in the suspect's car? He's now on foot.

Speaker 10:

He left the vehicle and possibly a lot of other valuable tools well, the car is a treasure trove of clues and potential clues, not just forensically, but things in plain sight. What we're told from law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation is that there are a cache of additional weapons inside that car, indicating that the suspect was loaded for additional targets, possible confrontations with law enforcement or security a large amount of ammunition. In an ammunition bag they found a Father's Day card, presumably addressed to the suspect. But there is also this manifesto which lays out his issues, and on top of that, a very, very long list of names, approximately 70 names. This includes numerous state legislators from Minnesota, but it also includes other elected officials, a couple of mayors. It includes other places in Minnesota, including medical clinics, abortion providers, pro-life advocates, and it includes some locations and individuals from out of state.

Speaker 10:

What does that tell us? It poses the question of what was the ultimate game plan. Was it to continue to get through this list, to go as far down with as many attacks or assassinations as possible, until he was stopped by police? What we know now is that at his first location he did his first attack in the pre-dawn hours of the morning, in the darkness. That, preemptively, police went to the second location where the nearest other elected state official was and ran straight into the suspect.

Speaker 10:

The Brooklyn Park, Minnesota police exchanged shots with the individual which caused him to flee towards the house and then into the darkness. But that also made him leave that car, all of that evidence and potentially part of his plan behind. Now, with the idea that they exchanged gunfire, the fact that he was described as wearing a tactical vest, probably body armor. That he was described as wearing a tactical vest, probably body armor, likely bullet resistant. He may be wounded or the vest may have deflected that, but he is with whatever weapons he had on him, without a vehicle and still theoretically on the move somewhere in that area that he could have gotten by foot.

Speaker 3:

OK so he took off out the back of the house. He was wearing a silicone mask that made him look bald, you know. So when he walks up the doorbell camera, he can't really see who he is. Well, this is who it ended up being. So this is. He was arrested this early this morning. So that's the guy. So he runs a security firm of some sort, or you know, and he sits on various boards dealing with immigration and stuff like that. He's traveled over to the congo. So the fact that he targeted democrats right, there's just. This is another one of those stories where it's like this guy's in the machine. Right, he's been a point. He was appointed by tim waltz, so it's like uh, what's happening here? They mentioned that he's targeting abortion clinics and pro-life places.

Speaker 6:

Very confused.

Speaker 3:

So is this guy just a anarchist? He sent text messages at 6 am to his roommates and his wife. He owns a house and he's married with kids, but then he lives 50 miles away with a roommate. It's very weird. The roommates, you know, the whole thing is just like it's one of these. I guess we'll just wait and see what happens. Like it's it's tragic. My gut tells me, and the the debate on this. It's like hey, we're forgetting about the lost lives here. It's like, yeah, it's tragic. Like I don't know what to think about it. I don't know what to think about, especially because these are clearly a political target and I am unfortunately at a spot where I don't believe we're ever gonna to. I don't believe in his manifesto.

Speaker 6:

No.

Speaker 3:

Like, for all I know, someone may write that down and go do X, y, z. You're the part of the Praetorian Guard and I don't know. There's just a lot. You know a lot of information, but it is not good. This is the field where he was taken in. So he was hiding in a field and they tracked him with drones and all that kind of stuff. Not a good idea to run. Not a good idea to run. This weekend in Salt Lake there was a shooting that resulted in death at one of these no Kings raids. Did you hear about this?

Speaker 6:

I did hear about that.

Speaker 3:

So basically what happened was the no Kings raid had a peacekeeping force, guys in high visibility, green stuff and hats and they had handguns on them. And they saw someone walking in. His name was actually his name, doesn't matter. He came loaded with a gun, gamboa. But gamboa came in. They saw him with a gun. They pulled their guns on him, told him to stand down. He raised his gun and advanced towards the crowd. So they took some shots at him, wounded him, but they ended up killing an innocent bystander. Dang it. So this is. This is a situation where it goes. Detectives have not been able to determine at this time why Gamboa pulled out his rifle and began to manipulate or why he ran from the peacekeepers. When they confronted him, the peacekeepers immediately attempted to provide aid to the injured bystanders. Detectives are still actively investigating the case to include the actions of the peacekeepers.

Speaker 6:

So, on one hand, it's oh, they stopped a mass shooting but, you killed somebody, so that's actually not the way I heard the story, so I'm actually glad we're covering this.

Speaker 3:

Well, this is the police report. This is Salt Lake City Police Department's press release.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, the way I'd heard the story is that somebody had walked up to somebody and shot them point blank.

Speaker 3:

No one of the peacekeepers told detectives he saw gamboa pull out an ar-15 style rifle from his backpack and begin manipulating the peace. Peacekeepers drew the firearms and ordered gamboa to drop the weapon. Witness reported gamboa instead lifted the rifle and began running toward the crowd gathered on state street holding the weapon in firing position. In response, one of the peacekeepers fired three rounds one struck gamboa, while another tragically wounded mr ah lu. Detectives have not been able to determine at this time why gamboa pulled his rifle.

Speaker 3:

So, yeah, I these are. These are like daniel penny situations here where it's like, okay, you stopped a mass shooting or did you, you know? Like, whoa, you know you stopped a mass shooting or did you? I don't know. But somebody you know I'm sure alu's family right now is not super happy about this. Yeah, there was a kid recently was just sentenced to um prison because he rescued some kids that were swimming and something happened. The kids died and basically he should have just let him drown, but by trying to help them somehow he became like some responsibility, you know it's tough, really tough.

Speaker 3:

Okay, so the other thing going on is Iran, israel. The fog of war is really intense. There's really no, there's no. I pulled up a bunch of news stories on the aggregator I like Citizen Free Press and it kept linking me to Israeli Times and I'm like ha ha, ha ha. Yeah right, you know like I can trust any of this information. Well, if Elon has to go check his eyes at our border.

Speaker 6:

how are we supposed to even know what's happening halfway around the world?

Speaker 3:

Yes, so all we can see is these videos of downed buildings. But again, is that now? Is that years ago? Is this syria or tehran? I can't tell. Is this ai?

Speaker 3:

I have no idea right so we're just kind of sitting here going hey, I know it's probably pretty bad. Yeah, here's a couple things to keep in mind that I think for us it's good to know like these things are real. I don't believe in the the theory that nothing's real. Some people are just like nothing's real, something's real, something's real. Yeah, so here's a guy who's talking about a ballistic situation with ballistic missiles and hypersonic missiles, because I didn't really quite recognize the difference here. So if you look at this for those of you that are video watchers on the screen you hear a uh, a graph of the earth. It's only a small portion of the curvature of the earth.

Speaker 6:

Now, this does presume that the earth is round, so you know let's just get that one on the table for all you flat earthers out there.

Speaker 3:

Just take a nap so here it shows a ballistic missile, the launch site. It goes up. Here's the internal space station area. It goes way past that right way up into outer space and down, okay. And then here's a line where it says limit of ground-based radar detection. Because the radar can only detect at a horizontal plane, so at a certain point you lose the earth. So as it comes up it gets detection. Here it can calculate trajectory, blah, blah, you end up down there. Okay, hypersonic glider trajectory. Looks like this you have the launch light, it goes up, doesn't quite go to the international space station place, drops back down, glides at a hypersonic rate okay, and then comes down and then drops down to the target, so it's late.

Speaker 3:

We're detected by radar.

Speaker 6:

Look at the difference here much later much later and it's traveling at a much faster yes, okay, scary window to respond is going to be very short scary stuff here, okay, so listen to what his assessment of the situation between israeli fighter jet or or bomber that tries to penetrate iranian airspace.

Speaker 5:

But the danger for israel is that as soon as they try to strike iran in this way, iran even before those is, those Israeli fighter jets can get to Iranian airspace, or even before the ballistic missile can have that huge, long parabolic trajectory to hit Iran.

Speaker 5:

Or the US, for example, from naval ships in the Mediterranean, has the time for that parabolic trajectory to hit Iran. They can launch these hypersonic missiles and reach Tel Aviv and these air bases faster, faster. So, even if the Israeli fighter jets are trying to get to Iran, they won't have anything to return back to, because the air bases will be obliterated. The air bases will be obliterated. Those fighter jets will have nowhere to return back to, because the air bases will be obliterated. The air bases will be obliterated. Those fighter jets will have nowhere to go back to. That's the, that's the strategic advantage that iran has now demonstrated. They hadn't demonstrated it before because, if you remember the um attack that they, or the response attack that they had in april, um, so israel shut down their internet, so iran did too okay, but israel didn't shut down their internet, they increased their censorship regime.

Speaker 3:

You cannot post videos of missile strikes in israel because, remember, they got the iron dome. They're super protected blah blah turns out.

Speaker 6:

They're getting hit left and right oh so they're not allowing people to post videos of the damage or wreckage because they don't want people to know that the iron dome is not working the.

Speaker 3:

It's not as effective against a hypersonic missile coming right and then and then in tehran, same thing. They've got the internet down and I don't know. You're bombing nuke sites. Is the radiation or not radiation? After you bomb them, you've got refineries. Are you bombing them, are you not? You know, oh, you took out some general, an apartment. Did you hit the whole apartment with all the families in there? No, no, it's. We're so strategic, I don't know. I don't know. Fog of war, complete fog of war. But this missile detente that they've got back and forth is real. That is real Right. And this comes from this. Is this guy right here? I can't remember how many years he served in federal prison. He's, he.

Speaker 7:

Oh, yeah, that dude yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yes, he was a CIA worker.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, wouldn't Kirk cow or something.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that dude. Yeah, yes, he was a cia worker. Yeah, wouldn't kirk cow or something? Yeah, anyways, he's. Yeah, he's made it made the rounds, but he does a little assessment keep in mind. He was an arabic specialist. Right, this was his region of the world he was assessing and he makes a little observation that I think is important to keep in mind put a bomb in the house in april because they knew that he stayed in the same house serious security problem.

Speaker 9:

Yeah, stayed in the same house, serious security problem. Stayed in the same house every time he'd go to Iran and they just waited for him to go and then they blew it up remotely. But this goes to the Israeli ability to violate Iranian sovereignty in any way they want. They kill Iranian scientists, they'll do car bombs, they do close-in hits. They have a whole network in Iran that we can only fantasize about, and it's taken years and years to build. I want to say one other thing too.

Speaker 9:

Back in what was March or April, the Israelis bombed the Iranian consulate in Damascus and killed two Iranian generals. Yes, major violation of international law, but these Israelis don't care about stuff like that. Anyway, the Iranians responded again with great restraint. They launched 700 drones I'm sorry, 600 drones but they told the United States in advance we're going to send these 600 drones. And then they called in the Jordanian ambassador and said we're going to fly these 600 drones over your airspace. So it took six hours for those drones to cross over. So everybody is like sitting like this waiting for the drones to come Right.

Speaker 9:

So the British scattered their jets from bases in Jordan. We scattered our jets. The Israelis scattered their jets and shot down all but seven. Okay, so seven hit the ground and there's a little bit of minor damage here and there and everybody's like oh, that was the response, no big deal. It was actually a very big deal because it showed the Iranians that the Iron Dome isn't so great as the Israelis say that it is. They were able to get seven drones through. Now what if those drones had been carrying BW or CW? Right, or big bombs, chemical weapons, biological.

Speaker 9:

I'm sorry, yes. Biological weapons, chemical weapons. It would be. It would be unprecedented in history. So the Israelis think they're so smart and so good that they got away with killing two generals who just were replaced the next day.

Speaker 14:

Right and the world thinks that Israel is so powerful because of their reach.

Speaker 9:

Look how safe they are. They reached into Syria and killed these guys. They reach into Iran and kill that guy. They bomb Lebanon and kill this guy.

Speaker 14:

It's not as great as they think it is. Meanwhile, iran is finding a way to learn more about its enemy without actually killing Iranians, exactly Because it's a bunch of extremist proxy people who are actually taking the fall.

Speaker 9:

Because it's a bunch of extremist proxy people who are actually taking the fall. What do you think of these rumors this week that it was the MEK that did it on I'm sorry, the Mujahideen, which is a it's a cult actually, but it was originally a communist opposition group during the Shah's time that he goes on to talk about that.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I saw an image that was pretty disturbing. It was a passenger airplane flying somewhere over the middle east and you know, way off in the distance was iran and it was.

Speaker 3:

This is what it looks like over iran this morning and it was ballistic missiles going up and there had to be 30 of them, but you know they're above the clouds, so when you see, and it, you see the, as Dawn's coming up and it's and I didn't save the video, but it was, it was one of those things You're just like and I didn't save the video but, it was it was one of those things.

Speaker 3:

you're just like it's the end of the world as we know it. I feel fine. It's like this is nuts.

Speaker 6:

Do you remember the beginning of the Iraq war, when they were sending in scud missiles? Do you remember that footage? That was wild.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, well, well, this was one of those things. Like somewhere in israel this morning they're waking up to that landing. Yeah, and or not, I don't know. Maybe I'm watching cgi. I'm losing my mind on this. Please stop asking me to spend money. There was another story today too, apparently. Apparently, there's a and I I hesitate to even bring it up because I haven't sourced it well, but it was talking about essentially this issue of the magic money printers and the missing money, and they're like where's the $6?

Speaker 11:

trillion. It's like no small amount.

Speaker 3:

Anyways, pretty crazy Again. Going back to Elon Musk, just cause he's got some good quotes and he's again, he's rubbing shoulders with these people, you're starting to see someone who's got some. Elon Musk is not afraid to fail and abandon things that don't work, so when you start getting into the government.

Speaker 3:

He's like well, if it doesn't work, make it more efficient. I don't understand Twitter's bad. It's got 8000 employees. We'll fire all but 1500. It'll run great. You know he's? He's just very like why wouldn't you fix problems? Why wouldn't you get rid of the? You know the issues and why why do you seem to be prolonging problems? Like he said, he went down to the border. He's like nothing about this makes sense if you have a high trust society. You know what I I mean. Clearly, we don't, you know. So this is Elon Musk talking about his disdain for warmongers, and I can echo this sentiment.

Speaker 4:

Well, I have no respect for the warmongers and the war profiteers and those who want the war to continue forever for their own purposes. Uh, this is, uh, in my view, an evil thing, because I'll talk to someone on the left and they'll say we must not give in to Russia. I'm like, but you have no plan for success. So what you are suggesting, then, is that we send these poor kids into the meat grinder every day, for nothing, with no end in sight. Forever, for nothing with no end in sight, forever. That is cruel, inhumane and senseless. So President Trump is right in this regard. There must be peace, and it's time for the slaughter of the young men and old men to stop. It's time to stop this senseless death machine. That's really what it comes down to.

Speaker 4:

There are those who like to have the appearance of empathy, but they don't have the reality of empathy. Those who are pro-war. They have the appearance of empathy. They're hypocrites and liars. If you want the reality of empathy, we must stop the senseless everyday death that lasts forever. That's what true empathy is. We should care about those men who are dying in the trenches in Ukraine and Russia. We don't want to be there. They're conscripted, they're forced to be there. They're forced to be. Ukraine conscripted, russia conscripted. They're forced to kill each other. Why? For how long time to stop?

Speaker 6:

yeah.

Speaker 3:

I had a.

Speaker 6:

I was watching a World War One movie again and I was telling my wife about it and you know I was just having some fun, but she was saying no surrender. Or the movie was saying, you know, they were sending people up and they knew they were going to get slaughtered. And this one, you know middle um officer, went in and complained to his you know superior officer, like hey, you know, we can't send this wave, they're all going to die in five seconds. And and he's like you know, I've got my orders too. You know we got to send them and it's, it's time, you know, and I expect the whistle blow in 30 minutes and or 30 seconds. And if you guys don't move in five minutes, you know there's gonna be hell.

Speaker 6:

And so the other guy goes out there and you know these guys are all standing there fixing bayonets, and then whistle blows, the guys go up, they all get shot, they all die within, you know, 30 seconds or less. And then the guy comes back in. It's like, hey, man, he's like next wave. And all these poor guys stand up in the trench and they fix bayonets and they're getting ready to go and the officers are standing behind them with their pistols. You know no surrender, no retreat. And I had to, I had to explain to my wife what that meant no surrender, no retreat, and and kamikaze.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, and it's the meat grinder and all these guys are lining up and they all know they're going to go up this ladder and die in two minutes. They all know it. And it was a great piece of cinema because you got to see the humanity of what it looks like at the bayonet. End of these orders.

Speaker 3:

There's nobody prays for peace more than the soldier.

Speaker 6:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

You know, and when war starts to touch the civilian population, I mean that's the end of it. Yeah, so here you've got two countries launching missiles at each other, hitting civilian population, and we're in the fog of war. We don't know what's really happening on the ground. Don't know what's happening in Israel. They say they're winning. Don't know what's happening in Iran. They say they won't give up. You know, my feeling is that I know I'm. I am not. If anybody thinks at all I am shilling for the Iranian regime. You are wrong. I am also not anti-Israel either. You are wrong. I am pro Taylor, I'm pro John Attacus, and then I'm pro Kingston and gets up at Washington state.

Speaker 10:

Sure.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean. Like, for me, that's over there, for me, that's over there it feels like.

Speaker 6:

I guess why I bring this up? Because it feels like in America right now that we are, we are, we are. Somehow we are getting ourselves into a position where we're funneling into, where we are going to send our kids into a situation where there's going to be an officer standing there, going no surrender, no retreat, and they know that they're going to go either going to have to go up the ladder and die or they're going to try to retreat and die. Yeah, you know what?

Speaker 3:

Henry David Thoreau, the whole idea of this being new or old right. This isn't new. Henry David Thoreau wrote about this. He's like look what the government does. They get you all wrapped up and they've got you marching like little toy soldiers over mound and hill to go fight and die. For what? Right right and he he writes about his essay on civil disobedience is phenomenal, it's almost poetic. But you go read it and it's like, yeah, that's what's happening today.

Speaker 6:

Oh, here we go and my grandfather, who fought in what most people would call a righteous war world war I. After that war was over, he never owned a gun again, and he would not tell war stories until later in his life. He told me a couple of war stories and at the end of those stories he would always say you know, it's really ugly what one human will do to another. War is awful. We should avoid it at all costs yeah, it's awful.

Speaker 3:

It's awful my time down in brazil. Let me see what socialism does. Yeah, you know it's. It is hard to comprehend and there aren't easy solutions no, it feels like it feels, like we're marching.

Speaker 2:

You know what I mean or three you never fight, you never defend anything.

Speaker 3:

That's not either. Being wrong does not mean being passive, and you know. You know there's a, there's a balance here, and when we have the right perspective, the peasants perspective, we defend our homes and our fields Right. But when we're over yonder there, that's your business. What I see Trump doing right now is doing a fairly decent job, considering we have a massive entanglement with Israel, to be like it's your deal. I mean, we've already sold you some stuff, but it's your deal. You know, I think that's, I think hopefully it plays out right, hopefully the big boys just don't want to, don't want to fight anymore. Yeah, in fact, that is something that, uh, this, this is, uh, I think, represented best by this guy here. Take a take a listen to how he presents this, and I know this is maybe a little utopic, but at the same time, I think it's also the sentiment that many of us adults they're pursuing their own agendas, oops.

Speaker 6:

I think this is always good to have some hope in there. So let's go ahead and have some.

Speaker 15:

Yeah, I have no respect for any single leader in the world today. I don't care what party they're from. I don't care what country they're the leader of. I don't have respect for any of them. If you nuke me, even though I'm dead, my submarines are going to nuke you and wipe you out. This is childish behavior. This is the behavior of unhinged teenagers. They're not leaders, they're misleaders. They're pursuing their own agendas and deceiving the public in order to get support behind those agendas. We need a whole new way to function in the world If humanity is going to continue as a species. If anybody cares about that and I certainly do I have nine grandchildren. I don't want them to grow up in a world that's suddenly devastated by a nuclear holocaust because of the stupidity, theocy, the irresponsibility and and the macho attitudes of these teenagers in old bodies who are running the world.

Speaker 3:

Amen and he might be talking about donald trump. I don't care the sentiments, right, isn't that?

Speaker 3:

graham hancock oh yeah, that is graham hancock. No, he got political, yes, no, I don't think he has particularly, but he's right in this assessment, right, he's like. I don't have respect for any of these that are that are doing this. That's how I feel Like the government's corrupt, like I don't know man, like it needs a reset. I'm not saying blood of tyrants and tree of Liberty or anything like that. I'm just saying hey guys, like he on on Musk and Donald Trump, they're taking the system as it is and trying to make some changes to it to get rid of this element of you know, the necessity to be constantly at each other's throats, and that it even matters what's going on in Iran. I mean, at the end of the day, I believe a lot of this has to do with Russia and Iran and China trying to be sovereign. That's just what it boils down to. They want to call their own shots and that's not OK. When you're the, when you're the guy in charge, you don't want someone else to set up a parallel power base. It's just that simple. But again, because we're set up the way we're set up, we fight instead of figuring out how to make peace. I hope Trump makes peace. I really do.

Speaker 3:

This is Stephen Miller, and the reason that I believe Trump will make peace is because of this is basically the number three in charge. The deputy secretary chief of staff is right below Susie Wiles, so this is someone who can walk into the Oval Office pretty much any time and talk to President Trump. It's also why he's so feared by the left because he says things like this OK, sometimes. Sometimes no is nice. When I was in prison, I learned that lesson the hard way. Sometimes no is nice. When I was in prison, I learned that lesson the hard way. Sometimes no is nice. And right now what we're at is we're at a position where the government and trump and his administration, if they are doing the peasants agenda and the maga agenda, then they're going to have to do a lot of saying no, a lot of no to the endangered turtle studies, a lot of no to the gender studies in pakistan, a lot of no to we will not be going to additional war. And the reason is because of this. Listen to the way he stages things.

Speaker 16:

For the love of God. Where are the damages for Americans? Where do I even begin? Where do I even start? We used to have a functioning public school system in this country. Then we had open borders. Now our schools are in chaos and disarray. We need hundreds of translators. Nobody's learning how to read or write. An entire generation of Americans, multiple generations in fact have been robbed of educational opportunities.

Speaker 16:

Entire cities Look at Los Angeles, once a paradise of safety, security and prosperity entire neighborhoods occupied and controlled by foreign gangs. Where do all the residents who've been displaced, who've been forced out of Los Angeles? Where do they go to get their reparations? And then, what about the victims of fentanyl poisoning brought in by Democrats? Open border? Hundreds of thousands of moms and dads whose kids are dead and buried in the ground. Where do they go to get their reparations from the government?

Speaker 16:

And then all the women who have been raped, who've been beaten, who've been murdered, all the dads who've been shot dead and aren't home. All the women who have been raped, who've been beaten, who've been murdered. All the dads who've been shot dead and aren't home. All the police officers who've been slain by illegal aliens and ambush attacks in the line of duty. Where do any of these people go? Where do any of their families go to get reparations?

Speaker 16:

Or the half a million children that Joe Biden trafficked across the southern border and put into the hands of unvetted so-called sponsors? Do you have any stories I could tell you of children that were trafficked across the border and raped because of the policies of Joe Biden? There aren't enough volumes that could fit into a library to calculate the carnage that has been inflicted by the Democrat Party's policy of open borders. We could spend the rest of our lives trying to document those harms. Where does our whole country go to get repaid for all of the wealth, all of the prosperity and security that has been stolen from us by decades of uncontrolled, illegal mass migration? Because we all deserve reparations for what has been stolen from us.

Speaker 3:

It is a tragedy that defies our ability to even describe it brought to you by vernon wow, it is a tragedy beyond even our description to describe it. War is like that. Political assassinations is like that. It is a tragedy beyond our description to even describe it now, in a world that's just crazy like that, in a world that, uh, is just upside down. Just keep in mind, this was the turnout yesterday at the parade for the 250th anniversary. So when they say, oh, hardly anybody showed up, it was a small crowd. They're trying to compare the okay where'd you get this picture?

Speaker 3:

the internet. Holy cow. This was yesterday. This looks like this is what j6 looked like. Yeah, it was at least that full, if not much fuller. Yes, exactly, okay, the no king's stuff going all over the us they're. They claimed on the news. It was the largest rally ever over a million people around the country showed up at these different rallies.

Speaker 3:

It was larger than some march they had in washington. They never include j6. J6 was like two to seven million. It's huge, it's massive, this right here. I don't know how many people showed up, but the idea that they just oh, small crowds. It was lightly attended.

Speaker 6:

Come on, man I think I can see a million people right there on the zits, you know.

Speaker 3:

Anyways, yeah, pretty, pretty amazing. But that's the America we live in, an America that cares, that would show up from all over probably the Eastern seaboard to go see that parade Pretty amazing. So keep in mind, it's our job to just keep trucking along. Let's go back to the comments before we shut down. Okay, yes, weedham boys eagle pass was a strict democrat town run. It was a strict democrat run town but it took a mess the migrants were leaving behind. In the chaos that they were causing on both sides, I'd always preach to my family the fiscal law and order aspect of it but didn't wake them up until it took the mess to wake everyone up. That's true, you know, sometimes we have like, yeah, peasants care about things like graffiti and little homeless encampments and things like that. They don't always pay attention to budgets. One precedes the other, right? Okay, so this is a.

Speaker 3:

This is Roger Frederick talking about having success in tennis and he's giving a little graduation speech. It's kind of fun, which is why I'm using. It's inspirational and he's talking about failure over success. And I think a tendency in people who do shows like this, who cover the type of material that we cover, is to kind of get into a negative rabbit hole. Listen, the history of the world is messy. Go read the Bible. It's messy. Good people die, bad people die. The rain falls on the righteous and the wicked. You have good times and bad times. It's finding your place in it. That's what's so important. The strength of a country is in the strength of its people, and when its people stand firm and resolute on their own, when they stand their ground, it's unstoppable.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, aside from nuclear war Be strong.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 11:

Perfection is impossible.

Speaker 11:

You're talking about failing and still being a champion. Perfection is impossible. In the 1526 singles matches I played in my career, I won almost 80 of those matches. Now I have a question for you what percentage of points do you think I won in those matches? Only 54%, in other words, even top-ranked tennis players win barely more than half of the points they play.

Speaker 11:

When you lose every second point on average you learn not to dwell on every shot. You teach yourself to think OK, I double-faulted, it's only a point. Ok, I came to net and I got faulted, it's only a point. Okay, I came to the net and I got passed again, it's only a point. Even a great shot, an overhead backhand smash that ends up on ESPN's top 10 playlist, that too, is just a point. So here's why I'm telling you this when you're playing a point, it has to be the most important thing in the world, and it is, but when it's behind you, it's behind you. This mindset is really crucial because it frees you to fully commit to the next point at the next point after that, that's what I think about every day.

Speaker 3:

Just make better decisions, be the solution to some problem or leave somebody suffering today. Right, Do something that you can do. It's for yourself, but do something to make a difference. If we string enough of these good decisions together, we can move on from the past. We just have to see it for what it is, Know where we're actually at. Hey, it's just a point. I'm down by 10. I better step in, you know, start playing a little harder. Whatever the case is, just keep playing every day. We're not going to win every political battle. We're not going to win every news cycle, if you even consider it a win or loss or anything. It's about enough of us making positive decisions, moving past the bad ones. That's how we liberate the world.

Speaker 6:

Fresh, clear eyes, Fresh, clear eyes. One decision at a time every time.

Speaker 3:

All right guys, that's it for the show today. Don it for the show today. Don't forget to visit peasantsperspectivecom and please, please, please visit leftbehindwithoutorg. There is a waiting list of kids that need help. So anything you guys can do is much appreciated. And yeah, and also check out 1776 live Lots of exciting stuff going on over there. All right guys, thanks for the joining us today. We'll talk to you again tomorrow.

Speaker 1:

Bye, old woman, man, man sorry what night, lived 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. You didn't bother to find out, did you? I did say sorry about the old woman, but from behind you looked. What I object to is that you automatically treat me like an inferior. 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.

Speaker 11:

There is.

Speaker 1:

There's some lovely filth down here. Oh, how do you do? How do you do? How do you do? Good lady, I am Arthur, king of the Britons. 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. I didn't know we had a king. 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. 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. 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.

Speaker 1:

Be quiet. I order you to be quiet. Order who does quiet? Oh, 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. 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.

Speaker 1:

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. Oh, 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? You saw it, didn't you?

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